USA > New York > Who's who in New York (city and state) 1904 > Part 44
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CRUGER, Mary:
Novelist; born Oscawana, N. Y., May 9, 1834; assisted on Standard Dictionary; member; The Authors World Uion, Chi- cago; author of A Den of Thieves or the Lay Reader of St. Mark's; Hyperes- thsia; The Vanderheyde Manor-House; How She Did It; Brotherhood. Address, Wood Rest, near Montrose, N. Y.
CUDDEBACK, William Herman:
Lawyer; born March 25, 1854, in Deer Park, N. Y .; prepared at Goshen Academy and attended Cornell University, 1870-74; admitted to the Bar, 1877; chairman of the Democratic Committee of Buffalo, 1895-96; practiced at Goshen, 1877-85, and at Buffalo since 1885. Address, Buffalo, N. Y.
CULLEN, Edgar M .:
Justice of Supreme Court of N. Y .; born Brooklyn, N. Y., Dec. 4, 1843; was graduated from Columbia, 1860; served in Civil War; elected to Supreme Court, 1880; re-elected, 1894; member of Univer- sity Club and Loyal Legion; also of Ham- ilton Club, Brooklyn. Address, 144 Wil- low St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
CULLEN, Thomas H .:
Democratic State Senator, representing Third Senate District of Kings County; born 1865; was graduated from St. Fran- cis College in 1881; engaged in shipping business; office in the Maritime Ex- change; member of the Exchange in N. Y. City; member of the Sixth Ward Dem-
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ocratic Club, and other prominent politi- | CUPPY, Hazlitt Alva: cal organizations in Brooklyn; elected to Assembly, 1902; in 1903 appointed a mem- ber of the Senate committees on Taxa- tion and Retrenchment, Miscellaneous, Corporations and Indian Affairs. Ad- dress, Brooklyn, N. Y.
CULLINAN, Patrick W .:
State Excise Commission; born June 26, 1851; prepared at Oswego High School, and attended Cornell University, 1869-72; admitted to the Bar, June 10, 1875; city attorney of Oswego, 1878; member of As- sembly, 1880-81;
chairman Republican State Convention, 1893. On the organiza- tion of the State Excise Department in 1896, he was appointed its attorney and continued in this position until the spring of 1901, when, upon the death of Col. H. H. Lyman, he was appointed to succeed him as State Excise Commissioner on May 8, 1901, and was reappointed on Jan. 8, 1902. Address, Oswego, N. Y.
CUNNEEN, John:
Lawyer; ex-attorney general; born May, 1848, Ennis, Ircland; came to America in 1862, and settled at Albion, N. Y .; was graduated from Albion Academy; admitted to the Bar, 1874; clerk of Board of Super- visors seven years; chairman of Demo- cratic County Committee; in 1890 began practice of law in Buffalo; lecturer on Equity Jurisprudence in
Buffalo Law School; trustee of Public Library; chair- man of General Democratic Committee; married. Adress, Buffalo, N. Y. CUNNINGHAM, John L .:
President of the Glens Falls Insurance Co., New York; elected to that office Jan. 20, 1892; born Hudson, N. Y., April 5, 1840; pursued his legal studies at the Union University Law School, at Albany, graduating in 1861 with the degree of LL. B .; practiced law at Essex until he enlisted in the 118th New York Regiment in 1862 and went to the front; he saw a good deal of active service, was for some time provost marshal at Portsmouth, Va., and came out of the war with the rank of major and brevet lieutenant colonel; on returning home he was appointed col- lector of the internal revenue for the Six- teenth Congressional District of New York, which position he resigned to join the field force of the Glens Falls as a special agent; in 1872 Colonel Cunning- ham was elected secretary of the com- pany and became virtually its manager; on the death of President Little, in 1892, he succeeded to the presidency. Address, Glens Falls, N. Y.
Publisher; born Sullivan County, Ind .; was graduated from Rockville, (Ind.) High School and Franklin College (Ind.); (Ph. D.) Heidelberg University; post- graduate courses at Oxford University (England); Berlin (Germany); Sorbonne (Paris); married, 1895, Elizabeth Over- street; correspondent and contributor to various English and American publica- tions; author: Rise of the Anglo-Indian Empire; founder and editor Altruistic Re- view, 1893-95; assistant editor Woman's Home Companion; editor Baptist Union; director University
of Chicago Press (1896-98) ; publisher Public Opinion since 1898; editor Our Own Times-A Contin- uous History of the Twentieth Century. Residence, 26 Gramercy Park, N. Y. City and Waveland, Ind .; office, 44 to 60 East 23d St., N. Y. City.
CURRAN, Charles C .:
Artist; born Hartford, Ky., 1861; stud- ied in Cincinnati School of Design, Art Students League and National Academy of Design in New York and the Julian Academy, under Benjamin Constant, Le- fevre and Doucet in Paris; is a National Academician; member of the Society of American Artists, New York Water Col- or Club and American Water Color Socie- ty; was awarded the second and third Halgarten and Clarke prizes at the Na- tional Academy of Design; Carnegie prize of $500, for best figure composition, Society of American Artists, 1904; honor- able mention. Paris Salon; medals at Cot- ton States Exposition in Atlanta and World's Columbian Exposition, Chicago, and a silver medal at the Pan-American Exposition in Buffalo; silver medal St. Louis World's Fair; life member of Lotos and Fencers Clubs and a member of the Salmagundi Club; served as assistant to the director of fine arts, American sec- tion, Paris Exposition Universelle, 1900, and assistant director of fine arts at Pan- American Expostion at Buffalo. Address, 16 West 61st St., N. Y. City.
CURTIS, Arthur F .:
Captain, U. S. Army; born N. Y. City; appointed U. S. Military Academy from New Jersey, July 1, 1881; second lieuten- ant, June 14, 1895; first lieutenant, Dec. 17, 1891; transferred to Second Artillery, Feb. 9. 1892; transferred to Sixth Ar- tillery, March 8, 1898; captain, First Ar- tillery, Aug. 10, 1900; honorary graduate Artillery School, class of 1892. Address, Fort Hunt, Va.
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CURTIS, Charles Boyd :
Lawyer; born Yates County, N. Y., Sept. 27, 1827; was graduated from Ham- ilton College, A. M .; admitted to the Bar, 1849; in Civil War was captain of the Fifty-seventh Regiment, New York Vol- unteers 1861-63, when he resigned; clubs: Union League, American Yacht, Apawam- is; patron of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York Museum of Natural His- tory; Bontanical Garden; author: Cata- logue of the Works of Velaquez and Mur- rillo (London, 1882), and Rembrant's Etchings, (New York, 1888). Address, 9 East 54th St., N. Y. City and Locust- wood, Rye, N. Y.
CURTIS, Edward, M. D .:
Physician; born Providence, R. I., June 4, 1838; was graduated A. B., from Har- vard College, 1859; A. M., 1862; was grad- uated M. D., from University of Pennsyl- vania, 1864; entered U. S. Army as medi- cal cadet, 1861; acting assistant surgeon, 1863; assistant surgeon, 1864; captain and major by brevet, for services during the Civil War, 1865; resigned from army, 1870 and engaged in medical practice, N. Y. City; assistant surgeon and surgeon, New York Eye and Ear Infirmary, 1872 to 1876; honorary microscopist to the Board of Health, New York; professor of materia medica and therapeutics, College of Physicians and Surgeons in the City of N. Y. (medical department, Columbia University), 1873 to 1885; one of the med- ical directors of Equitable Life Assur- ance Society of the U. S., 1876 to 1904; married, 1864, Miss Augusta Lawler Sta- cey, of Chester, Pa .; author: General Medicinal Technology; Months and Moods, A Fifteen Year Calendar, and various brochures and encyclopædia articles on medical subjects; member Military Order of the Loyal Legion, Sons of the Revolu- tion, Medical Society of the County of New York, Roman Medical Society, Am- erican Institute, and of the following clubs: Century, Harvard, Lawyers; honor- ary member Alpha Delta Phi and corres- ponding member of various medical and scientific societies. Address, 83 West 69th St., N. Y. City.
CURTIS, George Milton:
Lawyer; born Worcester County, Mass., June 18, 1843; served in the Civil War, in Third Battalion, Massachusetts Rifles, under Major Devins afterwards General Devins, subsequently attorney general of U. S. under President Hayes: studied law with Hon. John W. Ashmead and was ad- mitted to the Bar Nov., 1863; was elected
to the Legislature in Nov., 1863-65; made a speech in favor of Governor Seymour, which is still regarded as a Democratic classic; elected judge of the New York Marine Court, now the City Court, in 1867; served full term of six years and then returned to the Bar. He has tried causes in eleven States of the Union; his success in will controversies caused the New York World to give him the name of the "Will Smasher"; among the more celebrated causes in which he has ap- peared are the Buford murder trial, in Kentucky, the Rhinelander insanity case in N. Y., the Helmbold lunacy case in Philadelphia, the case of Riddle, presi- dent of the Pennsylvania Bank, in Pitts- burg, Pa., and the celebrated Fair case, in California, when he carried the ma- jority of the jury for Mrs. Craven Fair; among the will cases in which he has met with success are the John Anderson will controversy, the contest of the will of Maltby G. Lane, president of the Third Avenue R. R .; it is claimed that Mr. Curtis has caused to be settled the law of ejectment, the law of insanity, and the law of pedigree in relation to will controversies; is a magazine writer and the author of a treatise on Insanity Cases and How to Try Them. Address, 68 William St., N. Y. City.
CURTIS, H. Holbrook:
Physician; born N. Y., December 15, 1856; studied at Yale University, graduating in 1877 with degree of Ph. B .; M. D., in 1880; afterwards in hospitals of Vienna and Paris; made valuable discov- eries in method of vibration of vocal chords and practically used them to cure singers' nodules; author: Voice Building and Tone Placing; member British, French and American Laryngological and Oto- logical Societies, consulting laryngologist to N. Y. Throat ad Nose Diphtheria and Scarlet Fever Hospitals; consulting aurist to the Nassau Hospital, Long Is- land. Address, 118 Madison Ave., N. Y. City.
CURTIS, Newton Martin:
Soldier; born De Peyster, N. Y., May 21, 1835; educated at public schools; Gouverneur Wesleyan Academy, 1854-55; postmaster at De Peyster, 1857-61; April 14, 1861, enlisted in Union Army; May 7, captain of 16th New York Volunteers; lieutenant colonel and colonel of 142d New York Infantry, commanding brigade at Cold Harbor; Oct., 1864, brevetted bri- gadier-general of volunteers; major-gen- eral of volunteers March, 1865; chief of
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WHO'S WHO IN NEW YORK.
staff to Gen. E. O. C. Ord; July, 1865, com- manded Southern Virginia; Jan., 1866, mustered out; 1866-67, collector of customs of Osewegatchie, N. Y .; 1867-80, special agent of U. S. Treasury; 1883-85, member of Legislature; 1880, president of State Agricultural Society; also secretary and trustee of State Agricultural Organiza- tion. Address, Ogdensburg, N. Y. CURTIS, William Edmond:
Lawyer; born N. Y., June 2, 1855 eldest son of the late William Edmond Curtis, chief justice of the Superior Court of New York; educated at school in Connecticut, was graduated from Trinity College, in 1875; admitted to the Bar in 1877; began practice at once as member of the firm of Stearns & Curtis; he has always been an active independent Democrat, and served as secretary of the Democratic Club of New York for seven years; he took an earnest part in the movement which resulted in the Syracuse Conven- tion of 1892, and was treasurer of the Provisional State Committee; he was ap- pointed by President Cleveland in April of 1893 assistant secretary of the U. S. Treasury; he was sent to England in the spring of 1895 on a special mission for the Treasury Department, and was there for several months; he resigned in April of 1897, and returned to New York to be- come a member of the firm of Curtis, Mallet-Prevost & Colt, of which he is now the senior member, and to which firm Hon. John G. Carlisle, Secretary of the Treasury during the last Democratic administration, is counsel; he was aque- duct commissioner of the City of N. Y., having been appointed by Mayor Low in Sept., 1902. He is a life trustee of Trinity College, and in June, 1902, re- ceived the honorary degree of LL. D. from that institution; he is a member of the judiciary committee of the Associa- tion of the Bar of the City of N. Y .; he is a fellow of the Geological Society a life member of the Historical Society, and a member of various scientific or- ganizations; delegate to National Demo- cratic Convention, St. Louis, 1904. Ad- dress, 27 W. 47th St., N. Y. City.
CUSACK, Joseph E .:
Captain U. S. Army; born New York; appointed from the army private and corporal, Troop C, Fifth Cavalry, Jan. 13, 1890, to Nov. 21, 1892; second lieutenant, Fifth Cavalry, Nov. 19, 1892; first lieuten- ant, March 2, 1899; captain, Twelfth Cav- alry, Feb. 2, 1901; was graduated from
University of Notre Dame, South Bend, Ind., Oct. 9, 1901. Present address, Man- ila, P. I.
CUSHMAN, Blin Sill:
Educator; born New Berlin, N. Y .; was graduated from Cornell University, B. S., 1893; married Miss Manley, also a grad- uate of Cornell; instructor in Chemistry in Cornell University since 1893; member of Alpha Tan Omega and Sigma Xi Fra- ternities. Address, 109 Elston Place, Ith- aca, N. Y.
CUSHMAN, Daniel Burr:
Lawyer; born Dec. 18, 1852, at Plymouth, N. Y .; was graduated from Yale College, 1876, and Columbia Law School, 1878; married, Dec. 3, 1891, Sadie Van Cleft; su- pervisor, 1882-89. Address, Norwich, N. Y.
CUSHMAN, Joseph Wood:
President of the real estate corporation of J. W. Cushman & Co .; born N. Y. City, Sept. son 15, 1863; of E. Holbrook Cushman and grandson of Don Alonzo Cushman, who bought and settled in what was then the old village of Chelsea in the neighborhood of Ninth Ave., from 19th to 23d Sts., where the family have since held property and re- sided; descendant of Robert Cushman, who chartered the Mayflower and For- tune; was graduated from Columbia Col- lege with honor in 1884. President of the City Land Improvement Co .; President of the Cushman and Denison Manufacturing Co .; Chairman of the Citizens' Union of the Ninth Assembly District during Low Campaigns of 1901-03; Warden of St. Peter's Church in West 20th St .; member of the University Club, Amateur Comedy Club, Columbia University Club and Al- pha Delta Phi Club; married, 1893, Fran- ces J. Rathborne, daughter of Charles L. Rathborne, there being four children, two sons and two daughters. Address, 240 W. 23d St., N. Y. City.
CUTLER, Arthur Hamilton:
Educator; president of the schoolmas- ters Association of N. Y., 1897; born Hol- liston, Mass., Jan. 26, 1849; was grad- uated from Harvard, 1870; received Ph. D. from Princeton, 1885; established the Cutler School, N. Y. City in 1876, from which more than 350 graduates have en- tered the leading colleges of the country. He was appointed secretary of the Na- tional Conference on Mathematics, Har- vard, 1893, and again, Columbia, 1896; married, 1890, Elizabeth Jones (Wilson) ; clubs: Harvard University and Century. Address, 20 East 50th St., N. Y. City.
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WHO'S WHO IN NEW YORK.
CUTLER, Charles F .:
President New York Telephone Co., New York and Pennsylvania Telephone Co. and Empire City Subway Co .; di- rector Norristown Trust Co. and Southern Bell Telephone and Telegraph Co .; mem- ber of the Metropolitan, Lawyers and
Clergyman; born Aurora, N. Y., Jan. 10, 1822. At sixteen entered Princeton other clubs. Address, 15 Dey St., N. Y. College, and at seventeen joined the Pres- City.
CUTLER, Condict Walker, M. S., M. D .:
Born Morristown, N. J., Feb. 27, 1859; B. S. Rutgers, 1879; M. S., 1882; M. D., Columbia, 1882; house physician of Belle- vue Hospital, also of St. John's Guild Nursery and Child's Hospital, New Dorp, N. Y., 1884; attending surgeon East Dis- pensary, N. Y. City, 1885-86; attending physician, New York Dispensary, 1885- 88; physician in chief since 1888; assist- ant attending surgeon New York Hospital Dispensary; doctor of skin and genito- urinary diseases, 1884-90; professor of the skin, University of Vermont, 1890-94 .; au- thor: Medical Students' Essentials of Physics and Chemistry (third edition, 1889); Manual of Differential Medical Diagnosis (tenth edition), etc .; member County Medical Society; Academy of Medicine. Address, 135 West 76th St., N. Y. City.
CUTTING, Robert Fulton:
President of Citizens' Union of N. Y. City; born New York, June, 1852; was graduated from Columbia, 1871; active in New York politics, especially during the last campaign of 1903; member of sev- eral corporations; also of Century, City, Delta Phi, Church, and other clubs. Res- idence, 24 East 67th St .; office 32 Nassau St., N. Y. City.
CUTTING, William Bayard:
Lawyer and real estate owner; born New York, January 12, 1850; presi- dent New York and South Brooklyn Fer- ry and Steam Transportation Co .; trustee and director in American Exchange Bank, U. S. Trust Co., American Beet Sugar Co., Improved Dwellings Association, City and Suburban Homes, Columbia College; member of Union, Metropolitan, Riding, Players, South Side Sportsmens, Jeckyl Island and other clubs. Address, 32 Nas- sau St .; residence, 24 East 72d St., N. Y. City.
CUYLER, Cornelius C .:
Banker; was graduated from Princeton, DAGGETT, V. Chapin : 1879; Cuyler, Morgan & Co; vice-president Pharmactist; born South Weymouth, Mass., May 8, 1859; educated in common schools; served an apprenticeship in the U. S. Guarantee Co., Mercantile Trust Co., Mobile & Ohio R. R. Co., and U. S. Mortgage and Trust Co .; member of Un- drug business in Rockland, Mass .; was
ion, University, Down Town, Lawyers, Century, and City Clubs. Address, 44 Pine St .; residence, 214 Madison Ave., N. Y. City.
CUYLER, Theodore L., D. D .:
byterian Church; later entered Princeton Theological Seminary, where he was grad- uated in 1846; resigned pastorate of La- fayette Avenue Church, Brooklyn, in 1890, after thirty years of service. The growth of Brooklyn had, at the beginning of Dr. Cuyler's pastorate, fair- ly begun, and he, seeing there a promis- ing field for Christian ministration, con- sented to take charge of the church; the growth of the church proved marvelous, and from that time to the present its his- tory, under Dr. Cuyler's vigorous pas- torate, has been one of the highest pros- perity; as a Christian orator, Dr. Cuyler holds a very high rank; his power as a preacher "lies in picturesque description, and the weaving in of scenes and illus- trations from Scripture and from daily life; in manner he is ver yearnest, and in results highly effective, being possess- ed of the highest qualities of oratory and the most impressive power. In ad- dition to his labors in the pulpit he has been a voluminous writer, both in the columns of the religious press and in pub- lished books, of which he has written many on religious subjects. He has also been a persistent laborer in great reforms such as the Children's Aid Society, the National Temperance Society, and others, and as a whole his life has been one "mighty for good." He is author of God's Light on Dark Clouds; Beulah Land; Re- collections of a Long Life-and Auto- biography, and twenty other books, and more than 4,000 articles in religious papers and periodicals. Address, 176 Ox- ford St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
D
DAGGETT, Joseph M .:
Lawyer; born April 2, 1873, Chicago; educated at Columbia College; single; member of Delta Epsilon Fraternity and New York Athletic and Lawrence Harbor Country Clubs and a Mason. Address, 170 Broadway, N. Y. City.
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WHO'S WHO IN NEW YORK.
graduated from the Mass. College of Phar- tended for two years the evening school at macy in 1883, with honors; was valedic- South Second and Keep streets in the city torian of his class. Removed to N. Y. of Brooklyn; later became a law clerk in City, 1885; subsequently manager of the the office of Callahan, Swift & Lynn. In pharmacy at Thirty-fourth street and Broadway; founded the firm of Daggett & Ramsdell at 328 Fifth avenue, 1890; in- corporated, 1898. Director of the Phar- macists' Manufacturing Co .; member of the American Pharmaceutical Association, Manhattan Pharmaceutical Association and the New York College of Pharmacy. Address, Richmond Hill, N. Y. 1888 Mr. Dale saw the benefits to be de- rived from an evening law school, which had been established on Twenty-third street, New York, and persuaded Professor Abner C. Thomas, one of the instructors, to continue the school; and assisted him in securing for the institution a charter, which was granted to the New York Even- ing Law School, which finally became DAINGERFIELD, Elliott: merged in the present Law School of New York University. Mr. Dale continued his studies and was admitted to the practice of law in May, 1891; 1897, was elected an Assemblyman from his present district. In the Assembly of 1898 Mr. Dale was a member of the committees on Judiciary, and Unfinished Business ; was renominated in 1901, 1902 and 1903; Speaker Nixon, in 1902, appointed Mr. Dale a member of the following Assembly Committees : Codes
Artist, lecturer on art; born Harper's Ferry, Va., March 26, 1859; son of John E. P. and Matilda Brua Daingerfield; re- ceived his education in Fayetteville, N. C .; studying art at Art Students League and special instructions both here and abroad ; married, 1895, Anna E. Grainger, Louis- ville. First exhibited at National Academy of Design, 1880; commissioned to paint the Lady Chapel of the Church of St. Mary the Virgin, New York, 1902; profes- sor of painting and composition Philadel- phia School of Design; also of Art School at Blowing Rock, N. C .; paintings: Ma- donna and Child (property of Haley Fiske); Child of Mary (silver Medal); The Story of the Madonna (prize, 1902); received silver medal Pan-American Ex- position, 1901, Clark Prize National Acad- emy of. Design, 1902; member Fine Arts Federation, Municipal Art Association, Society American Artists; N. Y. Water Color Club; associate National Academy of Design; clubs: Lotos, Church. Resi- dence, 406 West 57th St .; studio, 145 West 55th St., N. Y. City.
DALE, Alan:
Author; born Birmingham, England, May 14, 1861; came to this country in 1886, engaging in journalism; 1887 dra- matic critic for the New York Evening World; this position he held until 1895, when he became connected in the same capacity with the New York Journal. Author: Johnathan's Home; A Marriage below Zero; His Own Image, and other books. Residence, 110 St. Nicholas Ave .; office, New York Journal. N. Y. City.
DALE, Harry Howard:
Lawyer; represents the Fifteenth As- sembly district of Kings county in the As- sembly ; born Dec. 3, 1868, New York, but his parents soon moved to Brooklyn, where he attended public School No. 2, and at the age of eleven years graduated there- from; secured employment in the Union Porcelain Works at Greenpoint, and at-
and Claims. In 1903 Speaker Nixon ap- pointed Mr. Dale a member of the fol- lowing Assembly Committees : General Laws and Judiciary ; 1904 was a member of the Codes, Railroads and State Prison Committees. Address, 187 Grand St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
DALY, John:
'Turfman; born Troy, N. Y., 1844; edu- cated in the public schools of Troy; ten years ago formed a partnership with David Gideon in a racing stable and stock farm at Homedale, N. J. ; this partnership lasted for several years, during which time it met with almost phenomenal success, win- ning the most important stake events. Ad .. dress, 12 E. 54th St., N. Y. City.
DALY, Joseph Francis:
Lawyer; born Plymouth, N. C., Dec. 3, 1840; son of Denis and Elizabeth T. Daly; came to New York when nine years old, where he was educated; received degree LL. D., St. John's College, 1883, Villanova, 1902; married, 1873, En.ma Robinson Bark- er (died, 1886); 1890, Mary Louise Smith; admitted to Bar, 1862 ; judge, 1870-90, and chief justice 1890-96 court of common pleas, N. Y .; justice Supreme Court, 1896- 98, since, private practice; member board of managers, Roman Catholic Orphan Asy- lum; member advisory board, St. Vin- cent's Hospital; president United Catholic Charities Association, 1896-97; member board of Trinity College, Washington; American Geological Society, Southern So- ciety, N. C. Society, Association of the Bar, Dunlap Society; clubs: Catholic,
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WHO'S WHO IN NEW YORK.
Players, Lawyers. Residence, 117 West ( Commercial and Financial Chronicle; 58th St., and Yonkers, N. Y .; office, 54 Residence, 140 Columbia Heights, Brook- Wall St., N. Y. City. lyn, N. Y .; office Pine and Pearl Sts., N. Y. City.
DAMON, William Emerson:
Author, naturalist; superintendent credit department Tiffany & Co .; born Windsor, Vt., Nov. 15, 1838; at the school of which and Kimball Union Academy, at Meriden, N. H., he received his education; mar- ried Alma C., daughter of Timothy B. Cuis, Windsor, Vt .; member New England Society, Scientific Alliance, New York, New York Microscopical Society, Royal Microscopical Society, London, New York Mycological Club, New York Naturalists Club, New York Zoological Society; author: Ocean Wonders. Address, The Chelsea, N. Y. City.
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