USA > Massachusetts > Middlesex County > Historic homes and places and genealogical and personal memoirs relating to the families of Middlesex County, Massachusetts, Volume IV > Part 43
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William A Carlish
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al Arcanum, Melrose; the Boston Veteran Firemen's Association ; the Old Schoolboys' Association of Boston, and the Republican Club. At the annual dinner of the Old School- boys' Association held in November, 1907, at Young's Hotel, he recited for his old school- mates and others one of the "pieces" which he used to declaim when a boy. He married Naomi Georgianna Sherman (see Sherman sketch), born December 3, 1825, died July II, 1881, and their children were: I. William Henry, born in Boston, July 3, 1847 ; married, in Toledo, Ohio, January II, 1869, Mary E. Wall, who died in Chicago, Illinois, February 15, 1889, leaving four children : Nellie, Wil- liam A., Frank H. and Edward S. 2. Ed- ward Augustus, born in Charlestown, Massa- chusetts, May 1, 1852; married Ida F. Kent, and resides in Wakefield ; two children : Ralph E., and Ruby F., who married, June 15, 1907, John B. Stetson, Jr., of Philadelphia. 3
Frank H., of whom further. 4. Emma Fran- ces, born in Charlestown, March 7, 1861 ; married, October 17, 1894, E. J. Dillaway, of Malden. 5. Lizzie Ella, born in Charlestown, December 24, 1864, died March 10, 1867. He married (second), September, 1884, Eleanor Reed, of Boston.
ยท (IV) Frank Herbert Carlisle, third child and son of William Augustus and Naomi G. (Sherman) Carlisle, was born in Charlestown, Massachusetts, February 4, 1857. He was educated at the Warren grammar school and the Charlestown high school. He began his business career as clerk for the firm of Levi Doles & Son, dealers in doors and windows, Boston. In 1881 he resigned this position to become bookkeeper for Reuben Sherburne, of Boston, dealer in window and plate glass. In 1893 he formed a partnership with John L. Ayer, of Winchester, and established the busi- ness at 28-33 Charlestown street, Boston, as Carlisle, Ayer & Co., dealing in doors, blinds, window glass, etc. The business prospered, and has grown to large proportions. In 1905 Mr. Carlisle sold. his interest and is now in business in Port Angeles, Washington. He maintains his residence in Malden, where he is deeply interested in community affairs. He rendered efficient service as a member of the school committee from 1890 to 1895, and on the street commission from 1896 to 1901, five years. With his family he is a member of the First Baptist church, and in politics he is a Republican. He is well advanced in Masonry, and is affiliated with Mount Vernon Lodge, and the Royal Arch Chapter, of Malden ; and Beauseant Commandery, Knights Templar ;
and is a member of Malden Lodge, Independ- ent Order of Odd Fellows, the Royal Arcan- um, and the Malden Club.
Mr. Carlisle married, January 1, 1878, Flor- ena Hortense Hamblen, born in Portland, Maine, daughter of William and Irene (Lunt) Hamblen, whose children are (besides Mrs. Carlisle) William B. Hamblen,, residing in Port Angeles, Washington, assistant treasur- er of the Fish Products Company ; and Edith, married first George Moulton, and (second) George J. Porter. Mr. and Mrs. Carlisle are both prominent in musical circles, having sung for seven years in the choir of the First Bap- tist church of Boston, and for eighteen years in that of the First Baptist church of Mal- den. They have one child, Frederick Burton Carlisle, born in Malden, August 1, 1880; was educated in the public schools of Malden, passing through the high school, and is now engaged in the fertilizer business at Port An- geles, Washington. He married, June 29, 1906, Montez A. Appleton, daughter of T. J. Appleton, M. D., and mayor, of Port Angeles, Washington.
WRIGHT Peter Wright, the progenitor of his family, was of an an- cient Scotch Highland clan. He resided at Dellanny, Argyleshire, Scotland. He married Agnes Ferguson and among their children was Duncan, born in 1776, mentioned below.
(II) Duncan Wright, son of Peter Wright (I), was born in Dellanny, Argyleshire, in 1776, and died in Tewksbury, Massachusetts, January 26, 1836. He was educated in his native town and learned the trade of chemical bleaching there. He lived in Arklestone, near Paisley, Scotland. In 1812 he decided to seek his fortune in America and without his family sailed for the United States with the intention of making his home in Philadelphia. But the United States and Great Britain were involved in war and the ship on which he was a passenger was captured by an American privateer, "The Yankee," Captain James De- Wolfe, commanding, and he was taken to Bristol, Rhode Island. When Captain De- Wolfe discovered the trade of Mr. Wright he sent him to Dighton where he was made super- intendent of the Arkwright Mill . bleachery. Captain DeWolfe was a part owner of this concern. It is believed that Mr. Wright was the first chemical bleacher working at this trade in ths country. His wife and three sons, constituting the little family he had left in
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Scotland, joined hm in 1815 after the war was over, sailing in the ship "General Knox" and landing in. Boston. His wife, Janet Wil- son, was the daughter of Alexander .Wilson, 2d., of Paisley, Scotland, and the sister of Al- exander Wilson, the pioneer American orni- thologist.
On the arrival of his family Mr. Wright went to Smithfield, Rhode Island, where he worked for several years. From there he went to Waltham, Massachusetts, and estab- lished a bleachery of his own. He sold out shortly afterward to the Boston Manufacturing . Company, and in 1820 established another bleachery at Medway, where he remained a number of years. Later he was engaged in calico printing at Fall River. His last years were spent in Tewksbury. Among his chil- dren was Alexander, born May 4, 1800, men- tioned below.
(III) Alexander Wright, son of Duncan Wright (2), was born in Arklestone, near Paisley, Scotland, May 4, 1800, and died in Lowell, June 7, 1852. He came to this coun- try with his mother and two brothers in 1815. In 1820 he began to manufacture coach lace at Medway, Massachusetts. In 1825 he turned his attention to the manufacture of carpets with the intention of establishing a carpet mill in New England. Wishing to obtain all the information possible relating to the carpet in- dustry he visited Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, where there was a small carpet mill in opera- tion, but he was refused all information and not allowed to enter the works. Soon after- ward he went to Scotland and bought three carpet looms. He brought back with him two operatives, Claude and William Wilson. The ship in which they came met with a series of storms and reached port badly damaged. He set up his carpet looms at Medway and soon had them in successful operation. As a busi- ness venture the carpet mill was not as suc- cessful as Mr. Wright anticipated and he sold his plant to Mr. Burdett, who in turn sold it to Frederick Cabot and Patrick T. Jackson. They obtained a charter from the general court of Massachusetts and organized the Lowell Manufacturing Company, February 22, 1828, at the home of Mr. Jackson on Winter street, Boston. In March the company began to build in Lowell. Mr. Wright remained in charge of the plant at Medway until the buildings' at Lowell were completed when he removed to Lowell and became superintendent of the Low- ell Manufacturing Company. Under his di- rection the first carpet was woven in Lowell. His mechanical skill and business foresight
had much to do with the upbuilding and growth of the corporation with which he was identified. Through a suggestion made by Mr. Wright in 1839 the inventor, E. B. Bige- low, perfected a power loom for carpet man- ufacture. It was introduced by the Lowell Manufacturing Company in 1843 and revolu- tionized the methods of making carpets, Mr. Wright was interested, not only in the devel- opment and success of his own company but in the industries of the city and in its municipal affairs. He was a progressive citizen. In politics he was a Whig and he represented his district in the general court in 1836. He was a member of the first board of aldermen of the city of Lowell. He was especially interested in the improvement of the public schools sys- tem, and lent his influence always to advance the educational facilities of the city. In re- ligion he was a Unitarian.
He married, October 13, 1828, Sabra Wis- wall Claflin, who was born at Holliston, Mas- sachusetts, July 16, 1807, and died at Lowell, October 10, 1881, daughter of William and Anna (Underwood) Claflin. (See Claflin family). Children, all born in Lowell: I. Sabra, born March 7, 1830, resides in Low- ell. 2. Catherine Janet, born October 28, 1831, married James R. Darracott, April 22, 1851. 3. Lois. Ripley, born December 4, 1833, married Rev. Frederick Frothingham, Septem- ber 4, 1872; resides at Milton, Massachusetts. 4. Emeline, born October 13, 1836, died No- vember 29, 1837. 5. Mary Montgomery, born June 19, 1838, married, 1871, David Henry Bradt, of Lowell. 6. Helen Waugh, born August 20, 1840, resides in Lowell. 7. Duncan, born February 16, 1843, died March 7, 1843. 8, Alexander, Jr., born July 22, 1846, married Katherine Margaret Bremer- man; July 3, 1889. 9. William Spenser, born February 12, 1850, married Anna L. Bremer- man, January 6, 1870; he died August 22, 1880.
(I) Robert Claflin, then spelled CLAFLIN Mackclothlan, was born prob- ably in Scotland. The name was probably Maclachlan originally. With the disuse of the "Mac" came the modification of the spelling in this country to its present form of Claflin. According to family tradi- tion he was a Scotch soldier and was prob- ably one of the prisoners sent over by Crom- well after the battle of Worcester. These prisoners were sold for a short term of years as servants to the colonists. It was the cus-
Aly: Might
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tom of the purchasers to help the Scotchmen make a start in life and procure them farms and homes for their families. Mackclothlan was admitted a townsman of Wenham, Mas- sachusetts, November 4, 1661. In 1669 he had a grant of land. He was elected highway surveyor of Wenham. In 1673 he sold his house and farm to the town for a parsonage, taking in exchange about fifteen acres of land and in this deed his occupation is given hus- bandman. The house that he built in Wen- ham is still standing and in a good state of preservation. The old well near the house still furnishes a supply of good water. The place is now or was lately owned by a Rich- ards family.
He married, October 14, 1664, Joanna War- ner, daughter of John Warner, of Ipswich and Brookfield, Massachusetts. Robert died prior to September 19, 1690, when an inventory of his estate was filed by Thomas Fiske, ad- ministrator. In the probate records the name is spelled Mackclafflin. The receipts of his children for their portions of the estate show that the Mack (meaning son of) was dropped early. The signatures were: Elizabeth (X) (her mark) Clafflin, Daniel Claflin, Abigale Clafflin, and Antipas Claflin, and in some of the papers the name of the pioneer is also spelled without the prefix ... Children. I. Jo- anna, born at Wenham, August 12, 1665, mar -- ried, November 18, 1685, Samuel Smith, of Hadley, who became the first settled minister of Wethersfield, Connecticut. 2. Robert, soldier in the Phipps Expedition of 1690. 3. Elizabeth, born at Wenham, May 18, 1670, married Thomas Wells, of Ipswich. 4. Pris- cilla, born at Wenham, August 22, 1672, mar- ried Jeremiah Webb, of Northampton. 5. Daniel, mentioned below. 6. Abigail, born March' 19, 1676, married at Suffield, Connecti- cut, December 12, 1700, John Mighill, son of Thomas, of Rowley, Massachusetts. 7. Mary, born in Wenham, February 22, 1678, married, September 22, 1699, John Rising, of Suffield, son of James Rising, of Rowley. 8. Antipas, born at Wenham, 1680, resided at Lexington and Attleborough, Massachusetts.
(II) Daniel Claflin, 'son of Robert Claflin (I), was born at Wenham, January 25, 1674. He was a tanner and lived in his native town until after May 25, 1722, when he conveyed to Emerson Cogswell, of Ipswich, his home, bark mill and tan vat and material for carry- ing on his trade of tanner, removing thence to Hopkinton, Massachusetts, where he was one of the earliest settlers. He was selectman in
1727 ; treasurer in 1729 and several years af- terward. He married, at Wenham, March II, 1701, Sarah Edwards, probably granddaugh- ter of Rice Edwards, of Salem. She died in Hopkinton, January 8, 1743, and he died in the adjoining town of Framingham in 1775, "old and increpid." Children, born in Wen- ham: Daniel, born February 19, 1702; Sar- ah, April 27, .1703; Mesheck, November 4, 1705, died June 3, 1706; Joshua, June 8, 1707 ; Caleb, December II, 1708; Cornelius, Febru- ary 2, 17II; Robert, August 16, 1714; Eben- ezer, mentioned below.
(III) Ebenezer Claflin, son of Daniel Claf- lin (2), was born at Wenham, Massachusetts, July 2, 1716. He married Hannah Smith, of Hopkinton, May 22, 1739. She was the daugh- ter of Nathaniel 'and Elizabeth Smith, who were received into the church at Hopkinton, September 10, 1731, by letter from the church at Ipswich. He was a soldier in the Second Company, Captain John Jones, comprising the Train band and Alarm list of Hopkinton. He died at Hopkinton in 1793; his wife Hannah died there September 13, 1785. Children : Hannah, born in Hopkinton, April 26, 1741 ; Ebenezer, Jr., September 14, 1742; Dolly, 1744, died July 1, 1839, unmarried; Isaac, 1748; John, mentioned below; Aaron, 1753. (IV) John Claflin, son of Ebenezer Claflin (3), was born in Hopkinton, July 5, 1750. Married, April 5, 1770, Mary Sheffield, of Holliston, Massachusetts. He was a soldier in the Revolution, marching on the Lexington Alarm, April 19, 1775, in the Hopkinton com- pany of minute-men. He died June 28, 1838. Mary, his wife, died 1821. Children, all born in Holliston : William, mentioned below ; Am- aziah, July 5, 1773; John, June 24, 1775; Pol- ly (Mary), August 13, 1780; Luther, October 30, 1781; Martin, March 24, 1784; Calvin, November 17, 1786; Moses, February 27, 1789; Hannah, 1791, died May 8, 1822, un- married.
(V) William Claflin, son of John Claflin (4), was born at Holliston, in 1772, and died there December 10, 1854 .. He married (first), May 18, 1793, Anna Underwood, in Holliston. She died there October 18, 1794. He married (second), March 31, 1796, Sabra Wiswell, who died October 30, 1815. He married (third), November 13, 1817, Lois Ripley, of Middleboro, Massachusetts. Child of William and Anna Claflin : Anna Underwood, born at Holliston, October 7, 1794. Children of Wil- liam and Sabra Claflin, all born in Holliston : William, born August 3, 1797; Erepta, Sep-
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tember 3, 1799; Mary, September 12, 1801 ; Oliver Wiswell, September 8, 1803; Sabra Wiswell, mentioned below; John, April 5, 1810; Horatio Seymour, April 23, 1814.
(VI) Sabra Wiswell Claflin, daughter of William Claflin (5), was born in Holliston, July 16, 1807, married Alexander Wright, of Lowell, October 13, 1828. (See Wright fam- ily). She was of the same stock as Governor William Claflin whose lineage was: Gover- nor William (6), Lee (5), Ebenezer (4), Ebenezer (3), Daniel (2), Robert (I).
ANDREWS John Andrews was born at Quidhampton, Wiltshire, England, of an ancient and honored family, and lived there all his life. He married Maria Bundy, of Pittonwilts, England. Children : Henry, John, James E., mentioned below ; Mary J., Ellen, Jane, Susan. (II) James E. Andrews, son of John An- drews (I), was born at Quidhampton, Wilt- shire, November 17, 1852, and was educated in the schools there. He worked with his father in the market gardening business, rais- ing vegetables out of season in greenhouses. Later he engaged in business on his own ac- count, having a general store at Broadstone, near Bournemouth, England. After a few years he gave up his mercantile business to take charge of the gardens and greenhouses of one of the finest hotels in England, the Royal-Bath, at Bournemouth. This hotel is the stopping place of English royal families and nobility. He carried on the hotel gardens with great success. In May, 1892, he de- cided to seek a larger and better field and came to America. During his first five years in this country he had greenhouses and market gardens at Watkins, New York. He was then in the same line of business at East Bridge- water, Massachusetts, for three years. He sold out and removed to South Dartmouth, Massachusetts, and entered into the same bus- iness with a partner, but after spending con- siderable time and money decided that the venture was not to be successful and gave it up ; then taking charge of the greenhouses and gardens of one of the leading Boston florists. Afterward he was employed as superintendent for a Canton florist for three years. Then he decided to engage in business for himself once more. He bought a place having a greenhouse and established himself in market gardening at Billerica, Massachusetts, March 15, 1906, where he has since lived. He has been very successful and numbers among his customers
some of the leading hotels of Boston. He has one of the best equipped and most productive truck gardens in that section of the state. He has 10,000 square feet of glass in his green- houses. He makes a specialty of growing mushrooms, producing large quantities yearly. He is an attendant of the Episcopal church. In politics he is a Republican.
He married, August, 1883, Rose Brown, of Trowbridge, Wiltshire, England. They have one child, Emily, born July 3, 1886, married, January, 1904, William Hunt, a merchant of Canton, Massachusetts ; have one child, Dor- othy, born September, 1905.
William Hunt, the immigrant an- HUNT cestor of Henry Hamilton Hunt, was born in England about 1603, and came to New England with the early exodus of the Puritans from England, and settled at Concord, Massachusetts Bay Colony, before 1640. The town records give his name among those who took the freeman's oath June 2, 1641. The town was at the time less than six years in existence, having been formed out of the plantation at Musktequid, and estab- lished with church and town government Sep- tember 3, 1635. William Hunt was an Eng- lish yeoman, and took up land in both Con- 'cord and Sudbury, which latter town was es- tablished out of "the new plantation by Con- cord" September 4, 1639. His wife Elizabeth died in 1661, and in 1664 he married Mercy Hurd, widow of Thomas Brigham, and widow, a second time, of Edmund Rice, the immigrant who settled in Sudbury before 1639, freeman 1642, deputy to the general court 1643, dea- con in the church 1648, and subsequently pro- prietor of Marlborough, established as a town May 31, 1660, and died there 1663. His widow and ten children divided his estate, and his widow on becoming the wife of Wil- liam Hunt, in 1664, induced her third husband to settle on her estate, and he died there in October, 1667, leaving a will dated October 23, 1667, in which is named his wife Mercy and children : Samuel, Nehemiah (2), Isaac and Elizabeth Barnes. His son Nehemiah married Mary Toole in 1663, and 'his son Isaac mar- ried Mary Stone in 1667. It is probable that Nehemiah (2) was the ancestor of Henry Hamilton Hunt, as the name of his father, grandfather and great-grandfather does not appear among the descendants of Isaac.
(VII) Jeremiah Hunt, son of Jeremiah and Mary Hunt, was born in Brunswick, Maine, November 20, 1804. He was a shipbuilder, a
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Democrat in political faith, a Baptist in re- ligious belief, served in the state militia, and was a man of standing in the community. He married Salome Green, daughter of George and Susan (Dunning) Woodside of Bruns- wick, Maine. (Susan Dunning was a lineal descendant of Lord Ashburton). Salome Green Woodside was born in Brunswick, Au- gust 9, 1814, and died there in 1897. Jeremiah Hunt died in Brunswick, Maine, January, 1881.
(VIII) Henry Hamilton Hunt was born in Brunswick, Maine, September 10, 1847, son of Jeremiah and Salome Green (Woodside) Hunt. He was educated in the public schools and when eighteen years of age went to Port- land, Maine, where he learned the trade of carpenter and builder, and in 1868 removed to Boston, Massachusetts, where he carried on his trade up to 1872, when he removed to West Newton, Massachusetts, and in 1878 es- tablished an extensive manufactory with am -. ple steam power, and engaged in contracting for the erection of first class wooden and brick buildings; and many of the fine man- sions in West Newton and the other Newtons, the seat of some of the most elegant private residences in New England, are the results of his skill as a builder and constructor.
He is a Democrat in political principles, and he has served the city of Newton first as a member of the common council, then from the third ward in 1888, and as alderman 1893, 1894 and 1898. He is a Baptist in religious profession, and a liberal contributor to all the works of benevolence and charity carried on by that denomination. His fraternal associa- tion is with the Masonic order and with the Independent Order of Odd Fellows, and he is a member of Dalhousie Lodge of Newton, F. and A. M .; Newton Royal Arch Chapter ; Gethsemene Commandery; Boston Lodge of Perfection ; Giles Yates Council of the New Rose Croix; Princes of Jerusalem; Boston Consistory, 32d degree; Improved Order of Red Men. His club memberships include the Newton Club and the Katahdin Club. He was married at West Newton, October, 1876, to Emma Amelia, daughter of Isaac and Char- lotte Frogley, and the children by this mar- riage are : 1. Richard Harold Hunt, graduate of Newton high school, 1893, and of Harvard University, class of 1897; married, September 19, 1903, Mabel Ross of Florence, Massachu- setts, and they have two children: Ross Franklin Hunt and Rosemary Hunt. 2. Helen May Hunt, educated in Newton grammar and
high schools; married, June 10, 1901, Irving F. Marshall, of Brookline, Massachusetts, and they have one son, John Hunt Marshall ; Mrs. Hunt died October, 1880, and Mr. Hunt mar- ried (second) December, 1882, Czarina Jose- phine, daughter of Garfield and Mary J. Learned, of West Newton. (Garfield Learned was up to the time of his death editor of Bos- ton Shipping List). The children by the second marriage are: Harry Learned Hunt, born in West Newton, Massachusetts, October 2, 1888; and Marguerite Hunt, born in West Newton, Massachusetts, May 19, 1891, and in 1907 a member of the freshman class of the Newton high school.
Edward Jenkins, the earliest JENKINS known ancestor of the family came from England as an em- ployee of Nathaniel Tilden in or prior to 1643, the year in which his name first appears in the Scituate town records. He was one of the Conihassett partners, 1646, was made a free- man in 1647, kept an ordinary for many years, and was representative to the general court in 1657. He died at Scituate in 1699, and his will discloses the fact that he was among the few. liberal Puritans then residing there, for in that document he says: "It is my will that bread and beer be served at my funeral. Also that a sermon be preached." It may not be out of place here to state the more rigid non- conformists forbade sermons or even prayers at funerals because the Established Church of England countenanced such proceedings. The maiden name of the first wife of Edward Jen- kins is unknown. In 1684 he married for his second wife Widow Mary Ripley, of Hing- ham. Those of his children of whom there is any record were: Thomas, Edward and Mary ..
Edward Jenkins, son of Edward Jenkins, married, 1705, Martha Damon (or Daman); married (second), 1728, Abigail Merritt. Children: Mary, born 1706. Thomas, 1707. Anna, 1708. Samuel, 1710. Thankful, 1712. Edward, 1713. David, 1715. Mary, 1717. James, 1718. Martha, 1724. Content, 1726. Daniel, 1728.
James Jenkins, son of Edward Jenkins, Jr., born 1718, married, 1746, Mary Vinal. Among their children was James, Jr., see forward.
James Jenkins, Jr., son of James Jenkins, born July 3, 1749, married, December 15, 1774, Ruth Lincoln, of Cohasset. Children: Polly, born November 5, 1775. Ruth, June 15, 1777. James, September 16, 1779. Cum-
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1
mings, May 19, 1782. Isaac, October 16 or 19, 1784. Ruth, 1788. John, March 8, 1792. Lucy, March 8, 1792. Lucy, June II, 1794.
Isaac Jenkins, son of James Jenkins, born October 16 or 19, 1784, died November 4, 1833. Married (first), November 23, 1807, Betsey Russell, born in Scituate, November 25, 1786, died February 22, 1821. Married (second), July 15, 1821, Sally Child, who died January 9, 1857. Child by first wife, Isaac, see forward.
Isaac Jenkins, son of Isaac Jenkins, was born in Boston, December 8, 1817, died Au- gust 24, 1857, in Boston. In early life he was a housepainter in Boston, but finally aband- oned that occupation for the West India trade transporting cargoes of barrel staves to Cuba, Porto Rico and the Bahamas, and exchang- ing them for tropical products. Retiring from business, he made an extended foreign tour and his diary, giving an interesting descrip- tion of his travels in Europe and other parts of the world, is now in the possession of his grandson, Henry Isaac Jenkins, of this re- view. During his latter years he dealt quite largely in real estate. He married, March 10, 1840, Sarah T. Hillett, who was born in Boston, May 27, 1815. She survived him and married for her second husband Francis Jen- kins, a native of Hingham, Massachusetts, and a brother of Gideon and William Jenkins of that town. Francis Jenkins was a man of considerable ability, and a staunch Jackson Democrat in his younger days. Mrs. Jenkins died at Onset, Massachusetts, August 20, 1903.
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