From collection Creating Acadia National Park: The George B. Dorr Research Archive of Ronald H. Epp

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Harvard Univ Arch Alumni class reports for 1874-1934
HARVARD UNIVERSITY
ARCHIUES. ALUMNI CLASS
REPORTS FOR 1874.1834
[ 14]
Portugal, and in that proscription concurs my good friend
so much of the Island's
our doctor who lives next door. I intend, however, to rebel
acquired and placed in 1
and revolt."
that jealousy arose, and
Legislature, meeting in
DORR writes from Bar Harbor: "My life these last half
charter and return their
dozen years offers little outstanding of which a tale might be
feated, but, after the h
told. One lives more interiorly and less actively as the years
Boston I went to Preside
go by.
pened, and that, withc
" But the story of the Acadia National Park, in brief out-
lands we held, the onli
line, I will gladly tell. It sprang from a desire I shared with
end we sought would be
President Eliot, a friend and neighbor on these shores, to
Government as a natio
first characteristic react
make safe from disfigurement, and free of access to the public
of the future, a great coastal landscape wherein for a term our
attack as it arose, ende
own homes were set. In September, 1901, President Eliot
ington:
called a meeting at Seal Harbor of a few people upon whose
" What happened :
interest in the matter he felt that he could count. The' meeting
story. I met with frie
was held, an association was formed, and President Eliot be-
the end I accomplished
came its president; I, its vice-president and executive officer.
July, 1916, our lands
on the recommendati
' Nothing further happened for the next half dozen years,
but in September, 1907, President Eliot came to see me, laid
Franklin K. Lane, to b
up in my home after a surgical operation, to make a friendly
ment, named in honor
the founder of Acadi
visit and to tell me that an old friend of his and of my family,
Mrs. Charles D. Homans of Boston, had given our associa-
Henry IV of France
nize it and Christian
tion its first gift of land, a bold rock-headland looking to the
French Dominion in
south across the sea, with a little mountain lake, sunk in
later this Monument
woods, which lay behind it, the Beehive and the Bowl.
Encouraged, I told President Eliot that as soon as I got
Congress, first in the
upon my feet again I would try what I could do to get the
in being created who
name Acadia National
dominant and crowning summit of the Island, Cadillac
Mountain, SO named by the Government on the Park's es-
tablishment in memory of the Island's first private owner,
JOHN FARLOW
Antoine de la Mothe Cadillac, soldier of Acadia and founder
live at 127 Bay State
of Detroit. It is this summit, now widely visited, to which the
1930 have spent the
Mountain Road, completed by the Federal Government two
Hampshire. I have
sional activities for a
years ago, ascends.
With the help of a friend, I secured the land that fall,
Emeritus of the Bost
and, availing of every opportunity, at the end of four years
nal. The monthly m
[15]
friend
so much of the Island's scenically important lands had been
rebel
acquired and placed in public reservation with the Trustees
that jealousy arose, and a bill was introduced in the Maine
Legislature, meeting in January, 1913, to take away their
st half
charter and return their holdings to taxation. This bill I de-
ght be
feated, but, after the hearing on it was over, returning to
years
Boston I went to President Eliot and told him what had hap-
pened, and that, without funds to develop or protect the
ef out-
lands we held, the only safe way, I thought, to secure the
d with
end we sought would be to get them accepted by the Federal
res, to
Government as a national reserve. President Eliot, after a
public
first characteristic reaction that we could meet and fight the
rm our
attack as it arose, ended by agreeing, and I went to Wash-
t Eliot
ington.
whose
What happened at Washington would be too long a
neeting
story. I met with friends and I met with obstacles, but in
liot be-
the end I accomplished what I set out to do. The eighth of
officer.
July, 1916, our lands were proclaimed by President Wilson,
n years,
on the recommendation of his Secretary of the Interior,
ne, laid
Franklin K. Lane, to be the Sieur de Monts National Monu-
friendly
ment, named in honor to Pierre de Guast, Sieur de Monts,
family,
the founder of Acadia, under a commission given him by
associa-
Henry IV of France to take possession of the land, to colo-
g to the
nize it and Christianize it, laying the foundation for the
sunk in
French Dominion in America. Two years and some months
wl.
later this Monument was made a National Park by Act of
as I got
Congress, first in the east, and unique in coastal situation, and
get the
in being created wholly by the gift of citizens. It bears the
Cadillac
name Acadia National Park."
ark's es-
owner,
JOHN FARLOW writes, May 2, 1934: "I continue to
founder
live at 127 Bay State Road, Boston, in the winter, and since
which the
1930 have spent the summers in the White Mountains, New
ment two
Hampshire. I have not engaged in any business or profes-
sional activities for a number of years, my duties as Librarian
that fall,
Emeritus of the Boston Medical Library being merely nomi-
our years
nal. The monthly meetings of the Massachusetts Historical
FOREWORD
DEAR CLASSMATES:
Our deeply loved and greatly lamented Charlie Green
gave us annually a Report giving information concerning
Classmates and their families up to the date of issue. Since
his last Report, issued in 1928, no Report has been printed.
It has seemed to your Secretary that a Report covering the
six years that have intervened might be of interest, especially
as the year 1934 is the sixtieth since our Class was graduated.
The monthly luncheons of the Class have been kept up
through the six years, with an average attendance of 8 or 9
men living in Boston and vicinity, and an occasional welcome
addition of one or two Classmates from places farther away.
These luncheons are held on the first Wednesday of each
month from October to May.
At the time of issue of the 1928 Report, there were 5I
graduate Classmates surviving. Today that number has been
reduced by death to 24. To the survivors and to the families,
relatives, and friends of those who have gone, this little book
is presented with the affection and good wishes of your
Secretary
HENRY F. MERRILL
257 Chestnut Street
West Newton, July 21, 1934
[6]
[[7]
to the Phillips House, Massachusetts General Hospital,
January. It is hoped that his plans of t
where he made a good convalescence. December 29th was
to our reunion next June.,
his birthday anniversary, and the Class Secretary visited him
in hospital in behalf of the Class, and took him some roses
HAYNIE writes (February I 5
in their name, with their congratulations on his miraculous
Florida. Soon after his acknowledgme
escape from more serious injuries. Later Dorr visited friends
ing on his birthday anniversary, he Sa
in Boston, and in February was able to go to Washington,,
the right to the street (in Chicago)
and take up certain official duties relating to Lafayette
stopped it; but a policeman took me
National Park.
tal, and the truck went about its wor
worst of that foolish venture. Fort
* ELLIOT: his son, John Morse, affiliated with the Class
broken, nor was I unconscious or lace
of 1914, on Monday, January 30, 1928, at Chicago, Illinois,
after sick, sore, lame, and disordere
married Miss Janet Pauling, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
weeks - lay on my back four weeks.
Edward George Pauling.
At the end of that time I got around
While I was improving, on the 28
FARLOW was unable to be with the Class last Com-
on a case of bronchial influenza. On
mencement because of his sailing for Genoa on May 28th.
my way from the cab to the train, an
He passed most of the summer in Switzerland. While miss-
town, on January 13th." He furth
ing the silver wedding of their daughter, Margaret Castle,
old as he is, and is in daily need o
June 3, Dr. and Mrs. Farlow were happily able to celebrate
tancy to set him to work. However.
their golden wedding, informally, last September. In Jan-
and a half, and to direct the care C
uary (1928) Farlow resigned the office of librarian of the
the Class is not to allow the mic
Boston Medical Library, a position he had most ably filled
their heads. So he is leading a 1
for twenty-three years. Indeed, he had been associated with
and we hope he will be enabled 1
the Library for nearly fifty years, and became a member of
June.
the executive committee in 1892. An oil portrait of Dr. Far-
low, thought to be an excellent likeness, has recently been
HILL has bought a house in ]
presented to the Medical Library, and now hangs in Holmes
and may make it his permanen
Hall.
In January, however, he went
for a time, with a probabilit
GRANT, U.S, wrote the Secretary in June and in August,
for the remainder of the Win
1927, while in Paris and in London. He sailed from San
Petersham.
Francisco to Marseilles, and his letters give an interesting
account of his subsequent travels, - in Egypt, Germany,
HODGES, A. G.: the Secre
Norway, Sweden, Denmark, and Great Britain. He is now
gret the death of Amory Hodge
at home in improved health, and Sears passed an evening
of John King Hodges, A. B. Ha
with him in San Diego on his brief visit there the last of
of our beloved classmate.
87)
Bennett, a writer and translator of note. Three sons and
a daughter have been born to them: all are married, and
there are five grandchildren. The family home is at 12
Dane Street, Jamaica Plain, Boston, with a summer place,
The Moorings, Ogunquit, Maine:
GEORGE BUCKNAM DORR
GEORGE BUCKNAM DORR was born in Jamaica Plain, Bos-
GEORGE BUCKNAM DORR
ton, December 29, 1853, son of Charles Hazen and Mary
Gray (Ward) Dorr, and fifth in descent from Edward Dorr,
who came to Massachusetts Bay Colony and settled in Rox-
bury about 1660. Dorr prepared for college in Mr. Dix-
well's school.
After graduation Dorr lived for four years in Europe,
spending some of the time in travel. Returning to the
United States in 1878 he entered the Harvard Graduate
School, and for three years read philosophy, history, and
general literature. He served as chairman of the Visiting
Committee on Philosophy, which with the help of President.
Eliot and the Faculty of the Department raised a fund for
chrol
the building of Emerson Hall. Later he again travelled in
Europe, and in Egypt and the Nearer East. He became in-
terested in the opening fields of mental suggestion, thought
JAMES DWIGHT
transference and psychical research, working on the latter
subject in conjunction with Professor William James and
the English Psychical Research Society, which later pub-
lished a volume on his work. He travelled in th& West
through the wilder portions, and took up the study of trees
and landscape planting he founded the Mount Desert Nur-
series at Bar Harbor, and joined with President Eliot and
Bishop William Lawrence in establishing the Hancock
County, Maine, Trustees of Public Reservations. In 1916,
on Mount Desert Island, in territory once a portion of the
French Province of Acadia, Dorr founded Lafayette Na-
tional Park, the first in the East or bordering the sea, and
LOUIS DYER
*1908
[88]
[89]
the first Wild Life Sanctuary administered by the Federal
handicapped the sight of one eye ano
Government in our Eastern States. In recognition of this
ear were very imperfect. He had als
work by Harvard University, at Commencement, 1923,
since his pulse was only from 48 to 50
President Lowell conferred the honorary degree of Master
small in stature and very strong; but t
of Arts upon, him as "A lover of nature, who has preserved
cess was largely to be found in his (
as a national park the grandest point on our Atlantic coast "
qualities. His judgment was quick an
And in 1924 the University of Maine gave him the honorary
great,, and his perseverance indefatigabi
degree of Master of Science.
of lawn tennis came into vogue in Er
Dorr's address is The Somerset Club, Boston, or Bar
a
Dwight introduced it into this countr
Harbor, Maine.
Nahant with the Searses. Much has
years as to the importance of games in
and as to the training which can be gi
+ JAMES DWIGHT
character which can be developed it
rightly directed. Dwight was instrumen
JAMES DWIGHT was born in Paris, France July 14, 1852,
son of Thomas Dwight and Mary Collins, daughter of John
warrad
the tennis matches between different F
which resultéd- in the establishment of
Collins Warren, M.D., of Boston. After he was two years
Tournaments at Newport. The -game h
of age he lived in Boston, and he prepared for college in
interest of all parts of the community
the school of Epes Sargent Dixwell.
the Pacific; and in its growth and deve
After graduation Dwight entered the Harvard Medical
standards of conduct and the spirit whi
School, choosing naturally the profession in which his
into it, Dwight has been the leading spi.
mother's family had won great distinction. He took his
Lawn Tennis for August I, 19 he i
M.D. in 1879, and entered practice: by reason of ill health
Father of Lawn Tennis in Ame ca, à ti
he was soon forced to give up medical work for a time, and
The article concludes with the words,
he never resumed it. On January 12, 1887, he married
Dwight died, there passed away the ma
Elizabeth Frances lasigi, who bore him three sons and three
lawn tennis in this country was greater
daughters: the first son, Alfred Warren, died May 4, 1893.
that of any other one man'. As a player
After a long and painful illness our classmate died at Matta-
in. 1885 and 1886, second in this count
poisett, Massachusetts, July 13, 1917. Mrs. Dwight, two
he, with Richard D. Sears, won the title
sons and three daughters survive him: two of the children
and 1886 in 1885 he did not play. He
have married, and there are two grandchildren. The young-
was the accepted authority on lawn teni
est child, Richard Warren, is a member of the Harvard
Europe to play, and at one time lived
Class of 1925. Mrs. Dwight resides at 18 Browne Street,
one of whom was the champion of Engl
Brookline.
both in Great Britain and in France, a
'From boyhood Dwight's success in games involving
among the first six; but it was not as a p.
skill, strength and judgment had been great. This was the
his. largest influence. The records availa
more remarkable because in certain ways he was physically
1891, in which year Dwight was a mem
[ 238 ]
239 ]
years of invalidism he bore weakness and suffering with the
and the teaching staff increased to thirty. In addition to the
greatest patience; and in brief letters to the Class Secretary,
duties of his office he has given under the auspices of Wash-
written in bed or reclining chair, he ever showed his affec-
ington University a course of lectures on Greek and Latin
tion for his classmates.
literature. In 1897 the degree of Master of Arts was con-
ferred on him by Washington University for scholarship in
the classics. He has devoted some leisure time to the study
EDMUND HAMILTON SEARS
of modern political history: in the winter of 1898 he gave
a public course of lectures on Recent Political Developments
EDMUND HAMILTON SEARS was born in Wayland, Massa-
in America, and another course on The Eastern Question.
chusetts, April 20, 1852, descending, like his classmate and
In 1900 he published Political Growth in the Nineteenth
distant kinsman David, from Richard Sears, a member of
Century, and in 1914 a novel, The Son of the Prefect: a few
John Robinson's congregation in Leyden, expectant of sail-
papers from him have appeared in religious periodical lit-
ing on the Mayflower in 1620, but for private reasons unable
erature, and in the Washington University Bulletin.
to come to Plymouth Colony until May 8, 1630. His father
Sears is a member of the Harvard Club of St. Louis, and
was Edmund Hamilton Sears, born in Sandisfield, Berkshire
has served as vice-president: he has membership älso in
County, Massachusetts, A.B. Union College (N. Y.), 1834,
Washington University Faculty Club (chairman of the board
₫ B K, Harvard Divinity School, 1837, S.T.D. Union Col-
of directors), in the Contemporary Club (chairman of the
lege, 1871, member of the Massachusetts Historical Society,
executive committee), in the Round Table Club, and Civic
an eminent Unitarian divine,,author, and writer of hymns
League, all of St. Louis, and in the Authors' Club of Lon-
dear to the Christian world. His mother was Ellen Bacon, of
don, England. He has passed many summer vacations in
the well-known Bacon family of English stock which settled
European travel.
in Barnstable, Cape Cod, in 1639. Sears grew up, in Way-
In Springfield, Massachusetts, June 19, 1895, Sears mar
land and Weston, and fitted for college in the Boston Latin
ried Hellen Clark Swazey.
School.
Choosing the career of a teacher, the. first year after
graduation Sears taught at Hampton Normal and Agricul-
THEODORE LOVETT SEWALL
tural Institute in Virginia; then for eight years he was in-
structor in the Greek and Latin classics at the University of
THEQDORE LOVETT SEWALL was born at Germantown, Ohic
California in Berkeley. After a period of rest and study in
September 20, 1853, son of Edmund Quincy Sewall an
his Weston home he established on Marlborough Street in
Louise Kilham (Lovett), and ninth in descent from Henr
Boston in 1885 a school for girls, which he. conducted suc-
Sewall, mayor of Coventry, England, whose grandso
cessfully for six years. Then seeking a wider field, in 1891
Henry came in the Elizabeth Dorcas in 1634 This Henr
he accepted a call to take charge of Mary Institute, a depart-
lived at Ipswich and Newbury, but was at different time
ment of Washington University, St. Louis, Missouri, and
absent in England: he was a minister of the Gospel, but di
one of the largest and best equipped private schools for girls
not preach in this country. Henry's son Samuel, later know
in the country. The school grew under his principalship:
as "the good and the wise" born in 1652 near Basingstoke
a new building was added in 1902, the pupils numbered 440,
Hants, England, came to Massachusetts Bay. in 1661, an
[ix]
THE CLASS OF 1874
James Lloyd Abbot
* 1905
John Chapin Brinsmade
William Fitzhale Abbot,
Alexander Porter Browne;
c. L.; Class. ©BK
* 1922
LL.B. 1876
* 1920
Richard Minot Allen
* 1913
Charles Thomas Buffum;
Eugene Nelson Aston, c. 1.;
M.D. Columbia 1877
* 1914
BK
1878
Henry Morgan Burdett
* 1896
Francis Eaton Babcock
* 1917
William Appleton Burnham * 1922
Walter Baker; S.T.B. Episc.
William Burry; Legion of
Theol. S. Cambr. (Mass.)
Honor (France)
18773 D.D. Austin Coll.
James Jackson Cabot
1875
1881
* 1897
Thomas Cary, Hist.; LL.B.
William Howard Baker
1885
Hamilton 1876; LL.B. Co-
Charles Parker Bancroft;
lumbia 1877
* 1921
M.D. 1878
* 1923
Edward Warren Cate, C. i.;
Harry Hudson Barrett
Hist.; ©BK; LL.B. 1875 * 1909
August Belmont, 18971
George Herbert Cate, C. i.;
Major U.S.A., A.E.F.
* 1924
©BK; S.T.B. Yale 1878
* 1924
George Bendelari, formerly
Henry Arnott Chisholm
* 1920
Giorgio Anacleto Corrado
Arthur Blake Clapp
Bendelari, (9) c. l.; Mod.
Henry Alden Clark; LL.B.
Lang.; Hist.; ©BK; A.M.
1877; M.C. 1917-1919
(Hon.) Yale 1888; Instr.
Louis Crawford Clark
* 1924
in Mod. Lang. 1878-1882;
Charles Cecil Clarke, (7);
Instr. in Mod. Lang. Yale
c. 1.; ©BK; Commissioner
1882; Asst. Prof. in Mod.
Chinese Imp. Maritime Cus-
Lang. Yale 1883-1888;
toms; Blue Button Third
Instr. in Hist. 1888-1894
Chinese Civil Rank; Order
Thomas Simms Bettens;
Double Dragon Third Divi-
BK, A.M. 1875
* 1907
sion First Class (China) * 1923
Woodbury Blair
Samuel Belcher Clarke, (2);
George Andrew Blaney;
C. l.; Hist.; ©BK; LL.B.
LL.B. 1877
* 1903
1876
Erastus Brainerd Kt. Ord.
Arthur Clifford; M.D. Dart-
St. John of Jerusalem;
mouth 1877
1881
Curator of the Gray Col-
George Oliver George Coale;
lection of Engravings,
LL.B. 1876
(Libr.) 1876-1877
* 1922
Frederic Kelley Collins
John Winters Brannan; M.D.
* Thomas Corlies
* 1894
1878
* Henry Horace Crocker
* 1904
George Russell Briggs; BK,
Frederic Cunningham; LL.B.
Tutor in Mathematics 1875-
1877
1881
Frederick Spaulding Cutter
Tokyo 1880-1886; Ord.
1915; Professor Emeritus
1900; Prof. Modern Lang.,
-
Paul Dana; LL.B. Columbia
Buchtel Coll. (o.) 1877-
Rising Sun Fourth Class
1915-
1878
* Samuel Blair Griffith; A.B.
1878; Librarian and Instr.
Richard Henry Dana; LL.B.
(Japan) 1886, Third Class
1877; Alumnus Memb.
1890; Ord. Sacred Mirror
Allegheny (Pa.) 1873
* 1909
in Greek, Pacific Unitarian
Herbert Lee Harding; LL.B.
S. (Cal.) 1906-1912
1915
BK 1891; Memb. Mass.
Third Class (Japan) 1890 1908
1876; A.M. 1877
* William Gordon McMillan;
Hist. Soc.; Fellow Amer.
Edward Mortimer Ferris;
M.D. 1878
1890
George Irwin Haven
* 1885
LL.B. 1876; A.M. 1877
1909
Acad.
Arthur Lithgow Devens
* George Russell Fessenden;
William Duff Haynie; LL.B.
William Staples Marston; C.E.
* 1914
James Edward Ditson
M.D. 1879
* 1923
Wesleyan (III.) 1876
1877
1881
Edward Higginson; LL.B.
William Castein Mason;
Nathan Haskell Dole, 1876;
Bernard Whitman Flagg;
* 1890
Cincin. Law S. (0.) 1876 * 1922
M.D. 1878
1922
BK (Hon.) Tufts 1904
A.M. 1875
Edwin Garrald Merriam;
George Bucknam Dorr; A.M.
Frank Byron Flanders; M.D.
Edward Bruce Hill; LL.B.
(Hon.) 1923; Sc. M.
1878
* 1911
1876; A.M. 1877
LL.B. 1875
Arthur William Foote; BK;
Amory Glazier Hodges
* 1917
Henry Ferdinand Merrill,
(Hon.) Univ. of Maine
A.M. 18753 Dr. Music, Trin-
Nathaniel Dana Carlile
C. 1.; BK; Commissioner
1924
ity (Conn.) 1919; Fellow
Hodges, C. 1., ©BK; Asst.
Chinese Imp. Maritime Cus-
James Dwight; M.D. 1879 1917
in Physics 1877-1881; Fel-
toms; Ord. Double Dragon
Louis Dyer, c. 1.; Class.
Amer. Acad.
Horace Waldo Forster
low Amer. Acad.
Second Division Second
* 1913
(sum.); Mod. Lang.;
William Whitworth Gannett;
Thomas Miller Honeywell;
Class (China) Red Button
Philos. (sum.); ₫BK; B/A.
M.D. 1879; Clin. Instr. in
A.B. Allegheny (Pa.) 1873
Second Chinese Civil Rank;
Oxford 1878; M.A. Oxford
Auscultation 1884-1889;
Adoniram Judson Hopkins * 1924
Director of Chinese Stu-
1893; Tutor 1878-1881;
Instr. in Pathology 1886-
William David Hunt, 1875
dents in U. S. and Eng.
Asst. Prof. of Greek and
1889; Instr. in Pathology
Jesse C Ivy; LL.B. 1876
* 1924
1908-1909; Hon. Council-
Latin 1881-1887; Lectr. in
and Auscultation 1889-
Walter Ingersoll Jones
* 1902
lor Board of Revenue, Pa-
German and French Balliol
1893-1896; Hearst Lectr.
1891; Instr. in Clinical
Arthur Monroe Keith, C. 1.;
tent of Nobility Second
on Greek Art, Univ. of
Medicine 1891-1899
LL.B. Boston Univ. 1876
* 1918
Order, Korea
* Arthur Lewis Goodrich;
* Charles Franklin Knowles
* 1880
Henry Childs Merwin
California 1900
* 1908
* James Lawrence
* 1914
Ethelbert Smith Mills
* 192
William Samuel Eliot
1874
A.M. 1904
* 1921
John Wheelock Elliot; M.D.
Wendell Goodwin
1898
Frederick Lawton, Hist.;
James Jackson Minot; M.D.
©BK; Just. Superior Ct.
1878
1876; Instr. in Gynacology
Henry Rice Grant
(Mass.) 1900-
Eugene Usher Mitchell
* 188
1888-1889; Lectr. on Sur-
Ulysses S Grant, formerly
Ulysses Simpson Grant;
William Sherman Leland
Henry Lee Morse; M.D. 1878
gery (Med. S.) 1900-
LL.B. Columbia 1876
* Joel Marvin Leonard;
Hosea Ballou Morse, (6);
1905
S.T.B. Boston Univ. 18773
C. 1.; Class (sum.) ©BK;
Frank Worcester Elwood;
Charles Montraville Green,
PH.D. Boston Univ. 1887;
LL.D. Western Reserve (0.)
LL.B. Columbia 1877
*.1899
C. 1.; ©BK; M.D. 1877;
S.T.D. Wesleyan (Conn.)
1913; LL.D. Harvard 1924;
John Woodford Farlow; M.D.
Asst. in Obstetrics 1883-
1886;, Instr. in Obstetrics
* 1916
Commissioner Chinese Imp.
18773 Clin. Instr. in Laryn-
1902
1886-1894; Asst. Prof. of
Frederic Howard Lombard;
Maritime Customs; Ord.
gology 1893-1906; Memb.
Mass. Hist. Soc.
Obstetrics 1894-1904; Sec-
M.D. 1882
1885
Double Dragon Third Divi-
retary of the Medical Fac-
James Duane Lowell, 1877,
sion Second Class (China)
Jacob Hamilton Farrar,
* 1921
ulty 1897-1899; Secretary
C.E. 1877
1885; ibid. First Class
1876
Francis Child Faulkner
* 1903
of the Faculty of Medicine
Herbert Warren Lull
19033 Blue Button, Man-
1899-1907; Assoc. Prof. of
Frank Lyman; M.E. Columbia
darin, Civil Rank Third
Ernest Francisco Fenollosa,
Obstetrics and Clinical
1878
Class 1893; Red Button
C. l.; Philos. (sum.) ©BK,
Gynxecology 1904-1907;
Michael John McCann;
Civil Rank Second Class
Prof. Philos. and Polit.
5.
Prof. of Obstetrics 1907-
LL.B. Columbia 1882
1906
1908; Chia Ho Third Class
Econ., Imp. Univ. Tokyo
1878-1880; Prof. Philos.
1911; Prof. of Obstetrics
Gifford Horace Greeley Mc-
1916; ibid. Second Class
and Logic, Imp. Univ.
and Gynacology 1911-
Grew; A.M. Univ. Cal.
1922
xiii
[ xii ]
Third Division -First Class
1902
manic -Lang. Univ. Texas
Charles Francis Withing-
illiam Lambert Morse
(China) Blue Button
ton, (4) 1.; ©BK, M.D.
odore William Moses
1899-1912
1912
Third Chinese Civil Rank
1881; Instr. in Clin. Med.
enry Holbrook Mudge,
Frank Eldridge Randall;
LL.B. Columbia 1879
* 1915
Charles Wellington Stone;
1893-19053 Lectr. (Grad.
ormerly Henry Sanford
Tudge, 1876
1908
Nicholas Reed
* 1874
A.M. 1881
S. of Med.) 1912-1915;
Edwin Palmer Stone
* 1914
President Mass. Méd. Soc.
ichard Cole Newton; M.D.
Huntington Richards; M.D.
Frederick Joseph Stone, (8);
Columbia 1877
1914-1916
1917
;olumbia 18773 First Lieu-
William Reuben Richards,
c. L.; ©BK, LL.B. 5. C. 1.
David Little Withington,
enant and Captain Medical,
Columbia 1876
c. 4.; Phys. and Chem.;
Dept. U. S. Army, 1880-
18753 LL.B. 18773 A.M.
Henry D Straus; LL.B. S. C. 1.
©BK; LL.B. Boston Univ.
1889
1919
1878
1912
George Carr Richardson
1916
Univ. Md. 1876
* 1914
1876
1919
Villiam Ichabod Nichols,
Frederick Swift
: 1.; BK
William Richmond, (1), ; c. L.
1915
Samuel Bayard Woodward;
1917
Archibald Dick Thomas
1881
M.D. 1878; President Mass.
in Parsons, (10); C. 1.;
Class. (sum.) ©BK; S.T.B.
Charles Saunders Tuckerman
Gen. Theol. Sem. (N. Y.)
1904
Med. Soc. 1916-1919
BK; Grad. Andover
Columbus Tyler Tyler
1905
John Palmer Wyman; LL.B.
Theol. Sem. 1877
1879
Harry Blake Tyler
1914
1876
1923
John Sidney Patton ₫BK;
George Riddle; Instr. in
William Royall Tyler, .1.;
Samuel Edwin Wyman,
LL.B. 1877
1915
Elocution 1878-1881
1910
©BK
1897
C. 1.; Class. BK, M.D.
Charles Sherburne Penhallow *
1921
Arthur Landon Rives
1902
Frederick Ozni Vaille
Henry Bellows Roberts; Grad.
1879
1896
William May Perkins
* 1900
George Willett Van Nest;
Andover Theol. Sem. 1878
60
165
arshall Livingston Perrin,
©BK; LL.B. 1876
1916
1875; A.M. 1876; PH.D.
Calvin Proctor Sampson; LL.B.
Edward Wood Walker; M.D.
Göttingen 1888; Instr. Bos-
Boston Univ. 1876
Cincin. (o.) 18773 Prof.
ton Univ. 1888-1889; Asst.
George Partridge Sanger
1912
Clinical Surgery Miami
Prof. 1889-1891; Prof.
William Cary Sanger; A.M.
Med. Coll. (0.) 1880-
Julius Kenrick Adams
* 187i
LL.B.
Columbia
Anglo-Saxon 1892-1896;
1875;
Hamilton
1914; Prof. Emeritus, Univ.
Clarence Almy
1883
Prof. Germanic Lang.
1878;
LL.D.
Cincinnati (Med. S.) 1914-
George Ashburner
* 1916
1892-1913; Prof. Ger-
(N. Y.) 1902
* 1921
William Pearson Warner,
Charles Fanning Barstow;
manic Lang. and Sanskrit
Charles Wesley Savage;
1875
1922
A.B. 1875
1900
1913-;
Prof.
Modern
LL.B. Boston Univ. 1877
1890
Edward Winslow Well-
Charles Warland Bigelow
*1896
Lang. Univ. of Peking
Robert William Sawyer
1918
ington
1925
William Gibson Coles-
(China) 1920-1921; ©BK
David Sears
1923
Frank Thaxter Wendell
1906
worthy; A.B. and S.T.B. Bos-
(Hon.) Boston Chap.
Edmund Hamilton Sears; A.M.
William Asa Wheeler; M.D.
ton Univ. 1877
1907
Washington Univ. (Mo.)
1907
Bowd. 1876; M.D. Co-
Edward Collins
1899
Edward Gould Peters; LL.B.
1897
lumbia 1877; Prof. Sur-
Arthur Norton Cram
1903
Boston Univ. 1879
1940
Theodore Lovett Sewall,
gery Niagara Univ. (Buf-
William Joseph Lawrence
Arthur Howard Pickering
1904
(5); C. 1.; ©BK; LL.B.
falo) 1886-1889; U. S.
Crane
1923
William Taggard Piper;
1876
1895
Marine Hospital Service
Edgar Mora Davison
BK; A.M. 1881; PH.D.
George Clarence Shepard,
880-1899
* 1912
Frank Christopher Fallon
and A.M. (Philol.) 1883
1911
BK; M.D. 1884
George Warner White
* 1899
* prior to 1910
Sylvester Primer, C. L.;
George Saltonstall Silsbee
1907
Edward Lawrence White-
Henry Pembroke Fettridge
BK; PH.D. Strasburg
Edward Simmons, formerly
house
1924
Frederic Albert Hackett
1903
1880; Prof. Mod. Lang.
Edward Emerson Simmons
George Wigglesworth, (3);
Arthur Dudley Hall
1912
Charleston Coll. (S. (C.)
Robert Alexander South-
C. l.; BK; A.M. 18753
Goold Hoyt; B.A. Cam-
1880-1888; Prof. Mod.
worth
1920
LL.B. 1878; Overseer 1909-
bridge, Eng.; LL.B. Co-
Lang, Colorado Coll. 1890-
William Franklin Spinney;
1915, 1918-1924; President
lumbia 1877
1911
1891; Assoc. Prof. Mod.
©BK; Commissioner Chi-
Overseers 1922-1924
James Keenan
1906
Lang. Univ. Texas. 1891-
nese Imp. Maritime Cus-
* Henry Houghton Williams 1876
George Rockwell Kent3
1899; Assoc. Prof. Ger-
toms; Ord. Double Dragon
['xiv }
5
M.E. Columbia; M.E. Frei-
Waldo Reed
burg, Germany
1887
* Charles Otis Scott
Rockwell King
* 1905
* Thomas Ely Secor; A.B.
Emil Washington Kracko-
18753 LL.B. Columbia 1877 * 1918
wizer; M.D. Leipzig 1875
1924
Samuel Parkman Shaw
Chauncey Edward Low;
David Stubert Stephens;
M.D. N. Y. Homoeopathic
A.B. Adrian Coll. (Mich.)
Coll. 1889; Assoc. Prof. of
1867; M.A. Wittenberg Coll.
Anatomy, ibid.
* 1890
1875; Prof. of Mental Sci-
Charles Austin Mackintosh
* 1889
ence and Logic Adrian Coll.
Francis Henry Matthews
1897
1875-1882; D.D. Western.
George Frank Merrill, M.D.
Maryland Coll. 18853
Bowdoin 1876
1922
President Adrian Coll.
Otis Osgood Ordway; A.B.
1882-1888;
Chancellor
RECORDS OF
Brown 1874; A.M. ibid.
Kansas City Univ. 1896-
1883
1916
1921
* 1921
Edmund Quincy Sewall Os-
Eugene Francis Warner;
good; A.B. 18753 S.T.B.
A.B. Brown 1875
* 1900
1878
Joseph Warren Warren
* 1885
Charles.Edward Perkins
1883
Henry Todd Washburn
Louis Atherton Pope, A.B.
Charles Horace Watson
* 1876
Brown 1874
1903
David Watts
* 1893
William Lawrence Porter;
Hugh Lawrence White
* 1908
A.B. 1875
1922
Perry Pentz Williams
*
1912
John Rufus Ranney; LL.B.
Lincoln Dewey Wright
1881
Michigan Univ. 1876
1901
Daniel Bechtel Young
1893
Benjamin Calvin Reed
1920
38 + 6 = 44
[3]
for example, we forget the eminent musical name and see
only the struggling boy, writing his masterpieces for a
pittance, appearing on the concert stage ere he had reached
his teens, and filling an untimely and unmarked grave.
The life-stories begin with Palestrina, now little more than
a name to many, yet an Italian prince of music in his day,
and include Bach, Beethoven, Handel, Haydn, Rossini,
Glinka, and others. The chapter on Wagner illustrates
forcibly the fallacy and prejudice of contemporary judg-
ment. Chapters not in the earlier edition are devoted to
Verdi, Tchaikowsky, Franck, Gounod, Saint-Saens, Rubin-
stein, Brahms, Grieg, Debussy, Dvorak, MacDowell, and
finally Puccini, whose recent death saddened the musical
world. The stories are enlivened by a vein of humor, pathos,
and wit by turns. They succeed in presenting very human
portraits of men who are too often viewed only as musical
traditions."
DORR: The Class well remembers Dorr's interest in,
and devotion to, Lafayette National Park, which he founded
in 1916, and to which he since has given much of his time.
In, 1925 he gave an additional tract of land, on Mt. Desert
Island, acquired by his father in 1868 and 1872, to be in-
corporated in the Park. This added land gives free access
from the public road, known ás the Schooner Head road,
to the Champlain Mountain section of the Park.
JOHN WHEELOCK ELLIOT
JOHN WHEELOCK ELLIOT died at his summer home in
Needham, Massachusetts, September 17, 1925, three week's
before his seventy-third birthday.
After leaving the Harvard Medical School in 1877, he
had the good fortune to be a surgical house officer at the
Massachusetts General Hospital when the surgical staff in-
cluded Dr. Samuel Cabot, Dr. Henry J. Bigelow, Dr.
Richard M. Hodges, Dr. Charles B. Porter and Dr. J.
ber of Boston Authors' Club. Among his recent publications are:
"The Pilgrims and Other Poems," 1907: "A Teacher of Dante,"
Bost
1907: and "Peace and Progress," 1904. His translations include
hom
"Anna Karenina" and other works of Count Tolstoi, and novels
by Valdes, Verga, Von Scheffel, Daudet, and Von Koch, and num-
erous volumes, of which the best known is the so-called multi-
BOR
variorum edition of the Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam, in two
and
volumes. Resides at "Hedgecote," Jamaica Plain (Boston), Mass.
MA
and has a summer home, "The Moorings," at Ogunquit, Me.
CHI
GEORGE BUCKNAM DORR.
BORN in Jamaica Plain (now Boston), Mass., December 29, 1853.
DIE
Son of Charles H. and Mary Gray (Ward) Dorr.
Europe five years, spent in study and travel. Continued
his studies as a graduate student at Harvard and elsewhere sev-
W
eral years. Travelled again in Europe and visited Greece, Egypt,
BOE
and the Holy Land. Has given much attention to the study of
Em
plant-life and to landscape gardening at his summer home at
DIE
Bar Harbor, Mt. Desert, Me. Member of Somerset and Tavern
Clubs of Boston. Resides at 18 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston.
JO
JAMES DWIGHT.
Bo
BORN in Paris, France, July 14, 1852. Son of Thomas (Harvard,
(Ha
1827) and Mary Collins (Warren) Dwight.
MA
MARRIED CHILDREN January 12, 1887, in Boston, Mass., to Elizabeth Iasigi,
CH
Dorothy, b. July 15, 1888.
F
Alfred Warren, b. July 28, 1889, d. May 4, 1893.
Ma
Ruth, b. January 18, 1891.
M.
Philip Joseph, b. March 16, 1892.
Elizabeth, b. February 24, 1894.
Bos
Richard Warren, b. April 30, 1903.
Harvard of Medical School, receiving degree of M.D., June
Practiced 1879. House physician at Boston Lying-in Hospital 25,
Mass. medicine for a while in Boston, and in summer in one Nahant, year.
In Relinquished the active practice of medicine some
and ago. 1881-83 prominent in lawn tennis matters as a years
Tennis publisher of two books. President of United States player,
Bo
Association, 1901-12. Member of Somerset Club Lawn of
An
[ 32 ]
M
a
pril 12, 1881 m. September 28,
work, to which of late years he has devoted himself, in June, 1878,
Boardman, A.B. Harvard, 1903.
by translating and editing Rambaud's "History of Russia," pub-
b. August 2, 1908.
lished in three volumes in 1880. Was engaged in newspaper work
Washington Mills at Lawrence,
for the Boston and San Francisco papers one year; assistant in
& Co., dry goods commission
private classical school in Philadelphia, 1881; and during his resi-
T, 1881, and with their succes-
dence for some years in that city, did some writing and translating,
aber, 1885, after several months
and was literary, music, and art editor of the "Press," and later
e Boston Stock Exchange, and
managing editor of the "Epoch." Literary adviser to the publishing
brokerage business, now under
house of Thomas Y. Crowell & Co., in Boston, 1877-99. Con-
& Co., in Boston, with offices at
nected editorially with the "Encyclopredia Americana" (16 vols.
on representative of the banking
1903-04), published under the auspices of the "Scientific American."
Paris and New York. Has been
In charge of the advertising department of D. Appleton & Co., in
of Massachusetts since its forma-
New York, 1900. Has since resided in Boston, and continued his
treasurer of the Somerset Club.
literary activities, editorially and by writing and lecturing. Delivered
at Club of Hamilton, Mass. Is
the Phi Beta Kappa poem at Tufts College, 1904, and wrote the
[anchester, Mass.
poem at the dedication of the monument in Provincetown, Mass.,
1907. Read a poem also at the dedication of a monument in New-
SON.
bury, Mass., in honor of the founders of that town, of whom his
er 11, 1852. Son of Oliver and
ancestor, Richard Dole, was one. President of the Bibliophile
Society and of the Omar Khayyâm Club of America since their
nrietta Curtis Mixer.
inception. One of the founders of the Twentieth Century Club of
er 20, 1878.
Boston, and member of Boston Authors' Club. On visiting commit-
J. Y., August 7, 1881.
tee of Boston Public Library, and trustee of Fellowes Athensum.
1 Report, 1899.
Among his recent publications are : "The Pilgrims and Other
Poems," 1907; "A Teacher of Dante," 1907; and "Peace and
OLE.
Progress," 1904. His translations include "Anna Karénina" and
31, 1852. Son of Nathan and Caro-
other works of Count TolstoI, and novels by Valdès, Verga, Von
Scheffel, Daudet and Von Koch, and numerous works for music.
n, Mass., to Helen James Bennett.
His editorial work comprises about two hundred volumes, of which
b. June 13, 1884; A.B. Harvard,
the best known is the so-called multi-variórum edition of the
Rubaiyât of Omar Khayyâm, in two volumes. Resides at "Hedge-
y. March 14, 1886; A. B. Harvard,
cote," Jamaica Plain (Boston), Mass., and has a summer home,
"The Moorings," at Ogunquit, Me.
January 26, 1891.
March 30, 1893.
GEORGE BUCKNAM DORR.
Suspension Bridge, N. Y., one year,
BORN in Jamaica Plain (now Boston), Mass., December 29, 1853.
a School, one year, and at Derby
Son of Charles H. and Mary Gray (Ward) Dörr.
:WO years. Commenced his literary
In Europe five years, spent in study and travel. Continued his
32 ]
[ 33 ]
studies as a graduate student at Harvard and elsewhere several years.
Travelled again in Europe and visited Greece, Egypt, and the Holy
Land. Has given much attention to the study of plant-life and to
landscape-gardening work, and has established at his summer home
in Bar Harbor, Mount Desert, Me., nurseries for the growth and
sale of northern trees and plants. Member of Somerset and Univer-
sity Clubs of Boston. Resides at 18 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston.
JAMES DWIGHT.
BORN in Paris,sFrance, July 14, 1852. Son of Thomas (Harvard,
1827) and Mary Collins (Warren) Dwight.
MARRIED January 12, 1887, in Boston, Mass., to Elizabeth Iasigi.
CHILDREN Dorothy, b. July 15, 1888.
Alfred Warren, b. July 28, 1889; d. May 4, 1893.
Ruth, b. January 18, 1891.
Philip. Joseph, b. March 16, 1892.
Elizabeth, b. February 24, 1894.
Richard Warren, b. April 30, 1903.
Harvard Medical School, receiving degree of M.D. June 25, 1879.
House physician at Boston Lying-in Hospital one year. Practised
medicine for a while in Boston, and in summer in Nahant, Mass.
Relinquished the active practice of medicine some years ago.
Prominent in lawn tennis matters as a player, and publisher of two
books. Elected president of United. States Lawn Tennis Associa-
tion, 1901. Member of Somerset Club of Boston. Resides at 225
Beacon Street, Boston, and has & summer home at Barnstable,
Mass.
*LOUIS DYER.
Louis DYER was born in Chicago, III., September 30, 1851. His father,
Charles Volney Dyer, born in Clarendon, Vermont, in 1808, was grad-
uated with the degree of M.D. at Castleton Medical College in Vermont
in 1829, and practised as & physician in Newark, New York, and Chicago.
LOUIS DYER
He was descended from William and Mary Dyer, who came from Somer-
setshire to Boston in 1635, and who, being adherents of Mrs. Hutchinson,
Born September 30. 1851. Died July 20,
were driven from Massachusetts Bay to Rhode Island, where they became
Quakers. Dr. Dyer was prominent in the anti-slavery movement, and very
active in the work of the "Underground Railroad." After giving up the
practice of his profession, he was appointed in 1862, by President Lincoln,
judge for the United States in the Anglo-American Mixed Court at Sierra
Leone, which had been established by treaty for the suppression of the
[ 34 ]
were driven from INTERNATIONAL DR) DO i
MGLG CLIAGN
D FLOW DAG MUC III rue MOACHEDI
Quakers.. Dr. Dyer was prominent in the anti-slavery movement, and very
active in the work of the "Underground Railroad." After giving up the
practice of his profession, he was appointed in 1862, by President Lincoln,
judge for the United States in the Anglo-American Mixed Court at Sierra
Leone, which had been established by treaty for the suppression of the
CHILDREN: Robert William, Jr., b, May 12, 1880; A. B. Harvard,
uber 1, 1899; d. on same day.
). July 22, 1905.
1902, LL.B., 1905; m. August 2, 1905, Louise Cush-
oril 3, 1909.
ing Dunn, A. B, Radcliffe, 1901.
Children: Robert William Sd, b. May 7, 1906.
for degree of A.M., which he
George Cushing, b. May 19, 1908.
in Europe one year. Columbia
Eugene Mitchell, b. January 9, 1882; A.B. Harvard,
ing degree of LL.B. May, 1878.
1904, S.B. 1906, M.E. 1908.
878, and was in law office two
Pauline, b. April 16, 1887; Radcliffe Class of 1910.
New York City some years, re-
Has regided, and been engaged in business in Bangor, Me., since
in Sangerfield, Oneida County,
graduation,
e he has built a country estate.
ctor and trustee in several cor-
DAVID SEARS.
city and New York. Member
BORN in Brookline, Mass., October 19, 1852. Son of David (Har-
years, 1895-97, and earnest in
vard, 1842) and Emily E. (Hoyt) Sears.
Served on the staff of the Gover-
Has spent most of the time since graduation, in travelling in this
Colonel, and detailed for special
country and abroad. Since 1902 has had his headquarters in Paris.
1 War, and was commissioned
In 1877 started on a trip round the world, and passed nearly two
United States volunteers in the
years in Japan, China, and India, in travelling and shooting; and
er Infantry. Assistant Secretary
in 1888 visited the chief places of interest in South America. Was
nited States delegation to In-
actively interested in yachting for some years, and in '1877 was rear-
revise the Treaty of Geneva of
commodore of the Eastern Yacht Club, now located at Marblehead
ation to International Red Cross
Neck, Mass. Gave $250,000 for the erection of one of the new
blican Presidential Elector from
buildinga of the Harvard Medical School. Of late years has suffered
e of LL.D. from Hamilton Col-
greatly from rheumatism, and his crippled condition does not
if that college. Fellow of Amer-
improve. Member of the Somerset Club of Boston. His Boston resi-
ritten various papers on military
dence has recently been sold.
publication of which has been
6
EDMUND HAMILTON SEARS.
VAGE.
BORN in Wayland, Mass., April 20, 1852. Son of Edmund Hamilton
', 1852. Son of Isaac A. and Mary
and Ellen (Bacon) Sears.
MARRIED June 19, 1895, in Springfield, Mass., to Hellen Clark
28, 1890.
Swazey.
Report, 1899.
Taught at Hampton (Va.) Normal and Agricultural Institute
in 1874-75; instructor in Greek and Latin at the University of
WYER.
California in Berkeley until 1883; established a school for girls in
uary 18, 1850. *Son of Charles
Boston, in 1885, which he conducted for six years. Has since been
Sawyer.
principal of Mary Institute in St. Louis, Mo., a large school for
in Wakefield, N. H., to Martha
girls under the control of Washington University. Received degree
[ 83 }
2
]
20
department of the reorganized firm of D. Appleton & Co., of
J
New York City, and during that time was librarian and also
ci
secretary of three of the committees in charge of the publish-
m
ing department of that firm., He then returned to Boston,
p
and has had editorial connection with several compilations,
ci
two of oratorical selections and one "Library of Children's
b
Literature" (twenty volumes). He had previously had a
to
hand in compiling "The International Library of Famous Lit-
erature" (twenty volumes) and the "Masterpieces of the World's
L
Literature," and for a time he was literary editor of Current
a
History, until it was absorbed in Current Literature. Two years
ti
ago he brought out a Greek-English edition of the Rubâiyat
u
of Omar Khayyâm for private distribution, and undertook
h
a series of ten little volumes entitled "Breviary Treasures,"
C
but on account of the great expense of publication he disposed
S
of his interest in the latter to a regular publisher. He has re-
t
cently completed an anthology of Greek and Latin poetry, in
o
two volumes, now in process of publication. He has read
S
many times in public the past year his poem, entitled "The
f
Building of the Organ," written in the interest of the Uni-
J
versal Peace idea; and he has continued giving his lectures.
He has been from their inception president of the Bibliophile
G
Society and of the Omar Khayyâm Club of America, and is
t
a member of many other literary, musical, and social clubs
&
of New York and Boston, and is the Boston correspondent of
o
the New York Evening Post. He is to deliver this year the
t
Phi Beta Kappa poem at Tufts College. His eldest son, Rob-
ert Montgomery, is a member of the class of 1906 at Harvard;
and his second son, Arthur Alexander, is a member of the class
I
of 1907. He resides at "Hedgecote," Glen Road, Jamaica
Plain (Boston), Mass., and has a summer cottage, "The Moor-
ings," at Ogunquit, Me.
J
o
GEORGE BUCKNAM DORR. He resides in the winter at
o
18 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston, and has a summer home
at Bar Harbor, Mount Desert, Me., where he has established
nurseries for the growth and sale of northern trees and plants.
38
Quite," "On the Point"; and, this year, "Omar, the Tent-maker,"
some nurseries fc
which contained some translations from the Persian. Published in
at Bar Harbor, M
1895 a volume of poems, entitled "The Häwthorn Tree," of which
Is a member of
Professor Norton, in an unsolicited letter, said, it was "marked by
Resides in the 1
simplicity, sincerity, and much grace of rhythm,-rare virtues in
these days." In 1896 contributed to the Educational Music Course
JAMES DWIG
about two hundred and fifty songs for children, and edited for the
Dwight, was bo:
Joseph Knight Company a multivariorum edition of the Rubáiyát of
In the fall of
Omar Kháyyám, containing versions not only in English, but also in
Medical School;
French, German, Italian, Hungarian, and Danish, carefully collated.
illness, he did n
Has also edited three other editions of the same poem, including a
Passed the winte
limited one privately printed. Was an assistant in the compilation of
in Hospital, and
Charles Dudley Warner's "Library of the World's Literature," and
Boston and at I
contributed several articles to it. During his residence in Boston
low of the Mas
has contributed a monthly literary letter to Book News, and a fort-
linquished the i
nightly letter to the Bookseller, Newsdealer and Stationer, and is
prominent amoi
now editor of Book Culture, a small monthly devoted to the interests
try, and, after W
of fine book-publishing. Has lectured widely before women's clubs
fall of 1883, and
and educational institutions, having delivered regular courses of
and Ireland. H
lectures on English, Russian, Italian, and French literatures, and
articles on sport
for a time was at the head of the department of English Literature
Boston.
of the New England Conservatory of Music in Boston. Is a member
He was mar
of the Twentieth Century Club, Harvard Musical Association,
Children: Doro
Cercle de l'Alliance Française, of which he has been first vice-presi-
28, 1889, died M
dent from the beginning, Franklin Field Club, and Kanai Camera
born March 16
Club.
at 225 Beacon S
He was married June 28, 1882, at Boston, to Helen James Ben-
has been spent
nett, who has translated several books from the German and French.
Children Robert Montgomery, born June 13, 1884; Arthur Alex-
LOUIS DYEP
ander, born March 14, 1886; Margaret Aliona, born Jan. 26, 1891;
Dyer, was born
and Harold Sanford, born March 30, 1893. Resides at Hedgecote,"
In the fall o
Glen Road, Jamaica Plain (Boston), Mass., and has a summer cot-
continued his S
tage, "The Moorings," at Ogunquit, Me.
home to Chicag
some months, S
GEORGE BUCKNAM DORR, son of Charles H. and Mary Gray
for three years
(Ward) Dorr, was born in Jamaica Plain, Mass., Dec. 29, 1853.
the degree of E
Soon after graduation went to Europe, where he remained trav-
was assistant P
elling and studying until 1879, when he returned to Boston and con-
for purposes (
tinued his studies as a graduate student at Harvard and elsewhere,
country in Dec
in various branches for several years. A few years ago spent
tute lectures i
nearly a year in travelling through Greece, Egypt, and the Holy
went back to
Land, and since his return has been mainly occupied in studying
which is his pe
plant life, in landscape gardening work, and in the establishment of
lectures,- S
39
some nurseries for the growth and sale of northern trees and plants
at Bar Harbor, Mount Desert, Maine, where he has a summer home.
Is a member of the Somerset and University Clubs of Boston.
Resides in the winter at 18 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston.
JAMES DWIGHT, son of Thomas and Mary Collins (Warren)
Dwight, was born in Paris, France, July 14, 1852.
In the fall of 1874 began the study of medicine at the Harvard
Medical School; but, his work at the school being interrupted by
illness, he did not receive the degree of M.D. until June 25, 1879.
Passed the winter following as house physician at the Boston Lying-
in Hospital, and subsequently practised medicine to some extent in
Boston and at Nahant in the summer. In 1879 was elected a Fel-
low of the Massachusetts Medical Society. Some years since re-
linquished the active practice of his profession. Was for a time
prominent among the leading lawn-tennis players of the coun-
try, and, after winning several matches here, went to Europe in the
fall of 1883, and competed with the champion players in England
and Ireland. Has published two books on Lawn Tennis and various
articles on sporting matters. Is a member of the Somerset Club of
Boston.
He was married Jan. 12, 1887, at Boston, to Elizabeth Iasigi.
Children: Dorothy, born July 15, 1888; Alfred Warren, born July
28, 1889, died May 4, 1893; Ruth, born Jan. 18, 1891 ; Philip Joseph,
born March 16, 1892 ; and Elizabeth, born Feb. 24, 1894 Resides
at 225 Beacon Street, Boston, one-half the year; and the other half
has been spent for ten years at Woods Holl, Mass.
LOUIS DYER, son of Charles Volney and Louisa Maria (Gifford)
Dyer, was born in Chicago, Ili., Sept. 30, 1851.
In the fall of 1874 entered Balliol College, Oxford, England, and`
continued his studies there until February, 1877, when he was called
home to Chicago by his father's illness. Remained in Chicago for
some months, studying, teaching, and lecturing, and was afterwards
for three years tutor in Greek at Harvard. In July, 1878, received
the degree of B.A. from Oxford. From Sept. I, 1881, to June, 1887,
was assistant professor of Greek at Harvard, and then went abroad
for purposes of study and travel. Returning temporarily to this
country in December, 1889, he gave a course of eight Lowell Insti-
tute lectures in Boston on "The Gods in Greece." In June, 1890,
went back to England, and purchased Sunbury Lodge in Oxford,
which is his permanent home. In June, 1891, published his Lowell
lectures,- Studies of the Gods in Greece at Certain Sanctuaries
)
2I
encore for my poem of 'How Mike O'Toole Drove Home his Hearse.'
B three children. Resides at
I have regularly contributed a monthly letter from Boston to the Phila-
delphia Book News, and I have-had stories, articles, and poems pub-
lished in the ' Century.' Harper's Weekly and Bazaar, Independent,
Dec. 11, 1852, at Boston,
' New-England Magazine' and other periodicals. I have had a number
N.Y., Aug. 7. 1881.
of poems translated into Russian and published in Russia. I have
884), pp. 16, 17.
translated (mostly for' Schirmer of New York) nearly three hundred
A novel entitled ' Not Angels Quite,' published by Lee and
songs.
is literary adviser to the publish-
Shepard, last August, drew forth the most amusingly contradictory
at 100 Purchase Street in
criticisms
I have two volumes of poems all ready for the press :
to one. I am sorry to say that
one, consisting of songs and sonnets dedicated to the Class of 1874, in
Rhadamanthus to many unhappy
honor of our twentieth anniversary, I hoped to have ready for the
een able to recommend a manu-
great event; the other is of Vers de Société," and, with illustrations
by F. G. Attwood, will be published by Estes & Lauriat.
I have
at Fenollosa's beautiful volume
any letters I have written, and
been industrious enough, and if I served any other mistress but Literature
I have corrected, Heaven only
with the same diligence I think I .should have received some material
f my duties, every line of Milton,
reward; but in the classic words of Wordsworth, I am still 'The
d others too numerous to mention.
poor Dole of scanty peuce, and apparently likely to become, in the
Milton, Burns, Scott, Byron, Poe,
sinister prophetic words of Shelley, Cold Charity's unwelcome Dole.',
and during the spare time that my
Still I was enabled to go to the Chicago Fair, and had a treatment only
re, - for I was not hurried about
exceeded in miraculous commissariat by the prophet Elijah's experience
itled, A Score of Famous Com-
with the ravens." Is married and has four children; his third child,
; and have also made considerable
Margaret Aliona, was born Jan. 26, 1891, and Harold Sanford, was
volume, to be called Famous
born March 30, 1893. Resides at "Hedgecote," Glen Road, Jamaica
ernoons and evenings being at my
Plain (Boston), Mass.
t nominal position of principal of
GEORGE BUCKNAM DORR.
England Conservatory of Music
Has not entered any business or profession since graduation.
han one or two lectures on Englisho
the classes varying greatly, from
Writes as follows
My home is still in Boston (18 Common-
wealth Avenue) ; and an autumn and winter spent upon the Nile, and a
of the year. I have also lectured in
pics, giving a course of ten on the
spring in the Holy Land, is the only travelling of any special interest that
1 Literature, and this past winter of
I have done the last five years."
ted by a course of five or six read
JAMES DWIGHT.
Writes as follows: Live at 225 Beacon Street, Boston, one half
riginality in Art and Literature' a
the year and at Woods Holl, Mass., the other half. Have four children
S, Haverhill, Lynn, Medford, and
living. Ruth, born Jan. 18, 1891, Philip Joseph, born March 16, 1892,
t an Authors' Readings and got an
17
ion, appeared in 1888 and
other stories," The Long Exile and other stories for children,
Family
1 behalf of the new system,
Happiness, The Cossacks,' a new translation of War and Peace," all
from the Russian of Count Tolstoi (who has been pleased to express
ated by actual voting with
his satisfaction with them); and many others, including translations
wrote a letter to the Board
from the French and Spanish, and a number of Goethe's minor works
ing athletics at Cambridge,
for the Barrie edition. I gave, in the spring of 1887, a course of six
1e Overseers. (See Boston
lectures on Russian Literature in Philadelphia and Germantown ; rewrote
1889, delivered an address
eveland,' at Baltimore, Md.
them and gave them in the Berkeley Lyceum Theatre, New York City,
cle entitled Substitutes for
in the spring of 1888. I also lectured in Deerfield, Mass., before the
' Summer School of History and Romance' (in 1887), and in Brooklyn
house at Manchester, Mass.,
on Tolstoi.
Is married and has two children Robert Montgomery,
ew home, 113 Brattle Street,
born June 13, 1884, and Arthur Alexander, March 14, 1886. Office in
born Sept. 29, 1884, and his
Boston is with T. Y. Crowell & Co., 65 Kingston Street.
Still practises law and man-
GEORGE BUCKNAM DORR.
Has entered no profession or business since graduation; has travelled
change, and of the firm of
much in Europe and in this country, but has been at his home in Boston
kers, 4 Post-Office Square,
most of the time of late, spending his summers at Bar Harbor, Mt.
ree children. Resides at 367
Desert, Me. Resides at 18 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston, Mass.
JAMES DWIGHT.
On account of poor health, his-practice of medicine has been inter
,
Aug. 7, 1881.
rupted is still actively interested in tennis. Was married Jan. 12,
p. 16, 17.
1887, to Elizabeth Iasigi; has one child, Dorothy, born July 15, 1888.
Resides at 225 Beacon Street, Boston.
the staff of the Philadelphia
LOUIS DYER.
ed to take editorial charge of
Remained in Cambridge as Assistant Professor of Greek and Latin
founded by one of the Selig-
until June, 1887, when his resignation took effect. In September follow-
ig, but it proved anything but
ing, he went abroad, intending to be-absent about a year. (No report
ausing side. This connection
since 1887.)
r spending the summer pleas
r to enter the employ of the
WILLIAM SAMUEL ELIOT.
., as general literary adviser,
Died in Boston, Mass., Nov. 15, 1874.
offer to remain in New York
See Secretary's Report No. 2 (1877), pp. 17,18.
d the former, and have since
[ built a small house on Glen
JOHN WHEELOCK ELLIOT.
it ' Hedgecote.' I have been
Has continued to practise medicine in Boston, having his office at his
5 since the beginning of 1886
residence, 75 Marlborough Street. In 1886 was appointed surgeon to
Enoch when probably trans-
out-patients at the Massachusetts General Hospital. Has published
more remunerative. Here is
articles in Wood's Handbook of Medical Science," and in the 'Bos-
nina,' Ivan Ilyitch and other
ton Medical and Surgical Journal." Is married.
8,' A Russian Proprietor and
18
my capacity of a newspaper Cerberus have regularly barked at art, liter-
ature and music. Besides my journalistic work, which has averaged six
Memorial Building,
columns a week, have written a few translations from German and Rus-
G. Hodges of '74, r
sian, contributed several articles to the American reprint of the Ency-
partnership continu
clopredia - Britannica,' and begun a 'History of Constantinople.' Am also
T. L. Scovill, of ]
slowly preparing to publish a small volume of songs and translations.
business remaining
My only public work since graduation has been to deliver at Hingham,
still continues, with
Mass., and at St. John, N.B., a lecture against Spiritism, and a course
member of the Ch
of talks about English literature while at Derby Academy. June 28,
& Mining Exchang
1882, was married in Boston to Helen James Bennett;" has a son not yet
Rochester, N.Y.
named, born June 13. 1884. Resides at 1934 Locust Street, Philadelphia.
JOHN WOODFOI
Office of The Press" is corner Seventh and Chestnut Streets in that city.
Continues to I
GEORGE BUCKNAM DORR.
residence, 234 Cla
Has continued to spend most of the time in Europe, where he now is ;.
Women at 18 Sta
has not been in active business. Resides at 18 Commonwealth Avenue,
Dispensary :- is a 1
Boston, Mass. (No report since graduation.)
Is married and ha
John, born Sept. :
JAMES DWIGHT.
On account of ill-health. has never practised medicine to any great
JACOB HAMILT
extent; has been actively interested in tennis, and after winning several
Writes as follo
matches in this country went to Europe last fall, and has since played
Signal Company U
with the champion players in England and Ireland is expected to return
company and con
home in August. Resides at 76 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass. (No
Union Switch & S
report since 1880.)
be a decided impr
voted myself to in
LOUIS, DYER.
often expensive, &
During the year 1880-1, continued as Tutor in Greek in Cambridge
and I soon found
since Sept. 1, 1881, has been Assistant Professor of Greek and Latin at
which to engage :
the College for five years, which appointment was confirmed by the Board
I could continue
of Overseers June 1, 1881. Resides at 104 Mt. Auburn Street, Cambridge.
estate brokerage
WILLIAM SAMUEL ELIOT.
such as I have tu
Died in Boston, Mass., Nov. 15, 1874.
in 3 Major Block
See Secretary's Report No. 2 (1877), pp. 17, 18.
completed and a
tion and drawing
JOHN WHEELOCK ELLIOT.
on a through pas
Has continued to practise medicine in Boston, now having his office
now in some ca
at his residence, 75 Marlboro Street; has made a specialty of Gynx-
sewer, water-ma
cology, or diseases of women. May 8, 1883, was married in Boston to
(Drawing set for
Mary Lee Morse.
such an inventio
ber of the class
FRANK WORCESTER ELWOOD.
Writes as follows "Practised law in Rochester, N.Y., until Sept.
FRANCIS CHI
1881, when I opened a banking and stock-brokerage office in the Elwood
Is still residi
18
in that city, under the firm name of J.E. Ditson & Co., now doing
JOHN
business at 1228 Chestnut Street; will return to the Boston house this
in t
summer, though the Philadelphia. business will still be carried on
afte
under his supervision; Oct. 2, 1877, was married in Boston, to
as -
Henrietta Curtis Mixer; Oct. 20, 1878, James Edward Ditson, jun.,
Bos
was born.
Soc
eigl
NATHAN HASKELL DOLE. The first year after graduation
Dre
taught at De Veaux College, New York; the next year was instructor
188
in Greek and English literature at the High School, in Worcester,
Bos
Mass.; in December, 1876, succeeded Nichols, as preceptor of the
Derby Academy, in Hingham, Mass., where he remained until June,
FRA
1878; since then has resided at 2 Mount Vernon Place, Boston; and
Ha
has been engaged in general literary work, especially in editing and
up
enlarging Rambaud's " History of Russia," published in three volumes,
the
by Estes & Lauriat, of Boston; is American correspondent of "Le
join
Livre," and has recently been appointed on the Committee to visit the
wh
Academical Department of Harvard.
the
adr
GEORGE BUCKNAM DORR. Soon after graduation went
to
he
Europe, where he remained, travelling and studying, until 1879
EN
since his return to Boston has not been in activé business ; the past
mo
year has been treasurer of the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty
to Children. (No report since graduation.)
JOH
JAMES DWIGHT. In the fall of 1874, began the study of medicine
at
at the Harvard Medical School; serious illness interrupting his work
27,
at the school. he did not receive his degree of M.D. until June 25,
ne
1879; passed the following winter as House Physician at the Boston
An
Lying-in Hospital, and has since been practising his profession at
No
Boston and at Nahant; in 1879 was elected a Fellow of the Massa-
in
chusetts Medical Society.
So
res
LOUIS DYER. Soon after graduation entered Balliol College, Oxford,
England continued his studies there until February, 1877, when he
JAC
was called home to Chicago on account of his father's illness; remained
the
in Chicago for some months, studying, teaching, and electuring, and for
18
the past- two years has been tutor in Greek in Cambridge, and is ex
tw
officio a member of the faculty; in July, 1878, received the degree of
Ch
B.A. from Oxford; has written several reviews for the Atlantic
en
Monthly;" expects to pass this summer in Europe.
CI
su
WILLIAM SAMUEL ELIOT. Died in Boston, Nov. 15, 1874.
C
See first triennial report.
CI
16
looking on, but by the sweat of his brow"; Feb. 20, 1875, was
LOUIS DYI
given a position in the house of E. R. Mudge, Sawyer, & Co.,
after gradu
15 Chauncy Street, Boston, selling agents of the Washington
continued I
Mills, which position he now holds ; Dec. 27, 1876, was
called. hom
married. at St. Paul's Church, in Rochester, N.Y. by the Rev.
Chicago, st
Dr. Foote. to Agnes Russell Elwood, daughter of the late Isaac
whether or
R. and Anna Elizabeth (Gold) Elwood, of Rochester ; is now
degree.
residing at 273 Clarendon Street. Boston.
WILLIAM
JAMES EDWARD DITSON. Both in Boston, Mass., Dec.
Marshall (
11. 1852 In Sept, istt. entered into the employ of the firm of
He visite
Oliver Ditson & Co., music publishers, of Boston. commenc-
and was fitte
ing at the very beginning of the business : passed the following
from Europe
summer 11F Littupe, and in October. 1875. returned to his
which he pas
father's stone as clerk in December. 1875, the firm of Oliver
a quiet one,
Ditson & Cig. purchased the complete music stock of Lee &
sented itself
Walker. of Philadelphia. and a branch house was established
studied faith
14) that CITY. under the firm name of 11 E. Ditson & Co.,
he
to the requir
having been made the junior partner of the Boston house of
and they wer
end of that
Oliver Davis & Co. and epen sent to manage the branch
Sophomore
thouse an Pima delphas. 1,022 Unestaut Street.
disease whic
NATHAN HASKEIN DOLFA Born in Chelsea, Mass., Aug.
the intervals
31.1152 Received the degree of A B. June 28. 1876: has
make up for
too ardent f
teaching since guadaation the first year was passed at
forced to lea
Veaux College at Suspension \Bridge. New York : the next
again as a si
as in Greek and English lerature, at the High
It was tl
School Mass. returned to Cambridge in the fall
giving up ev
of 11-6 and remained there until Christmas, when he suc-
him a more
ceeded Vichols as preceptor of the Nerby Academy, in Hing-
bed day afte
barn. Mass stillands 11, remain in Hingham until June, 1878,
things in the
and then to visit Kurope
up his inte
pleasure be
GEORGI. Bl CKNAM DORR Born in Jamaica Plain, Mass.,
without bein
Dec 29. 1053 Has been travelling and studying in Europe
he even studies
most of the time since graduation. (Has made no report to the
his degree
Secretary.)
specially ex
the stronges
JAMES DWIGHT Born in Paris, France, July 14, 1852. Has
class of '74
been studying medicine at the Harvard Medical School since
subscription
graduation on account of severe illness, his studies the past year
able, though
have been interfered with, and he will remain another year at the
from a wind
Medical School, at the end of that time taking the degree of M.D.
This was
Classmates of Mr. Don
30
31
ml h.: Kent. 75. 3. : Tyng. T.G.C.: Tower, 77.1.: Hooper.
Betters. 74. h. and r.
ADDRESSES.
Harvard rs. Yale at Saratoga. July 15.1874. Yale rintorious
enter winning the sedies and the college championship for the
ABBOT, JAMES L., Jr., 131 Pearl St., New York City.
e
Besse has Harvard. 7; Yale 8. Errors: Harvard 12:
ARBOT. WILLIAM F. 21 Berkeley St., Cambridge.
None Sand as above
ALLEN, RICHARD M., 5 Garden St., Cambridge.
ASTON, EUGENE N., Springfield, Mass.
Harvard T.S. Picked Nine at Samstoga. July 17. 1-74
BABCOCK. FRANCIS E., 10 E. Brookline St., Bosten.
N/0e virturious 11-14 Leeds 77 111 Hinish
BAKER. WALTER. Darchester, Mass.
it a : Thatcher .... and it. Walker. T1. .. Tang. Time
BAKER. WILLIAM H., 623 N. 18th St., Philadelphia, Pa.
TT.L. 11 70.1 and T.
BANCROFT. CHARLES P., Harvard Medical School, Boston.
BARRETT. HAWRY H., Box 273, Malden, Mass.
BENDELARI. GEORGE A. C., Greenwich, Ct.
BETTENS. THOMAS S., Cambridge.
inform the report to thank more health 11, -
BLAIR, WOOPBURY. Care Hon. Montgomery Blair, Washington, I
BLANEY. GEORGE A., Woburn, Ma-s.
1 of the Class who basis whangly t. part.
I
often troublesoun demonds and free conduct that al those
BRAINERD, ERASTUS. 5 Wadsworth House, Cambridge.
BRANNAN JOHN W.. 135 W. 7th St., Cincinnati, Ohio.
we 1kot acceded gramoiro or prompt 1.. U. request with
BRIGGS GEORGE R., 61 Kirkland St., Cambridge.
care realize that 1 importate for M
BRINSMADE, John C., Springfield, Mass.
at the doue of Noticiary United with ilst of the
BROWNE. A. P., Care Browne & Holmes, 30 Court St., Boston,
last.
BOFFUM. CHARLES T., 22 Remsen St., Brooklyn, N.Y.
thing you all a happy and success
BERDETT. HENRY M., 174 Water St., New York City.
and which has united AA it Colorge Health
BERNHAM. WILLIAM A., 21 Commonwealth Av., Boston.
hrinly Mi the future Health more wheele
BURRY, WILLIAM, Cambridge.
and classmate.
CAROT. JAMES J., 11 Park Square, Boston.
CARY, THOMAS, 184 Delaware Av., Buffalo, N.Y.
CATE: EDWARD W., Newton, Mass.
CATE, GEORGE H., Wolfeboro, N.H.
CHISHOLM. HENRY. 352 Superior St., Cleveland, Ohio.
"CLAPP, ARTHUR B., Chelsea, Mass.
CLARK, HENRY A., Erie, Pa.
CLARK, Lotis C., 18 Gramercy Park, New York City.
30
CLARKE, CHARLES C., Care of Commissioner of Customs Ser
Shanghai, China.
CLARKE, SAMUEL B., Chicopee Falls, Mass.
CLIFFORD, ARTHUR, New Bedford; Mass.
COALE, GEORGE O. G., 27 Brimmer St., Boston.
2
32
COLLINS, FREDERIC, 193 Euclid Av., Cleveland, Ohio.
CORLIES, THOMAS, Care E. W. Corlies, Esq., 661 Pine St., New
York City.
CROCKER, HENRY H., Jr., 54 W. 21st St., New York City.
CONNINGHAM, FREDERIC. 4 "Chestnut St., Boston.
CUTTER. FREDERIC S., 273 Harvard St., Cambridgeport.
DANA. PAUL, Care Charles A. Dana, Esq., New York City.
DANA. RICHARD H., *361 Beacon St., Boston.
DEVENS, A. LITHGOW, Cambridge.
DITSON. J. EDWARD, Care Oliver Ditson, Esq. Boston.
DOLE, NATHAN II., Care J. W. Fletcher, 22 School St, Boston..
DORR, GEORGE B., 18 Commonwealth Av., Boston..
DWIGHT, JAMES 70 Beacon St., Bo-ton.
DYER, Louis, Care Dr. Charles V. Dyer, Chicago, III.
ELIOT. WILLIAM St, 44 Brimmer St., Boston.
ECLIOT. JOHN W., Care J. II. Elliot; Esq., Keene, N.II.
Eiwoop, FRANK W. Rochester, N.Y.
FARLOW. JOHN W., Newton, Mass.
FARRAR, J. HAMILTON, 307 W. Washington St., Chicago, Ill.
FAULKNUR. FRANCIS C., Keene, N.I.
FENOLLOSA, ERNEST F., Salem, Mass.
FERRIS, EDWARD M., Brookline, Mass.
FESSENDEN, GEORGE R., Beaver Falls, Pa.
-FLAGG, BERNARD W., Cambridge.
FLANDERS. FRANK B., 375 Haverhill St., Lawrence, Mass.
Foore, ARTHER W. Cambridge.
FORSTER, HORACE W., 21 Monument Square, Charlestown, Mass.
GANNETT, WILLIAM W., Jr., 3 Dana St., Cambridge.
GOODRICH, ARTHUR L., West Auburn, Me.
GOODWIN, WENDELL, Jamaica Plain, Mass.
GRANT, HENRY Rice, 14 Commonwealth Av., Boston.
GRANT, U. S.. Jr., Washington, D.C.
GREEN, CHARLES M., Medford: Mass.
GRIFFITH, SAMUEL B., Mercer, Pa.
HARDING, HERBERT L., Cambridge.
HAVEN, GEORGE Is, Avondale, Cincinnati, Ohio.
HAYNIE, WILLIAM DUFF, Cairo, III.
HIGGINSON, EDWARD, Deerfield, Mass.
HILL, EDWARD B., Worcester, Mass.
32
33
FEEDERIC. 193 Euclid AF.. Cleveland, Ohio,
HODGES, AMORY G., Washington National Bank, Boston.
THOMAS. Care E. W. Corlies, Esq., 661 Pine St., New
HODGES, N. D. C., Salem, Mass.
HONEYWELL, THOMAS M., Meadville, Pa.
ty.
HENRY H., Jr., 54 W. 21st St., New York City.
HOPKINS, ADONIRAM J., East Boston, Mass.
AM. FREDERIC. 4" Chestnut St.. Boston.
HUNT, WILLIAM D., Chapel Station, Brookline, Mass.
FREDERIC S., 273 Harvard St.. Cambridgeport
IVx, JESSE C., Gainesville, Ala.
IUL Care Charles A Dana. Esq. New York City.
JONES, WALTER I., Portsmouth, N.H.
|CHARD H.331 Beacon St., Boston.
KEITH, ARTHUR M., 11 Hawthorn St., Boston Highlands.
A. LITHCOW. Cambridge.
80
KNOWLES. CHARLES F., 36 Newbury St., Boston.
-
I. EDWARD Care Oliver Disson. has Boston.
LAWRENCE, JAMES, Jr., 38 Beacon St., Boston.
ATHAN H.. Care J W. Fletcher. 22 School St. Boston.
LAWTON, FREDERICK Lowell, Mass.
BURGE B-18 Commonwealth A1 Boston,
LELAND, WILLIAM S., 53 Walnut Av., Boston Highlands.
JAMES in Bracon St.. Bo-ton.
LEONARD JOEL M., 139 Otis St., East Cambridge.
OUTS. Care Dr. Charles y. Dyer. Chicago. III
LOMBARD E HOWARD, 22 Hancock St., Boston.
WILLIAM S. 44 Brummer SL Boston
LULL. HERBERT W., Manchester, N.H.
JOHN W.. Care .1. H. Elliot. Eng. Keene, N.I.
LIMAN. FRANK, Care A. A. Low & Bros., 31 Burling Slip, N
tr
FRANK W.. Rochester. N.Y.
York City.
McCANN. MICHAEL J., Corner 57th St. and 4th Av., New York Ci
Jong W. Newton, Mass
J. HAMILION 307 W Washington St., Chicago Iii.
McGREW. G H. G., Dublin, Wayne Co., Ind.
EK. FRANCIS (.. Kore N.IL
McMillan. WILLIAM G., Brevoort House, New York City.
USA, ERNEI F. Salem. Mass.
MARSTON. WILLIAM S., Cambridge.
EDWARD M. Brookline Mass.
MASON. WILLIAM C., Bangor, Me.
DIEN. GEORGE R. Beaver Falls, Pa.
MERRIAM EDWIN G., 149 Newbury St., Lawrence, Mass.
BERNARD W., Cambridge
MERRILL, HENRY F., Cambridge.
Rs. FRANK B.. 370 Haverhill St.. Lawrence. Mass.
MERWIN, HENRY C., 126 Commonwealth Av., Boston.
ARTHUR W.. Cambridge
MILLS, ETHELBERT S., 150 Montague St., Brooklyn, N.Y.
R, HORACH W., 21 Monument Square. Charlestown. Mass.
MINOT. JAMES J., Care Minot, Hooper, & Co., Boston.)
TT, WILLIAM W.. Jr.. 3 Dana St.. Cambridge.
MITCHELL, EUGENE U., West Newfield, Me.
ICH, ARTIFUC L., West Auburn, Me.
MORSE, HENRY L., 12.Marlborough St., Boston.
7IN, WENDELL, Jamaica Plain. Mass.
100
MORSE, HOSEA B., Care of Commissioner of Customs Serv
HENRY Rick, 14 Commonwealth A\.. Boston.
Shanghai, China.
U. S., Jr. Washington, D.C.
MORSE, W. L., Marlborough, Mass.
CHARLES M. Medforde Mass.
MOSES, THEODORE W., Exeter, N.H.
TH, SAMUEL B., Mercer, Pa.
MUDGE, HENRY S.,118 Beacon St., Boston.
NO, HERBERT L., Cambridge
NEWTON, RICHARD C., So. Orange, N.J.
S GEORGE I. Avondale, Ciucianati, Ohio.
NICHOLS, WILLIAM I., 'Saco, Me.
E. WILLIAM DUFF, Cairo, III.
PARSONS, JOHN, Jr., Saugus Centre, Mass.
NSJON, EDWARD, Deerfield, Mass.
PATTON, JOHN S., Cambridge.
EDWARD B., Worcester, Mass.
PENHALLOW, CHARLES S., 7 St. James Av., Boston.
5
34
PERKINS. WILLIAM M.. 34 Hancock St., Cambridgeport.
TYLER, HARRY B., 201 S. 13
100
PERRIN. MAR-HALL L... Grantville. Mass
TYLER, WILLIAM R., 28 Stal
PETERS. EDWARD G.. Care F. 1) Peters, Esq.. Boston.
VAILLE. FREDERICK O., Car
PICKERING ARTHLR H.. fit Dudley SL. Boston Highlands.
VAN NEST, GEORGE W., Ca:
PIE+R. WILLIAM T.. Tripity College. Cambridge. England.
New York City.
PRIMER. STIVESTER Leight Saxony
WALKER. EDWARD W.,.Mad
RANDALL FRANK F. ( are P K. Randall. 69 Washington St.. Boston.
REED NIHOLAS ( are Ret Fredeno Brooks. Cleveland. Ohio.
14
WARNER, WILLIAM P., Cam
WELLINGTON, EDWARD W.,
R1. HARDS HOSTINGTON ( are P. Richards E. Georla N.Y.
WENDELL, FRANK T., Care
RICHARDS WILLIAM R.. I Marlborough St. Boston.
St., Boston.
R1 HARDSON GLORE ...18 Washington SL Boston.
WHEELER, WILLIAM A., W
R1 HMOND WILLIAM New II. Newark \./
WHITE. GEORGE W., Jr., 26
KUNDER Groke 112 Ma / Charlestown. Mass
WHITEHOUSE, EDWARD L.,
ARTHIR Cart William ( River try Boston
WIGGLESWORTH, GEORGE, :
ROBERTS Hine French Mass
WILLIAMS, HENRY H., Wor
haven Charlestown. Mass.
WITHINGTON, CHARLES F.,
SMOTH
WITHINGTON, DAVID L.,No
SAMOR WILLIAM Inward. Sauger & (.... 105 & 107
WOODWARD, SAMUEL B:, 5
Chamber Y:
WYMAN. JOHN P., Jr., Arlir
MAHANI CHARLIS H Item \.||
WYMAN, S. EDWIN, Arlingt
SAWIER W Bangou Me.
152,
STARS DAVID Ac. Beach :
The following former men
SEARS FORMUND H. Jr. Wissum Mass
SEWALI
Invoion 1.. 7 Paul Minu, or Cambridge. Masp.
BELMONT. AUGUST, Jr., Car
SHEPARI Durchester. Mass.
KING, ROCKWELL, 300 N. ]
SIL-BEE GEORGIA S., Salem. Mass
SECOR, THOMAS E., 5 W. (
Simmons. EDWARD E. Care J.B. Thaver. Esq. Cambridge
SOUTHWORTH ROBERT A. 143 Chelsea St Charlestown. Mass.
SPINNEY WILLIAM F.. Care Commissioner of ( ustomis Service.
Shanghai. China.
STONE CHARLES 11 Templeton. Mass,
STONE EDWIN P.. ps High Sh. Buston.
STONE, FREDERICK J. Care Cyrus W. Field. Esq. 123 E. 21st St.,
New York City.
STRAUB HENRY. 81 S. Broadway, Baltimore, Md.
SWIFT. FREDERICK. New Bedford. Mass.
THOMAS, ARCHIBALD D., Downingtown. Pa.
TUCKKEMAN, CHARLES S., 41 Chestout St., Salem, Mass.
TYLER, COLUMBUS T., 72 Temple St. Boston.
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Harvard Univ Arch Alumni class reports for 1874-1934
Details
Series 5