Scannell's New Jersey first citizens : biographies and portraits of the notable living men and women of New Jersey with informing glimpses into the state's history and affairs, 1919-1920, Vol II, Part 66

Author: Sackett, William Edgar, 1848- ed; Scannell, John James, 1884- ed
Publication date: 1917
Publisher: Patterson, N.J. : J.J. Scannell
Number of Pages: 1454


USA > New Jersey > Scannell's New Jersey first citizens : biographies and portraits of the notable living men and women of New Jersey with informing glimpses into the state's history and affairs, 1919-1920, Vol II > Part 66


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Mayor Ellis is a member of Trimble Lodge No. 117 F. & A. M., of Ex- celsior and Perfection Consistory, Scottish Rite, of the Tall Cedars of Lebanon, Consent Temple Knights of Mystic Shrine, Senatus Lodge I. O. O. F., the Leni Lenape, the I. O. R. M .. the Woodmen of America. Cam- den Council No. 17 Order North America, Lydia Dinah Council, Jr., O. U. A. M., Evening Star Council, Sr. O. U. A. M., Washington Camp P. O. S.


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552 Ely


A. of Camden, Lodge No. 111 L. O. O. M., Rebecca Lodge I. O. O. F. Dewey Temple O. U. A. M. Camden Lodge No. 293 B. P. O. E., and the Young Men's Christian Association, honorary member of the Physicians Motor Club and a member of the Stroilers Club of Philadelphia and the Sixth Ward Republican Club of Camden.


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JOHN H. ELY-Newark, (67 Pennsylvania Avenue) -Archi- tect. Born New Hope, Pa., June 13th, 1851 ; son of Matthias C. and Keziah (Stackhouse) Ely ; married at Cranbury Neck, N. J., Dec. 13th, 1871, to Lydia Helen Wilson, daughter of Dr. Ezekiel and Hannah (Bergen) Wilson.


Children : Wilson C .; Mrs. Ida M. Bemiss.


John H. Ely is of English extraction on his father's side; his mother was of French lineage. Joshua Ely, who came from Dunham, Notting- ham, England, in 1635, purchased four hundred acres of land in what was then called Burlington County, New Jersey. The lot on which the State House, Trenton, now stands, adjoined his tract on the south. The father of Mr. Ely was engaged in the lumber business in Pennsylvania for a number of years, but about twenty years before his death he came to this State, where he died, February 8th, 1895.


Mr. Ely attended the public schools in New Hope, Bucks county, Pa., until he was seven years of age, and in White Haven, Lucerne County, Pa., for five years afterwards. He completed his schooling in the public schools of this State, whither he came with his father's family when he was twelve years of age. And when the choice of a life calling became necessary, he chose that of the architect. He has followed his profession, in Newark since 1885. Many important buildings are of his planning. Among these is the great new City Hall in Newark-one of the most imposing and beau- tiful municipal buildings in the country. He also planned and built the city's new hospital. These great public works were accomplished in co- laboration with his son.


Mr. Ely is a worker in the ranks of the Democratic party. He was elected to serve in the Common Council of Newark for two years, 1892 and 1895; and at the organization of the Council in 1895, a unanimous vote, made him its President. He was one of the Committee of 100 that aided in the City's 250th Anniversary festivities ; and he has served on some of the city commissions. In 1909 and 1910 he was appointed a member of the Shade Tree Commission ; in 1911 a trustee of the Free Public Library, and in 1912 a member of the Board of Directors of the New- ark Museum Association. He is also a member of the Excise Board.


Mrs. Ely is a granddaughter of the Rev. Peter Wilson who was on the circuit embracing Hightstown, Hamilton Square and Trenton early in the nineteenth century. Of Mrs. Ely's children. Wilson C .. his partner in business, was married on June 2, 1897, to Grace R. Chamberlain, of James- burg. His daughter Ida May. married, in February, 1898, Dr. E. D. Bemiss, of Newark.


Engle


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Among the professional associations with which he has allied himself, is the American Institute of Architects. and he is one of the charter mem- bers of the New Jersey Chapter of the Institute. He is also a thirty-second degree Mason and a member of Salaam Temple, associated with the Car- taret Book Club, the Newark Board of Trade and the New Jersey His- torical Society, and a member of the Essex Club, the Gottfried Krueger Association, the Masonic Club of New Jersey and the Washington Asso- ciation.


AYMAR EMBURY-Englewood. - Architect. Born in New York, August 15, 1880; son of Aymar and Fannie Miller (Bates) Em- bury ; married May 14, 1904, to Dorothy Coe, of Englewood.


Aymar Embury, in his architect work, specializes in country houses. He has planned and supervised the construction of more than 250 of these, and is the author of two or three books on architectural topics. He has also directed the erection of some hotels and library buildings and banks in the country.


Mr. Embury entered Princeton University and, graduated with the C. E. degree in 1900, was given the M. S. degree in 1901. He had been in business for three years in New York when in 1904 he became an in- structor in architecture at Princeton University but he was there for only a year, returning then to his practice. In 1917, he went to France to en- gage in Government work.


Mr. Embury is the author of "100 Country Houses," 1908; "The Dutch Colonial House," 1912; "Country Houses," 1914; "Early American Church- es," 1914. He is a member of the A. I. A., the Architectural League, New York, Princeton Engineering Society, and is connected with The Players, the Englewood Country. The Knickerbocker Country Clubs.


Mr. Embury has a New York office at 132 Madison Avenue.


ROBERT FRY ENGLE-Beach Haven .- Member of Board of Commerce and Navigation. Born at Mount Holly, N. J .. Feb. 4th, 1868, son of Robert Barclay and Jane (Darnell) Engle ; mar- ried at Buckingham, Pa., on Nov. 6th, 1902 to Sarah A. Atkinson. Children : Robert Fry Engle. Jr .. and Jean Engle.


Robert Fry Engle's father was Robert Barclay Engle. Senator from Ocean County, from 1896 to 1898 and his mother was Jane Darnell En- gle of Mount Laurel, N. J. His father, although born and raised as a farm- er, established one of the first hotels in Beach Haven, N. J., opening the "Parry House" in 1874. In 1876, he built the Engelside.


. Mr. Engle, the subject of this sketch, received his education in the Friend's Boarding School at Westtown, Pa., in 1891, and after several years experience in the wholesale dry goods business at Philadelphia,


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Farmer


he came to the assistance of his father in the management of the ho- tel.


In 1901 when the father died, the property was incorporated into "The Engleside Company," and Mr. Engle became the treasurer and manager of this concern, and which position he has held to date. He is also head and general manager of the "Covington Company" which owns and operates the Covington Apartment Hotel in West Philadelphia. For the past fifteen years, he has been a member of the Council of the Bor- ough of Beach Haven.


On Feb. 27th, 1917, he was appointed for a full term of four years as a member of the Board of Commerce and Navigation by Governor Edge.


His business address is Beach Haven, N. J.


WILLIAM WADSWORTH EVANS-Paterson, (591 East 29th St.) .- Lawyer and Assemblyman. Born at Paterson, N. J., Octo- ber 5th, 1887, married at Paterson, N. J., to Isabel, daughter of William D. Blauvelt of Paterson, N. J.


Children : Barbara born April 10, 1914.


William Wadsworth Evans, republican representative to the Assem- bly from Passaic County is a Patersonian. He attended the public schools of that city, graduating in 1901, and thereupon entering the Paterson High School from which he graduated in 1905. Deciding that law was his chosen profession he entered the New York Law School, graduating from that institution in 1908. The following year he was admitted to the New York Bar, and in November, 1911, he was admitted to the New Jersey Bar.


Assemblyman Evans was secretary to Speaker Thomas F. McCran in 1912 while the latter was assemblyman from Passaic County.


EDWARD D. FARMER-Montclair, (16 Madison Avenue. ) -Manufacturer. Born at Montclair, N. J., Oct. 2. 1877 : son of George P. and Helena E. (Damai) Farmer ; married at Glen Ridge, N. J., Dec. 26th, to Helen H. Hart, daughter of E. C. Hart. Children : Annette Hart and Helen Joyce.


Edward D. Farmer, obtained his principal education in the public schools of Montclair which he attended in 1899 and from which he was graduated.


At the present, Mr. Farmer is a director of the consolidated Safety Pin Company, and President of the Jenkins Manufacturing Company of Bloomfield, N. J., as well as being treasurer of the Pratt & Farmer Com' pany, of New York City, and head of the Farmer Coal Company, of Asbury Park, N. J.


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Farrand


Mr. Farmer's activities in the commercial world were not confined to manufacturing. He is also a financier, and is a director in the following banks, Bloomfield National Bank, Glen Ridge Trust Company, and the Essex Title Guarazty and Trust Company.


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He is a menter of the Montclair Club, Inc., Montclair Golf Club, and the Montclair Civie Association.


DUDLEY FARRAND-Newark, (49 Lincoln Park) .- Electrical Engineer. {Photograph published in Vol. 1, 1917). Born in Bloomfield, Feb. 21, 1867: son of Charles and Anna (Ferrand) Ferrand; married in Newark, Nov. 9th, 1899, to Jane Cham- penois daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Champenois, or New- ark.


Children : Dudley Champenois, born May 3rd, 1901, (died July 19th, 1901;) Louise Champenois, born May 2, 1903, (died Nov. 11th, 1905) : Laura Jean, born Feb. 10th, 1907.


The Farrand family comes of the French Hugeunots. Nathan Farrand, first of the family on this side of the sea of whom there is any mention, is noted in an ancient record as having settled in Milford, Conn., in 1645. His son, also Nathan. came to Newark in 1691 and rose to be a Judge of the Essex County Court; and Betbuel Ferrand, great-great-grandfather of Mr. Ferrand, was a lieutenant in the Patriotic Army during the Revo- lution.


Dudley Farrand was educated in the Bloomfield schools, Common and High, and at the Newark Academy. Later, in 1887, he entered Princeton College, but did not take the course. Electricity was then just beginning to burst on the notice of men as a new force of nature that might be harnessed for human use. The rising generation became interested in it; and young Farrand deciding not to take the course at Princeton accepted a position with the Newark Electric Light and Power Company. He has since filled every position in the electrical department of that company and of the now Public Service Corporation, which absorbed it.


Mr. Farrand had been with the Electric Light and Power Company for . only two years when he was made Assistant Secretary of the Company ; and two years afterwards was promoted to the position of Assistant Mana- ger, with charge of the operating department; in 1892 he was placed in charge of Design and Construction. Thence his rise to higher positions was rapid. He became Assistant Manager of the company in 1896, and a year later was made General Manager. The supervision of the company's work all over New Jersey was given to him in 1899; and in 1903, when the company had gone under the wing of the Public Service Corporation of New Jersey, he was made General Manager of its electric department. Later, when the energies of the Public Service Corporation were differen- tiated, it established the Public Service Electric Company to take over and operate all of its electric properties. Mr. Farrand was made Vice Presi- dent and General Manager of that company ; and when, at the outbreak of hostilities between United States and Germany, Gen. Hine was given a


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Farrell


leave of absence, Mr. Farrand was made Assistant to President McCarter of the Public Service Corporation.


Mr. Farrand's skill and expertness as an electrical engineer have com- manded wide attention. He assisted the Board of Engineers, in an advisory way, in compiling data for the use of the National Conservation Com- mission appointed by President Roosevelt; and later was invited by the President to represent the electric interests in the first Conference of Governors, held at the White House in May, 1908.


Mr. Farrand was a private in the First Troop of Calvary of New Jersey (Essex troop) from 1893 to 1898. He is a member of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers, a Fellow of the American Institute Elec- trical Engineers and Past President of the National Electric Light Associa- tion. His club memberships are with the Engineers (N. Y.), Essex (New- ark), Essex County Country Club (West Orange), Rumson Country and the Sea Bright Beach, and he is one of the Sons of American Revolution.


. Mr. Farrand's summer home is at Fair Haven, (Monmouth Co.)


CHARLES LE ROY FARRELL-Newark. (624 Clifton Ave.)- Banker. Born at Britol, Ind. Nov. 14th, 1874; son of John W. Mary J. (Maffit) Farrell ; married at Indianapolis. Ind. Oct. 12th, 1898, to Nellie May Richards, daughter of Edward N. and Serena H. Richards of Indianapolis.


Charles Le Roy Farrell received most of his early education in the public and high schools of Bristol, Ind. He later studied at the Transyl- vania University, at Lexington, Kentucky, for one year.


Mr. Farrell resided in his native state until eight years of age, when his parents moved to Chicago. In 1908 he came to New York and lived in that city until 1910. Mr. Farrell's date of taking up residence in New Jersey, dates back eight years, when he made his home in Newark, N. J.


At the present writing, he is president and director of the National Newark and Essex Banking Co., as well as being director of the Secur- ing Savings Bank, Newark, American Insurance Co., Newark, American Foreign Banking Corporation, New York City, aud trusteee of Babies Hospital, Newark, N. J. He is also treasurer Anti-Tuberculosis Associa- tion of New Jersey and a director of the Board of Trade, Newark. and of the American Red Cross, Newark Chapter. He is Governor and treas- urer of Essex County Country Club, West Orange, N. J., and also of the Down Town Club, Newark, and a director of the Newark Music Festival Association.


Mr. Farrell's club memberships are the Union League Club, New York, City Essex Club, Newark ; Down Town Club. Newark ; Baltusrol Golf Club, Short Hills; Rumson Country Club, Rumson, and the Seaview Golf Club Absecon.


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Fewsmith


His business address is the National Newark & Essex Banking Co., Broad Street, Newark, N. J.


JOHN J. FARRELL-Trenton-Executive Clerk. Born at New York City on Aug. 31st, 1864, son of John and Bridget (Reilley) Farrell, married at Newark, N. J., on Jan. 27, 1897 to Lucy Young daughter of William and Anne (Carey) Young.


Children : Lucy V., born Nov. 7, 1897 ; John J., Jr., born August 28, 1899; Anne, born May 6, 1901; William, born July 24, 1905.


John J. Farrell is a descendant of John Farrell who lost his life while superintendent of the Morgan Iron Works New York, in fitting out the Monitor which sank the Merrimac and his father was the fifth genera- tion of Farrell's who settled in New York City.


He attended the public schools of Newark in 1871 to 1878.


Early in life, Mr. Farrell became interested in newspaper work. In 1883 doing special work for various papers and in 1892 he joined the staff of the Newark Evening News.


For many years almost continuously from his entrance into the newspaper field he was legislative correspondent at Trenton for the New- ark News and other papers.


From 1899 to 1904 when he served as State Riparian Commissioner, however, he discontinued his regular work in the newspaper profession. At the end of this period, he again became a legislative correspondent for the Atlantic City Review until Feb. 20th, 1913, when he was engaged as Executive Clerk of the State of New Jersey to fill a vacancy caused by the death of Charles A. Ransom.


Mr. Farrell is a member of the following clubs: Elks, National Cor- respondence and New Jersey Legislative Correspondents.


His business address is Statehouse, Trenton, N. J.


JOSEPH FEWSMITH-Newark, (72 Washington Street.) - Physician and Surgeon. Born at Auburn, N. Y., on Jan. 31, 1851; son of Joseph and Emma C. (Livingston) Fewsmith ; married at Newark on April, 1880, to Jean A. Hendry, daughter of Hugh Hendry of Scotland.


Children : Jean, born in 1897.


Joseph Fewsmith, widely known among the physicians and surgeons of the state, is of English lineage on his father's side ; his paternal ancestors were of Quaker stock and figured during the Revolutionary period. On his mother's side he is of Dutch and Scotch origin. His father, a D. D., was for thirty-seven years Pastor of the Second Presbyterian church in Newark, of which Dr. Fewsmith is now one of the trustees.


Dr. Fewsmith's earlier education was acquired at the Newark Academy and at Phillips Academy in Andover, Mass. He graduated from Yale Col-


558 Fielder


lege in 1871, from the College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York, in 1874 and pursued bis medical and surgical studies at Roosevelt Hospital in 1875, at Vienna (Austria) in 1877 and at Woolwich Military hospital in London. He established himself as a practitioner in Newark, and has since been engaged there.


Dr. Fewsmith is connected professionally with a large number of hos- pitals. He has been President of the Medical Board of St. Michael's Hos- pital in Newark for a number of years, is surgeon for the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad Company and examiner for the Mutual Benefit Insurance Company of Newark and for the Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company of New York. He is attending physician at the Protestant Foster Home, consulting physician to the Home for Crippled Children and for eight years was a Trustee of the Newark City Home at Verona.


Dr. Fewsmith is a member of the Essex County Country Club, of Newark, the New Jersey Automobile Club, and many medical societies.


WILLIAM H. F. FIELDER-Newark, (171 Littleton Avenue.) Read Estate .- Born in New York, August 25th, 1874 (Deceased Jan, 1, 1919, see Vol. 1, 1917) ; son of Christian F. and Eliza- beth J. (Roemer) Fielder; married Jan. 2nd, 1871, to Catherine Petronella . Moeller.


Children : W. C., born June 18, 1875; Ernest J., born May 2nd, 1878; Bertha (Mrs. Frank R. Sanford) born Sept. 5, 1885.


JAMES FAIRMAN FIELDER-Jersey City, (139 Gifford Ave.) -Lawyer. (Photograph published in Vol. 1, 1917). Born Feb- ruary 26th, 1867; son of George B. and Eleanor A. (Brinkerhoff) Fielder ; married June 4th, 1895, to Mabel Cholwell Miller, daugh- ter of Mary E. and Charles B. Miller, of Norwalk, Conn.


James Fairman Fielder, Governor of the State 1913-1917, was reared in the atmosphere of a family that, on the side of both father and mother, has long been active in the public affairs. The Brinkerhoff family, from which his mother comes, were among the early settlers of the "Old Ber- gen" section of Jersey City, and owned in the early days large farming tracts included within the corporate limits of Bergen. They had a prom- inent part in all the movements of their times; and the old Bergen Dutch Reformed Church, which they aided to establish, still stands, on Bergen Avenue, one of the oldest shrines in the state. John Brinkerhoff, Mr. Fielder's grandfather, on his mother's side was for many years Director of the County Board of Freeholders, and a Common Pleas Judge, and William Brinkerhoff, who represented Hudson County in the State Senate in 1SS4- '85-'86. is the Governor's uncle. His paternal grandfather was a Republi- can leader in the days of the old Commission Government in Jersey City


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Fielder


and was a member of the Assembly from Hudson County in 1871. George B. Fielder, his father, was for years the Register of Hudson County, and in 1893-'94 represented the Hudson County district in Congress ..


Mr. Fielder was educated at the public and high schools of Jersey City, and finished in the Selleck school at Norwalk, Conn. He took a course at Columbia University Law School, graduating in 1887 with the degree of L. L. B. After a period of study in the law office of his uncle, ex-Senator Brinkerhoff, he was admitted to the Bar in 1888. The degree of L. L. D. was conferred on him by Rutgers College in 1914.


Public affairs were an every-day topic in the house of his parents. He naturally acquired a deep interest in the subject, and was early drawn into the swim of politics. He was elected to the Assembly in 1903 and again in 1904; and in 1907 chosen by its voters to represent the county in the State Senate. When, in 1910, he stood for re-election, he was given an overwhelming majority. In both the Senate and the House he was called to serve upon the most important committees. At the organization of the Legislature in January of 1913 he became President of the Senate. Wood- row Wilson, then Governor of the state, had in the previous November, been elected President of the United States, and was about to lay down his state office for the greater one at Washington. Mr. Fielder's elevation to the Presidency of the Senate was made with the knowledge that, under the constitution, the President of the Senate was to serve as Acting Gov- ernor until a new Governor could be elected by the people.


Governor Wilson did not lay down his state office until the very eve of his departure for Washington to take the oath as President. Senator Fielder assumed the office of Acting Governor March 1, 1913, and served until October 28, when he resigned his seat in the Senate. His resignation vacated not only the Senate chair but also the Acting Governorship; and Leon R. Taylor, of Monmouth County, the Speaker of the House of Assem- bly. became the state's second ad interim Governor. At the primary in September Mr. Fielder was nominated by the Democrats as their candi- date for Governor for the full term of three years, and in November he was elected over ex-Governor Edward C. Stokes, the Republican candidate, by a majority exceeding 32,000.


In giving the Great Seal of the State into Mr. Fielder's hands, in the presence of the Senate and of the Assembly on the 1st of March, 1913. Gov- ernor Wilson felicitated the state upon having provided itself with so fitting a chief. Both during his services as Acting Governor, and after his inauguration in January, 1914, for the full term, Governor Fielder devoted himself to the completion of the work Governor Wilson had been obliged to leave behind him, undone; and a mass of constructive legislation which Governor Wilson had initiated, was perfected under his supervision.


Among the achievements of his administration may be noted the in- heritance tax law, which has increased the revenue of the State by a fairly graduated tax upon estates of deceased persons; the bank stock tax act, which brings revenue to the localities from this class of personal prop- erty ; reform in the care and employment of inmates of the state's penal institutions ; the strengthening of the pure food laws ; a system of traffic regulations, uniform throughout the state; statutes safeguarding the health


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Fitzpatrick


and safety of women and other operators in workshops and factories, and the grade crossing elimination law.


JOSEPH J. FINLEY-Newark, (130 North 11th Street) .- Mer- chant and Assemblyman. Born in Kells, County Meath, Ire- land, May 1st, 1871.


Joseph J. Finley was formerly owner of a chain of grocery stores throughout the state and is now in the wholesale paper and twine busi- ness.


Assemblyman Finley has never held any public office previous to being elected to the office which he now holds.


J. HAMPTON FITHIAN-Bridgeton, (62 N. Pearl St.) -Law- yer and Senator. Born at Greenwich, N. J., Dec. 16th, 1873 ; son of Samuel P. and Margaret K. (Stetser) Fithian ; married at Bridge- ton, N. J., April 26th, 1898, to Mary E. Robbins, daughter of Wil- liam W. Robbins of Bridgeton, N. J.


Children : James H. Jr., born May 10th, 1899; William R,, born April 15, 1900.


Most of Mr. Fithian's education was obtained in the West Jersey Academy, from which he was graduated in 1890.


He has resided within the borders of New Jersey all his life, and with the exception of the first sixteen years which he spent in his native place, the township of Greenwich, he has lived in Bridgeton, N. J.


In 1899, nine years after beginning his practice in law at that place, he became Prosecutor of the Pleas of Cumberland County, and held that office until 1914. He was elected to the Senate in 1918.


Mr. Fithian's club memberships are Welcome Council, Jr., O. U. A. M., Brearley Council, No. 2, F. & A. M., and the Bridgeton Lodge, B. P. O. E.


His business address is 4 Laurel St., Bridgeton, N. J.


JOSEPH FRANCIS STEPHEN FITZPATRICK-Jersey City, (40 Boyd Ave.)-Purchasing Agent, Hudson Co. Born at Jersey City, N. J., March 15th, 1880; son of Francis S. and Bridget (Mc- Grath) Stephen.


Joseph Francis Stephen Fitzpatrick comes partly from Irish stock. His mother, still living, emigrated from Tipperary, Ireland, where she was born in 1849, to Jersey City, in 1886. His father, who was born 1844, and is also still living, came to Jersey City from Perth Amboy, one year after his birth with his family.


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Foisom


Mr. Fitzpatrick was educated chiefy in the St. Peters institution at Jersey City. He attended the parochial school from 1885 to 1892, the high school from 1892 until 1894, and college from 1894 till 1898, at which time he received the A. B. degree, and in 1899 the A. M. de- gree.


. Virtually ever since completing his school training, Mr. Fitzpatrick has been engaged in organization work and education among Catholic young men and women .. Thus, he has served on the Board of Directors of the Columbia Club at Jersey City for five years and as that association's" vice president for one year. He also assisted in organizing St. Peter's Holy name Society of which he was later its first president for six years.




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