The Boston almanac and business directory for the year 1892, Part 3

Author:
Publication date: 1892
Publisher: Boston : Sampson, Davenport
Number of Pages: 670


USA > Massachusetts > Suffolk County > Boston > The Boston almanac and business directory for the year 1892 > Part 3


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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5. Ex-president and cashier of Keystone National Bank of Phila- delphia, arrested for falsely report- ing the bank's condition.


9. Mme. Blavatsky, founder of the Theosophical Society, died.


11. Rev. George C. Lorimer en- tered on his pastorate at Tremont Temple.


15. Carl Faelten elected Director of the N. E. Conservatory of Music. 20. Ex-Queen Nathalie expelled from Servia.


21. Judge Alphonso Taft, form- erly Secretary of War and Attorney General, died at San Diego, Cal.


26. City Treasurer Bardsley of Philadelphia charged with embez- zling $365,604 of state money.


26. Potter, White, & Bayley, boots and shoes, failed; liabilities nearly $1,000,000.


34


CHRONIOLE OF EVENTS, 1891.


27. H. E. Spaulding, dishonest cashier of Ayer National Bank, sentenced for 5 years.


June.


2. The Women's Open Air Gym- nasium opened at Charlesbank.


2. Judge Josiah G. Abbott died at Wellesley Hills.


3. The final census report shows the population of the U. S. to be 62,622,250.


4. Benson J. Lossing, the his- torian, died.


6. The Boston Traveller was sold to the Committee of One Hundred.


6. Sir John MacDonald, Gov- ernor-General of Canada, died at Ottawa.


7. Lieut. Ryder's exploring party left Copenhagen for Greenland.


13. Forty-three Welsh tin plate works will shut down in July, ow- ing to the Mckinley bill.


18. Dr. A. A. Miner gave $40,000 to Tufts College for a new Divinity School building.


21. Geo. M. Mowbray, inventor of nitro-glycerine, died at North Adams.


25. Seal catching in Behring Sea forbidden until May 1, 1892.


26. Work on the World's Fair buildings begun.


27. Harvard won in the univer- sity boat race on the Thames.


30. The Weather Bureau trans- ferred to the Agricultural Depart- ment, with M. W. Harrington as chief.


July.


3. John Bardsley sentenced to 15 years solitary confinement.


4. The White Squadron entered the harbor.


4. Hannibal Hamlin, ex-vice- president, died at Bangor.


8. Four murderers successfully electrocuted at Sing Sing.


11. The population of England and Wales was 29,000,000.


12. Edward Burgess, yacht de- signer, died.


18. Destructive fire in Lynn ; loss $175,000.


22. The monument to Stonewall Jackson at Lexington, Va., was unveiled.


24. The memorial erected at Ley- den, Holland, to Rev. John Robin- son, pastor of the Pilgrim Fathers, was unveiled.


25. This country leads the world in the production of copper.


27. Mrs. Mark Hopkins-Searles, one of the wealthiest women of America, died at Methuen.


August.


4. Opening of the 25th annual encampment of the G. A. R. at De- troit.


6. The amount of money now in circulation said to be greater than ever before in the nation's history.


7. M. Henri Litolff, musician and composer, died.


8. Great damage done at Mel- bourne, Australia, by a tremendous tidal wave.


10. Captain Lawler and his little boat, the ."Sea Serpent," arrived safely at an English port.


10. Mrs. Lelia Robinson-Saw- telle, the first woman admitted to the bar in Mass., died at Amherst, N. H.


11. Frederick Douglass resigned the Haytian mission.


12. James Russell Lowell, poet, author, and formerly minister to England and Spain, died at Cam- bridge.


19. Damon Safe and Iron Works at Cambridge destroyed by fire; loss about $300,000.


20. S. H. Sanborn, a noted book- binder of Boston, died in Cam- bridge, aged 71. He bound the BOSTON ALMANAC annually for over 30 years.


21. The buildings on Penikese Island, erected in 1873 for the School of Natural History, were destroyed by fire.


21. An experimental colony on the Bellamy plan was started near Reading, Pa.


22. An explosion, followed by collapse, took place in a six story building on Park place, New York, by which 60 persons lost their lives.


24. The Japanese aristocracy are said to be only waiting the Mika- do's initiative to embrace Protes- tantism.


25. England's postmaster-gen- eral, H. C. Raikes, was killed by lightning.


25. Floods at Toyama, Japan, damaged nearly 9,000 houses.


26. Gov. Page of Vermont ap- pointed Secretary Proctor to suc- ceed Senator Edmunds.


31. Oliver Wendell Holmes ob- served his 82d birthday at Beverly Farms, and received many con- gratulations.


September.


1. Germany will remove all re- strictions on American pork.


3. The Georgia Senate passed a bill which disqualifies physicians addicted to alcoholic drink from the practice of their profession.


85


CHRONICLE OF EVENTS, 1891.


4. The first aluminum boat in the world was given a trial on Lake Zurich.


5. The New Zealand House of Representatives passed a bill grant- ing residential suffrage to women, and qualifying women for election to Parliament.


7. John S. Dunham, a colored graduate of the University of Penn- sylvania, appointed minister to Hayti.


7 Labor Day in Boston marked by a downpour of rain. The pa- rade was given up and the celebra- tion postponed till Saturday.


10. Jules Grevy, ex-president of France, died.


10. New York Republicans nom- inated J. S. Fassett for governor.


15. Sudden floods in the prov- ince of Toledo, Spain, result in the drowning of thousands of people.


17. Mrs. President Harrison and party arrived at Woodland Park Hotel, Auburndale.


19. Ex-President Balmaceda of Chile committed suicide at San- tiago.


21. The national conference of Unitarian, and other Christian churches held its fourteenth regu- lar meeting at Saratoga.


22. The lands of the Indians on the Sac and Fox and other reserva- tions opened to settlement.


25. Rev. Brooke Herford sent in his resignation of the pastorate of Arlington Street Church.


30. Gen. Georges Boulanger, the great French agitator, committed suicide at Brussels.


October.


2. Fire at Halifax, N. S., de- stroyed property on the water side ; loss estimated at $200,000.


5. The pork packing works of J. P. Squire & Co. at Somerville damaged by fire, causing a loss of $200,000. About 2,000 live hogs were burned.


5. The Health and Food Exhi- bition opened in Boston,


6. King Karl of Wurtemberg died at Stuttgart.


6. William Henry Smith, First Lord of the English Treasury and Government leader in the House of Commons, died.


6. Charles Stewart Parnell, leader of the Irish Home Rule party, died at his home in Brighton, Eng., aged 45.


14. Phillips Brooks consecrated Bishop of the Massachusetts dio- cese.


15. The fly-wheel of an engine in the Amoskeag mill at Manches- ter, N. H., exploded. The engine house was wrecked, and several persons killed and wounded.


16. Irving A. Evans, a well- known stock broker in Boston, committed suicide on account of business troubles.


16. A number of sailors from the U. S. war ship Baltimore were assaulted in the streets of Valpa- raiso by Chilians.


18. Fire in the fire-alarm office at the City Hall disabled that ser- vice for three or four hours.


19. The corner-stone of the new armory of the First Corps of Cadets was laid, and the ceremony fol- lowed by a parade.


19. . Bull fighting revived in Mex- ico to raise funds for the sufferers by flood in Spain.


23. First snow of the season in Boston fell to a depth of three inches.


25. The ceremony of laying the corner-stone of the new Divinity School at Tufts College was per- formed.


30. Nicholas A. Apollonio, city registrar of Boston for thirty-seven years, died, aged 76 years.


November.


2. Maverick National Bank of Boston suspended payment. The president, Asa P. Potter, and direc- tors Jonas H. French and Thomas Dana, were arrested on a charge of misappropriation of the funds.


3. State elections in New York, Iowa, New Jersey, Virginia, and Maryland, resulted in Democratic victory ; in Ohio and Pennsylvania, in Republican victory. William E. Russell, Democrat, re-elected Governor of Massachusetts byabout 6000 plurality. Other state officers elected are Republicans.


8. Father A. C. Hall preached his farewell sermon at St. John's church, having been recalled to England on account of signing a testimonial to Phillips Brooks' fit- ness for the bishopric of Massa- chusetts.


10. Chester F. Sanger, judge of the third Middlesex district court, died at North Cambridge, aged 33 years. At the time of his appoint- ment in 1889, he was the youngest man who had ever attained that honor in Massachusetts.


11. Rev. W. L. Longridge of Phila. succeeded Father Hall as rector of St. John's church.


15. Total eclipse of the moon, plainly visible in New England.


36


Congressional Districts of Massachusetts. [Established by chapter 253, Acts of 1882.]


No. 1 .- Acushnet, Barnstable, Brewster, Chatham, Chilmark, Cot- tage City, Dartmouth, Dennis, Dighton, Eastham, Edgartown, Fairhaven, Fall River, Falmouth, Freetown, Gay Head, Gosnold, Harwich, Lakeville, Marion, Mashpee, Mattapoisett, Middle- borough, Nantucket, New Bedford, Orleans, Provincetown, Rehoboth, Rochester, Sandwich, Seekonk, Somerset, Swanzey, Tisbury, Truro, Wareham, Wellfleet, West- port, Yarmouth.


No. 2 .- Abington, Attleboro', Avon, Berkley, Braintree, Bridge- water, Brockton, Canton, Carver, Cohasset, Duxbury, Easton, East Bridgewater, Halifax, Hanover, Hanson, Hingham, Holbrook, Hull, Kingston, Mansfield, Marshfield, North Attleboro', Norton, Norwell, Pembroke, Plymouth, Plympton, Quincy, Randolph, Raynham, Rockland, Scituate, Sharon, Stoughton, Taunton, W. Bridge- water, Weymouth, Whitman.


No. 3 .- Ward's 11, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, and precincts 3 and 4 of ward 15 Boston, Milton.


No. 4 .- Wards 1, 2, 6, 7, 12, 13, 14, 16, and precincts 2, 3 and 4 of ward 8, and precincts 1 and 2 of ward 15 Boston.


No. 5 .- Wards 9, 10, 25, and precinct 1 of ward 8 Boston, Arl- ington, Belmont, Burlington, Cam- bridge, Lexington, Somerville, Waltham, Watertown, Woburn.


No. 6 .- Wards", 4, and 5 Bos- ton, Chelsea, Everett, Lynn, Mal- den, Medford, Melrose, Nahant, Reading, Revere, Saugus, Stone- ham, Swampscott, Wakefield, Winchester, Winthrop.


No. 7 .- Amesbury, Beverly, Boxford, Bradford, Danvers, Essex, Georgetown, Gloucester, Grove -- land, Hamilton, Haverhill, Ips- wich, Lynnfield, Manchester, Mar- blehead, Merrimac, Middleton, Newbury, Newburyport, Peabody, Rockport, Rowley, Salem, Salis- bury, Topsfield, Wenham, and W. Newbury.


No. 8 .- Acton, Andover, Ash- by, Ayer, Bedford, Billerica, Bol- ton, Boxborough, Carlisle, Chelms- ford, Concord, Dracut, Dunstable, Groton, Harvard, Lancaster, Law- rence, Littleton, Lowell, Lunen- burgh, Methuen, North Andover, North Reading, Pepperell, Shirley, Stow, Tewksbury, Townsend, Tyngsborough, Westford, and Wilmington.


-


No. 9 .- Ashland, Bellingham, Berlin, Blackstone, Brookline, Clinton, Dedham, Dover, Fox- borough, Framingham. Franklin, Holliston, Hopedale, Hopkinton, Hudson, Hyde Park, Lincoln, Marl- borough, Maynard, Mendon, Med- field, Medway, Milford, Millis, Na- tick, Needham, Newton, Norfolk, Northborough, Norwood, Sherborn, Southborough, Sudbury, Walpole, Wayland, Wellesley, Westborough, Weston and Wrentham.


No. 10. - Auburn, Barre, Boylston, Brimfield, Brookfield, Charlton, Douglas, Dudley, Graf- ton, Hardwick, Holden, Holland, Leicester, Millbury, New Braintree, Northbridge, North Brookfield, Oakham, Oxford, Paxton, Prince- ton, Rutland, Shrewsbury, South- bridge, Spencer, Sterling, Stur- bridge, Sutton, Upton, Uxbridge, Wales, Warren, Webster, West Boylston, West Brookfield, and Worcester.


No. 11. - Amherst, Ashfield, Ashburnham, Athol, Belchertown, Bernardston, Buckland, Charle- mont, Chesterfield, Colerain, Conway, Cummington, Dana, Deerfield, Easthampton, Enfield, Erving, Fitchburg, Gardner, Gill, Goshen, Granby, Greenfield, Greenwich, Hadley, Hatfield,Haw- ley, Heath, Holyoke,Hubbardston, Huntington, Leominster, Leverett, Leyden, Middlefield, Monroe,Mon- tague, New Salem, Northampton, Northfield, Orange, Pelham, Peter- snam, Phillipston, Plainfield, Pres- cott, Rowe, Royalston, Shelburne, Shutesbury, South Hadley, South- ampton, Sterling, Sunderland, Templeton, Ware, Warwick, Wen- dell, Westhampton, Westminster, Whately, Williamsburg, Winchen- don, Worthington.


No. 12. - Adams, Alford, Agawam, Becket, Blandford, Che- shire, Chester, Chicopee, Clarks- burg, Dalton, Egremont, Florida, Granville, Great Barrington, Hampden, Hancock, Hinsdale, Lanesborough, Lee, Lenox, Long- meadow, Ludlow, Monson, Mon- terey, Montgomery, Mount Wash- ington, New Ashford, New Marl- borough, No. Adams, Otis, Palmer, Peru, Pittsfield, Richmond, Russell, Sandisfield, Savoy, Sheffield, South- wick, Springfield, Stockbridge, Tolland, Tyringham, Washington, Westfield, West Springfield, West Stockbridge, Wilbraham, Wil- liamstown, and Windsor.


87


United States of America.


NATIONAL GOVERNMENT.


President,


BENJAMIN HARRISON. [Term of office ends March 4, 1893.]


Salary. $50,000


Vice-President,


Levi P. Morton,


New York, 8,000


Secretary of State,


James G. Blaine,


Maine, 8,000


Secretary of the Treasury, Charles Foster,


Ohio, 8,000


Secretary of War,


[Vacancy]


8,000


Secretary of the Navy,


Benjamin F. Tracy, New York, 8,000


Secretary of the Interior,


John W. Noble,


Missouri, 8,000


Postmaster-General,


John Wanamaker,


Pennsylvania, 8,000


Attorney-General,


William H. H. Miller,


Indiana, 8,000


Secretary of Agriculture, Jeremiah McL. Rusk,


Wisconsin, 8,000


SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES.


The Supreme Court is held in the city of Washington, and has one session annually, commencing on the second Monday in October, and such adjourned or special terms as may be necessary for the despatch of business. There are now nine Judicial Circuits, in each of which a Circuit Court is held twice every year, for every State within the Cir- cuit, by the Circuit Judge appointed for the Circuit, or by the District Judge of the State or District in which the Court sits. Each Justice of the Supreme Court must every two years attend at least one term of the Circuit Court in each district of his Circuit. The Judges are ap- pointed for life, or during good behavior. Any Judge who has held his commission ten years, and resigns after reaching the age of seventy, shall receive the same salary during the rest of his life.


By the act of Congress of July 23d, 1866, the several circuits are thus constituted, to wit: First, The Districts of Maine, New Hamp- shire, Massachusetts, Rhode Island. Second, Vermont, Connecticut, New York. Third, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and Delaware. Fourth, Maryland, Virginia, West Virginia, North Carolina and South Caro- lina. Fifth, Georgia, Florida, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, and Texas. Sixth, Ohio, Michigan, Kentucky, and Tennessee. Seventh, Indiana, Illinois, and Wisconsin. Eighth, Minnesota, Iowa, Missouri, Kansas, Arkansas, & Nebraska. Ninth, California, Oregon, & Nevada.


By the act of April 10, 1869, the Supreme Court is made to consist of the Chief Justice and eight Associate Justices, any six of whom make a quorum. Justices have been assigned to the circuits as follows :


Circuit.


Residence. Appointed. Salary.


4 Melville W. Fuller, Chief Justice, Illinois,


1888,


$10,000


1 Horace Gray, Associate Justice,


Massachusetts,


1881,


10,000


2 Samuel Blatchford,


New York,


1882,


10,000


3 Joseph P. Bradley, 66


Newark, N. J.


1870,


10,000


5 Lucius Q. C. Lamar, 66


Mississippi,


1887,


10,000


6 David J. Brewer,


Kansas,


1889,


10,000


7 John M. Harlan, 66


Louisville, Ky.


1877,


10,000


8 Henry B. Brown,


Michigan,


1890,


10,000


9 Stephen J. Field,


San Francisco, Cal. 1863,


10,000


Wm. Howard Taft, Solicitor-Gen'l, Washington, D.C. 1891, James H. McKenney, Clerk. J. M. Wright, Marshal.


7,500


By the same act of April 10, 1869, provision is made for the appoint- ment of a Circuit Judge for each of the nine Circuits, to reside in the Circuit and receive an annual salary of $6,000, with the same power and jurisdiction in his Circuit as the Judge of the Supreme Court allotted thereto. The following are the Circuit Judges: 1st Circuit, Le Baron B. Colt, of Bristol, R. I .; 2d, William J. Wallace, of Syra- cuse, N. Y .; 3d, Wm. McKennan, of Washington, Pa .; 4th, Hugh L. Bond, of Baltimore, Md .; 5th, Don A. Pardee, of New Orleans, La .; 6th, Howell E. Jackson, of Tennessee; 7th, Walter Q. Gresham, of Wisconsin; 8th, Henry G. Caldwell; 9th, Lorenzo Sawyer, of San Francisco, Cal.


38


NATIONAL REGISTER.


COURT OF CLAIMS .- Wm. A. Richardson, Chief Justice. C. C. Nott, Glenni W. Scofield, Lawrence Weldon, John Davis, Judges. Archi- bald Hopkins, Chief Clerk. The Court holds its sessions in the Capitol, at Washington, D. C.


TREASURER OF THE UNITED STATES .- E. H. Nebeker. INTERNAL REVENUE .- John W. Mason, Commissioner. COMMISSIONER OF EDUCATION .- Willlam T. Harris. COMMISSIONER OF PENSIONS .- Green B. Raum. COMMISSIONER OF PATENTS .- Charles E. Mitchell. COMMISSIONER OF INDIAN AFFAIRS .- Thomas J. Morgan. PUBLIC PRINTER .- Frank W. Palmer.


LIBRARIAN OF CONGRESS .- A. R. Spofford. SUPT. CENSUS OFFICE .- Robert P. Porter.


FIFTY-SECOND CONGRESS. Began March 4th, 1891; ends March 4th, 1893.


OFFICERS OF THE SENATE .- Levi P. Morton, President. Anson G. McCook, Secretary. Charles W. Johnson, Chief Clerk. Edward K. Valentine, Sergeant-at-Arms. Stanley Plummer, Postmaster. Rev. J. G. Butler, Chaplain.


OFFICERS OF THE HOUSE .- Charles F. Crisp, of Georgia, Speaker. James Kerr, of Pennsylvania, Clerk. S. S. Yoder, of Ohio, Sergeant- at-Arms. C. W. Turner, of New York, Doorkeeper. Rev. William H. Milburn, of Illinois, Chaplain.


Democrats are designated by a *. The names of members chosen at large are in italics.


Figures after Senators' names show the date when term expires ; after Representatives, the number of district. Salary of Senators and Representatives, $5,000. Salary of Speaker, $8,000.


Alabama.


Senators : * James L. Pugh. 1897


*John T. Morgan. 1895 Joseph R. Hawley. 1893


Reps .: * Richard H. Clarke. Dist. 1 *Hilary A. Herbert. 2


*William C. Oates. 3 Louis W. Turpin. 4.


*James E. Cobb.


5


*J. H. Bankhead. 6


*Wm. H. Forney. 7


*Joseph Wheeler. 8


Arkansas.


Senators : * James K. Jones. 1897


*James H. Berry. 1895


Reps .: *William H. Cate. Dist. 1


*C. R. Breckinridge. 2


*T. C. McRea. 3


*William L. Terry. 4


*Samuel W. Peel. 5


California.


Senators : Leland Stanford. 1897 *Charles N. Felton. 1893


Reps .: *T. J. Geary. Dist. 1


George G. Blanchard. 2


- Joseph McKenna. 3


John T. Cutting. 4 Eugene F. Loud. 5 W. W. Bowers. 6


Colorado.


Senators : Henry M. Teller.


1897


Edw'd O. Wolcott. 1895


Rep .:


Hosea Townsend. Dist. 1


Connecticut.


Senators : Orville H. Platt.


1897


Reps .: * Lewis Sperry.


Dist. 1


*W. L. Wilcox.


2


Charles A. Russell.


3


Robert E. DeForest.


4


Delaware.


Senators : Anthony Higgins. 1895


*George Gray.


1893


Rep .:


*John A. Causey.


Dist. 1


Florida.


Senators :* Wilkinson Call.


1897


*Samuel Pasco.


1893


Reps .: * R. S. Mallory.


Dist. 1


*Robert Bullock.


2


Georgia.


Senators :* Geo. B. Gordon.


1897


*Alfred H. Colquitt. 1895


Reps .:


*Rufus E. Lester.


Dist. 1


*Henry G. Turner.


2


*Charles F. Crisp.


3


*Charles L. Moses. 4


*L. F. Livingstone. 5


6


*James H. Blount.


*W. R. Everett.


7


*Thomas G. Lawson.


8


*Thomas E. Winn.


9


*Thomas B. Watson.


10


39


FIFTY-SECOND CONGRESS.


Idaho.


Senators : Fred T. Dubois. 1897


George L. Shoup. 1895


Reps .: Willis Sweet. Dist. 1 Win. J. McConnell. 2


Illinois.


Senators : * John M. Palmer. 1897 Shelby M. Cullom. 1895


Reps .: Abner Taylor. Dist 1


*Lawrence E. McGann. 2 Allen C. Durburrow. 3 Walter C. Newberry. 4 A. J. Hopkins. 5


Robert R. Hitt. 6


T. J. Henderson.


7


Charles A. Hills.


8


Herman W. Snow.


Philip S. Post. 10


*Benjamin T. Cable. 11 12


*Scott Wike.


*Wm. M. Springer. 13


*Owen Scott. 14


*S. T. Busey. 15


*George W. Fithian.


16


*Edward Lane.


17 18


*W. S. Farman.


*J. R. Williams. 19


George W. Smith. 20


Indiana.


Senators :* D. W. Voorhees. 1897


*David Turpie.


1893


Reps .: *Wm. F. Parrett.


Dist. 1


*John I .. Britz.


2 3


*Jason B. Brown.


*William S. Holman. 4


5


*William D. Bynum.


*E. V. Brookshire. Daniel Waugh. 9


D. H. Pelton. 10 11


*Aug. N. Martin.


*C. A. O. McClellan. 12


*Benj. F. Shively. 13


Iowa.


Senators : William B. Allison. 1897 James F. Wilson. 1895


Reps .: *J. J. Seerly. Dist. 1


*Walter I. Hayes. 2


David B. Henderson. 3 *W. H. Butler. 4 John T. Hamilton. 5 *F. W. White.


6 7


J. A. T. Hull. James P. Flick.


8


*Thomas Bowman. 9


Jonathan P. Dolliver. 10


George D. Perkins.


Kansas.


Senators : Wm. A. Peffer. 1897 Preston B. Plumb. 1895


Reps. : Case Broderick. Dist. 1


E. H. Funston. 2


*B. H. Clover. 3


*John G. Otis. 4


*John Davis. Dist. 5 6


*William Baker. Jeremiah Simpson. 7


Kentucky.


Senators ; * J. C. S. Blackburn. 1897 *John @ Carlisle. 1895


Reps .: *W. J. Stone. Dist. 1


*William T. Ellis. 2


*I. H. Goodnight. 3


*A. B. Montgomery. 4 *A. G. Carruth. 5


W. W. Dickerson. 6


*W. C. P. Breckinridge. 7


*James B. McCreary. 8


*Thomas H. Pavnter. 9


*John W. Kendall. 10


John H. Wilson. 11


Louisiana.


Senators : * Edward D. White. 1897 *Randall L. Gibson. 1895


Reps .: *Adolph Meyer. Dist. 1 *Mat. D. Logan. 2


*Andrew Price. 3


*N. C. Blanchard. 4 *Charles J. Boatner. 5


*S. M. Robertson. 6


Maine.


Senators : William P. Frye. 1895


Eugene Hale. 1893


Reps .: Thomas B. Reed.


Dist. 1


Nelson Dingley, jr. 2 Seth L. Milliken. 3 Charles A. Boutelle. 4


Maryland.


Senators: [Vacancy ] 1897


*Arthur P. Gorman. 1893 *Henry Page. Dist 1


Reps .:


*Herman Stump. 2


*Henry W. Rusk. 3


H. Stockbridge, jr. 4


*Barnes Compton. 5


L. E. McComas. 6


Massachusetts.


Senators : George F. Hoar.


1895


Henry L. Dawes. 1893


Reps .: Chas. S. Randall. Dist. 1 2


Elijah A. Morse.


*John F. Andrew. 3


*Joseph H. O'Neil. 4


*Sherman Hoar. 5


Henry Cabot Lodge.


6


W. Cogswell.


7


*Moses T. Stevens. 8


*George F. Williams. 9 Joseph H. Walker. 10


*F. S. Coolidge. 11


*John C. Crosby. 12


ยท Michigan.


Senators : James McMillan. 1895


F. B. Stockbridge. 1893


Reps. : *J. L. Chipman. Dist. 1


*J. S. Gorman. 2


James O'Donnell.


3


*George W. Cooper. Henry U. Johnson. 6 7 8


9


40


FIFTY-SECOND CONGRESS.


J. C. Burrows. Dist. 4


Charles E. Belknap.


5


*B. G. Stout. 6


*J. R. Whiting. 7 *H. M. Youmans. 8


*H. Wheeler. 9


*T. E. A. Wheadock.


10


Sam'l M. Stephenson.


11


Minnesota.


Senators : Wm. D. Washburn. '95 Cushman K. Davis. '93


Reps .: *W. H. Harris. Dist. 1 John Lind. 2


*O. M. Hall. 3 *J. N. Castle. 4


*K. Halversen. 5


Mississippi.


Senators :* E. C. Walthall. 1895


*James Z. George. 1893


Reps .: *John M. Allen. Dist. 1 *J. C Kyle. 2


*Thomas C. Catchings. 3 *Clarke Lewis. 4


*J. H. Beaman. 5 *T. R. Stockdale. 6


*C. E. Hooker. 7


Missouri.


Senators :* George G. Vest. 1897 *Francis M. Cockrell. '93


Reps .: *Wm. H. Hatch. Dist. 1 *C. H. Mansur. 2


*Alex. M. Dockery. ?


*Robert P. C. Wilson. 4


*James C. Tarsney. 5


*John T. Heard. 6


*Richard H. Norton.


7 8


*Seth W. Cobb.


9


*Samuel Byrnes. 10 11


*Richard P. Bland.


*David A. De Armond. 12


*H. S. Greenleaf. *Robert W. Fyan. 13 John Raines. 29 30


*Marshall Arnold. 14


Montana.


Senators : Wilber F. Sanders. 1895 Thomas C. Power. 1893


Rep .: William W. Dixon.


Nebraska.


Senators : Chas. F. Manderson. '95


A. S. Paddock. 1893 Reps .: *W. J. Bryan. Dist. 1 *W. A. McKeighan. 2 *O. M. Kem. 3


Nevada.


Senators: John P. Jones. 1897 Wm. M. Stewart. 1893


Rep .:


*Horace F. Bastine.


New Hampshire.


Senators :* J. H. Gallinger. 1897


Wm. E. Chandler. 1895 Reps .: * L. F. Mckinney. Dist. 1 *W. F. Daniels. 2


New Jersey.


Senators: * J. R. McPherson. 1895


*Rufus Blodgett. 1893


Reps .: Christ. A. Bergin. Dist. 1 James Buchanan. 2


*J. A. Geissenhainer. 3 *Samuel Fowler. 4


*C. A. Cadmus. 5 Thomas D. English. 6 *E. F. McDonald. 7


New York.


Senators: * David B. Hill. 1897 1893 Frank Hiscock. Dist. 1


Reps .: *James W. Covert. *Alfred Chapin. W. J. Coombs.


2 3 4 5


*John M. Clancy.


*T. J. Magner. *J. R. Fellows. 6 *E. J. Dunphy. 7


*T. J. Campbell .. 8


*Amos Cummings.


9


*Bourke Cockran. 10


*J. D. Warner. *Joseph J. Little. *A. P. Fitch. 11 12 13 *W. G. Stahlnecker. *Henry Bacon. J. H. Ketcham. -14 15 16 *Charles Tracey. 17 18 19 J. A. Quackenbush. *I. N. Cox. John Sanford. 20 21


J. M. Weaver.


N. M. Curtis. 22


H. W. Bentley. 23 24


*G. Van Horn. James T. Belden. 25


*G. W. Ray. 26 27


Sereno E. Payne.


*H. H. Rockwell. 28


J. W. Wadsworth. 31


*D. N. Lockwood. 32


*T. L. Bunting. 33


W. B. Hooker.


34


North Carolina.


Senators :* Z. B. Vance.


1897


*Matthew W. Ransom. '95 *W. A. B. Branch. Dist. 1 H. P. Cheatham. 2


*B. F. Grady. 3


*B. H. Bunn. 4 *A. H. A. Williams. 5


*S. B. Alexander, 6


*John S. Henderson. 7 *W. H. H. Cowles. 8


*W. T. Crawford. 9


North Dakota.


Senators: H. C. Hansbrough. 1897 Lyman R. Casey. 1895 Rep .: N. M. Johnson.


Reps .:


*John J. O'Neill.


41


FIFTY-SECOND CONGRESS.


Ohio.


Senators :* Calvin S. Brice. John Sherman.


1897 1893 Dist. 1


Reps .: Bellamy Storer. John A. Caldwell. *G. W. Houk. *M. K. Gatz.


2


*George D. Tillman.


*George Johnstone. 3 4


*G. W. Shell.


*John J. Hemphill.


5


*E. T. Stackhouse.


6


South Dakota.


Senators: James H. Kyle. 1897


R. F. Pettigrew. 1895


- Jolley. 2


Tennessee.


Senators :* Isham G. Harris. 1895


*W. B. Bate. 1893


Reps .: Alfred A. Taylor. Dist. 1 2


[Vacancy.]


*H. C. Snodgrass. 3


*Benton McMillin. 4


*J. D. Richardson. 5


*J. E. Washington. 6


*N. N. Cox. 7


*B. A. Enloe.


8


*Rice A. Pierce. 9


*J. Patterson. 10


Texas.


Senators: * Richard Coke. 1895


*Horace Chilton.


1893


Reps .: *Charles Stewart. Dist. 1 2


*John B. Long.


*C. B. Kilgore. 3 *David B. Culberson. 4 5


*J. W. Bailey.


*Joseph Abbott.


6


*William H. Crain. *L. W. Moore.


7


*Roger Q. Mills.


8 9


*Joseph D. Sayers. 10


*S. W. T. Lanham. 11


Vermont.


12 13 Senators: Justin S. Morrill. 1897 Redfield Proctor. 1893 14 15 Reps .: H. H. Powers. Dist. 1




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