USA > New York > Who's who in New York (city and state) 1904 > Part 191
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Chief Justice of the United States; born Augusta, Me., Feb. 11, 1833; was graduated from Bowdoin College in 1853; studied law; attended a course of lectures at Harvard Law School, and was admitted to the Bar in 1855; formed a law partnership in Augusta, Me., and was an associate editor of a Democratic paper called The Age; in 1856 became president of the common council, and served as city solicitor; removed to Chicago, Ill., in 1856, where he practiced law until appointed Chief Justice; in 1862 was a member of the State constitutional convention; was a member of the State legislature from 1863 to 1865; was a delegate to the Dem- ocratic national conventions in 1864, 1872, 1876 and 1880; the degree of LL. D. was conferred upon him by the North- western University and by Bowdoin College in 1888, by Harvard in 1890, by Yale and Dartmouth in 1901; was ap- pointed Chief Justice April 30, 1888, con- firmed July 20, 1888, and took the oath of office October 8, same year. Address, Washington, D. C.
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GARFIELD, James Rudolph:
Commissioner of Corporations; born Hi- ram. O., Oct. 17, 1865 ; son of James Abram (20th President of the U. S.) and Lu- eretia (Rudolph) G .; prepared for edu- cation at St. Paul's School, Concord; graduate of Williams College, 1885; studied Columbia Law School. Admitted to Bar, 1888 : established practice at Cleve- land; Republican. Has been a member U. S. Civil Service Commission; Com- missioner of Corporations, U. S. De-
United States Senator; born Howard County, Md., March 11, 1839; attended the public schools in his native county for a brief period; in 1852 was appointed page in the Senate of the U. S., and continued in the service of the Senate until 1866, at which time he was postmaster; on the 1st of September, 1866, he was removed from his position and immedicately ap- pointed collector of internal revenue for the Fifth district of Maryland, which office he held until the incoming of the Grant Administration in 1869; in Novem- ber, 1869, was elected a member of the house of delegates of the Maryland legis- lature; was re-elected in 1871; then elect- ed speaker of the house of delegates at the ensuing session; in June, 1872, he was elected president of the Chesapeake & Ohio Canal Co .; in 1875 he was elected to represent Howard County in the Mary- land State senate, and was re-elected in November, 1879, for a term of four years; was elected in January, 1880, to the U. S. Senate as a Democrat, to succeed William Pinkney Whyte; took his seat March 4, 1881, and was re-elected in 1886 and in 1892; in 1902 was again elected, to suc- ceed George L. Wellington, Republican, and took his seat March 4, 1903. His term of service will expire March 3, 1909. Ad- dress, Washington, D. C.
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HADLEY, Arthur Twining:
President Yale since June 29, 1899; born New Haven, Conn., April 23, 1856; son of Prof. James H., of Yale; was graduated from Yale, 1876; student University of Berlin (LL. D., Harvard, 1899, Columbia, 1900, Johns Hopkins, 1902) ; married, 1891, Helen Harrison, daughter of Gov. Luzon B. Morris. Conn. Tutor, 1879-83; lecturer, 1883-86, Yale; appointed commissioner
statistics, Conn., 1885; professor political science. Yale, 1886-99. Author: Railroad 'Transportation, Its History and Laws, (1885); An Account of the Relations Be- tween Private Property and Public Wel- fare, (1896); The Education of the Amer- ican Citizen, (1901); Report on the Sys- tem of Weekly Payments. American ed-
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itor 10th edition, Encyclopædia Britanni- ventions in 1868 and 1880; was elected ca. Address: 93 Whitney Ave., New Haven, Conn.
HALE, Edward Everett:
Author, minister South Congregational (Unitarian) Church, Boston, since 1856; born Boston, April 3, 1822; son of Nathan and Sarah Preston (Everett) Hale; stud- ied Boston Latin School; was graduated from Harvard, 1839, S. T. D., 1879; (LL. D., Dartmouth, 1901); two years usher Boston Latin School; studied theology; licensed to preach; minister Church of the Unity, Worcester, Mass., 1846-56. Prom- inent promoter of "Chautauqua" circles and "Lend-a-Hand" clubs. Chairman
Massachusetts Commission for Interna- tional Justice. Editor Lend-a-Hand Rec- ord. Married Emily Baldwin, Perkins, October 13, 1852. Author: (stories): The Man Without a Country; Ten Times One is Ten; Margaret Percival in America; In His Name; Mr. Tangiers' Vacations; Mrs. Merriam's Scholars; His Level Best; The Ingham Papers; Philip Nolan's Friends; Christmas Eve and Christmas Day; Other works: Sketches in Christian History; Kansas and Nebraska; What Career? Boy's Heroes; The Story of Massachusetts; For Fifty Years (poems) ; A New England Boyhood; Chautauquan History of the United States; If Jesus Came to Boston; Memories of a Hundred Years, (1902); Mr. Ralph Waldo Emer- son, (1902). Has been editorially con- nected with numerous literary journals. Is now chaplain of U. S. Senate. Ad- dress, 39 Highland St., Roxbury, Mass. HALE, Eugene:
United States Senator; born Turner, Me., June 9, 1836; received an academic education; studied law, was admitted to the Bar in 1857, and commenced practice at the age of 20; was for nine successive years county attorney for Hancock Coun- ty; was a member of the legislature of Maine in 1867, 1868, and 1880; was elected to the Forty-first, Forty-second, and Forty-third Congresses; was appointed Postmaster-General by President Grant in 1874, but declined; was re-elected to the Forty-fourth and Forty-fifth Congresses; was tendered a Cabinet appointment, as Secretary of the Navy, by President Hayes, and declined; was chairman of the Republican Congressional committee for the Forty-fifth Congress; received the degree of LL. D. from Bates College, from Colby University, and from Bowdoin College; was a delegate to the Cincinnati convention in 1876 and the Chicago con-]
to the U. S. Senate, to succeed Hannibal Hamlin, Republican (who declined a re- election), and took his seat March 4, 1881; was re-elected in 1887, 1893, 1899, and in 1905. His term of service will expire in 1911. Address, Washington, D. C.
HARLAN, John Marshall:
Associate Justice of the U. S. Supreme Court; born Boyle County, Ky., June 1, 1833; was graduated from Center College, Kentucky, in 1850; studied law at Tran- sylvania University; practiced his pro- fession at Frankfort; was elected county judge in 1858; was elector on the Bell and Everett ticket; removed to Louis- ville and formed a law partnership with Hon. W. F. Bullock; in 1861 raised the Tenth Kentucky Infantry Regiment and served in Gen. George H. Thomas's di- vision; owing to the death of his father in the spring of 1863, although his name was before the Senate for confirmation as a brigadier-general, he felt compelled to resign ; was elected attorney-general by the Union party in 1863 and filled the office until 1867, when he returned to active practice in Louisville; was the Republican nominee for governor in 1871; his name was presented by the Republi- can convention of his State in 1872 for the Vice-Presidency; was chairman of the delegation from his State to the national Republican convention in 1876 ; declined a diplomatic position as a substitute for the Attorney-Generalship, to which, before he reached Washington, President Hayes intended to assign him; served as a mem- ber of the Louisiana commission; was commissioned an Associate Justice of the U. S. Supreme Court, Nov. 29, 1877, and took his seat Dec. 10, same year. Ad- dress, Washington, D. C.
HARPER, William Rainey, Ph. D., D. D., LL. D .:
President of the University of Chicago; born Ohio, July 26, 1856; son of Samuel and Ellen Elizabeth Rainey Harper; mar- ried Ella, daughter of Rev. David Paul. Educated Muskingum College, Ohio; Yale University. Principal of Masonic College, Macon, Tenn., 1875-76; tutor in Prepara- tory Department, Denison University,
1876-79; principal of same, 1879-80; pro- fessor of Hebrew and the cognate Lang- uages, Baptist Union Theological Semi- nary, 1879-86; principal of Chautauqua College of Liberal Arts, 1885-91; principal of the Chautauqua System, 1891-98; pro- fessor of the Semitic Languages, Yale University, 1886-91; Woolsey Professor of
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WHO'S WHO IN NEW YORK.
Biblical Literature, ibid., 1889-91. Publi- cations: Elements of Hebrew; Introductory Method and Manual; Elements of He- brew Syntax; Hebrew Vocabularies; as- sociate editor of The American Journal of Theology, The Biblical World, and He- braica; (Harper and Weidner) An In- troductory New Testament, Greek Meth- od; (Harper and Burgess) Inductive Latin Primer, Inductive Latin Method ; Inductive Studies in English ; ( Harper and Castle In- ductive Greek Primer, Greek Prose Com- position; (Harper and Miller) Vergil's Aeneid, Vergil's Bucolics; (Harper and Tolman) Caesar's Gallic War; (Harper and Wallace) Xenophon's Anabasis ; (Har- per and Waters) Inductive Greek Method; (Harper and Gallup) Clcero. Clubs : Union League, Chicago, The University, The Quadrangle, Twentieth Century, Midloth- ian, Chicago; The Century, The Univer- sity, New York. Address : The University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois.
HARRIS, Joel Chandler:
Author; born Eatonton, Ga., Dec. 8, 1848; served apprenticeship to printing trade. Author: Uncle Remus; His Songs and His Sayings; Nights With Uncle Remus; Uncle Remus and His Friends; Mingo; Little Mr. Thimblefinger; On the Plantation; Daddy Jake, the Runaway; Balaam and His Master; Mr. Rabbit at Home; The Story of Aaron; Free Joe; Stories of Georgia; Aaron in the Wild Woods; Tales of the Home Folks; Georgia, From the Invasion of De Soto to Recent Times; Evening Tales; Stories of Home Folks; Chronicles of
Aunt Minerva Ann; On the Wings of Occasion, (1900 D6); The Making of a Statesman. Was editor of the Atlanta Constitution for twenty-five years. Address, Atlanta, Ga.
HAY, John:
United States Secretary of State since 1898; born Indiana. Oct. 8, 1838; 3d son of Charles Hay and Helen Leonard; married Clara, eldest daughter of Amasa Stone, Ohio, 1874. Educated Brown University, Rhode Island. A. M. and LL. D., Brown University; LL. D., Western Reserve, Princeton, Dartmouth, Yale, and Harvard Universities. Barrister Supreme Court of Illinois; Secretary and A. D. C. to Presi- dent Lincoln; Assistant Adjutant-General and Colonel by Brevet; Secretary of Le- gation at Paris and Madrid; Chargé d'Affaires at Vienna; First Assistant Secretary of State of the U. S .; President of the International Sanitary Congress of Washington; American Ambassador to
England, 1897-98; received thanks of Con. gress, 1902, for Memorial Address on death of President M'Kinley. Author : Poems, (1871 and 1890); Castilian Days, (1871); Abraham Lincoln, (a History, 10 vols., 1890, in collaboration with John George Nicolay). Recreations: member of Winou's Point Shooting Club; member of Mount Vernon Dock Club. Clubs : Met- ropolitan, Knickerbocker, Century (New York ; ) Metropolitan, Country (Washing- ton). Address, 800 Sixteenth St., Lafay- ette Square, Washington, D. C .; The Fells, Newbury, New Hampshire.
HEMENWAY, James A .:
Member committee and chairman of the Committee on Appropriations; born March 8, 1860, Boonville, Ind., and, with the exception of a few years, has contin- ued to reside at Boonville; was educated in the common schools; commenced the practice of law in 1885; in 1886 and again in 1888 was elected prosecuting attorney of the Second judicial circuit of Indiana; in 1890 was selected as the member of the Republican State committee from the First district; was elected to the Fifty- fourth. Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty- seventh Congresses, and re-elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 21,524 votes, to 17,833 for John W. Spencer, Dem- ocrat, 540 for George W. Norman. Pro- hibitionist, 1,459 for Moses Smith, So- cialist, and 41 for Samuel P. Aydelotte, Populist. Senator-elect from Indiana. Ad- dress, Boonville, Ind.
HIGGINSON, Thomas Wentworth:
Late Colonel 33d U. S. Colored Infantry; author; born Cambridge, Mass., U. S. A., Dec. 22. 1823; son of Stephen Higginson, Jr., and Louisa, daughter
of Capt. Thos. Storrow (British Army); married Mary Potter, daughter of Peter Thacher, 1879. Educated Harvard University; A. B., A. M., LL. D. Captain, 51st Massa- chusetts Volunteers (Civil War), 1862; colonel. 1st South Carolina Volunteers (afterwards 33d U. S. Colored Infantry), Sept. 25. 1862; wounded at Wiltown Bluff, S. C., July 10, 1863; resigned from conse- quent disability, 1864; member Massachu- setts Legislature, 1880-81; member Mili- tary Staff of Governor of Massachusetts, 1880-81; member Massachusetts State Board of Education, 1881-84; Massachu- setts Military and Naval Historian, 1889- 96. Publications: Atlantic Essays; Out- door Papers; Army Life in a Black Regi- ment ; Malbone; Oldport Days; Young Folks' History of the United States; Larg- cr History of the United States ; Common-
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sense about Women; Travellers and Out- laws; The New World and the New Book; The Monarch of Dreams; The Pro- cession of the Flowers; The Afternoon Landscape (poems); Book and Heart; Cheerful Yesterdays; Tales of the En- chanted Islands ; Old Cambridge; Contem- poraries ; Life of Longfellow; Life of Whit- tier; and a translation of Epictetus; Col- lected Works (revised edition, vols., 1900). Recreations: natural history and athletic exercises. Clubs: Round Table,
Appalachian Mountain, Loyal Legion, Boston. Address, 29 Buckingham St., Cambridge, Mass., U. S. A.
HILL, James J .:
President of the St. Paul, Minneap- olis & Manitoba R. R. since 1883; born near Guelph, Ont., Sept. 16, 1838; was educated at Rockwood Academy; left his father's farm for business life in Minneapolis; was in steamboat office in St. Paul, 1856-65; agent Northwestern Packet Co., 1865; later established gen- eral fuel and transportation business on his own account; head of Hill, Griggs & Co., same line, 1869-75; established, 1870, Red River Transportation Co., which was first to open communication between St. Paul and Winnipeg; organ- ized, 1873, syndicate which secured con- trol of the St. Paul & Pacific R. R., from Dutch owners of the securities; reorgan- ized system as St. Paul, Minneapolis & Manitoba R. R., and was its general manager, 1879-82; vice-president, 1882- 83; it became part Great Northern sys- tem, 1890; from 1883 to 1893 interested himself in building the Great Northern Ry., extending from Lake Superior to Puget Sound with northern and southern branches and a direct steamship connec- tion with China and Japan; president entire Great Northern system, 1893; chief promoter and now president North- ern Securities Co. Gave $500,000 toward establishing R. C. theological seminary at St. Paul, Minn. Address: Great Northern Ry. Bldg., St. Paul, Minn.
HITCHCOCK, Ethan Allen:
Secretary of the Interior; of Missouri; great-grandson of Ethan Allen of Ver- mont; born Mobile, Ala., Sept. 19, 1835; lived a year at New Orleans, and then removed to Nashville, Tenn., where he attended private schools, completing his course of study in 1855 at the military academy in New Haven, Conn. Rejoin- ing his family, who were then living at St. Louis, Mo., he engaged in mercantile business until 1860, when he went to
China to enter the commission house of Olyphant & Co., of which he was made a partner in 1866. Retired from business in 1872, and spent a couple of years in Europe. Returning to the United States in 1874, was engaged as president of several manufacturing, mining, and rail- way companies, until he was appointed August 16, 1897, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary to Russia. Reached his post in December of that year, and on Feb. 11, 1898, was made Ambassador Extraordinary and Minis- ter Plenipotentiary at St. Petersburg, where he discharged the duties of his office as the first American Ambassador accredited to the Russian Court until he left for home to assume, on February 20, 1899, the duties of Secretary of the In- terior, for which office he was nominated by the President and confirmed by the Senate on the same day, December 21, 1898. Address, 1601 H. St., Washington, D. C.
HOLMES, Hon. Oliver Wendell, LL. D .:
An associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court since 1902; born Boston, March 8, 1841; son of the nov- elist and poet; married, 1872, Fanny, daughter of Epes Sargent Dixwell, Cam- bridge, Mass. Joined 4th Battalion of Infantry at outbreak of Civil War; served with 20th Massachusetts Infan- try, present at battle of Ball's Bluff (wounded); Captain, 1862; present at battle of Antietam (wounded); Provost- Marshal of Falmouth, Virginia, 1863; present at battle of Marye's Hill (wounded); Lieut .- Col., 1863; A.D.C. on staff of Brigadier-General H. G. Wright, 1864; entered Harvard Law School (LL.B. 1866); admitted Suffolk Bar, 1867; taught Constitutional Law in Harvard College, 1870-71; University Lecturer on Juris- prudence, 1871-72; editor of The Amer- ican Law Review, 1870-73; Professor in Harvard Law School, 1882; Associate Justice of the Supreme Court, 1882-99; Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Massachusetts, 1899-1902. Publications: edited twelfth edition of Kent's Com- mentaries, 1873; The Common Law, 1881; Speeches, 1891, 1900; articles in Law Reviews. Address, 1720
I. St., Washington, D. C.
HOWELL, Hon. Clark:
Editor of the Constitution since 1897; born Erwinton, South Carolina, Sept. 21, 1863 ; son of Evan P. and Julia A. How- ell; married, first, 1887, Harriet Barrett; second, 1900, Annie Comer. Educated at
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common schools of Atlanta, Georgia; graduated University of Georgia, Athens, 1883. Became connected with The At- lanta Constitution upon graduating from State University; became successively night editor, assistant managing editor, managing editor in 1889 upon the death of Henry W. Grady; elected three times Georgia House of Representatives, 1886- 92; Speaker of the House last time; elected to State Senate two terms, 1900- 1905; President of Senate both terms; member National Democratic Executive Committee from Georgia since 1892; member of Board of Directors the As- sociated Press for past nine years ; trustee, University of Georgia. Publi-
cations: Several addresses delivered
upon public and patriotic occasions.
Recreations: Chiefly driving. Clubs: Capitol City, Piedmont Driving, Atlanta. Address, Atlanta, Georgia.
HOYT, Henry Martyn:
Solicitor General; born Wilkes-Barre, Pa., Dec. 5, 1856; son of Gen. Henry M. Hoyt (governor Pennsylvania, 1879- 83) and Mary Loveland Hoyt; early ed- ucation at public schools; graduate of Yale College, 1878; law department, University of Pennsylvania, 1881; ad- mitted to Bar; practiced at Pittsburg; assistant cashier U. S. National Bank, New York, 1883; treasurer Investment Co. of Philadelphia, 1886; president same, 1890; resumed profession, 1893; married, Jan. 31, 1883, Anne, daughter of Morton McMichael of Philadelphia. Residence, 1516 K St., N. W .; office, Department of Justice, Washington, D. C.
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INGALLS, Melville Ezra:
President of Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago & St. Louis R. R .; Born Harri- son, Me., Sept. 6, 1842; was educated at Burlington Academy and studied Bow- doin College; was graduated from Har- vard Law School, 1863; practiced first at Gray, Me., but soon removed to Boston; member Massachusetts senate, 1867; president, 1870, receiver, 1871, the In- dianapolis, Cincinnati & Lafayette R. R., and from bankrupt condition, with aid of reorganizations in 1873 and 1880, put its successor, the Cincinnati, Indianapo- lis, St. Louis & Chicago, upon a sound footing, consolidating it with other roads into the Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago & St. Louis R. R., of which he is pres- ident, comprising the "Big Four" sys-
item; also from Oct. 1, 1888, until Feb., 1900, president Chesapeake & Ohio Ry. Co. Was Democratic candidate for Mayor of Cincinnati, 1903 ; defeated. Ad- dress, E. Walnut Hills, Cincinnati, O.
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JESSE, Richard Henry:
President of the University of Mis- souri since 1891; born Ball Farm (home of Washington's mother), Lancaster Co., Va., March 1, 1853; son of W. T. Jesse and Mary Claybrook; married Ad- die Henry Polk, of Princess Anne, Md., 1882. Educated at Hanover Academy; University of Virginia; Europe; Tulane University (LL. D.). Chariman, Section Higher Education, N.E.A., 1898; Presi- dent State Teachers Association of Mis- souri, 1899; President Southern Associa- tion Colleges and Secondary Schools, 1903; LL. D. University of Wisconsin, 1904; instructor in French and Mathe- matics, Hanover Academy, 1876; Dean of Academic Department, University of Louisiana, 1878-84; Professor of Latin, Tulane University, New Orleans, Louis- iana, 1884-91; a member of the Commit- tee of Ten, 1893 (National Educational Association). Publications: Missouri lit- erature (with E. A. Allen), pamphlets, papers in transactions of various soci- eties, etc. Address, University of Mis- souri, Columbia.
JOHNSTON, Mary:
Author; born Buchanan, Va., Nov. 21, 1870; daughter of John William and Elizabeth Alexander Johnston; educated at home. Author: Prisoners of Hope; To Have and To Hold; Audrey. Ad- dress, Richmond, Va.
JORDAN, David Starr, M. S., Ph.D., M. D., LL.D .:
President of Leland Stanford Junior University since 1891; born Jan. 19, 1851, Gainesville, New York; second son of Hiram Jordan, teacher and farmer, and Hulda Lake, daughter of David Haw- ley of Warsaw, N. Y., ancestry from Devon; married, first, Susan Bowen, daughter of Sylvester Bowen of Hins- dale, Mass .; second, Jessie Knight, daughter of Charles S. Knight, of Wor- cester, Mass. Educated at Cornell Uni- versity ; afterwards studied at Harvard and in Paris and elsewhere. College professor and naturalist; instructor in Cornell University, 1870-72; in Agassiz's Summer School at Penikese, 1873; pro- fessor of Biology in Butler University,
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WHO'S WHO IN NEW YORK.
1876-79, of Zoology in University of In- | J. Bar, 1877, but never practiced. Pres- ident National State Bank of Elizabeth; Elizabetlitown Water Co .; Elizabeth Gas Co. ; vice-president Manhattan Trust
diana, 1879-85; president of University of Indiana, 1885-91; assistant to U. S. Fish Commission, 1879-90; commission- er in charge of Fishery Investigations of Pacific Coast, 1880; Commissioner in charge of investigations of Fur Seals in Behring Sea, 1896-97; commissioner in charge U. S. Fish Commission inves- tigations in Hawaii, 1901; Samoa, 1902; Alaska, 1903; president of California Academy of Sciences, 1896-98, and 1900- 02. Publications: Synopsis of Fishes of North America, 1883; Fishes of North and Middle America (4 vols., 1898) ; The Fur Seal of Behring Sea (4
vols., 1898) ; Manual of Vertebrates ;
Science, Sketches ; Care and Culture of Men; Matka and Kotik; The In- numerable Company; Footnotes to Evo- lution, Imperial Democracy; Animal
Forms; Animal Life; The Book of Knight and Barbara; The Voice of the Scholar; The Blood of the Nation; The Call of the 20th Century; besides some 300 scientific papers and articles in mag- azines. Recreations: Baseball in young- er days; mountaineering, Matterhorn, 1881, and various peaks in Switzerland, Norway, North Carolina, and the Sierra Nevada of California; natural history field work in all parts of U. S., besides Cuba, Italy, Mexico, Japan, Hawaii, Sa- moa, etc. Address, Stanford University, Cal.
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KAUFFMANN, Samuel Hay:
President Washington Evening Star Co .; born Wayne Co., O., was educated at common school; learned printing bus- iness early in life and has been almost continuously connected with journalism since in Ohio and District of Columbia; for more than thirty years one of pro- prietors of Washington Evening Star. Extensive traveler in all parts of world; patron of art and luerature; president board of trustees Corcoran Gallery Art. Member National Geographical Society, Philosophical Society, Anthropological Society, History and Literature Society, Washington; National Sculpture Soci- ety, Grolier Club and Arts Club, New York. Address, 1421 Massachusetts Ave., Washington, D. C. KEAN, John:
U. S. Senator from N. J., term 1899- 1905; born Ursino, N. J., Dec. 4, 1852 ; studied at Yale; graduate of Columbia Col- lege Law School, New York ; admitted to N.
Co .; member Congress, 1883-85 and 1887-89; candidate for governor, 1892; elected, U. S. senator, 1899; Republican. Address, Ursino, near Elizabeth, N. J. KING, Brig .- Gen. Charles:
Soldier and novelist; born Albany, N. Y., Oct. 12, 1844; married daughter of Capt. Yorke of Carroll Parish, Louisiana. Ed- ucated at West Point Academy. Began military career, 1856; retired, 1899; served Apache campaign, 1874; Sioux campaign, 1876; Nez Perces Campaign, 1877; professor Military Science and Tactics, University of Wisconsin, 1889- 82; colonel and aide-de-camp to Governor Rusk, 1882-89; Governor Heard, 1889-91; Inspector-General Wisconsin National Guard, 1883-89; commanded Fourth In- fantry, 1890-92; Commandant of Cadets, Michigan Military Academy, 1892; Adjutant-General Wisconsin National Guard, 1895-97; served in Philippines as Brigadier-General, U.
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