History of Carbon County, Pennsylvania; also containing a separate account of the several boroughs and townships in the county, with biographical sketches, Part 42

Author: Brenckman, Fred (Frederick Charles), 1876-1953
Publication date: 1913
Publisher: Harrisburg, Pa. : J. J. Nungesser
Number of Pages: 830


USA > Pennsylvania > Carbon County > History of Carbon County, Pennsylvania; also containing a separate account of the several boroughs and townships in the county, with biographical sketches > Part 42


Note: The text from this book was generated using artificial intelligence so there may be some errors. The full pages can be found on Archive.org (link on the Part 1 page).


Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5 | Part 6 | Part 7 | Part 8 | Part 9 | Part 10 | Part 11 | Part 12 | Part 13 | Part 14 | Part 15 | Part 16 | Part 17 | Part 18 | Part 19 | Part 20 | Part 21 | Part 22 | Part 23 | Part 24 | Part 25 | Part 26 | Part 27 | Part 28 | Part 29 | Part 30 | Part 31 | Part 32 | Part 33 | Part 34 | Part 35 | Part 36 | Part 37 | Part 38 | Part 39 | Part 40 | Part 41 | Part 42


In 1890 he was placed in command of a company of Indian scouts in the service of the government at Fort Reno. A year later he was given charge of the govern-


610


HISTORY OF CARBON COUNTY.


ment schools for the Indians at Fort Lewis, Colorado, where he remained for a short period. He was pro- moted to the rank of first lieutenant in 1895.


Upon the breaking out of the war with Spain, being eager to go to the front, he was appointed an aide-de- camp to Brigadier General Snyder, United States Vol- unteers, under whom he served with the army of occu- pation in Cuba. Being appointed to a captaincy in 1899, he was ordered to the Philippines, where a stub- born revolt against the authority of the United States was in progress. Within a few days after his arrival at Manila, he was already under fire, participating in the hard fighting about the Zapote river. At the battle of San Mateo, where General Lawton lost his life, Cap- tain Wilhelm displayed conspicuous bravery, winning a recommendation from his superior officers, Major Parker and General Young, for the brevet of major. For his cool and soldierly conduct in this engagement he was also recommended for a medal of honor.


From July until November, 1900, he was in command of a body of troops charged with the perilous duty of preserving the peace in the most lawless district of Manila, in which position he acquitted himself with signal ability. On June 10, 1901, after two years of strenuous campaigning in the islands, he was mortally wounded at Lipa, Batangas Province, while engaging a force of insurgents outnumbering his own five to one. His death occurred two days later.


Governor General Taft, with the Civil Commission, and a large number of officers and civilians, attended the funeral services held in Manila. His untimely but heroic death elicited many warm tributes to his worth as a man and a soldier from those with whom he had come in contact in the various grades of the service.


611


HISTORY OF CARBON COUNTY.


On July 30th, the remains of Captain Wilhelm were laid to rest with military honors at his home in Mauch Chunk, all business being suspended in the town, while virtually the whole population joined in doing honor to his memory.


A battery at Fort Flagler, Washington, now bears his name, which is also perpetuated by a suitable me- morial in the Hall of Fame at West Point.


Young, Dr. James H., a Lansford physician and sur- geon, was born at Dunmore, Pa., on November 20, 1876. He is the son of James and Lottie (Harrington) Young, the former born in Scotland, and the latter a native of New Jersey. The father was a mine super- intendent at Dunmore, and at one time held the office of treasurer of Lackawanna county.


James H. Young received his early education in the School of the Lackawanna, a private institution at Scranton. Later he attended Lafayette College. Choosing the medical profession, he entered the Uni- versity of Pennsylvania in 1897, being graduated with the class of 1901.


After spending a year in his professional capacity at the Moses Taylor Hospital at Scranton, he came to Lansford, in 1903, as the assistant of Dr. E. H. Kistler. During the following year he did post-graduate work at the Polyclinic Hospital and at Wills Eye Hospital, Philadelphia.


Returning to Lansford in 1905, he re-entered the service of Dr. Kistler, to whose daughter, Mary, he was married on October 9, 1907. A year later he succeeded his father-in-law as the physician and surgeon of the Lehigh Coal and Navigation Company, which arduous and responsible position he is now filling. The com- pany's department for giving first aid to the injured is under his direction. He is also the surgeon of the


612


HISTORY OF CARBON COUNTY.


Eastern Pennsylvania Railways Company at Lans- ford.


Dr. Young is a specialist in diseases of the eye, ear, nose and throat. He is a member of the Carbon County Medical Society, the Pennsylvania State Medical Asso- ciation, the American Medical Society, and the Medical Club of Philadelphia. He is also a member of the Masonic order.


Zern, Hon. Jacob Gilbert, is a native of Montgomery county, Pennsylvania, but nearly the whole of his ma- ture life has been spent in Carbon county, having long since achieved prominence as a physician, and as a man of public affairs.


He was born February 24, 1845, being a descendant, in the fifth generation of Adam Zern, who emigrated to Montgomery county from Germany in Colonial times. His great-great-grandfather, Martin Sensen- derfer, and his great-grandfather, Christian Specht, were soldiers in the Revolutionary War. His grand- father, Abraham Zern, was a soldier in the war of 1812. His father, the Reverend Jacob Zern, was for a quarter of a century a well-known minister of the Evangelical Association in the eastern part of Penn- sylvania. Dr. Zern's mother was Sophia Gilbert, also a native of Montgomery county. His earlier years were spent in farming pursuits, and he attended the public schools of his locality until he became eighteen years of age. He then became a student at Millersville State Normal School, after which he served for a time as a teacher in the schools of Lancaster county. At the age of nineteen he enlisted as a soldier in Company C, One Hundred and Ninety-fifth Regiment, Pennsyl- vania Volunteers, serving until the termination of hos- tilities.


613


HISTORY OF CARBON COUNTY.


Immediately after the close of the war he began the study of medicine in the office of Dr. S. B. Detwiler, of Montgomery county, subsequently attending lectures in the Medical Department of the University of Penn- sylvania, graduating with the class of 1868. Soon after his graduation Dr. Zern located at Weissport, where he was successful in the practice of his profes- sion from the start. He lived in Weissport for twenty- three years, after which he removed to Lehighton. Dr. Zern's popularity is attested by the number of times he has been chosen to fill political office. He was elected to represent Carbon county in the state legislature in 1878, and was re-elected in 1880.


During a part of Cleveland's first term he was post- master of Weissport, Pa. In 1893 he was elected bur- gess of Lehighton, and two years later he was the suc-' cessful nominee for the office of associate judge of Carbon county. He was next delegated to represent his district (comprising the counties of Carbon, Mon- roe and Pike) in the state senate, being elected in 1902. He is a supporter of the Democratic party. Dr. Zern has also taken an active part in business affairs, and has been prominently identified with various enter- prises in and about Lehighton. He is the oldest direc- tor, in point of service, of the First National Bank of Lehighton, of which he is also the vice-president. He is the secretary of the Association of Lehigh Valley Railroad Surgeons, and was the first president of the Carbon County Medical Society. He is also a member of the Pennsylvania Medical Society, and of the Amer- ican Medical Society. Upon the completion of the Panther Creek Valley Hospital, located at Coaldale, he was appointed as one of its consulting physicians.


Dr. Zern is a past master of Lehighton Lodge, No. 621, Free and Accepted Masons, having the honor of


614


HISTORY OF CARBON COUNTY.


being elected its master when the lodge was consti- tuted, in 1900. He is also a past master of Carbon Lodge, No. 242, F. & A. M., Mauch Chunk, and is a past eminent commander of Packer Commandery, No. 23, of Mauch Chunk.


Dr. Zern was married to Ellen M. Edinger, a daugh- ter of Hon. Abraham Edinger, of Monroe county, in 1870. Four children were born to them: May, Wilmer, Harry and Katharine. The last named, who is the wife of Dr. Homer Heberling, of Lehighton, alone survives.


Ziegenfuss, John A., a representative of one of Penn- sylvania's oldest families, and a prominent churchman and Democrat, conducts a carriage and wagon building establishment at East Weissport, Franklin township. The pioneer of his family in America was Andrew Zie- genfuss, who was born near Strassburg, in the valley of the Rhine, Germany, in the year 1692. He, with his wife, Catherine, and children, sailed from Havre, France, on board the ship Thistle, for Philadelphia, where they landed on October 28, 1738. Leaving Phil- adelphia, the family settled in what is now Spring- field or Nackomixom township, Montgomery county, September 16, 1751. Andrew Ziegenfuss died in the year 1778, being aged eighty-six years.


One of his six children, Andrew, was born in 1747, and, in March, 1773, was married to a Miss Richard, of Bucks county. The eldest of their seven children was George Ziegenfuss, who was born January 31, 1779, in Bucks county. On February 18, 1798, at the age of 19, he was united in marriage at Easton, to Su- sannah Nulf, a daughter of Captain Nulf, of Revolu- tionary fame. He was a miller by trade, which occu- pation was quite common among his descendants.


In the year 1800, he, with his brothers, Andrew and John, crossed the Blue Ridge, and settled in the wil-


THE NEW YORK "BLIC LIBRARY


.STOR, LENOX AND ".OEN FOUNDATIONS.


615


HISTORY OF CARBON COUNTY.


derness, where the village of Aquashicola, Carbon county, now is. He there built the first grist mill in all that section of country. He was drafted for service in the war of 1812, but having six small children to care for, his brother John generously volunteered as his substitute.


George Ziegenfuss died, having attained the age of eighty-six, and leaving eleven children, on November 24, 1865. His wife followed him to the grave on Oc- tober 23, 1866, at the advanced age of eighty-nine years. One of the sons of this pair, Daniel, was killed in the war with Mexico, while their daughter, Polly (Fenstermacker), died at Mauch Chunk, January 20, 1906, at the age of ninety-nine.


George, the second son of George and Susannah Ziegenfuss, was born April 9, 1803, being married to Catherine Kerchner in the year 1830. They had seven children: Cornelius, Thomas H., Isabella, Susannah, Stephen, Mary A., and William E. Ziegenfuss. Only two of these survive, Cornelius, living at White Haven, while William is a physician at Detroit, Mich.


Stephen Ziegenfuss, the father of the subject of this sketch, was born in Ross township, Monroe county, August 27, 1842. On September 29, 1862, he enlisted in Company A, Fourth Regiment, Pennsylvania Volun- teer Calvary. He served with the Army of the Poto- mac, and was with Grant in the campaign against Rich- mond. He took part in thirty-one battles and skir- mishes, and was honorably discharged on July 1, 1865, as a corporal. Returning to civil life, Mr. Ziegenfuss located at Gilberts, Monroe county, where he followed the trade of a wheelwright and became a justice of the peace.


He chose as his life companion Salina Heiney, of Gilberts, Monroe county, with whom he had ten chil-


616


HISTORY OF CARBON COUNTY.


dren, five of whom are yet living: Emma J., wife of Lewis Smith, of Lehighton; Mary C., wife of Henry Trainer, of Weissport; John A., Thomas H., and Lydia M., wife of William Walck, all of Franklin township.


Removing to Franklin township, Carbon county, in 1890, Stephen Ziegenfuss continued as a carriage and wagon builder, filling various township offices. He died August 31, 1910.


John A. Ziegenfuss was born July 25, 1882, at Gil- berts, Monroe county. Coming to Carbon county with the family of his father, he attended the public schools until he reached the age of seventeen. Under the in- struction of his father he had already mastered the trade of a wheelwright at this time; but he began life as a bookkeeper in the Packerton office of the Lehigh Valley Railroad Company. At the end of a year, how- ever, he relinquished his duties there, and shortly afterwards formed a partnership with his father, con- ducting the wagon and carriage works at East Weiss- port. In 1907 he acquired his father's interest in the business through purchase, and has since been sole owner of the enterprise.


Mr. Ziegenfuss was elected, as a candidate of the Democratic party, to the office of county auditor in 1908. He is also a notary public, and is a justice of the peace of Franklin township, to which office he was elected in 1911. He was one of the organizers of the Ziegenfuss Family Association of the United States, and was chosen as its first president, being still so serving. The association has a membership of about 500, most of whom live in Pennsylvania; there are rep- resentatives from many other sections of the Union, however, and its meetings are held annually.


Fraternally Mr. Ziegenfuss is allied with the Sons of Veterans, Junior Mechanics, Independent Americans,


617


HISTORY OF CARBON COUNTY.


Royal Arcanum and the Patriotic Order of Sons of America. He has also been a member of Company B, Eighth Regiment, National Guard of Pennsylvania, for the past six years. He is the superintendent of the Sunday school of St. Paul's Lutheran church of Weiss- port, and is the president of the Upper Lehigh Valley district of the Luther League of Pennsylvania, of which he was the treasurer for five years. He is also a member of the state executive board of this organiza- tion, in the councils of which he has borne an active part during recent years.


Mr. Ziegenfuss is in demand as a speaker at church and Sunday school gatherings; he is of a studious dis- position and is the owner of a well-selected library. By reading law at night and during his hours of leis- ure, he has equipped himself to intelligently discharge the judicial functions of the office which he holds.


APPENDIXES


APPENDIX I


POPULATION OF CARBON COUNTY FROM 1850 TO 1910.


Districts.


1850


1860


1870


1880


1890


1900


1910


Banks township,


1,745


2,502


3,982


4,018


4,461


4,113


4,719


Beaver Meadow borough,


East Mauch Chunk borough,


833


1,585


1,853


2,772


3,458


3,548


East Penn township,


688


801


862


933


1,109


1,182


944


East Side borough,


210


220


Franklin township,


1,624


1,912


1,741


2,040


2,342


2,346


Kidder township,


536


1,249


1,417


1,207


992


651


427


Lansford borough,


1,382


1,942


1,416


1,421


136


242


263


Lehigh township,


36


565


619


491


Lehighton borough,


1,485


1,937


2,959


4,629


5,316


Lower Towamensing township,


1,197


1,409


1,552


1,732


1,726


2,507


4,131


Mahoning township,


1,520


1,961


1,589


1,903


2,248


2,501


2,378


Mauch Chunk borough,


2,557


2,966


3,841


3,742


4,101


4,029


3,952


Packer township,


291


357


441


496


665


684


717


Penn Forest township,


415


580


504


653


627


486


417


Summit Hill borough,


2,816


2,986


4,209


Towamensing township,


1,629


801


913


931


933


914


840


Weatherly borough,


1,076


1,937


2,961


2,471


2,501


Weissport borough,


359


388


456


601


638


Totals,


15,687


21,033


28, 144


31,923


39, 624


44, 510 52, 846


APPENDIX II


ROSTER OF CIVIL OFFICERS OF THE COUNTY AND OF MEMBERS IN THE STATE AND NATIONAL LEGISLATURES.


The year given indicates date of election or appointment.


Representatives in Congress.


1852-Asa Paeker.


1880-Robert Klotz.


1854-Asa Packer.


1892-William Lilly.


1878-Charles Albright.


1898-Laird H. Barber.


621


4,082


2,448


2,896


4,358


Parryville borough,


657


605


723


590


Mauch Chunk township,


3,727


4,008


5,210


2,206


4,004


4,888


8,321


Lausanne township,


1,378


1,530


622


HISTORY OF CARBON COUNTY.


State Senators.


1857-Thomas Craig, Jr.


1869-A. G. Brodhead.


1878-Allen Craig.


1890-William M. Rapsher. 1902-Jacob G. Zern.


Members of General Assembly.


1843-John Fatzinger.


1844-James R. Struthers.


1876-J. C. Kramer.


1845-Jesse Samuels. W. M. Rapsher.


1846-Peter Bowman. Alexander Lockhart.


1847-Peter Bowman.


1882-E. H. Snyder.


1848-Robert Klotz.


John J. Gallagher.


1850-William Lilly, Jr.


1852-James R. Struthers.


1854-Thomas Craig, Jr.


1856-Enos Tolan.


1857-Charles H. Williams.


1858-Samuel Balliet.


1859-Zachariah H. Long.


1860-William H. Butler.


1861-Thomas Craig, Jr. 1863-Zachariah H. Long. 1864-W. H. Stroh.


1865-Allen Craig.


1902-E. T. Brimmer.


1868-James Place.


1904-Robert Bacon. 1906-James I. Blakslee.


1869-Wesley B. Leonard.


1871-C. S. Detrick.


1872-E. T. McDonough.


1873-William Kistler.


1912-Jacob W. Smith.


1843-N. B. Eldred. 1847-Luther Kidder. 1849-N. B. Eldred.


1853-George R. Barrett.


1853-James M. Porter.


Judges. 1855-George R. Barrett.


1870-Samuel S. Dreher. 1892-Allen Craig.


1901-Horace Heydt.


1884-John Craig. J. W. Malloy. 1886-Daniel Bachman. A. W. Raudenbush. 1888-E. M. Mulhearn. 1890-Hugh Ferry.


1892-William F. Biery.


1894-Thomas Williams.


1896-Jerry N. Weiler.


1898-Thomas Craig.


1900-William R. Stroh.


1908-Wilson S. Campbell.


1910-Edwin R. Enbody.


1874-James A. Harvey.


1874-A. J. Durling.


1878-J. G. Zern. Michael Cassady.


623


HISTORY OF CARBON COUNTY.


Associate Judges.


1843-Asa Packer.


1874-Edwin M. Paxton.


1843-Jacob Dinkey.


1876-R. Leonard.


1848-Daniel Heberling.


1878-Charles Meendsen.


1881-Harry E. Packer.


1883-Charles Meendsen.


1884-James Heberling.


1856-Dennis Bowman. John Lentz. R. Leonard.


1861-A. G. Brodhead. Tilghman Amer.


1888-C. H. Seidle.


1889-Samuel B. Price.


1893-Daniel Rousc.


1894-Jacob G. Zern.


1871-John Leisenring. James Huston.


1898-Eugene P. Williams.


1899-Edwin R. Enbody.


County Commissioners.


1843-William Kern. G. H. Dougherty.


John D. Bowman.


1866-William Wagner.


1844-John D. Bowman.


1867-John D. Bowman.


1845-Jacob Andreas.


1868-B. F. Kleppinger.


1846-Christopher Shires.


1847-John Lentz.


1848-John Ziegenfuss.


1849-John Horn.


1871-Henry Beineman.


1872-Samuel Harleman.


1873-Daniel Kennedy.


1874-Henry Boyer.


1875-Henry Boyer. Daniel Rouse. James Ash.


1878-Josiah Andreas.


John J. Gallagher. James Ash.


1859-E. W. Harlan. 1860-Enos Koch.


1861-Daniel Stemler.


1862-Abel Hewett. 1863-Peter Hartz.


1864-Charles Meendsen.


1865-George Smith.


1869-Charles Murray. Edward Reber.


1870-Levi Harleman.


1850-Abraham Shortz.


1851-Charles Gilbert.


1852-William Kern.


1853-James Broderick, Sr.


1854-H. B. Berryhill.


1855-Abraham Harleman.


1856-Joshua Bullock. Peter Hartz. 1857-Peter Hartz.


1858-Andrew Graver.


1881-Edwin Sensinger. Samuel Harleman. Amos Riegel. 1884-Anthony Coll. John Arner. Benjamin Williams.


1851-Isaac T. Dodson. William H. Cool.


1866-James Huston. Herman Hamburger.


1873-Levi Wentz.


624


HISTORY OF CARBON COUNTY.


1887-Jacob S. Hawk. Henry Miller. Dominick O'Donnell.


Daniel Cannon. J. C. Sendel. 1893-H. H. McBride. William B. Anthony. Morris Trexler. 1896-Lewis W. Koons. Robert H. Bauman. John O'Donnell. 1899-Charles Rehrig. John O'Donnell. Jesse L. Gabel.


1902-D. O. Straup. David Ross.


Thomas M. Ferry.


1890-Henry Miller. 1905-D. O. Straup. David Ross. John K. Lentz.


1908-John K. Lentz.


Edwin F. Warner.


David Ross.


1911-Wallace Drumheller.


Thomas B. Craig. James Walker.


Sheriffs.


1843-Charles Snyder. 1879-Thomas Koons.


1846-John Painter.


1882-Charles W. Lentz.


1849-Isaac Ripple. 1885-James Gallagher.


1852-John Lentz.


1888-Hiram Levan.


1855-Francis Stucker.


1891-Joseph S. Webb.


1858-Amos Riegel. 1894-Milton Setzer.


1861-Charles Packer. 1897-Robert Breslin.


1864-Reuben Ziegenfuss. 1900-J. H. Gombert.


1867-Peter S. Keiser.


1870-Jacob W. Raudenbush.


1906-William H. Reber.


1909-August Begel.


Treasurers.


1843-Peter Bowman. 1861-Conrad Kocher.


1845-Abraham Shortz. 1863-M. W. Raudenbush.


1847-Laurence D. Knowles. 1865-Patrick Sharkey.


1849-Isaac Ripple. 1867-A. G. Brodhead.


1851-James I. Blakslee. 1853-A. G. Brodhead. 1871-Edgar Twining.


1855-Samuel B. Price. 1873-William E. Bevan.


1857-Franklin Reed. 1875-T. D. Claus.


1859-Robert Klotz.


1869-James Sweeney.


1878-Max Schweibinz.


1873-Oliver Breneiser.


1876-J. W. Raudenbush.


1903-James H. Rothermel.


625


HISTORY OF CARBON COUNTY.


1881-Douglas MeLean. 1899-Lawrence Tarleton.


1884-Samuel Rickert. 1902-Douglas Arner.


1887-George Dolan.


1905-Thomas M. Ferry.


1890-James T. Mulhearn.


1908-Milton A. Mummey.


1893-Levi Horn.


1896-Thomas M. Whildin.


Registers and Recorders.


1843-Robert Klotz. 1872-Alfred Whittingham.


1846-Oliver Musselman. 1875-Bernard Phillips.


1852-A. B. Nimson. 1881-James H. Handwerk.


1858-Edward K. Stroh.


1893-Henry E. Swartz.


1861-A. B. Nimson.


1896-Robert G. McMichael.


1869-William Graver.


Registers of Wills. 1902-Henry W. Bartels. 1908-C. Curtis Doak.


Recorders of Deeds.


1902-Robert G. McMichael. 1905-Warren Van Dyke.


1905-John McMichael. 1908-Horace F. Keat.


Prothonotaries and Clerks of the Court.


1843-William H. Brown. 1864-J. H. Siewers.


1846-Charles Snyder. 1873-Thomas Kemerer.


1849-Dennis Bowman. 1879-George Esser.


1855-Stephen E. Sites.


1891-David G. Watkins.


1858-Robert Q. Butler. 1897-E. I. J. Paetzel.


1861-Thomas J. Heberling. 1900-William J. Zerbey.


Prothonotarics.


1903-James E. James. 1909-Henry W. Bartels.


Clerks of the Court. 1903-William J. Zerbey. 1909-John J. McGinley.


District Attorneys.


1843-James R. Struthers. 1859-Allen Craig.


1850-O. H. Wheeler. 1862-W. B. Leonard.


1856-Samuel McLean. 1868-E. C. Dimmick.


1911-E. F. Eshleman.


626


HISTORY OF CARBON COUNTY.


1874-E. R. Siewers. .


1880-E. M. Mulhearn.


1886-W. M. Rapsher.


1889-Joseph Fisher.


1895-E. O. Nothstein.


1898-Daniel W. Sitler.


1901-Frank P. Sharkey.


1904-George E. Gray.


1911-Chester Setzer.


County Surveyors.


1850-Henry Boyer, Jr. 1868-Henry Boyer.


1853-S. E. Sites.


1872-William G. Freyman.


1855-C. H. Nimson.


1874-Josiah Xander.


1859-Hiram Belford.


1875-Charles Carroll.


1861-Oliver O. Bowman.


1878-H. B. Salkeld.


1863-Edwin Shortz.


1879-Henry Boyer.


1865-R. F. Hofford.


1882-Franz Mackl.


1866-James Harvey.


1907-William B. Tombler.


Coroners.


1843-Lewis Haney.


1846-John Horn, Jr.


1849-William H. Eberle. 1873-John Weston.


1852-A. G. Brodhead.


1874-J. J. Smyth.


1855-L. D. Knowles.


1875-A. M. Straup.


1876-P. D. Keiser.


1858-S. B. Hutchinson.


1879-C. W. Lentz.


1859-EIwin Bauer. 1882-P. H. Latham.


1863-R. Leonard.


1885-J. A. Horn.


1864-Solomon Driesbach. 1888-W. W. Buck.


1865-John B. Longshore.


1891-W. L. Kutz.


1866-Horace De Young.


1867-Elwin Bauer. 1901-J. H. Behler.


1868-James C. Kramer.


1870-Joseph De Frehn.


1904-G. Stuart Kirby. 1907-Edward G. Bray.


Superintendents of Schools.


1854-J. H. Siewers. 1887-T. A. Snyder.


1857-Thomas L. Foster. 1896-A. S. Beisel.


1863-R. F. Hofford. 1902-James J. Bevan.


1881-T. M. Balliet.


IL


1856-Patrick Sharkey.


1871-John Painter.


1872-J. B. Tweedle.


1894-W. P. Long.


1867-C. H. Dickerman.


SEP 17 1931


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