USA > New York > Who's who in New York (city and state) 1904 > Part 46
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DAVIS, George B .:
Major, U. S. Army; born in and ap- pointed from N. Y .; cadet at the U. S. Military Academy, July 1, 1882; was graduated, July 1, 1886; actual rank-sec- ond lieutenant, Twenty-third U. S. In- fantry, July 1, 1886; served in garrison at Fort Mackinac, Mich., 1886 to Feb., 1888; Fort Brady, Mich., to June, 1888, and Fort Mackinac, Mich., to Aug., 1889, and at the infantry and cavalry school of application at Fort Leavenworth, Kan., Sept., 1889; first lieutenant, Aug. 14, 1893; captain commissary subsistence, Oct. 14, 1896; major commissary subsis- tence, Feb. 12, 1900. Address, Vancou- ver Barracks, Wash.
Republican State Senator, representing the Forty-ninth Senate district, which consists of the rural part of Erie County and the Sixth Assembly district in the city of Buffalo; born Buffalo, Aug. 5 1858; received his education in the pub- lic schools of Buffalo; in 1877 he began the study of law in the office of Day & Romer, where he remained until admitted DAVIS, George B .: to the Bar in 1880; since that time has Lawyer; born in 1840; McLean, N. Y .; prepared at Homer Academy, attended practiced his profession in the city of Buffalo; 1885, married Miss Lillie N. | New York Central College, McGrawville.
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N. Y., and was graduated from Colum- bla University Law School, Washington, D. C .; served in the Military Telegraph under Gen. Eckert, during the Civil War, and afterwards became a clerk in the In- terior Department in Washington; has practiced his profession in Ithaca since 1876, where he is a leading member of the Bar and successful trial lawyer; chairman of Tompkins County Democrat- ic Committee and candidate for County Judge and Surrogate; Knight Templar and Deputy State Grand Master of Ma- sons; member of Town and Gown Club, and Ithaca Club. Married Miss Houtz of Etna, N. Y. Address, Ithaca, N. Y.
DAVIS, Gherardi:
Lawyer; graduate of Harvard College, 1885; member of University and Repub- lican Clubs, Down Town Association and Association of N. Y. City Bar. Resi- dence, 34 East 39th St., N. Y. City; office, 44 Pine St., N. Y. City.
DAVIS, Henry C .:
Broker; born Sept. 11, 1849, in Nor- wich. Vt .; educated at Lawrence Uni- versity Appleton, Wis. Connected with the firm of A. A. Housman & Co., members of the N. Y. Stock Exchange. Member of the N. Y. Athletic, Lawyers. Indian Harbor Yacht Clubs. Union Club of Tacoma, Wash., and Minnesota Club of St. Paul, Minn. Residence, Greenwich, Conn. ; office, 20 Broad St., N. Y. City.
DAVIS, Howland:
Banker; director Baltimore & Ohio R. R. Co., Corn Exchange Bank, Land & River Improvement Co. and N. Y. Im- proved Real Estate Co. Member
of Union League, Players and Riding Clubs, American Geographical and New Eng- land Societies, Down Town and Century Associations. Residence, 194 Madison Ave., N. Y. City ; office, 50 Ex. Place, N. Y. City.
DAVIS, Oscar King:
Journalist; born Baldwinsville, N. Y., Jan. 13, 1866; was graduated from Col- gate Universtiy, 1888; A. M., 1892; war correspondent at Manila and the Phil- ippines during Spanish-American War, and in China during Boxer troubles for N. Y. Sun and Harper's Weekly. Author: Our Conquests in the Pacific; Dewey's Capture of Manila; Sherreaf's Exclusion, and other stories. Clubs: Lotos, Clois- ter, Colgate Alumni, Montauk, Crescent. Athletic (Brooklyn). Residence, 39 Ham- ilton Terrace, Brooklyn; office, 170 Nas- sau St., N. Y. City.
DAVIS, Richard Harding:
Novelist, journalist, playwright ; born Philadelphia, 1864; son of L. Clarke Davis, editor of the Philadelphia Public Ledger, and of Rebecca Harding Davis, the well known author ; educated at Lehigh and the Johns Hopkins Universities; then turned his attention to literary work; in 1887 be- came reporter on the Philadelphia Record, and later on the Press; engaged in this line for two years, part of the time being spent in England as correspondent. Then went to N. Y. City, under an engagement to write special articles for the Evening Sun ; his first success in the purely literary line was the story of "Gallagher"; in con- sequence of this he was offered and ac- cepted in 1890 the editorial management of Harper's Weekly, and held it successful- ly for two years, when he resigned in order to travel; 1896, present at coronation of Czar Nicholas II., reporting spectacle Harper's Magazine ; in 1900, married Miss Cecil Clark, of Chicago, daughter of John Marshall Clark. Among his books are Van Bibber and Others (1893) : Soldiers of Fortune (1897) ; The King's Jackal ; Cuba in War Time (1898). In the Fog: Captain Macklin ; With Both Armies in South Af- rica ; Princess Aline, and twelve others. Acted as war correspondent of the London Times in the Greek-Turkish war, Spanish- American War, for the New York Herald in South African War, and for Collier's Weekly with Gen. Oku in Manchuria dur- ing Japanese-Russian War; also in Cuban- Spanish rebellion and revolution of Matos in Venezuela and Gazia against Viagon on the Rio Grande. Plays. Taming of Helen; Ranson's Folly. The Dictator; member of Roval Geographical Society and American Explorers' Club. Address, Marion. Mass.
DAVIS, Thomas F .:
Lieutenant colonel, U. S. Army; born N. Y., May 8, 1853, and appointed from N. Y .; was graduated from the Military Academy and promoted to second lieu- tenant, June 16, 1875; served on frontier duty in New Mexico, Oct. to Nov., 1875; constructing military telegraph line, 1875 to 1876; at Fort Craig, New Mexico, 1876 to 1878; promoted to first lieutenant, March. 1879; acting assistant adjutant general of New Mexico column of the Ute Expedition, to Feb., 1880; at Fort Bliss, Texas, to Jan. 2, 1882; Fort Randall, Da- kota, 1882 to April, 1887; regimental quartermaster, March 31, 1887, to, and at Buford, Dakota, May 20, 1887; captain,
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WHO'S WHO IN NEW YORK.
April 25, 1892; major, Twelfth Infantry, Dec. 7, 1900; transferred to Fifteenth In- fantry, May 28, 1901; lieutenant colonel, 30th Infantry, Aug. 14, 1903; transferred to 28th Infantry Feb. 7, 1903; to 30th In- fantry, 1904. Address, Fort Logan H. Roots, Ark.
DAVIS, Varina Howell Jefferson:
Born Natchez, Miss., May 7, 1826; granddaughter Gov. Richard Howell of N. J., and daughter William Burr and Margaret Kempe Howell; educated Ma- dame Grelaud's School, Philadelphia, and private tutors; married, 1845, Jefferson Davis of Warren County, Mass .; lived at the Brierfield plantation at Davis Bend, Warren County, Miss., and at Washington during the time Jefferson Davis was Senator and Secretary of War, 1847-61; and at Richmond during the time he was president of the Con- federate States, 1861-65; during the Sec- ond year of her husband's imprisonment at Fortress Monroe, she obtained per- mission to be with him and on his re- lease they went abroad; acted as her husband's secretary. Author: Jefferson Davis: A Memoir by His Wife; contribu- tor to magazines. Home: Beauvoir House P. O., Harrison Co., Miss., now occupied by the Southern Veterans, sold to Sons of Veterans. Address. Hotel Girard, 123 W. 44th St., N. Y. City.
DAVIS, Vernon Mansfield:
ively both in civil and criminal law; has also been commissioner of education in the City of N. Y., a position which he filled with signal ability; president of the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children, succeeding Mr. Elbridge T. Gerry, elected, 1902, justice of the Su- preme Court, 1st district of N. Y., for term, Jan. 1, 1903, to Dec. 31, 1916; Democrat; he is a member of the Church, Metropolitan and Manhattan Clubs, the Society of Medical Jurisprudence, and of the Association of the Bar of the City of N. Y. Address, 194 Lenox Ave., N. Y. City.
DAVIS, William C .:
Lawyer; born Sept. 21, 1857, Mifflin Co., Pa .; educated at Mountain Seminary, Birmingham, Pa., and at Princeton Uni- versity. Single. Member of Princeton, Lotos, Union League and Larchmont Yacht Clubs. Residence, 36 West 35th St .; office, 120 Broadway, N. Y. City.
DAVIS, William C .:
Captain U. S. Army; born in N. Y. July 1, 1886 ; appointed from N. Y .; was graduated, and appointed additional sec- ond lieutenant, Fifth Artillery, June 12, 1890; second lieutenant, Third Artillery, May 22, 1891; transferred to Fifth Artil- lery, Aug. 12, 1891; first lieutenant, Sixth Artillery, March 8, 1898; captain, Artillery Corps May 8, 1901; volunteer service, captain, A. Q. M., Oct. 29, 1900, to honor- able discharge, June 30, 1901. Address, Presidio San Francisco, Cal.
Jurist; born N. Y. City. 1855; educated in the public schools and was graduated from the College of the City of N. Y. in DAVISON, George Howard: 1876, and from Columbia University Law Vice-president N.Y. State Agricultural Society; born July 16, 1867, Brooklyn, N. Y .; was graduated from Sheffield Sci- entific School, Yale University, Ph. B., 1888; Cornell University, B. S., in Agri- culture, 1889, and American Veterinary College, D. V. S., 1890; secretary of Na- tional Association for Exhibition of Live Stock; director, Bank of Millbrook; mem- attorney, ber Board of Control, New York State Agricultural Experiment Station; mem- ber of Executive Committee of In- ternational Live Stock Exposition, and American Shropshire Sheep Association; member of Delta Psi Fraternity, Calu- met and St. Anthony Club and New York Zoological Society; 1st lieutenant, Squad- ron "A," N. G. N. Y. Address, Alta- mont Stock Farm, Millbrook, N. Y. DAVY, John M .: School; instructor in the college in the department of Greek and mathematics; devoted himself also to the prosecution of his legal studies, and in 1879 was ad- mitted to the Bar; entered upon the act- ive duties of his profession, and in it obtained almost from the start, an ex- tensive practice; 1885 was appointed as- sistant district and served under District Attorneys John R. Fellows and W. M. K. Olcott, and their predeces- sors, R. B. Martine and Delancy Nicoll, and continued in the office for a period of twelve years, at the end of which time he resigned his position. During the last term of District Attorney Fellows, he, as first assistant district attorney, gained much prominence by his successful prose- cution of arson cases, and conducted some of the most important prosecutions Jurist; born Ottawa, Canada, June 29, 1835; removed early to Rochester, N. Y .; studied for the legal profession; served ever brought in the City and County of N. Y .; he was district attorney of N. Y. County, 1897; has since practiced act- for some time in the Union Army during
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WHO'S WHO IN NEW YORK.
the Civil War; 1863, was admitted to Bar; | Club, Riding Club, and Yale Club. Resi- 1868 to 1871, was district attorney of dence, 420 Madison Ave .; office, 45 Wall St., N. Y. City. Monroe County; 1872 to 1875, U. S. Col- lector of Customs, Rochester; was in DAY, Frederick R .: Congress for the term 1875-77; took of- fice of justice of the Supreme Court, 7th judicial district, N. Y., Jan. 1, 1889, term expiring Dec. 31, 1916. Address, Roches- ter, N. Y.
DAWSON, Miles Menander:
Actuary, translator, author, poet; born Viroqua, Wis., May 13, 1863. Parents, John Dawson and Martha Wright (Ady) Dawson; educated public schools and Kentucy University; married Grace Lu- enette Burnett; profession consulting member, Actuarial Society of America, fellow Institute of Actuaries of Great Britain; member German Actuaral Socie- ty of Berlin; honorary member Insurance Ins. of N. S. Wales, Australia; fellow American Statistical Association, Royal Statistical Society and American Geo- graphical Society; member of Psychical Research Society, American Economic Association and American Academy of Political and Social Science; author: El- ements of Life Insurance, (1892); Am- erican Life Insurance Methods, (1893); The Effect of Free Surrender and Loan Privileges in Life Insurance (1894), As- sessment Life Insurance, (1895); Princi- ples of Insurance Legislation, (1896);
Practical Lessons in Actuarial Science, (1897); The Function of Insurance in Modern Society, (1898); Various Derived Tables, American Experience, (1900); Things Agents Should Know, (1900); Development of Insurance Mathematics, (1901); Poems of the New Time, (1902); translator: Elsie, a novel (from Norwe- gian of Alexander Kjelland, 1892). Res- idence, Cornwall-on-Hudson, N. Y .; office, 11 Broadway, N. Y. City.
DAY, Clarence Shepard :
Banker; special partner firm Day, Ad- ams & Co., member New York Stock Ex- change; vice-president and director, Rome, Watertown and Ogdensburg R. R. Co .; member of Union League, Met- ropolitan, American Yacht, N. Y. Yacht and Riding Clubs and New England So- ciety, Down Town Association, Cham- ber of Commerce. Residence, 420 Mali- son Ave .; office, 45 Wall St., N. Y. City. DAY, Clarence Shepard, Jr .:
Retired banker; born 1874; was grad- uated from Yale College, A. B., 1896. Former member of New York Stock Ex- change; now secretary of his class at college and member of the University
Captain, U. S. Army; born New York; appointed from the army a second lieu- tenant, Twenty-second Infantry, Feb., 1891, to rank form July 15, 1884; accepted, Feb. 9, 1891; first lieutenant, Ninth In- fantry, June 15, 1891; transferred to Twentieth Infantry, July 20, 1891; cap- tain of Infantry, Nov. 1, 1898; assigned to Third Infantry, Jan. 1, 1899; previous regimental service, private and sergeant, Signal Corps, Aug. 6, 1880, to July 24, 1884; second lieutenant, Signal Corps, July 15, 1884; accepted, July 25, 1884. Ad- dress, Pay Department, Portland, Ore.
DAY, Harry Valette:
Stock broker; born May 11, 1874, N. Y. City; was graduated from Sheffield Sci- entific School, Yale University, Ph. B., 1895; single; member of New York Stock Exchange, Delta Phi Fraternity, Yale, Racquet and Tennis, Luncheon and West- chester County Clubs, and Squadron A, N. G. N. Y. Residence, 6 East 44th St .; office, 6 Wall St., N. Y. City.
DAY, James Roscoe :
Educator; born Whitneyville, Me .; ed- ucated at Maine Wesleyan Seminary and Bowdoin College; minister in the Methodist Episcopal Church; preached at Bath and Portland, Maine; Boston and New York; received degree of D. D. from Wesleyan University and Dickinson Col- lege; S. T. D. from Bowdoin College; LL. D. from Northwestern University; D. C. L. from Cornell College, Iowa; elected chancellor of Syracuse University in 1894; elected Bishop of M. E. Church, 1904, but resigned. Address, Syracuse, N. Y. DAY, Richard Edwin:
Author, lecturer; born West Granby, N. Y., April 27, 1852; son of Richard and Susan L. Huggins Day; was graduated from Syracuse University, 1877, A. M., 1878, Litt. D., 1899; married, 1880, Fran- ces E. Northrop; for many years on ed- itorial staff of Syracuse Standard, from 1899 to 1904 on staff of Regents' Office, in State Capitol; now in State Historian's Office; author: Lines in the Sand; Thor, a Drama; Lyrics and Satires; Poems. Address, Albany, N. Y.
DAY, S. Edwin:
Jurist and banker; born Jan. 20, 1840, Moravia, N. Y .; educated at Moravia In- stitute; president of Moravia National Bank; County Judge and Surrogate of Cayuga County twelve years; member
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WHO'S WHO IN NEW YORK.
N. Y.
Auburn City Club. Address, Moravia, | the Harlem Democratic Club, which has since then been highly influential; in the DAYTON, Charles W .: same year he acted as secretary of the Citizen's Reform Movement. On a num- ber of occasions he has served as a del- egate to Democratic state conventions; when Grover Cleveland was nominated for President in 1884; he worked ener- getcally in the campaign for his election, and was one of the electors; in the cam- paign of 1888 he was equally active, mak- ing numerous speeches in favor of Cleve- land, not only in New York but in other states; one delivered by him in Burling- ton, Iowa, was circuated as a campaign document by the Democratic National Committee; he again became active for his favorite candidate in 1892, and used all his powers to aid Cleveland's second election. In 1889 he served on the Cen- tennial Committee of the Washington Inauguration, and in 1893 was elected a member of the New York State Consti- tutional Convention; June 5, 1893, he was nominated by the President as postmas- ter of New York; this nomination was unanimously confirmed by the Senate; delegate to National Democratic Con- vention, 1904. Address, 13 Mount Morris Park, N. Y.
Lawyer; born Brooklyn, Oct. 3, 1846; comes from New England ancestry; his grandfather became a leading merchant in N. Y. City, and his father, Abraham C. Dayton, whose tastes were literary, contributed much to the periodicals of his day, and was the author of, Last Days of Knickerbocker Life in New York; is descended from Andrew Adams, colonel in the Revolutionary War, speaker of the Continental Congress in 1779 and 1780, and chief justice of Connecticut; Mr. Dayton was educated in New York, and in 1861 entered the College of the City of N. Y .; on account, however, of fi- nancial reverses to his father at the out- break of the Civil War, he left college and entered a law office, studying also in the Columbia College Law School, where he was graduated in 1868; was admitted to the Bar, and since then he has been actively engaged in legal labors; aside from his professional duties has been very active in metropolitan affairs; trus- tee of the Church of the Puritans; direc- tor of the Twelfth Ward Bank and Em- pire City Savings Bank, both of which he is counsel; trustee of the Harlem Library and the Harlem Law Library, and president of the "Board for the Im- provement of Park Avenue above One Hundred and Sixth Street," a work which his involved the expenditure of several million dollars, much to the public bene- fit; this work was authorized by the Leg- islature in 1892. In addition to these corporations he is a member of various clubs and societies, including Harlem Democratic, Sagamore, Manhattan, Down Town and Players Clubs, Geographical Society, and the Sons of the Revolution; was one of the corporators of the Post- Graduate Medical School; belongs, in ad- dition, to the Bar Association of the State of N. Y. and the City of N. Y. He early took an active interest in poli- tics, as a member of the Democratic party; in 1864 he made speeches advo- cating General Mcclellan as a candidate for the Presidency, and in 1881 was elect- ed to the State Legislature, where he be- came prominent in the deliberations of that body; municipal reform was earnest- ly advocated by him, and the primary election law of 1881 owed its passage largely to his efforts. He declined a re- nomination, owing to the pressure of professional duties; in 1882 he organized
DEAL, Charles :
Consul; born New York; educated in the comman schools of that State; served in Company D, Thirty-fourth New York Infantry, 1861-63, and in Company H, Sixteenth N. Y. Cavalry, 1864-65; was a merchant and insurance agent for thir- ty-six years; collector of customs four- teen years; represented by his village as trustee and president twelve years, and his town as supervisor three years; July 17, 1897, appointed consul at St. Johns, Quebec, Canada.
DEAN, Bashford:
Zoologist and archæologist; born N. Y. City. Oct. 28, 1867; received degrees of A. M. and Ph. D. from Columbia Uni- versity, where he is now; professor of zoology; honorary curator of vertebrate palæontology, American Museum of Nat- ural History; member of the Advisory Board of New York Aquarium. Married Mary Alice, daughter of T. M. Dyckman of Kingsbridge. In charge of collection of Arms and Armor, Metropolitan Museum of Art. Address, 20 West 82d St., N. Y. City.
DEAN, Casper W .:
Civil engineer; born Aug. 14, 1844, Milan, N. Y .; educated at Kenyon, Col .- lege; he is president of Dean-West-
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WHO'S WHO IN NEW YORK.
brook Bridge Co .; member of Colonial [ last eight years he has been at the head Club and Ohio and American Geographi- cal Societies. Residence, 2609 Broadway; office, 136 Liberty St., N. Y. City. DEAN, David M .:
Lawyer; born Oct. 31, 1852, Newfield, N. Y .; attended the Ithaca Academy and Albany Law School and was admitted to the Bar in 1873; district attorney of Tompkins County, 1876-82; until his re- " cent removal to N. Y. City to enter the law firm of Griggs, Baldwin and Bald- win; was for many years the leading trial lawyer of Tompkins County, being engaged on one side or the other of all the leading cases; Republican; Knight Templar; was married to Hattie Labar of Newfield. Residence, Ithaca, N. Y .; office, N. Y. City.
DEAN, Herbert H .:
Superintendent of Equitable Life As- surance Society of U. S .; born May 4, 1865, N. Y. City; educated at College of City of N. Y .; director, Campagnia Metal- urgica Mexicana, Mexican Lead Co., and Potosi and Rio Verde R. R. Co .; member of Lawyers and Colonial and Rye Apa- wamis Clubs. Address, 264 West 73d St., N. Y. City.
DEANE, John Hall:
Lawyer; born Canada; came to U. S. in boyhood; partial course at Rochester University; private Union army, 1862; captured at Gettysburg, and, after being exchanged served in navy to end of war; admitted to the Bar and has since prac- ticed in N. Y. City; made gift of $100,000 to Rochester University and many bene- factions to Baptist institutions; club: Union League; American Geographical Society, Genessee Society, Metropolitan Museum of Art. Residence, 62 East 78th St .; office, 27 Pine St., N. Y. City.
DEANE, Joseph Griswold:
Lawyer; was graduated from Amherst College, 1890; member of Psi Upsilon Fra- ternity and Nineteenth Century Club and Amherst College Alumni Association. Residence, 200 West 79th St .; office, 15 William St., N. Y. City.
DE ANGELIS, Jefferson:
Comedian; born San Francisco, Cal., Nov. 30, 1859; has followed the theatrical profession all his life; has taken up every branch of it from vaudeville to tragedy and finally devoted himself to comic opera; has travelled all over the world. First appearance in New York in comic opera was with the McCaull Opera Com- pany in 1886; since that time has appear- | N. H .; residence, 146 West 57th St., N. Y, ed in many operas in N. Y. City; for the City.
of the De Angelis Opera Company; mem- ber of the Masonic Fraternity 32d de- gree, the Mystic Shrine, the Lambs Club of New York and the City Club of Yonk- ers. Address, Yonkers, N. Y.
DEARBORN, George S .:
President American-Hawaiian Steam- ship Co .; born March 20, 1858, Brook- lyn; educated at Brooklyn Polytechnic Institute; president of Flint, Dearborn & Co., Crude Rubber Co. and Manhattan Storage and Transportation Co .; vice- president of National Sugar Refining Co .; director, West Indies Land and Trading Co. and Cuban-American Sugar Co .; member of Players, Knollwood, Country, Racquet, American Yacht and Apawamis Golf Clubs. Residence, Rye, N. Y .; office, 6 Bridge St., N. Y. City.
DEARBORN, Henry Martin:
Professor of dermatology; born Epson, N, H., 1846; prepared for college at Blan- chard Academy, Pembroke, N. H .; stud- ied medicine at Harvard University Med- ical College and Bowdoin Medical College and was graduated from the latter in 1869; practiced medicine in Boston until 1880, and since that year in N. Y. City; professor of dermatology, New York Homeopathic Medical College and Hos- pital; professor of principles of medicine and clinical professor of dermatology New York Medical College and Hospital for Women; visiting physician to the Metropolitan Hospital; visiting dermatolo- gist to the Laura Franklin Free Hospital for children; consulting dermatologist to the Flower Hospital, the St. Mary's Hospital (Passaic, N. J.), and the Wo- men's Hospital of the New York Med- ical College and Hospital for Women; ex-president and member of the Hom. Medical Society of the County of New York; member of New York State Hom. Medical Society, American Institute of Homeopathy, National Society of Electro- Therapeutists, Academy of Pathological Science, New York Materia Medica So- ciety, Jahr Club, New York Medical Club; honorary member N. H. Medical Society; ex-associate editor North American Jour- nal of Homeopathy, ex-member Medical Council University of the State of N. Y .; author: Diseases of the Skin (illustrated), and numerous contributions to medical journals; married in 1873, to Sadie Smith, of London. Summer home, Hopkinton,
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WHO'S WHO IN NEW YORK.
DEARTH, Henry Golden:
Artist; born Bristol, R. I., April 22, 1863; began the study of painting with Horace Johnson, a portrait painter in Waterbury, Conn .; went to Paris in 1883, and was received at the Ecole des Beaux Arts in the studio of Hébert; in 1887 studied in the private class of Aimé Morot; exhibited first in the National Academy of Design of New York, about 1887; was elected a member of the So- ciety of American Artists in 1889; received the Webb prize for landscape in 1893; received a bronze medal at the Paris Exposition of 1900; a silver medal at the Pan-American Exposition, at Buffalo, in 1901, and a silver medal at the Charles- ton Exposition in 1902; his picture, Har-
vest Time in Normandy, went the Berlin International Picture Exhibition in May, 1903; was purchased by the Ger- man government; was elected associate of the National Academy of Design in 1902; is a member of the Fencers, Cen- tury and Lotos Clubs of New York. Ad- dress. 883 Seventh Ave., N. Y. City.
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