USA > Massachusetts > Suffolk County > Professional and industrial history of Suffolk County, Massachusetts, Volume I > Part 42
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GUY CUNNINGHAM, son of Sylvester, was born in Gloucester, Mass., April 19, 1867, and graduated at Harvard in 1887. He attended the Harvard Law School and was admitted to the Suffolk bar January 20, 1891. His residence is at Gloucester.
FRANCIS P. CURRAN, son of Patrick and Ellen Curran, was born in Woburn, Mass., August 31, 1862, and was educated at the Woburn High School. He studied law at the Boston University Law School and was admitted to the bar of Middlesex county in July, 1885. He has been selectman, city solicitor, water commissioner, and chair- man of the Board of Assessors in Woburn, where he has his residence. He married Ida M. Gilman (Colby). He is editor of the Woburn City Press, with his law office in Boston.
NATHAN CURRIER, son of Albert and Hannah Currier, was born June 22, 1858, and was educated at the Goddard Seminary and at Tufts College, where he graduated in . 1883. He was admitted to the bar of York county, Me., January 8, 1880, and to the Suffolk bar in June, 1890. He married Clara May Smith in Enfield, N. H., July 14, 1886, and lives in the Roxbury District of Boston.
CHARLES H. CROSBY, son of Watson and Desire Crosby, was born in Brattleboro, Vt., and was educated at the Brattleboro Academy. He studied law with Luther Adams in Chester, Vt., and was admitted to the Vermont bar in Woodstock, Febru- ary 2, 1848, and to the Suffolk bar November 7, 1878. He is the author of "Letters from Abroad." He married Mary L. Hart, at Guilford, Vt., November 8, 1849, and lives in the Roxbury District of Boston.
J. PORTER CROSBY, son of Asa Stone and Eliza Barker (Snow) Crosby, was born in Boston, May 23, 1870, and was educated at the Boston public schools. He studied law at the Boston University Law School, and in the office of Arthur F. Means, and was admitted to the Suffolk bar August 4, 1891. He lives in Boston.
SIMON GREENLEAF CROSWELL, son of Andrew and Caroline Augusta (Greenleaf) Croswell, was born in Newton, Mass., August 3, 1854, and was educated at the Cam- bridge High School and at Harvard College, where he graduated in 1875. He stud- ied law at the Harvard Law School, and in Boston in the office of Albert Mason, and was admitted to the Suffolk bar in February, 1879. He is the author of " Croswell on Executors," and a " Collection of Patent Cases." He has also edited "Greenleaf on Evidence," "Washburn on Easements," and jointly with J. Willard, "Wash- burn on Real Property." He lives in Cambridge.
JAMES T. CUMMINGS, son of John and Mary R. Cummings, was born in Providence, R. I., July 20, 1865, and graduated at the College of the Holy Cross in Worcester. He studied law with John W. Cummings, and graduated at the Boston University Law School, being admitted to the Suffolk bar August 4, 1891.
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MICHAEL JOSEPH CANAVAN Was born in Somerville, Mass., and was educated at the Somerville High School and at Harvard, where he graduated in 1871. Immediately after leaving college he spent two years in Gottingen, Germany, and entering the Harvard Law School graduated in 1876. He was admitted to the Suffolk bar Febru- uary 12, 1877. He is a trustee of the Somerville Public Library and lives in that town.
IRA OSBORN CARTER, Son of Lewis and Sarah (Sawyer) Carter, was born in Berlin, Mass., November 18, 1832, and graduated at Paducah College, Kentucky, in 1853, and was afterwards for a time one of its professors. He studied law at the Harvard Law School and was admitted to the Suffolk bar March 11, 1864. He married March 6, 1860, Susan French, daughter of Walter and Roxana (Fletcher) Shattuck, of Groton, Mass., and died at Arlington, Mass., February 13, 1885.
WILLIAM E. CASSIDY Was born in Boston in 1856 and was educated at the Lawrence Grammar School in that city. He studied law at the Boston University Law School and was admitted to the Suffolk bar in 1882. He was commissioner of insolvency in 1884-85-86.
THOMAS HENDERSON CHANDLER was born in Boston, July 4, 1827, and fitting for college at the Boston Latin School, graduated at Harvard in 1848. He graduated at the Harvard Law School in 1853. He taught in the Latin School three years and a private school three years. In 1857 he began the study of dentistry, and has been for a number of years dean of the dental department of Harvard, and professor of mechanical dentistry. He is in the practice of dentistry in Boston.
SALMON CHASE was born in Cornish, N. H., in 1761, and graduated at Dartmouth in 1785. He studied law with Judge Sherburne, and his name is on the roll of ad- missions to the Suffolk bar by the Supreme Court before 1807. He practiced in Portland, and died in 1806.
EDWARD VERNON CHILDE, son of David Weld and Abigail (Dorr) Child, was born in Boston, March 13, 1804. His original name, Ebenezer Dorr Child, was changed by act of the Legislature February 8, 1823. He fitted for college at the Boston Latin School, and graduated at Harvard in 1823. He studied law in Boston in the office of Daniel Webster, and was admitted to the Suffolk bar by the Common Pleas Court in October, 1826, and by the Supreme Judicial Court in October, 1829. He soon aban- doned the law and became a resident of Paris, France, where he devoted himself to literary pursuits. He was the Paris correspondent of the London Times from Novem- ber 3, 1845, to June 7, 1856, and of the New York Courier and Enquirer from October 17, 1846, to December 4, 1856. His letters to both journals were published in a volume for private circulation. He married in 1831 Mildred, daughter of General Henry Lee, of Virginia, and died in Paris, January 23, 1861.
WALTER LENOIR CHURCH, son of Samuel S. and Julia (Lenoir) Church, was born in Lexington, Ky., October 17, 1849, and was educated at the Kentucky University, the Missouri University, and Washington University. He studied law in St. Louis, Mo., with Thomas A. Russell, and at the Washington University Law School. He was admitted to the bar in Missouri in 1872, in Colorado in 1880, in Kentucky in 1887, and in Massachusetts in 1890. He has devoted himself to literary pursuits, aside from his law practice, and has published essays, poems and stories. He married
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Sue Alexine Campbell in St. Louis, December 28, 1876, and lives in the Brighton District of Boston.
JOHN MAITLAND BREWER CHURCHILL, son of Asaph and Mary (Brewer) Churchill, was born in Dorchester, Mass., January 18, 1858, and was educated at the Boston Latin School and at Harvard, where he graduated in 1879. He studied law at the Harvard Law School and was admitted to the Suffolk bar in 1884. He is unmarried, and lives in Boston.
GEORGE KUHN CLARKE, son of Samuel Greeley and Martha (Kuhn) Clarke, was born in Cambridge. He graduated at the Boston University Law School in 1883, and became a member of the Suffolk bar. He married Ellen M., daughter of Harrison Dudley, of Cambridge.
ALBE CADY CLARK, son of Satchwell W. and Ruth (Folsom) Clark, was born in Franklin, N. H., August 31, 1826, and was educated at the Gilmanton Academy and at Phillips Exeter Academy. He studied law in Lowell in the office of John P. Robinson, and at the Harvard Law School, and was admitted to the Suffolk bar in October, 1852. He has been a member of the Dorchester School Board, and was a representative in 1873-74. He married at Lowell, October 1, 1855, Josephine Varney, and lives in the Dorchester district of Boston.
ALBERT E. CLARY, son of John and Sybel H. Clary, was born in Troy, Me., March 15, 1848, and was educated at the public schools and at Wilbraham Academy in Wil- braham, Mass. He graduated at the Boston University Law School in 1875 and was admitted to the Suffolk bar in the same year. While living in Troy he was town clerk and chairman of the School Board and is now special justice of the East Boston District Court, appointed in 1886. Prior to 1875 he taught school a number of years in Maine. He married at Saco, Me., April 14, 1881, Rosalia L. Dunn, and lives in East Boston.
ANDREW JACKSON CLOUGH, son of Winthrop and Susan (Bryant) Clough, was born in Montpelier, Vt., August 3, 1831. He studied law in New Ipswich with John Pres- ton and at the Harvard Law School, and was admitted to the Suffolk bar May 5, 1857. He practiced at Groton Junction and lived in Shirley, and was appointed trial justice September 28, 1858. He served in the war as captain of Company D, Fifty- third Massachusetts Regiment, and was discharged January 22, 1863. He married, March 6, 1860, Mary Jane, daughter of Lewis and Almira Woods (Hartwell) Blood, of Shirley, and died at Shirley, June 14, 1868.
MOSES GILL COBB, son of Elias Hull and Rebecca Buttrick (Gill) Cobb, was born in Princeton, Mass., November 24, 1820, and removed with his parents to Groton in 1834. He was educated at the Lawrence Academy in Groton and at Harvard, where he graduated in 1843. He graduated at the Harvard Law School in 1846, and was admitted to the Suffolk bar January 26 in that year. He was associated in prac- tice with James Dana in Charlestown, where he was a member of the Common Council in 1847 and 1848, and an alderman in 1853. In 1855 he removed to Dorchester and was a member of the Executive Council in 1856. He married, October 14, 1846, Sophia, daughter of Edmund and Sophia (Sewall) Munroe, of Boston, and is now in the practice of his profession in California.
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JOHN STOKER COBB, Son of John Saxelby and Harriett W. Cobb, was born in Eng- land, January 7, 1842, and was educated in the higher schools of England. He studied law at the Columbia College Law School in New York, and was admitted to to the New York bar in 1875, and to the Suffolk bar in 1884. His residence is in Boston.
AMORY ELIOT, son of William Prescott and Eleanor (Chapin) Eliot, was born May 26, 1856, and was educated at Phillips Exeter Academy and at Harvard, where he graduated in 1877. He studied law at the Harvard Law School and in Boston in the offices of M. & C. A. Williams and James C. Davis, and was admitted to the Suffolk bar in May, 1880. He married Mary Clark in Boston, December 2, 1881.
THOMAS JEFFERSON EMERY, son of Hiram and Margaret (Young) Emery, was born in Poland, Me., December 26, 1845, and graduated at Bowdoin College in 1868. He studied law in Boston in the office of D. C. Linscott and at the Boston University Law School, and was admitted to the Suffolk bar October 15, 1877. He was a member of the Boston Common Council in 1881-82-83, and of the Boston School Board in 1889- 90-91. He lives in Boston.
ABRAHAM EDWARDS, son of Abraham and Martha Edwards, was born in Boston, September 7, 1796, and was fitted for college under the care of Charles Folsom. He graduated at Harvard in 1819, and after studying law with Judge Fay was admitted to the bar in Middlesex county in September, 1822. He began to practice in Brigh- ton, now a part of Boston, and continued there until 1832, when he removed to Cam- bridge, of which city he was mayor in 1848. He married Anne, daughter of Josiah and Nancy Moore, and died in Cambridge, February 5, 1870.
CHARLES H. EDSON, son of Henry and Mary M. Edson, was born in East Bridge- water, Mass., September 3, 1848, and was educated at the East Bridgewater High School, and the Bridgewater Academy. He studied law at the Columbian Law School at Washington, D. C., and in East Bridgewater in the office of William H. Osborne, and was admitted to the bar in Washington in October, 1879, and to the Massachusetts bar in Plymouth in February, 1880. He married at East Bridgewater, December 24, 1879, Mary M., daughter of Benjamin Winslow Harris, and lives in Whitman, Mass., with his office in Boston.
GEORGE ALFRED PAUL CODWISE, son of George W. and L. C. Beatrice Codwise, was born in York, Penn., September 5, 1859, and was educated at Union College, Sche- nectady, N. Y. He studied law at the Boston University Law School, and in the office of George Z. Adams, and was admitted to the Suffolk bar in July, 1884. He married Annie M. Pope at Waltham, Mass., June 9, 1891, and lives at Wellesley Hills, near Boston.
JOHN W. CONVERSE, son of Nelson and Sally M. Converse, was born in Marlboro', N. 11., July 3, 1848, and was educated at the Marlboro' public schools, the academy at Newbury, Vt., the academy at Westbrook, Me., and the academy at New Ipswich, N. H. He studied law in Keene, N. H., with Wheeler & Faulkner, and in Spring- field, Mass., with Soule & Lathrop, and was admitted to the bar October 29, 1872. He has been an alderman in Somerville, where he has his residence. He married at Laconia, N. H., Mrs. Georgiana E. Huckins, March 3, 1880.
MICHAEL B. COOGAN was born in New Bedford, March 21, 1858, and was educated at the public schools in Providence, R. I., and at the Phillips Grammar School in
Edward
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Boston. He studied law in Boston in the offices of Joseph Bennett and Owen A. Galvin, and was admitted to the Suffolk bar July 10, 1883. He was a clerk in the office of the United States marshal under Nathaniel P. Banks and Henry B. Lover- ing, and also special operative of the United States secret service of the Treasury De- partment in 1888 and 1889, but is now in active practice. He married, November 29, 1883, in Boston, Mary E. Connell, and has his residence in Cambridgeport.
HORACE HOPKINS COOLIDGE, son of Amos and Louisa (Hopkins) Coolidge, was born in Boston, February 11, 1832, and was educated at the Boston Latin School and at Harvard, where he graduated in 1852. He graduated at the Harvard Law School in 1856, and after further study in Boston in the office of Brooks & Ball was admitted to the Suffolk bar in June, 1857. He has been commissioner of insolvency and master in chancery, was a member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives in 1865- 66-67, and a member of the Senate in 1869-70-71-72, serving the last three years as its president. He married in Boston, October 27, 1857, Eunice Maria Weeks, and has his residence in Boston.
WILLIAM HENRY COOLIDGE, son of William Leander and Sarah Isabella (Washburn) Coolidge, was born in Natick, Mass., February 23, 1859, and graduated at Harvard in 1881. He studied law at the Harvard Law School and in Boston in the office of Hyde, Dickinson & Howe, and was admitted to the Suffolk bar in January, 1885. Heis assistant attorney of the Boston and Lowell and Boston and Maine Railroads, and lives at Newton, with an office in Boston occupied by the firm of Strout & Coolidge, of which he is a member. He married May Humphreys, of St. Louis, October 3, 1887, at Bergen Point, N. J.
JOHN COLBY COOMBS, son of Josiah C. and Abigail E. Coombs, was born in Bow- doinham, Me., March 9, 1845, and graduated at Bowdoin College in 1869. He studied law at the Harvard Law School and in Boston in the office of Jewell, Gaston & Field, and was admitted to the Suffolk bar June 8, 1872. He lives in Boston.
CLARENCE H. COOPER, son of Elias H. and Ruth E. Cooper, was born in New Haven, Conn., March 18, 1853, and was educated at the common and high schools of that city. He studied law at the Harvard Law School and in Boston with John Lathrop, and was admitted to the Suffolk bar February 18, 1878. He is at present assistant clerk of the Supreme Judicial Court for Suffolk county, and lives in Boston.
FRANK M. COPELAND, son of Almon and Elizabeth A. Copeland, was born in Mans- field, Mass., April 19, 1854, and was educated at Marietta College, Marietta, O. He studied law at the Boston University Law School and in Boston in the office of Ely & Gates, and was admitted to the Suffolk bar in 1883. He lives in Newton.
WILLIAM A. COPELAND, son of Almon and Elizabeth A. Copeland, was born in Mans- field, Mass., October 23, 1855, and graduated at Amherst College in 1877. He studied law at the Boston University Law School and in Boston in the offices of Richard H. Dana and of J. E. Maynadier, and was admitted to the bar of Bristol county in 1880. He has held many town offices in Mansfield, where he has his residence, and was a member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives from the First Bristol Dis- trict in 1883.
JOSEPH J. CORBETT, son of James and Hannah Corbett, was born in Charlestown, Mass., December 24, 1863, and was educated at the Charlestown High School. He
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graduated at the Boston University Law School in 1885, and in December of that year was admitted to the Suffolk bar. His residence is in the Charlestown District of Boston.
JOSIAH PARSONS COOKE, son of Noah and Mary Rockwood Cooke, was born in New Ipswich, N. H., February 15, 1787. He was descended from Major Aaron Cooke, who probably came from Earls Colne in Essex county, England, with the first set- tlers of Dorchester, Mass., in 1630. The ancestor Aaron removed to Windsor, Conn., and in 1661 settled in Northampton, where he died in 1690. His son Aaron lived in Hadley, and there Noah Cooke, the fourth in descent from him, was born. Noah Cooke graduated at Harvard in 1769 and served as chaplain in the Revolutionary War. He practiced law in New Ipswich, and married Mary Rockwood, of Winchester, N. H. The subject of this sketch, at four years of age, in 1791 removed with his parents to Keene, N. H., where he attended the public schools and the Chesterfield Academy, and entering Dartmouth College graduated in 1807. He studied law with his father in Keene and was admitted to the Common Pleas bar of Suffolk county in 1810 and to the Supreme Judicial bar in 1813. He began practice in an office in the old State House in State street, Boston, and from the tower of that building saw the battle between the Chesapeake and Shannon. Mr. Cooke at his death was the oldest member of the Suffolk bar and had held a commission of justice of the peace and of the quorum sixty-four years, his first commission having been signed by Gov- ernor Strong in 1816 and his last by Governor Rice in 1878. It has been said by one who knew him well and revered his memory, "that he had so long outlived his gen- eration that he was not known to many of the recent active members of his profes- sion ; but the records of the courts and the fruits of his industry furnish abundant evidence that during his active life few legal advisers were more trusted than this quiet and unostentatious attorney." Mr. Cooke was the confidential counsellor and friend of the saintly Bishop Cheverus, who from his subsequent great elevation wrote to his Boston lawyer: "The little Bishop of Boston enjoyed more real peace and happiness than the Cardinal Archbishop of Bordeaux and Peer of France." Mr. Cooke married in 1826, Mary, daughter of John Pratt, a Boston merchant, who died five years after marriage at Santa Cruz. Josiah Parsons Cooke, Erving professor of chemistry and mineralogy in Harvard College, is his son, and his only daughter married Professor H. B. Nash of the same institution. Mr. Cooke died in Boston, February 29, 1880, at the age of ninety-three years.
JOHN SPAULDING, son of John and Eleanor (Bennett) Spaulding, was born in Town- send, Mass., August 8, 1817. He is descended from Edward Spaulding, who came to New England about 1630, and settled in Braintree, Mass., and his father, John Spaulding, the father of the subject of this sketch, was the sixth in descent from the ancestor. He was educated in the public schoo s of Townsend, and at Phillips Acad- emy, and entered Vale College in 1842. At various times before entering college he was employed on his father's farm and in teaching school, all the while gaining all the knowledge he could from observation and study preparatory to the career he had marked out for himself. He was obliged on account of ill health to leave college in his senior year, but though failing to graduate with his class, he received at a later period the degree of Master of Arts. In 1850 he graduated at the Harvard Law School, and after further pursuing his law studies in Groton, in the office of George
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Frederick Farley, was admitted to the bar in 1851. He began practice in Groton and after remaining there, in the central village and at Groton Junction, about twenty years, removed to Boston, where he has continued in business to the present time. At the time of the establishment of the First Northern Middlesex District Court he was appointed special justice, and still holds that office. He married Charlotte A., daughter of Alpheus Bigelow, of Weston, who died June 24, 1889. He lives in the Roxbury District of Boston.
GEORGE FRANCIS RICHARDSON, son of Daniel and Hannah (Adams) Richardson, was born in Tyngsboro, Mass., December 6, 1829. He was educated at Phillips Exeter Academy and at Harvard, where he graduated in 1850. He graduated at the Har- vard Law School in 1853 and was admitted to the Suffolk bar July 25 of that year. After practicing in Boston a few years he became in 1858 a partner of his brother, Daniel S. Richardson, in Lowell, as the successor of his brother, William A. Rich- ardson, who had been appointed judge of probate and insolvency for Middlesex county. In 1862 and 1863 he was a member of the Common Council of Lowell, and president of the Board. In 1864 he was alderman, and in 1867 and 1868 was mayor of the city. In 1871 and 1872 he was a member of the Massachusetts Senate. He has also been a member of the School Board, trustee of the City Library, presi- dent of the Middlesex Mechanic Association, director of the Prescott National Bank, president of the Lowell Manufacturing Company, and either trustee, director, or president of other institutions.
CHARLES RUSSELL TRAIN, son of Rev. Charles and Hepsibah (Harrington) Train, was born in Framingham, Mass., October 18, 1817. He was educated at the Fra- mingham public schools, the Framingham Academy, and at Brown University, where he graduated in 1831. He read law in Cambridge and was admitted to the Suffolk bar in July, 1841. He settled in Framingham, and was a representative in 1847 and member of the Constitutional Convention in 1853. He was district attorney from 1848 to 1855, a member of the Executive Council in 1857-58, and member of Congress from 1859 to 1863. Not long after his retirement from Congress he removed to Bos- ton and in 1871 was a representative from that city, and held by election the office of attorney-general of the Commonwealth from 1872 to 189. He published in 1855, jointly with Franklin F. Head, "Precedents of Indictments, Special Pleas, etc., Adapted to American Practice." He died at North Conway, N. H., July 29, 1885. He was a volunteer aide on the staff of his friend, General George H. Gordon, and took part in the battle of Antietam. He was an excellent lawyer, a man of fine social qualities, and was universally beloved.
WILLIAM WETMORE STORY, son of Judge Joseph Story, was born in Salem, Mass., February 12, 1819, and graduated at Harvard in 1838. He graduated at the Harvard Law School in 1840, and was admitted to the Suffolk bar in July, 1841. He soon abandoned the law for the profession of sculpture, in which he has become dis- tinguished. Among his best works are the bust of his father and the statues of Ed- ward Everett and Chief Justice Marshall, one in the Boston Public Garden and the other in Washington at the west front of the Capitol. He is now in Italy.
DANIEL SAMUEL RICHARDSON, son of Daniel and Hannah (Adams) Richardson, was descended from Ezekiel Richardson, who came to Massachusetts with Winthrop in 1630. Daniel, the father of the subject of this sketch, was a lawyer in Tyngsboro,
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Mass., who at various times was senator and representative, and had three children, Daniel Samuel, the oldest, William Adams, late secretary of the treasury, and now chief justice of the United States Court of Claims, and George Francis, already mentioned in this register. Daniel Samuel fitted for college at the Derry Academy, New Hampshire, and graduated at Harvard in 1836. He graduated at Harvard Law School in 1839 and was admitted to the Suffolk bar July 9 of that year. He set- tled in Lowell, and it is said that during his long practice he argued more than three hundred cases, which are included in the Massachusetts Reports. In 1842-43-47 he was a representative, and in 1862 a Senator. In 1845 and 1846 he was a member and president of the Lowell Common Council, and in 1848 a member of the Board of Aldermen, and an officer of corporations and other institutions too numerous to mention. He died in Lowell, March 21, 1890.
JOEL GILES was born in Townsend, Mass., in 1804, and graduated at Harvard in 1829, and was for a time after graduating a tutor in the college. He was admitted to the Suffolk bar in April, 1837. He delivered the Fourth of July oration in Boston in 1848, was a representative and senator, and a member of the Constitutional Convent- tion in 1853. He died in Boston in 1882.
JOHN GILES, brother of the above, was born in Townsend in 1806, and graduated at Harvard in 1831. He read law with Parsons & Stearns in Boston, and died in June, 1838.
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