USA > Pennsylvania > Who's who in Pennsylvania; containing authentic biographies of Pennsylvanians who are leaders and representatives in various departments of worthy human achievement. First Edition. V.1, Pt.1 > Part 62
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HUGHES. Robert Patterson:
Major General United States Army: . born in and appointed from Pennsylvania. Private. Company E. Twelfth Pennsyl- vania Infantry, April 25, 1861: honorably discharged Aug. 5. 1861: First Lieutenant Eighty-fifth Pennsylvania Infantry, Oct. 11, 1861; Captain May 20. 1862; Lieuten- ant Colonel 199th Pennsylvania Infantry Dec. 7. 1St; brevetted Colonel Volun- teers April 2. 1865, for gallant and dis- tinguished service at Fort Gregs. Va .:
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honorably mustered out June 28. 1865; Captain Eighteenth Infantry July 28, 1866; unassigned April 26, 1869; Third Infantry July 5, 1870; Major Feb. 19, 18$5; Lieutenant Colonel Inspector Gener- al March 11, 18$5; Colonel Inspector Gen- eral Aug. 31, 1S&S; Brigadier General Vol- unteers Inspector General June 3, 1898; Brigadier General United States Army Feb. 5, 1901; Major General April 1, 1902; retired April 11, 1903. He has held the following commands: Manila, as Provost Marshal General, Sept. 1, 189S, to June 1, 1899; First Military District, June 1, 1899, to May 7, 1900; Department of Visayas, May 7, 1900, to Dec. 1, 1902; De- partment of California, April 1, 1902, to April 1, 1903. Address, 30 Hillhouse Ave., New Haven Conn. ...
HUGHES, Sam. HI .:
Cashier of the Washington National Bank of Burgettstown; born near Kit- tanning, Armstrong County, Pa., July 20, 1866; removed to Indiana, Pa., 1873; edu- cated in the public schools and Indiana State Normal School: taught in the pub- lic schools of Indiana; studied the banking business at the First National Bank of Indiana, Pa .; enlisted in Company F. Fifth Regiment, National Guard of Penn- sylvania, 1885, and served in every grade in the company; promoted to Major, Fifth Regiment, National Guard of Pennsyl- vania, Feb. 17, 1902; served with his regi- ment during the Spanish-American War as First Lieutenant. Married Lida O. Scott, Indiana, Pa .. Sept. 2, 1903. Ad- dress, Burgettstown, Pa.
HUHN, George A .:
Broker; born in Philadelphia April 15, 1850: educated in the public schools, and in 1862 entered the office of Travis & Co., stock brokers. In 1866 he became engaged with Cooper & Graff in the same line of business. in whose office he re- mained for thirteen years; in 1879 he en- gaged in business in partnership with W. H. Tevis. the firm being known as W. H. Tevis & Co. In 18 2. three years later, he entered into partnership with Robert Glendenning; when Mr. Glendenning died. in 1993, Mr. Huhn became a partner with his son, as Huhn & Glendenning; and in 1895 he formed a partnership with his own sons, as George A. Hulin & Sons. Throughout his career he has pursued a successful business, and the new firm is prominent among the brokerage houses
of Philadelphia. Mr. Huhn is a member of the New York, Philadelphia and Chi- eago Exchanges, and the firm has been engaged in several large financial trans- actions, especially with passenger railway lines. Mr. Huhn is a member of the Union League, Art Club, Columbia Club, Country Club, Marion Cricket Club, etc. Address, 134 South Sixteenth St., Phila- delphia, Pa.
HUHN, John R .:
Member of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives from Philadelphia; born in Tamaqua, Schuylkill County, Pa., July 7, 1856; removed to Philadelphia when seven years old, and was educated in the public schools of that city, graduating in 1874; has been identified with the brick manufacturing business since 1874, enter- ing first the office of Henry Huhn & Co., of which his father. Hon. Henry Huhn, was the head, and served during various changes in the firm until 189S, since which time he has carried on the extensive busi- ness originally established by his grand- father. John R. Huhn, in 1836; served as a member of the Seventh Sectional School Board from 1886 to 1893, and was elected Secretary of that body annually from 1887 to 1892, inclusive; elected to the House of Representatives in November, 1902. Residence. 2339 Wharton St .; office address, South Thirty-third St., Philadel- phia. Pa.
HUIDEKOPER, Arthur Clarke:
Member of the Pennsylvania Command- ery of the Military Order of the Loyal Legion: Second Lieutenant and Recruit- ing Officer Aug. 22, 1864; First Lieuten- ant 211th Pennsylvania Infantry Sept. 9, 1864: Captain April 13, 1865; honorably mustered out June 2, 1865. Elected May 2, 1SSS. Address, care of Recorder of Loyal Legion, 1535 Chestnut St., Phila- delphia, Pa.
HUIDEKOPER, Henry Shippen:
Soldier; born at Meadville, Pa., July 17, 1$39: son of Edgar and Frances (Ship- pen) Huidekoper and grandson of Harm Jan and Rebecca (Calhoun) Huidekoper, Harm Jan having come to America from Holland in 1795; was graduated at Har- vard College in 1862, and received. in 1872, the degree of A. M. from the same col- lege: from 1899 to the present time one of the overseers of Harvard College; served in the War of the Rebellion as
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Captain, Lieutenant Colonel and Colonel with the 150th Regiment of Pennsylvania Volunteers, and while in command of his regiment at Gettysburg, on July 1, 1863, was wounded twice, losing his right arm. He returned to service in September, 1863, but, prostrated by his wounds. had to resign from the army at Culpepper, Va., in 1864. He was appointed Major General in the National Guard of Pennsylvania by Governor Geary in 1870. and, as such, was active in the labor riots in 1877 un- der Governor Hartranft, solving at Scran- ton a question between the civil and the military powers with such tact and firm- ness as to establish himself strongly in the confidence of the Governor and the people. Upon reorganization of the Na- tional Guard, with Governor Hartranft as the Major General, was appointed the senior Brigadier General in the Guard; in 1879 he compiled and published a "Manual of Service," which became an accepted authority on military matters. From 1880 to 1SS6 was Postmaster at Philadelphia, and was credited with hav. ing organized and carried through the ounce measure for letters, instead of the former half ounce. Residence, Philadel- phia, Pa.
HUIDEKOPER, Wallis:
Insurance agent; born Feb. 2, 1870, at Germantown, Pa .; spent early childhood at Meadville, Pa., the family home; at- tended the old Germantown Academy School, graduating in 1SS6; entered Sci- entific School, University of Pennsylvania, following year. and was graduated in 1891; resided two years in North Dakota. during which period he was in the cattle business; returned to Philadelphia in 1893 and entered the insurance business; volunteered during the Spanish-American War with First Troop, Philadelphia City Cavalry; mustered into Government serv- ice April 28, 1898; honorably discharged Nov. 21. 1898: served in Porto Rico can- paign, afterward being promoted to Ser- geant. He was in the service of the Na- tional Guard of Pennsylvania for ten years. Address, 321 Walnut St., Phila- delphia, Pa.
HUKILL, Edwin Martin:
Oil and gas operator; born in New Castle County, Del., Feb. 1. 1$40; after his father's death, in 1956. had charge of a farm; received a seminary education; became clerk in Philadelphia in Novem- ber, 1561; went to oil fields of Venango
County, Pa .; has since continued to operate largely in oil and natural gas properties. Address, Pittsburg, Pa.
HULL, William Isaac:
Educator; born in Baltimore, Md., Nov. 19, 1865; son of T. Burling and Mary Hull; preliminary education at Friends' High School. 1S$1-1SS6; was graduated from Johns Hopkins University in 1SS9, Ph. D., 1892; student University of Berlin, 1891: College Professor since 1892; Professor of History in Swarthmore College, and Examiner in History for the College; entrance Examination Board of Middle States and Maryland since 1900; was Su- perintendent of Summer Charities, New York, 1896-1897. Member of the Ameri- can Historical Society. Author of "Mary- land, Independence and the Confedera- tion," 1891; "Handbook of Sociology" (with W. H. Tolman), 1893; "History of Higher Education in Pennsylvania." 1902. Married Hannah Hallowell Clothier Dec. 27, 189S. Address, Swarthmore, Pa.
HULINGS, Willis James:
Oil and mine operator; born in Clarion, Pa., July 1, 1850; academic education. studying law at the conclusion of his academic course; admitted to practice in the courts of Pennsylvania, West Vir- ginia and Arizona; member of the Penn- sylvania Legislature. 1SS1-18$6; procured passage of bill to prohibit unjust discrim- inations in railroad freight rates; enlisted in the National Guard of Pennsylvania in 1876, serving through various grades until elected Colonel in February, 1857: served in railroad riots (1877), Homestead riots (1891), and Walston riots (1592); volun- teered with entire regiment May 10. 189S, for service in Spanish-American War; served in Porto Rico: promoted Sept. 26, 1898, to Brigadier General of the United States Volunteers for gallant and meri- torious conduct at battle of Coamo, Aug. 9, 1898; discharged Jan. 1, 1899. Com- mander-in-Chief of the National Associa- tion of the Spanish-American War Vet- erans; member of the Sons of the Ameri- can Revolution; Colonel of the Sixteenth Regiment, National Guard of Pennsyl- vania: commanded Second Brigade. Na- tional Guard of Pennsylvania, during anthracite coal miners' disturbances. 1902: engaged in mining and large Mexican en- terprises. Address, Oil City, Pa.
HULLEY, Lincoln:
Educator: born in Cainden, N. J., May 3, 1565; was graduated from Bucknell Uni-
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versity in 1888; Harvard, 1889; received the degree of A. M. from Bucknell and Ph. D. from the University of Chicago. College professor since 1893; was In- structor of Science in Bucknell for three years; now Professor of History. Bucknell University. Member of the Chautauqua Faculty for three years; lec- tured in Ohio, Tennessee, Pennsylvania and New York for Council of Seventy (Biblical specialists), of which he is a member. Author of "Lullabies and Slum- ber Songs," "Annie Laurie, an Old Sweet- heart of Mine," also Tariff League prize essay, 1SSS. Address, Lewisburg, Pa.
HULSIZER, Greene R .:
Physician; born in Easton, Pa., July 28, 1862; was graduated from the Easton High School in 1880; afterward entered Lafayette College, but left there to study medicine at home while engaged for two years in teaching. He then entered Jef- ferson Medical College, where he was graduated in 1887. His interest was es- pecially given to surgery, and after grad- uating he was, by competitive examina- tion, appointed resident physician of the Jefferson Medical Hospital. He subse- quently entered upon general practice, and soon after was appointed Police Sur- geon of the Seventh District, a year later being made Assistant Chief Surgeon of * the Philadelphia Police and Fire Depart- ment. In 1895 he, with Dr. T. H. An- drews, organized the Medical Emergency Corps, composed of district police sur- geons. its purpose being to render all pos- sible assistance in case of injury at fires and elsewhere. This corps, which is un- der Dr. Hulsizer's command and was the first of its kind in this country, has proved to be highly efficient and useful in its operations. In addition to his labors in these fields he has been appointed As- sistant Medical Inspector of the Board of Health. He is a member of several medi- cal societies and of the Pen and Pencil Club. Address, 225 Brown St .. Philadel- phia, Pa.
HUMES, William P .:
Banker; born in Bellefonte, Pa., Sept. 21, 1844: son of the late prominent. effi- cient and reputed to be at the time of his death (March 28, 1895. being in the eighty-fifth year of his age) the oldest bank President in the United States, Ed- ward C. Humes, of Bellefonte. Pa. He was educated at the Bellefonte Academy; afterward at the Pennsylvania State Col-
lege, then known as the Farmers' High School (later as Agricultural College of Pennsylvania), from where he was called to his home during the early part of the Civil War, to assist his father in his varied business interests, taking an active part in the banking interests of his na- tive place in connection with the First National Bank, and the successful bank- ing firm established previously by his father of Humes, McAllister, Hale & Co., composed of Edward C. Humes, H. N. McAllister. a prominent lawyer; Judge James T. Hale, also a leading lawyer and member of Congress, and Andrew G. Curtin, the great war Governor of Penn- sylvania, and which was after a number of years merged into the former (First National Bank of Bellefonte), of which his father was also President until his death. In addition to his financial interests Mr. Humes became more generally known to the public as a candidate for position of United States Commissioner of Railroads. to succeed Gen. Wade Hampton of South Carolina. He was supported in his appli- cation by nearly all the Republican lead- ers of Pennsylvania, by the United States Senators, and several Judges of the higher courts of the State; by the Governor. the Mayor and former Mayor of Philadelphia, and indorsed in private letters from lead- ers of both political parties throughout the State, as well as from personal friends of the President of his own State of Ohio. While there were other applicants from several Statse. Mr. Humes' strongest com- petitor was General Longstreet of Geor- gia, who, as a prominent Southern sup- porter of the Union and the Administra- tion, was finally appointed to the place by President Mckinley. His time is still actively and almost continuously with the bank. as well as in giving attention to his father's estate. He is a Director of the bank, and, with his sister. Miss Mira, and his father's estate. are its largest stockholders. He is an elder of the Pres- byterian Church of Bellefonte, with which his father and grandfather (Hamilton Humes) bore the same connection. The family from its earliest history have been closely identified with church, charitable and missionary work, always interested in the best general welfare of the com- munity and their friends, and have been favored with the highest social standing. Politically he is a Republican, and, while loyal to party interests, respects those who may differ with him in their politient faith or views. He has also been for many years an active member of the
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Union League of Philadelphia, and be- longs to various other organizations. Ad- dress, Bellefonte, Pa.
HUMPHREYS, Charles:
Lieutenant Colonel United States Army; born in Pennsylvania and appointed from the District of Columbia; Second Lieu- tenant, First New York Artillery, Feb. 14, 1865; honorably mustered out June 16, 1865; Second Lieutenant, Third Artillery, May 9, 1867; First Lieutenant Jan. 1, 1870; Captain June 30, 1893; Artillery Corps Feb. 2, 1901; Major Feb. 28, 1901; Lieu- tenant Colonel Aug. 3, 1903. Address, Fort Du Pont, Del.
HUMPHREYS, Henry Hollingsworth:
Lieutenant Colonel United States Army; born in and appointed from Pennsylvania; First Lieutenant, Second Pennsylvania Artillery, Oct. 3, 1862, to April 26, 1865; Major. Aide-de-Camp. Volunteers, April 5, 1865; brevetted Captain of Volunteers Aug. 1, 1864, for faithful and meritorious services in the field; Major of Volunteers March 13, 1865, for gallant and meri- torious services during the war, and Lieu- tenant Colonel Volunteers April 9, 1865, for - valuable and meritorious services during the campaign terminating with the surrender of the insurgent army under Gen. R. E. Lee; honorably mustered out Nov. 10, 1865; Second Lieutenant and First Lieutenant, Seventeenth Infantry, Feb. 23, 1SC6; transferred to Thirty-fifth Infantry Sept. 21, 1866; transferred to Fifteenth Infantry Aug. 12, 1869; Captain Jan. 15, 1873; Major. Twelfth Infantry, July 13, , 1$96; Lieutenant Colonel. Twenty-second Infantry, Dec. 23. 1898; brevetted Captain March 2, 1867, for gallant and meritorious services in the battle of Fredericksburg, Va .: Major March 2. 1867, for gallant and meritorious services in the battle of Get- tysburg, Pa., and Lieutenant Colonel March 2, 1867, for gallant and merito- rious services at the fall of Petersburg and in the pursuit of the rebel army un- der Gen. R. E. Lee; retired May 25, 1899. Address, Highwood, Lake County, Ill.
HUMPHREYS. W. Y .:
President of Bessemer Coke Company; born in St. Louis, Mo .; educated at St. Louis. He is a Director of Colonial Trust Company and Columbia National Bank, President Bessemer Coke Company. Pres- ident Jacobs Creek Coal Company, and Vice President Powell Coal and Coke Company. Married Helen M. Stephenson 12
Oct. 22, 1892. Formed the five coke com- panies, subsequently the Bessemer Coke Company. Republican in politics. Ad- dress, Dallas Ave., Pittsburg, Pa.
HUNKER, John J .:
Captain United States Navy; born in Pennsylvania; entered Naval Academy in April, 1862; was graduated in 1866; Sus- quehanna, flagship, North Atlantic Sta- tion, 1866-1868; promoted to Ensign April, 1868; Franklin, flagship. European Squad- ron, 1869-1871; promoted to Master March 26, 1869; commissioned Lieutenant March 21, 1870; torpedo service. 1872; Michigan, 1873; Swatara, North Atlantic Station, 1874-1875; Michigan, 1876; torpedo duty, 1877; Nautical schoolship St. Mary's, 18:9- 1880; Richmond, Asiatic Station, 1882- 18$4; Michigan, N. W. Lakes, 1884-1SST; Lieut. Commander October, 1$$5; Adams, Pacific Station, 1889-1890; Independence July. 1890, to April, 1891; Palos. Asiatic Station. April, 1891, to June, 1893; Wa- bash June, 1893-1894; promoted Command- er September, 1894; Inspector of Ordnance, Portsmouth, November, 1894; Equipment Officer, Navy Yard, New York. February, 1895. to 1897; commanding the Annapolis July, 1897, to May 18, 1899; promoted to Captain Dec. 11. 1900; commanding train- ing ship and station, Newport. June 20, 1899; commanding New York since Jan. 3, 1903. Address, care Navy Department, Washington, D. C.
HUNT, Cyrus F .:
Manufacturer; grandson of Cyrus Blood, founder of Forest County, Pa .; son of J. D. Hunt and Marion Fullerton Blood Hunt, in whose honor Marienville re- ceived its name; born at Marienville Sept. 22, 1852; educated in the public schools and was graduated from Duff's Commer- cial College, Pittsburg, Pa .; learning te- legraphy. worked for the United Pipe Line Company as operator for eight years. In 1887 embarked in the mercantile busi- ness and the manufacture of lumber. On Aug. 1. 1880, was married to Miss Belle F. Collum of Philadelphia, daughter of Samuel H. Colluin, a prominent con- tractor of that city. They have one son, Leigh F. Address. Marienville, Pa.
HUNT. David W .:
President of Knickerbocker Ice Com- pany: born in Hunterdon County. N. J., Nov. 15. 1842: educated in Philadelphia. graduating from the High School of that city; began to study conveyancing, but
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gave this up to enlist as a soldier when General Lee's Army was invading Penn- sylvania. He subsequently entered the employment of the Knickerbocker Ice Company, with which he has since re- mained; upon the consolidation of the Philadelphia ice companies Mr. Hunt be- came a member of the Board of Directors, and took an active part in the mannage . ment of the company's business, which added to its ice trade the manufacture of ice machinery and wagons and the sale of' coal. It now holds a leading position among the ice companies in the United States. Mr. Hunt's father was President of the company, and on his death his son was elected to succeed him; in ad- dition to his duties with the ice com- pany, he is President of the Knicker- bocker Building Association and of the Carbon Di-Oxide and Magnesia Company, and a Director in the Knickerbocker Tow- boat Company. The Building Association was organized for the benefit of the company's employees, in whose welfare Mr. Hunt is strongly interested. Address, 2014 Green St., Philadelphia, Pa.
HUNT, Joseph S .:
Member of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives from Northampton Coun- ty; born in Sussex County, N. J., in i836; worked on the farm until 1853, then at- tended Stiles Select School and Hudson River Institute; went south in 1858 and returned in 1861; attended Jefferson Med- ical College one year, and was gradu- ated from the College of Physicians and Surgeons of New York City in 1866; en- gaged in the drug business. also the man- ufacture of iron in.Easton, Pa., from 1869 to 1876; has been Physician and Surgeon of the Northampton County Prison for fifteen years: is also consulting physician of the Easton Hospital, and President of the Board of Health of Easton; clected to the House of Representatives in No- vember, 1902. Address, Easton, Pa.
HUNTER, Richard Stockton:
Lawyer; son of Louis Boudinot Hunter, late Medical Director United States Navy; a great-grandson of Richard Stockton, signer of the Declaration of Independence; born in Princeton, N. J., Feb. 20, 1845; was graduated from Princeton College in 1864, receiving the degree of A. M. in 1867: admitted to Philadelphia bar 1868. Author of various papers on legal sub- jects and of lectures delivered before New Century and Civic Clubs of Philadelphia.
Director Children's Aid Society; heredi- tary member of the Society of the Cin- cinnati; member of the Society of Colonial Wars and American Philosophical Society. Address, 308 Wainut St., Philadelphia, Pa.
HUNTER, Silas:
Member of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives from Mercer County; was born in West Salem Township, Mercer County, Pa., May 26, 1832; educated in the common schools; went to Kansas in 1355, and went through the Border War with John Brown and Jim Lane; enlisted in the army from Kansas in 1861. and served in all the grades of commissioned officers from Second Lieutenant to Col- onel; was mustered out Dec. 20, 1866, at Fort Leavenworth, Kans; was appointed First Lieutenant in the Thirty-ninth Uni- ted States Infantry; returned to Mercer County in 1869, and now resides on the farm where he was born; served as Sheriff of Mercer County one term; elect- ed to the House of Representatives in 1902. Address, Jamestown, Pa.
HUNTER, W. L .:
President of the First National Bank of Turtle Creek. Address. Turtle Creek, Allegheny County, Pa.
HUNTT. George Gibson:
Colonel United States Army; member of the Pennsylvania Commandery of the Military Order of the Loyal Le- gion; Second Lieutenant of First United States Cavalry March 27, 1861; First Lieutenant May 2. 1861; Captain Fourth Cavalry July 17, 1862; Major First Cav- alry Feb. 10, 1870: Lieutenant Colonel Tenth Cavalry April 27, 1887; Colonel Sec- ond Cavalry April 20, 1891; retired May 31, 1898. Elected Feb. 4, 1891. Address, Carlisle, Pa.
HURD. William Lambert:
President of the Monongahela Tube Company of Pittsburg, Pa .; born at Port Lavaca, Tex., on Aug. 28, 1847: educated at Colby Academy, New London, N. H., . and at Brown University, Providence. R. I., he, at an early age. filled various clerical positions. paving the way to a satisfactory business opening. At the time of the great fire in Boston in 1872 he was a clerk in a wholesale clothing house, which succumbed to the wide- spread confiagration, and afterward took a position with the National Tube Works
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Company at Mckeesport, Pa., with which concern he remained for a period of twelve years. He then connected him- self with the Continental Tube Company, and later on he aceepted a leading posi- tion with the Duquesne Tube Works Company of Pittsburg. In 1897 he en- gaged in the iron and steel commission business with Mr. Hugh H. Davis, as Hurd, Davis & Co., and in 1899 organized and became President of the Mononga- hela Tube Company, which position he now fills, and he is also President of the Home Trust Company of Pittsburg. Mr. Hurd's ancestors on his father's side were of English origin and set- tled in New England several genera- tions back; his mother's aneestors were English and French. Her father, Na- thaniel Dearborn, was a descendant from Godfrey Dearborn, who settled in Ports- mouth, N. H., in 163S, her mother being a deseendant of Dr. Pierre Sigourney, a French Huguenot, who settled in Massa- chusetts in the latter part of the Sev- enteenth Century. During the Civil War Mr. Hurd was a member of Company F, Second Massachusets Artillery. He was married in 1873 to Miss Alabama Vander- vort, daughter of the late Robert Van- dervort of Pittsburg, and has three ehil- dren. Address, Pittsburg, Pa.
HUSEMEN, F. R .:
Banker; born Nov. 29, 1876, in Wheel- ing, W. Va .; educated in publie sehools and Linsley Institute, Wheeling, W. Va. Married Essie Jane Swearer of Pittsburg, Pa., in Deeember, 1901 .. He was ehosen Cashier of the Center Wheeling Savings Bank, Wheeling, W. Va., on April 1, 1901; cashier of the Allegheny Valley Bank of Pittsburg, Pa., April 1, 1903. Residenee, 830 Heath St .; office, Allegheny Valley Bank of Pittsburg, Pittsburg, Pa.
HUSTEAD, James Miller:
Member of the Pennsylvania Command- ery of the Military Order of the Loyal Legion; Seeond Lieutenant Fourteenth Pennsylvania Cavalry Nov. 21, 1862; First Lieutenant March 30, 1864; resigned and honorably discharged March 30, 1865. Elected Oct. 14, 1891. Address, Union- town, Pa.
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