USA > New York > Who's who in New York (city and state) 1904 > Part 118
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MORSE, Richard C .:
Clergyman of Presbyterian Church; born Hudson, N. Y., Sept. 19, 1841; was graduated from Yale College in 1862, subsequently studying theology at Prince-
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ton and Union Theological Seminaries; ordained to ministry in 1869; in that year he was appointed editor and in 1872 gen- eral secretary to the International Com- mittee of Young Men's Christian Asso- ciations, and has been identified with its work ever since. Address, 3 West 29th St., N. Y. City.
MORSE, Sherman:
Publisher; born Jan. 15, 1870, Canan- daigua, N. Y .; was graduated from Yale University, A. B., 1891. Manager of The Gazette Publishing Co., publishers of the Niagara Falls Daily Gazette. Formerly city editor of Buffalo Evening News. Member Zeta Psi Fraternity, University Club of Buffalo and Niagara Frontier Fish and Game Club. Residence, Edge- wood, De Veaux; office, Niagara Falls, N. Y.
MORSE, Waldo Grant:
Lawyer; born Rochester, N. Y., March 13, 1859; son of Adolphus Morse and Mary E. (Grant) Morse; is of old New England ancestry. The paternal ancestor, Samuel, came to this country in 1635, and settled in Dedham, Mass .; on the maternal side the descent is from Christopher Grant, who was one of the founders of Water- town, Mass. He studied law in the office of Martindale & Oliver, and was admitted to the Bar in 1884; four years later opened offices in New York. Took an especial in- terest in the preservation of the Palisades, and was appointed a Palisades commis- sioner by Governor Morton; drew the Pal- isades National Reservation bills which the Legislatures of New York and New Jersey passed, and also a congressional bill. He was the second president and is now a of
director the Morse Society, incorporated under the laws of the State of New York; engaged in the publication of the Genealogy of the Morse family; member American Academy of Political and Social Science, the American Bar Association; of the New York State Bar Association; of the Association of the Bar of the City of N. Y., and of the West- chester County Bar Association. Member Society of Colonial Wars, Sons of the Revolution, and of the Lawyers, Quill, Reform, Amackassin, Seagull Golf, and other clubs. He is vice-president and di- rector of the State Bank of Seneca Falls. Married Adeaide P. Cook, daughter of Albert Cook, of Seneca Falls, N. Y. Res- idence, Yonkers, N. Y .; office, 10 Wall St., N. Y. City.
MORTON, Levi Parsons:
Former Vice-President, and former gov- ernor of the State of New York; born Shoreham, Vt., May 16, 1824; youngest son of the Rev. Daniel Oliver Morton. He is a direct descendant of George Morton, of Bawtry, Yorkshire, England, one of the Pilgrim Fathers who landed at Plymouth, Mass., from the ship Ann in 1623. Mr. Morton was educated at the Academy in his native town, and then chose a mercantile career. When twenty years old he began business at Hanover, N. H., remaining there about five years; in 1849 he became connected with the house of James M. Beebe & Co., in Bos- ton, as a clerk, and was admitted to part- nership at the same time that Mr. Mor- gan, the successor of George Peabody & Co., of London, joined the firm; five years later he went to New York, and estab- lished the dry goods commission house of Morton & Grinnell; in 1863 he went into the banking business, establishing the well known house of Morton, Bliss & Co., and in connection with Sir John Rose, who was at one time financial minister to Canada, he founded the house of Morton, Rose & So., of London, England. Mr. Morton was a careful student of the financial transactions of the government, and his firm was one of the syndicates which so successfully assisted in funding the national debt and making the re- sumption of specie payment possible at a fixed rate. The London house were the first fiscal agents of the U. S. gov- ernment from 1873 until 1884, and were re-appointed in 1889. In the negotiation of the U. S. bonds and the payment of the Geneva award of fifteen million five hundred thousand dollars, and the Hall- fax Fishery Award of five million five hundred thousand dollars. Mr. Morton's firm was especially active; the firm of Morton, Bliss & Co. was dissolved on Oct. 1, 1899, and was succeeded by The Morton Trust Co., of which Mr. Morton was elected president, and he still fills that position. In 1878, President Hayes ap- pointed Mr. Morton honorary commission- er of the U. S. to the Paris Exhibition, and in that same year he was elected to the Forty-sixth Congress from the Elev- enth District in New York, defeating his opponent, a Tammany Democrat, by sev- en thousand votes; he was returned in 1880 by a largely increased vote. He represented in Congress the wealthiest district in the U. S., and in the con-
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scientious attention to the interests of Insurance Co .; director in the Panama
his constituency, as well as those of the State at large, found himself a very busy man; his experience in finance made him naturally a leader in this branch of legis- lation, and he was promptly accorded a prominent place among his associates at the national capital. He strongly opposed the unlimited coinage of silver in 1879, and characterized the measure then before the House as a "bill for the relief of owners of silver mines and silver bullion in the U. S. and Europe;" was always deeply interested in international poli- tics and the relations of the U. S. with other countries, and served as a member of the committee on Foreign Affairs in the Forty-sixth Congress. The nomina- tion for the Vice-Presidency was inform- ally tendered Mr. Morton at Chicago in 1880, but he declined it, preferring to re- main in Congress; subsequently he was given his choice between a place in the Cabinet as the Secretary of State, Se- cretary of the Navy, and the French Mission, and he chose the last named. His credentials were presented to the French government on Aug. 1, 1581, and the manner in which he filled that im- portant position won for him the good opinion of the people of both that country and this; was able to secure the removal of the restrictions upon the importation of American pork to France, and was able to bring about also the recognition of American corporations in that country. Mr. Morton drove the first rivet in the Bartholdi Statue of Liberty Enlightening the World, and had the honor of accept- ing it for his government. He repre- sented the U. S. at the Paris Electrical Exposition and the Sub-Marine Cable Convention; in 1885, after the inaugura- tion of President Cleveland, he resigned his mission and returned home. At the Republican National Convention in Chi- cago, in 1888, Mr. Morton was nominated for the Vice-Presidency, and was inaug- urated in March of the following year. As a presiding officer of the Senate he discharged his duties in a most able and impartial way. On July 14, 1881, Dart- mouth College conferred upon him the degree of doctor of laws, and in the fol- lowing year Middleburg College remem- bered him with a similar honor. Mr. Morton is president and director of the Morton Trust Co., president and trustee of Fifth Avenue Trust; trustee of Atlan- tic Mutual Insurance Co .; director in the Guaranty Trust Co .; director in the Home
Coal Co., and director in the Washington Life Insurance Co. He is president of the Metropolitan and member of the Union, Union League, Lawyers, Republican and Tuxedo Clubs, the Century Association, the New England Society, the Sons of the American Revolution, and the American Geographical Society. He has been mar- ried twice; his first wife was Lucy Kim- ball; she died in 1871. His second wife, whom he married in 1873, is a daughter of William L. Street; she is descended from several of the old Manhattan famil- ies; her grandfather was General Ran- dall S. Street, and her grandmother, Cor- nella Livingston, Robert Livingston and Alida (Schuyler) a granddaughter of Van Rensselaer. Mr. Morton has had five children by his second wife. His eldest daughter, Edith Livingston, was married to William Corcoran Eustis, April 30, 1900; his daughter Helen was married to Count De Perigord, now Duke De Val- encery, in London, in Oct., 1901, and his daughter Alice was married to Winthrop Rutherford, in Feb., 1902. Country home, Ellerslie, Rhinecliff. Rhinebeck-on-the- Hudson; residence, 681 Fifth Ave., N. Y. City.
MOSER, William:
Physician, born N. Y. City, Aug. 2, ISCS; attended public school and Pack- ard's Business College in N. Y. City; then studied medicine, graduating from New York University in 1888. Studied abroad, first at University of Heidelberg, then at the University of Berlin, from which he received the M. D. degree in 1902. At present physician to the Ger- man Hospital and physician to St. Cath- arine's Hospital Dispensary. Was form- erly pathologist to St. Catharine's, St. Mary's German, and the Brooklyn Throat Hospital (now the Williamsburg Hos- pital). Has recently been appointed la- thologist to Deaconesses Hospital of New York; was expert pathologist for the State in the Place murder case in New York. Member German Medical Society of New York. Has contributed numerous short articles to current medical litera - ture, chief of which is the Motility of the Red Blood Cells, (published in differ- ent articles in the New York Medical Record). Has always claimed originali- ty and priority for this physiological dis- covery. Anomalous Labulations of the Liver (published in the same journal of original researches in anatomy). Other publications of miscellaneous subjects
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are: A Case of Epigastric-Diaphrogamtic senior counsel in Mazet Investigation.
HIernia, (published in the Philadelphia Medical Journal) ; Reptilian Delusions; A
Case of Lead Osteo-Periostitis; On a Certain Form of Xanthoma; On the Local Effects of Aurantia, and Their Treat- ment, (published in the New York Med- ical Journal); On Nitric Acid, Carbolic Acid and Mercury Poisoning, (published in Brooklyn Medical Journal). On Sem- inal Cells and Crystals; The Anatomical Changes in Arsenical Poisoning. Most of these contributions have been entirely original and these claims will be sus- tained by the editors of the respective journals. Address, 573 Decatur St. Brooklyn, N. Y.
MOSES, Alfred Joseph:
Professor mineralogy Columbia, since 1897; born Brooklyn, July 25, 1859; ed- ucated Brooklyn common schools and academy, Woburn, Mass .; was graduated from Columbia School of Mines as min- ing engineer (Ph. D., Columbia); stud- ied University of Munich, Bavaria, 1895- 16; married, June 23, 1887, Elizabeth B. Gilbert. Member La Société Française de Mineralogie; member American Insti- tute Mining Engineers; Fellow New York Academy Sciences; Fellow A. A. A. S. Author: Crystallography and Blowpipe Analysis, (1895 V1); Characters of Crys- (als, (1899 V1). Contributor to School of Mines Quarterly, American Journal of Science, Zeitschrift für Krystallographie, Science, etc. Address, Columbia Univer- sity, N. Y. City.
MOSHER, Eliza M .:
Physician; born Cayuga Co., N. Y., 1846; was graduated from Friend's Academy, Union Springs, N. Y., 1862; University of Michigan, 1875; studied in London and Paris, 1879-80. Resident physician Mass- achusetts Reformatory for Women, 1877- 79; superintendent same, 1881-83; as- sociate professor physiology and resident physician Vassar College, 1883-86; phy- sician, in general practice, Brooklyn, N. Y., 1886-96; professor hygiene department of literature, science and arts, and wom- en's dean, University of Michigan, 1896- 1902; lecturer on Physiology, Chautauqua Summer School of Physical Education since 1888; at present in the practice of medicine at 44 Court St., Brooklyn, N. Y. MCSS, Frank:
Lawyer; born Cold Spring, N. Y., March 16. 1860; son of John R. Moss and Eliza ( Wood). President of police board, 1897. Prominent in reform movements. Asso- ciate counsel in Lexow Investigation;
Counsel to Society for the Prevention of Crime. Member Union League, Republi- can, Harlem-Republican Clubs and of Bar Association, Law Institute and of var- ious social and religious societies. Pro- fessor of Medical Jurisprudence in New York Medical College and Hospital for Women. Author: American Metropolis. Writer and speaker on political, munici- pal, reform and religious topics. Ad- dress, 93 Nassau St., N. Y. City. MOTT, John T .:
President of the First National Bank of Oswego; born Oct. 11, 1848, at Hamilton, N. Y .; son of Thomas Smith Mott and Sarah W. B. De Wolf Mott; was grad- uated from Union College, 1868. Republi- can State Committeeman. Member Sigma Phi Fraternity, City, Oswego Yacht and Fortnightly Clubs, University and Re- publican Clubs of N. Y. City, Sons of Am- erican Revolution, Society of Colonial Wars, Colonial Order, Rochester Yacht Club, Sodus Bay Yacht Club, Royal, Can- adian Yacht Club of Toronto, American Canoe and Naval Reserve Associations. Address, Oswego, N. Y.
MOTT, Jordan Lawrence:
President J. L. Mott Iron Works; born N. Y. City, Nov. 10, 1829; was graduated from the University of the City of N. Y., 1849; entered office of his father, of same name; became partner, 1853, and suc- ceeded to management, 1866, J. L. Mott Iron Works, large manufacturers of plumbing fixtures, etc .; also president Star Foundry Co., North American Iron Works, North River Bridge Co. Alder- man, 23d and 24th Wards, president board of Aldermen and Acting Mayor New York, 1879; member Rapid Transit Commission, when present elevated railroads in New York were chartered. Presidential elect- or, 1876 and 1888; Democrat. Residence, 2122 5th Ave .; office, 90 Beekman St., N. Y. City.
MOTT, Luther Wright:
Banker; born Nov. 30, 1874, Oswego. N. Y .; son of John T. and Alice J. Wright Mott; was graduated from Harvard Uni- versity, A. B., 1896; married, Dec. 10, 1902, Ruth Wolsey Johnson, of Oswego, N. Y. Cashier, First National Bank, Os- wego, N. Y. Director Syracuse Trust Co., Syracuse, N. Y., Steam Carriage Boiler Co., Oswego, N. Y., and First National Bank, Oswego, N. Y. Vice-president Na- tional Republican League of the U. S., 1900-02. Member Harvard Club, N. Y. Genealogical and Biographical Society,
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N. Y. City; University Club, Syracuse; | Instructor physics and chemistry, Shat- Harvard Club, Buffalo; Fortnightly, Os- tuck School, Faribault, Minn., 1885-87, 1889-92. Address, Poughkeepsie, N. Y. wego Historical, Yacht, and Country Clubs, Oswego, Sons of American Revo- MOULTON, Franklin Woodruff : lution, Society of Colonial Wars, Society of Founders and Patriots of America, and Boston Philatelic Society. Address, Oswego, N. Y.
MOTT, Valentine :
Physician; born New York, Nov. 17, 1852; was graduated from Columbia. 1872; Cambridge University, England. 1876; Bellevue Medical College, 1878; since then in practice in New York; became attend- ing surgeon out-door department Belle- vue Hospital, 1879. Went to Paris. 1887, as representative American Pasteur In- stitute; studied under Louis Pasteur the prophylactic treatment for hydrophobia; brought away the first inoculated rabbit which Pasteur permitted to leave his laboratory; his written several papers on the subject. Residence, Roslyn, L. J., N. Y.
MOTT, William Elton:
Educator; was graduated from Massa- chusetts Institute of Technology, B. S. in Civil Engineering, 1889. Assistant in Civil Engineering in same, 1889-90; prac- ticed his profession. 1890-92. Instructor in Civil Engineering in Cornell Univer- sity, 1892-1900; Assistant Professor since 1900. and Registrar of C. E. College. He has been in service of N. Y. State Wea- ther Bureau. and engaged one summer in survey of College Forest at Axton. In 1900 was principal assistant on the study of the water supply for the barge canal project of the State. Address, 610 East Buffalo St., Ithaca, N. Y.
MOTTET, Henry :
Clergyman of Protestant Episcopal church; born Stuttgart. Germany, 1845. Educated in public schools of New York and was graduated from the College of the City of N. Y. in 1869. Studied at General Theological Seminary. New York; 1873 became curate of the Church of the Holy Communion, N. Y .. and in 1879. pastor. filling the latter position to the present date: member Phi Beta Kappa. Is trustee of the St. Luke's Hospital Corporation and president of the Society of St. Johnland. Received the degree of D.D. from Hobart College. 1892. Address, 47 West 20th St .. N. Y. City.
MOULTON, Charles William:
Professor of chemistry. Vassar. since 1892; born Elmira. N. Y., May 6. 1859; was grdauated from University of Minne- sota, 1885; Ph. D., Johns Hopkins, 1883. terms.
Lawyer and merchant; was graduated from Harvard University, A. B., 18S3. Member of firm of Francis D. Moulton. Member University. Harvard, and Uni- versity Athletic Clubs and City Bar and Down Town Associations. Residence, 125 E. 57th St .; office, 59 Wall St., N. Y. City.
MOVINS, Edward H .:
Lawyer; born Oct. 19, 1848, Ypsilanti. Mich .; was graduated from Heidelberg University, (Germany) 1869, and Hamilton College Law School, 1878. Married. Sept. 26. 1877. Mary Lovering Rumsey of Buf- falo. Receiver. 1st National Bank. 1887. U. S. Mineral Land Commissioner in Helena (Mont.) District, 1895-97. Ad- dress, Buffalo, N. Y.
MOWBRAY, Henry Siddons:
Figure painter and decorator; born Alexandria. Egypt, of English parents. 1858; came to U. S. in childhood; ed- ucation in North Adams, Mass .; appoint- ed to West Point. but remained only one vear; studied under Bonnat and painted in Paris. 1878; since then in New York; member Society American Artists, 1886; received Clark prize. National Academy of Design. 1888; academician. 1891. Ad- dress. 66 West 11th St., N. Y. City.
MOWTON, Edward P .:
Lawyer; born Nov. 15, 1863. N. Y. City; educated at Stevens Institute Technology and New York Law School. Connected with Fidelity and Casualty Co. of New York. Member New York Athletic Club. City Bar Association and General Society of Mechanics and Tradesmen. Residence. Park Hill. Yonkers; office, 97 Cedar St .. N. Y. City.
MULLALY, John, LL.D .:
Journalist. author and inventor. Bort Belfast. Ireland. Commenced and learned his profession as journalist on the New York Tribune. then under the manage- ment of its founder, Horace Greeley. City reporter on Evening Post. Six years on the New York Herald and its special correspondent on the expeditions to lay the submarine cable across the Gulf of St. Lawrence and the first three expedi- tions of 1857-58 to lay the Atlantic tele- graph cable. Fourteen years proprietor and editor of the Metropolitan Record. Commissioner of Health one term and member of the Board of Assessors two Member New York Press Club.
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Originator of the new system of parks | School at New Orleans, La., in 1895, which beyond the Harlem and active partici- has proven a stimulus and inspiration to the Catholics of the South. Has trans- lated books, contributed articles to re- views and magazines, and prepared pa- pers for historical societies, convocations, literary clubs and reading circles. Au- thor of many volumes and of the series: Our True Position, now running in Don- uhoe's Magazine. Address, Syracuse, N. Y. pator in the seven years' movement by which its area of nearly 4,000 acres was acquired by the city. Inventor of Alum- inography, which is superseding Lithog- raphy in the U. S. and Europe and which is being applied through appropriate ma- chinery to printing without moveable type. President of the U. S. Aluminum Printing Plate Co. President of the Aluminum Press Co. Author: Milk Trade MULLER, Carl C .: of N. Y. City-exposing its adulterations; More Public Parks-Lungs for the Me- tropolis; Report to the .Legislature of 1884 of the Commission to select the sites for the six new parks and three new parkways in the new Borough of ine Bronx (217 pages); History of the Sev- en Years' Contest, to acquire said parks; Trip to Newfoundland to lay the Gulf of St. Lawrence Cable; The Laying of the Cable or the Ocean Telegraph; Alum- inography, a Radical Revolution in Print- ing. Address, Times Building, N. Y. City.
MULLANY, John F .:
Roman Catholic clergyman; born Deer- field, N. Y., July 29, 1853, and made his studies under the Christian Brothers at Utica and at Manhattan College, New York, from which Institution he was grad- uated in 1875. The following year he entered St. Joseph's Provincial Seminary, Troy, N. Y., and was ordained to the priesthood in 1880. For a little less than three years acted as assistant in
St. John's Church, Utica, and Sacred Heart Church, Albany. In 1883 he was appoint- ed by the Rt. Rev. Francis McNeirney, Bishop of Albany, to organize parishes in the suburbs of Utica. In less than five years erected two churches in Whitesboro and New Hartford, and in Holland Patent. In 1887 th Albany diocese was divided and the Rt. Rev. P. A. Ludden, D. D., as- sumed charge of the new diocese of Syra- cuse soon after selecting Father Mullany to fill the vacancy in the pastorate of St. John the Baptist's Church. Since coming to the City of Syracuse he has erected two churches in the territory adjoining his large city parish. In his city parish he has an academy chartered under the Regents of the State of New York. He was closely identified with the Catholic Summer School movement from the be- ginning. Has also been identified with the work of the Young Men's National Union and the spread of the Reading Circle movement. Founded the Winter
Teacher of harmony, counterpoint and composition; born July 3, 1831, Meinin- gen, Germany. Studied music in his na- tive town; piano, under W. F. Pfeifer and his son, Heinrich; harmony with A. Zöll- ner and Organ with Court Organist But- zert. Came to this country 1854 and took position in a piano factory. Was leader of the orchestra in old Barnum Museum. After professional tour through the States, 1862-64, he settled in N. Y. City. Some of his compositions having attracted attention he was induced to give in- struction in harmony. Finding the then existing text-books inadequate he trans- lated Simon Sechter's celebrated Correct Order of Fundamental Harmonies, which reached its tenth edition. This was fol- lowed by his Tables for the Writing of Harmonic Exercises in three series and a supplement, all of which enjoy great popularity. Published songs, male quart- ettes, Morceaux and Children's Pieces for Piano, instructive and entertaining pieces for the violin and cello, a sonata for vio- lin and piano, a string-quartette and three sonatas for organ. His chief com- position (unpublished), a symphony in D minor, was played from the score by no less an artist than Dr. Franz Liszt, who manifested great interest for it. It was performed by Theodore Thomas's orches- tra, together with other compositions. Has composed, also unpublished, a suite, two overtures, instrumental solos, an idyl for orchestra, some of which were per- formed by Theo. Thomas and Seidl orchestras at the Harvard Concert, Bos- ton and at the Peabody Concert, Balti- more, a cantata founded on Schiller's poem: Die Kraniche des Ibicus, for solo, mixed chorus and orchestra, two an- thems, a second string quartette, instru- mental solos and a dramatic solo for ten- or, founded on an excerpt from Tenny- son's Maud. Member German Lieder- kranz, Manuscript Society, Aschenbroedel Verein, Musicians Mutual Protective So- ciety and New York State Music Teach-
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ers' Association. Continues to teach har-
mony and all
its associate branches. Studio, 125 East 85th St., N. Y. City.
MULLIGAN, Richard Thomas:
Lieutenant-Commander, U. S. Navy. Born New York. Entered Naval Acad- emy, June 5, 1871; was graduated, June 20, 1876; Powhatan, 1877-78. Promoted Ensign, January 2, 1880; Trenton, 1879- 81; Navy Yard, New York, 1881-82; Ten- nessee, 1882-86. Promoted Lieutenant (junior grade), May 23, 1886; Signal Of- fice, 1886-87; Enterprise, 1887-90; Des- patch, special service, Dec., 1890, to Nov., 1891; Bureau of Navigation, Dec., 1891- 96; U. S. S. New York, June, 1896. Pro- moted to Lieutenant, Dec. 16, 1891; Navy Yard, New York, June 20, 1899; Office of Naval Intelligence, Nov. 3, 1899. Pro- moted to Lieutenant-Commander, Oct. 10, 1899; training ship Alliance, April 22, 1901; U. S. S. Francisco, April, 1901, to 1903. Address, Office of Naval Intelligence, Navy Department, Washington, D. C. MUMFORD, Ethel Watts:
Author and artist; born N. Y., June 23, 1876; educated in Paris and New York. Extended travel and study. Books pub- lished: Dupes (Putnam); Whitewash (Dana Estes); Hundred Love Songs of Kamal, (David Nutt, London and Scrib- ners, N. Y.); Cynic Calendar, (Paul Elder, San Francisco); contributor to all maga- zines, Century, Harpers, Smart Set, etc. Address, care of Paul Reynolds, 70 Fifth Ave., N. Y. City.
MUMFORD, George Dana:
Lawyer; born May 9, 1870, San Fran- cisco, Cal .; was graduated from Columbia University, A. B., 1889, and Harvard University, A. M., 1891, and attended Heidelberg and Leipsic Universities. Member Phi Delta Phi Fraternity, Har- vard and University Clubs and City Bar Association. Residence, 62 East 81st St .; office, 32 Nassau St., N. Y. City.
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