USA > Wisconsin > The Wisconsin blue book 1893 > Part 58
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The primary object of the institution is to furnish a temporary home for dependent and neglected children until suitable homes can be found for them in good families. While they remain in the institution they are instructed in the elementary branches of an Eng- lish education.
From the establishment of the institution up to September 30, 1892, there had been ex- pended for site, permanent improvements, equipments and current expenses, $328,151.31.
The whole number of children admitted up to September 30, 1892, was 857; the average number in the school for the fiscal year, ending September 30, 1891, was 276, and for the fiscal year ending with September last, the average number was 229. At the last named d ite 550 children had been placed in homes, of whom 235 were indentured and the remain- ing 315 are on trial.
495
STATE INSTITUTIONS.
THE WISCONSIN VETERANS' HOME, NEAR WAUPACA.
-
BOARD OF TRUSTEES.
J. H. MARSTON, PRESIDENT.
J. A. WATROUS, VICE-PRESIDENT.
J. H. WOODNORTH, SECRETARY.
R. N. ROBERTS, TREASURER.
A. O. WRIGHT, A. J. SMITH, C. B. WELTON,
EX-OFFICIO.
Exceutive Board.
A. J. SMITH, J. H. WOODNORTH, R. N. ROBERTS.
SUPERINTENDENT, C. CALDWELL.
MATRON, MRS. IDA J. CALDWELL.
The Wisconsin Veterans' Home was founded by the G. A. R., Department of Wiscon- sin, November 16th, 1857, to care for indigent soldiers, sailors or marines of the war of the Rebellion, who cannot be received into any national home for disabled volunteer soldiers, and for their indigent wives or widows, for whom no provision is made at the national homes, and who hitherto have been separated, the wife to go to the poorhouse, while the husband goes to the National Home.
This home is built upon what is known as the cottage plan, each cottage being for two persons, in every instance, man and wife. The cooking is done in a large centrally located building and meals served in a large commodious dining hall in connection with the kitchen, thus relieving these old people from all care of any kind. The home now con- sists of forty-two cottages, an administration building, dining hall and kitchen, and wid ows' hall, hospital, assembly hall (for single men only), old people's building, old men's building, chapel, laundry, ice houses, farm house, barns, etc.
Since 1889 many improvements have been made and accommodations enlarged. The property is now owned by the state, but controlled by a board of trustees elected by the department of the G. A. R.
It is supported by an appropriation of. $300 per week made by the state for the mainten- ance of these people.
The capacity of the house is 300, having at this date on the rolls 265 present. The total valuation of the property is $150,000. It is situated on the shores of Hicks lake, one of the chain of lakes near Waupaca, and is unsurpassed for healthfulness and for its beautiful scenery and surroundings, having only lost by death since its opening twenty-seven mem- bers.
The Grand Army of the Republic and W. R. C. of the state have expended in buildings, grounds and furnishings $50,000, and are justly proud of the institution. The state receives from the government the sum of $100 per annum for each male inmate, and up to the pres_ ent time has received from this source nearly $30,000. The liberal appropriation made in 1891 by the state of $50,000 will be all now required for per nanent improvements.
1
496
WISCONSIN BLUE BOOK.
NATIONAL HOME FOR DISABLED VOLUNTEER SOLDIERS.
MANAGERS.
THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES; THE CHIEF JUSTICE; THE SECRE- TARY OF WAR -Ex-Officiis.
GENERAL WILLIAM B. FRANKLIN, President, Hartford, Connecticut.
COLONEL LEONARD A. HARRIS, 1st Vice-President, Cincinnati, Ohio.
GENERAL JOHN A. MARTIN. 2d Vice-President, Atchison, Kansas. GENERAL MARTIN T. McMAHON, Secretary, 93 Nassau Street, New York City. GENERAL JOHN C. BLACK, Danville, Illinois.
GENERAL THOMAS W. HYDE, Bath, Maine.
GENERAL JAMES S. NEGLEY, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
COLONEL JOHN L. MITCHELL, Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
GENERAL WILLIAM J. SEWELL, Camden, New Jersey.
NORTHWESTERN BRANCH.
LOCAL MANAGER. COLONEL JOHN L. MITCHELL, Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
OFFICERS.
COLONEL CORNELIUS WHEELER, Gov. DR. A. I. COMFORT, Assistant Surgeon.
MAJOR J. E. ARMITAGE, Treasurer. REV. E. P. WRIGHT, Chaplain.
MAJOR W. W. ROWLEY, C. S, Q. M. and Adjutant.
DR. W. H. LEIGHTON, Surgeon.
REV. VICTOR PUTTEN, Chaplain. DR. OSCAR CHRYSLER, 2d Asst. Surg. MRS. KILBURN KNOX, Matron.
Number of inmates present date of last annual report, June 30, 1892 1,820
Number of members present and absent date of last annual report, June 30, 1892. 2, 500
Number of inmates present September 30, 1892. 2.004 Number of members present and absent September 30, 1892 2,503
The building of the National Home for Disabled'Volunteer Soldiers, located near Milwau- kee, December 7, 1866, is called the Northwestern branch of that National Institution. The Central Home is located at Dayton, Ohio. Other branches are located at Augusta, Maine, Hampton, Virginia, and Leavenworth, Kansas. The whole are under the same board of managers.
THE NORTHWESTERN BRANCH
is beautifully situated three miles from the city of Milwaukee. It is a capacious briek building, containing accommodations for 1,000 inmates. In addition to this building which contains the main halls, eating apartment, offices, dormitory and engine room, are shops, granaries, stables and other out-buildings. The Home farm contains 410 acres, of which over one-half is cultivated. The remainder is a wooded park, traversed by shaded walks and drives, beautifully undulating. The main line of the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul railroad runs through the farm, and the track of the northern division passes beside it.
WHO ARE ADMITTED AND HOW.
Soldiers who were disabled in the service of the United States in the war of the rebellion, the Mexican war, or the war of 1812, and have been honorably discharged, are entitled to admission to the Soldier's Home.
Admission is procured on a certificate, of which blank forms are furnished to every applicant, setting forth his enlistment, with date, rank, place of muster, and the company, regiment or other organization to which he belonged, and the date and cause of discharge; and whether he is receiving a pension His identity is set forth in the same certificate, and a surgeon's statement of his disability and its nature.
These certificates in blank, with full directions for filling them out, may be procured by
497
STATE INSTITUTIONS.
applying therefor, either in person or by mail, to Gen. Jacob Sharpe, National Home, P. O., Wis., the governor of the National Home for Disabled Soldiers.
Disabled soldiers, or their friends, county, city and town authorities, police officers, guardians of the poor and almshouses, trustees of benevolent institutions and public or private hospitals throughout the country, having knowledge of disabled soldiers, or such persons in their charge, are cordially invited to address the governor of the home, by whom the necessary blanks and instructions will be sent by return mail. On the application and certificate thus made out, an order for the admission of the disabled soldier is indorsed, and an order for free transportation by railroad to the home is furnished.
LABOR, INSTRUCTION AND AMUSEMENT.
Such inmates as are able to do so, have the opportunity to practice various mechanical trades, or to work on the home farm, for which they are paid a c compensation of from $6 to $15 a month, averaging all around, about 40 cents per day. Skilled laborers earn more than these wages. The trades practiced are boot and shoe making, carpenter and joiner work, tinsmithing, plastering and stone masonry, gas-fitting, printing, book-binding and harness-making. Farming is largely carried on, and some of the finest products exhibited at the state fairs have been from the fields and gardens cultivated by the soldiers. All the labor of the institution, including care of the building, repairs which are found necessary, and farming operations is done by the inmates.
The institution has an excellent library of over 4, 500 volumes contributed by friends of the soldiers in various parts of the country. The reading room contains newspapers and magazines, all of which are in constant use and requisition by the inmates.
This institution is not a public charity, and the disabled soldiers of the country should understand it. They do not place themselves in the list of paupers by becoming inmates of the home.
32
-
.
-
498
WISCONSIN BLUE BOOK.
INDUSTRIAL SCHOOL FOR GIRLS.
OFFICERS OF THE BOARD OF MANAGERS.
PRESIDENT. MRS. M. E. B. LINDE.
VICE PRESIDENTS.
MRS. C. J. RUSSELL,
MRS. J. H. INBUSH.
MISS CHRISTINE DOIG. SECRETARY. MRS. J. L. KAINE.
TREASURER. MRS. W. S. CANDEE
RESIDENT OFFICERS.
SUPERINTENDENT. MISS SARAH E. PIERCE.
ASSISTANT SUPERINTENDENT. MRS. MARY A. MASON.
FAMILY MATRONS.
MRS. AMELIA COXE, MISS MARY DAVIS.
PRINCIPAL TEACHERS.
MISS EMMA O. SKINNER,
MISS MARY E. SHEFFIELD.
KINDERGARTEN. MISS BELLE B. LURKINS.
STEWARD. J. R. LOVE.
The Wisconsin Industrial School for Girls is located in Milwaukee, on Lake Avenue, in that part of the city known as North Point. It is capable of accommodating 160 inmates. Its proper subjects are:
1. Viciously inclined girls under 17, and boys under 10 years of age.
2. The stubborn and unruly, who refuse to obey their proper guardians.
3. Truants, vagrants and beggars.
4. Those found in circumstances of manifest danger of falling into habits of vice and immorality.
5. Those under the above ages who have committed any offense punishable by fine or imprisonment in adult offenders.
Although the school was founded by private charity, and is under the control of a self- perpetuating board of managers, it is incorporated and employed by the state for the cus- tody, guardianship, discipline and instruction of the aforenamed children. In default of responsible and efficient guardianship they are treated as minors and wards of the state, and by it they are committed to the guardianship of this board of ladies during minority.
The present statute provides that for each girl so committed, the county from which such commitment is made shall pay not more than two dollars and fifty cents per week.
It is designed to be in no sense a penal institution, but it is a reformatory for the older, a temporary place of detention and instruction for the younger. Its objects are detention and reformation.
MISS AMELIA KNEELAND, MISS EMMA DAYFOOT,
4.99
STATE INSTITUTIONS.
The school was organized under the act of 1875, and has received from the Legislature, in 1878, 1880, 1881, 1882, 1885, 1887 and 1889, sums amounting to $65.000 for buildings, improve- ments, stock and furnishings. The city of Milwaukee has also given for its use a tract of over eight acres of land, the State holding the title to this property.
The buildings, as completed by the successive appropriations, afford in all the requisites for distinct family life, three separate dwellings, designated as the Main Home, the Chil- dren's Home and the Cottage, and include a kindergarten room, two infirmaries, a laundry and three large school-rooms. The Children's Home takes boys and girls under eleven years of age; the Main Home, the girls from eleven upwards, dividing them into four dis- tinct classes, according to age and morals, with fair facilities for suitable separation and instruction; and the cottage is an additional and entirely separate building for proper re- straint and influence over the older and more depraved.
On leaving the school, children are either returned to former homes or relatives, or given by adoption or indenture to the care of well-recommended families. Boys are transferred to the State Industrial School for Boys, if unfit for homes in families, when of unsuitable age to remain longer in the school.
NUMBER DURING PAST TWO YEARS.
1891.
1892
In school October 1st
183
182
Since received, including returns.
126
153
Number under care.
309
335
Dismissed during the year.
127
112
Remaining in school at close of year
182
223
Boys
32
33
Girls
150
190
Average number
184
188
Average age.
13
122%
Supported by counties
168
212
Suported by friends
14
11
Total
182
223
Cost per capita per week, 1891, $2.37; 1892, $2.47.
On hand October 1, 1890, $9,127.73; October 1, 1891, $5, 371.67.
1891. $22,329.79
1892.
$25, 880.63
Received during the year Expended during the year.
26,085.85
23,222.58
PART VII.
THE JUDICIARY. UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT.
STATE GOVERNMENT. MISCELLANEOUS STATE SOCIETIES, ETC.
THE JUDICIARY.
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES.
Chief Justice-MELVILLE W. FULLER, Illinois, 1888.
App.
App.
Justices-S. J. Field, California 1863 Justices-Samuel Blatchford, N. Y .. .. 1882
Geo. Shiras, Jr., Pennsylvania. .1892
Howell E. Jackson, Tennessee 1893
John M. Harlan, Kentucky 1877
David J. Brewer, Kansas 1889
Horace Gray, Massachusetts 1881 Henry D. Brown, Michigan 1890
Retired Justice-Wm. Strong, Pennsylvania.
Clerk-J. H. McKenney, D. C., 1880.
Salaries: Chief Justice, $10,500; Justices, $10,000; Clerk, $6,000.
Marshall-J. M. Wright, Kentucky ... $3,000 | Reporter-J. C. B. Davis, N. Y ... .. $5,700
CIRCUIT COURTS OF THE UNITED STATES.
(Salaries of Circuit Judges, $6,000.)
FIRST JUDICIAL CIRCUIT .- Mr. Justice Grey, Boston, Mass. Districts of Maine, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Circuit Judge-L.B. B. Colt, Bristol, R. I., July 5, 1885.
SECOND JUDICIAL CIRCUIT .- Mr. Justice Blatchford, New York City. Districts of Vermont, Connecticut, New York Circuit Judges-Wm. J. Wallace, Syracuse, N. Y., April 6, 1882; E. H. LeComb, New York, May 26, 1887.
THIRD JUDICIAL CIRCUIT .- Mr. Justice Bradley, Newark, N. J. Districts of New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Delaware. Circuit Judge-Wm. McKennan, Washington, Pa., December 22, 1878.
FOURTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT .- Mr. Chief Jus- tice Fuller, Washington, D. C. Districts of Maryland, Virginia, West Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina. Circuit Judge- Hugh L. Bond, Baltimore, Md., July 13, 1870. FIFTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT .- Mr. Justice Jackson. Districts of Georgia, Florida, Ala- bama, Mississippi, Louisiana, Texas. Circuit
Judge-Don A. Pardee, New Orleans, La., May 13, 1881.
SIXTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT .- Mr. Justice Brewer, December 18, 1889. Districts of Ohio, Michigan, Kentucky. Tennessee. Cir- cuit Judge -- Benton Hanchett, Mich., Feb., 1893.
SEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT .- Mr Justice Harlan, Chicago, Ill. Districts of Indiana, Illinois, Wisconsin. Circuit Judge-Walter Q. Gresham, Chicago, Ill., December 9, 1884.
EIGHTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT .- Mr. Justice Brown, Detroit, Mich., December, 1890. Dis- tricts. of Minnesota, North Dakota, South Dakota, Wyoming, Iowa. Missouri, Kansas, Arkansas, Nebraska, Colorado. Circuit Judge-Henry C. Caldwell, Little Rock, Ark., March 4, 1890.
NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT .- Mr. Justice Field, San Francisco, Cal. Districts of Cali- fornia, Montana. Washington, Idaho, Ore- gon, Nevada. Circuit Judge-Lorenzo Saw- yer, San Francisco, Cal., January, 10, 1870.
CIRCUIT COURT OF APPEALS.
Each offthe following judges, with the circuit judge of the circuit to which he has been ap- pointed and a justice of the Supreme Court, constitute a Circuit Court of Appeals for cer- tain cases. First Circuit, William L. Putnam, Maine; Second, Nathaniel Shipman, Con- necticut; Third, George M. Dallas, Pennsylvania; Fourth, Nathan Goff, Jr., West Virginia; Fifth, A. P. DcCormick, Texas; Sixth, William H. Taft, Ohio; Seventh, William A. Woods, Indiana; Eighth, Walter H. Sanborn, Minnesota; Ninth, William B. Gilbert, Oregon. The salaries are $6,000 each.
UNITED STATES COURT OF CLAIMS.
(Judges' salary, $4,500 )
Chief Justice-WILLIAM A. RICHARDSON, Massachusetts, 1883.
Judges-Chas C. Nott, New York .. 1865 Judges-Lawrence Weldon, Illinois ..... 1883
Stanton J. Peele. Indiana .. 1892 John Davis, District Columbia 1885
Chief Clerk-Archibald Hopkins, Massachusetts, 1873.
504
WISCONSIN BLUE BOOK,
JUSTICES OF THE UNITED STATES SUPREME COURT. (Names of the Chief Justices in CAPITALS.)
SERVICE.
NAMES.
Born.
Died.
Term.
Years
JOHN JAY, New York .
1783-1795
6
1745
1829
John Rutledge, South Carolina
1789-1791
2
1739
1800
William Cushing, Massachusetts
1789-1810
21
1733
1810
James Wilson, Pennsylvania
1789-1798
9
1742
1798
John Blair, Virginia ...
1789-1796
1732
1800
Robert H. Harrison, Maryland.
1789-1790
. 1
1745
1790
James Iredell, North Carolina
1790-1799
9
1751
1799
Thomas Johnson, Maryland .
1791-1793
2
1732
1819
William Paterson, New Jersey
1793-1806
13
1745
1806
JOHN RUTLEDGE, South Carolina
1795-1795
1739
1800
Samuel Chase, Maryland.
1796-1811
15
1741
1811
OLIVER ELLSWORTH, Connecticut
1796-1800
5
1745
1807
Bushrod Washington, Virginia
1798-1829
31
1762
1829
Alfred Moore, North Carolina.
1799-1804
5
1755
1810
JOHN MARSHALL, Virginia
1801-1835
34
1755
1835
William Johnson, South Carolina.
1804-1834
30
1771
1834
Brockholdt Livingston, New York
1806-1823
1.
1757
1823
Thomas Todd, Kentucky
1807-1826
19
1765
1826
Joseph Story, Massachusetts
1811-1845
34
1779
1845
Gabriel Duval, Maryland
1811-1836
25
1752
1844
Smith Thompson, New York
1823-1843
20
1767
1813
Robert Trimble, Kentucky.
1826-1828
2
1777
1828
John McLean, Ohio.
1829-1861
32
1785
1861
Henry Baldwin, Pennsylvania
1830-1844
16
1779
1844
James M. Wayne, Georgia
1835-1867
32
1790
1867
ROGER B. TANEY, Maryland.
1836-1864
28
1777
1864
Philip B. Barbour, Virginia.
1836-1841
5
1783
1841
John Catron, Tennessee.
1837-1865
28
1786
1865
John McKinley, Alabama,
1837-1852
15
1780
1852
Peter V. Daniel, Virginia.
1841-1860
19
1785
1860
Samuel Nelson, New York
1845-1872
27
1792
1873
Levi Woodbury, New Hampshire
1845-1851
6
1789
1851
Robert C. Grier, Pennsylvania.
1846-1870
23
1794
1870
Benj. R. Curtis, Massachusetts
1851-1857
6
1809
18.4
John A. Campbell, Alabama.
1853 -- 1861
1811
1889
Nathan Clifford, Maine
1858-1881
1803
1881
Noah H. Swayne, Ohio.
1861-1881
1804
1884
Samuel F. Miller, Iowa.
1862-1890
28
1816
1890
David Davis, Illinois
1862-1877
15
1815
1886
Stephen J. Field, California
1863 -. .
9
1808
1873
William Strong, Pennsylvania
1870-1880
10
1808
Ward Hunt, New York.
1872-1382
10
1811
1886
MORRISON R. WAITE, Ohio
1874-1888
1816
1888
John M. Harlan, Kentucky
1877-
1833
William B. Woods, Georgia
1880-1887
7
1824
1887
Stanley Matthews, Ohio
1881-1889
8
1824
1889
Horace Gray, Massachusetts
1881-
1828
Samuel Blatchford, New York
1882-
1820
Lucius Q C. Lamar, Mississippi.
1888-
1825
MELVILLE W. FULLER, Illinois.
1888-
1833
David J. Brewer, Kansas.
1889 -..
1837
Henry B. Browin, Michigan
1890 -..
1836
Geo. Shiras, Jr , Pennsylvania
1892-
Howell E. Jackson ....
1893-
. .
1816
SALMON P. CHASE, Ohio.
1864-1873
Joseph P. Bradley, New Jersey
1870-
1813
1
THE JUDICIARY.
505
JUDGES OF THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURTS.
DISTRICTS
Name.
Residence.
Date of Commission.
Sal- ary .
Alabama-N. and Middle dist Southern district ....
John Bruce
Montgomery .
Feb. 27, 1875
$3,500
Harry T. Toulmin
Mobile
Dec. 13, 1886
3,500
Alaska .
J. S. Bugbee
Sitka
Sept. 1, 1889
3,000
Arkansas-Eastern district .. Western district
John A. Williams Isaac C. Parker.
Fort Smith .
Mar. 24, 1875
3,000
California-Northern district Southern district
Erskine W. Ross
Jan. 13, 1887
5,000
Colorado.
Mosses Hallett.
Jan. 20, 1877
3,500 3,500
Delaware
Leonard E. Wales
Wilmington .. Jacksonville ..
May 17, 1889
3,500
Florida -- Northern district. Southern district
James W. Locke ..
Key West.
Feb. 1,1872 3,500
Georgia-Northern district Southern district
William T. Newman
Atlanta.
Jan. 13, 1887
3,500
Emory Speer.
Savanah.
Feb. - , 1885
3,500
Idaho
James H. Beatty.
Boise City
5,000
Illinois-Northern district Southern district
*Henry W. Blodgett .. Wm. J. Allen
Springfield
.April 18, 1855
4,000
Indiana ...
John H. Baker
Goshen ..
Aug. 14, 1882
3,500
Kansas
Cassius G. Foster.
Topeka ..
Mar. 10, 1874
3,500
Kentucky
John W. Barr
Louisville
April 16, 1880
3,500
Louisiana-Eastern district .. Western district
Shreevesport.
May 18, 1881
3,500
Maine ..
Nathan Webb.
Portland
Jan. 24, 1882
3,500
Maryland
Thomas J. Morris
Baltimore
July 1,1879
4,000
Massachusetts.
Thomas L. Nelson
Worcester
Jan. 10, 1879
4,000
Michigan-Eastern district Western district .
Henry F. Severens ..
Kalamazoo
May 25, 1886
3,500
Minnesota ...
Rensselaer R. Nelson. Henry Chiles
St. Louis
Feb. 26, 1887
3,500
John F. Phillipps.
Kansas City .
June 25, 1888
3,500
Montana
Hiram Knowles.
Butte City.
Feb. 21, 1890
3,500
Nebraska
Elmer S. Dundy
Falls City
April 9, 1868 .3,500
Nevada .
Thomas P. Hawley
Carson City
Sept. 9, 1890
3, 500
New Hampshire
Edgar Aldrich
Littleton
New Jersey ..
E. T. Greene ..
Trenton
Oct. 18, 1889
3, 500
Alfred C. Coxe Addison Brown.
Utica ..
May
4, 1882
4,000
Eastern district ...
Brooklyn. .
Mar. 9, 1865 4,000
Robert P. Dick
Greensboro .
June 7, 1872
3,560
North Dakota ..
Alfred B. Thomas
Fargo ;.
Feb. 25, 1890
3, 500
A. J. Ricks
Cleveland .
Jan. 16, 1890
3,500
Oregon
Matthew P. Deady
Portland
Mar. 9, 1859
4,000
William Butler
Philadelphia .
Feb. 19, 1879
3,500 4,000
Rhode Island
Providence ..
Dec. 16, 1884
3,500
South Carolina
Charleston
Jan. 13, 1887
3,500
South Dakota
Mitchell
Jan. 16, 1890
3,500
Tennessee-E. & Middle dist. Western district
Eli S. Hammond.
Memphis
June 17, 1878
3,500
David E. Bryant.
Sherman Austin
May 27,1890 June 25, 1888
3,500 3,500
Vermont
Hoyt H. Wheeler
Jamaica.
Mar. 16, 1877
3,500
Virginia-Eastern district Western district
Robert W. Hughes John Paul.
Norfolk
Jan. 14, 1874
3, 500
Washington
C. H. Hanford
Feb. 25, 1890
3,500
West Virginia.
John J. Jackson
Parkersburg ..
Aug. 3, 1861
3,500
Wisconsin-Eastern district Western district
James G. Jenkins
Milwaukee
July 2, 1888
5,000
Romanzo Bunn .
Madison
Oct. 30, 1877 5,000
Wyoming
John A. Riner
Cheyenne
Sept. 22, 1890
3,500
Connecticut.
Win. K. Townsend. ..
New Haven
Mar. 20, 1884
3,500
Charles Swayne.
Chicago
Jan. 11, 1870
3,500
lowa-Northern district Southern district .
John S. Woolson
Keokuk
3,500
Edward C. Billings Aleck Boarman.
New Orleans
Feb. 10, 1876
4,500
Henry H. Swan
Detroit
June 1, 1858
3, 500
Mississippi- (Two district ) Missouri - Eastern district. Western district !.
Jackson
3, 500
Amos M. Thayer
New York City
June
2, 1881
4,000
Charles L. Benedict ... Augustus S. Seymour Newbern ยท
Feb. 21, 1882
4,000
Ohio-Northern district Southern district
George R. Sage
Cincinnati ..
Mar. 20, 1883
3,500
Pennsylvania-Eastern dist .. Western district
Joseph Buffington
Pittsburg.
George M Carpenter. Chas. H. Simonton ... Alonzo J. Edgerton. . David M. Key.
Chattanooga .
May 27, 1880
3,500
Texas-Fastern district. Western district
Thomas S. Maxey
Northern district
John B. Rector
Dallas
3,500
Harrisonburg. Seattle
Mar. 3, 1883
3,500
* Resigned, successor not appointed. March 1833.
Little Rock.
Sept. 22, 1890 3,500
Wm. W Morrow.
3,500
San Francisco Los Angeles .. Denver
3, 500
Oliver P. Shiras
Dubuque
3,500
St. Paul.
3,500
New York-Northern district Southern district.
N. Carolina-Eastern district Western district
506
WISCONSIN BLUE BOOK.
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURTS FOR WISCONSIN.
EASTERN DISTRICT.
Judge JAMES G. JENKINS, MILWAUKEE.
District Attorney-ELIHU COLEMAN, FOND DU LAC.
Marshal-GEORGE N. WISWALL, ELKHORN.
Clerk-EDW. KURTZ, MILWAUKEE. Terms of Court.
AT MILWAUKEE-First Monday in January and October. AT OSHKOSH-Second Tuesday in July. SPECIAL TERM - First Monday in April, at Milwaukec. Counties Comprising District.
Brown,
Green Lake,
Milwaukee,
Walworth,
Calumet,
Kenosha,
Oconto,
Washington,
Dodge,
Kewaunee,
Outagamie,
Waukesha,
Door,
Langlade,
Ozauke,
Waupaca,
Florence,
Manitowoc,
Racine,
Waushara,
Forest,
Marinette,
Shawano,
Fond du Lac,
Marquette,
Sheboygan,
WESTERN DISTRICT.
Judge-ROMANZO BUNN, MADISON.
District Attorney-SAMUEL A. HARPER, MADISON.
Assistant District Attorney-J. J. FRUIT, LA CROSSE.
Marshal-F. W. OAKLEY, MADISON.
Deputy Marshal-WILLET S. MAIN, MADISON.
Clerk-F. M. STEWART, MADISON. Terms of Court.
AT MADISON-First Tuesday in December.
Special Term-Third Tuesday in June and first Tuesday in October. AT LA CROSSE-Third Tuesday in September. AT EAU CLAIRE-First Tuesday in June.
Counties Comprising Distriet.
Adams,
Douglas,
La Fayette,
Rock,
Ashland,
Dunn,
Lincoln,
St. Croix,
Barron.
Eau Claire,
Marathon,
Sauk,
Bayfield,
Grant.
Monroe,
Sawyer,
Buffalo,
Green,
Oneida,
Taylor,
Burnett,
Iowa,
Pepin,
Trempealeau,
Chippewa,
Iron,
Pierce,
Vernon,
Clark,
Jackson,
Polk,
Washburn,
Columbia,
Jefferson,
Portage,
Wood .
Crawford,
Juneau,
Price.
Dane,
SUPREME COURT OF WISCONSIN.
NAME.
Title of Office.
Salary.
Term expires.
WM. PENN LYON
Chief Justice
$5.000 Jan , 1894
HARLOW S. ORTON
Associate Justice
5,000|Jan., 1898
J. B. WINSLOW
Associate Justice
5,000 Jan., 1896
JOHN B. CASSODAY.
Associate Justice
5,000 Jan., 1902
SILAS U. PINNEY
CLARENCE KELLOGG
Clerk.
W. F. WOLFE Messenger.
JOHN R. BERRYMAN . .. Librarian.
W. D. HOOKER .... .Messenger and Copyist.
FREDERICK K. CONOVER Reporter.
FRANK REED. Messenger and Copyist.
JACOB FLIEGLER. . Proof Reader to Reporter.
F. W. DOCKERY . ... Messenger and Copyist. Messenger and Crier.
C. H BEYLER ...
La Crosse,
Richland,
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