USA > Massachusetts > Suffolk County > Professional and industrial history of Suffolk County, Massachusetts, Volume I > Part 49
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JO1IN B. GOODRICHI, son of John and Mary Ann (Blake) Goodrich, was born in Fitchburg, Mass., January 7, 1836, and graduated at Dartmouth in 1857. He studied law with Norcross & Snow of Fitchburg, and was admitted to the Worcester bar at Worcester in February, 1859. He represented Newton, where he lives, in the Legis- latures of 1860 and 1861, and was district attorney for Middlesex county from 1872 to
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1875. He was the senior counsel of Sarah J. Robinson, convicted of murder in Somerville in 1886. He married at Newton, April 25, 1865, Anna L. Woodward, of that city.
AHLIN CROCKER SPOONER, son of Nathaniel and Lucy (Willard) Spooner, was born in Plymouth, Mass., March 9, 1814, and graduated at Harvard in 1835. He was ad- mitted to the Suffolk bar September 3, 1839. He married in 1840, Susan Leach, daughter of John and Anna (Burgess) Harlow, of Plymouth, and died in Boston June 28, 1853.
EVELYN BONN GOODSELL was born under the British flag at sea, between Ham- burg and England, his father being of Roman descent and his mother a German. Ile came to America at the age of twelve to live with Renfield B. Goodsell, then pub- lisher and proprietor of the Boston Saturday Evening Gasette, who subsequently adopted him and gave him his family name. He was educated at the English High and Latin Schools in Boston, at the Adams Academy in Quincy, under private instruc- tion and in Europe. He studied law at the Harvard Law School and the Boston University Law School, and in the offices of Ambrose A. Ranney and J. B. Richard- son in Boston, and was admitted to the Suffolk bar in 1879. He was the first petitioner to the Legislature for a change in the law relating to employers' liabilities, which re- sulted in the statute of 1887, was of counsel for the plaintiff in the action of Page Richardson against the Fall River, Warren and Providence Railroad, involving a liabil- ity of more than $20,000, and which on its decision for the plaintiff, after twenty years' litigation, resulted in five other suits. He was sole counsel for the plaintiff in the suit of Collamore against Collamore, involving a question of title under a will in which as much as $200,000 was at stake. He is unmarried and lives in Boston.
JOHN MARK GOURGAS, son of John Mark and Margaret (Sampson) Gourgas, was born in Milton, Mass., March 25, 1804, and graduatad at Harvard in 1824. He studied law with Lemuel Shaw and was admitted to the Suffolk bar in July, 1828. He settled in Quincy, Mass., and died in Roxbury unmarried, June 28, 1862.
JOHN CHIPMAN GRAY, son of Horace and Sarah Russell (Gardner) Gray, was born in Brighton, Mass., July 14, 1839, and graduated at Harvard in 1859. He studied law at the Harvard Law School and was admitted to the Suffolk bar September 18, 1862. He married Anna S. L. Mason, and lives in Boston.
J. CONVERSE GRAY, son of Joseph H. and Maria L. D. Gray, was born in Boston June 3, 1855, and was educated at the Chauncy Hall School, Noble's School, and at Amherst College, where he graduated in 1877. He studied law at the Boston Univer- sity and in the office of Hyde, Dickinson & Howe, and was admitted to the Suffolk bar November 21, 1881. He married in Rochester, N. Y., October 22, 1885, Helen Hart Brewster, and lives in Boston.
MORRIS GRAY, Son of Dr. Francis HI. and H. Regina Gray, was born in Boston, March 7, 1856, and graduated at Harvard in 1877. He studied law at the Harvard Law School and in the office of Bryant & Sweetser, of Boston, and was admitted to the Suffolk bar in 1880. He is the author of a treatise on the law of communication by telegraph. He married at Nahant, Mass., in September, 1883, Flora, daughter of Patrick Grant. His home is in Boston.
ORIN T. GRAY, son of Robert D. and Lurana D. Gray, was born in Norridgewock, Me., June 2, 1839, and was educated at Maine academies and under private instruc-
DAMason
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tion. He studied law at Waterville, Me., with J. H. Drummond, and was admitted to the bar in Augusta, Me., in 1860, and to the Suffolk bar in 1863. He has been chairman of the School Board of Hyde Park where he has his residence. He married Louise B. Holmes at Waterville, Me., in 1860.
EUGENE FULLER, son of Timothy and Margaret (Crane) Fuller, was born in Cam- bridge May 14, 1815, and graduated at Harvard in 1834. He studied law with George F. Farley in Groton, to which place his father had moved in 1833, and was admitted to the Middlesex bar in June, 1839. He practiced two years in Charlestown, now Boston, and then went to New Orleans. He married, May 31, 1845, at New Orleans, Mrs. Anna Eliza Rotta, and was drowned on the passage to New York from New Orleans, January 21, 1859.
ARTHUR E. GAGE, son of Arthur A. and Mary F. Gage, was born in Stratham, N. H., December 2, 1858, and graduated at Brown University. He studied law with Ropes, Gray & Loring in Boston, and was admitted to the Suffolk bar August 2, 1887. He married Marilla M. Sanborn in Tilton, N. H., December 8, 1883, and lives in Woburn.
GEORGE LUNT was born in Newburyport, December 31, 1803, and graduated at Harvard in 1824. He was admitted to the Essex county bar in 1833, having pre- viously held the position of principal in the Newburyport High School. He practiced law in his native town until 1848, when he moved both his residence and business to Boston. From 1849 to 1853 he was United States attorney for Massachusetts, and at a later period he was the editor of the Boston Courier. He published a book of poems in 1839, another in 1843, and at various later times occasional poems of much merit. He died May 17, 1885, in Boston, where in the latter part of his life he spent his winters, residing in summer at Scituate, Mass.
NATHAN MATTHEWS, jr., son of Nathan, born in Boston, March 28, 1854, was edu- cated at public and private schools and at Harvard, where he graduated with mathe- matical honors in 1875. After leaving college he spent two years in Leipsic studying political economy and jurisprudence, and on his return entered the Harvard Law School, and was admitted to the Suffolk bar in November, 1880. He associated him- self in business with Charles M. Barnes, devoting himself chiefly to equity cases, and acting for a time as law editor of the American Architect. In 1888 he was a dele- gate to the national convention of Democratic clubs held in Baltimore, and the same year was a presidential elector on the Democratic ticket. He presided at the Demo- cratic State Convention in 1889, was chairman of the Executive Committee of the Democratic State Committee in 1890, and was chosen mayor of Boston in December of 1890, 1891 and 1892. He married in 1884 Ellen B., daughter of Colonel Manlius Sargent.
EDWIN GUTHRIE MCINNES, son of John and Elizabeth Jane (Morrow) McInnes, was born in Washington, Penn., July 14, 1862, and was educated at the Roxbury Latin School and at Harvard, where he graduated in 1883. He attended the Harvard Law School, also studying in the offices of Charles S. Lincoln and Samuel N. Aldrich, and was admitted to the Suffolk county bar in 1886. He married Mabel Hook Folsom in Boston, June 5, 1888, and lives in Boston.
RICHARD J. MCKELLEGET, son of Patrick and Hannah (O'Connell) McKelleget, was born in Cambridge, Mass., April 10, 1853, and was educated in the Cambridge schools.
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HISTORY OF THE BENCH AND BAR.
He studied law at the Harvard Law School and in the office of Charles J. MeIntire, and was admitted to the Middlesex bar in Cambridge June 26, 1877. He was a mem- ber of the School Board in Cambridge, where he lived in 1888-89-90. He was a part- ner of Isaac S. Morse from 1877 to 1881. He married in Brooklyn, N. Y., April 20, 1881, Emma L. Hanlon.
Jours D. Me LAUGHLIN, was born in Boston, December 3, 1864, and graduated at Georgetown College in 1883. He studied law at the Boston University, and was ad- mitted to the Suffolk bar in 1886.
HENRY SLADE MILTON, son of George Bruce and Lucy Kidder (Slade) Milton, was born in Boston, September 28, 1855, and was educated at the Boston Latin School and at Harvard, where he graduated in 1875. He studied law at the Boston Uni- versity and in the office of Proctor, Warren & Brigham, and was admitted to the Suf- folk bar October 31, 1836. He has been a member of the School Board of Waltham, where he resides, was a representative in 1889-90, and has been a special justice of the Second Eastern Middlesex Court since its establishment. He married in Wes- ton, Mass., November 7, 1877, Lilias Constance Haynes.
WILLIAM MINOT, jr., son of William and Katharine (Sedgwick) Minot, was born in West Roxbury, Mass., now a part of Boston, May 7, 1849. He graduated at the Har- vard Law School in 1869, and after further study with Minot & Balch was admitted to the Suffolk bar May 9, 1870. He has been a member of the Boston Common Coun- cil, and is the author of "Taxation in Massachusetts," 1877, "Local Taxation and Municipal Extravagance" and other treatises. He married Elizabeth Veredenburgh Van Pelt at Trumansburg, N. Y., June 24, 1882, and lives in Boston.
WILLIAM INGALLS MONROE, son of George Harris and Alice Maria (Ingalls) Monroe, was born in Boston, August 1, 1854, and graduated at Harvard in 1879. He studied in the office of Jewell, Gaston & Field in Boston, of Josiah W. Hubbard, of Boston, of Josiah H. Benton, jr., of Boston, and at the Boston University Law School, and was admitted to the Suffolk bar in 1882. He lives in the Roxbury District of Boston.
GEORGE BARRELL MOODY, son of Joseph and Maria (Barrell) Moody, was born in Kennebunk, Me., July 17, 1802, and graduated at Harvard in 1821. He studied law in Boston with James Sullivan, and after his admission to the bar, practiced in Kennebunk, Gardiner, Brewer, Oldtown, and Bangor. He married Mary, daughter of John Barker, of Bangor, and died in Bangor, July 6, 1856.
EUGENE H. MOORE, son of Hobart and Ellen R. Moore, was born in Boston, Feb- ruary 17, 1864, and was educated at the public schools. He studied law at the Boston University and in the office of Solomon A. Bolster, and was admitted to the Suffolk bar, July 21, 1885. He lives unmarried in Boston.
GEORGE W. MOORE, whose name appears on the roll of lawyers in Boston for 1892, is engaged in newspaper work. He was admitted to the bar in Nebraska.
HOWARD DUDLEY MOORE was born at Moore's Mills, in New Brunswick, November 21, 1854, and was educated at the High School in Lewiston, Me. He studied law at the Boston University and was admitted to the Suffolk bar in August, 1887. He married Maud E. Roberts at Worcester, May 27, 1891, and has his home in Somer- ville.
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MICHAEL J. MOORE was born in South Boston, May 20, 1864, and was educated at the public schools. He studied law at the Boston University and was admitted to the Suffolk bar in 1888.
CHARLES CARROLL MORGAN, son of Charles and Sarah Ann (Robinson) Morgan, was born in Meredith Bridge, now a part of Laconia, N. H., July 25, 1832, and was edu- cated at the public schools, at Guilford Academy, N. H., and at Brown University. He studied law in Nashua, N. H., Saco, Me., New York city, and Indianapolis, Ind., and was admitted to the bar in Marion county, Ind., February 17, 1880, and to the Suffolk bar in 1885. He has been the editor of revised editions of Colton & Fitch's Introductory Geography and Modern School Geography; editor of Lloyd's Battle History of the Rebellion; editor and author of revised and enlarged editions of Fitch's Physical Geography and Descriptive List, of Colton's Parlor and Library Atlas; author of American School Geography, and of various other works. He married, at Toledo, O., October 12, 1859, Marianna Robinson Gove, and has his home in Nashua, N. H., with an office in Boston.
WILLIAM MOIR MORGAN, son of Edwin and Harriet (Tyler) Morgan, was born in Griswold, Conn., May 13, 1862, and was educated at the Milford High School, Mass. He studied law at the Boston University, and with Frederick D. Ely and Charles G. Keyes in Boston, and was admitted to the Suffolk bar February 2, 1887. He lives in Waltham, with an office in Boston.
JOHN HOLMES MORISON, son of Nathaniel H. and Sidney (Brown) Morison, was born in Baltimore, Md., January 21, 1856, and graduated at Harvard in 1878. He studied law at the Harvard Law School and with George Hawkins Williams, of Baltimore, and was admitted to the Baltimore bar in 1881 and to the Suffolk bar in 1885. He married Emily Marshall, daughter of Samuel Eliot, of Boston, where he has his home.
ALBERT GORDON MORSE, son of Albert and Ellen R. (Webster) Morse, was born in Boston, August 29, 1855, and was educated at the Dorchester High School and Rox- bury Latin School. He studied law at the Boston University and in the office of Robert M. Morse, of Boston, and was admitted to the Suffolk bar in November, 1880. He lives in the Dorchester District of Boston.
ISAAC S. MORSE, son of Rev. Bryant and Susannah (Stevens) Morse, was born in . Haverhill, N. H., December 27, 1817, and was educated at the public schools, re- ceiving an honorary degree of A.M. from Dartmouth College in 1857. He studied law with Elisha Fuller in Lowell, and at the Harvard Law School, and was admitted to the Middlesex bar at Lowell, September 25, 1840. He was seventeen years district attorney in Middlesex county, his term expiring in 1871, when he declined further service. In 1849, while residing in Lowell, he was a member of the City Council, and for a time was city solicitor. He married, at Lowell, September 25, 1844, Eloise La Barte, of Groton, daughter of John J. and Mary La Barte, of South Carolina. He now resides in Cambridge, with an office in Boston.
ELLIS LORING MOTTE, son of Mellish Irving and Marianne (Alger) Motte, was born in Boston June 30, 1836, and graduated at Harvard in 1859. He studied law in the office of Ellis Gray Loring and at the Harvard Law School, and was admitted to the Suffolk bar December 9, 1862. He married, January 20, 1863, Annie L. Lobdell, and lives in Boston.
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OSCAR BROWNELL MOWRY, son of Warren B. and Hannah A. (Brownell) Mowry was born in Woonsocket. R. I,, and graduated at Brown University in 1863. He studied law at Harvard Law School and in Boston in the office of C. T. & T. H. Russell, and was admitted to the Suffolk bar March 17, 1866. He has served three years in the Boston Common Council. He married Georgianna J. Goodwin at Boston in 1879, and has his home in Brookline, Mass.
HENRY COOLIDGE MULLIGAN, son of Simon and Almaria (Coolidge) Mulligan, was born in Natick, Mass., March 6, 1854, and was educated at Adams Academy, Quincy, and at Harvard, where he graduated in 1879. He studied law at the Harvard Law School and was admitted to the Suffolk bar Jannary 14, 1883. He married at Wor- cester December 22, 1886, Minna Rawson, and has his home in Natick.
WILLIAM ADAMS MUNROE, son of William Watson and Hannah Foster (Adams) Mun- roe, was born in Cambridge November 9, 1843, and graduated at Harvard in 1864. He studied law at the Harvard Law School and in Boston in the office of Chandler, Shat- tuck & Thayer, and was admitted to the Suffolk bar July 25, 1868. He began to practice in 1869, and in 1870 became associated as partner with Shattuck & Holmes. He was several years a member of the School Committee of Cambridge, where he resides, was one of the commissioners to revise the Cambridge charter in 1890, presi- dent of the Boston Baptist Social Union in 1882, and president of the Cambridge Club in 1890. He married, November 22, 1871, at Plymouth, Mass., Sarah D. Whitney, a native of Salem.
THOMAS RUSSELL, son of Thomas and Mary Ann (Goodwin) Russell, was born in Plymouth, Mass., September 26, 1825, and graduated at Harvard in 1845. He studied law in Boston with Whiting & Russell, and was admitted to the Suffolk bar Novem- ber 12, 1849. He was appointed justice of the Police Court of Boston February 26, 1852, and on the establishment of the Superior Court in 1859, was appointed one of its judges. He sat on the bench until his resignation in 1867, and after the accession of General Grant to the presidency, was appointed collector of the port of Boston. While collector he was one of the trustees of the Massachusetts Nautical School by appointment from the governor. During General Grant's second term as president he resigned the collectorship and was appointed minister to Venezuela, where he re- mained until the domestic troubles of that country caused his return. In 1879 he was chosen president of the Pilgrim Society, and continued such until his death. He married Nellie, daughter of Rev. Edward T. Taylor, many years the preacher at the Seamen's Bethel in Boston, and died in Boston, February 9, 1887.
JOHN W. MASON, son of Judge Albert and Lydia F. (Whiting) Mason, was born in Plymouth August 18, 1861, and was educated at the schools of Plymouth and Brook- line. He studied law with his father and was admitted to the Suffolk bar in 1885.
CHARLES HENRY DREW, son of Abijah and Sally (Faunce) Drew, was born in Plym- outh, Mass., November 4, 1838, and was educated at the Plymouth schools. He studied law in Plymouth and was admitted to the Plymonth bar in 1860. In August, 1861, he was commissioned as first lieutenant in Company H, Eighteenth Massachusetts Regiment for three years' service. At the battle of Fredericksburg he was severely wounded. When the Thirty-eighth Massachusetts Regiment was recruited in July, 1862, he was designated as captain of Company D, then first lieutenant in Company H, Eighteenth Regiment, but the War Department refused to muster him out to enable
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him to receive his commission. He was, however, afterwards promoted to a captaincy in his own regiment. After the war he settled in Boston, where he has continued to the present time with a constantly increasing practice. He lives in Brookline, where he is the justice of the Brookline Police Court. He married Mary A., daugh- ter of Samuel Bradford, of Plymouth.
CHARLES TRACY MURDOCH, son of John, was born in Havana, January 5, 1804, and graduated at Harvard in 1828. He was admitted to the Suffolk bar in October, 1832, and practiced there. He died in Cambridge, November 25, 1853.
JAMES J. MYERS, son of Robert and Sabra (Stevens) Myers, was born in Frewsburg, N. Y., November 20, 1842, and graduated at Harvard in 1869. Ile studied law at the Harvard Law School and was admitted to the Suffolk bar in 1873. He lives, unmarrried, in Cambridge.
BRADLEY WEBSTER PALMER, son of Henry Wilbur and Ellen (Webster) Palmer, was · born in Wilkes-Barre, Penn., June 28, 1866, and was educated at Phillips Exeter Academy and at Harvard, where he graduated in 1888. He studied law at the Har- vard Law School and was admitted to the bar at Wilkes-Barre in March, 1890, and to the Suffolk bar in July, 1892. He lives, unmarried, in Boston.
GRANT M. PALMER, son of Calvin G. and Elizabeth H. Palmer, was born in Repub- lic, O., September 21, 1861, and was educated at the High School in Lynn, Mass. He studied law at the Boston University and in the office of W. H. Anderson in Lowell, and was admitted to the Suffolk bar in 1885. He married, October 29, 1891, Marion K. Breed, of Lynn, and has his home in Weston, Mass.
BOWDOIN STRONG PARKER, son of Alonzo and Caroline G. Parker, was born in Con- way, Mass., August 10, 1841, and was educated at the common schools, the Green- field High School, and at Boston University. He studied law in Greenfield with Wendell Thornton Davis and in Boston with Thomas William Clarke, and gradu- ated at the Boston University Law School. He was admitted to the Suffolk bar December 20, 1875. He served during the war in the Fifty-second Regiment of Massachusetts Volunteers, was representative in 1891, and has been three years a member of the Boston Common Council. He married in New York city, June 25, 1867, Kate H. Eager, and lives in Boston.
WILLIAM ELLISON PARMENTER, son of William and Mary (Parker) Parmenter, was born in Boston, March 12, 1816, and was educated at Framingham Academy, at the Angier School in Medford, and at Harvard, where he graduated in 1836. He studied law. with John Mills, United States district attorney at Boston, and at the Harvard Law School, and was admitted to the Suffolk bar April 1, 1842. IIe has lived in Arlington many years, and has been a member of the School Board in that town nearly a quarter of a century. He was appointed special justice of the Municipal Court of the city of Boston in March, 1871, associate justice December 12, 1871, and chief justice January 24, 1883, which position he still holds. He married Helen James at South Scituate, now Norwell, June 30, 1853.
JAMES PARKER PARMENTER, son of William Ellison and Helen (James) Parmenter, was born in West Cambridge, now Arlington, Mass., November 29, 1859, and grad- uated at Harvard in 1881. He studied law at the Harvard Law School and was ad- mitted to the Suffolk bar January 20, 1885. He lives in Arlington.
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HISTORY OF THE BENCH AND BAR.
FRANK PARSONS, Son of Edward P. and Alice B. (Rhees) Parsons, was born in Mount Holly, N. J., November 14, 1855, and was educated at Aaron's Academy at Mount Holly, and at Cornell University. He studied law in Southbridge, Mass., with A. J. Bartholomew and at Worcester with F. P. Goulding, and was admitted to the bar at Worcester in 1881. He has rewritten "Morse on Banks and Banking," edited enlarged editions of "May on Insurance," "Perry on Trusts," and " Black- well on Tax Titles." He has now in press " Herbert Spencer and Nationalism," and "Our Country's Need, or the Development of a Scientific Industrial System." He is also a lecturer in Boston University on insurance law. He is also the author of " The World's Best Books, or a Key to the Treasures of the Great Literatures." He lives, unmarried, in Boston.
JOSEPH NICHOLAS PASTENE, son of Louis and Clara Catherine (Moltedo) Pastene, was born in Boston, October 3, 1863, and was educated at public schools and under private instruction of Professor J. B. Torricelli. He studied law at the Boston Uni- versity, graduating in 1888, and was admitted to the Suffolk bar July 17, 1888. He was appointed April 29, 1891, a public administrator for Suffolk county. He married Pauline M. Ceppi at Boston, April 21, 1889, and lives in the Roxbury District of Bos- ton.
CHARLES H. PATTEE, son of Asa D. and Laura B. Pattee, was born in Charles- town, Mass., October 8, 1843, and was educated at the Boston Latin School. He studied law in Boston with George E. Betton, and was admitted to the Suffolk bar January 7, 1865. He is the author of "Recollections of Old Play Bills." He lives, unmarried, at Winthrop.
WILLIAM GREENLEAF APPLETON PATTEE, son of Dr. William S. and Mary E. (Apple- ton) Pattee, was born in Quincy, Mass., August 28, 1854, and was educated at the Chauncy Hall School in Boston. He studied law at the Harvard Law School and in the office of Augustus Russ, of Boston, and was admitted to the Norfolk bar at Dedham May 14, 1879. He was a representative in 1883-84 from Quincy and was city solicitor during the first two years of its city government. He married at New- ton, February 16, 1887, Laura Saltonstall, and has his home in Quincy, with an office in Boston.
F. ALARIC PELTON, son of Florentine W. and Mary (Reed) Pelton, was born in Newton, Mass., January 2, 1864, and attended Williams College two years and Bos- ton University two years. He studied law at the Boston University and in the office of Edmund H. Bennett in Boston, and was admitted to the Suffolk bar in August, 1890. He married in Boston, October 17, 1891, Mabel S. Clarke, and lives in Boston.
SIDNEY PERLEY, son of Humphrey and Eunice (Peabody) Perley, was born in Box- ford, Mass., March 6, 1858, and after studying law at the Boston University, was ad- mitted to the Suffolk bar in 1886. He is the author of a History of Boxford.
GEORGE HOFGU PERRY, son of Baxter E. and Charlotte (Hough) Perry, was born in Medford, Mass., July 25, 1866, and was educated at the public schools. He studied law in Boston with his father and at the Boston University, and was admitted to the Suffolk bar in August, 1888. He lives unmarried at Medford.
LEMUEL WARD PETERS, son of Lemuel E. D. and Maria (Wescott) Peters, was born at Blue Hill, Me., July 29, 1860, and was educated at the Wesleyan University in
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Middletown, Conn. He studied law at the Boston University, and was admitted to the Suffolk bar in June, 1887. His home is in Boston.
GILBERT A. A. PEVEY, son of Abiel and Louisa (Stone) Pevey, was born in Lowell, Angust 22, 1851, and graduated at Harvard in 1873. He studied law in Boston with Sweetser & Gardner, and was admitted to the Suffolk bar in June, 1875. He has been for two years assistant district attorney for Middlesex, and is a director in the Cam- bridge Mutual Fire Insurance Company. He married at Lowell, November 28, 1876, and lives in Cambridge, with an office in Boston,
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