Who's who in New York (city and state) 1904, Part 30

Author:
Publication date: 1904-
Publisher: New York : Lewis Historical Pub. Co., etc.
Number of Pages: 1100


USA > New York > Who's who in New York (city and state) 1904 > Part 30


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Brigadier General, U. S. A. (retired) ; bern Albany, N. Y., 1821; sixth of seven sons of Archibald Campbell, forty years deputy secretary of the State of N. Y .; graduated in medicine, 1843; assis- tant surgeon, U. S. A., 1847; served with army in Mexico until evacuation; on duty in Texas, Cal., and other parts of the U. S .; in April, 1861, sailed with troops for re- lief of Fort Pickens; in 1862 medical direc- tor Department of Washington; surgeon in charge of general hospital, Bedloe's Is- land, N. Y. Harbor: by special order, de- tailed as medical attendant to General Winfield Scott; 1863, member of first army retiring board, of which General McDow- ell was president; 1863-65, medical direc- tor Department of the Susquehanna, sta- tioned at Philadelphia; 1865, medical director District of Georgia; 1878, medical director Department of the South, station Newport Barracks, Ky .; received brevets


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WHO'S WIIO IN NEW YORK.


of lieutenant colonel and colonel for mer- | and director, Tietjen & Lang Dry Dock itorious services in the Civil War; retired Co .; director, N. Y. & Hoboken Ferry Co., and First National Bank of Hoboken; president of Board of Health of Hoboken, 1893-98; member of Metropolitan Museum of Art. Address, Produce Exchange An- nex, N. Y. City, and Fifth St., Hoboken, N. J. from active service Sept., 1885, by opera- tion of law; in 1888 moved to present res- idence; in 1864, married Mary, daughter of James E. Price, of Wilmington, Del .; has six sons and two daughters; the eld- est son, Archibald, is now captain Artil- lery Corps, U. S. Army. Address, Cold CAMPBELL, Samuel R .: Spring, N. Y.


CAMPBELL, John :


Protestant Episcopal clergyman; born N. Y. City, March 3, 1867; son of John and Elizabeth (Kilpatrick) Campbell; was graduated from the City College, 1888; student of law with Hon. John De Witt Warner and at Columbia; A. M., Colum- bia, 1890; admitted to the Par, Dec., 1890; was graduated from the General Theolog- ical Seminary, 1904; made deacon, 1894; priest, 1895; assistant minister of St. laul's Church, New Haven, 1894-96, under Rev. E. S. Lines, now Bishop of Newark; assistant at the Church of the Incarna- tion, New York, 1896-97, under Rev. W. M. Grosvenor; since Nov. 15, 1897, rector of the Church of the Mediator at Kings- bridge, N. Y. City; received degree, Ph. D. from New York University, 1896; mem- ber American Oriental Society, Church- man's Association, Phi Delta Theta Fra- ternity. Address, Kingsbridge, N. Y. City.


CAMPBELL, John Lorne:


Baptist clergyman; born Dominionville, Canada, Jan. 14, 1845; son of Peter and Flora (McLean) Campbell; was graduated from Woodstock (Ont.) College, 1868; Baptist Theological Seminary, same, 1868; D. A., Toronto University, 1SS3; D. D .. Central University of Iowa, 1893; B. A., from the McMaster University, Toron- to, 1899; married, 1868, Maggie C. McIn- tyre, Dominionville, Ont .; ordained, 1868; and held pastorates in Ontario and Quebec until 1879; travelled in Holy Land and Europe, preaching in London, Eng- land, during summers of 1899, 1901 and 1902; pastor of Lexington Avenue Baptist Church since 1SS9; Republican; author; Heavenly Recognition and Other Sermons; Sanctification. Address, 129 E. 111th St., N. Y. City.


CAMPBELL, Palmer:


Banker; born Dec. 25, 1856, New Or- leans, La .; educated in Edinburgh, Scot- land; married; president and director Campbell Stores and Campbell & Co. (Inc.); general manager, treasurer and di- rector, Hoboken Land and Improvement Co., and Hoboken Shore Road; secretary


Cotton manufacturer; born 1838; mar- ried; treasurer New York Mills; president Walcott & Campbell Spinning Co .; presi- dent, Aragon (Ga.) Mills; director, First National Bank of Utica; ex-U. S. Consul, member of Fort Schuyler, Sadaquada Golf Clubs, Utica Chamber of Commerce, and Oneida Historical Society. Address, New York Mills, N. Y.


CAMPBELL, Thomas Blake:


Builder; born June S, 1854, Fayetteville, N. Y .; educated at Ithaca Academy; mar- ried, in 1881, Laura Frances Poole, of Ithaca, N. Y .; alderman, 1890-92; builder of nearly all the great buildings at Cor- nell University, including Memorial Chapel. Lincoln, Franklin and Morse Halls, Sibley College, Sage College Annex, Armory and Annex, and Chi Psi, Zeta Psi, Kappa, Alpha, Phi Gamma Delta, Sig- ma Phi and Delta Chi Fraternity Chap- ter houses; also Morgan Hall at Wells College; manufacturer of fine white and buff pressed briek; inventor of brickmak- ing machinery; member ofAmerican Brick Manufacturers Association and Society of American Inventors, Knight Templar; Re- publican. Address, Ithaca, N. Y.


CAMPBELL, Thomas C .:


Lawyer; born April 27, 1845, Roch- ester, N. Y .; was graduated from Cin- cinnati Law School and began practice in that city. Meantime, at the age of sixteen years he enlisted in the Union Army and was honorably discharged in Oct., 1865. Quartermaster-general, staff of commander-in-chief G. A .R., 1867; councilman, 1868; assistant revenue collector, 1869; prosecuting attorney of Hamilton County two terms, commenc- ing in 1873; Republican counsel in numer- ous prominent political contests; attorney for Gazette ten years; founded the Even- ing Telegram in 1884 which he conducted three years; since 1888 he has practiced in N. Y. City; president of Hamilton Republican Club four years; member of Ohio Society; Thirty-second degree Ma- son; member of Reorganizing Committee of Columbus Central R. R. Co. Address, 265 Broadway, N. Y. City.


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CAMPBELL, Thomas Joseph:


Educator; born N. Y. City, April 29, 1848; educated at St. Francis Xavier Col- lege; entered Society of Jesus; ordained priest 1880; professor of belles lettres and rhetoric at St. Johns College, Ford- ham; (president of same 1885-89, 1896- 99); professor belles lettres and rhetoric St. Xavier Colege, and St. Francis Xavier College; associate editor Messen- ger of the Sacred Heart, since 1900. Re- sidence, 29 W. 16th St .; office, 44 Broad- way, N. Y. City.


CAMPBELL, William Auchinbreck:


Lawyer; born Aug. 29, 1866, in Schnec- tady, N. Y .; was graduated from Yale College, 1888, and attended Harvard Law School; member of University, Union, University Athletic and Harvard Clubs; City Bar Association, Society of Colonial Wars and Military Order of Loyal Le- gion. Residence, 136 Madison Ave .; office, 44 Cedar St., N. Y. City.


CANDA, Charles J .:


President of Canda Realty Co .; vice- president of Chrome Steel Works; chair- man and trustee, Texas Pacific Land Trust; member Reform, Democratic and Manhattan Clubs, Metropolitan Museum of Art and American Geographical So- ciety. Residence, Summit, N. J .; office, 11 Pine St., N. Y. City.


CANDA, Ferdinand E .:


Civil engineer; president of Ensign Manufacturing Co .; vice-president of Chrome Steel Works, Canda . Cattle Car Co., and Canda Manufacturing Co .; direc- tor American Car and Foundry Co .; mem- ber of Engineers, Manhattan, Reform and Lawyers Clubs. Residence, 48 Cen- tral Park South; office, 11 Pine St., N. Y. City.


CANFIELD, Edward:


Railway official; born Geneva, N. Y., May. 27, 1848; was graduated from Ho- bart College, 1869, A. M., 1874; married, 1874, Jane M. Hastings; civil engineer- ing 1869-82; since which time he has been successively division superintendent, chief engineer and now general superintendent of N. Y. Ontario & Western Ry. Mem- ber American Society of Civil Engineers. Address, Middletown N. Y.


CANFIELD, George Folger:


Lawyer, educator; born N. Y. City, Aug. 21, 1854; son of Albert Warren and Elizabeth I. H. Canfield; was graduated from Phillip's Exeter Academy, 1871, Harvard College, 1875, spending two years at German Universitles; Harvard Law School, 1880; married, (first) Peekskill,


N. Y., 1884, Sarah Kittredge (died 1897); (second), Sept. 20, 1904, Frances Maynard Marshall, of Charleston, S. C. Admitted to the New York Bar, 1881; member of the law firm of Wilmer & Canfield; pro- fessor Columbia Law School since 1894; member Association of the Bar of the City of N. Y., New York Zoological Gar- dens, Down Town Association, Law In- stitute, Civil Service Reform Association; president State Charities Aid Association. Clubs: Harvard, University, City. Res- idence, 32 East 33d St .; office, 49 Wall St., N. Y. City.


CAKFIELD, James Hulme:


Librarian of Columbia University, N. Y. City, since 1899; born Delaware, O., Mar., 1847; son of Rev. Dr. E. H. and Martha C. (Hulme) Canfield; was graduated from Williams College 1868, LL. D., 1893; Litt. D., (Oxon) 1902; mar- ried Flavia A. Camp; admitted to Michi- gan Bar, 1872; after practicing his pro- fession for five years he accepted the professorship of history, State University of Kansas, 1877-91; chancellor Univer- sity of Nebraska, 1891-95; president Ohio State University, 1895-99; member of Cen- tury, Authors, Quill and Independent clubs; Society Colonial Wars, American Society of Letters, American Library As- sociation, N. Y. Library, and National Educational Association; author, Taxa- tion; A Short History of Kansas; Local Government in Kansas; The College Stu- dent and His Problems; contributes to pe- riodicals and current press. Address, Co- lumbia University, N. Y. City.


CANNON, Duncan B .:


Financier; born July 19, 1844, in Bal- timore, Md .; educated at Monumental Academy; married; secretary and treasu- rer and director Coney Island and Brook- lyn R. R. Co., Brooklyn City & Newtown R. R. Co .; director Gatling Ordnance Co .; member of Reform Club and Southern Society. Residence, 311 Washington Ave .; office, De Kalb and Central Aves., Brook- lyn, N. Y.


CANNON, Henry White:


Chairman Board of Directors Chase Na- tional Bank and ex-comptroller of the cur- rency; born Delhi, N. Y., Sept. 27, 1850; Benj. Cannon, his parental grandfather, in whose honor Cannonsville, N. Y., re- ceived its name, was a man who stood ligh in the business world, and the same may be said of his son, George B. Can- non; postmaster for many years at Delhi, under President Grant. Henry W. Cannon was educated in the private


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schools at Delhi, and studied at the [ judiciously performed. On the election of President Cleveland, Mr. Cannon was asked to continue in office, but he re- signed early in 1886 and removed to New York, where he became vice-president of the National Bank of the Republic. In November of the same year he became president of the Chase National Bank; resigned in February, 1904, and was elected chairman of its board of direc- tors, which position he still holds. Mr. Cannon was appointed by Mayor Grant aqueduct commissioner; he was chosen by President Harrison as a member of the assay commissions of 1891 and 1892, and as one of the United States com- missioners in the International Mone- tary Conference of 1892, in which he played a very important part; he has been a frequent contributor to news- papers on financial subjects; he is direc- tor of Great Northern, Lake Erie & Western; Oregon R. R. & Navigation Co .; director Guarantee Co., of North America; trustee Imperial Insurance Co. of London (Ltd); director Manhattan Trust Co .; chairman and president of the Pacific Coast Co., U. S. Guarantee Co. Residence, 258 Madison Ave .; office, Chase National Bank, N. Y. City.


Delaware Literary Institute; he inherited a strong business proclivity, and, hav- ing decided to pursue the business of banking, he obtained a position in the First National Bank of Delhi, where he was made teller before he became twen- ty years of age; he left immediately af- terwards, Being offered, in 1870, what seemed to him a better position in the Second National Bank of St. Paul, Minn .; in 1871 he removed to Stillwater, Minn., and, though only twenty years old, he organized there the Lumberman's Na- tional Bank, of which he became cashier and active manager, and continued so for thirteen years. Two years after this institution came into existence the panic of 1873 began, and banks everywhere sus- pended currency payment, but so skill- ful and judicious was the management of the youthful cashier that his bank was carried through the storm with- out once refusing payment; when the public debt was refunded he became ac- tive in purchasing and exchanging gov- ernment bonds for Minnesota banks; he also negotiated loans for the city of St. Paul; his operations in these various directions, which frequently brought him to the East, and into contact with promi- nent officials and financiers, gave him such a reputation as an able banker that in 1884, at the solicitation of the Minnesota Congressmen and numerous bankers, he was appointed, by President Arthur, comptroller of the currency, to succeed Hon. John J. Knox; in this re- sponsible position Mr. Cannon quickly demonstrated his ability; young as he was, his experience had been varied, and he had diligently studied the principles of banking and commercial law; he found himself at once in a position of difficulty, the financial crisis of 1884 caus- ing great trouble in the banking com- munity, during which many banks were saved from going into the hands of re- ceivers by the skill and judgment of the new comptroller; he also wisely dissuaded the Senate from ordering an inquiry into the condition of the banks of New York, which might have precipitated disaster; during his term of office the charters cf numerous national banks expired, and new charters were granted only after the comptroller had satisfied himself of the soundness of the institutions; this was a task demanding great labor and vigilance on the part of Mr. Cannon; it was very 6


CANNON, James Graham:


Banker; vice-president Fourth National Bank; treasurer Chamber of Commerce; Board of Trustees International Commit- tee, Y. M. C. A .; interested as officer or director in banks and corporations. Pub- lications: Clearing Houses, Their History, Methods and Administration. Residence, Scarsdale. N. Y .; office, 114 Nassau St., N. Y. City.


CANNON, Le Grand Bouton :


Retired banker; vice-president of rail- roads; served in Civil War, 1861-65; vice- president American Protective Tariff League; interested as officer and direc- tor in many railway and other corpora- tions; member Metropolitan Museum of Art, Loyal Legion; Academy of Design; Jekyl Island; clubs, Union League, Army and Navy. Residence, 19 West 47th St .; office, 135 West 23d St., N. Y. City.


CANNON, Sylvanus T .:


Lawyer; born Jan. 11, 183S, in Orange County, N. Y .; prepared at Denniston's Academy, and attended Columbia Col- lege; married; member of firm of Can- non & Cannon; member of City Bar As- scciation, Law Institute and St. Nicho- las Society. Residence, 323 West End Ave .; office, 115 Broadway, N. Y. City.


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CANNON, Wilson Lee, Jr .:


Lawyer; born Dover, Del., Aug. 23, 1865; was graduated from Yale College, 1886; single; member of City Bar Asso- ciation and Delaware Society. Resi- dence, Hotel San Remo; office, 115 Broad- way, N. Y. City.


CANTOR, Jacob A .:


Lawyer; born in N. Y. City; was edu- cated in the public schools; in 1867 en- tered the law office of William Ware Peck; also a law student in the office of Webster & Craig. In 1844, during the first Presidential campaign of Grover Cleveland, he first entered politics. He was the Democratic candidate for As- sembly in the Twenty-first District, and was elected; in 1885 he was re-elected to the Assembly and re-elected to the same position in 1886; his career as a State Senator began in 1887, when he was elected in the Tenth District .. At the opening of the Legislature, in 1888, he was elected Democratic leader; in 1891 he became chaiman of the Committee on Finance; president of the Borough of Manhattan in 1902-03. Address, 9 West 70th St., N. Y. City.


CARBONE, Agostino:


Singer and vocal teacher; born 1856, Geneva, Italy. He studied singing at the Municipal College of Music in Genoa, and with the famous tenor, Settimio Mal- vezzi; at nineteen years of age he made liis debut and in a few years was one of the most successful and prominent actor- singers in Europe. He sang in the grand opera houses in Milan, Rome, Florence, Moscow, Paris, London, Lisbon, Barce- lona, etc., and in America was a member of the Strackosh Gerster, Sembrich, Cam- panini's opera and concert companies, and was also for many seasons a mem- ber of the Grau Metropolitan Grand Opera Co. Among his artistic successes most remember the remarkable one as Beckmesser in Wagner's opera, Die Meistersinger, and Bartolo in Rossini's opera, Il Barbiere di Siviglia. His am- bition to teach singing began in 1885 in Moscow, and there his spare time was spent in giving instruction to a limited number of pupils. He continued to teach in New York during his engagements at the Metropolitan Opera House. He left the stage in 1900 to devote twenty-five years of experience in teaching singing, and is at present one of the most promi- nent vocal teachers in New York, with studio at 240 Fifth Ave., N. Y. City.


CARD, Albert M .:


Lawyer; born at Ancram, N. Y .; edu- cated at Sharon (Conn.) High school, Amenia (N. Y.) Seminary and East- man's Business College, Poughkeepsie, N. Y .; married; Judge of Probate at Sharon, Conn .; Representative and State Senator of Connecticut; president of vil- lage of Sharon, 1900-02; vice-president, secretary and director, Salisbury Carbon- ate Iron Co .; secretary, treasurer and director Landon Iron Co .; secretary and director Amenia Mining Co .; director Sharon Water Co., Sharon Electric Light Co., Sharon Telephone Co., First National Bank of Amenia and Amenia Water Co. Member of Harlem and Democratic Clubs; Tammany Society; State Bar Association and a Mason. Residence, Grand Union Hotel and Amenia, N. Y .; office, 93 Nas- sau St., N. Y. City.


CAREY, Chauncey Sherwood:


Physician; born Aug. 10, 1858, Centre Moreland, Pa .; prepared at Keystone Academy, Factoryville, Pa .; was gradu- ated from United States Medical College in New York City, 1880, and afterwards attended the Post Graduate Medical Col- lege, New York City, 1891-92; engaged in general practice in N. Y. City; after- wards located at Mill City, Pa., where he remained until 1892, when he located ir. Elmira, N. Y., as a specialist in dis- eases of the eye, ear and throat; mem- ber of Knights Templar and thirty-sec- ond degree Mason, Odd Fellow, and mem- ber of Chemung County Medical So- ciety and Century Club; also of the So- ciety of the Sons of the American Revo- lution. Address, Elmira, N. Y.


CAREY, Daniel Graham:


Physician; born Nov. 22, 1842 at Dolsontown, N. Y .; educated at United States Eclectic Medical College in N. Y. City, and Eclectic Medical Institute and American Eclectic Medical College, Cin- cinnati; was graduated from the latter in 1893; married, in 1861, Louisa J. Conkling, of Montrose, Pa .; captain of militia; manufacturer of Carey proprie- lary medicines; author of Dr. Carey's Guide to Health; founder of the Waverly Farmer. Address, Elmira, N. Y.


CAREY, Henry Dewitt:


Banker; born near Middletown, N. Y., was graduated from Lowell's Commercial College, Binghamton, N. Y .; married, in 1873, Ella J. Ludlum, of Middletown, N. Y .; merchant in Middletown; mana- ger of legal and foreign departments of


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WHO'S WHO IN NEW YORK.


New Home Sewing Machine Co., in N. [ton and Lee University;


Y. City for many years, until about 1900, when he engaged in private banking; Justice of the Peace; Justice of Ses- sions of Westchester County, N. Y., 1889-90; president of Pelham Park R. R. and City Island R. R .; president of Metropolitan Dispensary and board of trustees of New York College of Mid- wifery, and president of the Northmore- land and Minnewa Clubs. Life member of the American Society for the Preven- tion of Cruelty to Animals; member Tammany Society; thirty-third degree Mason; member of American Historical Association and Sons of American Revo- lution. Address, City Island, N. Y .; office, 70 Beaver St., N. Y. City.


CARHART, Alfred B .:


Lawyer; born 1872, Iowa; educated at Princeton University; married; member Princeton and Crescent Athletic Clubs and Society of Colonial Wars. Residence, 1331 Pacific St., Brooklyn; office, 49 Wall St., N. Y. City.


CARHART, Henry Smith:


Physicist; born Coeymans, N. Y., March 27, 1844; was graduated from Wesleyan University, Middletown, Conn .; A. B., 1869; honorary LL. D., 1833; later studied at Yale, Harvard and Berlin; instructor in Northwestern University, 1872; pro- fessor of physics in same institution, 1873-86; professor of physics in the Uni- versity of Michigan since 1886; in 1881, member international jury of award at the Paris Exposition of Electricity; presi- dent board of judges in Electricity at the World's Columbian Exposition, 1893; one of the five official members of the cham- ber of delegates at the International Elec- trical Congress in Chicago, 1593, and in St. Louis in 1904; Fellow of the Am- erican Association for the Advancement of Science; member of the American In- stitute of Electrical Engineers; foreign member of the British Institution of Electrical Engineers; president of the American Electrochemical Society; mem- ber of the American Physical Society; vice president of the committee of organ- ization of the International Electrical Congress at St. Louis, 1904. Author of: Primary Batteries; Elements of Phys- ics; University Physics; Electrical Meas- urements, and High School Physics. Married, 1876, Ellen M. Soulé. Address, Ann Arbor, Mich.


CARICHOFF, Eugene Russell:


Electrical engineer; born Virginia; was graduated as master of arts at Washing-


post-graduate


student under Professor Rowland at Johns Hopkins University for two years ending 1903; associated with Frank J. Sprague in development of controlling apparatus for electrical elevators and for the mutliple unit system of electric rail- ways; later associated with the Otis Elevated Co., N. Y. City, and retained by the General Electric Co .; member of the American Institute of Electrical Engi- neers; at present consulting engineer with offices at 20 Broad St., N. Y. City.


CARL, William C .:


Organist; director of music in the First Presbyterian Church of N. Y. City; direc- of the Guilmant Organ School, and of the Manuscript Society, and director and founder of American Guild of Organists. Address, care of The Guilmant Organ School, 34 W. 12th St., N. Y. City.


CARLETON, Henry Guy :


Inventor, journalist and playwright; born Fort Union, New Mexico, June 21, 1856; son of Gen. James H. Carleton; a gradu- ate of Santa Clara College (C. E.), 1870; second lieutenant 8th Cavalry; served in Indian campaigns, 1873-76, when he re- signed; began journalistic work in 1876 on editorial staff of Louisiana Times; at- terward managing editor of Life; on edi- torial staff of N. Y. World since 1886; in- ventor of a barometer, a telegraph re- peater and others; member New York and Larchmont Clubs; author of Memnon, The Pembertons, Victor Durand, Thomp- son Street Poker Club. Residence, 27 W. 37th St .; office, 1133 Broadway, N. Y. City.


CARLETON, Will:


Author, poet, lecturer; born Hudson, Lenawee County, Mich., Oct. 21, 1845; was graduated from Hillsdale College, 1869, B. S. (A. M., Litt. D.); 1878, 1885 and 1888, visited Europe several times; ever since leaving college, has delivered lectures and original readings, visiting Great Britain, Canada, and all parts of the United States; also engaged in news- paper work in Hillsdale, Detroit, and Chi- eago; now editor of Every Where, illus- trated magazine, Brooklyn; member of Authors Club, Brooklyn University Club, etc., etc. Publications: Poems (1871) ; Farm Ballads (1873); Farm Legends (1875); Young Folks Centennial Rhymes (1876), Farm Festivals (1881); City Bal- lads (1885); City Legends (1889); City Festivals (1893); Rhymes of our Planet (1895); The Old Infant, and Similar Stories (1896); Songs of Two Centuries


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WHO'S WHO IN NEW YORK.


(1902). Address, 420 Greene Ave., Brook- lyn, N. Y.


CARLISLE, John Griffin:


Statesman; born Campbell County, Ky., Sept. 5, 1835; received common school education; studied law with J. W. Stev- enson and W. B. Kinkhead; after teach- ing at Covington, admitted to bar, 1858; one term in House of Representatives, 1859-61; 1866 and 1869 member of Demo- cratic Convention; 1871-75 lieutenant gov- ernor of Kentucky; 1876 presidential elec- tor; also chosen member of Congress and seven times re-elected; appointed mem- ber of Committee on Ways and Means; elected Speaker of House of Representa- tives, 1883; twice re-elected, serving six years; is an able speaker and prominent in Democratic party, supporting tariff reform; 1890 United States Senator, suc- ceeding James Beck; 1893, appointed by President Cleveland, Secretary of the Treasury; 1897, removed to N. Y. City. Residence, 4 Washington Square; office, 30 Broad St., N. Y. City. CARLTON, Caleb H .:


Brigadier general, U. S. A., retired; born Ohio; appointed to Military Academy as cadet, July 1, 1854; was graduated from Military Academy, West Point, 1859; served in Peninsula campaign and brev- etted major 1862; at Chicamauga and brevetted lieutenant colonel 1863; since the war served in regular infantry: 1st Cavalry, 7th Cavalry, Sth Cavalry; briga- dier general, June 28, 1897; retired June 30, 1897; member Army and Navy and Richmond (Washington) Clubs. Address, 305 5th Ave., N. Y. City. CARMALT, Woolsey :




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