Metropolitan Boston; a modern history; Volume IV, Part 54

Author: Langtry, Albert P. (Albert Perkins), 1860-1939, editor
Publication date: 1929
Publisher: New York, Lewis Historical Pub. Co.
Number of Pages: 508


USA > Massachusetts > Suffolk County > Boston > Metropolitan Boston; a modern history; Volume IV > Part 54


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Mr. Walker was born in Worcester, Massa- chusetts, July 13, 1865, a son of Joseph Henry and Hannah Maria (Kelly) Walker, his father a boot and shoe manufacturer of Worcester, and later a leather manufacturer in Chicago. He also entered public life; was a member of the Worcester Common Council for some years, and a member of the United States House of Representatives from 1890 to 1900. During the years 1879 and 1881 he served as a member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives.


Joseph Walker, of this record, received his preliminary education at Phillips-Exeter Acad- emy, where he was graduated in 1884, and later entered Brown University, taking his Bachelor of Arts degree in 1887. Meanwhile he had determined upon a legal career and ac- cordingly entered Harvard University Law


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School, where he received the Bachelor of Laws degree in 1890, and in the same year the honorary degree of Master of Arts. Mr. Walker was admitted to the Massachusetts bar soon afterwards, and until 1895 he practiced in Boston, having as his principal business the trusteeship of real estate.


Mr. Walker maintains his home at Brookline, Massachusetts, and he has always been active in its public life. From 1896 to 1902 he was a member of the Brookline School Committee, was chairman of the Republican Town Con- mittee, and also served as moderator of the town meeting, and in various other capacities. From 1901 to 1903 he was a member of the Republican State Committee, and in the fol- lowing year was elected a member of the Mass- achusetts House of Representatives, serving continuously until 1911. From 1908 until 1911 he was speaker of the House. In 1912 he was the Republican candidate for governor of Mass- achusetts, in the following year changed from the Republican to the Progressive party, and in 1914 was the candidate of that party for governor. Mr. Walker was a member of the Massachusetts Constitutional Convention dur- ing the three years, 1917, 1918, and 1919, and a member of the State Board of Charity in 1904. He is affiliated with the Loyal Legion, and also holds membership in several clubs, including the Union and City clubs of Boston, the Brook- line Country Club, and the Wianno Club of Cape Cod. With his family he worships in the Unitarian faith, and is a member of the First Church of that denomination at Brookline.


Joseph Walker married, on June 30, 1890, at Providence, Rhode Island, Caroline Rich- mond, daughter of Walter and Julia (Anthony) Richmond, of that city. Five children have been born of this marriage: 1. Joseph R., born May 6, 1891. 2. Richmond, born August 2, 1892. 3. George R., born December 25, 1896. 4. Kath- arine (now Katharine (Walker) Bradford), born August 10, 1899. 5. Evelyn (now Evelyn (Walker) MacDuffie), born October 24, 1904. Mr. Walker's offices are situated in Boston, at No. 120 Boylston Street.


WILLIAM BERMAN-When the United States entered the World War in 1917, William Berman was a student at Harvard University, his ultimate object the profession of the law. On May 12, less than one month after Con- gress had a declared a state of war to exist with the Imperial German Empire, this young man abandoned his college work and enlisted in the service of his country. He was trained at Plattsburg, New York, sent overseas with the American Expeditionary Forces, and com- missioned a first lieutenant of infantry, No- vember 27, 1917. He served during the dura- tion of the war and, returning to the United States, was honorably mustered out at Camp Dix, New Jersey. Such is the brief military record of a man whose standard of citizen- ship is unquestioned, whose first thought was his country. In his present practice of the law there is no question of his ultimate success. Characters such as he possesses cannot fail of the highest rewards that are given.


William Berman was born in Savannah, Georgia, October 2, 1893, a son of Mayer Ber- man, a native of Hungary, now living as a retired brewer, in Boston, Massachusetts. His mother, Julia (Halpert) Berman, was also a native of Hungary, and is still living. They were the parents of the following children: William; Emanuel, deceased; Edgar Henry; Pauline Eleanor, now the wife of Max Slater, of Brookline, Massachusetts; and Herbert Al- vin.


William Berman received his early educa- tion in the Savannah schools and was gradu- ated from the Chatham Academy there in 1906, after which he attended for two years the Savannah High School. The family then re- moved to Scranton, Pennsylvania, where Wil- liam completed the high school course and was graduated in 1911. He then went to Harvard University and was graduated four years la- ter with the degree of Bachelor of Arts. This he supplemented by the course at the Harvard School of Law, which was interrupted by the World War and his participation therein, but from which he was eventually graduated with


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the degree of Bachelor of Laws, in 1920. He. was admitted to the bar of Massachusetts in 1921, and immediately established himself in practice in Boston, with offices at No. 16 Court Street. He has his residence at No. 30 Sum- mit Avenue, Salem, Massachusetts. Mr. Ber- man is devoted to athletics. He holds mem- bership in the Military Reserves; the Ameri- can Legion, Salem Chapter; and the Reserve Officers' Association of the United States. Added to these, Mr. Berman is a member of the Harvard Club of the North Shore; mem- ber of the B'nai B'rith; and is also a member of the Harvard Law School Association, of which he has been a member for a number of years. His religion is the Hebrew.


Mr. Berman married, in New York City, July 15, 1918, Anna Eugenia Rakowsky, born in Sa- lem, Massachusetts, daughter of Aaron Rakow- sky, retired shoe merchant and Libby (Kamber) Rakowsky, deceased. They have two chil- dren: 1. Leonard Stanley, born May 23, 1920. 2. Esther Charlotte, born March 11, 1924.


DR. JAMES VANCE MAY-The first mu- nicipal hospital for the insane to be opened in America was the institution now known as the Boston State Hospital, located at Dorchester Centre, Massachusetts. It was opened under the name of the Boston Lunatic Hospital and was located at the corner of East Third and M streets in South Boston, but the present site was purchased in 1895, and the story of its de- velopment and progress from that time on is a record of the abundant fulfillment of the prophecy made by its first superintendent, Dr. John S. Butler, in his first annual report, made in July, 1840, when he predicted that the cure of more recent cases of insanity, rather than the care of the hopelessly insane, would ulti- mately be the "best measure of its benefits."


Since December, 1917, Dr. James Vance May has been superintendent of the institution, and under his skillful direction, and with the aid of his devoted service, the institution has contin- ued to develop along the lines of kindness, high moral standards, and natural and constructive treatment noted by Charles Dickens in his "American Notes," written after his visit here in 1842. Dr. May is a graduate of the Univer- sity of Kansas and of the University of Penn- sylvania, and before coming to his present charge as superintendent of the Boston State Hospital had had wide experience in numerous institutions for the treatment of mental diseases.


Dr. James Vance May was born in Lawrence, Kansas, July 6, 1873, son of Vance W., a well- known physician of that place, and of Eleanor (Shearer) May. After completing his prepar- atory education he matriculated in the Univer- sity of Kansas, from which he was graduated in 1894 with the degree of Bachelor of Arts. He then began his professional study in the medical department of the University of Penn- sylvania, where he completed his course in 1897, receiving at the time the degree of Doctor of Medicine. For a year following his graduation he served as resident physician in the Philadelphia Hospital, 1897-98, and then was appointed assistant physician at Brigham Hall Hospital, in Canandaigua, New York, where he remained during the year 1899- 1900. As acting assistant surgeon in the United States Army, he enlarged his experience by a year and a half of service, 1900-1902, and then was made assistant physician at the Central Islip State Hospital, Islip, New York. Before the end of the year he made a change, accepting a position as assistant physician in the Bingham- ton (New York) State Hospital, where as assistant and as first assistant he remained until 1911. His next service was rendered at the Matteawan (New York) State Hospital, as medical superintendent, but late in 1911 he was appointed medical member of the New York State Hospital Commission, in which connection he rendered valuable service from 1911 to 1916. During the year 1916-17 he


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served as superintendent of the Grafton State Hospital, at North Grafton, Massachusetts, and on December 1, 1917, he came to Dorchester Centre as superintendent of the Boston State Hospital.


The Boston State Hospital has the distinction of being the first municipal hospital for the insane opened in America and the first hospital for the treatment of mental diseases to estab- lish a psychopathic department. The crowded state of the "Lunatic Hospital" at Worcester was the immediate cause for the act of the Leg- islature passed in 1836, which made it neces- sary for the counties of the Commonwealth to provide suitable accommodation for the idiotic or incurable insane, who were in no condition to be left at large, but who could not be accom- modated at Worcester. Pauper lunatics of the city of Boston were confined in the House of Industry or in the House of Correction at South Boston, with no special accommodations or attendance. In accordance with the act of the State Legislature, therefore, the city voted to erect a hospital for the insane. The building, planned to accommodate one hundred patients, was commenced in 1837, and as it was to be located half way between the House of Indus- try and the House of Correction, it was built principally by the inmates of the last-named institution at an expense of $32,000. It was ready for its inmates by the autumn of 1839, five stories high, including a basement and two wings besides the main building, each story in the wings containing twelve rooms, which, with the attic, would provide for fifty patients in each wing. The hospital was opened Decem- ber 11, 1839, with Dr. John S. Butler as super- intendent, and had received up to July 1, 1840, the date of his first annual report, one hundred and four patients, of whom sixty-five came from the House of Industry and the House of Cor- rection. The institution was fortunate in its first superintendent, Dr. Butler, who was a man of culture, of enlightened sympathy, and of scientific attainments, and in spite of meagre equipment, insufficient funds, and lack of sup- port from the business head of the institution


he established the care of the insane in the city of Boston on a high moral plane, and incul- cated as its fundamental quality his own spirit of kind, considerate, and helpful treatment. During the three years of his service as super- intendent, the institution was visited by Charles Dickens, in 1842, and the impressions made upon that interested and sympathetic writer as recorded in his "American Notes" are a high tribute to Dr. Butler. The institution Dick- ens puts on record as being "admirably con- ducted on those enlightened principles of con- ciliation and kindness which twenty years ago would have been worse than heretical, and which have been acted upon with so much success in our own pauper asylum at Hanwell"; and then proceeds to picture the life of the institution throughout the day, noting the effect of the presence of the superintendent's wife and an- other lady, with a couple of children, "seated calmly, quite as a matter of course, amid a throng of madwomen, black and white." The fact that the insane were trusted with forks and knives, were encouraged to engage in healthful amusements, and were encouraged in self respect especially interested the illus- trious visitor who had seen so much suffering in public institutions, and the record of his impressions is a warm and graphic tribute to the management.


In 1842 Dr. Charles H. Stedman succeeded Dr. Butler as superintendent (1842 to 1851), and then Dr. Clement A. Walker took charge, July 1, 1851, and for a period of thirty years he worked for the interests of the institution. Troubles due to over-crowding in the building and lack of ground for exercise and occupation caused him to urge upon the city authorities the purchase of land in a suburban location and the building of new hospital accommodations, or, if this could not be done, then the enlarge- ment of the present buildings on the grounds of the House of Industry, after removing that institution to Deer Island. The property was sold to a ship-building and boiler-making con- cern, however, and the longed for removal into the country was indefinitely postponed.


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Plans were drawn and a site selected in 1866, but nothing came of it until long years after, and on December 31, 1881, Dr. Walker resigned, because of ill health, which resulted in his death April 26, 1883. Meantime, improvements had been made. In 1853 solar lamps were placed in the wards amid great rejoicing, and in the same year male attendants were discontinued for the female wing; in 1855 gas was installed; in 1859 an undergraduate interne was employed; in 1863 an assistant physician was appointed for the first time; and in 1875 a second assis- tant physician was provided.


When Dr. Walker retired in 1881, he was succeeded by Dr. Theodore W. Fisher, who had been assistant and had spent several months abroad studying hospitals for the insane. He accepted the position with the understanding that the building would be renovated and the essentials for proper care of the patients pro- vided, and these improvements he secured. His description of the condition of the institution as compared with that of the first superintend- ent in 1840 is an enlightening commentary on the change which had been brought to pass in knowledge of the needs of those whose minds were diseased, and the building which had once been rejoiced over is described as most pitifully inadequate. Dr. Fisher worked long and hard to get the institution removed to more commodi- ous quarters in the country, and in 1887 eighty- four chronic cases were transferred to the Re- treat for the Insane at Austin Farm, in Dor- chester. In 1889 the Retreat was made part of the Boston Lunatic Hospital and two hundred patients of both sexes were accommodated there under the care of Dr. Edward B. Lane, first assistant physician. From that time on Dr. Fisher spared no effort to achieve his goal and secure the entire removal of the hospital to Dorchester. New buildings were occupied at Austin Farm in 1893 and 1894, and at Pierce Farm, adjoining, in 1895, and at that time the South Boston building was given up, to be demolished a few years later. Dr. Fisher re- signed, because of failing health, November 1, 1895, and Austin and Pierce Farms, though


known collectively as Boston Insane Hospital, were organized as separate institutions, with Dr. Edward B. Lane as superintendent of the former, and Dr. William Noyes of the latter. In 1897 the hospital was placed in charge of a board of trustees, succeeding the commissioner of institutions, and the two units were consol- idated under one management, Dr. Lane being made superintendent and Dr. Noyes associate superintendent. Austin Farm then became the department for women and Pierce Farm the department for men. The new institution was of the cottage type, consisting of groups of detached buildings, some with and some with- out corridor connections, attractive in appear- ance, pleasingly ornamented. Three substantial brick buildings were added to the women's group in 1904.


Dr. Lane resigned from the superintendency in 1905 to engage in private practice and was succeeded by Dr. Noyes. On December 1, 1908, the institution was transferred to the State, re- organized as the Boston State Hospital, and plans for enlargement and equipment made. Seventy-nine acres of adjoining land were pur- chased, new buildings were planned for and later built. By 1914 one new infirmary and one new building for violent patients had been erected, also three industrial cottages and a re- ception pavilion for male patients. On April 15, 1910, Dr. Henry P. Frost became superin- tendent, and in June, 1912, the Psychopathic Hospital on Fenwood Road was opened, at a cost of $600,000.


In 1917 the present superintendent, Dr. James Vance May, took charge, and he is giving to the institution the kind of service which makes such institutions a blessing to mankind. When the present site was purchased by the State in 1908, at a cost of one million dollars, there was provision for seven hundred and sixty-four beds in eight buildings. At the pres- ent time (1929) there are sixteen buildings for patients, occupying a farm of two hundred and thirty-three acres. There is a staff of thirteen physicians and a dentist, and two hundred and sixty-seven nurses are on duty. Since Dr. May


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became superintendent two nurses' homes have been built, kitchen and bakery buildings have been added, also an infirmary building which accommodates three hundred and forty men, and a home for the superintendent, also an admin- istration building, erected at a cost of $180,000. This institution was the eighth public hospital opened for the insane in this country, and of the average six hundred and twenty-five cases received yearly about fifty per cent are dis- charged greatly improved, and in many cases permanently cured. A nurses' training school has also been organized, and numbers among its stu- dents Smith College girls who are enrolled as social workers. There are at the present time nearly 2,400 patients in the institution, and Dr. May makes it a rule to personally call on and have a chat with each one at some time during


each week. This personal touch is an impor- tant factor in the work of the institution, and, vast as the task may be, Dr. May feels that it is well worth while.


Dr. May is a Fellow of the American Medi- cal Association and of the American Psychi- atric Association, also of the New York State Medical Society and of the Massachusetts State Medical Society. He is a thirty-second degree Mason, and a member of the Boston City Club, and with all his activities has found time for authorship, being the author of "Mental Diseases," published in 1922. He served as first lieutenant, and later as captain and major in the Medical Reserve Corps of the United States Army.


Dr. James Vance May was married, in 1905, to Ada L. Arms, of Binghamton, New York.


BIOGRAPHICAL INDEX


BIOGRAPHICAL INDEX


(Covering this volume only.)


Abbott, Florence M., 29


Joseph B., 29 Leon M., 28 Lydia C., 29 Achorn, Bernice, 17 Eben T., 17 Harry C., 17 Harry C., Jr., 17 Robert G., 17


Sylvania, 17


Adams, Barrett, 319


Charles C., 318 Charles C., (2), 319 Ellen E., 318 Henry S., 318 Mabel, 319


Edna L., 329 Grant S., 329


Junius O., 21


Lucius, 21 Lucius M., 21 Selenda, 21


Adlard, Charlotte M., 273 Barnes, Clarence A., 187 Clarence A .. Jr., 188 David H., 188 Doreen, 188 Helen, 188


Walter, 272


Hannah, 85


Aiken, Henry M. S., 71


Howard J., 86


John S., 86


Jonas S., 85


Margaret, 86


Robert M., 71 Stephen J., 71


Ruth, 86


Bickford, Isabella M., 233 John H., 232 John H., Jr., 233 Julia A., 232 Samuel E., 232


Allen, Abbie L., 1 Caroline C., 20 Clara, 2


Sara, 86 Solomon J .. 85 Barney, Edith, 68 Emily, 67 G. Robert, 67


Bigelow, John. 170 Louis K., 171 Martha A., 170 Mary L., 171


Frank G., Gov., 1


Henry H., 67


Frank G., Jr., 3


Robert, 68


William, 170


Frank M., 1


Barringer, Edwin C., 88


William F., 171


Grace M., 19


Frank A., 88 Mary A., 88 Bayley (Bayly), Edwin, 26


Blanchard, Helen, 304


Allyn, Edgar P., Sr., 139


Edwin A., 26 Jacob, Brig .- Gen., 26


John, 304 Rose, 304 William, 303, 304


Harry O., 139 Helen M., 139 Marie S., 139


John, 26


Lucia A., 27


Vesta, 26


Bazeley, Augustus L., 58


Georgina F., 58


Margaret, 59 William A. L., 58


Bliss, Alvin E., Hon., 65 Ann E., 65


Frances, 73


Betsy H., 96


Harold H., 66


Bruce, 96


Ezra W., 28


Foster C., 28


Avery, Christopher, 93


Henry F., 28


Henry W., 95, 96 Lawrence W., 28 Lucretia, 28 Margaret E., 95 Marion A., 28


Becker, Alice M., 237


Joseph E., 188 Richard K., 188


Anna, 237 Brooks, 237


Roland M., 188 Roland M., Jr., 188 Sarah, 188


Edward, 236, 237 George, 237 Beebe, Eleanor H., 21


Barker, A. O., 328, 329


Junius, 20


Helen, 329 Justin S., Dr., 328


Bell, Charles W., 305 Eliza J., 305 Frank M., 304 Martha P., 305


George W., 273 Le Roy V., 273 Mabel F., 273 Margaretta, 272 Robert; 272


Barnet, Carl J., 86


Julia, 343 Leonard S., 344


Mayer, 343 William, 343


John D., 71 Mary E., 71 Rebekah S., 71


Eleanor H., 3


William P., 170


John W. (J. Weston), 19 Walter, 19


William R., 170


Blatt, Joseph H., 147 Louise, 148 Lucy, 148 William M .. 147. 148


Anthony, Alice, 219 Carroll G., 218, 219 Frank P., 218 Sarah A., 219


Archer, Allan F., 74 Elizabeth G., 74


Beal, Abram S., 95


Evarts, 65


Gleason L., 73 Gleason L. (2), 74 John S., 73


John P., 65 Nellie S., 66 Thomas, 65 Blood, Abigail, 111


Berman, Anna E., 344


Bailey, Edward H., 293 Helen G., 293 James A., 293 James A., Sr., 293 Marietta, 293


Baker, Edith, 188


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James, 110


James (2), 111


John, 111 John (3), 112 John, Jr., 111


Mary E., 256


Mayall, 255, 256


Mayall, Jr., 256


Margaret A., 335


Richard, 111


Maylert, 256


Melinda, 334 Timothy D., 334


Bloomfield, Harry N., 24


Samuel, 256


Buchanan, Edwin P., Dr., 28 Marian V., 28


Mary K., 184 Mary O., 184 William, 184


Booth, Ernest, 329


Henry, 329 Isabella, 329


Gordon, 278


Russell W., 20


Campbell, Alice L., 199


Boyden, Amy L., 67 Kate F., 67 Roland W., 67 William C., 67


Maud L., 278


Chester I., 199


Henry J., 199


Boynton, Annie R., 186 Charles I., 23


Charles I., Jr., 24


Helen M., 3


Cora, 23


Robert P., 3


David F., 138


Burke, Arthur W., 254, 255


Minnie E., 275


Eldora, 187


George W., 255


Susie B., 276


Ernest H., 23


Hannah L., 255


Willard B., 275


Hattie L., 138


Burns, Amy M., 186


Caro, David, 337


Herbert H., 186


David F., 185


Lydia, 138


Hattie, 185


Myrtie, 24


Walter G., 185


Carr, Edith M., 106


Thomas J., 138 William F., 186


Brackett, Angeline M., 22


Francis, 41


John G., 22


John G., Jr., 23


Willard H., 185


Herbert F., 40, 41


John Q. A., 22


Burrough, Anna K., 145


Irene G., 41


Mary L., 23


Arnold H., 145


Julia M., 41


Richard, Capt., 22


George A. R., 144


Leroy, 41


Brigham, John, Dr., 119 Sarah, 119 Susanna, 109, 116


Bushnell, Ezra L., 56


Donald C., 134


Thomas, 119


Ezra L., Jr., 57


Kingman P., 133


Thomas, Jr., 109, 116


Joseph J., 56


Mary, 133 Mary F., 134


Brine, Dorothy M., 338 Frank R., 337, 338


Frank R., Jr., 338


Mary M., 338


James D., Rev., 3


Richard A., 338


Mary L., 5 Minnie F., 5


George G., 198 Willis D., 197


Brooks, Eugene D., 22 Luke, 21 Ruth F., 22 Sarah, 22 Shirley F., 21, 22


Cady, Edwin B., 330


Edwin B. (2), 331


Edwin T., 330


Edwin O., 290


Edwin O., Jr., 291


Frank E., 317


Josephine, 330 Kenneth G., 331


Joshua, 290


Mildred E., 291


Caldwell, Albert B., 309


Otis, 290 Reuben, 290


William H., 317


Brownell, Anna, 272


Albert B. (2), 310 Edward, 309 Frances D., 310


Richard, 290


Richard (2), 290


Jackson, 309 Louise, 309 William, 309 Calvin, Edwin, 334 Edwin E., 335


Cameron, Donald A., 184


Henry, 24 Luella, 25


Maria J., 24


Bucknam, Asa, 278 Charles C., 278


Charles C. (2), 279


Lucy A. M., 278


Bullard, Clara E., 3


Frederic K., 3 Frederic L., 3


Frederic L. (2), 3


Sarah, 199 Capen, Aaron, Gen., 26 Barnard, 26 Izanna, 26 Carman, Eugene M., 275


Jeannette, 337 Maurice, 336


Burpee, Amy D., 185


F. Easton, Prof., 106


Annie L., 185 Frank W., 185


Willard A., 185


George, 41


Leroy S., 41


Mary B., 144 Rudolph, 144


Cass, Arthur T., 133


Katherine E., 59 Sarah, 56


Chapin, Henry, Judge, 59


Butler, Eliza B., 3


Chapman, Elizabeth, 198 Ella, 197 George B., 197


William M., Hon., 3


Childs (Child), Abigail, 290 Asa, 290 Caroline A., 291


Brown, Edwin E., 318 Emily, 317


Jeannette, 331


Frank W., 318 Malvina, 318 William E., 317


Carter, Flora E., 41


Camfield, Helen S., 20


Olive, 112


Walter, 271 Walter E., 271 Bruner, Margaret M., 256


353


BIOGRAPHICAL INDEX


Henry V., 182, 183 Loring, 183 Roger, Gov., 182 Ruth B., 183 Connell, Frances M., 197 Peter H., 197


Rosa, 197


William J., 197 William J., Jr., 197


De Groat, Floyd E., 69 J. Fields, 69 Mary, 69 Minna P., 70 Damon, Carrie, 167 Frances, 167 Harry F., 167 Harry F., Jr., 167


Herbert, 167


Herbert S., 167 Davenport, Alfred, 59


Carleton, 60 Edith E., 60 Elizabeth V., 59 George E., 59 William E., 59 Davidson, George W., 187 Grace L., 187 Davis, Allan L., Dr., 207


Ansel S., Dr., 207 Benjamin S., 240


Bertha E., 241


Frank H., 219, 240


Leslie W., 94


George H., 249


Lydia A., 93


Coonse, G. Kenneth, Dr., 303


G. Kenneth, Jr., 303


Helen G., 220




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