Who's who in New York (city and state) 1904, Part 4

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 4


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ALLEN, Fred E .:


Republican Assemblyman, representing the Second District of Broome County, son of James F. Allen, descendant of Ethan Allen; born in Lisle, Broome Coun- ty, N. Y .; received education at Whit- neys Point High School; soon after leav- ing school entered dry goods store of


Griffin Brothers; began business life in 1883, and now conducts one of the larg- est stores in northern Broome; has served several years as Town Clerk of Whit- neys Point; was member of Board of Education for fifteen years, and presi- dent of board eight years; was trustee of village for two years and has been secretary of Broome County Agricultu- ral Society five or six years; long mem- ber of Republican County Committee of Broome County; 1901 elected member of Assembly; re-clected in 1902 and again in 1904. Appointed to Assembly Com- mittee on Taxation and Retrenchment and others. Address, Whitneys Point, Broome County, N. Y.


ALLEN, Frederick Hobbes :


Lawyer; born May 30, 1858, in Hono- lulu, H I .; was graduated from Harvard Univerity, A. B., 1880, and LL.B., 1883. Married. Member of Knickerbocker, Union, Democratic and Country Clubs, Sons of Revolution and Society of Colo- nial Wars Residence, Bolton Priory, Pelham Manor; office, 63 Wall St, N. Y. City.


ALLEN, Fred. Hovey, LL. D .:


Congregational clergyman, author and lecturer; born Lyme, N. H .; son of Phi- lander and Rhoda (Lord) Allen; was graduated from the Hartford Theological Seminary, studied in Paris, Vienna and Berlin. Filled pastorate at E Street Church, Boston; Olivet Church, Boston; Wollaston, Abington, and First Church Rockland, Mass. One of the founders in Lawrence of the Daily Eagle and editor of daily and weekly editions. Later editor and proprietor of the Suffolk County Jour- nal, Boston. Made the first photogravure plates for Art Reproduction in America. Made for the publishers the first book ever illustrated from American made photogravure plates Was the pioneer in the process of Fine Arts Publishing by photo-mechanical processes in America. Married 1881, M. Cora Bumpus, a noted musician of Auburn, Me. Lecturer and author on art topics. Author of Glimpses of Parisian Art, (1882), Masterpieces Mod- ern German Art (1884), Recent German Art (1885), Modern German Masters (1885), Great Cathedrals of the World (1886), Famous Paintings (1887), Grand Modern Paintings (1888), Bowdoin Art Collection (1887), Popular History of Ref- ormation (1887) Edited Life of Columbus (1881), Life of Pizarro (1881), Life of Cortez (1881), American Scenery (1882), European Scenery (1882), Mountain, Lake and River (1883), Heart of Europe (1884) he also secured patents on a press for


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WHO'S WHO IN NEW YORK.


printing photogravure plates, also patents [ 1883 to 1891 president of the American Or- on gas burners for house ranges; is artist nithologists' Union; member National Academy of Sciences since 1876; foreign member Zoological Society of London; member of Boston Art Club; member of the Gesellschaft fur Verveilfaltigende Kunst, Vienna, of Maler Gesellschaft, Munich, Society of American Authors; is corresponding member of Brooklyn Insti- tute of Arts and Sciences. Address, 2191 Broadway, New York.


ALLEN, Frederick L .:


Lawyer; educated at Hamilton College. Single. He is one of the attorneys for the N. Y. Mutual Life Insurance Co. Member of Alpha Beta Phi college fraternity and club, University and Knollwood Country Clubs, Phi Beta Kappa college fraternity, Bar Association of the City of N. Y, and Hamilton College Alumni Association. Residence, 12 West 44th St .; office, 59 Cedar St., N. Y. City.


ALLEN, Frederick Percival:


Banker; born Feb. 26, 1853, Rochester; cashier German-American Bank; treas- urer, Rochester Street Railway Company and Rochester State Hospital; director, Rochester and Genesee Valley R. R. Co .; trustee, Security Trust Company commis- sioner of the Sinking Fund of the City of Rochester; member of Rochester Histori- cal Society, Genesee Valley Club and Country Club of Rochester, Sons of American Revolution, and Society of Co- lonial Wars Address,


19 Prince St., Rochester, N. Y.


ALLEN, Henry Whitcomb, M. D .:


Physician; was graduated from Colum- bia University Medical College, 1889; member of Psi Upsilon college fraternity and University Club. Address, New York Hotel, N. Y. City.


ALLEN, Joel Aspah:


Naturalist; born Springfield, Mass., July 19, 1838; educated at Wilbraham Academy and Lawrence Scientific School under Agassiz; in 1865 accompanied Agassiz as assistant on the scientific expedition to Brazil; in 1869 visited Florida, and in 1871 the Rocky Mountain region with scientific explorers; 1871-85, assistant in ornithol- ogy at the Museum of Comparative Zo- ology at Cambridge; received the Hum- boldt scholarship in 1871; in 1873 headed the exploring party sent out by the Gov- ernment in connection with the Northern Pacific R. R. Co .; 1876-83, editor Bulletin of Nuttall Ornithological Club; 1884-1903, editor of The Auk, a quarterly ornitho- logical journal; 1885-1903, curator of the department of mammals and birds, Am- erican Museum of Natural History of New York; in 1886 received the degree of Ph.D. from the Indiana University; from


foreign member British Ornithologists Union; member American Academy of Arts and Sciences, American Philoso- phical Society and of numerous other American and foreign academies and sciences. Author Geographical Variations in North American Birds, History of North American Pinnipeds, Monographs of North American Rodentia (with Elliott Coues), The American Bison, Living and Extinct, Mammals of Patagonia (in press), and of several hundred scientific papers on birds and mammals of North and South America; in 1903 received the Walker Grand Prize, awarded by the Boston So- ciety of Natural History; editor Bulletin and Memoirs, American Museum of Natu- ral History, 1889-1903. Address, American Museum of Natural History, N. Y. City.


ALLEN, Louis J .:


Rear Admiral U. S Navy; born, Mary- land; appointed Third Assistant Engi- neer, 1895; steam sloop Dacotah, 1859-61; promoted Second Assistant Engineer, 1861; special duty at Novelty and Morgan Iron Works, 1861; steam sloop Adirondack, un- til wrecked; South Atlantic Station, Se- nior Engineer of double-ender Cone- maugh; participated in attacks of forts around Charleston and other places; pro- moted to First Assistant Engineer, 1863; special duty, New York, 1864; special duty, Baltimore, 1865-66; double-ender Monocacy, as Senior Engineer, en route to China, 1866; left at hospital, Barba- does, with yellow fever, 1866; Naval Ren- dezvous, Philadelphia, 1867; Naval Acad- emy, 1867-68; ironclad Dictator, 1869-70; promoted to Chief Engineer, 1871; U. S. Sloop Resaca, Pacific Squadron, 1871-72; Inspector of machinery afloat, Mare Island Navy Yard, 1872; steam sloop Tuscarora, Pacific Squadron, 1873-74; Navy Yard Pensacola, 1875-77; steam sloop Marion, European, North American and South American Squadrons, 1878-80; waiting orders and temporary duty, New York, Bristol, Rhode Island, 1880-83; receiving- ship Vermont, 1884; steam sloop Quinne- baug, European and African Stations, 1884-87; waiting orders and New York Navy Yard, 1887-88; League Island Navy Yard, 1889-90; Chicago, S. A. Station, Nov., 1891-95; member of Experimenting Board, New York, May, 1895-97; Continen- tal Iron Works to Aug., 1897; Union Iron Works, San Francisco, Feb., 1898; to Sept., 1899, then to Mare Island Navy


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WHO'S WHO IN NEW YORK.


Yard, March 3, 1899; promoted Captain, was Cordelia in Lear, Desdemona, Neo- March 3, 1899; retired Rear Admiral, Jan. 14, 1902; member of Veteran Corps of Artillery and New York Society of 1812; Continental Society of War 1812; Wash- ington Light Artillery; Military Order of Loyal Legion, Grand Army of Republic, and Union Club. Address, 1 West 21st St., N. Y. City.


ALLEN, Timothy Field, M. D .:


Born Westminister, Vt., April 27, 1837; graduated, 1858, Amherst College (LL. D., 1883); M. D., University of the City of New York, 1861; married Julia Bis- sell, 1862; M. D., University of the State of New York, and Hahnemann Medical College, Philadelphia, 1865; acting assis- tant surgeon, U. S. Army, 1862-64; presi- dent board of trustees New York Hom- eopathic Medical College, also dean and teacher of materia medica of same; now president New York Ophthalmic Hospi- tal; Fellow of New York Academy of Sciences, Publications; Encyclopedia of Materia Medica (10 volumes, 1874-79), index of same (1881), Ophthalmic Ther- apeutics (1878), Characeae Americanae (1880). Address, 3 E. 48th St, N. Y. City. ALLEN, Viola:


Actress; gained her knowledge of the stage in the best school-that of experi- ence; her father, C. Leslie Allen, a char- acter actor of merit, and her mother, were in Alabama when she was born; dur- ing most of Miss Allen's childhood her parents were connected with the Boston Theatre Company; Miss Allen received her education in Boston; when she was about thirteen years old her parents moved to New York, where Miss Allen continued her schooling; when she was fifteen her debut on the stage was made; her father was a member of the com- pany which was playing Esmeralda at the Madison Square Theatre in support of Annie Russell. Miss Russell retired rather unexpectedly from the cast, and by some chance Miss Allen got the part; a season on the road with Esmeralda proved that Miss Allen had in her the material from which good actresses are made; the next season she went with John McCullough, playing leading roles; this was the fatal scason of the great Mccullough, his last; with she


him played a round of parts, including Vir- ginia, Desdemona, Parthenia and Julia in The Gladiator; when Lawrence Bar- rett produced Browning's Blot on the Scutcheon, she was in the cast; then came, the following season, her engage- ment with the elder Salvini; her range of characters was widened here; she


damis in the Salvini version of the Glad- iator, and the wife in Le Mort Civile; when young Salvini played she was the Juliet to his Romeo; in 1888 Miss Allen became leading woman of the Boston Museum Stock Company; Bronson How- ard's Shenandoah was put on, with Miss Allen in the leading feminine role; in 1889 she became a member of the Joseph Jefferson-William Florence combination, playing Lydia Languish to Jefferson's Acres and Florence's Sir Lucius O'Trigger in Sheridan's Rivals, and Cicely Home- spun to Jefferson's Doctor Pangloss and Florence's Zeke in The Heir at Law; Miss Allen signed with Charles Froh- man as leading lady of the Empire Theatre Company, in 1893; she was seen in Bronson Howard's play, Aristocracy, and was later prominently identified with the great successes, The Masqueraders, Under the Red Robe, Liberty Hall and Sowing the Wind, in which she was tlie original Rosamond in this country; in 1898 Miss Allen first appeared as a star under the management of Liebler & Co., making a great and immediate success as Glory Quayle in The Christian by Hall Caine; her second production, In the Palace of the King, by F. Marion Crawford, proved equally fortunate, as was also her third star play, The Eternal City; after a season in the latter piece, Miss Allen turned her attention to Shakespeare, and began a series of brilliant classic revi- vals under the direction of her brother, C. W. Allen; the first being an elaborate production of Twelfth Night, in 1903, which proved artistically satisfying and financially profitable, and The Winter's Tale, in 1904, was likewise highly com- mended. Address, care C. W. Allen, New Amsterdam Theatre Building, N Y. City. ALLEN, William Frederick:


Meteorologist, editor; born Bordentown, N. J., Oct, 9, 1846; son of Col. Joseph Allen, a Civil Engineer and State Sen- ator and Colonel of the Ninth New Jer- sey Regiment of Volunteers, who lost his life during the Civil War; educated at the Model School at Bordentown, N. J., and at the Protestant Episcopal Academy in Philadelphia, Penn .; shortly after his father's death, in 1862, he turned his at- tention to business, taking a position as rodman with the Camden & Amboy R. R. Co .; in 1863 was promoted Assist- ant Engineer; thereafter was engaged on several roads then in course of con- struction in New Jersey; and in 1868 was appointed Resident Engineer of the West Jersey Railroad company, and founded the


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WHO'S WHO IN NEW YORK.


town of Wenonah, N. J .; on Oct. 1, 1872, president of the Manhattan Fire Alarm Mr. Allen became assistant editor of the and the Knickerbocker Guide Co., vice- president of the New York Transfer Co., director in the National Railway Publica- tion Co., the Manhattan Fire Alarm and Gamewell Fire Alarm Telegraph Co., and other corporations; a member of the Loy- al Legion, the American Society of Civil Engineers, and of the leading Geographi- cal, Meteorological; Statistical and eco- nomis Associations, and a member of the Lawyers, Transformation, Engineers, N. Y. Ry., and other promintent Clubs. Residence, S. Orange, N. J .; office 124 Park Place, N. Yi City Official Railway Guide, and in May, 1873, was made editor, and became also busi- ness manager of the National Ry. Publi- cation Co .; in 1875, Mr. Allen was elected permanent secretary of the General Time Convention, composed of the principal trunk-line railways, represented by their general managers and superintendents, which then met to determine upon sched- ules of through trains on the Eastern and Western roads; in the following year he was elected secretary of the Southern Time Convention, consisting of the lead- ing Southern railway lines; these conven- ALLEN, William Herschell: tions were consolidated in 1886, and from them the American Railway Association developed, and Mr. Allen became secre- tary of the association; the adoption of standard time, based upon the Green- wich hour meridians on a detailed plan proposed by him, was pricipally due to the efforts of Mr. Allen, and ultimately culminated in the adoption of Standard Time by the railway companies and by the people of the United States and Can- anda on Nov. 18, 1883; the same system has been adopted by other countries, and is now in use in Japan, in the Philli- pine Islands, Porto Rico, Australia, Ger- many, Austria, Sweden, Switzerland, Italy, Spain, Belgium, Holland, Rou- manla, Servia and part of Turkey, for which purpose a large amount of Infor- mation was furnished by Mr Allen; Mr. Allen was appointed by President ALLISON, Thomas: Arthur one of five delegates who repre- sented the U. S. at the International Meridian Conference, held at Washington in Oct., 1884; twenty-five nations were represented and the Greenwich meridian was adopted as the prime meridian and standard of time-reckoning; on April 22, 1890, he was elected an honorary mem- ber of the K. K. Geographical Society, ALMY, Bradford: of Vienna, Austria, in recognition of his services in the adoption of standard time; he was present as one of eight delegates representing the American Rail- way Association at the meeting of the International Railway Congress, held in London, England, in June and July, 1895, at which the railways of thirty-six na- tions were represented; as one of six delegates to the same Congress at the session held in Paris, in Sept., 1900; has been appointed a delegate to the seventh session to be held at Washington, D. C., in May, 1905, and is secretary and treasur- er of the American section; he was also Ithaca, N. Y. an official delegate of the U. S. Govern- ALMY, Francis: ment to the Paris Congress; Mr. Allen is


Lieutenant-Commander, U. S. Navy; born New York; entered Naval Acad- emy from Illinois, Sept. 27, 1872; was graduated, June 20, 1876; Essex, 1876-79; promoted Ensign. Nov. 25, 1877; Coast Survey vessels, Palinurus, Endeavor and Arago, 1879-83; Naval Observatory, 1883- 87; promoted Lieutenant (junior grade), July 13, 1884; Trenton, 1887-89; Now Hampshire, 1889; Library and War Rec- ords office, 1889-90; promoted Lieuten- ant, March 4, 1890; Alert. 1890-93; Naval Academy, 1893-96; Oregon, 1896-99; pro- moted Lieutenant-Commander, March 3, 1899; Boston, 1899; Bureau of Equipment, 1899-01; Olympia. Jan., 1902-Sept., 1903; commanding U. S. S. VIxen, U. S. S. Am- phitrite and Commandant Naval Station. Guantanamo, Cuba, Sept., 1903-May, 1904; Navy Yard, Boston, Mass., to date.


Lawyer; born Sept. 19. 1840, N. Y. City; educated at College of City of N. Y .; ad- mitted to the Bar, 1861; married in 1871, Mary C. Millett; Judge of the Court of General Sessions, 1895; commissioner of jurors since April, 1902. Residence, 251 W. 75th St .; office, 280 Broadway, N. Y. City.


Lawyer; born Feb. 10, 1845, Enfield. N. Y .; educated at Ithaca Academy; taught school in Auburn, N. Y .; admitted to the Bar, May 10, 1872; Justice of the Peace; Republican; County Judge and Surrogate of Tompkins County, 1892-1904; married, July 20, 1876, Fannie E. Vant; director in Wall Paper Co .; director and secretary of Ithaca Glass Co .; member of Protective Fire Police; Knight Templar; Republican candidate for Mayor of City of Ithaca in 1904; Major in the 50th Regi- ment of New York Militia; chairman Re- publican County Committee. Address,


Merchant; born Nov. 28, 1858, New Bed-


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WHO'S WHO IN NEW YORK.


ford, Mass .; was graduated from Har- vard College, A. B., 1879; A. M., 1880; Registrar, Saturn Club, 1885-88; secretary of Harvard Club, 1890-00; chairman Ex- ecutive Committee of Liberal Club, 1890- 00; purchasing agent, Pan-American Ex- position. 1900. Treasurer Society for Beautifying Buffalo. At present with United Fruit Co., at Port Timon, Costa Rica. Address, 427 Delaware Ave., Buf- falo, N. Y.


ALTMAN, Benjamin:


Proprietor department store, B. Altman & Co .; director Bank of the Metropolis; trustee Garfield Safe Deposit Co. Address, 25 Madison Ave., N. Y. City.


ALTMAN, Henry :


Lawyer; born Aug. 12, 1854, Rochester, N. Y .; prepared at Buffalo Academy and was graduated from Cornell University, B. S., 1873; member of Alpha Delta Phi Fraternity; chairman of Board of School Examiners; president of Buffalo Republi- can League, three terms; member of Am- erican Protective Tariff League; member of Buffalo Saturn, University, Ellicott and Country Clubs; director, Bell Telephone Co .; married, July 4, 1887, Sadie S. Ray- nor. Address, Buffalo, N. Y.


ALTSHELER, Joseph Alexander:


Journalist and author; born Three Springs, Kentucky, April 29, 1862; was educated at Liberty College, Glasgow, Ky., and at Vanderbilt University, Nash- ville, Tennessee; on leaving college en- tered journalism, first on the Louisville Evening Post, but transferred shortly to the Louisville Courier Journal; came to New York in 1892, to enter service of The World, where he has been ever since in an editorial capacity; has been publishing American historical fiction since 1897, be- ing the author of the following novels: The Sun of Saratoga, A Soldier of Man- hattan, A Herald of the West, The Last Rebel, In Circling Camps, In Hostile Red, The Wilderness Road, My Captive, Before the Dawn, Guthrie of the Times; he is a member of the Authors Club; was married May 30, 1888, to Sara Boles. Res- idence, 320 Manhattan Ave .; business ad- dress, The World, N. Y. City.


ALVORD, Andrew Porter:


Treasurer; born 1864, Monson, Mass .; was graduated from Amherst College, 1887; treasuerer and director, Phoenix Tube Co .; member of Alpha Delta Phi, and Nassau Country Clubs, and Amherst College Alumni Association. Residence, University Club, Sea-Corinthian Yacht Club, 12 West 44th St .; office, 138 North 11th St., Brooklyn, N. Y.


AMBLER, Henry S .:


State Senator representing the Twenty- fourth Senate district; born N. Y. City, 1836; received education there at the Mount Washington Collegiate Institute and the City Institute; was graduated from latter in 1853, and immediately ac- cepted position as bookkeeper at Morgan Iron Works; afterward filled a similar position for his father, coal merchant in N. Y. City; in 1856, on account of failing health, moved to his father's farm in Austerlitz, Columbia County, N. Y .; where he remained until 1861; Dec., 1861, be- came agent and steward for the New York Institution for the Blind; in 1866 he resigned to engage in business in dairy produce; 1873, purchased the farm former- ly owned by his father, Austerlitz, and engaged in the breeding of Jersey and Kerry cattle; retired from produce bus- iness, 1888, and has since devoted atten- tion to general farming, stock raising and the production of oil in West Virginia; 1896, appointed Assistant Commissioner of Agriculture; 1898, elected Senator on Republican ticket; on becoming member, 1899, was appointed chairman of the Com - mittee on Agriculture, and also a mem- ber of the following committees: Insur- ance, Internal Affairs and Privileges of Elections; re-elected, 1900; in 1901 was appointed chairman of the Committee on Agriculture, and a member of the Com- mittees on Commerce and Navigation, In- surance, Internal Affairs of Towns an1 Counties, and Privileges of Elections; au- thor of and had enacted into laws several measures which have been of great bene- fit to the dairymen and farmers of the State; again elected, 1902 and 1904; ap- pointed member of the following Senate committees in 1903: Chairman of the Committee on Agriculture, member of Commerce and Navigation; Insurance and Internal Affairs, and Railroads. Address, Austerlitz, Columbia County, N. Y.


AMBROSE, Paul:


Composer, organist; born Hamilton, Ontario, Oct. 11, 1868; educated in public school and Hamilton Collegiate Institute; was organist of the Madison Ave. M. E. Church for four years is professor of music, American Institute of Applied Music and State Normal School of New Jersey ; composer of numerous sacred and secular songs, piano solos, etc. Address, 128 E. 16th St .; office, 212 W. 59th St., N. Y. City.


AMEND, Edward B .:


Justice Supreme Court, N. Y., since 1902; term expires Dec. 31, 1917. Ad- dress, 324 East 87th St., N. Y. City.


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WHO'S WHO IN NEW YORK.


AMES, Daniel T .:


Artist, editor and publisher; editor and publisher of Penman's Art Journal; mem- her of firms of Ames & Rollinson, Ames & Kingsley, and Ames & Rollinson Co .; member of Press, Thirteen, Sunrise, Twi- light and Manhattan Liberal Clubs, and New England Society. Residence, Eliza- beth, N. J .; office, 202 Broadway, N. Y. City.


AMMON, John H .:


Publisher born Feb. 29, 1840, Auburn. N. Y. attended Auburn Academy; Cap- tain, 3d and Lieutenant Colonel, 16th New York Artillery Vols. in Civil War; manager of wholesale and jobbing de. partment of Harper & Bros .; member of Lotos and Democratic Clubs, and Papyrus Club, of Boston; Loyal Legion, G. A. R., and Old Guard. Residence, 112 West 88th St .; office, 81 Chambers St., N. Y. City.


AMOS, Jacob:


Merchant; born Dec., 1853, Syracuse. N. Y .; educated at Syracuse High School; flour merchant; Republican; trustee of Village of Baldwinsville; Mayor of Syra- cuse, 1892-96; vice-president, Third Na- tional Bank; director, Commercial Bank; trustee, Syracuse Savings Bank, and St. Joseph's Hospital; president, Peoples Building and Loan Association; member New York Produce Exchange and Buf- falo Merchants (grain) Exchange; mar- ried Sept., 1880, Miss Florence E. Wells; Knight Templar; member of Century and City Clubs; vice-president, Empire Bicy- cle Co .; director, Syracuse Storage Bat tery Co .; Onondaga Building and Loan Association. Residence, Syracuse, N. Y.


ANABLE, Eliphalet Nott:


Lawyer; born Sept. 1, 1857, Newtown, L. I., N. Y .; was graduated from Union College, 1878, and Columbia Law School, 1880; member Kappa Alpha Fraternity; married; director. University Magazine Publishing Co .; Pelham Park R. R. Co., and Hahnemann Hospital; member of University, N. Y. Athletic, and Baltusrol Golf Clubs, Association of the Bar of the City of N. Y., and Union College Alumni Association. Residence, Westminister Hotel; office, 45 Broadway, N. Y. City.


ANDERSON, Charles :


Democratic Assembly representing the Sixth Assembly district of N. Y. Born N. Y., March 17, 1864; was a theatrical agent in the employ of Klaw & Erlanger for the past eight years. Was nominated for Assemblyman by the Democratic party in 1903. Was appointed a member of the following Assembly Committees


for 1904 by Speaker Nixon: Charitably and Religious Societies and Indian Ar- fairs. Address, 214 W. 42d St., N. Y. City.


ANDERSON, Frank:


Medical Inspector, U. S. Navy; born and appointed from New York; Assistant Surgeon. May 24. 1875; Passed Assistant Surgeon. Nov. 22, 1878; Naval Hospital. Chelsea, 1875-76; Kearsarge, Asiatic Sta- tion. 1876-78; receiving ship Wabash, 1878-80; Quinnebaug, European Station. 1880-83; Navy Yard. New York, 1884-86; Richmond, N. A. Station. 1887-88; Dol- phin, Squadron of Evolution, 18SS-20; Naval Dispensary. Washington, D. C., Oct .. 1890-25; promoted to Surgeon, Nov. 14. 1801; ordered to the Amphitrite, April, 1895; Dolphin. 1895; Naval Hospital, Yoko- hama. Aug., 1897. to 1901; Alabama, Nov., 1901, to 1903; U. S. S. Brooklyn; Fleet Surgeon of U. S. South Atlantic Squadron. Address. care of Navy Department, Washington, D. C.




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