USA > New York > Who's who in New York (city and state) 1904 > Part 74
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HALL, Archibald G .:
Publisher, journalist; born N. Y. City, Dec. 6, 1062, and obtained his education in the public schools and the College of the City of N. Y .; leaving college he went into the service of the American News Co. and afterward to that of the Amer- ican Agriculturist. His relations with the insurance business began in the office of the Mutual Fire Insurance Co. of N. Y., and he was a fire insurance broker and licensed agent three years; founded in New York in 1892, The Surveyor, an in-
tor and editor; also publisher of the At- lantic Highlands Journal; member of the Insurance Society of N. Y., Underwriters Club, Once-A-Year Club and the Atlantic Highlands Casino. Address, 56 Pine St., N. Y. City.
HALL, Benjamin Elihu:
Lawyer; born Nov. 1862,
2, Essex County, N. Y .; was graduated from Wil- liams College, 1885; member of Repub- lican, and Delta Kappa Epsilon Clubs, Sons of Revolution, and Society of Colonial Wars. Residence, 15 W. 83rd St .; office, 34 Nassau St., N. Y. City.
HALL, Bolton:
Lawyer; born Ireland, 1854; son of Rev. Dr. John Hall ; educated in Dublin; was graduated from Princeton, 1875; A. M .. 1878; married, 1884, Susie Hurlbut Scott. Advocate of restoring the land to
the people ; active in the promotion of the cultivation of vacant lots by the unemployed. University Ex- tension lecturer. Author: Even as You and I; Things as They Are; The Game of Life ; Free America; Monkey Shines. Clubs : University, Social Reform. Res- idence, 33 East 61st St. ; office, 52 William St., N. Y. City.
HALL, Charles Cuthbert:
Clergyman; born N. Y. City, 1852; edu- cated at public schools, at Williams Col- lege and Union Theological Seminary; li- censed to preach in 1847; devoted one year to study in England and Scotland; pastor of the Union Presbyterian Church at Newburg, 1875; in 1877 he accepted a call from the First Presbyterian Church in Brooklyn, N. 1 .; received D. D. from the University of the City of N. Y., 1889; was Carew lecturer at the Hartford The- ological Seminary for 1894 and published his lectures in a volume entitled: Quali- fications for Ministerial Power; he also wrote: Does God Send Trouble? and Into His Marvelous Light; president of Union Theological Seminary and trustee of Will- iams College. Residence, 46 East. 70th St .; office, 700 Park Ave., N. Y. City. HALL, Charles M .:
Inventor of the Hall process for pro- uucing aluminum; born Thompson, Ohio, Dec. 6, 1863; attended the public schools of Oberlin, Ohio, and later Oberlin Col- lege. graduating in 1885 with the degree of A. B .; during the course he had one term of chemical study with Professor Jewett; thereafter experimented at home and in Oberlin Laboratory with special object of discovering an electrical method
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WHO'S WHO IN NEW YORK.
of commercially producing aluminum; of America; Historian, Empire State So- ciety, Sons of American Revolution; Sec- retary, American Scenic and Historic Preservation Society and Association for the Protection of the Adirondacks. Resi- dence, 12 West 103d St .; office, Tribune Building, N. Y. City. discovered, Feb., 1886, the present electro- lytic method now universally used; con- tinued his work in Boston and Cleveland, culminating in the formation of the Pitts- burg Reduction Co. to manufacture alum- inum under his patents, Aug., 1888; has been first vice-president of said company HALL, Edward J .: since 1900. In 1893 Oberlin College gave Vice-president American Telephone & Telegraph Co., director N. Y. & N. J. Tel- ephone Co., president Perth Amboy Terra Cotta Co., Southern Bell Telephone & Tel- egraph Co .; director, Bell Telephone Co., Buffalo, N. Y., Bell Telephone Co., Phil- adelphia, Pa., Market & Fulton National Bank, N. Y. Telephone Co., Western Tel- ephone & Telegraph Co. Residence, Mor- ristown, N. J .; office, 15 Dey St., N. Y. City. him the honorary uegree of A. M., in re- cognition of his work as an inventor; director of Power City Bank, of Niagara Falls, and member of the American Electro-Chemical Society; member of the Franklin Institute, Institution of Electri- cal Engineers of Great Britain, American Philosophical Society, Chamber of Com- merce, State of N. Y., and of the Uni- versity Club, N. Y. City. Address, Ni- agara Falls, N. Y.
HALL, Charles Mercer:
Episcopal clergyman; born Brooklyn, N. Y., Dec. 23, 1864; son of William No- ble Hall and Flora Margaret McAlister; educated in England; in banking house, 1882-86; student General Theological Sem- inary, 1888-91; ordained deacon Epiph- any, Camden, N. J., 1891-93; curate, Church of Beloved Disciple, New York, 1893-94; vicar and rector of Holy Cross Church, Kingston, N. Y., 1894; married, Jan. 25, 1898, Bertha, daughter Honorable Alton B. Parker, LL.D. Honorary M. A., St. Stephen's College, 1903. Address, Holy Cross Rectory, Kingston, N. Y. HALL, Edward Hagaman:
Editor, writer, and lecturer on Amer- ican history; born Auburn, N. Y., Nov. 3, 1858; son of Benjamin Hall, (lawyer, first Chief Justice of Colorado and Mayor of Auburn) and Abigail Farnam Haga- man; educated Auburn Academic High School. News editor Norwich, Conn., Morning Bulletin, 1877-1885; senior editor of same, 1885-1888; editor Waterbury Daily Republican, 1888-1889; with N. Y. Tribune, 1889; printing and publishing in New York, 1890-1900. Author: New York, the Second City of the World; Ho! For Alaska; Register of the Empire State Society; Sons of the American Revolution; Biography of Andrew H. Green, and many monographs on American archaeology, history and scenery. Lecturer on Ameri- can History for the Board of Education of the City of N. Y. Married, 1893, Irene Gilbert Gazzam. Member of N. Y. His- torical Society, National Arts Club of N. Y., Municipal Art Society of N. Y., and Association for the Protection of Vir- ginia Antiquities; Deputy-Governor Gen- eral, Order of the Founders and Patriots
HALL, Ernest:
Lawyer; born Oct. 24, 1844, London, England; educated at New York Univer- sity Law School; served in Army and Navy in Civil War. City Judge, 1882- 87; attorney for several insurance com- panies. Referee in Bankruptcy; presi- dent of Alumni Association of University Law School; member of Union, Republi- can, North Side Republican, N. Y. Ath- letic, Bedford Park, Fordham and Morris Clubs, G. A. R., Lebanon Hospital and St. John's Guild. Residence, 1087 Boston Road; office, 62 William St., N. Y. City. HALL, Frank L .:
Lawyer; born July 4, 1850, Bridgeport, Conn .; was graduated from Yale College, 1872, and Columbia Law School, 1874; president and director, Baltimore and Delaware Bay R. R. Co .; corporation at- torney. Member of
Psi Upsilon and Wolf's Head Fraternities, Yale, Univer- sity, and South Side Sportsmens Clubs, American Historical Society, City Bar and Down Town Asociations. Residence, 1 West 30th St .; office, 30 Broad St., N. Y. City.
HALL, George Henry:
Artist; born Boston, 1825; common school education; began study of art at 16; studied in Art Academy, Dusseldorf, Germany, in Paris and Rome; settled in New York; his more important pictures are figures and still life. Member Na- tional Academy of Design and Century Club. Studio, 3 E. 14th St .; residence, 129 West 34th St., N. Y. City.
HALL, Gertrude:
Writer of short stories and poems;
born Boston, Sept. 8, 1863; educated in private schools, Florence, Italy. Author: Far from Today; Allegretto; Foam of the Sea; The Hundred, and Other
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WHO'S WHO IN NEW YORK.
Stories; Age of Fairy Gold; April's Sow- ucated Auburn public and high schools. ing; translated Cyrano de Bergerac and poems of Paul Verlaine. Address, 1425 Broadway, N. Y. City.
HALL, Henry :
Journalist; born Auburn, N. Y., Dec. 6, 1845; son of Hon. Benjamin F. Hall. lawyer and first chief justice of Colo- rado. His ancestors on both sides were among the earliest pioneers (Francis Hall, New Haven, 1639), and the Hagamans, early Huguenot settlers of Long Island. He received an academic education; was clerk and teller in a bank in Auburn; later wrote: History of Auburn, and His- tory of the Nineteenth N. Y. Volunteers; subsequently became journalist serving successively on the Auburn Morning News, the Auburn Advertiser, the Nor- wich (Conn.) Bulletin, and the New York Tribune. He came to New York to join the Tribune in 1875 serving as an editor and afterward for eighteen years as bus- iness manager of the Tribune, resigning in 1901. For several years he wrote monthly and occasional letters for the London Times, the Boston Journal, and other newspapers. Feb. 2, 1886, he mar- ried Virginia, daughter of L. Warren Houghton of Bath, Me. For a year (1882-83) he was engaged in taking the first (and only) census of American ship- building for the Census of 1880, and in this work visited all the ship and boat building localities of the country; com- piled: American Millionaires, the first list ever printed of that class of men, and later wrote: America's Successful Men. Now a dealer in investment securities. Residence, Bronxville, N. Y .; office, Trib- une Building, N. Y. City.
HALL, Henry H .:
President, Underwriters Salvage Co., Victoria Fire Insurance Co .; ex-president National Board Fire Underwriters; trustee Law Union & Crown Insurance Co. of Lon- don; State Fire Insurance Co. of Liver- pool, Union Assurance Society of London. Residence, East Orange, N. J .; office, 35 Pine St., N. Y. City.
HALL, Henry J. S .:
Manufacturing and wholesale druggist, of the firm of Hall & Ruckel; director of the Corporate Securities Co., Fellows Manufacturing Co. and Washington Trust Co. Address, 215 Washington St .; resi- dence, 51 Riverside Drive, N. Y. City.
HALL, James Pierre:
Editor N. Y. Tribune, journalist; born Auburn, N. Y., Sept. 2, 1849; son of Ben- jamin F. and Abigail Hagaman Hall; cd-
On staff Auburn Evening News, 1870-71, Auburn Advertiser, 1872, Norwich, Conn., Bulletin, 1872-83; since with New York Tribune. Member A. A. A. S., Astro- nomical and Astrophysical Societies of America, New York Academy of Sciences, British Associations for the Advancement of Science, British Astronomical Associa- tion, Society of Physical Research, Brooklyn Institute, Sons of American Revolution. Clubs: Twilight, Underwrit- ers. Author: Cayuga in the Field (with his brother Henry); Guide Book to Block island, R. I. Residence, 6 Poplar St., Brooklyn; office, New York Tribune, N. Y. City.
HALL, John M .:
Director, Equitable Trust Co., N. Y. Connecting R. R. Co., N. Y. New Haven & Hartford R. R. Co., Providence & Ston- ington Steamship Co., Windsor Trust Co. Residence, New Haven, Conn .; office, Grand Central Station, N. Y. City. HALL, John R .:
Secretary, treasurer and director, Bar- bour Flax Spinning Co., Dumbarton Flax Spinning Co., Linen Thread Co., Marshall & Co .; treasurer and director, O. H. Heart Co., Barbour Bros. Co. Address, 96 Franklin St., N. Y. City.
HALL, Lewis A .:
President and director, Boston & Seven Devils Copper Co., Pacific & Idaho North- ern R. R .; vice-president and director Atlantic Coast Steamship Co .; office, 52 Broadway, N. Y. City.
HALL, Randall Cooke:
Protestant Episcopal clergyman; born Wallingford, Conn., Dec. 18, 1842; was graduated from Columbia College, 1863, and from the General Theological Semi- nary, 1866; ordained deacon, 1866; priest, 1870; received D. D .. Racine College. Wis., 1881, and General Theological Seminary, 1884; instructor in Hebrew, General Theo- logical Seminary, 1869-71; professor of Hebrew and Greek, from 1871-99; pro- fessor emeritus of Hebrew and Greek from 1899 to date; Chaplain of the House of The Holy Comforter, N. Y. City, 1904, to date; published : Some elements of He- brew Grammar; married Lizzie, daughter of George C. Eyland, examining chaplain to the bishop of New York. 1872-95. Ad- dress, 245 West 48th St., N. Y. City. HALL, Ruth:
Aumior; born Scoharie, N. Y .; educated at home and private school; unmarried; first work appeared in newspaper edited by her father; subsequently contributed to many magazines and journals. Au-
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WHO'S WHO IN NEW YORK.
thor: In the Brave Days of Old; The sister, Ruth Hall, are remarkable as the Boys of Scrooby, and The Golden Arrow; only sister novelists doing simultaneous work in the history of literature since the Brontës. Address, Catskill, N. Y. 'The Black Gown; A Downrenton's Son; and The Pine Grove House. Address, Catskill, N. Y.
HALL, Thomas:
Inventor; born Philadelphia, Feb. 4, 1834; educated University of Pennsyl- vania, with special course in mechanics abroad; devised mechanism for and ex- hibited a keyed typewriter at Paris Ex- position, 1867; invented the Hall type- writer; also several sewing machines, and machinists' tools. Address, 35 39th St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
HALL, Thomas Cuming :
Professor of theology at Union Theo- logical Seminary; burn Armagh, Ireland, Sept. 25, 1858; son of Dr. John Hall and Emily (Bolton) Hall; when a boy came to this country with parents, his father going as pastor to the Fifth Avenue Pres- byterian Church in 1867; was graduated from Princeton, 1879; from Union Theo- logical Seminary, 1882; studied then at Berlin and Göttingen, Germany; called in 1883 to Omaha, Neb., and there built two churches and edited a newspaper for the denomination. In 1884, married, in Lon- don, Miss Jenny E. L. Bartling, of Göt- tingen; 1886, called to Chicago, and there was pastor of the Forty-first Street Pres- byterian Church during the construction of its new building; thence was called in 1893 to the Fourth Presbyterian Church. An acute illness compelled his resignation of the pastorate in 1897; after a year and a half in Europe he was called to a professorship in Union Theological Seminary, where he is still teaching; has written: The Power of an Endless Life; The Social Meaning of English Revival Movements in the Eighteenth Century; The Synoptic Gospels; John Hall, Pastor and Preacher, a Biography by His Son; has been a constant contributor to the re- views, religious weeklies and daily press. Seminary office, 700 Park Ave., N. Y. City. HALL, Thomas W .:
President and director of the American Hide & Leather Co., Pennsylvania Hide & Leather Co .; treasurer and director, Burlington Safe Deposit Co. (Stanford, Conn.); director, Munising Leather Co. Residence, 5 East 54th St .; office, 92 Cliff St., N. Y. City.
HALL, Violette:
Author; born Schoharie, N. Y .; has done much magazine and newspaper work in social satires and in short stories. Author of novel: Chanticleer; she and her
HALL, William A .:
President and director of the Eastern Timber Co., Dairy Improvement Co., and director Consolidated National Bank. Ad- dress, 135 Broadway, N. Y. City.
HALL, William H .:
Treasurer and director Chesapeake
Western Ry .; treasurer and director, Chesapeake Western Co .; Address, 26 Cortlandt St., N. Y. City.
HALL-BROWN, Dr. Lucy:
Physician, N. Y. City, N. Y .; recognized as among the first women in the profes- sion of medicine; is native of New Eng- land and of Puritan ancestry; received education at Milton College, Wisconsin, and at Dearborn Seminary, Chicago; med- ical studies pursued in department of medicine and surgery of the University of Michigan, from which institution she was graduated with the degree of M. D. in 1878; after experience in hospitals of N. Y. City, visited Europe; in London at- tended the clinics of Sir Spencer Wells, and under Drs. Ord and Bristowe was first woman entered to clinics of St. Thomas' Hospital, London; at Dresden served as medical interne at the Royal Lying-in and Gynecological Hospital or Professor Fred Winckel. Soon after re- turn to U. S. was appointed resident phy-
sician of the State Reformatory for Women at Sherburne, Mass .; subsequent- ly appointed superintendent, but declined; from 1884 to 1887, professor of physi- ology and hygiene and resident physician at Vassar College; first vice-president of the Alumni Association of the Depart- ment of Medicine and Surgery, Univer- sity of Michigan; Fellow of N. Y. Acad- emy of Medicine; member of the Kings County Medical Society; Brooklyn Patho- logical Society; American Electro-Thera- peutic Association; vice-president Ameri- can Social Science Association; former treasurer of the N. Y. Medico-Legal So- ciety; member of the council of the Na- tional Red Cross Society, etc .; member of various social, literary and philan- thropic societies; inventor of numerous electrical devices; frequent contributor to standard publications upon subjects of health, hygiene, etc .; 1887, delegate with Clara Barton to International Conference of the Red Cross at Carlsruhe, Germany; 1897, again delegate to the Conference of the Red Cross in Vienna; 1900, dele-
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WHO'S WHO IN NEW YORK.
gate to the Kings County Medical So- |Thought, New York, and The Preachers' ciety to the International Congress of Assistant, Reading, Pa. Address, 10 Liv- ingston Park, Rochester, N. Y. Medicine and to the International Con- gress of Electro-Therapeutics in Paris; HALLOCK, Rev. Joseph Newton, M. A., D. D .: also delegate of the U. S. government to International Congress of Hygiene, the International Congress of Secondary Ed- ucation and the International Congress of Physiology; Sept., 1891, married R. G. Brown, N. Y. City, well known electrical engineer, officier de l'academie of France. Address, 715 Braly Building, Los Angeles, Cal.
HALLIWELL, Charles E .:
Vice-president of the American To- bacco Co .; director of the American Cigar Co., American Snuff Co., American To- bacco Co., Automatic Weighing Machine Co., Kentucky Tobacco Product Co. Res- idence, Hotel Majestic; office, 111 Fifth Ave., N. Y. City.
HALLOCK, Gerard Benjamin Fleet:
Clergyman and author; born Holliday's Cove, West Virginia (then Virginia), Jan. 28, 1856; was graduated from Princeton, 1882 and received honorary degree of A. M. from the same in 1901; was gradu- ated from Princeton Theological Semin- ary in 1885, doing post-graduate work under President McCosh, during his sem- inary course; received the degree of D. D. from Richmond (Ohio) College, June, 1896; he married Miss Anna Catherine Cobb, N. Y. City, May 8, 1888. Ordained by the Presbytery of Rochester, Oct. 12, 1885, and installed as pastor of Wheat- land Church, Scottsville, N. Y., serving over four years; since Jan. 1, 1890, has been one of the pastors of the Brick Church, Rochester, N. Y., one of the larg- est in the denomination; toured extensive- ly in Europe, Egypt and the Holy Land in 1902; member of Princeton Club of Western New York, and Sons of Veterans; stated clerk of the Presbytery of Roches- ter. Author: Upward Steps, (1899); Ser- mon Seeds, (1900); God's Whispered Se- crets, (1901); Beauty in God's Word, (1902); The Homiletic Year, (1903); Jour- neying in the Land Where Jesus Lived, (1903); Growing Toward God (1904); Wedding Manual (1904) ; also booklets : The Psalm of Shepherdly Love; Bits of Comfort; Practicing the Presence of God, and Orange Blossoms. Author also of a large number of tracts issued by the Amer- ican Tract Society and over six hundred articles in religious and secular magazines and journals; associate editor of Current Anecdotes, Cleveland, Ohio, und conducts departments in The Treasury of Religious
Editor-in-chief of The Christian Work; was graduated from Yale, (B. A.) 1857; studied theology at Yale Theological Sem- inary till 1860; took M. A., 1860. and D. D. at Ursinus College, Pennsylvania in 1896; preached a short time at Bridgewater, Conn .; 1897, he received a call to the presidency of Westminister University in Denver, Colo., but declined it; 1880, be- came editor-in-chief and sole proprietor of The Christian at Work. His published works include an edition of Tacitus; A History of Southampton; First Impres- sions in Europe; Twice Across the Con- tinent, besides numerous religious, ed- ucational and historical writings; his lecture on Heresy, delivered before the Congregational Club of Brooklyn, N. Y., was widely printed and read, an edition of more than ten thousand copies having been issued in pamphlet form after it ap- peared in the papers. Has traveled in nearly all parts of the world, and written several series of letters relating his various experiences in Europe and in America. He is called to supply the pul- nit of various churches; director and one of the trustees of the State Trust Co. of N.Y., and was one of the original incor- porators; also a director of the Metropoli- tan Realty Co. of N. Y., and of the Society for the Prevention of Crime. Residence. 338 Greene Ave., Brooklyn; office, Bible House, N. Y. City. HALLOCK, William:
Professor of physics, Columbia Univer- sity; born Milton, N. Y., Aug. 14, 1857; was graduated from Columbia College, 1879, studying later at the University of Wurzburg, where he obtained the degree of Ph. D. For two years after his grad- uation at Wurzburg, in 1881, he was as- sisted in the physical laboratory at that university, thence becoming physicist of the U. S. Geological Survey. In 1884, he was called to the chair of physics at the Corcoran Scientific School, Washington, in addition to his work on the geological survey, holding this position for two years. In 1889, he accepted a call to the chair of chemistry and toxicology at the National College of Pharmacy, leaving this, as well as the geological survey, in 1891, to assist in the astrophysical labora- tory of the Smithsonian Institution. In 1892, he was made adjunct professor of physics at Columbia and ten years later
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WHO'S WHO IN NEW YORK.
received the full professorsnip. He is a | University Clubs. Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, a member of the Philosophical Society of Washington, American Physical Society, etc. Address, 417 West 118th St., 1 .. Y. City.
HALLS, William, Jr .:
Banker; born Brooklyn, August -1, 1858; was educated at German Commer- cial Institute, Brooklyn; married Sarah W. Whittaker, Oct. 14, 1879. Residence, Summit, N. J. ; office, 11 Nassau St., N. Y. City.
HALPIN, Francis:
Cashier Chemical National Bank; born Oct. 15, 1853, Brooklyn, N. Y .; educated at Holbrook Military Academy; connected with Chemical National Bank since 1869; is first lieutenant, Squadron A, N. G., N. Y. Member of N. Y. Historical So- ciety. Residence, Mt. Clair, N. J .; office, 270 Broadway, N. Y. City.
HALPIN, Paul:
Lawyer; born Jan. 3, 1869, N. Y. City; attended Manhattan College; was grad- uated from Columbia Law School, 1888; married; commissioner appraisal for De- partment of Water Supply. Secretary and treasurer of George Washington Lighting Co .; vice-president of Mutual Brewing Co .; president and director, Seneca Land Co .: secretary anu treasurer of Automatic Smoke Prevention Co. Member of Wy- oming Field, Democratic and N. Y. Ath- letic Clubs, Columbia Alumni, Manhat- tan Alumni and Marcy Associations, Friendly Sons of St. Patrick and Knights of Columbus. Residence, 3472 Broadway; office, 150 Nassau St., N. Y. City.
HALPINE, Nicholas J. Lane Trowbridge:
Lieutenant, U. S. Navy; born New York. Entered Naval Academy, June 9, 1871; was graduated, cadet midshipman, June 10, 1877; Alliance, 1877-79. Promot- ed midshipman, June 18, 1879; Renef Ex- pedition, 1880. Promoted ensign, Oct. 1, 1880; receiving-ship Passaic, 1880-81; En- terprise, 1882; Palos, 1883-84; Essex, 1884- 85; Hydrographic Office, 1885-87; C. S. S. Eagle, 1887; C. S. S. Blake, 1887-88. Pro- moted lieutenant (junior grade), Oct. 31, 1888; Tallapoosa, 1889, to Jan., 1892; re- ceiving-ship Wabash, May, 1892-95. Pro- moted to lieutenant, July 4, 1893. Re- tired, November, 1895. Address, Hamp- den St., University Heights, N. Y. City. HALSEY, Charles Day:
Banker and broker; born Sept. 20, 1865; was graduated from Princeton University, C. E., 1886 ; member of the firm of C. D. Halsey & Co .; member N. Y. Stock Ex- change; member of Union, Princeton and
Address, 49 E. 72đ St., N. Y. City.
HALSEY, Charles Storrs:
Educator; son of Rev. Herman and Sophia Woolworth Halsey; born Cambria, N. Y., Dec. 20, 1834; prepared for col- lege at Wilson Collegiate Institute; at Williams College he was graduated with the valedictory honor in 1856, in the same class with James A. Garfield. Immediate- ly after his graduation he began teach- ing as principal of Macedon Academy, Wayne County, N. Y., where he contin- ued till March, 1858; since that time he has been successively principal of the Collegiale Institute, Newton, N. J. (1859- 61); a second time principal of Macedon Academy (1862-65); associate principal of Canandaigua Academy, Canandaigua, N. Y., 1865-72; principal of
the High School, Burlington, Vt., 1872-75; and principal of Union Classical Institute, Schenectady, N. Y., 1875-97; author: Gene- alogical and Chronological Chart of the Rulers of England, Scotland, France, Germany and Spain, (Ginn & Co., 1873) ; etymology of Latin and Greek (Ginn & Co., 1882) ; married, April 11, 1859, Maria A. Lippincott (born Aug. 25, 1838; died Nov. 19, 1887). Address, 169 Schermer- horn St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
HALSEY, Francis Whiting:
Author and editor; born Unadilla, N. Y., Oct. 15, 1851; preparatory education at Unadilla Acad my; was graduated from Cornell, 1873; assistant editor Bingham- ton Times, 1873-75; connected with edi- torial department of staff of N. Y. Tri- bune, 1875-80; foreign editor and writer of book reviews, N. Y. Times, 1880-1896 ; edited from its initial number, Oct., 1896,
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