USA > New York > Who's who in New York (city and state) 1904 > Part 78
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Lawyer; born N. Y. City; in 1859 mar- ried Sarah Christina Hogan, daughter of Doctor Robert Hogan, of N. Y. City, and granddaughter of Dr. Robert Grant of St. Simon's Island, Ga .; studied law in the office of Judges Barbour and Cowles, and at Law School of Columbia College, under Professor Dwight; admitted to Bar in 1860; was member and secretary of the first "Committee of Seventy" organized in Fall of 1871 on the call of the leading citizens of N. Y., at Cooper Institute, without distinction of party, in mass meeting to take measures to rescue the city from the control of the "Tweed Ring." On the organization of "The Com- mittee of Seventy" was made secretary, and served in that capacity until the overthrow of the "Tweed Ring" by the election of the Hon. William F. Have- meyer as Mayor. Appointed by Mayor Havemeyer one of the commissioners to reorganize the Fire Department of the City of N. Y. under the charter of 1873; served as commissioner of Fire Depart- ment from May, 1873, to May, 1877; one of the earliest members of the Bar Asso- ciation (1869). Address, 76 William St., N. Y. City.
HAVARD, Valery:
Colonel Medical Department, U. S. Army ; born Compiegne, France, Feg. 18, 1846; was graduated from Institute of Beau- vais, France, 1865; Manhattan College,
University, 1870 ; married, 1885, Agnes J. Hewitt of Bridgeport, Conn .; Surgeon in medical department, U. S. A .. , since 1874; Assistant Surgeon Nov. 10, 1874; Captain, Assistant Surgeon, Nov. 10, 1879 ; Major, Surgeon, Feb. 27, 1891; Lieutenant Colonel, Oct. 24, 1901; Colonel, Apr. 26, 1904; Chief Surgeon Fifth Corps under Gen. Shafter in Santiago de Cuba, 1898, and of Department of Cuba under Gen. Wood, 1900-01. Address, U. S. Legation, St. Petersburg, Russia.
HAVEMEYER, Henry Osborne:
Sugar refiner; born N. Y., 1847; was edu- cated in public and private schools; con- nected with Havemeyer and Elder, sugar refiners, first as member of the firm, then manager; 1891, president of the American Sugar Refining Co .; president and director of the American Coffee Co., director in Brooklyn Cooperage Co., Central Realty Bond and Trust Co., Colonial Safe De- posit Co., Williamsburgh Trust Co., and many other large corporations. Address, 117 Wall St., N. Y. City.
HAVEMEYER, John Craig:
Merchant and sugar refiner; born N. Y. City 1833; educated at private schools and was prepared for college at the Columbia College Grammar School, but, owing to failing eyesight, was unable to complete the college course. In 1854, he assumed the responsibility of the office work at the sugar refinery of Havemeyer & Moller; in 1856 established sugar refinery in Brook- lyn and commenced business for himself, but later sold out his interest and became connected with Havemeyer & Moller again; in 1871 engaged in the sugar refin- ing business in Greenpoint, L. I .; contin- ued till 1880, when failing health obliged him to retire. In 1872 married Alice Alide Francis. Mr. Havemeyer is a writer and speaker on political, moral and reli- gious topics; wrote monographs on: The Relation of the United States to Armenia, Why I Vote for Hancock; Study of Labor Unions; Patriotism; In Time of Peace Prepare for War; The Needs of the Church from a Layman's Standpoint; What is Love of Country? etc. Address, Yonkers, N. Y.
HAVEMEYER, Theodore Augustus:
Sugar refiner; born N. Y. City; educated at Columbia College; member of Delta Psi Fraternity, Metropolitan, St. Anthony's, Westchester County Country, Meadow Brook, and Racquet and Tennis Clubs. Residence, 21 W. 39th St .; office, 117 Wall St., N. Y. City.
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HAVEMEYER, William F .:
Director Union Ferry Co., Queens Cour- ty Safe Deposit Co., Manhanset Improve- ment Co., Nat. Bank of North America, and N. Y. Mortgage and Security Co .; member Union League, Metropolitan, Century, Down Town, Grolier and Nation- al Arts Clubs. Office, 32 Nassau St .; residence, 10 E. 57th St., N. Y. City. HAVEN, George A .:
Lawyer; born Pitcher, N. Y., Oct. 1, 1843; served as a member of Company A, Fifty-second Illinois Volunteers from Aug. 20, 1861, to June 7, 1865; was captured near Iuka, Miss., Nov., 1863; in prison at Belle Isle, Andersonville, Charleston and Florence, until March, 1865, when he was paroled; was graduated from Cazenovia Seminary in 1870, and from the Law De- partment of Union University in 1873, since which time has practiced law in Chenango County, N. Y .; was District At- torney of the County from Jan. 1, 1885, to Jan. 1, 1888; is now located at Afton County, and is president of the Chenango County Veterans Association. Address, Afton, N. Y.
HAVEN, George Griswold:
Banker; president and director Metro- politan Opera and Real Estate Co., and Worcester, Nashua & Rochester R. R. Co; was graduated from Columbia University ; officer and director in many corporations including, Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Ry. Co., Audit Co. of N. Y. Bank of Am- erica, Bank of New Amsterdam; trustee Mutual Life Insurance Co., N. Y .; vice- president National Bank of Commerce. Residence, 24 E. 39th St. ; office, 32 Nassau St., N. Y. City.
HAVEN, George Griswold, Jr .:
Banker; was graduated from Yale Col- lege, 1887; member of N. Y. Stock Ex- change firm of Strong, Sturgis & Co .; director, Charleston and Ohio River R. R. Co., Christopher and Tenth Sts. R. R. Co., and U. S. Mortgage and Trust Co .; mem- ber Metropolitan, University, Knicker- bocker, University Athletic and Racquet and Tennis, Ardsley, Casino, Yale Alumni and Downtown Associations. Residence, 6 E. 53d St .; office, 30 Broad St., N. Y. City.
HAVILAND, Charles T .:
Lawyer; born Waterville, Me., Aug. 24, 1850; was graduated from Union College and Albany Law School; in 1882 com- menced practice of law in N. Y. City, where he has since continued, giving his principal attention to corporation law; member of University Club and Bar As- sociation. Author: Corporations and the
Liabilities of Officers and Stockholders and annotated editions of the N. Y. cor- poration laws for several years; also con- tributor to magazines and reviews on le- gal, economical and philosophical subjects; his summer home is at Westlake Farm, Chapinville, Conn .; office, 32 Nassau St., N. Y. City.
HAWES, Gilbert Ray :
Lawyer and author; born Dec. 8, 1854, Brooklyn, N. Y .; was graduated from Am- herst College, 1876, and Columbia Law School, 1878; married June 1, 1903, to Gertrude Newman Dunlop of Kansas City, Mo .; senior member of firm of Hawes & Judge; sometime lecturer for Board of Education, N. Y. City, also for Dwight Alumni Association, N. Y. Law School. Author of various articles and pamphlets on biographical, genealogical and legal subjects ; contributes to various legal peri- odicals; member of the Delta Kappa Ep- silon Fraternity, American and N. Y. State Bar Associations, N. Y. Historical, Geneal- ogical and Biographical Societies, Sons of the Revolution, Society of Founders and Patriots of America, Society of Colonial Wars, Patria Club, Amherst Club, Society of Medical Jurisprudence, Medico-Legal Society, Columbia Yacht Club, Alumni As- sociation of the Law School of Columbia University, Republican Club of the Nine- teenth Assembly District and West End Asociations ; member of the Consistory of Bloomingdale Reformed Church. Has been counsel in a number of important liti- gations. Residence, 596 West End Ave .; office, 120 Broadway, N. Y. City ..
HAWES, James William:
Lawyer; born July 9, 1844; Chatham, Mass., son of James Hawes and Susanna Taylor Hawes; was graduated from Har- vard College, 1866, and attended Harvard Law School; he was admitted to the Bar, 1868; alderman, 1881-82; member of Phi Beta Kappa; Republican and Harvard Clubs and City Bar Association. Resi- dence, 25 Madison Ave .; office, 35 Nassau St., N. Y. City.
HAWK, William Samuel:
Hotel proprietor; born at Canton, Ohio, Feb. 11, 1859; educated in N. Y. by an uncle, who adopted him, at a Church school in Pelham, and S. Williamstown, Mass., the Anthon School and Charlier Institute, N. Y .; for a time was in dry goods, but in 1879, after a long trip abroad with his uncle, became proprietor of the Windsor Hotel. He is a vestryman in the Church of Zion and St. Timothy, and a member of the Union League. In 1882 he
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WHO'S WHO IN NEW YORK.
married Miss Davis. Address, 19 E. 42d | president of the N. Y. County Committee, St., N. Y. City. and in 1900 one of the Republican leaders HAWKES, McDougall: of N. Y. County; as counsel he has repre- Lawyer; born N. Y. City, 1862, and comes from an old N. Y. family, identified with public affairs from Colonial times; his great-great-grandfather, Alexander McDougall (after whom McDougall St. was named), commanded the vessels of war Barrington and Tiger in the conflict of 1756 with the French; was Colonel of the First N. Y. Regiment in 1775. raised to the rank of Major-General in 1777, put in command of the H ghlands and West Point upon the discovery of Arnold's treachery; member of Congress 1780-81 and after termination of the war was State Senator and first President of the Bank of N. Y. and of the N. Y. Society of Cincinnati; his great-grandfather was the Judge Advocate-General of the Revo- lution, John Lawrance, who officiated at the trial of Major Andre, was subsequent- ly U. S. Senator and U. S. Judge for the District of N. Y .; his grandfather, George Wright Hawkes, came to N. Y. from Dud- ley, England, about 1798, and married in 1807, Ann, daughter of Judge Advocate- General Lawrance, whose wife was the only daughter of General McDougall; his father, W. Wright Hawkes, LL. D., was a brilliant public speaker, well known at the Bar and in public life, during the pe- riod of Governor Marcy's administration, and held for some time the Chair of Eng- lish Literature at Trinity College. His mother, Eliza Forbes Hawkes, was born in New Haven, Conn., and was a daugh- ter of William Jehiel Forbes, a well- known real estate owner and shipping merchant of New England. Mr. Hawkes attended the Trinity Church School, Philadelphia, the Hopkins Grammar School, New Haven, the French Uni- versity Lycées of Tours, and of St. Louis in Paris, where he prepared for the Ecole Polytechnique, Dr. Winneberger's School, at Marburg, Germany, and, returning to N. Y. in 1881, entered Columbia College ; was graduated from the School of Mines with the degree of Engineer, 1885; the School of Political Science, 1886, and the School of Law, of which Professor Dwight was then Dean, 1887, being admitted to the Bar in the same year from the office of the late Chief Justice of the Court of Common Pleas, Charles P. Daly; in the sound-money Presidential campaign of 1896 he took an energetic part, and, be- coming actively interested in Republican politics, was elected in 1899 first vice- sented important foreign investing inter- ests in American enterprises, many of which have been prominent factors in the development of Western Railroads and industries. As counsel he has also repre- sented security holders in several of the large railroad and other reorganizations. As an authority on admiralty law, as well as engineering and real estate matters and values concerning the water front and port of N. Y., he was selected by Mayor Low for the position of Commis- sioner of Docks; served in that capacity during the latter's term of office (1902- 1903); carried on the Chelsea improve- ment, the most important piece of water front work undertaken by the City, ex- tending from 23d St. to 12th St., North River, adding over three mues of availa- ble dockage space to the city's water front (quick prosecution of the work being made possible by chapter 611 of the Laws of 1902, which he had passed), established the Trunk Line Union Ferry Terminal Centre at W. 23d St .; built the large rec- reation pier at the foot of Market Slip, East River, and a large number of com- mercial piers, and devised the first recre- ation and promenade roof, which was planned for the Jersey Central R. R. bulk- head sheds at Cedar St., North River; pushed the municipalization of the water front in Manhattan and the construction of the river wall; completed the break- water at the foot of Battery Place; laid out extensive plans for the improvement of the water front in the other Boroughs and made application for the establish- ment of harbor lines in the Eastchester and other important creeks emptying into N. Y. Harbor, and modification of lines on the Hudson from 23d to 10th Sts. to permit the building of 1,000-foot piers; presented to the Sinking Fund Commis- sion the first plans for municipal ferries from Whitehall St., Manhattan, to 39th St., South Brooklyn, and to St. George, Stapleton and Port Richmond, S. I., and largely increased the water front revenue of N. Y. City (which exceeded $3,000,000 for the year 1902) without raising rates, through changed administrative methods. The Revised Greater N. Y. Charter which went into effect Jan. 1, 1902, abolished the old "Board of Docks," composed of three Commissioners, and substituted in its place a single Commissioner, to which position Mr. Hawkes was the first ap- pointee; he reorganized the inner work-
WHO'S WHO IN NEW YORK.
425 ings of the Department of Docks and Fer- ¡ ter of Nicholas Brown, of Providence, R. ries, dividing it into a Commissioner's I .; was a member of the N. Y. Legislature of 1872, and was the art commissioner for the U. S. at the Centennial Exhibition of France in 1889 ; since childhood has been a book collector of early English folks let- ters, and later especially of books printed before the year 1501, which illustrate the progress of wood engraving and printing during the second half of the fifteenth century. Of his writings there have been published; Titles of the First Books from the Earliest Presses; Better Than Men, The Assassination of North Carolinians for Serving in the Union Army, Our Po- litical Degradation, and a volume of es- says, articles for the Century War History, and also pamphlets on various subjects and magazine articles. Address, 21 W. 20th St., N. Y. City. Office, Department Secretary's Office, and three bureaus; first, Construction and Re- pairs; second, Superintendence; third, Ac- counts; effected marked economies in the cost of supplies, construction and ad- ministration. Mr. Hawkes is a member of the Union, Metropolitan, Union League, Republican, Westchester Country, Mid- day and Grolier Clubs, the Bar As- sociation and the Law Institute of the City of N. Y .; of the Society of Cincin- nati of the Society of Colonial Wars, the St Nicholas Society, the N. Y. Historical Society, the Maritime Association of the Port of N. Y., and the New York Cham- ber of Commerce, in which he is a member of the Committee on Harbor and Ship- ping. Address, 42 E. 26th St., N. Y. City. HAWKINS, Eugene Dexter:
Lawyer; born May 2, 1860, N. Y. City; prepared at Phillips Exeter Academy; was graduated from Harvard College 1881, and Columbia Law School, 1883; member of firm of Hawkins, Delafield & Sturgis ; director, New Central Coal Co., of Mary- land; member of University, Harvard, Union League and Riding Clubs, New Eng- land Society and City Bar Association. Residence, 51 E. 67th St .; office, 1 Nassau St., N. Y. City.
HAWKINS, John A .:
Democratic State Senator; born Meri- den, Conn., Oct. 27, 1864, but has been a resident of N. Y. City for thirty years; left school at the age of twelve and became an office boy in a law office, where he re- mained for two years, when he was in- dentured as an apprentice in the printing business, which occupation he has fol- lowed ever since; attended evening gram- mar schools and evening high schools of N. Y. City ; was nominated for State Sen- ator by the Democratic party in 1902, re- ceived 25,611 votes.
In 1903 was ap- pointed a member of the following Senate Committees: Canals and Trades and Man- ufactures; re-elected in 1904. Address, N. Y. City.
HAWKINS, Rush Christopher, A. M., LL. D .:
Brevet Brigadier-General U. S. Volun- teers, and officer of the Legion of Honor of France; born Pomfret, Vt., Sept. 14, 1831; educated in common schools; was in the Army in 1848 and again during the Rebellion. when he commanded the Ninth N. Y. Volunteers (Hawkins Zouaves) and a brigade and division of the Ninth Army Corps; in 1860, married Annmary, daugh-
HAWLEY, Charles B .:
Composer, organist, vocal teacher; born Brookfield, Conn .; began playing church organ in his native town at the age of twelve; attended the Military Academy at Cheshire, Conn., and there had charge of the boy choir; 1876, began study of music with Rivarde, Federlein and George James Webb, of N. Y .; studied organ and composition with Dudley Buck, Mosenthal, Dyas and Ruthenbur; at the age of 19 was engaged as solo basso of Calvary Episco- pal Church, and as assistant organst of St. Thomas's Church, under George Wil- liam Warren; and five years later as solo basso and director of music at the Broad- way Tabernacle Church, which position he still holds; for twenty-one years he has had charge of the music in the Chapel of St. James, Elberon, N. J., where Gen- erals Grant and Garfield, George W. Childs and other prominent men attended; was one of the original members of the Manuscript Society of N. Y. and its first vice-president; was also president of the American Composers Choral Club, and for many years a prominent member and as- sistant conductor of the Mendelssohn Glee Club; also a member of the Mendelssohn Quartet Club; is also instructor of voice- culture and composer of many songs, among which are An! 'tis a Dream, My Little Love, Because I Love You, Dear; The Sweetest Flower That Blows; A Rose Fable, I Wait for Thee, Mollie's Eyes, A Song of Life, Spring's Awakening. Ad- dress, 230 W. 99th St., N. Y. City.
HAWORTH, Joseph:
Actor; born Providence, R. I., April 7, 1858; educated in Cleveland, O .; supported Edwin Booth, Lawrence Barrett and John
-
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WHO'S WHO IN NEW YORK.
Mccullough in tragedies; has since taken Berlin and Oxford; Fellow of Columbia principal roles in drama in his own and University, 1890-92 ; assistant minister of other companies. Address, Players Club, ; St. Mark's Pro-Cathedral, Washington, D. N. Y. City.
HAWTHORNE, Hildegarde (Miss) :
Author; born N. Y .; daughter of Julian Hawthorne, and granddaughter of Nath- aniel Hawthorne. Author of A Country Interlude (Houghton Mifflin & Co.), Poems (Richard J. Badger), stories and poems in Scribner's, Century, Harper's and other leading magazines. Address, 476 War- burton Ave., Yonkers, N. Y.
HAWTHORNE, Julian:
Author; born Boston, June 22, 1846; studied at Harvard; Lawrence Scientific School, and Dresden; hydrographic engi- neer Department of Docks, N. Y., 1870- 72 ; since then devoted to authorship and journalism; was correspondent of N. Y. Journal in Cuba and elsewhere, and special commissioner of Cosmopolitan Magazine to India ; literary critic Philadelphia North American, 1901-03 ; special commissioner N. Y. American. Author Nathaniel Haw- thorne and His Wife, Garth, Dust, Idol- atry, Beatrix Randolph, Saxon Studies, Fortune's Fool, Sebastian Strome, Mrs. Gainborough's Diamonds, The Trial of Gideon, Prince Saroni's Wife, Love, or a Name, David Poindexter's Disappearance, A Dream and a Forgetting, Confessions and Criticisms, John Parmalee's Curse, Millicent and Rosalind, Sinfire, History of the United States from the Landing of Columbus to the Signing of the Peace Pro- tocol with Spain, Archibald Malmaison, A Fool of Nature, One of Those Coinci- dences, Hawthorne Reading, American Lit- erature, Constance, Noble Blood, Love is a Spirit, Golden Fleece, etc. Residence, Yonkers, N. Y .; Address, care N. Y. Amer- ican, N. Y. City.
HAY, George T .:
Shipping and commission merchant; born Brooklyn, N. Y., May 21, 1858; son of Charles H. and Rachel White Hay; at- tended public schools until July, 1872, when he entered the employ of J. F. Whit- ney & Co., shipping and commission mer- chants; since 1882, has been interested in the business; in 1896, he became the senior member of firm; member of Pro- duce and Maritime Exchanges. Address, 80 Winthrop St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
HAYES, Charles H .:
Clergyman; Professor General Theologi- cal Seminary. Born at Newark, N. J., 1868; received his education at Newark Academy, Columbia University, General Theological Seminary, and afterwards at
C., 1896-1900; Professor at Trinity Col- lege, Hartford, 1901-02. Democrat. Ad- dress, Chelsea Square, N. Y. City.
HAYES, Edward M .:
Brigadier-General U. S. Army; born N. Y., 1842; enlisted in the Army at Cleve- land, Ohio, Aug. 28, 1855, at the age of thirteen years as trumpeter; served at Jefferson Barracks, Mo., and Carlisle, Barracks, Pa., until 1856, when ordered to Texas and assigned to Troop B, Second Cavalry, commanded by E. Kirby Smith; saw service at Camp's Cooper and Colo- rado, Texas, and engaged in Indian cam- paign with Major Earl Van Dorn and Fitzhugh Lee; was discharged in 1860, and attended school until the outbreak of the Civil War, when he entered the mili- tary telegraph service, but was soon ap- pointed second lieutenant of the Tenth Ohio Cavalry; was promoted to first lieu- tenant. Captain, and Brevet Major, and was mustered out of service July 24, 1865. at Lexington, N. C .; was appointed second lieutenant, Fifth Cavalry, in Feb., 1866, and served with company and as Regi- mental Quarteramster until 1872; was aide de camp on the staff of General W. H. Emory, commanding Department of the Gulf at New Orleans, La .. until 1875; promoted to Captain and joined troop in field, serving in the Indian Territory, Kansas, Nebraska, Wyoming and the Yellowstone expedition of 1876, and in different sections of the West; promoted Major in 1893, and assigned to the Sev- enth Cavalry; served at Fort Clark, Texas; was detailed with the North Caro- lina State Guard until the breaking out of the Spanish War; volunteered and as- signed temporarily to the Fifth Cavalry; accompanied the regiment to Cuba in 1898; assigned with squadron to Seventh Army Corps, commanded by Major-Gen- eral Fitzhugh Lee; promoted Lieutenant- Colonel of the Fourth Cavalry, stationed in the Philippines, and assumed command of the regiment in 1899; served in the Philippines in command of regiment until 1901; promoted to Colonel of the Thir- teenth Cavalry (one of the new regi- ments) and returned to the U. S .; served at Fort Meade, S. Dak., organizing the regiment, and was temporarily in com- mand of the Department of Dakota; was promoted Brigadier-General in 1903 and retired in Feb., 1903, at special request made to the Secretary of War. Service
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embraced nearly all of the Indian cam- paigns in Texas between 1856 and 1860, and all the campaigns of the Western Army; the March to the Sea, and through the Carolinas, to General Johnston's sur- render at Greensboro, N. C .; also the In- dian campaigns in the West under Gen- eral Sherman, General E. A. Carr, Colonel W. P. Royal and General George Crook; the northern and southern campaign of Luzon in 1899, 1900 and 1901. Address. care Adjutant General of Arkansas, Little Rock, Ark.
HAYES, R. Somers:
President of Interlake Pulp and Paper Co .; director of Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway Co., Brooklyn Heights Rail- road Co., Brooklyn Rapid Transit Co., California Eastern Ry, Great Northern Paper Co., Guaranty Trust Co., Gulf, Col- orado & Santa Fe Ry., Long Island R. R. Co., Metropolitan West Side Elevated Ry. Co., Newburgh, Duchess & Connecticut R. R., Sonora Ry. and Santa Fe Pacific R. R. Co .; member of Metropolitan, Rid- ing, Down Town, City, Players, and N. Y. Yacht Clubs. Residence, 30 E. 51st St .; office, 32 Nassau St., N. Y. City.
HAYMAN, Alfred:
Manager Knickerbocker Theater and others; president Actors' Fund of Ameri- ca; member of Players and other clubs. Address, 1398 and 1340 Broadway, N. Y. City.
HAYNES, David Oliphant:
President and general manager D. O. Haynes & Co., publishers; born Detroit, Aug. 29, 1858; for ten years connected with large firm of manufacturing chem- ists; established the Pharmaceutical Era- Detroit, 1887; removed to N. Y., 1894; es- tablished the N. Y. Commercial as a daily business newspaper in 1898. Residence, 11 W. 94th St .; office, 8 Spruce St., N. Y. City.
HAYWARD, George North:
Lieutenant U. S Navy; born Connecti- cut, son of the late Commander George W. Hayward, U. S. Navy; appointed from N. Y .; Naval cadet, May 19, 1884; en- sign, July 1, 1890; lieutenant (junior grade) April 13, 1898; lieutenant, March 3, 1899; U. S. S. Boston, July 1, 1888, to Oct., 1889; Pensacola, Oct. 24, 1889, to
to Feb. 19, 1896; Philadelphia, May 26, 1896, to Sept. 15, 1898; Baltimore, Sept. 15, 1898, to March 2, 1899; Monadnock, March 2, 1899, to June 28, 1899; Yoko- hama Hospital, June, 1899, to Sept., 1899;
Cleveland Branch Hydrographic Office, Nov. 21, 1899, to Jan. 10, 1901; Essex, Jan. 14, 1901, to Dec. 5, 1903; Naval Gun Fac- tory, Jan. 18, 1904. Address, Navy Yard, Washington, D. C.
HAZEL, John Raymond:
Jurist; born Buffalo. N. Y .. Dec., 1860; admitted to Bar April 7, 1882; judge U. S. District Court. Western District, N. Y .. 1900; administered constitutional oath of office to President Roosevelt, Sept. 14. 1901; member Buffalo, Ellicott, N. Y. and Republican Clubs.
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