Who's who in New York (city and state) 1904, Part 75

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 75


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until June, 1902, N. Y. Times Saturday Re- view; gave the anniversary address of the massacre of Wyoming in July, 1898. Has lectured before historical societies, colleges and elsewhere, his subjects being : Hudson Valley in Revolution; Good Books as an Inspiration in Human Life; Journalism in N. Y., and N. Y. Indians and Their Fa- mous League; has published Two Months Abroad (1878); The Old N. Y. Frontier, (1901); Virginia Isabel Forbes (memoir of his wife, privately printed), (1900); Our Literary Deluge (1902); The Pioneers of Unadilla Village (1902); has edited fol- lowing volumes: American Authors and ineir Homes (1901); Authors of Our Day in Their Homes (1902); Women Authors of Our Day in Their Homes (1903) ; Of The Making of a Book (1904); his writ- ten articles for Harper's Weekly, The In-


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WHO'S WHO IN NEW YORK.


dependent, Book Buyer, Review of Re- | views, and other periodicals; is trustee American Scenic and Historic Preserva- tion Society, N. Y. State Historical Association, People's University Exten- sion Society; member of the Century, Au- thors, National Art, Aldine, Drawing Room, Nineteenth Century, Cornell Uni- versity Clubs and of American Historical Association, Municipal Arts Society and New York State Library Association ; lit- erary adviser to D. Appleton & Co., 1902- 05. Residence, 146 West 119th St .; Club address, 7 West 43rd St., N. Y. City.


HALSEY, Frederick A .:


Associate Editor of American Machin- ist since 1895; born Unadilla, N. Y., July 12, 1856; graduated from Cornell Univer- sity 1878; special education in mechani- cal engineering; engineer Rand Drill Co., 1890-4. Author of The Locomotive Link Motion; The Slide Rule; Worm and Spi- ral Gearing; The Metric System; con - tributor to Encyclopedia Britannica of article on Pneumatic Tools. Inventor of the "premium plan" of paying for labor. Clubs: Engineers, Cornell University, Twilight, American Society Mechanical Engineers. Residence, 356 W. 120th St .; office World Bldg., N. Y. C .. y.


HALSEY, Frederick Robert:


Lawyer; born March 28, 1847, Ithaca, N. Y .; prepared at Phillips Exeter Acad- emy; was graduated from Harvard Col- lege, 1868, and Columbia Law School, 1870. Paymaster General on Military Staff of Governor Flower. Member of Union, University, Harvard, Westminister Kennel, Tuxedo, Grolier, Manhattan, Rac- quet, Tennis and N. Y. Athletic Clubs, and St. Nicholas Society of N. Y. City, St. James Club of Paris, Royal Societies Club of London, Bibilographical Society of London. Married, 1872, Emma Gertrude, only child of Henry Keep. Country house, "Egeria," Tuxedo Park; address, 22 West 53d St., N. Y. City.


HALSEY, Jacob L .:


Vice-president Manhattan Life Insur- ance Co .; born N. Y. City, Aug. 18, 1828, and on April 1, 1846, began his insurance career in the office of the Nautilus, now the New York Life Insurance Co .; after two years' private service there he went into the employment of the American Mutual, of New Haven, with which he remained until the organization of the Manhattan Life in 1850; since when he has been promoted by successive grades to his present position; he has the dis- tinction of being the oldest life under-


writer in the U. S., measured by years of service. Office, 66 Broadway, N. Y. City.


HALSEY, John Rogers:


Lawyer; born Sept. 23, 1864, Brooklyn; was graduated from Yale College, 1884; attended Columbia Law School; single. Member of University Club, City Bar and Yale Alumni Associations. Address, 141 Clinton Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y.


HALSEY, N. Wetmore:


Banker; born Dec. 24, 1856, Forreston, Ill .; educated at Beloit College, and Union College of Law, Chicago. Member of Lawyers Club; New England Society, Phi Delta Phi Fraternity, Essex County Country and Riding anu Driving Clubs of Orange, N. J., Chicago Law Institute and Metropolitan Museum of Art. Ad- dress, 150 Montrose Ave., South Orange, N. J.


HALSEY, Richard T. Haines:


Broker; born Aug. 28, 1865, Elizabeth, N. J .; was graduated from Princeton College, 1886. Married. Member of firm of Halsey & Hudnut, New York Stock Exchange; Princeton, Camera and Rich- mond County Country Clubs and New York Historical Society. Address, 23 West 20th St., N. Y. City.


HALSEY, Stephen Alling:


Insurance broker; born Astoria, L. I., N. Y., May 3, 1868; son of John Jacob and Harriet Elizabeth Halsey; was grad- uated from Protestant Dutch Church School, 1884; enterea business of insur- ance brokerage in Sept., 1884; connected with Knickerbocker Insurance Co. from May. 1885, to Jan. 1, 1888, when he re- entered insurance brokerage at 64 Wall St., associated with John R. Townsend, till Jan., 1891; then removed to 119 Broadway, with Home Insurance Co .; Nov., 1902, severed connection with J. R. Townsend and commenced business under his own name. Director in New Hope Mining Co., Climax Zinc Mining Co., Boston-Duenweg Mining Co. Address, 56 Cedar St., N. Y. City.


HALSTEAD, Marshal:


Consul; born Cincinnati, O .; parents, Hon. Murat and Mary Banks Halstead ; educated in the schools of that city, Freehold Institute, Monmouth County, N. J., and Princeton University, gradu- ating from the latter institution in 1886; he immediately entered the newspaper business as correspondent; served as edi- tor, general business manager and finally as vice-president of the Cincinnati Com- I mercial Gazette Co .; appointed consul at


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Birmingham, England, Dec. 18, 1897. Ad- | England under Andrew Jackson and Van dress, Birmingham, England. Buren); was graduated from the College HALSTEAD, Murat: of Physicians and Surgeons, N. Y., 1870, when he received the first faculty and Harsen prize; successful competitor for the first prize of the American Medical Association, 1879; has for many years de- voted himself to the study of nervous and mental diseases; was professor of mental diseases at Cornell University Medical College; is one of the Consult- ing physicians to the Manhattan State Hospital; has made many contributions to medical science, especially to the knowledge of locomotor ataxia; is the author of a treatise on nervous diseases, and has written extensively upon his specialties and allied subjects in medical journals; he is a Fellow of the Royal So- ciety of Edinburgh; a member of the N. Y. Neurological Association, and various societies in this country and in Europe. Address, 44 East 29th St., N. Y. City.


Journalist; born Paddy's Run, Ohio, Sept. 2, 1829; son of Griffin Halstead; ed- ucated at Farmers' College, Ohio, where he was graduated, 1851; began his con- nection with the Cincinnati Commercial in 1853, first as local reporter, but soon as news editor. He purchased a part interest in the Commercial in 1854, and in 1867 gained complete control of ule paper; for a time he managed it as an independent sheet, but afterwards made it a Republican organ; in 1883 it became combined with the Gazette under a com- pany of which he was president. His criticisms of the conduct of the armies were so vigorous and just that they gained him the title of "field marshal;" married, 1857, Miss Mary Banks, of Cin- cinnati; present with the German army during the Franco-Prussian War, in which he, in company with Bismarck and King William was at the Battle of Gravelotte. His acquaintance with Prussian affairs led to his nomination by President Har- rison in 1889 to the important diplomatic post of minister to Berlin, but he was rejected by the Senate for his personal denunciation of the use of money in se- curing Senatorial seats. Has written in recent years: Our Country in War; The Story of Cuba; The Story of the Philip- pines: History of Our War With Spain; The Life of Admiral Dewey; The Life of Mckinley; Life of President Roose- velt, and other histories and works. Ad- dress, Press Club, N. Y. City.


HAMBLEN, Herbert E .:


Author and engineer; born Ossipee, N. H., Dec. 24, 1849; son of Andrew H. Hamblen and Mary Susan (Small) Ham- blen; educated in the public schools of Lovell, Me .. and N. Y. City and Brook- lyn; went to sea in 1864, retiring in 1878. Author: On Many Seas; The General Manager's Story; Tom Benton's Luck; The Story of a Yankee Boy; The Yarn of a Bucko Mate; We Win; The Red Shirt; also of numerous magazine and newspaper stories and articles; at present in department of water supply, gas and electricity, N. Y. City. Address, Ferriss St., Woodhaven, L. I., N. Y.


HAMILTON, Allan McLane:


Physician; born Brooklyn, N. Y., Oct. 6, 1848; son of Philip (youngest son of Alexander Hamilton) and Rebecca Mc- Lane (eldest daughter of Louis McLane, secretary of the treasury and minister to


KAMILTON, Eraddin:


Clergyman, lawyer; born Stratford, On- tario. Nov. 20, 1862; graduate of Trinity University. Toronto, 1882; received de- grees of B. D. and D. D. from Trinity College, Cambridge; 1891, appointed public minister for N. Y. City, in department of charities and corrections; studied law. and passed law examination, Jan. 14, 1900; now practicing law in New York and Rhode Island. Address, 61 East 55th St., N. Y. City and Hawthorne Villa, Newport, R. I.


HAMLITON, Charles Elbert:


Clergyman; born Delphi, N. Y., July 26, 1865; was graduated from Cazenovia Seminary, 1882; Syracuse University, 1886, and Drew Theological Seminary, Madison, N. J., 1889. He received the degree of A. M. in 1889 and of D. D. in 1901; mar- ried Carrie May Cuykendall, of Oswas- co. N. Y., on July 14, 1886; he was ad- mitted to the ministry in the Methodist Episcopal Church in 1882. He has filled several important pastorates, having been pastor of the First Methodist Episcopal Church of Rochester since 1896. A fine marble church has been built during his pastorate, costing $130,000. He is a mem- ber of the Phi Beta Kappa and Delta Kappa Epsilon Fraternities. Address, 65 North Fitzhugh St., Rochester, N. Y. HAMILTON, Edward J., D. D .:


Clergyman; professor successively in Hanover College, Princeton University, Hamilton College, and the State Univer- sity of Washington. Has written the following works: A New Analysis in Fundamental Morals, (1870); The Human


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Mind, (1883); The Modalist, a Logic, (1890); The Perceptionalist, or Mental Science, (1899); The Moral Law, or The Theory and Practice of Duty, (1904). He adheres to the Aristotelian or common- sense philosophy, but has introduced im- portant changes into mental science, logic and ethics; is a member of the Presbytery of New York. Address, care of Funk & Wagnalls Co., 30 Lafayette Place, N. Y. City.


HAMILTON, Grant E .:


Artist: born Youngstown, O., Aug. 16, 1862; was graduated from Yale, 1880; married, 1882, Lydia E. Hilker, Pittsburg, Pa. Art editor of Judge and Leslie's Weekly. Member Ohio Society. Resi- dence, 48th St., near 16th Ave., Bath Beach, L. I .; studio, 110 5th Ave., N. Y. City.


HAMILTON, William Pierson:


Banker; great-grandson of Alexander Hamilton ; born N. Y. City, Feb. 5th, 1868 ; educated Yale University ; married Juliet Morgan, daughter of J. Pierpont Morgan ; member of the firms of J. P. Morgan & Co., New York; Drexel & Co., Philadel- phia, Pa .; Morgan, Harjes & Co., Paris; special U. S. Trustee North British & Mercantile Insurance Co. of London and Edinborough; director North British & Mercantile Insurance Co. of New York; vice-president and director : Racquette Lake Ry. Co., Racquette Lake Transpor- tation Co., Fulton Chain Ry. Co., Fulton Navigation Co .; director Hudson Trust Co .; treasurer Parochial Fund Protestant Episcopal Church, Diocese of New York; formerly treasurer and director Manhattan Trust Co .; member of the Metropolitan, Tuxedo, Saint Anthony, Racquette, New York Yacht, Automobile and Church Clubs, Saint Nicholas Society, Sons of the Revolution, Delta Psi Fraternity. Of- fice, 23 Wall St., N. Y. City.


HAMLIN, Alfred Dwight Foster:


Architect; born Constantinople, Tur- key, Sept. 5, 1855; son of late Cyrus Ham- lin, D.D., LL.D., missionary and founder of Robert College, and of H. Martha (Lovell); educated at Robert College, Constantinople; Amherst College (B. A., 1875, M. A., 1885); Massachusetts Insti- tute of Technology ; Ecole des Beaux-Arts, Paris, 1878-81; architect and since 1904 professor of the history of architecture in school of architecture of Columbia Uni- versity, where he was instructor, 1887-89 ; assistant professor, 1889-90 ; adjunct pro- fessor, 1890 to 1904; acting head of the School of Architecture, 1903; executive


head of same, 1904, to date. Author: A History of Architecture; in "College Series of Text Books of the History of Art"; Longmans & Green, New York, 1896; in collaboration with others; European and Japanese Gardens, H. T. Coates & Co., Philadelphia, 1902; contributor to many encyclopædias and periodicals. Member of Century Association, of Architectural League of New York, of Board of Direc- tors of Municipal Art Society ; correspond- ing member of American Institute of Architects. Address, 105 Morningside Ave., N. Y.


HAMM, Margherita Arlina:


Author and traveller; born St. Stephen, Canada, 1871; educated Carlton Convent, N. B., Emerson College, Boston; Law Class, N. Y. University, Victoria College, Hong-Kong. Married John R. McMahon. Foreign correspondence Mexico, Hawaii, Egypt, Europe, etc. War correspondent, N Y. Sun. Hong Kong Telegraph, Chica- go Inter-Ocean, Chinese-Japanese War, 1894; Spanish-American War, 1898, for Leslie's Syndicate. Volunteer nurse in


both wars. Contributor to The Century Magazine, Review of Reviews, The In- dependent, N. Y. Evening Post. Publi- cations: Korean Journeys; Manila and the Philippines, America's New Possessions, Dewey, the Defender; Porto Rico; Emi- nent Actors in Their Homes; Builders of the Republic; Ghetto Silhouettes, Famous Families of New York, (Putnam); Christ- mas Poems; Songs of Maine. Received medal from President Palma of Cuba for aiding insurgents. Presented at various foriegn courts. Delegate to World's Council of Women, London, 1895. Com- missoner for the World's Fair at Atlanta, same year, to England and France. Clubs : Geographical Society, London ;


honorary vice-president Writers Club, London; American Institute of Civics; Medico-Legal Society. Address, care of the Independent, N. Y. City.


HAMMERSTEIN, Oscar:


Theatrical manager and inventor. Mr. Hammerstein has the distinction of hav- ing built more theatres, all of them of the first-class, than any other man in the world. Address, Hammerstein's Theatre, N. Y. City.


HAMMOND, Clarence W .:


Cashier and vice-president of the Peo- ple's Bank, of Buffalo, N. Y .; born East Jeffrey, N. H., June 3, 1848; youth and early manhood was passed in Michigan. where he received a sound, practical edu - cation in the public schools of Saginaw


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WHO'S WHO IN NEW YORK.


and in the well known Academy of Ypsil- anti, after which excellent preparation he immediately began the active business career in which he has since continued. His Michigan business experiences com- prised those of a banker's clerk, manager in a mercantile establishment, and as a manufacturer of lumber and salt, with occasional newspaper work. In 1879, rec- ognizing the growing importance and great possibilities of Buffalo as a busi- ness centre, he established there, in ag- sociation with Wellington R. Burt, a very extensive and lucrative lumber and plan- ing-mill business; he then became an active member of the Buffalo Lumber Ex- change. He retired from the lumber business in 1889, and inaugurated the Peo- ple's Bank of Buffalo, of which enter- prise he is cashier and second vice-pres- ident; he was formerly treasurer of the Buffalo Board of Trade and Merchants' Exchange, and also of the Buffalo Press Club; member of several leading social clubs and Masonic bodies, and of the New York Transportation Club; as a stock- holder, he is interested in numerous im- portant industrial enterprises; married Adele E. Sirret, June 2, 1881, in Buffalo. Address, 199 Bryant St., Buffalo, N. Y.


HAMMOND, John Hays:


Mining engineer; born San Francisco, Cal., March 31, 1855; educated at the Hop- kins Grammar School, New Haven, Conn .; entered Yale University and took the degree of bachelor of philosophy in the Sheffield Scientific School in 1876; subsequently the honorary degree of M. A. was conferred on him by Yale Univer- sity. After leaving Yale, studied for three years in the Royal School of Mines, Frei- berg, Saxony; on his return to America, ir. 1880, was appointed special expert on the U. S. Geological Survey and Mineral C'ensus, to examine the gold fields of California; 1892, went to Mexico and superintended large silver mines at Sen- ora, afterwards returning to California, where he was consulting engineer of mincs in Grass Valley; was also made consulting engineer to the Union Iron Works, of San Francisco, and the Central Pacific and Southern Pacific R. R. In 1893 he went to South Africa as con- sulting engineer to the mines owned by Barnato Brothers, of London; in 1894 made an expedition in company with Cecil Rhodes and Dr. Jameson into the country now known as Rhodesia, and wrote on the mineral resources of that country for the British South Africa (chartered) Com-


[pany; the result of this visit was very encouraging, and had largely to do with increasing the mineral development of that country; during that trip he ex- amined and reported upon what he thought were the mines of King Solomon, and recent archæological investigations lead to the belief that he was correct in his opinion as to the site of the mines of King Solomon; he was one of the four leaders in the reform movement in the Transvaal in 1895-96; this movement cul- minated disastrously in the Jameson Raid, with which Mr. Hammond was at no time in sympathy; result of this raid was the arrest of all of the "reformers," and the sentence of death of Mr. Hammond and the three other leaders; sentence was afterwards commuted to fifteen years im- prisonment, but upon paying $125,000 he was subsequently released. He then went to London, and became connected with numerous large mining enterprises; soon after he returned to America representing several big English syndicates, and trav- eled extensively through the West and Mexico in connection with his business; he is a professor of mining at Sheffield Scientific School of Yale University, where he delivers several lectures each year, and also finds time to lecture at Columbia, Harvard, Johns Hopkins, and other large universities; also before some of the large scientific societies of this country. In 1891 he was elected a Fellow of the Am- erican Association for the Advancement of Science; in March, 1893, he became con- nected with the Guggenheim Exploration Co. as general manager and consulting engineer, taking entire supervision of the vast interests of that company, although he still retained his connection wth sev- eral of the largest mining companies in this country. In 1881 was married to Natalie, daughter of Judge J. W. M. Har- ris, of Mississippi, and has four sons- Harris, John Hays, Jr., Richard Pindle and Nathaniel; has offices in London, at 43 Threadneedle Street; is a member of the University Clubs of New York, Denver, Salt Lake and San Francisco; the Century Club of New York, the Denver Club at Denver, the El Paso Club at Salt Lake, and several societies; is also a Mason. Address, 71 Broadway, N. Y. City.


HAMMOND, James Bartlett:


Typewriter inventor; born South Bos- ton, April 23, 1839 ; graduated from Uni- versity of Vermont, 1861; newspaper cor- respondent during the Civil War (N. Y. Tribune) ; graduated from Union Theol-


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ogical Seminary, 1865; studied philosophy and science at University of Halle, Ger- many ; collaborator on translation of


Lange's Commentary on the Psalms (Charles Scribner's Sons, 1872) ; devoted many years to mechanical experiments ; patented, 1880, a typewriting machine made on scientific principles ; introduced Ideal keyboard and true alignment in Hammond typewriter; put machine on market, 1884; recent patents cover the use of shuttles carrying upward of 400 charac- ters, including Chinese, also Braille for the blind; won highest honors in compe- titions ; member of The N. Y. Academy of Sciences, American Academy of Political and Social Science, American Museum of Natural History, Metropolitan Museum of Art; N. Y. Zoological Society, N. Y. Botan- ical Garden, N. Y., Atlantic and Biscayne Bay Yacht Clubs. Address, 551 E. 69th St., N. Y. City.


HAMMOND, John Henry:


Lawyer; born Louisville, Ky., Oct. 3, 1871; son late Gen. John Henry and Sophia Vernon (Wolfe) Hammond; grad- uated from Phillips Exeter Academy 1889; Sheffield Scientific, Yale, Ph. B., 1892; Columbia Law School, LL. B., 1895; admitted to Bar, 1895; married, 1899, Emily v. Sloane ; Deputy Attorney General, N. Y., in charge of election cases. Clubs: Knickerbocker, University, Yale, St. Anthony, Republican, Associa- tion Bar City of New York; member Am- erican Academy Political and Social Sci- ence, etc. Author: Hammond on Taxa- tion of Business Corporations in New York State. Residence, 14 E. 72d St .; office, 30 Broad St., N. Y. City.


HAMMOND, William A .:


Professor of ancient and mediæval philo- sophy and æsthetics, Cornell; born New Athens, O., May 20, 1861; son of Archi- bald and Agnes (Oglevie) Hammond; was graduated (A. B.) Harvard, 1885; resi- dent lecturer on the classical literatures in Kings College, Windsor, Nova Scotia, 1885-88; studied in Leipzig, Berlin, Paris, and Athens; Ph. D. from Leipzig, 1891; instructor, 1891-92; assistant professor, 1892-93, of ancient and mediæval philo- sophy; since 1903 assistant professor of ancient and mediæval philosophy and æsthetics, in Cornell; secretary of the University Faculty. Member of American Philological Association, American Psy- chological Association, American Philo- sophical Association (member of execu- tive council). Author: The Characters of Theophrastus (jointly with C. E. Bennett),


Longmans, Green & Co., 1902; Aristotle's Psychology, the Macmillan Co.,


1902; The Notion of Virtue in the Dialogues of Plato (in Harvard Classical Studies vol. iii, 1892); philosophical articles and re- views in various periodicals; co-editor of Cornell Studies in Philosophy; member of Town and Gown Club, Ithaca. Address, 29 East Ave., Ithaca, N. Y.


HANAFORD, Phebe Anne:


Universalist minister; born Nantucket, Mass., May 6, 1829; daughter Capt. Geo. W. and Phebe Anne ( Barnard) Coffin ; married, 1849, Joseph H. Hanaford; or- dained 1868, the first woman minister ordained in New England; held pastorates at Hingham and Waltham, Mass., New Haven, Conn., and Jersey City; member and officer many literary and temperance societies. Author: Life of Abraham Lin- coln; Our Martyred President, (poem) ; Life of George Peabody; Lucretia, the Quakeress; Leonette, or Truth Sought and Found; The Best of Books and its His- tory; Frank Nelson, the Runaway Boy; The Soldier's Daughter; Field, Gunboat and Hospital; Women of the Century; The Captive Boy of Tierra del Fuego; Life of Dickens; Heart of Siasconset; From Shore to Shore, and Other Poems; etc. Address, 201 W. 88th St., N. Y. City. HANCHETT, George Tilden:


Electrical Engineer; born Hyde Park, Mass., Sept. 4, 1871; educated at High School; graduated from Massachusetts Institute of Technology, S. B., in elec- trical engineering, 1893 ; married Dor- othy A. Lewis; had charge elec-


trical work for Collyer Machine Co., Pawtucket, R. I .; was then on the edi- torial staff of the Electrical Railway Ga- zette; afterward on Electrical World and Engineer; inventor electrical devices; specialist in improved machine design; member American Institute Electrical Engineers. Author: Modern Electric Rail- way Motors. Address, 116 Nassau St., N. Y. City.


HANCHETT, Henry G .:


Musician (pianist) Author; born Syra- cuse, N. Y., Aug. 29, 1853 ; son of M. Wal- do and Marthia A. (Huntington) Hanch- ett; of New England lineage running back eight generations to about 1630 through the Hanchett, Granger and Huntington lines; is or has been a member of Sons of the Revolution, American Historical Association, Oneida County Historical So- ciety, Music Teachers' National Associa- tion, N. Y. State Music Teachers' Asso- ciation, Manuscript Society, American


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WHO'S WHO IN NEW YORK.


Guild of Organists, N Y. State and Coun- [ Island (secretary), American Association ty Homeopathic Medical Societies, Quill, for the Advancement of Science, Brooklyn Pathological Society, Brooklyn Medical Library Association, Brooklyn Ophthalmo- logical Society (a founder), Alumni Asso- ciation New York Hospital, Brooklyn Neurological Society; also o Crescent Athletic Club (life member), Omega Club of College of Physicians and Surgeons. Articles written and published: Head- aches Due to Eye Strain; Trachoma; Factors in the Ordinary Treatment of Eye Diseases; Reflex Indigestion; Glaucoma, and Three Cases of Eye Injury. Address, 43 Cambridge Place, Brooklyn, N. Y. Clef, and Twilight Clubs; graduate of the N. Y. Homeopathic Medical College, and was a Fellow of the N. Y. Academy of Anthropology; pupil in music of Ernst Held, A. J. Goodrich, Dr. Theodore Kul- lak, Mr. A. K. and Mrs. A. M. Virgil and William H. Sherwood ; director of music or of the piano departments of Martha Washington College, Va., Beethoven Con- servatory, St. Louis, Mo .; St. John's Church, Elizabeth, N. J .; Central Con- gregational Church, Brooklyn, N. Y., and of the Marble Collegiate, South, and As- cension churches of N. Y. City; Professor HANCOCK, Theodore E .: of Music at the Metropolitan College of Music, and at Adelphi College, Brooklyn, N. Y. Lecturer on music to the Brook- lyn Institute, and to the N. Y. City Board of Education. Conductor of the Paterson Musical Union (N. J.), Clifton Choral So- ciety (N. Y.) and of the music of the Mont- eagle (Tenn.), Chautauqua Assembly, and of the Florida Chautauqua, De Funiak Springs, Fla. As concert pianist has toured the eastern portions of the U. S. repeatedly, appearing at Columbia, Cor- HAND, Augustus Noble: nell, Pennsylvania, De Pauw, Dennison and other universities, at Vassar and many other colleges as pianist and musi- cal lecturer. Author: Modern Domestic Medicine; Sexual Health, The Prophylac- tic and Therapeutic Resources of Man- kind, An Inquiry in Prophylaxis, Teach- ing as a Science, The Art of the Musician, HAND, Billings Learned : and numerous contributions to periodicals. Married (first) Ophelia, daughter of Rev. Thomas G. Murphey, of Dover, Del., and (second) Grace, daughter of Samuel Tal- mage Mather, of New York. Residence, 40 WV. 85th St., N. Y. City.




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