USA > New York > New York City > Who's who in New York City and State, 1st ed > Part 84
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LUSK, Graham:
Educator; born at Bridgeport, Conn., Feb. 15, 1866; son of Dr. William T. Lusk; graduated in the course of chemistry, Columbia University, 1887; studied physi- ology in Munich till 1891. He taught phy- siology from 1891 to 1898 at Yale .Univer- sity; since 1898 professor of physiology at the University and Bellevue Hospital , Medical College, New York. Received the. degrees of Ph.B., Columbia; Ph.D., Mu- nich; M. A .. Yale. Member of the Ameri- can Physiological Society; fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh; member of the University and Century Clubs; libra- rian of the Society for Experimental Bi- ology and Medicine. Address, 11 East 74th St., New York.
LUQUER, Lea MclIvaine:
Adjunct professor at Columbia Univer- sity, New York: born in Brooklyn, 1864, of an old Long Island family, settled there. from 1658. descended from Jan l'Escuyer; son of Rev. Lea Luquer and Eloise Eliz- abeth (Payne) Luquer; graduated from Columbia with C. E. degree in 1887; Ph.D.
in 1894. Married, in 1896, Anne Low Pierrepont, daughter of Henry Evelyn Pierrepont and Ellen A. (Low) Pierre- pont. Member of the Huguenot Society of America (secretary of said society for five years) and Society of Colonial Wars; fellow of the New York Academy of Sci- ence and of the American Association for the Advancement of Science; also a mem- ber of the Century Club of New York and the City Club of New York. Author of "Minerals in Rock Sections" (D. Van Nostrand). Address, 321 West 80th St., New York.
LUTZ, Stephen H .:
Physician (otologist and laryngologist) ; was born May 16, 1872, at Elizabeth, N. J .; son of Stephen M. ' and Margaret (Cook) Lutz. Married Winifred A. Steppe, 1899. Graduated from the College of Phy- sicians and Surgeons, Columbia Univer- sity, 1893; City Hospital and Chamber Street Hospital, 1894-95; surgeon in ear department, Brooklyn Eye & Ear Hos- pital; ear surgeon, Eastern District Hos- pital, . Brooklyn, and Bushwick Dispen- sary, Brooklyn; "assistant ear surgeon, Manhattan Eye & Ear Hospital, New York; consulting otologist, Jamaica Hos- pital and Bedford Hospital, Brooklyn. Member American Medical Association, New York State Medical Society, New, York State Medical Association, Kings County Medical Society, Long Island Med- ical Society,Brooklyn Medical Society, American Laryngological, Rhinological and Otological Society, Associated Phy- sicians of Long Island, Brooklyn Path- ological Society; also Crescent Club, Union League Club in Brooklyn, and Phi Gam -. ma Delta College Fraternity. Address 551 Madison St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
LYDECKER, Garrett J .:
:' Colonel, U. S. Army; was born. in New Jersey and appointed from New York; appointed first lieutenant, Corps of Engi- neers, June 13. 1864; captain, Aug. 8, 1866; major, March 31, 1880 ... He served at Van- couver Barracks, Washington, D. C., Aug. 14, 1899, to May 13. 1891; promoted to lieutenant colonel, Corps of Engineers, Dec. 14, 1891; in charge of engineer works at Louisville, Ky., May 23, 1891, to Nov., 14, 1893; in charge of survey of St. Clair Flats Canal. and of St. Mary's Falls Canal. He had charge of the removal of the wrecked schooners Fontana and Mar- tin in the St. Clair River, Mich .; in charge of ' the reconstruction of bridge across Pine River at St. Clair, Mich., Nov. 14, 1893; promoted colonel, April 30, 1901. Address, Cincinnati, O.
LYMAN, Chester Wolcott:
Paper manufacturer; born in New Ha- ven, Conn.,,May 25, 1861; son of Chester S. Lyman, who was long professor in the Sheffield Scientific School of Yale Univer- sity. The Lyman family is one of the
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oldest in the country, being descended from Richard Lyman, who came to Amer- ica in 1631, from England. His mother was the granddaughter of Chief Justice Oliver Ellsworth (the second chief justice of the United States), appointed by Wash- ington. On his mother's side he is also descended from the old Wolcott family, which was so prominent in Colonial times and included several governors of Con- necticut and Roger Wolcott, who signed the Declaration of Independence. Chester Wolcott Lyman was prepared for college at the Hopkins Grammar School, New Haven, and graduated from Yale in 1882, with the usual degree of B. A., subse- quently taking the degree of M. A. After graduation he was employed for a short time in the United States Coast Survey and traveled abroad for one year; then studied for twelve months in the Shef- field Scientific School at New Haven. In the summer of 1885, entered the employ of W. H. Parsons & Co., paper manufac- turers and merchants, of New York City, and towards the end of the following year went to Chicago as the Western repre- sentative of the firm. In the spring of 1889 he went to West Newton, Pa., and became connected with the Westmore- land Paper Company; in the winter of 1890 he went to Herkimer, N. Y., and eventually became a director in and man- ager of the Herkimer Paper Company. On the absorption of that company by the International Paper Company he became connected with the latter company. He was for two years (1898-1900) secretary and treasurer of the American Paper & Pulp Association, the national organiza- tion of the paper industry. He is now connected with the International Paper Company, having been assistant to the president, Mr. Hugh J. Chisholm, since the organization of that company in 1898, through the combination of the principal mills in the United States, which manu- factured newspaper. He is now also man- ager of one of the departments of the com- pany. Member of American Paper and Pulp Association, the Forestry, Water Storage and Manufacturing Association of New York State, the Association for the Protection of the Adirondacks, and the American Forestry Association; also a member of the American Association for the Advancement of Science and the American Institute of Electrical Engi- neers. He belongs to a number of social organizations, among which may be men- tioned the University Club and the Yale Club of New York, the Ardsley Club and the Sons of the American Revolution. Address, 30 Broad St., New York.
LYMAN, Henry D .:
Suretyship; born in Parkman, O., April 12, 1852; son of Henry Daines and Bet- sy Collin Lyman; descended from Richard Lyman, who emigrated to Hartford, Conn., 1631. He has been special agent U. S. Postoffice Department; chief clerk
contract office, Postoffice Department,
during President Garfield's administra- tion; second assistant postmaster general, President Arthur's administration; sec- retary American Surety Company of New York, 1885; vice-president, 1886, and pres- ident, 1899 to date; is director Electrical Review Publishing Company, and a mem- of Union League Club. Residence, 41 West 73d St .; office, 100 Broadway, New York.'
LYMAN, Joseph:
Artist; born in Ravenna, O., July 27, 1843; studied art in this country and in Europe; devoted his time principally to coast scenery. He is a member of the Century Association and an associate member of the National Academy of De- sign. Residence, 641 Fifth Ave .; studio, 11 East 59th St., New York.
LYON, Ernest Neal:
Author; born in Greenfield, Mass., Oct. 26, 1873; son of Rev. A. Judson Lyon and Mary Wheaton Lyon, author; he was graduated from Colgate Academy in 1893, and from Colgate University, 1897 (degree of B. A.). Professor of English in Marion Military Institute, Alabama, 1897-1900; Mt. Hermon School, Massachusetts, 1900-01. Republican; member of Phi Beta Kappa. He is a contributor to leading magazines, and has given readings from his writings. Address, 131 Lenox Road, Brooklyn, N. Y.
LYON, George F .:
Jurist; born on farm in Barker, Broome County, N. Y., July 13, 1849; son of Harry and Pamelia A. (Livermore) Lyon; grad- uated from Binghamton Academy, 1868, . and from Hamilton College, 1872. Married Elizabeth R. Mather, Binghamton, N. Y., 1884. He was admitted to the bar of New York State in 1875. Member of the law firm of Chapman & Martin (Hon. Or- low W. Chapman, late solicitor general of the United States, and Hon. Celora E. Martin, judge of the New York Court of Appeals), 1876-77; also member of law firm of Chapman & Lyon, 1877 to 1890. Mem- ber of New York State Constitutional Convention, 1894. He was elected justice of the Supreme Court on nomination of both Republican and Democratic parties, 1895, for term ending Dec. 31, 1909. Ad- dress, Binghamton, N. Y.
LYON, Henry G .:
Captain, U. S. Army; was born in and appointed from New York; cadet at Mili- tary Academy, July 1, 1886; promoted to second lieutenant, Seventeenth Infantry, June 12, 1890. He served at Fort D. A. Russell, Wyo., on garrison duty. Oct., 1890, to Sept., 1894; on garrison duty at Columbia Barracks, O., 1894, to Sept., 1897; promoted to first lieutenant of In- fantry, April, 1897; on garrison duty at
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Fort Douglas, Utah, Nov., 1897, to April, 1898; with regiment at Tampa, Fla., in June, 1898; at Santiago, Cuba, and San Juan Hill, July, 1898; post quartermaster at Fort D. A. Russell, Wyo., Nov., 1898, to May, 1899; at Fort Harrison, Mont., June to Dec., 1899; captain, Twenty-sec- ond Infantry, Dec., 1899; on duty with the National Guard of New York, April, 1900; transferred to Seventeenth Infantry Aug. 13, 1902. Address, Manila, P. I.
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MABIE, Hamilton Wright:
Associate editor The Outlook; born at Cold Spring, N. Y., Dec. 13, 1846; gradu- ated from Williams College, A. B. (A. M., L.,H.D.); graduated Columbia, LL.B., and received LL.D. from Union University; trustee Williams College; trustee Barnard College; president New York Kindergar- ten Association. Author of "Norse Stor- ies Retold from the Eddas," 1882; "Na- ture in New England," 1890; "My Study Fire," first series, 1890; "Short Studies in Literature," 1891; "Under the Trees and Elsewhere," 1891; "Essays in Literary In- terpretation," 1892; "My Study Fire," second series, 1894; "Nature and Culture," 1897; "Books and Culture," 1897; "Work and Culture," 1898; "The Life of the Spirit," 1899; "William Shakespeare: Poet, Dramatist and Man," 1900; "Works and Days," 1902; "Parables of Life," 1902; "In Arcady," 1903; "Backgrounds of Litera- ture," 1903. Address, 287 Fourth Ave., New York.
McADOO, William:
Appointed police commissioner of New York by Mayor-elect Mcclellan; born Co. Donegan, Ireland, Oct. 23, 1853. His father was a merchant on a small scale; came to the United States when young. He was successively journalist, lawyer, State Senator. member of the House of Representatives and assistant secretary of the navy, President Roosevelt being his successor in the same office after he had been president of the police board in New York. At the age of twenty he became a reporter on a Jersey City newspaper; during leisure hours stud- ied law; soon after was admitted to the bar, and was appointed attorney to the Hudson County Board of Health through the influence of the late William McAvoy, the then Democratic leader of Jersey City. He served four terms as member of the House of Representatives; was appointed assistant secretary of the navy during Mr. Cleveland's second administration, and since he left that of- fice he has devoted himself assiduously to the practice of law. Of late years he has been taking rather an active part in New York politics; has all the native eloquence of his countrymen; though not
quite as effective a public speaker as W. Bourke Cockran, is, perhaps, his equal in debate. In 1903 was appointed by Mayor- elect Mcclellan to be police commissioner, to take office on Jan. 1, 1904. Residence, 210 West 57th St .; office, Police Head- quarters, New York.
McADOO, William Gibbs:
Lawyer; born near Marietta, Ga., Oct. 31, 1863; son of William G. McAdoo and Mary Faith (Floyd) McAdoo. He attended the University of Tennessee, at Knoxville, but left in his junior year to accept the position of deputy clerk of the United States Circuit Court for the Southern Division of Eastern Tennessee, at Chatta- nooga. While deputy clerk he studied law and was admitted to the bar in his twenty-first year; practiced law at Chat- tanooga, where he was division counsel in Tennessee for the Central Railroad & Banking Company and Richmond & Dan- ville Railroad Company, during which time he developed a deep interest in rail- road affairs; in 1892 he moved to New York. He is a member of the New York Bar. and for a number of years, and until May, 1903, was associated with Hon. Wil- liam McAdoo, police commissioner for the City of New York and formerly Congress- man and assistant secretary of the Navy, in the practice of law under the firm name of McAdoo & McAdoo. In 1902 he was elected president of the New York & Jersey Railroad Company, which is building the Hudson River tunnel from Christopher Street to Jersey City, and, in 1903, he was elected president of the Hud- son & Manhattan Railroad Company, which is to build another tunnel under the Hudson River from Cortlandt Street, New York, to the Pennsylvania Railroad sta- tion, in Jersey City. Address, 15 Wall St., New York.
McALPIN, Edwin Augustus:
Manufacturer; born in New York, June 9, 1848; son of David H. McAlpin, a well known tobacco manufacturer; graduated from Phillips Academy, Andover, Mass. Entered his father's business; now presi- dent of D. H. McAlpin Co., Consumers' To- bacco Co., Toronto, Canada; John I. Cooke Co., New York Hygeia Distilled Wa- ter Co., and Manhattan Hotel Co .; vice- president Eleventh Ward Bank, Standard Gas Light Co .; director Mutual Bank of New York City, Morton Trust Co .; trustee Board of Trade & Transportation Co. He is a member of Chamber of Commerce, St. Andrew's and Colonial Wars Soci- eties. Military career began, 1869, as pri- vate in Seventh Regiment, N. Y. S. N. G .; resigned to become first lieutenant, Sev- enty-first Regiment, Jan. 29, 1875; cap- tain, May, 1875; . major, Aug., 1875; re- signed, April, 1881; captain, June, 1881, Seventh Regiment; resigned, 1882; colo- nel, Seventy-first Regiment, 1888; ap-
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pointed by Governor Morton adjutant gen- eral, rank major general of State of New York; postmaster and president of vil- lage of Ossining, N. Y .; Presidential elec- tor county of New York; president League Republican Clubs, New York; president National League, 1895; trustee Presby- terian Church, Ossining, Cremoror Mis- sion, New York. Member Army and Navy, Union League, Lotos, New York Athletic, Republican Clubs, etc. Address, Ossining, N. Y .; office, 150 Avenue D, New York.
MacARTHUR, Robert Stuart:
Baptist clergyman; born in Dalesville, Quebec Canada, July 31, 1841; graduated from University of Rochester, 1867 (D. D., 1880); graduated from; Rochester Theolog -. ical Seminary, 1870 (LL.D.,: Columbian, Washington, 1896). Since, May 15, 1870, pastor Calvary Baptist Church, New York. Married, in 1870, Mary Elizabeth Fox. Was correspondent for years of Chicago Standard; long editorially connected with" Christian Inquirer, and Baptist Review; and writer for various other newspapers and magazines. Author of "Calvary Pul- pit," "Divine Balustrades," "Quick Truths in Quaint Texts," "Current Questions for: Thinking Men, "Bible Difficulties and" Their Alleviative' Interpretation,"+ "From the Invasion of Canaan to the Last of the Judges," "The Attractive Christ," "The Celestial ' Lamp,", "The Old Book and the Old Faith," "The Land and the Book," "Around the World"; in collabora- tion-"The People's Worship and Psalter;" } hymn books: "Calvary Selection," "Cal- vary Hymnal," ""Landes Domini," "In Ex- ' celsis." Lecturer; among his subjects the following: "The Empire of the Czar- the Great Bear of the North." "Elements of Success in Life," "India, the Mysteri- ous and Magnificent," "The Present He-' roic Era in American History," "Shine and Shade from Spanish Hilltops," "Am- erica's. Great Place Among the Nations," "Anglo-Saxon Dominion of the Pacific," "American Principles in European Poli- cies." Member of the following clubs, societies, etc .: Lotos Club, Phi Beta Kap- pa, Sigma Chi, Psi Upsilon. He is a trustee of the University of Rochester; trustee Rochester Theological Seminary; trustee Stetson University. Address, 47th St., between Sixth and Seventh Aves., New York.
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McBURNEY, Charles, M. D .:
Surgeon; born in Boston, Mass., Feb. 17, 1845; son of Charles and Rosine (Hor- ton) McBurney; graduated from Harvard University in 1866, and received the de- gree of doctor of medicine from the Col- lege of Physicians and Surgeons, of New York City, in 1870. He served on the surgical house staff at Bellevue Hospital for eighteen months, and then spent two years in professional study in Vienna,
Berlin, Paris and London. In 1873 formed a professional partnership with Dr. Geo. A. Peters; in the same year was appoint- ed assistant demonstrator of anatomy in the College of Physicians and Surgeons, and subsequently became demonstrator of anatomy; 1878-80, lectured, upon the anat- omy of the nerves; in 1882 was appoint- ed lecturer in operative surgery, and in 1889 became professor of surgery. Ap- pointed visiting surgeon to St. Lukes' Hospital in 1875, and to Bellevue Hos- pital in 1880, and consulting surgeon to the Presbyterian Hospital in 1886. In 1888 he was appointed as surgeon to the entire surgical service of the Roosevelt Hospital. Dr. McBurney is now consult- ing surgeon to the New York Hospital, St. Luke's Hospital, the Presbyterian Hospital, the Orthopaedic Hospital, St. Mark's Hospital and the Hospital for Ruptured and Crippled. He is a corres- ponding member of the Société de Chir- urgie of Paris; member of the New York Academy of Medicine, the County Medi- cal Society, the Medical, and Surgical So- ciety, the Practitioners' Society, and the Roman Medical Society, and is a coun- cillor of the Association of the Alumni of the College of Physicians and Surgeons. He is the author of numerous papers on important surgical topics. `Address, 28 West 37th St., New York.
McCABE, James Henry, M. D .:
Democratic State Senator, who repre- sents the Fifth Senate district of Kings County' in the Senate; was born in Brook- lyn, March 21, 1870. He attended the public schools, Sacred Heart College, Vineland, N. J., and was graduated with the degree of Bachelor of Arts by that in- stitution in 1891. Still pursuing his stud- ies, he attended medical lectures and studied medicine, and in 1895 received the degree of M. D. from the Long Island Col- lege Hospital. He has practiced medicine since his graduation from the Long Island College Hospital; elected State Senator in 1900; re-elected in 1902. In 1903 was ap- pointed a member of the following Com- mittees: Finance, Public Health, and Public Printing. Address, Brooklyn, N. Y.
McCALL, John A .:
President of the New York Life Insur- ance Company; was born in Albany, N. Y., March 2, 1849; graduated from the Albany Commercial College in 1865, and served his insurance apprenticeship in the Al- bany office of the Mutual Life, where he became bookkeeper. In 1870 he received an appointment in the actuarial branch of the State insurance department; he was successively examiner of companies, and deputy superintendent, and in 1883 he was appointed superintendent by Grover Cleveland. He made most of the ex- aminations during the period following the panic of 1873, when so many insolvent
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companies were forced out of business. The officers of the several companies were convicted of. making false returns upon the evidence supplied by Mr. McCall's ex- aminations; he declined a reappointment when his term expired in Jan., 1886, and accepted the office of comptroller of the Equitable Life Assurance, Society. On Feb. 12, 1892, he was elected president of the New York Life Insurance. Company in place of Mr. Beers, who had resigned. He was, president of the National con- vention of insurance department officials in . 1883; member Metropolitan, Manhat- tan, Merchants, New York Athletic, Law- yers, Colonial, Catholic, and National. Arts Clubs. Address, 346- Broadway, New York !.
McCARDELL, Roy Larcom:
Humorist born in Hagerstown, Md., on June 30, 1870; son of Colonel Thomas F. McCardell, who is one of Maryland's most noted newspaper men., At the age of thir- teen he began his career as a writer on Puck, Scribner's, and other periodicals and magazines; at nineteen went to Ala- bama, and after working some time in a rock quarry and with a firm of rail, road contractors, became a reporter on the Birmingham Age-Herald. Here "his sketches and verses attracted the at- tention of Arthur Brisbane, then editor of the New York Evening Sun, and he was offered a position on the staff of that paper; later went on the editorial staff of Puck, leaving in 1895 to start the Sun- day World colored supplement. Is a writ- er of songs, comic operas and a contrib- utor of prose and verse to newspapers, . and to Pearson's, Truth, Everybody's, Harper's, Century and other magazines, and to humorous and satrical series in the Herald. Author of "The Wage Slaves of New York," 1898; ""The Skyscraper," 1899; "Olde Love and Lavender," 1900; : "Jim- mie Jones," 1902; "Rise and Shine Stor- ies." 1903: "Conversations with a Chorus Girl," 1903; also musical comedies: "The Filibuster." "The - Local Forecaster." Married Frances Quirk, "of Dublin, Ire- land. Nov. 30, 1891. Residence, New Ro- chelle, N. Y .; office, The World, New. York.
MCCARREN, Patrick H .:
Democratic State Senator, representing the Seventh district. made up of the Fourteenth. Fifteenth, Sixteenth, and Seventeenth wards of Brooklyn, N.
Y. It was through his efforts that free books are now supplied in the pub- lic schools. and it was he who passed the original bill for the erection of a second bridge over the East river for the bene- fit of the eastern district. He was, born in East Cambridge, Mass., but removed to Brooklyn with his parents when only eight years old. He was elected to the Assembly three times, and was one of the leaders on the floor of the House in 1889, the year before he first entered the Sen-
ate; elected to Senate 1895, 1898, 1900, and 1902. In 1903 was appointed a member of the following Senate Committees: Ju- diciary, Cities, Commerce and Navigation. He did much toward advancing the in- terests of Tammany, Hall in Brooklyn, and is responsible for the election of the Tammany ticket in that borough in the recent election. In recognition of his ser- vices he was made leader of the Borough of Brooklyn. Address, Brooklyn, N. Y.
McCARROLL, William:
Leather manufacturer; born in Belfast, Ireland; educated at Russell's Academy, Brookville Academy, and Royal Academi- cal Institution; came to New York in 1869, beginning in the leather business. In 1878 he started in business under the firm name of William McCarroll & Co., which continued until the organization of the American Leather Company. This cor- poration was a consolidation of the firms of: William McCarroll & Co. and J. Parke Postles & Co., of Wilmington, Del .; of this corporation he has been vice-president and general manager since its beginning. : Recently he organized the Premier Leath- er Company, of which he is president, the two companies co-operating together. He is a director of the Oriental Bank, New York City; trustee of the Dime Savings Bank of Brooklyn; member of the ad- visory committee of the Brooklyn Trust Company; also director in the New York Board of Trade & Transportation; mem- ber of the Chamber of Commerce; vice- president of the National Association of Manufacturers for New York State and .president of the Manufacturers' Associa- tion of New York; also member of the board of governors of the Drug Club and member of the Union League Club; vice- president of the Y. M. C. A., Borough of Brooklyn. Residence, 758 St. Mark's Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y .; office, 17 Ferry St., New York.
MCCARTHY, Daniel E .:
Major, U. S. Army; born in Albany, N. Y., April 14, 1859; appointed cadet at U. S. Military Academy, June, 1877; gradu- ated, June, 1881, and assigned as second lieutenant, Twelfth Infantry; served at Fort Bowie. Ariz., Plattsburg Barracks, N. Y., and Fort Leavenworth, Kan., 1882 to 1887, when he graduated from the Infantry and. Cavalry School at latter post; at Fort Sully and various military ports until Nov., 1899; at Havana, Cuba, until May, 1900. He participated in Apache campaigns in Arizona, 1881-82, and Sioux campaign in South Dakota, 1890-91; appointed quartermaster, Twelfth Infantry, 1893, and captain and quarter- master, 1896; major and quartermaster of Volunteers, 1900, and major and quarter- master, U. S. Army, 1902. Was depot quartermaster at Camp Geo. H. Thomas, Chicakamauga Park, Ga., during Span-
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ish-American War; since 1900 as con- structing quartermaster at the General Service and Staff College at Fort Leaven- worth, Kan. Author of "Manual of In- structions for Quartermasters Serving in the Field," adopted and published by the War Department. Address, Fort Leaven- worth, Kan.
MCCLELLAN, George B .:
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