USA > Ohio > The biographical cyclopaedia and portrait gallery with an historical sketch of the state of Ohio. Volume III > Part 73
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830
BIOGRAPHICAL CYCLOPÆDIA AND PORTRAIT GALLERY.
ing presiding judge, and immediately entered upon the prac- tice of his profession, in partnership with Thomas W. Bartley, at Mansfield. He soon acquired a reputation as being a lawyer of more than ordinary ability, and in 1839 was elected Prosecuting Attorney for Richland County, and successfully discharged the duties of the office for four years. In the fall of 1843 he was elected to Congress on the Democratic ticket, in the district then composed of the counties of Richland, Marion, and Delaware. While serving as a member of this body, he became affiliated with the Free-soil party, and drew up the famous resolution introduced by David Wilmot, of Pennsylvania, and since known as the "Wilmot Proviso." The original draft of this resolution in Judge Brinkerhoff's handwriting is now in the Congressional Library in Wash- ington City. Several copies of this resolution were made and distributed among the Free-soil members of Congress, with the understanding that whoever among them should catch the speaker's eye, and get the floor, should introduce it. Wilmot was the fortunate man, and thereby his name was attached to the resolution, and it has gone into history as the "Wilmot Proviso," instead of the Brinkerhoff Proviso, as it should have been. At the close of his Congressional career he resumed the practice of the law at Mansfield, in which he successfully labored until he was elevated to the Supreme Bench, his first term commencing January 9th, 1856. In this highly honorable position he was retained for three suc- cessive terms, covering a period of fifteen years, and it is but justice to mention that a fourth term was offered him, but he declined a renomination. The Ohio State Reports, from volumes five to twenty, inclusive, contain many of his opinions, delivered during his term upon the Supreme Bench, and they are everywhere very highly regarded by the pro- fession. He was married October 4th, 1837, to Caroline Campbell, of Lodi, Seneca County, New York, who died at that place while on a visit, November 18th, 1839. His sec- ond wife was Marion Titus, of Detroit, Michigan, by whom he had four children, two sons, George and Roeliff, and two daughters, Malvina and Gertrude. Judge Brinkerhoff had a strong and fervent sense of justice, and was ever zealous in the discharge of his official duties, and his written opinions are characterized by a fluent and perspicuous style. He was a man of broad culture, of comprehensive views, and of remarkably quick perception. Upon his retirement from the Supreme Bench he returned to his home in Mans- field, where he remained up to the time of his death, which occurred July 19th, 1880.
FOULKE, LEWIS W., physician, was born at Car- lisle, Pennsylvania, in August, 1809. His father, George D. Foulke, a physician and surgeon, was a graduate of Dickin- son College, Carlisle, and of the Medical University, of Maryland, one of the leading institutions of its character in the United States. The subject of this sketch was reared with all the advantages superior social position could secure, and in 1825 was sent to Dickinson College, then very exten- sively patronized, and from which he graduated in 1829. In 1832, after the usual course of attendance upon the lectures of the Medical University of Maryland, he graduated as a doctor of medicine, just thirty years after his father had done so from the same college, and which had maintained its ex- cellence, its several chairs being in Dr. L. W. Foulke's time filled by Drs. Robley, Potter, Dunglinson, Elisha Geddings, Samuel Baker, and other no less learned and talented col-
leagues. Having commenced the practice of his profession at Churchtown, Lancaster county, Pennsylvania, immediately after receiving his diploma, he subsequently removed to Church Hill, Maryland, and from thence to his native town of Carlisle, where he remained until his removal to Ohio in 1836, when he located at Chillicothe, where his personal demeanor and professional skill soon won for him the es- teem of the community. He rapidly acquired an extensive practice that embraced many of the influential families of the town and surrounding country. He thus became in an eminent degree successful, while his reputation as a gentle- man of the old school, and in every department of life de- porting himself in the most honorable manner, soon won for him the respect and confidence of everybody. Ever atten- tive, patient and watchful in his practice, his presence in the sick chamber at once inspired hope in the patient ; while his self-reliance and assurance in his diagnosis, and orthodox treatment of his patients precluded dissatisfaction. In his consultations and intercourse with his brother practitioners he was ever careful to maintain a strict regard for the ethics of the profession. In 1837, Dr. Foulke married Miss Eliza- beth, daughter of John McCoy, of Chillicothe. The issue of this union was a daughter who grew to womanhood, and be- came the wife of Dr. G. S. Franklin, a gentleman of fine literary culture, genial manners and increasing influence, a graduate of Marietta College, and subsequently of the Col- lege of Physicians and Surgeons, of New York City. For several years, and until his resignation in 1869, Dr. Franklin was an assistant, and, when he resigned, a full surgeon in the United States navy. He then located in Chillicothe, as a practitioner. Having lately retired from the more active and laborious duties of his profession, Dr. Foulke has prominently identified himself with many of the most important public interests of the city. Its school system, organized by himself and others, owes much of its present excellence to his energy and watchfulness ; while to him in chief degree the Chilli- cothe cemetery owes its spaciousness and beauty of plan and position. He was president of its board of trustees from the organization of that body until 1879. From 1846 to 1858 he was president of the Board of Education, and in 1851, as one of the organizers of the Chillicothe gas-works, he was one of the original stockholders. He was also the first president of the Ross County National bank, and held the same posi- tion in the Ohio Insurance Company. In 1840, in acknowl- edgment of his professional status and literary attainments, he received from Dickinson College the degree of master of arts. During the war of the Rebellion he was ever loyal to the Federal government, and his influence always prepend- erated in favor of the Union cause.
STEELE, JAMES, was born in Rockbridge county, Vir- ginia, October 28th, 1778, and died at Dayton, August 22d, 1841. He migrated to Kentucky with his father's family, ar- riving in that State, then a wilderness, October 24th, 1788. He grew up amid the privations and adventures of pioneer life. When twenty-one years of age, loading a flat-boat with produce, he descended the Kentucky, Ohio and Mississippi rivers to New Orleans, and having disposed of his cargo re- turned on horseback to his home in Kentucky. In 1807 he came to Dayton, and engaged in merchandising in con- nection with Joseph Peirce, afterwards his brother-in-law. The remainder of his life was spent in Dayton, where he was always among the foremost in the promotion of religious,
831
BIOGRAPHICAL CYCLOPÆDIA AND PORTRAIT GALLERY.
educational and business enterprises. In 1812 he married Phoebe Peirce. It is worthy of mention that Isaac Peirce, the father of his wife, was a member of the Ohio Company, and emigrated to Ohio with the first white settlers, arriving at Marietta with his family in 1788, the same year in which the Steele family came to Kentucky. An incident of the war of 1812 may serve to illustrate the patriotism and decision of character of James Steele. When the news of Hull's surren- der reached Dayton, it was reported that the Indians who were assembled in council near Piqua, were excited by the success of the British and were dangerous. The news was brought by a messenger on Saturday, and hand-bills were issued calling on every able-bodied man to volunteer and march to the frontier. On Sunday morning at seven o'clock, a company of seventy men was organized and completely equipped, and under the command of Captain Steele, marched for Piqua. The alarm proved to be groundless, and in a few days most of the men returned home. Captain Steele by the order of General Harrison, remained longer in the service, and, proceeding to St. Mary's, superintended the erection of block-houses for the defense of that place. Mr. Steele as one of the early settlers of Dayton, filled various important public stations. He was fourteen years an asso- ciate judge of the county, a senator four years in the State legislature, and in 1824 one of the electors for President and Vice-President of the United States, for the State of Ohio. He was president of the Dayton bank from the time of its first organization, up to the end of his life. In all the re- lations of life, public and private, his character was irre- proachable. On the bench he was distinguished for good sense, integrity and impartiality. As a legislator in a period of great public excitement, though firm and consistent in his political opinions, he won the respect and esteem of his op- ponents by his candor and moderation. His private life was not more marked by strict and unyielding integrity, than by the kindness and benignity of his nature to all his fellow- creatures. His death was sudden and unlooked for, but he was an humble and devoted Christian, and his life had been a preparation for that event. He left two sons, Robert W., and Joseph P. Steele, both of whom are living.
HASSAUREK, FREDERICK, journalist, was born in Vienna, Austria, October 8th, 1832. The revolution of 1848 found him a boy at college, where he participated, as a member of the Academic Legion, in the defense of his native city against the Imperial troops. In 1849 he came to the United States, and to Cincinnati, where he found em- ployment as sub-editor and translator on the Ohio Staats Zeitung, a German daily newspaper. During the following year he commenced the publication of Der Hochwachter, a weekly journal, which he sold after several years of pros- perous management. Having studied law, he was admitted to the bar in 1857, and soon acquired a lucrative practice. Taking a natural interest in the politics of the day, he be- came one of the organizers of the Republican party in Ohio, and one of its most prominent speakers, both in German and English. In 1861 President Lincoln appointed him Minister Resident to the South American Republic of Ecua- dor, with which he concluded a treaty securing the estab- lishment of a mixed commission for the settlement of claims. Under this treaty he acted as Commissioner on the part of the United States, and some of his decisions have frequently been cited before similar commissions, and also by the Con-
gressional Committees on Foreign Affairs. In 1865 he re- signed the commission to Ecuador, and during the same year was connected as partner with the Daily Volksblatt, the leading German newspaper of Cincinnati. This journal is now the property of a company, of which he is the presi- dent. The result of his South American observations and re- searches he published in a book, entitled "Four Years Among Spanish-Americans." He is also the author of a romance, and numerous essays on various subjects. Mr. Hassaurek's political career began in 1855, when he was elected to the City Council from the Tenth Ward, as an independent can- didate against both his Democratic and Know-nothing com- petitors. He was one of the original few who organized the Republican party in Hamilton County, which, before that time, was considered the "Gibraltar of Democracy." To his power as a popular speaker, and to his indefatigable efforts, must chiefly be ascribed that overwhelming revolu- tion of sentiment in the German wards, which changed the heavy Democratic majorities "over the Rhine" into much larger majorities for his party. He was a delegate to the National Republican Conventions at Chicago in 1860 and 1868, and headed as a Senatorial elector the Lincoln elec- toral ticket in 1860. Mr. Hassaurek speaks four languages, and is a fluent and trenchant writer not only in German, but also in English and Spanish. He is concerned in all movements of importance to the city and State, and ever manifests in his labors a large public spirit. In February, 1869, he married Mrs. Eliza Atherton, daughter of Andrew Lamb, Esq., of Avondale.
MEHARRY, REV. ALEXANDER, D. D., was born in Adams county, Ohio, October 17th, 1813, and died at Eaton, Ohio, November 10th, 1878, in the sixty-fifth year of his age, and thirty-seventh of his ministry. His father, Alexander Meharry, was born in Ireland, August 5th, 1763, married Jane Francis, May 7th, 1794, and soon afterward came to America; tarried four years in Pennsylvania, and in 1798 settled in Adams county, Ohio. He possessed remark- able energy and industry, and was a zealous Methodist. He was instantly killed by the fall of a tree while returning from a camp meeting, June 21st, 1813, having, only two hours previously, partaken of the sacrament, and, expressing himself as never so happy before, had remarked, quite prophetically as it proved, "I think I shall not live long." Bereft of her husband, and left alone at that early day in a new and un- settled country, with a family of seven sons and one daugh- ter to care for, it is not a matter for surprise that Mrs. Meharry felt that hers was a burden heavier by far than usually falls to the lot of widowed mothers. But she was a woman of remarkable courage and great faith in God, and was a strong believer in the efficacy of prayer, as the follow- ing incident will attest. Some forty rods from her cabin a grapevine had woven itself into a beautiful bower-nature's own arbor. To this sequestered spot she would frequently repair for private devotion, and on one occasion was specially burdened in soul as to how she should rear her boys properly, when all at once, in answer to her earnest prayer, she seemed to hear a "still small voice " saying to her : "Do your duty, and I will take care of the boys." She rose from her knees and returned to the house with a light heart. She obeyed the voice, and was privileged to see all her children well settled in life. Her seventh son, our subject, joined the Methodist church at fourteen. He was reared on a farm with
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832
BIOGRAPHICAL CYCLOPEDIA AND PORTRAIT GALLERY.
only pioneer school privileges. The first eight years of his majority were employed as a store clerk in Ripley, Ohio, where he made such a reputation for integrity that he ob- tained the loan of $1,500 on no other security than his indi- vidual note. In September, 1841, he joined the Ohio confer- ence as an itinerant preacher, and subsequently rode the circuits of Blenden, Bainbridge, Dunbarton, Deer Creek, and Frankfort, in Ohio, and Maysville in Kentucky. In Septem- ber, 1848, he became the first Methodist city missionary in Cincinnati, and stood heroically at his post during the ravages of cholera in 1849-50. The mortality by this scourge reached as high as one hundred and thirty-seven deaths in one day, and from May Ist to August 30th, 1849, it swept off four thousand, one hundred and fourteen victims; and in the same time there died from other diseases two thousand, three hundred and forty-five, making a mortality in four months of six thousand, four hundred and fifty-nine. In September, 1850, he was appointed financial agent of the Ohio Wesleyan University, Delaware, and with the exception of one year gratuitously given as agent to the Springfield Female College, served six years. In September, 1857, he became pastor at Franklin, Ohio, where in two years he built a church edifice, besides liquidating some old debts. In 1859 he took charge of the church in Middletown, and in 1861 became pastor of Finley chapel, Cincinnati, and was among the first of the clergymen who advocated the employment of colored troops in the Union war. From 1863 to 1866 he was stationed at Wilmington, where he erected a church edifice. He then became agent of the Wesleyan Female College, Cincinnati.
The old college building on Vine street had been sold for debt, and a new structure was to be erected. Its site was then the Wesleyan cemetery, and the remains of those in- terred therein were removed to Cumminsville. The difficul- ties in the way of accomplishing this, together with those arising from financial depression, can be properly appreciated only by those who have shouldered similar enterprises and borne similar burdens. The present edifice is an ornament to the city, and a monument to Methodism. In the fall of 1868 he became pastor in Eaton, and remained three years, within which time a handsome church building was erected, and also a parsonage. In 1871 he was appointed presiding elder of the Ripley district, and in 1872, transferred to the Springfield district. In 1875 he settled in Eaton. In 1877, the Athens Wesleyan University, of Tennessee, conferred on him the degree of doctor of divinity. In 1878 he was ap- pointed financial agent of the Delaware Wesleyan University. During a service of thirty-seven years he has traveled nearly forty-five thousand miles, received into church connection over three thousand persons, and raised as agent for colleges and churches about $100,000. Since 1874 he had held super- annuated relations to his conference. His long and active service had given him a warm place in the hearts of the mul- titudes for whom he had labored. He had been twice mar- ried. August 14th, 1844, he married Ann Ransom, a niece of Governor Worthington, of Ohio. She died June 22d, 1847. On May Ist, 1856, he married Eliza Ann Ogden, of Clark county, Ohio, and had two children, both dying in infancy.
GENERAL INDEX.
Vol. I-
A.
PAGE.
Adams, J. M., . 206
Allen, William, 154
Andrews, S. J., 88
Vol. 2-
Ackley, Horace A., . . 537
Amick, Marion L., . 400
Andrews, Chauncey H., . 550 Axworthy, Thomas, . . . 434
Vol. 3-
Abbot, Butler F., 594
Aiken, Samuel C.,
804
Alexander, Isaac N.,
670
Burr, Erastus,
392
Allen, Marston,
758
Alms, William H.,
608
Anderson, Charles, .
. 704
Armstrong, William W., 612
Ashley, James M., . . . 622
Vol. I-
B.
Backus, A: L., 210
Backus, E.,
210
Backus, Thomas,
210
Banning, H. B.,
259
Bartley, M.,
118
Bartley, T. W., 94
Baumgardner, L. S., 165
Bettman, Bernhard,
685
Bebb. William,
92
Bell Jr., William,
221
Bennitt, John,
106
Bergen, S. H., .
223
Bingham, E. F., 203 Bishop, R. M., . 254 Blandy, F. J. L., 168
Bodman, E. C., 155
Bookwalter, J. W., 178
Bowler, William, 163 Bradley, A., 170
Brasee, J. S., 202
Brasee, J. T., 201
Breare, R., 98
Brough, John, 297 Brown, D. I., 132 Brown, E. A., 97
Brown, H. T.,
205
Brown, T. P.,
188
Buckland, R. P., 266
Burke, S., 160 Burns, B., 233 Bushnell, A. S., 209
Vol. 2-
Ball, Alfred, . 350 Barber, Gershom M., 498 Barber, Ohio C., . 539 Barnett, James, 369 Barton, Charles A., · 479 Bates, Joshua H., . . 432
Battelle, Joseph B., . 328
Beatty, Charles C., . 514
Beebe, Artemas, .
355
Bell, Thomas J.,
482
Benndorf, Karl F., . 420
Chase, Philander,
117
PAGE.
Chase, S. P., 91
Chisholm, Henry, 106
Chisholm, William, 148 Clements, Joshua, 164
Coffin, C. D., 83
Coffinberry, J. M., 149
Conger, A. L., 240
Cooper, W. C., 227
Corwin, Thomas,
192
Cowen, B. S., 237
Cowen, D. D. T., Cowles, Edwin, III
Crocker, T. D., 152
Cross, D. W., 115
Culver, L. A.,
242
Curtis, Hosmer,
99
Curtis, H. B.,
250
Vol. 2-
Calvert, George W.,
. 451
Calvert, Robert A.,
451
Campbell, Francis, . 407 Campbell, James E., . 442 Campbell, John W., . 446
Campbell, Lewis D., . . 441 Campbell, Samuel D., . 430
Canfield, George S., . . 538
Carpenter, Samuel S., - 453
Carson, Enoch T.,
. 427
Chamberlain, Selah, . 382
Clark, Milton L., 555
Clendenin, William, . 421 Cobb, Ahira, 500
Collins, Isaac C., 524
Cook, Matthew S., 408
Cooke, Eleutheros, .
. 565
Crawford, John M., . 375
Critchfield, Leander J., . 449
Crouse, George W. . . 531
Cunningham, David, . . 357 Cunningham, Thomas B., 373 Cunningham, Theo. E., 418
Vol. 3 --
Caldwell, John D., . 711
Caldwell, William B., . 756
Calhoun, Henry, . 602
Campbell, John, . 737
Cappeller, William S., . 590
Cary, Freeman G., . . 765
604 654
Clark, Benjamin F., Cole, Amos B.,
598
Comly, James M., 579
Cook George,
620
Coppin, Joseph, 761
Courtright, Samuel W. . 690
Cowles, E. W., 598
Cox, Jacob D.,
647
Cox, Samuel S., . 810
PAGE.
Crook, George,
. 744
Crosley, Powel,
694
Culbertson, Howard, . 687
Culbertson, James C., . 675
Cummings, John,
. 718
Custer, George A., .
. 587
D.
Vol. I-
Damarin, C. A. M.,
162
De Steiguer, R.,
204
Doan, W. H.,
225
Vol. 2-
Davis, George, 343
Davis, Simon S.,
559
DeCamp, Daniel,
504
DeCamp, James M.,
508
Delamater, John,
525
Denison, Amos, 435
Dennison, William, 509
Dewey, Chauncey,
.406
Dougherty, Frank C.,
. 508
Drake, Daniel, . . 384
Vol. 3-
Davies, Edward W., . . 710
Davis, George W., . 717
Dawson, William W., . 691
Day, Luther,
666
Dennis, Robert B., 793
Chandler, Zachariah M., 348 Clare, James D., . 391 Clark, John, . 364 Doan, Azariah W., . 694 Dickson, William M., . 741
Clark, James F., 435 Doane, William H., . 683
Dodge, Henry H., . 726
Dodge, Samuel, . . 725
Dodson, William B., . 747
Doty, Calvin B., . .
615
Doyle, John H., .
658
Duhme, Herman,
. 672
Durflinger, Sylvester W., 643 Dutcher, Addison P., . 781
Vol. I-
E.
Eaton, Frederick, 190
Eells, Dan. P., 151
Eells, James,
215
Eells, Samuel,
187
Ely, George H., 172
Ely, Sen., Heman, 185
Ely, Heman,
186
Errett, Isaac,
270
Everett, S. T.,
229
Ewing, Thomas,
273
Vol. 2-
Eaton, Morton M., . . . 405
Eggleston, Benjamin, . . 471
Emerson, Lowe, .
440
English, Lorenzo,
517
Estep, Josiah M., 474
Everett, Azariah, . 320
Vol. 3-
Edgar, Robert,
688
Edwards, John S.,
. 641
833
PAGE.
Bierce, Lucius V., . 565
Biggar, Hamilton F., 456
Birchard, Sardis, . · 397
Boyce, George W., . 476
Boyd, William F., 477
Bradstreet, Edward P., . 457 Bright, Samuel H., . . 333
Brown, Benjamin S., . . 319
Brown, John, · 374
Brown, James D., 373
Brown, LeRoy D., . 410
Brown, Thomas W. S., . 333
Buchtel, John R., 452
Buck, Jirah D.,
375
Burton, Jonathan P.,
467
Bushnell, William, . . . 479
Vol. 3-
Backus, Franklin T., . . 674
Baker, William,
750
Baldwin, J. William, 632
Ball, Flamen, 758
Barnes, Milton, 612
Bateman, Warner M. 789
Bates, Bethel, 785
Bates, John, 696
Bedell, G. T., 828
Bingham, John A., . 691
Birchard, Matthew, 626
Bishop, Robert H., . 772
Bissell, Edward, . 656
Blennerhassett, Harmon,. 583 Bodmann, Ferdinand, . 732
Boerstler, George W., . 700
Bohl, Henry, 762
Bolton, Thomas, 686
Bowen, George, 705
Bowen, Ozias, 73I
Braddock, John S., 601 Bradstreet, Stephen I., . 797 Brinkerhoff, Jacob, 829
Brinkerhoff, Ræliff, 749
Brooke, John T., . 805 Brown, James M., 792 Brown Jr., Jeremiah B., 763 Brown, John H., 764 Brown, Joseph H., 625 Brown, Marcus, 794
Browne, Samuel J. 770
Browne, Thomas McL., . 802
Brush, Charles F., 724 Case, Leonard, 662
Burdsal, Samuel, . 699
Catlin, Milton M., Cassels, John Lang, 688 Burnet, Jacob, . 606 Burnett, Charles C., 642 Bush, Philo P., 622
Butler, Richard, 778 Butterworth, Benjamin, . 661
Vol. I- c.
Carrington, M. D., . 209
Chambers, R. E., 246
Beach, William M., 659
Bentley, Aholiab, 596 Beatty, John, 211
292
Coleman, Asa,
784
834
GENERAL INDEX.
PAGE.
Eggleston, Emerson H., 650
Erkenbrecher, Andrew, . 746
Este, David K., . . . . 755
Vol. I- F.
Farmer, James, 303
Findlay, James, 140
Foran, M. A., .. 224
Force, M. F., 287
Ford, Seabury, 179
Vol. 2-
Fallis, Daniel J., . 438
Flickinger, Charles A., . 426
Follett, John F., . 562
Foraker, Joseph B., 484
Foster, Charles, 470
Fullerton, William, · 478
Vol. 3-
Falconer, Cyrus, . 779
Fearing, Benjamin D., 803
Foos, Joseph, 734
Foulke, Lewis. W., 830
Frazer, Abner L., 719
Freeman, Francis,
726
G.
Vol. I-
Garfield, James A., 77
Gaylord, B. B., 90
Geddes, George W., 244
Giddings, J. R., IOI
Gilmour, R.,
288
Glessner, Jolın Y., 247
Glover, E., 87
Gregory, J. B., II4
Grosvenor, C. H., 109
Vol. 2-
Gano, Daniel, .443
Gardner, Mills, 439
Gibbs, David W., 378 Goodhart, Daniel C., 332 Goodman, William A., . 413 Goshorn, Alfred T., 487
Graham, George, 334
Greene, Elisha B., 398
Green, John K., 501
Greenwood, Miles, 469
Groot, George A., 553 Gunning, Owen T., . 354
Vol. 3-
Galloway, Samuel, . . 750
Garlick, Theodatus, 621
Garrett, Horatio G., . 686
Gibbs, Franklin C., 614
Gill, John S., 635
Gilmore, James, 799 Glenn, William, 628
Goddard, Charles B., . 591
Goforth, William, 661
Goode, Patrick G., . 680
Goodrich, William H., . 672 Grandin, Philip, 644
Grant, Ulysses S., 577
Grasselli, Eugene, 681 Grimes, Alexander, . 746
Grimes, William McC., . 589
H.
Vol. I-
Handy, T. P., 177
Hanna, John E., 205
Hansen, John, . 247 Harrison, R. A., 207 Harrison, W. H., 130
Hart, C. P., 284
PAGE.
Hart, Seth, 86
Haynes, G. R., 100
Hempstead, G. S. B., 189
Herrick, R. R., . 105
Jones, A. B., 163
Jones, W. W., I34
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