USA > New York > Who's who in New York (city and state) 1904 > Part 177
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WILSON, James Grant:
Author; editor; born in Edinburgh, April 28, 1832; son of William W., poet-
publisher, and Jane Sibbald Wilson. He
was educated at College Hill, Poughkeep- sie, and by private tutors. He traveled extensively abroad, and upon his return in 1856 became the founder, owner and ed- itor of the Chicago Record, a journal of arts and literature, since discontinued. He enterd the Union army as major in the Fifteenth Illinois Cavalry, serving in the Vicksburg campaign and elsewhere. He resigned in 1865 with the rank of brigadier-general. Since then he has been engaged in literary work in New York. He was married in 1869 to Miss Cogswell, a descendant of Madame Bay- ard. General Wilson is a popular speak- er, and is the author of numerous ad- dresses on Lincoln, Grant, Bishop Pro- voost, Colonel John Bayard, Commodore Isaac Hull, etc. He delivered the ora- tion at the N. Y. celebration of May, 1903. President since 1885, N. Y. Genealogical and Biographical Society; president Am- erican Ethnological Society since 1900. vice-president Society for Prevention Cru- elty to Animals. Erected bronze statutes to the poet Halleck and Columbus in Cen- tral Park, and for latter was knighted by the Queen Regent of Spain in 1894; mem- ber board of visitors to U. S. Naval Acad- emy, 1879, and U. S. Military Academy, 1880. Editor Fitz-Greene Halleck's Po- ems. (1868); Memorial History of the City of New York (1892-93) ; Appletons' Cyclo- paedia of American Biography (1901), Great Commanders Series (1892-1903) ; Memoirs of an American Lady (1901).
Author : Sketches of
Illinois Officers (1862) ; Mr. Secretary Pepys and His Diary (1867) ; Life of Fitz-Greene Halleck (1869) ; Sketches of Illustrious Soldiers (1874); Poets and Poetry of Scotland (1876) ; Centennial History of the Diocese of New York (1886); Bryant and His Friends (1886) ; The World's Largest Li- braries (1894); Love in Letters (1896) ; Life of General Grant (1897) ; The Presidents of the U. S. 1789-1902, (1903) ; Thackeray in the U. S. (1904). Memoir Henry W. Halleck, general-in-chief U. S. Army (1905). General Wilson is an hon- orary member of several American and foreign historical societies, and a member of the Loyal Legion and various clubs. Address, 621 Fifth Ave., N. Y. City.
WILSON, John Clark:
Captain, U. S. Navy; entered Naval Academy from Brooklyn, N. Y., 1865, and was graduated in 1869. Promoted to en- sign, 1870; to master, 1871; to lieutenant,
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1875, and to lieutenant commander, 1898; commander, Dec. 29, 1899. Captain, Feb.
12, 1905. He served on the following named ships and stations, viz. : Sa-
bine and Franklin, European Sta- tion, 1869-71; Iroquois, Monocacy, Saco and Ashuelot, Asiatic Station, 1872-75; Omaha, South Pacific Station, 1875-78; Tenessee, North Atlantic Station, 1879- 82 ; Vandalia, Pacific Station, 1886-89 ; At- lanta, Monongahela and Vesuvius, North Atlantic Station, 1892-95 ; executive officer, Miantonomah, 1899; commanding the U. S. S. Viking, on the blockade, north coast of Cuba, 1899; commanding U. S. S. Vixen, 1899-1900; U. S. S. Indiana, 1900 ; commanding Panther, North At- lantic fleet, 1902-03; volunteered for a second cruise on the Vandalia in 1889, when difficulties with Germany over
Samoan affairs were threatened; was wrecked on Vandalia, in harbor of Apia, Samoan Islands, in hurricane of March 15 and 16, 1889, when three U. S. and three German men-of-war were wrecked and 150 lifes lost; was rescued from wreck of Vandalia by Fuji Hochitara, captain's steward on U. S. S. Trenton, who was awarded a life-saving medal of first class for heroism in making the rescue; was sent by the commander-in- chief to Auckland, New Zealand, and Syd- ney, Australia, to cable news of disaster and to charter a steamer to bring surviv- ors to the U. S .; chartered a steamer in Sydney and brought 500 survivors from the U. S. wrecked vessels to San Fran- cisco; shore duty; ordnance, Navy Yard, Washington, D. C .; Naval Observatory, Washington, D. C .; Board of Inspection, San Francisco, Cal .; Navy Yard, N. Y .; Navy Yard, Norfolk, Va .; inspector of ordnance, Midvale Steel Works, Philadel- Phia, Pa .; inspector Eleventh Lighthouse district, 1900-01; inspector of Eighth Lighthouse district, New Orleans, La., 1903; Navy Yard, Boston, 1904. Address, Navy Yard, Boston, Mass.
WILSON, Walter Sibbald:
Secretary ; born Poughkeepsie, N. Y., Aug. 9, 1844; son of William and Jane Sibbald Wilson; was educated at Bisbee's High School, Poughkeepsie, 1855-57; at College Hill, Poughkeepsie, 1858-59, and there- after by private instructors. He served in Company A, ("Ellsworth Grays"), Twenty-first Regiment, N. Y. State Mili- tia, in 1863; joined Company B, Seventh Regiment, N. G. S. N. Y., March 5, 1868, and continued in active service in that regiment for thirty-one years, thirteen of
which as first lieutenant; was the first battalion adjutant appointed in the regi- ment. Married in N. Y., April 22, 1878, Josephine Bristed Fales. Was assistant editor Memorial History of the City of N. Y., four volumes, and contributed articles on statues and monuments, and on Staten Island in same; editor of dia- lectical obsolete and slang words in the new Standard Dictionary; wrote History of the Seventh Regiment, N. G., N. Y., in American Magazine, Oct., 1888. Mem- ber N. Y. Athletic Club and Dutchess County Society. Residence, 159 West 18th St .; office, 120 Broadway, N. Y. City. WILSTACH, Paul:
Playwright; born July 1, 1870, La Fay- ette, Ind .; son of John Augustine and Elbra Cecilia Patti Wilstach; received de- gree of A. B. from St. Viateur's College, Bourbonnais, Ill. Member of the Play- ers Club. Author of the following plays produced : Bridget (one-act) ; A Gay Deceiver (three acts); A Partial Eclipse (one-act) ; A Capitol Comedy (four acts); Poly Primrose (four acts) ; also author of Solitare, Fifty Games of Patience. Contributor on literary and theatrical subjects to the Bookman, The Dial, Munsey's, etc. Address, The Play- ers Club, N. Y. City.
WILTSIE, Charles H .:
Lawyer; was graduated from the Uni- versity of Rochester in 1880; student in University of Göttingen, Germany, 1880- 81; attorney and counsellor at law, Rochester, N. Y., since 1883. Member of the Rochester Historical Society, Sons of American Revolution, and Genesee Valley Club. Author: Wiltsie on Parties to Mort- gage Foreclosures (1885); Wiltsie on Mort- gage Foreclosures (1889). Traveled ex- tensively, 1889-1893. Address, 820 Powers Block, Rochester, N. Y.
WINDMULLER, Louis: .
Merchant; a native of Westphalia, re- ceived a collegiate education at Münster in a gymnasium founded by Charlemagne. He emigrated to the U. S. in 1853, coming to N. Y., which city has remained his place of residence. Here he soon became a successful merchant. The financial in- stitutions with which he has been asso- ciated, and which he took part in found- ing, are the Title-Guarantee and Trust Co., the German-American Insurance Co., the Hide and Leather National Bank, the German Alliance Insurance Co., the Maiden Lane Savings Bank, the Maiden Lane Safe Deposit Co., and the Bond and Mortgage Guarantee Co .; with some
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WHO'S WHO IN NEW YORK.
of these companies he is still associated | as director ; he is president of the Maiden Lane Savings Bank. One of the founders and since 1889 treasurer of the Reform Club, of N. Y. Member of the German- American Reform Club, and as one of its executive committee, took an active part in the election of William L. Strong as re- form mayor of the City of N. Y. He has been indefatigable in the advocacy of a sound currency and tariff, and civil service reform. His interest in public affairs is shown in his membership and active work in several other associations for munici- pal and State improvement; among these may be named the Chamber of Commerce Committee on Internal Trade and Im- provements, of which he was chairman; and the executive committee for the im- provment of the State canals, as a mem- ber of which he agitated successfully for the amendment to the Constitution which authorizes the Legislature to make the necessary appropriations; he was, in ad- dition, auditor of the Business Men's Re- lief Committee, and member in a number of charitable institutions. Among these is the Legal Aid Society, which furnishes gratuitous advice to the ignorant needy without regard to nationality; in this use- ful institution he is treasurer and a mem- ber of the board of directors. Among the earnest and effective efforts in behalf of charity which have been made by him may particularly be mentioned his valua- ble services for the benefit of the German Hospital Fair in 1888; for this he arranged a collection of paintings, which proved so potent and attractive that over $100,000 were cleared for this institution. He is an occasional contributor to magazines and has written articles in favor of cre- mation for the North American Review, How to Shield Our Birds, for the Outlook, A Plea for Parks, for the Forum, Pleas- ures of City Pedestrians for The Review of Reviews, etc. Outside his connection with bodies devoted to reform and charity he is a member of many other N. Y. or- ganizations, including the Merchants, German, Lotos, Underwriters, Athletic, and various other clubs; the Metropolitan Mu- seum of Art and the N. Y. Historical So- ciety, of which he is a life member; he was also treasurer of a fund for the erection of a monument to Goethe, and vice-president of the Heine Monument Society. Residence, Woodside, Borough of Queens; office, 20 Reade St., N. Y. City,
WINGATE, Charles Frederick:
Consulting sanitary engineer; born N. Y. City, March 5, 1848; was educated in pub- lic schools and Cooper Institute. En- gaged in mercantile business in early life, then in editorial work for twenty years; for five years N. Y. correspondent Springfield (Mass.) Republican. under sig- nature Carlfried. Author: Views and Inter- views on Journalism; What Shall Our Boys Do for a Living? Twilight Tracts; History of Greene Co .; An Episode in Municipal Government, etc. Address, 20 Nassau St., N. Y. City.
WINGATE, George W .:
Lawyer; national guardsman; author; born N. Y. City, July 1, 1840; descended from an old New England family Payne Wingate being first Senator from New Hampshire, and close friend of Washing- ton. The family were represented in the Colonial and Revolutionary Wars and the War of 1812. He was educated in the public schools, and entered the Free Acad- emy, but at the age of thirteen family reverses obliged him to become a boy in a law office. Admitted to the Bar in 1861, and has since practiced, being prominent in railroad litigation; for many years vice- president of the Brooklyn Elevated and director in several other railroads .. Is general solicitor of the Long Island R. R. and its associate companies. Was for several years a sachem of Tammany Hall and its counsel, as well as the personal counsel of the late John Kelly after the latter had wrested its control from Tweed. Was counsel for Tammany Hall in its prosecution of Commissioner Davenport for his wholesale arrests of naturalized citizens, and succeeded in having his acts declared illegal; also in the prose- cution and conviction of Police Commis- sioners Charlick and Gardiner for the vio- lation of the Election Law. Enlisted in a cavalry company at the outbreak of the Rebellion ; after it was disbanded enlisted in the Twenty-second Regiment, N. Y., in which he finally became captain ; served with Twenty-second in 1862-63. Is often called "the Father of Rifle Practice in America." Drafted and secured the pas- sage of the act establishing the Creedmoor rifle range, which was constructed under his supervision. Was the first secretary then vice-president, and afterwards presi- dent of the National Rifle Association for many years. There being no text-book for instruction in shooting, he wrote Win- gate's Manual of Rifle Practice, in 1871, which was for many years the only work
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on the subject adapted to American troops | player. and was adopted by N. Y. and many other States; the Army Manual is largely founded upon this book. He was one of the organizers of the Amateur Rifle Club and its first president; was captain of the first team of American Long Range Riflemen in the great international rifle match at Creedmoor in 1874; has been connected with all other rifle teams that have shot in international contests. In 1874 he was appointed general inspector of rifle practice in N. Y. State, with the rank of brigadier general, which position he held under Governors Tilden
and Robinson until his resignation, Oct., 1879. While in this position he organized and carried into successful operation the sys- tem under which the N. Y. National Guard, then numbering nearly 20,000, all utterly ignorant of the use of their rifles, in a few years became good shots; a sys- tem which has since become universal in the national guard and army. He was president of the National Guard Associa- tion of the U. S. for many years, and has been active in procuring legislation to increase the efficiency of the militia. From 1893 to 1896 he was special aide on the staff of the Commander-in-chief of the Grand Army of the Republic on the subject of military instruction in the pub- lic schools; tendered the nomination of Supreme Court Judge in 1895 and declined. Appointed by Mayor Low a member of the Board of Education in 1902, and has been chairman of the committee on lec- tures and libraries; as such has been prominent in developing the system of free lectures and of class libraries in the public schools in N. Y. City. He figured conspicuously in the attacks upon the
Tweed ring, many of the editorials in the N. Y. Press against the Ring Judges being written by him. Author: On Horse- back through the Yellowstone; The Great Cholera Riots; The History of the Twen- ty-second Regiment, and numerous essays ; been prominent in advocating an increase of the artillery and the improvement of the army and national guard. Has been prominent in the organization of the pub- lic schools Athletic League for the im- provement of the physical condition of the New York school children, and is its president ; is an enthusiastic sportsman ; has fished and hunted over the greater part of the U. S. and Canada; is a crack shot with rifle, pistol or shotgun, and an expert fisherman and tennis
Member of the Army and Navy Club, the Brooklyn, Twilight, Democratic (Brooklyn) ; president Twilight Park As- sociation, and director in a number of railroad and other corporations; member Marine and Field Clubs; director in the New England Society, Lincoln and Wy- andanch Clubs; member of the John A. Dix Post; honorary member of the U. S. Grant Post, Old Guard and Dyker Meadow Golf Clubs. Residence, 1100 Dean St., Brooklyn; office, 20 Nassau St., N. Y. City.
WINNE, Charles K .:
Colonel U.
S. Army; born N. Y., June 30, 1838; appointed from N. Y. civil Iif℮. Actual rank,
assistant surgeon, Aug. 5, 1861; captain, assistant surgeon, July 28, 1866; resigned, Oct. 15, 1873; re- appointed assistant surgeon, Nov. 10, 1874; captain, assistant surgeon, Nov. 10, 1879; major and surgeon, Feb. 22, 1891; lieutenant colonel, April 13, 1901; retired, June 30, 1902 ; appointed colonel, retired, by Act of Congress, approved April 23, 1904. Brevet rank, brevet captain, March 13, 1865, and brevet major. March 13, 1865 for "faithful and meritorious services during the war." Brevet lieutenant-col- onel, Sept. 28, 1866, for "meritorious and distinguished services at Tybee Island, Georgia, where cholera prevailed." Mem- ber Sons of Revolution, Loyal Legion, and Holland Societies. Address, 370 State S., Albany, N. Y.
WINSLOW, Eugene H .:
President of Metropolitan Plate Glass and Casualty Insurance Company of New York; born Brooklyn, N. Y., March, 1856. He received his education in that city, and entered the office of John G. Schu- maker for the study and practice of law; in Feb., 1874, he was induced by Mr. Harteau, then organizing the Metropoli- tan Plate Glass Insurance Company, to engage in the business of plate glass in- surance. Mr. Winslow began as a clerk, being the first man employed in any ca- pacity by that company; has been in con- tinuous service with the Metropolitan ever since, and worked his way up through the various steps to the position of secretary in 1887, and president in 1895. Address, 47 Cedar St., N. Y. City. WINTER, Edwin W .:
President and director Brooklyn Heights R. R. Co., Brooklyn, Queens Co., & Sub- urban R. R. Co., Brooklyn Rapid Transit Co., Brooklyn Union Elevated R. R. Co., Coney Island & Gravesend Ry. Co., Nas- sau Electric R. R. Co., Sea Beach Ry. Co.,
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WHO'S WHO IN NEW YORK.
South Brooklyn Railway. Director Chi- (1901). Married, 1893, Dr. G. W. Winter- cago Transfer & Clearing Co., Chicago burn, of New York. Spent the years 1903, 1904 and 1905 in European travel, mainly in France. Address, 7 West 108th St., N. Y. City.
Union Transfer Ry. Co., Evansville & Terre Haute R. R. Co., First National Bank, St. Paul. Address, 168 Montague St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
WINTER, William:
Author, dramatic critic; born Glouces- ter, Mass., July 15, 1836; educated in Boston and Cambridge, Mass., and was graduated from Harvard Law School 1857; (Litt. Doc., Brown). A writer for papers and magazines since about 1852 ; dramatic reviewer for New York Tribune since 1865; president Staten Island Academy since 1891; founded Arthur Winter Me- morial Library in that academy, 1886; married, Dec. 8, 1860, Elizabeth Camp- bell, of Ederline, Scotland. Author : Shakespeare's England; Gray Days and Gold; Old Shrines and Ivy; Brown Heath and Blue Bells ; Shadows of the Stage; Life and Art of Edwin Booth; Life and Art of Joseph Jefferson; The Actor, and Other Orations; The Press and the Stage; Wand- erers (pcems); Stage Life of Mary Ander- son; Life of Ada Rehan; Henry Irving; Life of John Gilbert; Lives of Actors, etc. Member Lotos Club, Bohemian Club, Society of the Potomac, Actors Fund So- ciety. Residence, New Brighton, Staten Island, N. Y .; office, care Tribune, N. Y. City.
WINTERBURN, Florence Hull:
Anthor; born Chicago, Ill., June 8, 1858; daughter of Captain Stephen Chester Hull and Laura (Bell) Hull, and great- granddaughter of Major General William Hull. Educated in private schools and by private tutor in Baltimore, Md., and Washington, D. C., afterwards took the two years' course at the College of Elo- cution and Acting, graduating B. E. A .; devoted the subsequent twelve years to the study of psychology, heredity and the theory of education, in which she is recognized as an expert; became asso- ciate editor of Childhood Magazine, in 1892; assistant editor Godey's Magazine, in 1893; assistant editor Home and Coun- try Magazine, in 1895; for the past ten years special contributor of articles on sociological subjects to the Woman's Home Companion, Harper's Bazar, Inde- pendent, Outlook, and other magazines and periodicals. Author: (published by Baker & Taylor Co., N. Y.): Nursery Ethics. (1895); From the Child's Stand- point, (1899); Southern Hearts (short
stories, 1901) ; The Children's Health,
WINTERBURN, George William:
Editor, physician; born N. Y., Sept. 19, 1845; son of the Rev. Charles Winterburn, M. D., and Katherine Gardner (Boss) Winterburn; was graduated from Hughes High School. Cincinnati, 1862; took one years' course in Cincinnati Law School, 1863; took four years' course in medicine in Ohio Medical College, Cincinnati, Uni- versity Medical College, New York, Hom- eopathic Medical College, New York, and was graduated (M. D.) from the Eclectic Medical College, New York, 1875, and at the U. S. Medical College (Phar. D.) in 1881. Was in journalism with the Cin- cinnati Daily Gazette, 1862-66; New York correspondent for various western jour- nals, 1867-69; editorial writer New York Evening Post, 1869-70; editor Congrega- tional Review. 1870-71; musical critic New York Daily Witness, 1871-72; musi - cal critic New York Public School Jour- nal. 1873-74; editor American Homeo- pathist. 1882-87; editor Homeopathic
Obstetrics, 1889-93; editor Journal of
Childhood: A Magazine for Parents and Teachers, 1892-94; is an extensive con- tributor to medical journals and literary magazines and reviews, 1873-97. Author, (published by Boericke & Tafel, Philadel- phia, and A. L. Chatterton & Co., N. Y.): American Vegetable Remedies, (1878);
Cinchona. Historically, Physically and
Therapeutically Considered, (1880); The Value of Vaccination, (1884); Purpura: Including a Materia Medica of Thirty-two Remedies and a Repertory, (1885); A Pocket Repertory, (1886), and the follow- ing monographs: Musical Precocity, (1875); One Hundred Consecutive Cases of Diphtheria. (1887) ; A Seductive Drug, (1883); Commonplace Midwifery, (1889); Homeopathy in Midwifery, (1891); The Better Way, (1892); The Perineum in La- bor, (1873), and various others. Was pro- fessor of Materia Medica and Therapeu- tics, Eclectic Medical College, New York, 1878-82; professor Materia Medica and Therapeutics. U.
S. Medical College, 1883-84; clinical lecturer and physician- in-chief, Manhattan Hospital, 1878-84; president American Obstetrical Society, 1885-92 ; secretary of same, 1893-99 ; pres- ident Alumni Association Eclectic Medical College, New York, 1881-82; Censor West Side Medical Society, 1881-82; Censor
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WHO'S WHO IN NEW YORK.
Homeopathic County Medical Society, New York, 1884-85; member County, State and National Homeopathic Medical So- cieties; honorary member Michigan Hom- eopathic Medical Society. Republican in politics and active as a speaker and writer for many years. Married, first, Nov. 30, 1871, Charlotte Van Duser Hutchings, daughter of William Hutchings, Esq., of New York; second, Jan. 25, 1893, Florence May Hull, daughter of Captain S. C. Hull, of Washington, D. C. Address, 7 West 108th St., N. Y. City.
WINTERS, Joseph E., M.D .:
Born Minnisink, N. Y., Jan. 11, 1850; M. D., New York University, 1872. Tutor of anatomy at New York University, 1872 to 1873; demonstrator of anatomy at New York University, 1873-85; house surgeon, Bellevue Hospital, 1873-74; house phy- sician, Bellevue Hospital, 1874-75; assist- ant curator at Bellevue Hospital, 1875 to 1879; lecturer on Diseases of Children at New York University, 1881 to 1884; clin- ical professor of diseases of children. 1884 to 1891; professor of diseases of children, 1891 to 1898; professor of diseases of chil- dren at Cornell University Medical Col- lege, 1898 to present; visiting physician to Demilt Dispensary since 1882. Member Academy of Medicine, County Medical So- ciety and New York Clinical Society. Author of many works on diphtheria, croup and children's diseases. Also mem- ber City and Riding Clubs. Address, 25 West 37th St., N. Y. City.
WINTHROP, Edgerton Leigh:
Lawyer; born 1839, N. Y. City; was graduated from Columbia College, 1860. Trustee Institution for Savings of Merch- ants Clerks. Member Knickerbocker, Church, Union, Metropolitan and City Clubs, Century and Columbia University Alumni Associations and Metropolitan Museum of Art. Residence, 23 East 33d St .; office, 48 Wall St., N. Y. City.
WINTHROP, Edgerton Leigh, Jr .:
Lawyer; born 1864, N. Y. City; was graduated from Harvard College, 1885, and Columbia Law School, 1887. Secretary and director American Horse Exchange and New York Cab Co. Member Delta Kappa Epsilon, Porcelain and Hasty Pud- ding Fraternities, Lawyers, Metropolitan, Racquet and Tennis, Knickerbocker, City, Harvard and Meadow Brook Hunt Clubs, and City Bar Association. Residence, 114 E. 39th St .; office, 48 Wall St., N. Y. City.
WINTHROP, F. Bronson:
Lawyer; was graduated from Trinity College, Cambridge University, England, 1886. Member University, Metropolitan, Racquet and Tennis, Meadow Brook Hunt, City and Knickerbocker Clubs, and City Bar Association. Address, 23 East 33d St., N. Y. City.
WINTHROP, Grenville Bayard:
Lawyer; born Oct. 3, 1868, Pan, France; was graduated from Harvard College, 1891, and Columbia Law School, 1894 .. Married, Oct. 19, 1897, Arazalia Van Zandt Potter. Member Harvard, Calumet, Lawyers, and New York Athletic Clubs, Sons of Revolution, Society of Colonial Wars and City Bar Association. Resi- dence, 175 W. 87th St .; office, 96 Broad- way, N. Y. City.
WINTHROP, Henry Rogers:
Financial manager and assistant secre- tary and director the Equitable Life As- surance Society ; director Adam's Trust. Co., Commercial Trust Co., (Philadelphia), Coney Island & Brooklyn R. R. Co., Con- ried Metropolitan Opera Co., Essex County Trust Co., (East Orange), Fidelity Trust Co., (Newark), Franklin National Bank, (Philadelphia), Lawyers' Mortgage Co., Mercantile Electric Co., Missouri Safe De- posit Co., (St. Louis), Security Safe De- posit Co., (Boston), Union County Trust Co., (Elizabeth), Union National Bank. Trustee of the Equitable Trust Co., Mer- cantile Safe Deposit Co. Residence, 279 Fifth Ave., ; office, 120 Broadway, N. Y. City.
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