Professional and industrial history of Suffolk County, Massachusetts, Volume I, Part 52

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 52


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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HISTORY OF THE BENCH AND BAR.


SAMUEL SWETT, son of Dr. John Barnard and Charlotte (Bourne) Swett, was born in Newburyport, June 9, 1782, and graduated at Harvard in 1800. He studied law with Jeremiah Smith in Exeter and with Charles Jackson and Edward Livermore. He began to practice in Salem in 1803, and in 1810 removed to Boston. He was a member of the Boston Common Council in 1823, representative three years, and soon after coming to Boston abandoned the law and became a partner in the house of William B. Swett & Company. He married at Salem, August 25, 1807, Lucia, daughter of William Gray, and died in Boston, October 28, 1866.


FRANCIS KITTRIDGE SWEETSER, son of Francis K. and Myra A. Sweetser, was born in Stoneham, Mass., January 21, 1865, and graduated at Tufts College in 1886. He studied law at the Harvard Law School and in the office of Charles Robinson, jr., and was admitted to the Middlesex bar in September, 1889. He married, October 21, 1891, at Saco, Me., Jennie M. Clement, and lives in Stoneham, with an office in Boston.


JAMES F. SWEENEY, son of Michael and Johanna Sweeney, was born in Stow, now Maynard, Mass., and was educated at Boston College. He was admitted to the Suf- folk bar January 18, 1888. He lives in Maynard, with his office in Boston.


GEORGE R. SWASEV, son of Horatio J. and Harriet M. (Higgins) Swasey, was born in Standish, Me., and graduated at Bowdoin College in 1875. He studied law with his father in Standish and at the Boston University, and was admitted to the Maine bar in 1879 and to the Suffolk bar February 24, 1879. He lives, unmarried, in Boston.


HALES WALLACE SUTER, SON of John and Sarah (Wallace) Suter, was born in Bos- ton, December 30, 1828, and was educated at the Boston Latin School and at Har- vard, where he graduated in 1850. He studied law with William J. Hubbard and Francis O. Watts in Boston, at the Harvard Law School, and in the office of John J. & Manlius S. Clarke in Boston, and was admitted to the Suffolk bar in 1852. He has been a member of the Boston Common Council and president of the Massachu- setts Title Insurance Company.


JOSEPH LEWIS STACKPOLE, son of Joseph Lewis and Susan Margaret (Benjamin) Stackpole, was born in Boston, March 20, 1838, and graduated at Harvard in 1857. Ile graduated at the Harvard Law School in 1859 and was admitted to the Suffolk bar September 3, 1860. He was first assistant city solicitor of Boston from 1870 to 1876, and United States general appraiser from August to December, 1891. In the War of the Rebellion he was commissioned captain in the Twenty-fourth Massachu- setts Regiment September 2, 1861, captain and C. S. of United States Volunteers August 30, 1862, major and judge advocate July 10, 1863, brevet lieutenant-colonel March 13, 1865, and resigned April 20, 1865. He has appeared in the North Ameri- can Review for November, 1865, as the author of "Military Law," and in the American Law Review as the author of " Rogers vs. Attorney-General," October, 1866; "Law and Romance," April, 1867; "Book about Lawyers," October, 1867: " Lord Plunket," April, 1868; "Campbell's Lives of Lyndhurst and Brougham,', January, 1870; " Howland Will Case," July, 1870, and " Early Days of Charles Sum- ner," April, 1879. He married, March 3, 1863, at Cambridge, Martha Watson Par- sons, and has his domicile at Mattapoisett, with his office in Boston.


ARTHUR LANGDON SPRING, son of John Langdon and Ellen M. Spring, was born in Salmon Falls, N. H., February 25, 1857, and was educated at Kimball Union Acad-


Scow Morse


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BIOGRAPHICAL REGISTER.


emy and at Dartmouth College, where he graduated in 1880. Hle studied law at Boston University and with John L. Spring at Lebanon, N. H., and was admitted to the New Hampshire bar in August, 1883, and to the Suffolk bar in 1887. He has been a member of the Common Council three years in Boston, where he has his residence.


CHARLES H. SPRAGUE, son of Homer B. and A. E. Sprague, was born in New Haven, Conn., July 21, 1856, and studied law at the Boston University Law School. He was admitted to the Suffolk bar May 26, 1879, and was a member of the Common Council of Newton, where he has his domicile, in 1891, and an alderman in 1892. He married Jennie Starbuck, of Cincinnati, O., August 11, 1877.


CHARLES FRANKLIN SPRAGUE, son of Seth Edward and Harriet B. (Lawrence) Sprague, was born in Boston, June 10, 1857, and graduated at Harvard in 1879. He studied law at the Harvard Law School and at Boston University, and was admitted to the Suffolk bar in 1889. He was a member of the Common Council of Boston, where he lives, in 1889-90, and a representative in 1891-92. He married in Boston, in November, 1891, Mary B. Pratt.


WILLIAM JONES SPOONER, son of William and Mary Phillips Spooner, was born in Boston, April 15, 1794, and graduated at Harvard in 1813. He studied law at Litch- field, Conn., and with Peter O. Thacher in Boston, and was admitted to the Suffolk bar in October, 1816. He died in Boston, October 17, 1824.


WILLIAM EDWARD SPEAR, son of Archibald G. and Angelica Spear, was born in Rockland, Me., January 2, 1848, and graduated at Bowdoin College in 1870. He studied law with A. P. Gould, of Thomaston, Me., and was admitted to the Suffolk bar in 1878. He was of counsel for the United States in the Alabama Court of Claims, and is at present counsel for the United States in the French Spoliation Claims. He married in 1878 in Boston, Marie Josephine Graux, and lives in Boston.


SAMUEL SNOW, son of Caleb Hopkins and Sarah (Drew) Snow, was born in Dux- bury, Mass., November 18, 1832. His father was the author of a history of Boston, a physician of note, who died in 1835. He graduated at Brown in 1856, and after at- tending the Harvard Law School and studying in the office of Caleb William Loring, of Boston, was admitted to the Suffolk bar in 1858. Before entering Brown he went to California, one of the first at the breaking out of the gold fever, sailing in the ship Niantic, July 5, 1849. He has been a member of the Common Council of Cambridge, where he resides. He married in Cambridge, August 20, 1861, Ophelia A. Smith.


CHARLES ARMSTRONG SNOW, son of Franklin and Anna E. (Armstrong) Snow, was born in Boston, September 23, 1862, and graduated at Harvard in 1882. He studied law at the Harvard Law School and was admitted to the Suffolk bar in 1885, since which time he has been associated in business with E. W. Burdett, and makes a specialty of corporation law. He is unmarried and lives in Boston.


WILLIAM CHRISTOPHER SMITH, son of Christopher and Sally T. Smith, was born in Chatham, Mass., September 16, 1861, and graduated at Harvard in 1885. He at- tended the Harvard Law School and was admitted to the Suffolk bar in 1887. Hc married in Chelsea, October 31, 1889, Florence Ilsley, and has his residence in Mel- rose, with his office in Boston.


52


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HISTORY OF THE BENCH AND BAR.


THEOPHILUS GILMAN SMITH, Son of Theophilus Staniells and Mary Burley (Gilman) Smith, was born in Stratham, N. H., December 29, 1848, and graduated at Harvard in 1871. He studied law with E. Rockwood Hoar in Boston, and at Boston Uni- versity, and was admitted to the Suffolk bar April 13, 1874. In 1887 he moved to Groton. He married, May 11, 1875, at Somerville, Julia Warton, daughter of George and Marie (Warton) Kaan, of New York.


SETH P. SMITH, son of Samuel and Ruth T. Smith, was born in Hollis, Me., Janu- ary 4, 1857, and was educated at the Maine Wesleyan Seminary and at Dartmouth College, where he graduated in 1882. He studied law at the Boston University and was admitted to the Suffolk bar in September, 1885. He has served two years in the Common Council of Boston, where he lives.


SAMUEL HERBERT SMITH, son of Samuel Abbott and Maria E. (Edes) Smith, was born in Arlington, Mass., April 5, 1864, and graduated at Harvard in 1887. He studied law at the Harvard Law School, and was admitted to the Suffolk bar in December, 1888. His residence is in Arlington.


SAMUEL EMERSON SMITH, son of Manasseh and Hannah (Emerson) Smith, was born in Hollis, N. H., March 12, 1788, and fiitting for college at Wiscasset, Me., and at Lawrence Academy in Groton, Mass., graduated at Harvard in 1808. He studied law with Samuel Dana, of Groton, and with his brothers Manasseh and Joseph Em- erson, of Boston, and was admitted to the Suffolk bar February 25, 1812. He re- moved from Boston to Wiscasset, and represented that town in the Legislature of Massachusetts in 1819, before the incorporation of Maine, and in the Legislature of Maine in 1820. He was chief justice of the Court of Common Pleas of Maine from 1822 to 1830; governor from 1831 to 1833; reappointed justice of the Common Pleas Court in 1835, and resigned in 1837. In 1837 he was appointed one of the commis- sioners to revise the laws of Maine. When chosen governor he removed to Augusta, but in 1836 returned to Wiscasset. He married, September 12, 1832, Louisa Sophia, daughter of Henry Weld Fuller, of Augusta, and died in Wiscasset, March 3, 1860.


SAMUEL SAVAGE SHAW, son of Chief Justice Lemuel Shaw, was born in Boston and graduated at Harvard in 1853. He graduated at the Harvard Law School in 1855 and was admitted to the Suffolk bar in April, 1856.


JOHN L. SWIFT, was born in Falmouth, Mass., May 28, 1828. He came to Boston in 1843 and entered a store as clerk. He was an active member of the Mercantile Library Association from 1848 to 1852. He studied law at the Harvard Law School, was a representative in 1855-57, was appointed pilot commissioner in 1858, and United States storekeeper in June, 1861. He enlisted in August, 1862, in the Thirty-fifth Massachusetts Regiment, and was made sergeant, lieutenant, and then captain in the Forty-first Regiment. He was provost judge at Baton Rouge, captain and judge ad- vocate on the staff of General Grover, and adjutant-general of Lousiana in 1863. 1n 1866 he was appointed naval officer of the port of Boston, and in 1867 deputy collector, holding that office till 1869, when he went into business in New York. Afterwards returning to Boston he was reappointed in 1874 deputy collector, and remained in office till 1885. From 1886 to 1887 he was editor of the State, a weekly journal, and from 1887 to 1890 was with the Evening Traveller. In March, 1890, he was reap- pointed deputy collector, and is still in office, .


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BIOGRAPHICAL REGISTER.


ELISHIA GREENWOOD was born in Dedham, Mass., July 15, 1863, and was educated at the public schools. He studied law at the Boston University and in the office of Henry W. Bragg, of Boston, and was admitted to the St. Louis bar February 1, 1884, and to the Suffolk bar January 18, 1885. He has been a representative from Ded- ham, where he lives. He has been counsel in many important cases to be found in the reports of the Supreme Court, was editor of the Central Law Journal in 1883-84, and is the author of " Public Policy in the Law of Contracts," and two volumes on "Constitutional Law" for " Federal Decisions."


WILLIAM CAHOONE GREENE, son of Samuel D. and Susan (Gibbs) Greene, was born in Batavia, N. Y., October 8, 1828, and was educated at the Monson, Westfield and Easthampton Academies in Massachusetts and at Amherst College and Brown Uni- versity. He studied law with Bates, Beach & Gillett in Westfield, Mass., and with Beach & Bond, and Henry Morris in Springfield, and was admitted to the bar in Springfield in October, 1852. He married first, Virginia Croll, of Philadelphia, and second, Maria H., daughter of Noah Lincoln, of Boston. He lives in Boston.


REGINALD GRAY, son of Francis Henry and Hedwiga Regina (Shober) Gray, was born in Boston, March 19, 1853, and graduated at Harvard in 1875. He studied law at the Harvard Law School and was admitted to the Suffolk bar in July, 1879. He lives in Boston.


SAMUEL JACKSON GARDNER, son of Caleb Gardner, was born in Brookline, July 9, 1788, and graduated at Harvard in 1807. After his admission he practiced law in Roxbury, now Boston, and in 1838 moved to Newark, N. J., where in 1850 he became editor of the Newark Daily Advertiser. He died at the White Mountains, N. H., July 14, 1864.


WILLIAM PARKINSON GREENE, son of Gardner and Elizabeth (Hubbard) Greene, was born in Boston, September 7, 1795, and graduated at Harvard in 1814. He studied law in Boston with Samuel Hubbard, who married his sister, and was admitted to the Suffolk bar March 14, 1820. He became a partner with Mr. Hubbard and con- tinued in practice in Boston seven years. In 1824 he moved to Norwich, Conn. He married, July 14, 1819, Augusta Elizabeth, daughter of Leonard Vassall Borland, and died in Norwich, June 18, 1864.


WILLIAM B. GALE, son of John Gale, was born in Southampton, N. H., August 8, 1829, and after fitting for college under private instruction, spent two years at Har- vard. He studied law with Franklin Pierce at Concord, N. H., and Asa Fowler at the same place, and was admitted to the New Hampshire bar in 1853, and to the Middlesex bar in Massachusetts in June, 1860. He has practiced in Boston many years, coming to that city from Marlboro, where he had previously practiced.


JOHN P. GALE, son of the above, and born in Marlboro' in 1856, was a member of the Suffolk bar as early as 1885, but moved to Seattle, Wash, and died at Redlands, Cal., May 11, 1892.


ROBERT DICKSON WESTON-SMITH, son of Robert Dickson and Paulina Cony (Weston) Smith, was born in Newton, Mass., May 8, 1864, and was educated at the Boston Latin School and at Harvard, where he graduated in 1886. He studied law at the Harvard Law School and in Boston in the office of his father, and was admitted to the Suffolk bar in January, 1888. In 1890 he was associate counsel of the New York


412


HISTORY OF THE BENCH AND BAR.


and New England Railroad Company. He married in Cambridge, October 4, 1888, Anstiss Walcott, and lives in Cambridge.


GEORGE A. GRIFFIN, Son of George A. and Eliza T. Griffin, was born in Lowell, August 28, 1842, and graduated at Tufts College in 1864. He studied law in Lowell and was admitted to the Middlesex bar in Cambridge in February, 1866. He married in Malden, August 28, 1878, Victoria W. Hutchings, and has his residence in Mel- rose.


JAMES WILSON GRIMES, Son of James Forsaith and Sarah ( Jones) Grimes, was born in Hillsboro', N. H., November 21, 1865, and was educated at Phillips Andover Acad- emy. Ile studied law at the Boston University and with John F. Colby, of Boston, and was admitted to the bar at Des Moines, Ia., October 8, 1890, and to the Suffolk bar in January, 1892, His residence is in Boston.


CHARLES EDWARD GRINNELL, son of Charles Andrews and Anna (Almy) Grinnell, was born in Baltimore, Md., May 7, 1841, and graduated at Harvard in 1860. He studied divinity at the Vale Divinity School and the Divinity School in Cambridge, and also pursued a course of study at the university of Gottingen, Germany. After preaching for a time he studied law at the Harvard Law School and in Boston in the office of Chandler, Ware & Hudson, and was admitted to the Suffolk bar November 28, 1876. He has been master in chancery in Suffolk county since 1878, and was edi- tor of the American Law Review in 1881-82. He has written editorials in the above Review in 1880-81-82, a book entitled "A Study of the Poor Debtor Law of Massa- chusetts," another entitled " The Law of Deceit," and a third entitled "Points in Pleading and Practice under the Massachusetts Practice," an article in the Ameri- can Law Review on " Cross Bills by Assignees," and one in the Harvard Law Review on "Subsequent Payments under Resulting Trusts." He married in Boston July 11, 1865, Elizabeth Tucker Washburn, and lives in Boston.


WILLIAM PENN HARDING, son of Isaac and Abigail (Young) Harding, was born in Duxbury, Mass., February 15, 1831, and graduated at Harvard in 1853. He studied law in Boston with Richard F. Fuller and at the Harvard Law School, and was ad- mitted to the Suffolk bar October 1, 1856. He married, December 25, 1861, in Can- ton, Mass., Abby Anceline Morse, and lives in Cambridge.


CHARLES NATHAN HARRIS, son of John L. and Sarah E. Harris, was born at Port Byron, Ill., October 6, 1860, and was educated at the Boston Latin School. He graduated at the Harvard Law School in 1884 and was admitted to the Suffolk bar June 22, 1882. He was appointed second assistant attorney-general of Massachusetts January 21, 1891. He has been engaged in the preparation of portions of "Gould and Tucker's Notes on the Revised Statutes of the United States," of the second edi- tion of Keller's "Index Digest," and portions of the ninth American edition of "Smith's Leading Cases." He married at Cambridge, September 30, 1890, Sarah W. Bird of that city, and has his residence in Cambridge.


DAVID GREENE HASKINS, jr., son of Rev. David Greene and Mary Cogswell (Daveis) Haskins, was born in Roxbury, Mass., March 5, 1845, and was educated at the Roxbury Latin School and at Harvard, where he graduated in 1866. He studied law at the Harvard Law School and in Boston in the office of Henry W. Paine, and was admitted to the Suffolk bar in May, 1870. He has been secretary of the Massa-


athan. Make


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BIOGRAPHICAL REGISTER.


chusetts Society of the Cincinnati, and recording secretary of the New England His- toric Genealogical Society. He is unmarried and lives in Cambridge.


SIMON W. HATHEWAY, son of Thomas G. and Harriet E. (Bates) Ilatheway, was born in St. John, N. B., September 10, 1837, and graduated at Amherst College in 1857. He studied law in Worcester with Dwight Foster and George W. Baldwin, and was admitted to the Middlesex bar in Cambridge in October, 1866. He has his domicile in Dedham.


GUSTAVUS HAY, jr., was born in Boston in 1866, and graduated at Harvard in 1888. He studied law at Harvard Law School and was admitted to the Suffolk bar Janu- ary 20, 1891. He lives in Boston.


CHARLES WILLIAM STOREY, son of Charles William and Elizabethi (Burnham) Storey, of Newburyport, was born in Claremont, N. H., July 18, 1816, and was educated at the Newburyport Academy and Phillips Exeter Academy and at Har- vard, where he graduated in 1835. Ile studied law at the Harvard Law School and in Boston with C. P. & B. R. Curtis, and was admitted to the Suffolk bar June 15, 1840. He was clerk of the Massachusetts House of Representatives from 1844 to 1850, has been register of insolvency for Suffolk county, and clerk of the Superior Criminal Court. He married in Newburyport, Elizabeth Eaton Moorfield, and lives in Brookline.


MOORFIELD STOREY, son of the above, was born in Roxbury, Mass., March 19, 1845, and was educated at the Boston Latin School and at Harvard, where he grad- uated in 1866. He studied law at the Harvard Law School and in Washington with Charles Sumner, and in Boston with Benjamin F. Brooks and Joshua D. Ball, and was admitted, to the Suffolk bar August 28, 1869. He has been assistant dis- trict attorney of Suffolk county and an overseer of Harvard College. He married in Washington, D. C., January 6, 1870, Anna Gertrude Cutts, and lives in Brookline.


DAVID THAXTER, son of Joseph B. and Sally (Gill) Thaxter, was born in Hingham, Mass., March 24, 1824, and was educated in his native town. He studied law in Boston with Sidney Bartlett and was admitted to the Suffolk bar October 21, 1848. He practiced in Boston, and died in Hingham, June 10, 1878.


EDWARD ELLERTON PRATT, son of George and Abigail H. (Lodge) Pratt, was born in Boston, December 24, 1830, and was educated at the Boston Latin School and at Harvard, where he graduated in 1852. He studied law at the Harvard Law School and in Boston with John J. Clarke, and was admitted to the Suffolk bar. He mar- ried in 1856, Miriam Foster, daughter of Rufus Choate.


WILLIAM BATES, a native of Wareham, Mass., was a soldier in the War of 1812, and distinguished himself in the battle of Bladensburg. He practiced law and taught school in Wareham, and in 1850 opened an office in Boston. He became conspicuous in the early days of the Free Soil party, and was at one time its candidate for secre- tary of state.


THOMAS LAFAYETTE WAKEFIELD, son of Thomas and Submit (Ross) Wakefield, was born in Londonderry, Vt., June 15, 1817, and graduated at Darmouth College in 1843. He studied law with Horace E. Smith in Broadalbin, N. Y., and was admitted to the Suffolk bar April 27, 1849, and became a partner of Mr. Smith, his instructor, who had removed to Boston. Before coming to Boston he was admitted to the bar


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HISTORY OF THE BENCH AND BAR.


in New York and was the first district attorney chosen under the law making the office elective. On coming to Massachusetts he resided first in Chelsea, then in Dedham, then in Chelsea again, and finally in Dedham in 1854, where he lived un- til his deatlı. He married first at Fayetteville, Vt., about 1845, Jane, daughter of D. Perry, and second at Dedham, Frances A. L., daughter of Rev. John Lathrop. He made a specialty in the latter part of his career of patent cases. He was an associate of the writer on a commission appointed by the Supreme Court under an act of the Legislature to widen the draws of the Charlestown bridges, and was also on a commission to construct the State Prison, now the Reformatory, at Concord. He died at Dedham, June 21, 1888.


FRANCIS S. FISKE was born in Keene, N. H., in 1825, and graduated at Dartmouth College in 1843. He graduated at the Harvard Law School in 1846, and was admit- ted to the New Hampshire bar and settled in Keene. He was commissioned lieu- tenant-colonel of the Second New Hampshire Regiment in 1861, and afterwards while in command of a Pennsylvania regiment, he contracted the army fever and resigned in 1862. He resumed practice in Keene, but came to Boston in 1865, and was admitted to the Suffolk bar in May of that year. He has been auditor and clerk of the United States Bankruptcy Court, and is now, as commissioner of the United State, conducting the business of Henry L. Hallett, recently deceased.


A. W. GATES FAIRBANKS was admitted to the Suffolk bar March 23, 1874, and is now in Boston. He was previously admitted to the Connecticut bar in New Haven and to the New York bar in New York city. In these places he was admitted as A. W. Gates.


GEORGE SILSBEE HALE, son of Salma and Sarah Kellogg (King) Hale, was born in Keene, N. H., September 24, 1825, and graduated at Harvard in 1844. He was ad- mitted to the Suffolk bar January 5, 1850, and is now in active practice in Boston. He married, November 25, 1868, Ellen, daughter of Colonel John and Ann (Dana) Sever, of Kingston, Mass., and widow of Rev. Theodore Tibbetts.


GEORGE DWIGHT GUILD, son of Moses and Juliette (Ellis) Guild, was born in Ded- ham, Mass., March 17, 1825, and fitting for college at the Wrentham Academy, grad- uated at Harvard in 1845. He studied law at the Harvard Law School and in Boston in the office of Charles M. Ellis, and was admitted to the Suffolk bar August 9, 1848. He married in 1860, Mary M., daughter of William Thomas, of Boston, and died in Brookline, Mass., May 5, 1862.


JOHN EDWARD HANNIGAN, son of William and Anne Hannigan, was born in Brigh- ton, Mass., September 24, 1868, and was educated at the Brighton High and Boston Latin Schools. He studid law at the Boston University, and was admitted to the Suffolk bar in August, 1890. He married Annie M. Judson, May 21, 1891, in Bos_ ton, and lives in the Brighton District of that city.


ALBERT FEARING HAYDEN, son of Edward B. and Anna (Goodspeed) Hayden, was born in Plymouth, Mass., May 5, 1865, and was educated at the Plymouth High School. He studied law at Boston University and in the office of Gaston & Whitney, with which firm he is still connected, and was admitted to the Suffolk bar July 17, 1888. He married in Boston, December 23, 1891, Lucy Seaver Parker, and lives in the Roxbury District of Boston.


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BIOGRAPHICAL REGISTER.


ANDREW WAYLAND HAYES, son of Andrew and Caroline (Gowell) Hayes, was born in Lebanon, Me., August 9, 1857, and was educated at the East Lebanon Academy and at Boston University. He studied law at Boston University and in Quincy, Mass., in the office of Judge E. Granville Pratt, and was admitted to the Norfolk bar at Dedham in May, 1879. He married in Quincy in September, 1879, Hattie Louise Lincoln, and has his domicile in Revere.


GEORGE EDWARD HEAD, son of Joseph and Elizabeth (Frazier) Head, was born in Boston, February 25, 1793, and after studying at Phillips Academy, at the Boston Latin School and with Rev. S. J. Gardiner, D. D., of Boston, graduated at Har- vard in 1812. He studied law at Litchfield, Conn., with Judges Reeve and Gould, and was admitted to the Suffolk bar in September, 1815. He was a representative from Boston in 1836-37-47-48, alderman in 1846-47-48, and permanent assessor from 1848 to 1855. He married, February 26, 1815, Hannah, daughter of Grove Catlin, of Litchfield, Conn., and died in Boston, July 5, 1861.


CHARLES EDWARD HELLIER, son of Walter S. and Eunice (Bixby) Hellier, was born in Bangor, Me., July 8, 1864, and was edneated at the Bangor High School and at Yale, where he graduated in 1886. He attended law lectures at the University of Berlin, and after completing his studies with Robert M. Morse, was admitted to the Suffolk bar in January, 1889. He married in New Haven, Conn., July 8, 1886, Mary L. Harmon, and lives in Boston.




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