Professional and industrial history of Suffolk County, Massachusetts, Volume I, Part 38

Author: Davis, William T. (William Thomas), 1822-1907
Publication date: 1894
Publisher: [Boston, Mass.] : Boston History Co.
Number of Pages: 1160


USA > Massachusetts > Suffolk County > Professional and industrial history of Suffolk County, Massachusetts, Volume I > Part 38


Note: The text from this book was generated using artificial intelligence so there may be some errors. The full pages can be found on Archive.org (link on the Part 1 page).


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CHARLES RUSSELL CODMAN, son of Charles Russell and Anne (Macmaster) Codman, was born in Paris, France, October 28, 1829, and graduated at Harvard in 1849. He studied law in Boston in the office of Charles G. Loring and at the Harvard Law School, from which he graduated in 1852. He was admitted to the Suffolk bar Sep- tember 29, 1852. He was a representative from Boston from 1873 to 1875, and sena- tor in 1864 and 1865. In the War of the Rebellion he commanded the Forty-fifth Mas- sachusetts Regiment during its nine months' service in North Carolina. He has been twice chosen overseer of Harvard College, and for several years was president of the board. He married Lucy Lyman Paine, daughter of Russell Sturgis, at Walton on Thames, England, February 28, 1856, and his residence has been for some years at Cotuit (Barnstable).


PATRICK ANDREW COLLINS, son of Bartholomew and Mary Collins, was born in Fer- moy, Cork county, Ireland, March 12, 1844, and when four years old came with his mother to Massachusetts, receiving his education at the public schools in Chelsea. First an office boy, he was afterwards engaged in the upholstery business for a num- ber of years, at the same time devoting his leisure time to study. He entered the Harvard Law School in 1868, graduating in 1871 with the degree of LL.B., and fin- ished his preparatory professional studies in Boston in the office of James M. Keith. He was admitted to the Suffolk bar April 15, 1871. While pursuing his studies he was a member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives in 1868 and 1869, and in 1870 and 1871 senator. He was judge advocate-general of Massachusetts in 1875, member of Congress in the Forty-eighth, Forty-ninth and Fiftieth Congresses, dele- gate at large to the Democratic National Conventions of 1876-80-88-92, and president of the Democratic National Convention at St. Louis in 1888. He is a man of great natural powers, possessing an eloquent tongue and broad views, and, though foreign


Jaramillony


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born, a thorough American. With life and health he has a brilliant career before him. He married Mary E. Carey in Boston, July 1, 1873, and resides in Dor- chester.


JOHN W. CORCORAN, son of James and Catharine Corcoran, was born in Batavia, N. Y., June 14, 1853, and his parents moved to Clinton, Mass., when he was less than a year old. He was educated at the public schools in Clinton and at St. John's Univer- sity, New York, and at the College of the Holy Cross in Worcester. He graduated at the Boston University Law School in 1875, and was admitted to the Worcester county bar June 17, 1895, beginning his practice in Clinton, and afterwards opening an office in Boston. He was water commissioner in Clinton ten years, member of the School Board fifteen years, and has been judge advocate-general of Massachusetts, and chair- man of the Massachusetts Board of Managers of the World's Columbian Exposition. His fidelity and skill were exemplified in his management of the Lancaster Bank, of which as receiver he paid the creditors including interest one hundred and nine per cent. In 1890 and 1891 he was the Democratic candidate for lieutenant-governor of Massachusetts, and in 1892 was appointed judge of the Superior Court. He married Margaret J., daughter of Patrick and Mary McDonald, in Boston, April 28, 1881, and his residence is at Clinton.


CHARLES COWLEY, son of Aaron and Hannah (Price) Cowley, was born in Easting- ton, England, January 9, 1832, and came with his father to Lowell when a boy. He was educated in the public schools of Lowell, and at an early age entered the office of Josiah G. Abbott in Lowell as a student of law. He was admitted to the Middle- sex bar in April, 1856, and has practiced since in Lowell and Boston. In the War of the Rebellion he served as paymaster in the navy and on the staff of Admiral Dahl- gren as judge advocate and provost judge in the South Atlantic Squadron. He has published a " History of Lowell," " Famous Divorces of all Ages," " Our Divorce Courts," and several other valuable contributions to legal and general literature. In 1885 he received from the University of Vermont the degree of LL.D.


GEORGE GLOVER CROCKER, son of Uriel and Sarah Kidder (Haskell) Crocker, was born in Boston, December 15, 1843, and graduated at Harvard in 1864. He studied law at the Harvard Law School, graduating in 1866, and in the offices of George W. Tuxbury and Uriel H. Crocker, and was admitted to the Suffolk bar July 3, 1867. He was representative in 1873 and 1874, and senator in 1880-1881-1882-1883, the last year serving as president. He was chairman of the Board of Railroad Commissioners from February, 1887, to February, 1892. He is the author of a work published in 1889 entitled "Principles of Procedure in Deliberative Assemblies." He married Annie Bliss, daughter of Dr. Nathan Cooley and Susan Prentiss (Haskell) Keep, in Boston, June 19, 1875, and resides in Boston.


URIEL HASKELL CROCKER, son of Uriel and Sarah Kidder (Haskell) Crocker, was born in Boston December 24, 1832, and graduated at Harvard in 1853. He gradu- ated at the Harvard Law School in 1855, and after further study in the office of Sid- ney Bartlett in Boston was admitted to the Suffolk bar in April, 1856. He married Clara G., daughter of Joseph Ballard, of Boston, and lives in Boston.


GEORGE URIEL CROCKER, son of the above, was born in Boston, January 9, 1863, and graduated at Harvard in 1884. He studied law at the Harvard Law School and


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the Boston University Law School, and was admitted to the Suffolk bar in June, 1886. He is or has been treasurer of the Northern Railroad of New Hampshire, and his business is confined largely to probate cases. He married Emma L. Aylsworth in Providence, in 188;, and lives in Boston.


CORNELIUS F. CRONIN, son of John and Margaret (McCarthy) Cronin, was born in Cork, Ireland, July 25, 1851, and came with his parents, an infant, to Boston. He received his education at the Boston public schools and went into business. He af- terwards studied law at the Boston University Law School, and in the office of Gar- gan, Swasey & Adams, and was admitted to the Suffolk bar in May, 1878. He was a representative from Boston in 1881-82-83 and senator in 1884. His residence is in Boston.


EDWIN UPTON CURTIS, son of George and Martha Ann (Upton) Curtis, was born in Roxbury, Mass., March 26, 1861, and graduated at Bowdoin College in 1882. He studied law with William Gaston and was admitted to the Suffolk bar in 1885. He was associated in business with William G. Reed, and in 1889 was chosen city clerk of Boston. Residence, Boston.


HENRY CHARLES DAVIS, son of Benjamin and Cordelia (Buffington) Davis, was born in Palmer, Mass., October 23, 1843, and was educated at the Wilbraham Academy and Williston Seminary. He graduated at the Harvard Law School in 1868 and was admitted to the Suffolk bar January 23, in that year. Not long after he began prac- tice in Ware, Mass., where he has been many years a member of the School Commit- tee, and in 1873 was chosen representative. He married Jennie A., daughter of Lo- renzo and Jane (Marlen) Demond, in Ware, May 4, 1876.


PHILIP J. DOHERTY, son of Philip and Ellen (Munnegle) Doherty, was born in Charlestown, Mass., January 27, 1856, and was educated at the Harvard Grammar and Charlestown High School. He graduated at the Boston University Law School in 1876, and was admitted to the Suffolk bar June 4, 1877. He was a representative in 1884-85-86, an alderman of Boston in 1888, and a member of the Boston Water Board from 1889 to 1891. In 1888 he was a delegate to the Democratic National Con- vention at St. Louis. He married Catherine A., daughter of John and Catherine (Doyle) Butler, in Charlestown, August 16, 1878, and lives in Charlestown.


CHARLES FRANCIS DONNELLY, son of Hugh and Margaret (Conway) Donnelly, was born in Athlone, Roscommon county, Ireland, October 14, 1836, and in his infancy came with his parents to Canada, whence they removed to Rhode Island in 1848. In 1856 he entered the office of Ranney & Morse, in Boston, as a student of law, and in 1859 graduated at the Harvard Law School. He was admitted to the Suffolk bar in September, 1858. In 1875 he was appointed a member of the Board of State Chari- ties and for four years he was chairman, and his services were exceedingly valuable to the State. He has received the degree of LL.D. from St. Mary's College of Maryland, the oldest Catholic educational institution in the country.


LEVI EDWIN DUDLEY, son of John Gilman and Mary Clark (Townsend) Dudley, was born in North Troy, Vt., October 18, 1842, and was educated in the public schools. After some preparatory experience, he occupied for a time a position in a drug store in Boston, and at the beginning of the war entered the service and re- mained until hostilities had ceased. He became hospital steward in the regular


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army, and at one time was commissary steward of Lincoln Hospital in Washington. After the war he was a clerk in the internal revenue department, and in 1866 actively sustained President Johnson in his contest with Congress. He then became con- nected with the Great Republic newspaper in Washington and was earnest in his efforts to organize grand army associations. While engaged in the work of recon- struction in Virginia, and serving as military secretary of the governor, he was ad- mitted to the bar in Richmond, and afterwards, in 1869, to the Supreme Court of the United States. In 1872 he was appointed superintendent of Indian affairs for New Mexico, and afterwards a clerk in the Post-office Department. In 1877 he re- turned to Boston, where he has been for some years active as secretary of the Law and Order League. As a member of the bar resident in Boston, though perhaps not a member of the Suffolk bar, he is entitled to a place in this register.


SAMUEL JAMES ELDER, son of James and Deborah Dunbar (Keene) Elder, was born in Hope, R. I., January 4, 1850, and graduated at Yale in 1873. He studied law in Boston with George W. Morse and John H. Hardy, and was admitted to the Suffolk bar in June, 1875. He was a representative in 1885, is president of the Yale Alumni Association, and has acted in behalf of the International Copyright League before the United States Senate. He married Lilla, daughter of Cornelius W. and Margaret J. (Wyckoff) Thomas, at Hastings on the Hudson, May 10, 1876, and lives in Winchester.


WILLIAM CROWNINSHIELD ENDICOTT, son of William Putnam and Mary (Crownin- shield) Endicott, was born in Salem, November 26, 1826, and graduated at Harvard in 1847. He studied law at the Harvard Law School and in Salem in the office of Nathaniel J. Lord, and was admitted to the Essex bar in 1850. He began to prac- tice in Salem and in 1852 was a member of the Common Council and its president. In 1853 he associated himself in business with J. W. Perry, and from 1857 to 1864 was city solicitor of Salem. In 1870 he was the Democratic candidate for Congress, and in 1871-72-73 the Democratic candidate for attorney-general. In 1873 he was appointed judge of the Supreme Judicial Court to take the place of Horace Gray, who in that year succeeded Reuben Atwater Chapman as chief justice. In 1884 he was the Democratic candidate for governor, having resigned his seat on the bench in 1889, and in 1885 he was appointed by President Cleveland to a seat in his cabinet as sec- retary of war. In 1889, after leaving the cabinet, he resumed law practice and opened an office in Boston, still holding his residence in Salem. He married Ellen, daughter of George Peabody, of Salem, December 13, 1859.


MORTON DAVIS ANDREWS, son of Henry G. and Elizabeth Bliss (Davis) Andrews, was born in Plymouth, May 5, 1855, and was educated at the public schools and under private instruction. He studied law in Boston in the office of Elias Hasket Derby, and was admitted to the Suffolk bar in 1885. He married, October 7, 1885, Mary Davis, daughter of Timothy Davis and Frances (Judkins) Bond, and died while traveling for his health in Detroit, Mich., August 11, 1892.


WILLIAM WISNER DOHERTY, son of Ross and Sarah Doherty, was born in Boston, August 16, 1836, and was educated at the Boston Latin School and at Cumberland University, Tennesee. He studied law at the above university and in Boston in the office of C. T. & T. H. Russell, and was admitted to the Suffolk bar in April, 1859. He has been assistant district attorney for Suffolk county and is now United States


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marshal. He was senior counsel for Joseph Donato and David Mooney, two capi- tal cases tried in Boston. He married Catherine L. Chamberlain, nee Thompson, in Boston, August 17, 1880, and lives in Boston.


AvGustes HENRY FISKE, son of Isaac and Susan (Hobbs) Fiske, was born in Wes- ton, Mass., September 19, 1805. He fitted for college at the Framingham Academy and graduated at Harvard in 1825. He studied law at the Harvard Law School and was admitted to the Suffolk bar June 11, 1830. He was for a time associated with his father in Boston, and afterwards for many years with Benjamin Rand, the partnership being Fiske & Rand. Their business was largely office and collection business, but in 1844, when Charles Henry Warren resigned his seat on the bench of the Common Pleas Court, he removed from New Bedford to Boston, and became the court and jury partner of the firm. The first case tried by the new firm was that of the Commonwealth against Rev. Joy H. Fairchild, in which Judge Warren ap- peared for the defence and secured, by skillful management and a masterly argu- ment, an acquittal of the defendant. Mr. Fiske married Hannah Rogers, daughter of Captain Gamaliel and Elizabeth (Hickling) Bradford, of Boston, in Concord in May, 1830, and died in Boston, March 22, 1865.


CHARLES HENRY FISKE, son of the above, was born in Boston, October 26, 1840, and graduated at Harvard in 1860. He studied law in Boston in his father's office and was admitted to the Suffolk bar December 6, 1864. He was a representative in 1868, and 1872 from the representative district including the towns of Concord, Lincoln and Weston. He married Cornelia Frothingham, daughter of Rev. Dr. Chandler Robbins, of Boston, June 4, 1868, and has his residence in Weston, with an office in Boston.


ANDREW FISKE, brother of the above, was born in Weston, Mass., June 4, 1854, and graduated at Harvard in 1875. He graduated at the Harvard Law School in 1878, and after further study in Boston in the office of Ebenezer Rockwood Hoar was ad- mitted to the Suffolk bar February 11, 1880. He resides in Weston, with an office in Boston.


FREDERICK A. P. FISKE, son of Benjamin M. and Elizabeth A. Fiske, was born in Chelmsford, Mass., October 4, 1859, and graduated at Harvard in 1881. He studied law at the Harvard Law School, and in Boston at the office of Hardy, Elder & Proctor, and was admitted to the Suffolk bar January 20, 1885. He married Harriet Lydia Locke at Winchester, Mass., July 2, 1890, and has a residence in Somerville, with an office in Boston.


JEROME H. FISKE, Son of Moses and Susan (Hurd) Fiske, was born in Dover, N. H., April 7, 1844, and was educated at the public schools, and at the Chicopee, Mass., High School, under the direction of George D. Robinson afterwards governor of Massachusetts. He studied law in Salem in the office of George Wheatland, and was admitted at Salem to the Essex bar October 8, 1875. He was in the Boston Custom House six years under Thomas Russell, collector and city solicitor of Mal- den, where he resides from 1883 to 1887. He was married at Chicopee. In 1884 he delivered an oration on the Fourth of July.


JOHN FISKE, son of Edmund Brewster and Mary Fiske (Bound) Green, was born in Hartford, Conn., March 30, 1842. His original name was Edmund Fiske Green,


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but in 1855 he received the name of John Fiske after his mother's grandfather. He received his early education at the public schools, at Stamford, Conn., Academy and under private instruction, and graduated at Harvard in 1863. He graduated at the Harvard Law School in 1865, and was admitted to the Suffolk bar July 11, 1864. He began practice in Boston in 1865, but soon abandoned it for the study of and exposi- tion of history. He was a lecturer at Harvard on philosophy from 1869 to 1871, in- structor in history there in 1870, assistant librarian from 1872 to 1879, and overseer of Harvard from 1879 to 1891. In 1885 he was made professor of American history at Washington University, and is a member of various historical and antiquarian asso- ciations. His contributions to historical literature have been numerous and valuable, and his pen is still keeping the press busy with his publications. He married Abby Morgan Brooks, of Petersham, Mass., at Cambridge, September 6, 1864.


JAMES AUGUSTUS Fox, son of George Howe and Emily (Wyatt) Fox, was born in Boston, August 11, 1827. He was educated in the public schools, and studied law at the Harvard Law School, and in Boston in the office of John C. Park. He was ad- mitted to the Suffolk bar December 24, 1854, and continued his practice in Boston until 1861, when he entered the service as captain in the Thirteenth Massachusetts Regi- ment. In 1864 and 1865 he commanded the Ancient and Honorable Artillery Com- pany, and in 1867 and 1868 was a representative from Boston, and in 1870 and 1871 senator. He removed to Cambridge in 1872, and has served there as alderman two years and mayor four years. In 1890 he was the Republican candidate for Congress against Sherman Hoar, the Democratic candidate, who was chosen. He married Julia Elizabeth, daughter of Col. James and Julia (Sterry) Valentine, of Provi- dence, R. I.


JABEZ Fox, son of Henry Hodges and Sarah Ann (Burt) Fox, was born in Taunton, Mass., April 10, 1850, and graduated at Harvard in 1871. He graduated at the Harvard Law School in 1875, and, after further study in the office of Hillard, Hyde & Dickinson in Boston, was admitted to the Suffolk bar in February, 1876. He married Susan Elizabeth Thayer at Cambridge, in June, 1879, and resides in Cambridge, with an office in Boston.


JAMES W. Fox was born in Boston, August 15, 1849, and was educated at the pub- lic schools. He studied law in Boston in the office of Henry W. Paine, and was ad- mitted to the Suffolk bar March 17, 1874.


WILLIAM WESLEY FRENCH, Son of William B. and Mary Ann (Torrey) French, was born in Brockton, Mass., January 10, 1849, and graduated at Dartmouth in 1872. He studied law in Boston in the office of Knapp & Bowman, and was admitted to the Suffolk bar in August, 1874. He removed to Gloucester, where he was a member of the Common Council from 1819 to 1883 and mayor in 1888 and 1889. He married Lelia Fenno, daughter of Moses H. and Ellen N. (Low) Shaw at Gloucester, August 1, 1878.


ARTHUR PHILIP FRENCH, son of William R. and Marcia French, was born in Turner, Me., May 19, 1854, and fitting for college at the Brunswick High School, graduated at Tufts College in 1876. He was admitted to the bar in Bristol county at New Bed- ford June 24, 1878, but practices in Boston. He married Addie R. Jacobs, of Boston, October 30, 1884.


DANIEL, ANGELL GLEASON, son of John Fiske and Maria (Tourtellotte) Gleason, was born in Worcester, Mass., May 9, 1836, and graduated at Harvard in 1856. He


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studied law in Meadville, Penn., where he taught school, and was there admitted to the bar in 1859. Returning to Massachusetts he graduated at the Harvard Law School in 1860, and after further pursuing his studies in Boston in the office of Chandler & Shattuck, he was admitted to the Suffolk bar June 7, 1860, and began practice in Boston. In Medford, where he lives, he has been a member of the School Board, and water commissioner, and has held the State offices of tax commissioner, commissioner of corporations, and treasurer and receiver general. He has edited "Bouvier's Law Dictionary," " Bouvier's Institutes," an edition of " Phillips's Insur- ance," and assisted Emory Washburn in his work on "Easements." He married Annie Louisa, daughter of Richard and Mary A. (Henry) Hall in Roxbury, Jan- uary 7, 1863, and lives in Medford.


DANIEL WHEELWRIGHT GOOCH, son of John and Olive (Winn) Gooch, was born in Wells, Me., January 8, 1820, and graduated at Dartmouth in 1843. He studied law in South Berwick, Me., and in Boston, and was admitted to the Suffolk bar November 18, 1847. He practiced law in Boston with success, but was drawn either by am- bition or the force of circumstances into a public career. He was a representative in 1852, member of the Constitutional Convention in 1853, and a member of the 35th, 36th, 37th and 38th Congresses. He was chosen to the 39th Congress, but resigned to take the position of naval officer in the Boston Custom House. He resumed the practice of law after holding office a year, and was chosen a member of the 43d Con- gress. In 1875 he was appointed pension agent at Boston and held the office until 1886. He married Hannah H., daughter of John S. and Theodore L. Pope, of Wells, Me., and died November 1, 1891.


JESSE MORSE GOVE, son of Dana B. and Susan (Morse) Gove, was born in Weare, N. H., December 11, 1852. He was educated at the Lowell schools, and after study- ing law in Boston with his father, was admitted to the Suffolk bar in May, 1875, and has practiced in Boston. He was a member of the Common Council of Boston in 1881, a representative from 1883 to 1885, and has been a member of the Board of Aldermen. He was a delegate to the National Republican Conventions of 1884 and 1888. He married Agnes E., daughter of James and Jane Ballantyne at Lowell, August 17, 1882. He resides in Boston.


ROBERT GRANT, son of Patrick and Charlotte Bordman (Rice) Grant, was born in Boston, January 24, 1852, and graduated at Harvard in 1873. He graduated at the Harvard Law School in 1879, and was admitted to the Suffolk bar in that year. He has been chairman of the Boston Board of Water Commissioners since May, 1889, and a member since May, 1888. He delivered the poem before the Phi Beta Kappa Asocia- tion at Cambridge in June, 1883, and was the poet of the Latin School Alumni on the two hundred and fiftieth anniversary of that institution, April 23, 1885. In other ways he has devoted himself to literature and has published various volumes, in which as a writer of fiction he has excelled. He married Amy Gordon, daughter of Sir Alexander T. Galt and Amy Gordon (Torrance) Galt in Montreal, July 3, 1883. His residence is in Boston.


JOHN HENRY HARDY, son of John and Hannah (Farley) Hardy, was born in Hollis, N. H., February 2, 1847, and graduated at Dartmouth in 1870. He studied law at the Harvard Law School, and in Boston in the office of Robert M. Morse, jr., and was admitted to the Suffolk bar in January, 1872. He associated himself in business


John J. Hassam


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BIOGRAPHICAL REGISTER.


with George W. Morse, and afterwards with Samnel J. Elder and Thomas W. Proc- tor. On the 3d of June, 1885, he was appointed an associate judge of the Municipal Court of Boston, and is still on the bench. He served in the War of the Rebellion in the Fifteenth New Hampshire Regiment, being fifteen years of age at the time of his enlistment. He was a representative in 1883, then a resident in Arlington. He married Anna J. Conant, daughter of Levi and Anna (Whitney) (Mead) Conant in Littleton, August 30, 1871.


FRANK EPHRAIM HERBERT GARY, son of Ephraim and Sarah A. Gary, was born in Montpelier, Vt., October 8, 1858, and graduated at the Vermont Methodist Seminary in 1879. He studied law with Heath & Carleton in Montpelier, and was admitted to the Vermont bar in 1882. He afterwards graduated at the Boston University Law School in 1884 and began practice in Montpelier. In 1888 he removed to Boston, and was admitted to the Suffolk bar in 1889. He was acting assistant dean and an instructor in the Boston University Law School from 1888 to 1890. His residence is in Boston.


ROBERT HALLOWELL GARDINER, son of John W. Tudor and Annie Elizabeth Hays Gardiner, was born at Fort Tejon, Cal., September 9, 1855, and graduated at Harvard in 1876. He took the name of his grandfather " Gardiner." He studied law at the Harvard Law School, and in Boston in the offices of Charles P. Greenough & Shattuck, Holmes & Munroe, and was admitted to the Suffolk bar in 1880. He married Alice, daughter of Edward Bangs, of Boston, June 23, 1881, and lives at Newton.


JOHN EDWARD GALVIN, son of David and Mary A. (Dwyer) Galvin, was born in Bos- ton, November 8, 1857, and was educated at the English and Latin schools of that city. He studied law at the Harvard Law School, and was admitted to the bar of Middlesex county at Cambridge, October 6, 1879. His residence is in the Dorchester District of Boston.


CHARLES THEODORE GALLAGHER, son of William and Emily C. Gallagher, was born in Boston, May 21, 1851, and was educated at the Boston public schools and the Bos- ton University. He studied law at the Boston Law School and in the office of Ran- ney & Morse, and was admitted to the Suffolk bar November 29, 1875. He was a member of the State Senate from Boston in 1882, and has been twelve years a mem- ber of the Boston School Board, serving the last three years as its president. He en- listed in 1864 at the age of thirteen as a drummer boy in the First Unattached Regi- ment. He married Nellie W. Allen at Scituate, February 19, 1880, and resides in Boston.




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