USA > New York > Who's who in New York (city and state) 1904 > Part 111
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).
Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5 | Part 6 | Part 7 | Part 8 | Part 9 | Part 10 | Part 11 | Part 12 | Part 13 | Part 14 | Part 15 | Part 16 | Part 17 | Part 18 | Part 19 | Part 20 | Part 21 | Part 22 | Part 23 | Part 24 | Part 25 | Part 26 | Part 27 | Part 28 | Part 29 | Part 30 | Part 31 | Part 32 | Part 33 | Part 34 | Part 35 | Part 36 | Part 37 | Part 38 | Part 39 | Part 40 | Part 41 | Part 42 | Part 43 | Part 44 | Part 45 | Part 46 | Part 47 | Part 48 | Part 49 | Part 50 | Part 51 | Part 52 | Part 53 | Part 54 | Part 55 | Part 56 | Part 57 | Part 58 | Part 59 | Part 60 | Part 61 | Part 62 | Part 63 | Part 64 | Part 65 | Part 66 | Part 67 | Part 68 | Part 69 | Part 70 | Part 71 | Part 72 | Part 73 | Part 74 | Part 75 | Part 76 | Part 77 | Part 78 | Part 79 | Part 80 | Part 81 | Part 82 | Part 83 | Part 84 | Part 85 | Part 86 | Part 87 | Part 88 | Part 89 | Part 90 | Part 91 | Part 92 | Part 93 | Part 94 | Part 95 | Part 96 | Part 97 | Part 98 | Part 99 | Part 100 | Part 101 | Part 102 | Part 103 | Part 104 | Part 105 | Part 106 | Part 107 | Part 108 | Part 109 | Part 110 | Part 111 | Part 112 | Part 113 | Part 114 | Part 115 | Part 116 | Part 117 | Part 118 | Part 119 | Part 120 | Part 121 | Part 122 | Part 123 | Part 124 | Part 125 | Part 126 | Part 127 | Part 128 | Part 129 | Part 130 | Part 131 | Part 132 | Part 133 | Part 134 | Part 135 | Part 136 | Part 137 | Part 138 | Part 139 | Part 140 | Part 141 | Part 142 | Part 143 | Part 144 | Part 145 | Part 146 | Part 147 | Part 148 | Part 149 | Part 150 | Part 151 | Part 152 | Part 153 | Part 154 | Part 155 | Part 156 | Part 157 | Part 158 | Part 159 | Part 160 | Part 161 | Part 162 | Part 163 | Part 164 | Part 165 | Part 166 | Part 167 | Part 168 | Part 169 | Part 170 | Part 171 | Part 172 | Part 173 | Part 174 | Part 175 | Part 176 | Part 177 | Part 178 | Part 179 | Part 180 | Part 181 | Part 182 | Part 183 | Part 184 | Part 185 | Part 186 | Part 187 | Part 188 | Part 189 | Part 190 | Part 191 | Part 192 | Part 193 | Part 194 | Part 195
Yale Universities. Member of Century, Morristown, Morris County Golf Clubs, Society of Colonial Wars and Sons of the Revolution. Residence, Kemble Hill, Morristown, N. J .; office, 32 Nassau St., N. Y. City.
MCCLURE, Samuel Sidney :
Editor of McClure's Magazine; born Treland, Feb. 17, 1857; was graduated from Knox College, Ill .; in 1893 he established McClure's Magazine. and in 1899 the pub- lishing house of McClure, Phillips & Co .; he is president of S. S. McClure Co. Residence, Ardsley-on-Hudson; office, 60 E. 23rd St., N. Y. City.
McCONNELL, Samuel D .:
Protestant Episcopal clergyman and author; born Westmoreland County, Pa., 1846; enlisted in the Twenty-second Pennsylvania Regiment, 1863; was grad- uated from Washington and Jefferson College, 1868; D. D. University of Penn- sylvania, 1889; D. C. L., Hobart College, 1896; LL.D., Washington and Jefferson College, 1902; Fellow of Royal Victoria Institute of Great Britain, 1894; rector Holy Trinity Church, Middletown, Ct., 1876-82; rector of St. Stephen's Church, Philadelphia, 1882-96; rector Holy Trin- ity Church, Brooklyn, 1896-1902; rector All Souls Church, New York, 1902. Edi- torial writer for Philadelphia and New York newspapers. Author: History of the American Episcopal Church; Sons of God; Sermon Stuff; The Open Se- cret; A Year's Sermons; The Next Step in Religion; The Evolution of Immor- tality; Christ, etc. Address, "Sunset Farm," Easton, Md.
McCOOK, Anson George:
Brigadier-general U. S. V .; born Steu- benville. O., Oct. 10, 1835; educated pub- lic schools, New Lisbon, O .; admitted to Ohio Bar, 1861; served in Civil War, participating in first battle of Bull Run, as captain Second Ohio Infantry; served in Army of Cumberland and in Atlanta campaign under Sherman; brevetted brigadier-general; 1866-72, United State brigadier-general; 1866-72, U. S. Asses- sor Internal Revenue at Steubenville, Ohio. Member Congress, 1877-83, 8th New York district; secretary U. S. Sen- ate, 1884-93; city chamberlain, New York, 1895-97; Member Ohio Society, Clubs: Union League; New York Ath- letic; Hardware; Republican; Loyal Le- gion: Patria. Address, 33 West 54th St., N. Y. City.
604
WHO'S WHO IN NEW YORK.
McCOOK, John James:
Lawyer; born Carrollton, O., May 25, 1845; entered Kenyon College, but left at end of first year to serve in the Civil War. Enlisted in the Fifty-second Ohio Infantry; subsequently commissioned first lieutenant, Sixth Ohio Cavalry, and captain and aide-de-camp, U. S. Volun- teers; served in campaigns of Perry- ville, Stone River, Tullahoma, Chicka- mauga and Chattanooga; with Western armies, and in General Grant's cam- paign with the army of the Potomac; mustered out as brevet colonel of Vol- unteers; re-entered Kenyon College, be- ing graduated in 1866; studied law at Harvard, receiving degree of LL.B., 1869; received LL.D. from University of Kansas, 1890, and Lafayette College, 1893. Member Phi Beta Kappa. Is sen- ior member Alexander & Green; counsel for railroad, financial and insurance corporations. Was invited to place in
President McKinley's first cabinet; chairman Army and Navy Christian Commission during war with Spain; trustee Princeton Universiy, from which he received A. M., 1893; director Prince- ton Theological Seminary. Member Un- iversity, Union, Union League and Met- ropolitan Clubs of New York, Somerset of Boston, and Metropolitan of Wash- ington. Residence, 10 West 54th St .; office 120 Broadway, N. Y. City.
McCORD, David Walter:
Manufacturer; born Paris, Ill., Sept. 13, 1865; son Colonel W. B. and Mary J. McCord; moved to Minneapolis, Minn., in 1882; educated Princeton University, being graduated with degree of bache- lor of arts in 1889. Engaged in the business of manufacturing in Chicago, 1890. Married Fannie E. Davis, daugh- ter of Judge Oliver L. Davis, of Illinois, 1893. Became a resident of New York in 1897; vice-president of two corpor- ations largely engaged in manufactur- ing railroad cars and appliances. Mem- ber Union League, of Chicago, Ill., Lawyers, Princeton and University Clubs of New York. Address, 24 Broad St., N. Y. City.
McCORD, George Herbert:
Landscape and marine painter; born New York, Aug. 1, 1848; son George and Matilda McCord; educated at Quacken- bos Collegiate School and Claverack College of Claverack, N. Y .; studied art under Professor Moses
Morse and abroad, in England, Holland and France; has been awarded many medals and
prizes including Shaw prize Salmagundi Club, 1891; bronze medal, Charitable Me- chanic Association, Mass .; silver medal New Orleans Exposition; his work is found in many private and public col- lections. Member: National Academy
Design; American Water Color Society; Artists' Fund Society. Clubs: Salma- gundi; Lotos; Black and White; Lin- coln Club of Brooklyn; Brooklyn Art Club. Residence, 203 Gates Ave., Brooklyn; studio, 114 East 23rd St., N. Y. City.
McCORD, William H .:
Capitalist; born Newburgh, N. Y., 1846; son Robert D. and Sarah Hewlett McCord; graduate of College City New York; married Isabell R. Park, West- port, Conn., 1870. Interested as officer or director in several large corporations. Member: New York Historical Society; Metropolitan Museum of Art; Munici- pal Art Society; American Geographi- cal Society; American Fine Arts Socie- ty; Chamber Commerce; Aldine Associ- ation. Clubs: New York, American and Indian Harbor Yacht; Colonial; Engi- neers; Building Trades; Lawyers; N. Y. Athletic, N. Y. Yacht. Residence, Greenwich, Ct .; office, 100 Broadway. N. Y. City.
McCORMICK, Benjamin Bernard:
Lieutenant, U. S. Navy; born in and appointed from New York. Naval ca- det, May 19, 1888; ensign, July 1 1894; lieutenant (junior grade), Mar. 3, 1899; lieutenant, Dec. 26, 1900; Baltimore,
1892; Marblehead, 1894-98; Katahdin, 1898; branch hydrographic office, 1899; commanding Potomac, Dec., 1899, to 1903; commanding U. S. T. B. Worden since 1903. Address, care Navy Depart- ment, Washington, D. C.
McCOSH, Andrew J., M. D .:
Born Belfast, Ireland, 1858; A. B. and A. M., Princeton, 1877; M. D., College of Physicians and Surgeons, 1880; attend- ing surgeon Presbyterian Hospital. Member: Academy of Medicine, Surgi- cal Society and Clinical Society, and of University Club. Address, 16 East 54th St., N. Y. City.
McCRACKAN, William Denison:
Author, lecturer; born Munich, Ger- many, of American parents, Feb. 12, 1864; early education in Germany, St. Paul's School at Concord, N. H .; was graduated from Trinity College, A. M., 1885. Author: The Rise of the Swiss Republic; Romance and Teutonic Swit- zerland; Swiss Solutions of American
605
WHO'S WHO IN NEW YORK.
Problems; Little Idyls of the Big
Worid; The Huntington Letters; The Fair Land Tyrol. Member American
Social Science Asociation, American His- torical Associotion. Clubs: Authors, New York Press, Manhattan Single Tax, Twentieth Century (Boston). Ad- dress, 45 W. 32nd St., N. Y. City.
MCCREADY, Rt. Rev. Charles, LL. D., P. R .:
Rector of the Church of the Holy Cross; born Ireland, 1837; came to this coun- try, 1864, and entered Mt. St. Mary's Seminary, Emmetsburg, Md., from which he was graduated in 1866; 1877, came to Holy Cross as pastor and has been there ever since. Created by Pius X. Domestic Prelate, 1904. Address, 329 West 42nd St., N. Y. City.
McCULLAGH, John:
State superintendent of Metropolitan Election District, New York, from 1898 to 1903; born Ireland, 1845, but early came to the United States; 1870-98, was connected with the New York police force, holding all the offices from pa- trolman to chief of police; 1898, was called to Havana and there organized the local police force. Residence, 20S West 85th St .; office, 585 Broadway, N. Y. City.
MCCULLOUGH, John G .:
Director American Trading Co., Atch- ison Topeka and Santa Fe Railway Co., Bank of New York, Buffalo Creek Rail- road, Central Vermont Railway Co., Chicago and Erie Railroad Co., Erie and Wyoming Valley Railroad, Erie Rail- road Co., The Fidelity and Casualty Co., Hudson and Manhattan Railroad Co., The Lackawanna Steel Co., Middletown, Unionville, and Water Gap Railroad Co., National Life Insurance Co., New Jer- sey and New York Railroad Co., The New York and Greenwood Lake Rail- way Co., New York and New Jersey Railroad Co., New York and Wilkes- barre Coal Co., New York, Susquehanna and Western Coal Co., New York Sus- quehanna and Western Railway Co., Pennsylvania Coal Co., and The Stark Paper Co., Member: Metropolitan, Union League, Midday, University and Law- yers Clubs. Married Miss Eliza Hall Park. Residence, 88 Park Ave .; office, 21 Cortlandt St., N. Y. City.
MCCURDY, Richard A .:
President of the Mutual Life Insur- ance Company of New York; born New York, 1835; son late Robert H. McCurdy, many years a prominent director of the
company. Entered upon study of law at Harvard University being ,graduated 1855, with degree LL.B. Practiced law in New York with Lucius Robinson, af- terward governor of the State; was ap- pointed attorney for the Mutual Life, 1860; elected vice-president 1865; presi- dent, 1885, on the death of President Winston. Member: Metropolitan; Law- yers; Morristown; Morris County Golf Clubs. Address 37 Fifth Ave., N. Y. City.
MCCURDY, Robert H .:
General manager of the Mutual Life Insurance Company of New York; born N. Y. City, May 26, 1859; was gradu- ated from Harvard College, 1881; en- tered service of the Mutual Life in the same year; appointed superintendent of foreign department of the company, 1886; elected general manager of the company 1903. He is trustee of the Mutual Life Insurance Company of New York; director: Astor National Bank; First National Bank of Morris- town; Windsor Trust Company; Com- mercial Trust Company of New Jersey; Metropolitan Trust Company; Central Realty Company, Casualty Company of America; National Safe Deposit Com- pany; O' Rourke Engineering Construc- tion Company; Conried Metropolitan Opera Company; International Bell Tel- ephone Company. Address, 11 East 9th St., N. Y. City.
MCDERMOTT, George Robert:
Educator; officer, United States Navy; assistant professor of Naval Architec- ture in Cornell University. Address, 216 University Ave., Ithaca, N. Y.
McDONALD, John B .:
Railroad contractor and builder; born Ireland, Nov. 7, 1844; self made man, having begun life as a poor boy; son of a laborer living in Washington Heights; later became a foreman, next a contrac- tor. His most noted undertaking is the building of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad tunnel under the city of Balti- more through rock; is now in charge of the construction of the New York sub- way. Residence, 1 West 72nd St .; office, 21 Park Row, N. Y. City.
McDONNELL, Charles E .:
Roman Catholic bishop of Brooklyn; born New York, 1854; studied at Chris- tian Brother's School, also at St. Fran- cis Xavier's College, and American Col- lege at Rome; 1878, ordained to priest- hood; assistant at St. Mary's Church, New York, 1878; St. Stephen's, 1879;
606
WHO'S WHO IN NEW YORK.
master of ceremonies New York Cathe- dral, 1879-84; secretary to Cardinal Mc- Closky; secretary to Archbishop Corri- gan; 1890, one of private chamberlains of Pope Leo XIII. Consecrated bishop, April, 1892. Address, 367 Clermont Av., Brooklyn, N. Y.
McDOWELL, William Osborne:
President of the Society of the Who's Who. Special envoy from the Interpar- liamentary Union to the members of all the National Congresses and Parliaments of the World. President Cuban-American League; born Bedminster Township, N. J., April 10, 1848; son of Col. Augustus W. McDowell and Anna M. (Osborne) McDowell; was educated in common schools and by private instruction, (LL. D., 1902); apprenticed to a trade; ap- pointed lieutenant, volunteers, 1864; but being only sixteen was not allowed to serve; clerk in N. Y. grocery store, 1865- 69; in twine and cordage business, 1869; married, Nov. 17, 1873, Josephine R., daughter of Colonel Henry Timanus, Fernandia, Fla. Reorganized Montclair Ry., New York, Ontario & Western Ry., and Midland Ry. of N. J .; planned con- solidation of the New York, Susquehanna & Western R. R .; was president, New York & Sea Beach Ry. and rehabilitated it, then resigned. Started successful $1, subscription for completion of Bartholdi's Statue of Liberty; organized Sons of American Revolution, Daughters of Am- erican Revolution; World's Order of Merit conferred by a majority vote of an Electoral College composed of the Who's Who (the intellectual leaders of the world) upon the man or woman who in the opinion of this majority have accom- plished the most for the cause of Univer- sal Liberty and Peace; also the Pan-Re- public or World's Liberty and Peace Congress, through which the necessary in- fluence was brought to bear on the Czar of Russia that resulted in his "rescript" inviting the first International Peace Con- ference that brought into existence the Permanent International Court at the Hague; initiated plan and work for the World's Liberty and Peace Bell; origi- nator of the World's Ensign of Liberty and Peace, (the flag of any nation in the field of white); owner of the famous Liberty Gavel that has been used on so many great historical occasions in con- nection with the story and work for Liberty and Peace; by invitation of the City of Chicago arranged programme and delivered 4th of July oration, World's
Columbian Exposition; orator by special invitation at centennial of inauguration of President Washington, the 600th an- niversary of the birth of the Republic of Switzerland; the centennial of the Fall of the Bastile, and of the birth of the French Republic; of the adoption of a constitutional form of government by Po- land; of the freedom of the Press in Hungary and upon other great patriotic centennials and occasions; with Dr. Deems created American Institute of Christian Phiolsophy; organized Human Freedom League and many other socie- ties in the interest of a solidarity of work for the cause of Liberty and Peace; revived the Washingtonian idea of the University of the U. S., and by resolu- tion of special convention appointed the committee of 400 (ex-Governor John W. Hoyt, Chairman) who have that work in hand; the organizer, and from its incep- tion president Cuban-American League; led in work for making Brazil a republic and for the federation under a constitu- tion in Australia; brought China into membership into the Interparliamentary Union. Now working for a constitutional convention as basis for reunion of U. S. and Great Britain, as a great factor in advancing the cause of Liberty and Peace, and for the evolution of the theory of government for which the U. S. of "America and the Commonwealth of Aus- tralia stand one step higher, and through The United Nations of the Earth, with the Permanent International Court at the Hague as the Judiciary Department; The Interparliamentary Union, composed of all the members of all the national Parlia- ments in the world, as the Legislative Department, and with a duly elected executive to be known as "The Peace- maker" to eliminate war, war conditions and all preparations for war as thoroughly from between nations as it has been elim- inated between the States of the Ameri- can Union; author: Bible of Liberty; lecturer for New York Board of Educa- tion. Residence, 447 Summer Ave., New- ark, N. J .; office, 51 Liberty St., N. Y. City.
MCELROY, William H .:
Journalist, lecturer; born Albany, N. Y.,; son of Wiliam and Jane McMullen McElroy; was educated Albany Academy; graduate of Union College, LL.D .; mar- ried, 1898, Mary Livingston McDonnell; on editorial staff successively of Albany Journal, N. Y. Tribune, N. Y. Mail and Express, Rochester Post-Express; Repub-
607
WHO'S WHO IN NEW YORK.
lican. Author of: Matthew Middlemas' Experiment, An Overture to William Tell. Member Genessee Society, Authors Club, Union Alumni and Genesee Valley. (Roch- ster). Address, 180 W. 88th St., N. Y. City.
MCEWAN, James Briggs :
Republican State Senator, representing the Twenty-ninth Senate district (Albany county) ; born Albany, 1857. He attended the public schools of Albany for some years, and later the Albany Free Acad- emy. From this school he entered Yale College, from which he was graduated with the class of 1878. Since leaving college Mr. McEwan has been constantly engaged in the coal business. He at present operates an extensive coal yard in Albany, of which he is the manager. Mr. McEwan was elected to the As- sembly from the Second Assembly dis- trict of Albany county, in 1897. Speaker O'Grady, in the Assembly of 1897, selected Mr. McEwan as a member of the Commit- tees on Public Health and Affairs of Cities. At the election of 1897. Mr. Mc- Ewan, who was a candidate for re-elec- tion, was elected by receiving 5,058 votes. In the Assembly of 1898 Mr. McEwan was a member of the Committees on Ways and Means, Public Printing, and Charitable and Religious Societies. At the election of 1898 Mr. McEwan received 5,275 votes. In the Assembly of 1899 Mr. McEwan was chairman of the Committee on Banks; and was also a member of the following committees: Ways and Means, Public Printing, and Mazet Investigating Committee. Mr. McEwan, at the Assem- bly election in 1899, received 5,290 votes. Mr. McEwan, in 1900, was appointed chairman of the Committee on Banks, and a member of the Committee on Ways and Means, and of the Committee on Public Printing. Nominated for State Senator in 1900, Mr. McEwan received 23,207 votes. Upon entering the Senate in 1901, Mr. McEwan was appointed chairman of the Committee on the Affairs of Villages, and a member of the follow- ing committees: Miscellaneous Corpora - tions, Insurance, and Internal Affairs of Towns and Counties. Renominated for State Senator in 1902, Mr. McEwan re- ceived 23,110 votes. In 1903, Senator Mc- Ewan was appointed a member of the following Senate committees: chairman of the Committee on Villages, member of Cities, Insurance, Public Printing, and Miscellaneous Corporations; re-elected in 1904. Address, Albany, N. Y.
MCGIFFERT, Rev. Arthur Cushman, D. D. Ph.D. :
Professor of church history in Union Theological Seminary, N. Y .; born Sau- quoit, N. Y., March 4, 1861; son of Joseph Nelson McGiffert, D. D., Presbyterian clergyman, and of Harriet Whiting Cush- man. daughter of Rev. Ralph Cushman, lineal descendant of Robert Cushman, one of the founders of the Plymouth Colony. He moved with parents to Ashtabula. O., 1866; prepared there for college and entered the sophomore class of Western Reserve College, 1879; was graduated in 1882 with degree of B. A .; studied at Union Theological Seminary for three years, graduating there in 1885; studied in Germany, 1SS5-87; in France and Italy, 1857-88. taking the degree of Ph.D. at University of Marburg, Germany, 188S; was instructor in church history, Lane Theological Seminary, Cincinnati, 18SS- 90; professor, 1890-93; professor in Union Theological Seminary, N. Y., since 1893. Received honorary degree of D. D. from Western Reserve University, 1892. Au- thor: Dialogue Betwen a Christlan and a Jew (Christian Literature Co., N. Y., 1589); Translation of Eusebius' Church Ilistory, with Prolegomena and Notes (same publisher, 1890); A History of Christianity in the Apostolle Age (Scrib- ner, 1897); The Apostles' Creed (Scribner, 1902); joint author of The Christian Point of View (Scribner, 1902); also author of Primitive and Catholic Christianity; The Problem of Christian Creeds as Affected by Modern Thought; The Validity of Non-Episcopal Ordination (Dudleian lec- ture), and of other essays, addresses and reviews. Member of the Century and Pelham Country Clubs, Delta Kappa Ep- sllon and Phi Beta Kappa Fraternities, N. Y. Alumni Association of Western Reserve University, Alumni Club of Union Theological Seminary, Philosophical Club of N. Y., American Historical Associa - tion, Chi Alpha Clerical Club and Theta Clerical Club. Residence, Pelham Manor, N. Y .; office, 700 Park Ave., N. Y. City.
McGILVARY, Evander Bradley :
Sage professor of ethics, Cornell; born Bangkok, Siam, July 19, 1864; son of Rev. Daniel and Sophia Royce Bradley McGilvary. At the age of nine came to America for his education; attended
school in Fayettville, N. C., and then went to Bingham School, Mebane, N. C .; was graduated (A, B.) as valedictorian from Davidson College, N. C., in 1884; taught in Bingham School, 1884-86;
608
WHO'S WHO IN NEW YORK.
studied at Princeton, N. J., 1886-90; re- ceived the degree of A. M. from Prince- ton, 1888; worked in Siam as translator in the employ of the Presbyterian Board
of Foreign Missions, 1891-94, during which time he translated the Gospels of Matthew, Luke and John, and the Acts of the Apostles into the Lao dialect of the Siamese language; taught first as in- structor, then as assistant professor in the University of California, 1894-99, dur- ing part of which time he also was en- rolled as a student candidate for the de- gree of Ph.D., which he received in 1897; was called, 1899, to the Sage chair of moral philosophy in Cornell Univer- sity; has contributed frequently to philo- sophical journals, and was in charge of the department of philosophy in the New International Encyclopedia. Member of Town and Gown Club (Ithaca), American Psychological Association and the Ameri- can Philosophical Association. Address, 7 South Ave., Ithaca, N. Y.
MCGREGORY, Joseph Frank:
Professor of chemistry and mineralogy, Colgate University; born Wilbraham, Mass., 1855; was educated at Wesleyan Academy of his native town; subsequent- ly entered Amherst, receiving the degree of A. B. from that college in 1880, and A. M., 1883; studied chemistry and min- eralogy for two years at Göttingen and later, for one year, at Heidelberg; was instructor in chemistry for two years at Amherst; in 1884 was called to chair of chemistry and mineralogy at Colgate University, which position he continues to hold. Member of American Associa- tion for the Advancement of Science, American Chemical Society, Chemical Society of London and German Chemical Society. Author of text-books on general chemistry and qualitative analysis. Ad- dress, Hamilton, N. Y.
McGUIRE, James K .:
Mayor of Syracuse, 1895-1902; born N. Y., 1868; was elected mayor of Syracuse, 1894, and repeatedly elected, filling the office until Jan., 1902. Is chairman of the Democratic State Executive Com- mittee. Address, Syracuse, N. Y.
McGUIRE, Joseph Hubert:
Architect; born N. Y. City, 1866; edu- cated private and public schools, St. Francis Xavier College, Metropolitan Art School, Ecole des Beaux Arts, Paris; was delegate to Fine Arts Federation, 1899- 1901; delegate to conventions of American Institute of Architects, 1902 and 1903; member board of management Catholic
Club, 1896-97; has designed and erected numerous churches, hospitals, schools and residences, among the most import- ant being the Cathedral, Richmond, Va .; Chapel and Assembly Hall, N. Y. Catholic Protectory, Churches of the Holy Trinity and St. Rose, of Lima, N. Y .; St. Eliza- beth's Hospital, N. Y .. He is an associ- ate of the American Institute of Archi- tects; member of N. Y. Chapter of Am- erican Institute of Architects, Society of Beaux Arts Architects, the Architectural League, Catholic Club, etc .; officer New York Chapter of American Insti- tute of Architects from 1900; married, 1899, Harriet, daughter of the late John H. and Cecelia (Amer) Mein, of Phila- delphia. Address, 45 E. 42d St., N. Y. City; residence, New Rochelle, N. Y. McHARG, Henry K .:
Broker; president and director Texas Central R. R., Virginia and Southwestern Ry. Co., and Virginia Iron Coal and Coke Co .; secretary and director Ward Consoli- dated Mining Co., Evening Star Mining Co .; Morning Star Consolidated Mining
Co .; director The Consolidated Lake Superior Co., Detroit and Mackenac Ry. Co .; Stamford Trust Co., Su-
burban Land and Investment Co., and Wabash R. R. Co. Member Union League, N. Y. Yacht and Down Town Clubs. Residence, Stamford, Conn .; office, 40 Wall St., N. Y. City.
McHARG, John B .:
Manufacturer; born Rome, N. Y., July 11, 1873; received the degree of C. E. from Cornell University, 1893; and A. B., Hamilton College, 1900; teacher of Greek, Auburn Academic High School, 1900; manufacturer of fishing tackle, Rome, N. Y., 1895-1902; also member of the John B. McHarg Co., Rome, N. Y., organized Jan. 1, 1902, continuing the business of his grandfather, James McHarg, and his father, John B. McHarg, the first manu- facturer of jointed fishing rods and arti- ficial flies for fishing in America. Ad- dress, Rome, N. Y.
MCILHINEY, Parker Cairns, A.M., Ph.D .:
Chemist; born Oct. 9, 1870, Jersey City, N. J .; received a primary and high school education in the schools of Jersey City; 1888, entered the School of Mines, Co- lumbia University, and there pursued the course in analytical and applied chem- istry, graduating with the degree of bachelor of philosophy; then was con- nected for a short time as chemist with the Fibre Pipe Co., but in the fall of 1892 returned to Columbia University as a
Need help finding more records? Try our genealogical records directory which has more than 1 million sources to help you more easily locate the available records.