History of Trenton, New Jersey : the record of its early settlement and corporate progress., Part 63

Author: Lee, Francis Bazley, 1869-1914
Publication date: 1895
Publisher: Trenton, N.J. : John L. Murphy
Number of Pages: 540


USA > New Jersey > Mercer County > Trenton > History of Trenton, New Jersey : the record of its early settlement and corporate progress. > Part 63


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CHARLES J. PARKER, eldest son of ex-Governor Joel Parker, was born in Freehold, New Jersey, August, 1849. He graduated from the Lawrenceville High School in 1867, and from Princeton College in 1870. He was admitted to the bar of New Jersey by the Supreme Court in 1893 as an attorney and three years afterwards as a counselor. He practiced his profession for a short time in Freehold (the county seat of Monmouth county), and subsequently removed to Manasquan, in that county, where he has been engaged in the practice of the law continuously. A few years ago he formed a co-partnership with Benjamin B. Pearce, Esquire, under the firm name of Parker & Pearce. The firm has a large and substantial clientage. Mr. Parker is a man of great public spirit. He has taken great interest in the cause of popular education, and was largely instrumental in securing the erection of the commodious public school-house in the borough of Manasquan, and in raising this school to one of the best high schools in the county. He was for many years clerk of the Board of School Trustees, and is now the President of the Board of Education of the borough. He founded the First National Bank of Manasquan, New Jersey, one of the strongest banking institutions in the State, and ever since its organiza- tion he has been its President and legal adviser. On only one occasion has he been a candidate for a political office. In the campaign of 1895 he was persuaded to accept the Democratic nomination for member of Assembly. This was the year of the CHARLES J. PARKER. great Republican landslide. He was defeated by a very small majority, but by reason of his great popularity he ran ahead of the State ticket. He is a man of the strictest integrity, and has the confidence of his fellow-citizens irrespective of party. He is a prominent member of the Masonic Fraternity. He was married in September, 1877, to Miss Alida Marcellus, daughter of the late Adam V. Marcellus (then of Free- hold). They have five children-Joel, Helen, Marcellus, Frederick and Alida.


106


LEGISLATIVE AND BIOGRAPHICAL SUPPLEMENT.


ABRAHAM LOWER was born in York, Pennsylvania, October 27th, 1839. He was educated at the public schools of Philadelphia and began his chosen occupation of carpenter and builder in that city. He resided in Ohio from 1853 to 1857, returning to Philadelphia in the latter year. In April, 1861, he enlisted in the 19th Pennsylvania Volunteers ; re-enlisted in August in the 72d Penn- sylvania Volunteers, and served until August 5th, 1863. From the date of his discharge he served as special officer of the War Department until near the close of the Rebellion. He removed to Camden, New Jersey in 1868, but for the past nineteen years, Point Pleasant, Ocean county, has been his home. He has been Coroner of that county ; is a Commissioner of Deeds ; has served in Point Pleasant Borough Council ; has been a member of Board of Education and Board of Health, and was the first Police Magistrate of the borough. He has always taken an active interest in political affairs, and at one time figured prominently in Camden municipal politics. He was elected a member of the Assembly of 1895 and served on the Committees on Boroughs and Borough Com- missions, Engrossed Bills, and was Chairman of the Committee on Soldiers' Home. He was re- elected to the Assembly of 1896 by a plurality of 1,129 over Hall, Democrat. In the House he served on the Committee on Elections and was Chairman of Committee on Railroads and Canals. He was appointed in 1895, by Governor Werts, a member of the Commission to report on a plan for the erection and maintenance of a home for honorably-discharged soldiers and sailors of the late Rebellion and was chosen President of the Commission. Mr. Lower is a member of the Masonic Order, is a Past Chancellor in Pythian Knighthood, is ex-State Councilor of the American Mechanics of New Jersey, Past Commander and Adjutant of Elwood Arnold Post, G. A. R., at Point Pleasant, and occupies positions of prominence in several other secret societies and organizations.


107


LEGISLATIVE AND BIOGRAPHICAL SUPPLEMENT.


WILLIAM D. DALY was born in 1851 in Jersey City. He has always resided within the limits of Hudson county. His early education was acquired in the public schools of Jersey City, and among his schoolmates were ex-Mayor Wanser, Samuel D. Dickinson, City Treasurer of Jersey City, and the late City Clerk John E. Scott. At the age of fourteen he went to work as a moulder's apprentice, and at one time was employed in the foundry of the Erie Railroad Company. But the legal profession had always offered an attractive field to Mr. Daly, and in 1870 he entered the office of Blair & Ransom, in Jersey City. Four years later he was admitted to the bar as an attor- ney, and later he was made a counselor. Mr. Daly entered upon the practice of law with the tact and energy peculiar to self-made men. He has practiced law in all the courts of the State, and has represented the defence in more capital cases than any lawyer in the State and now stands in the front rank of criminal lawyers in the State. In the field of municipal and constitutional law he has shown marked success. In the great Erie railroad strike of 1878 Mr. Daly appeared as counsel for the arrested freight-handlers and secured their acquittal. In 1887 he conducted the defence of the Cigar- makers' Union in Jersey City, whose leaders were charged with conspiracy. In this case also he succeeded in ob- taining a verdict of acquittal. His carly associations have made Mr. Daly entertain a very kindly feeling toward laboring men and labor organizations. In appreciation of his legal ability President Cleveland, during his first term, appointed Mr. Daly Assistant United States Dis- trict Attorney, and this office he held for three years, handing in his resignation to an incoming administra- tion. In 1888 he was made alternate delegate to the National Democratic Convention at St. Louis, and again in 1892 to the Chicago convention. In 1896 he was a district delegate to the National Democratic Convention at Chicago. In 1891 he was urged to accept the nomi- nation for member of the House of Assembly from the Eighth district of Hudson county. Elected by a rous- ing majority, he took his place on the floor of the House as the practical leader of his party. The same courtesy which had characterized his work as a practitioner won for him hosts of friends as a legislator, even from the opposition, and at the close of the session, he was WILLIAM D. DALY. appointed Judge of the Hoboken District Court. This office he resigned upon his election to the Senate in 1892. The election which resulted in the choice of Judge Daly to the Senate was won after a most exciting campaign. J. Herbert Potts, a man of great strength and popularity, was nominated on the Republican ticket, but Mr. Daly has such a hold on the popular heart that he was triumphantly elected by 5,645 plurality-the largest vote ever given a Senatorial candidate in Hudson county. He was re-elected in 1895 by a plurality of 4,559 over ex-Assemblyman Max Salinger, the Republican nominee. In the Senate Mr. Daly has gained a reputation as a legislator that many of the old leaders might look upon with envy. He made a brilliant record in 1895 on the Riparian Rights question, his opposition to the Creamery trust, as a member of the Special Inves- tigating Committee of the Senate and on all other important matters which came before that body, and in 1896 and 1897 he added much to his fame and popularity as a legislator, particularly in opposition to the bill extending terms of officers in Newark and Jersey City. During the Presiden- tial campaign of 1896, the Senator was always to the forefront battling for the success of the Demo- cratic ticket, and besides he rendered his party valuable service as a member of its State Committee. His name has been frequently mentioned in connection with the Gubernatorial nomination. Last year he served on the Committees on Judiciary, Municipal Corporations, Engrossed Bills, Passed Bills and Sinking Fund.


108


LEGISLATIVE AND BIOGRAPHICAL SUPPLEMENT.


CHARLES E. DAVEY, the well-known and popular liquor merchant of Washington street, Newark, New Jersey, was born in the city of Camden, New Jersey, September 1st, 1859. At an early age he removed to Newark, New Jersey with his parents ; his father establishing a wholesale liquor business which subsequently grew to such prominence as to be ranked among the largest, if not the largest, in the country. Finishing his education at the Newark Academy Mr. Davey entered into the employ of his father and paid such attention to his duties that upon the death of his parent in 1895, the entire busi- ness was willed to him. Under his able man- agement, the success which had attended the old firm was continued, and the established reputation for reputable dealing fully sustained. While Mr. Davey has taken no prominent part in politics, it is by no means owing to lack of opportunity. He has repeatedly refused nomi- nation for office ; a nomination, too, at a time when such nomination was equivalent to an election. Mr. Davey has been twice married. In 1887 he married Harriet Middleton, who died in 1893. On Christmas day of 1896 he was united in marriage to Minnie Wolf, of Newark, and both reside at No. 228 Washington street of that city. Mr. Davey belonged to the Randolph Light Guards, the only Democratic club in the State of New Jersey that participated CHARLES E. DAVEY. in the funeral parade commemorative of the death of President Garfield. He is a member of the Arion Singing Society, and a member of the Krueger Democratic Club.


109


LEGISLATIVE AND BIOGRAPHICAL SUPPLEMENT.


DR. JULIUS FEHR is the son of George Louis William Fehr, of Darmstadt, Germany, who was born March 6th, 1774, and died in 1840. He was an officer in the Polish Lanciers of the Austrian army, and took part in the celebrated battles of Esslin and Aspern, as well as other engagements of that period. His father had been director of the Darmstadt Mint, a position which succeeds by inheri- tance, and had the father chosen to follow the vocation of his ancestors the subject of this sketch would doubtless have been there to-day. Julius was born at Castle, near Mayence, in the Grand Duchy of Hesse, Germany, March 29th, 1825, and was educated in the schools of Darmstadt. At the age of sixteen years he was apprenticed to a druggist in Hanau, with whom he remained four years. He then went to Colmar, in Alsace, where he spent a year in the same business. Soon after this he enlisted in the French army and served four years in Algiers, when he was discharged as a non-commissioned officer and returned home. He emigrated to America in 1850, landing in New York in May of that year. He at once obtained employment in E. & S. Fougera's Pharmacy and occupied various positions with that firm for the ensuing five years. In the latter year he removed to Hoboken, New Jersey, where he had charge of the pharmacy of C. V. Clickner & Company for four years, when he pur- chased the business and continued it until 1877. During this time he pursued the regular medical course of the College of Physicians and Surgeons at Columbia Col- lege, New York City, and graduated from that institution in 1869. For some time he practiced medicine in the city of Hoboken. Dr. Fehr was one of the founders of the New Jersey Pharmaceutical Association in 1871, and, at the meeting held in Newark that year, was elected Vice President. After experimenting for several years with talcum, the silicate of magnesia (a substance which, although known for many centuries, had been entirely overlooked by therapeutics and dirmatologists), Dr. Fehr succeeded in perfecting his celebrated preparation of "Compound Talcum." In the year 1874 it was exhibited at the meeting of the American Pharmaceutical Association at Louisville, Kentucky ; in 1875, at Boston, and in 1876 at the Centennial Exposition at Philadelphia ; at all of which places it was given marked attention. In 1890, on invi- tation of Dr. Wales, Surgeon-General of the DR. JULIUS FEHR. United States Navy, the preparation was placed on exhibition at the Museum of Hygiene, founded in the city of Washington for permanent exhibition of meritorious hygiene discoveries and inventions. From a small beginning in 1873, the manufacture of "Fehr's Compound Talcum " has grown to be a large and increasing business and, at the time of Dr. Fehr's death, which occurred February 20th, 1897, the transactions of the firm extended not only throughout the United States, but to foreign lands as well. In 1867 Dr. Fehr was married to Mrs. Eliza Broguet, by whom he had one son, Louis Julius Fehr. After the death of his first wife in 1883, the Doctor married Antonia, daughter of Francis Heger. He was, up to the time of his death, a member of the Manhattan Liberal Club of New York, founded by Horace Greeley. The large and lucrative business which his energy had established is still being carried on with increasing prosperity under the able management of his son, who succeeded to the interest.


DR. JULIUS FEHR'S "COMPOUND TALCUM" POWDER.


The original " Hygienic Dermal Powder for Infants" and Adults.


THE MOST EXCELLENT TOOTH


ented


COMPOUND


TALAGNESIA SILICATAJ


TO SOFTEN AND PRESERVE THE SKIN


FOR


ci


BABIES


ADULTS isManufactured by Julius Fehr gal Hoboken


N. JE


WLY THE GEDE


BEST DRESSING TAKES


First investigated and its Therapeutic Properties discovered in the year 1868, by DR. FEHR, and introduced to the Medical and the Pharmaceutical Profession in the year 1873.


Composition :


Silicate of Magnesia, with Carbolic and Salicylic Acids.


Properties :


Antiseptic, Antizymotic and Disinfectant.


USEFUL AS A


General Sprinkling Powder,


with positive Hygienic, Prophylatic and Therapeutic Properties.


GOOD IN ALL THE AFFECTIONS OF THE SKIN.


Sold by the Drug Trade generally, both plain and perfumed.


THE MANUFACTURER : JULIUS FEHR, M.D.,


ANCIENT PHARMACIST.


Established since 1859 in Hoboken, New Jersey.


Send for sample.


INDEX.


A.


Abrahamson, C. M., 107


Adams, C. F., .


Allinson, D. Cooper, 193


Apgar, W. H., .


192


B.


Bainbridge, Willis P., 199


Baker, C. H.,


309


Baker, L. F.,


164


Baker, P. E.,


Illustration.


Barwis, Elmer,


225


Beasley, Mercer,


Beatty, H. M.,


223


Bird, Chetwood,


311


Bird, John T.,


Birt, Frank J., 332


Blauth Jacob,


317


Bonney, Robt. B., 304


Brewer, J. Hart, 321


Bruere, A. T.,


225


Britton, C. P.,


208


Buchanan, James,


189


Burley, Chas. S., 330


Burroughs, C. R.,


222


Burtis, H. J., .


317


C.


Cain, Gardner H.,


198


Cantwell, F. V., .


214


Case, C. B.,


304


Cauldwell, W. H ..


326


Chambers, Benj. F.,


299


Chambers, J. S.,


306


Chambers, Thos. S.,


297


Clark, James,


207


Clark, W. A., Jr., 211


Condict, E. C.,


321


Cook, E. G.,


187


Cooper, Jas. R.,


214


Cooper, W. H.,


328


Coleman, J. B.,


207


Cornell, J. W.,


318


Coutier, Louis,


315


Coxon, Jonathan, Sr., 319


Coxon, Jonathan, Jr., 320


Craythorn, C. J., 215


Cranmer, Geo. T.,


296


Crossley, W. J.,


200


D.


Dayton, W. L.,


183


Diehl, Louis, Sr ,


334


Diehl, Louis, Jr.,


326


Dey, A. H., . .


218


Dickinson, E. L.,


224


Dilts, C. H.,


.


331


Dippolt, Charles,


326


Dunham, C. H.,


220


E.


Elmer, William, .


210


Evans, E. W.,


192


Exton, Wm. T.,


325


F.


Fell, A. S.,


221


Fell, J. B.,


303


Firth, Walter,


332


Fish, Benjamin,


298


Fitzgeorge, George,


302


Freudenmacher, Philip,


327


G.


Gerry, C. W.,


220


Gihon, H. D.,


334


Ginnelley, E. H.,


311


Ginnodo, J. Q.,


306


Golding, Moses,


310


Gray, J. D,


323


Green, Edwin, 324


Green, J. M., 150 Perrine, Lewis, Jr., 196


Gregory, B. C.,


102


Gribbin, A. A.,


332


Griffith, W. H. G.,


209


Gummere, Barker, Jr.,


309


Gummere, W. S.,


191


Gunson, B. F.,


319


H.


Hamill, Hugh H., . 191


Hamilton, M. R.,


145


Hawthorn, John .


314


Headley-Leavitt Co.,


325


Heath, Samuel,


301


Hill, Edmund C., 308


Hodson, S. F., . 333


Howell, Israel,


301


Hutchinson, B. B,


200


Hutchinson, S. B.,


195


J.


Johnson, Wm. Y.,


190


K.


Kafes, J. L., .


313


Keegan, Martin,


314


Kemler, F. A.,


327


Kitson, Chas. P., .


318


Klein, J. Henry,


322


L.


Lalor, Frank H., . 142


Lalor, W. S.,


208


Lane, J. B.,


329


Lanning, J. W.,


299


Lanning, Wm. M.


187


Leavitt, Lyman, .


223


Lee, Francis B.,


197


Lee, William H., 316


Leigh, Hutchinson,


310


Loos, I. B.,


224


Lutze, A. F. R., 330


M.


Mackenzie, T. H.,.


221


Macpherson, G. W.,


190


Maple, J. C., .


315


Margerum, J. D.,


323


Martinette, J. H.,


331


Mccullough, W. G.,


212


McFaul, J. A., Rt. Rev., 172


McGalliard, B. W.,


219


McKelway, John,


207


Mickel, Wm. H.,


329


Moore, Eckford,


303


Moore, J. H.,


330


Moore, J. T.,


322


Montgomery, John A., 200


Murray, C. Edward,


312


Mutchler, Wm. H.,


300


Murphy, John L.,


250


N.


Norton, Horace G.,


216


O.


O'Farrell, M. J., Rt. Rev.,


170


Olipliant, N. B., .


217


Oliphant, S. D., Sr.,


184


Owens, W. C.,


333


P.


Parker, Lewis,


185


Patterson, Jolin H.,


149


Pierson, L. C.,


102


Poulson & Coleman,


331


Price, Geo. V


324


Perrine, Lewis, Sr., 195


Phillips, W. W. L.,


207


Prudential Insurance Co.,


. 335-338


Quintin, C. E.,


334


R.


Raub, Thos. E.,


314


Reed, Alfred,


191


Reid, Chas. A.,


318


Rice, Wm.,


213


Richards, H. N.,


333


Rickey, A. H., 305


Rider, A. J., 106


Robbins, Carroll, 199


Roberts, C. E., . 202


Rogers, R. R., Sr.,


210


Rogers, R. R, Jr.,


218


Rusling, Jas. F.,


182


S.


Satterthwait, Linton,


201


Satterthwaite, Jos. H.,


215


Scarborough, John, Rt. Rev.,


168


Scudder, H. C.,


201


Shaw, Jos. B.,


217


Shepherd, C., 216


Solan, M. J.,


300


Southwick, J. A., 302


Spencer, Bird W., 322


Stelle, W. W., 312


Stevens, Thos. S., 320


Stockton, J. P.,


186


Stokes, E. H.,


316


Stokes, J. W., 316


Stout, J. G., 327


Struble, Wm. McD., 219


Stryker, Wm. S., 296


Swayze, H. M.,


313


T.


Tantum, J. D.,


225


Taylor, John,


297


Taylor, John L.,


207


Taylor Provision Co., The,


312


Terradell, T. M.,


311


Turner, J. P.,


212


V.


Van Cleef, John T.,


198


Van Syckel, Bennet,


184


Vroom, Garret D. W.,


189


W.


Walker, E. R.,


202


Walker, Samuel, Jr.,


188


Weeks, H. M.,


209


Weller, F. M.,


305


Wetherill, H. G.,


211


Wells, J. M., .


214


White, Thos. M.,


328


White, W. H., 304


Whittaker, John H., 302


Witte, Eugene B., . 215


Woodruff, R. S.,


202


Woodward, F. F. C., 307


Woolsey, W. W., . 222


Woolverton, John,


207


Worthington, A. H.,


213


Wyckoff, W. W., 213


Y.


Yard, Emory N.,


294


Yard, W. S.,


295


222


188


Hannum, Levi T.,


199


Rellstab, John,


189


186


Skirm, A. A., 313


INDEX TO SUPPLEMENT.


A.


Armbruster, Wm. O., 29


Atherton, Frank, . 59


Atherton, Robert, 67


B.


Baird, Wni. M , M.D., 83


Bartinc, J. D.,


S6


Hicks, Edward W., .


Baumann, Carl V.,


13


Bennett, Chas. A., 85


Benny, Allan, .


98


Bergen, Jas. J.,


90


Blackshaw, Jas. F.,


45


Bolton, De Witt C., 62


Bonnet Julius, 100


Braun, Christian,


61


Breidenbach, Andrew J. 17


Bridge, Phineas, 63


Brown, O. H, . 81


Bullock, Samuel,


98


Burke, John II.,


59


C.


Cadmus, C. A.,


97


Cadmus, Edwin,


26


Carroll, Richard,


64


Carroll, Robert A.,


65


Carroll, T. J.,


39


Chamberlain, W.


73


Christic, Jas. A.,


13


Clark, R. A.,


87


Clauss, Henry,


76


37


Clements, Alex. J.,


Conklin, Edward L., 8


Cornislı, Johnston,


83


Cox, Winfield S.,


69


Coyle, Michael J., 93


Cramer, Isaac S.,


78


Crater, David S.,


78


Cunningham, Jos. L,


100


D.


Daly, William D.,


107


Davey, Chas. E.,


108


Davis, Robert,


43


Decker, Geo. W.,


49


Demarest, Elmer W.


21


De Meza, Geo. W.,


88


Dietz Conrad, .


34


Ditmar, A. J., 46


Dod, Wmn. H., 30


Drake, W. E 46


Dryden, Jno. F.,


2


Dunn, John T.,


75


E.


Ebie, Alvin C.,


98


Emley, Eugene,


62


Evans, Chas. M.,


30


F.


Fehr, Julius, .


109


Fielder, Geo. B., 29


Fisher, John G., 35


Fleming, Pierce J , 48


Flummerfelt, A. L.,


86


Flynn, Thomas,


56


Fort, J. Franklin, 11


Fowler, Chas. N., 73


Francois, Judson C., 51


Frederick, Samuel, 63


Frost, Bartlett C.,


85


G.


Gledhill, Henry W.,


60


Goldenhorn, Isaac F., 23


Green, Wm.,


31


Griggs, John W.


1


Groth, Emil,


26


H.


Hagerty, Daniel W., 88


Hand, Robert E., .


95


Murphy, Franklin, .


11


Harrison, Geo. B., 14


Hauck, Anthony, . 33


Heiney, Morris, 38


Hendrick, Chas C., 90


Heppenheimer, W. C., 46


91


Norton, James F.,


102


O.


O'Neill, P. H.,


102


P.


Parker, Chas.,


105


Parker, Fred ,


105


Parker, James,


99


Peal, John H.,


16


Pearson, John,


101


Perrine, David Clark, 80


Piercy, Francis,


37


Porter, Geo. W. W.,


12


Price, Col. E. L., .


14


Queen, John W.,


48


R.


Rabe, Rudolph F.,


48


Ramsey, John,


77


Rau, Jacob, Jr.,


12


Reading, Chas. N.,


77


Reed, Chas. A.,


88


Reid, Wm. H.,


82


Righter, Jos. B.,


92


Ringleman, John,


89


Rippe, Frederick,


36


Robertson, James,


58


Roll, J. Martin,


75


Romaine, Isaac,


44


Ruempler, Carl H.,


49


S.


Schober, Chas. A.,


100


Simpson, Albert J.,


13


Sproul, Dr. O. H.,


79


Stanger, Solomon H.,


82


Stewart, Jas. F.,


58


Stout, Stephen V. W., M.D., 30


Stuhr, Frederick J., 38


Stuhr, William S., 45


Sutphen, A. P., 94


T.


Thurston, Chas. B.,


33


Tice, Geo. H.,


90


Tremble, James,


26


U.


Ulrich, Benedict,


8


Urquhart, Rob't D.,


21


V.


Van Noordt, Jacob J.,


67


Van Voorhies, A. A.,


62


Van Wickle, D. E,


87


McComb, Joseph, .


34


Vinson, Dr. Jos. S.,


16


Voorhees, Foster M.,


74


Vreeland, Jno. B, 95


W.


Ward, Dr. Leslie D.,


4


Ward, Elias S., .


6


Watkins, David O.,


84


Welsh, John J.,


69


Winfield, Albert D., .


57


Z.


Zabriskie, Albert T.,


68


Zeller, John,


94


Zumbusch, Joseph,


34


76


Mullin, Jos. P.,


41


Murphy, Benjamin, .


35


N.


Neely, S A. J.,


37


Nelson, Wm. G.,


23


Norman, Adrian, .


74


Hobart, Garret A., .


55


Hoffinan, C. S.,


101


Hogan, Jas. J.,


Holdrum, Abram C., 92


Holt, John L.,


Hooker, Wm. H.,


31


Hoos, Edward,


25


Hopkins, Charles F., 93


Hopson, Win. A., 57


Huber, Christian, 68


Huff, Abraham T.,


91


Hughes, P. L.,


97


J.


Jackson, Edward W.,


15


Jacobi, Charles, .


101


Jacobus, John,


99


Johnson, Jos. B.,


14


Johnson, Wm. M.,


96


K.


Kean, John,


71


Kelly, Simon,


39


Kenny, Michael J., 43


Kerr, John F.,


61


Kevitt, Edward N.,


66


Keys, James,


59


Keys, W. J.,


96


King, John, 64


Klein, Charles, 103


Krueger, Gottfried,


7


Kyte, George,


77


L.


Lake, W. H., .


79


Lawshe, David,


76


Lawson, Wilson M., 65


Legislature, A Brief History of


The,


i-xi


Leonard, Clement De R., 27


Letts, Wm. H.,


47


Lewis, Wm. I.,


58


Lippincott, Job H., 25


Lloyd, Frank T., .


81


Lower, Abraham,


106


Lynch, Richard J.,


36


M.


Madden, Jno. F.,


47


Malcolm, William,


66


Mandeville, F. N.,


15


Martin, W. H.,


71


Martine, James E., 89


McAndrew, Robert, 19


McArthur, John E., 19


McCran, Thomas,


McDermit, Frank M., 9


Mc Dermott, Frank P., 94


McEwan, Thomas, 55


McKee, Wood, 60


McNally, Frank, 98


Mettler, Isaac S., 87


Mills, Thos. D., 44


Minch, B. M., 51


Mock, Frederick W., Jr., 17 84


Moon, Jas. E.,


Moran, Wm. J., 43


Morrell Richard,


53


Morrow, Wm. J., .


16


102


Hopper, John,


50


Parker, Joel,


104


64


2043





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