F 1 cr> f^"^-''^^ CLEVELAND, 0. ^C^ -iX*- .^'^jT IRew )6nQlant) Society OF^ Clcvelan^ an^ the IHIleetern IRcservc. JInniversarv Addresses, and enrollment ^T4 7a^ 1897. . hi 677 Z ANNIVERSARY ok. ts * Torefatbers* Day DECEMBER 19th, 1896. AT THE Jfir0t lprc0bvUci1an Church, J£a6t GlcvelanO. A V A Order of Exercises. 5 o'clock (old sun time), - - Social Gathering 6 o'clock (sharp), ----- Supper 7 o'clock, - .- - - Speakinc; and Music The Music furnished liy the EAST CLEVELAND MUSICAL SOCIETY. ADDRESS, - Hon. J. C. Burrows, Washington, D. C, \J . S. Senator from Michigan ADDRESS— "Old-Time Farm Life in New England, and the Men it Made," Prqf. W. I. Chamberlain, Hudson, O. ADDRESS—" The Women of New England," Miss Mary Evans, Painesville, O., Principal Lake Erie Seminary ADDRESS—" Laws, and Legal Reforms of New England," Hon. Edward H. Fitch, Jefferson, O. ADDRESS—" Peculiarities of the Pilgrims," Rev. J. W. Malcolm, Cleveland, O. West. Res. Hist. Boc. 1915 «.new england Society. ♦♦ Entered Page //Q B >^ £^^ No. OFFICERS, 1897. President. L. E. HOLDEN. Vice-Presidents. Maine, New Hampshire, • Vermont, ^fassachtmefts, Bhode Island, Connecticut. Secretary. L. F. Mellen. Chas. F. Thwing. E. R. Perkins. Francis C. Keith. m. m. hobart. F. J. DiCKMAN. Wm. Bingham. Treasurer. S. C. Smith. Chaplain. Rev. Livingston L. Taylor. ^ir>^^, — ] L. E. HOLDEN, A. G. COLWELL, R. C. Parsons, Wm. Edwards,. L. F. Mellen, S. C. Smith, M. M. Hobart, Trustees. W. P. HORTON, H. R. Hatch, James Barnett, F. A. Kendall, N. B. Sherwin, I. P. Lamson, H. Q. Sargent, Thos. H. White, J. H. Breck, Mrs. W. a. Ingham, Mrs. C. F. Olney, Mrs. p. H. Babcock, Mrs. Elroy M. Avery. Mrs. E. D. Burton. The New England Society was reorganized in December, 1895, and incorporated. Annual Election of OfiRcers have been held January 1st, 1896, and January 1st, 1897, as required by the Constitution. The Celebration of " Forefathers' Day" was observed December 21st, 1895, with a New England Supper, at Plymouth Congregational Church. The 100th Anniversary of the Settlement of the City of Cleveland was cele- brated on July 22nd, 1896, New England Day, with a Banquet, on the Campus of the We.»itern Reserve University, where addresses were made on " New England Life and Character," by Hon. Wm. McKinley, President-elect of the United States ; Hon. John Sherman, U. S. Senator from Ohio ; Hon. J. R. Haw- ley, U. S. Seniitor from Connecticut ; Governor Asa S. Bushnell and others. The Celebration of " Forefathers' Day " was observed December 19th, 1896, with a New England Supper, at the First Presbyterian Church, East Cleveland. New England Society of "OLD-TIME NEW ENGLAND FARM LIFE AND THE KIND OF MEN IT MADE." Address of Prof. W. I. Chamberlain. In her old hand-loom, more than fifty years ago, I remember that my New England mother used to stretch certain disconnected threads, called the "warp," and then with her shuttle fling in the cross-threads that made the carpet or the web of cloth. So in my mental loom to-night let me stretch certain apparently discon- nected threads of thought and then weave them into the web that shall show what sort of men and women old-time farm life in New England naturally and actually produced. The first isolated thread is this : Not until mature manhood did I visit the farm home of my maternal ancestors for many genera- tions, in old Groton, Mass. From that home, for generation after generation, even as Ian MacLaren tells of it in " Bonnie Scotland," there had gone forth bright boys who became college honor men, professors, presidents, missionaries, ministers, scientists, inventors and intelligent farmers and mechanics. At the time of my visit, not one stone remained upon another of the home of my ancestors, nor any vestige of the enclosures. With many neighboring farms this my ancestral one had been bought up by a rich Boston capi- talist and the whole was a huge sheep-walk. And I asked, "Why did that farm home send forth such men? Why is it that my farm home, and hundreds like it in New England, to-day are in ruins ?' ' Further on, the web of thought will weave the answer to these questions. The second isolated thread is this : Soon after that, I visited the home of my birth, and of my paternal ancestors for many gen- erations, in famous old Litchfield County, Conn. A cousin then owned that farm and several adjacent ones, a wealthy and sagacious farmer of the modern time. His splendid orchard was as fine a one and as»heavily loaded as any 1 have ever seen, not excepting my own in Ohio, and all his farming was sagacious and profitable. One fact he mentioned, viz.: that my father's former mountain wood lot, from which my cousin sold the timber every twenty years, brought him for that timber $60 per acre, as it stood. The view from our old home was one of the finest in New En- gland — a high mountain-hemmed plateau, with fertile fields and nestling lake far off in the lower distance. When 1 returned to my Ohio home I said to my aged father, then living with me, "Father, how could you ever sell that splendid view?" His answer I shall not S(jou forget: "My sou, it was indeed a lovely view, but if we Cleveland and the JVesfern /Reserve. had not sold it and come to this college town of Hudson, where your uncle was a professor in the college, you and your brother and three sisters would never have had a full education." The third disconnected thread is this : Doubtless many of you recall that splendid series of articles by Dr. S. Weir Mitchell, in the Century Alagazinc some, three years ago, entitled: "Charac- teristics." One paragraph I wish to use. He describes a coterie of cultured people — poets, painters, scientists and the like, as meeting by chance in one of their homes, and he says they fell to discussing this question : Which of all the callings in which men are engaged bring most of aesthetic enjoyment through the occupa- tions themselves? And he says that by universal consent they named the callings of the artist and the naturalist. And why ? The first paints the glories of God's landscapes in lasting colors on canvas; the second studies the wonders of God's animate crea- tion and fixes them upon the canvas of his soul. Now let me begin to weave the web of my thought on these few disconnected threads that constitute its warp ; for these threads, to my mind, directly or indirectly suggest this : That New England farm life, its atmosphere, its snows, its skies, its glorious land- scapes, its inherent difficulties overcome only by energy, inevitably created a race of men and women instinct with the love of beauty and grandeur, with the Jove of God, the love of victory, the love of country, the love of learning, and the spirit of invention that lays all God's forces and materials under tribute to man's brain and hand. First, then, the love of beauty. When I read what Dr. Mitchell says about the joys that come to the painter and the naturalist, I said to myself instantly : " Yes, and all those joys came to the New England farmer of the olden times." He had the joys of the painter in far fuller degree, for the former only occasionally amid the glories of God's landscapes studies and imitates and reproduces them ; but the farmer on those grand New England hills, was in the very midst of them all the time. Daily he drank into his very soul the glory of God's landscapes, a glory which the wealth of Vanderbilt or Rockefeller cannot transfer to canvas or hang upon the walls of his art gallery. You remember the story of the celebrated painter, who invited his fellow artists to his country home to view "a painting he had lately finished and framed." He ranged the guests in fit position and an attendant unveiled the painting. Here, in its great gilt frame, was a lovely mountain landscape, with flocks and herds and winding stream in the fertile valley. At first they stood transfixed with admiration, but at last, true to the spirit of criticism so com- mon among artists, they began to speak their thoughts. One thought the mountain tops too blue; another, the foothills too green ; another, the grain too golden ; another, the cattle too large for true perspective; another, the golden glory of the sunset far too gorgeous. When they were done he said: "My friends, New England Society of keep your eyes closely fixed upon the painting and walk forward three steps;" and as they did so the picture slowly moved back- ward in its frame; and then, for the first time, they found that the window had been removed, a great gilt frame thrown round the opening, and it was God's mountains they had thought too blue, and God's foothills they had thought too green, and God's actual sunset they had thought too golden for reality! He enacted the little scene to rebuke their tendency to hyper- criticism. I have told of it to show why the New England farmers, daily in the midst of such landscapes, could not but inherit this love of the beautiful, so different from what we associate with the character of the stern Pilgrims of Plymouth Rock, and the equally stern Puritans of the Massachusetts Bay Settlement; for they re- jected the tinsel of man's cathedrals, but never the real beauty of "God's first temples." That love of the beautiful flowed in the veins of their descend- ants, too, for at least one generation after they left New England. For many years, even up to manhood, I never guessed what force it was that made me climb every highest hill top, tower and steeple and drink in the landscapes, with the blood tingling with delight in every vein, or later, that made me climb Pike's Peak and other peaks of the Rockies, the Alleghenies and the mountains of New England, and steam up the glorious Hudson river, again and again, with an all-day-long delight. I scarcely knew by what force it was when, thirty-seven years ago, as principal of Shaw Academy, close by this spot where to-night we celebrate Forefathers' Day, I was impelled almost every pleasant evening to climb the ridge back of the academy and drink in the landscape and look over the lower- lying forests, and watch the great sun drown itself in beautiful Lake Erie — more than a third of a century before the millionaires of Cleveland had discovered the cash value, from an artistic point of view, of this famous Collamer ridge for splendid country homes ! My second thought is that New England farm life made a race of men and women full of the love of God. The poet says : "The undevout astronomer is mad," and I might add, the undevout New England country dweller, or farmer of the olden time, was well nigh unknown. Sublimity lies close to beauty, but higher in the scale. No New Englander ever wondered that our Divine Master went into the mountain top to pray. In more ways than one he thus came nearer God. Nor can we wonder that even the devil, when he wished to tempt our Lord, " took him up icito an exceed- ing high mountain, and showed Him the kingdoms of the world and the glory of them," and said: "All this will I give thee if thou will bow down and worship me," nor that Christ replied : "It is written, 'thou shalt worship the Lord thy God and Him only shall thou serve.'" That is the true tendency of the grandeur and beauty of the New England scenery. None but the devil him- self, standing on such mounts of vision, could dare to tempt his Lord. None but a fiend incarnate, it would seem, standing with Cleveland and the Western Reserve. such surroundings could fail to worship God. And so we cannot wonder that a truly Godly race sprang up from these New England hills. My third point is that New England farm life in the olden time, with its climate and its snows, its ruggedness and its inherent diffi- culties, made men who loved pre-eminence, victory, supremacy — who spurned the very name of defeat. The salt air from the sea, the invigorating breezes from the mountain tops, the battle with the stubborn soil, the deep snows of winter, the ten-ox teams with which they broke the roads through the deep snows — all combined to make a vigorous, a manly, a victory-loving people, who made Lexington and Bunker Hill possible. We do not wonder that the climate of Samoa and other tropical lands, which lets the inhabit- ants go half clad or unclad, and eat the spontaneous fruits of nature, makes men sluggish both in body and mind. We do not wonder that nine-tenths of the world's power of hand and brain and heart lie north of the frost line, where the snows of winter compel prudence and energy and forethought and sagacity. My next thought is that old-time New England farm life invari- ably made a patriotic race, a race of men who loved home and fatherland and were ready to die for them and for civil and religi- ous liberty. The same is true of Switzerland, earliest of republics, whose mountain-loving people never could be bound down by tyrants. This partly, in fact, I think, grows out of difficulties overcome. "To whom much is given to do, of him much is re- quired." For home and country for which men have toiled, they are willing to suffer and die. This may occount for the otherwise anomalous fact of the intense love of liberty, civil and religious, displayed by the people of the flat, level Netherlands, whose three million people not even all the men and all the wealth of Spain, under Philip II, could ever conquer, even with the fierce general ship of an Alva; whom, sixteen centuries earlier, not even Csesar with all his genius and the trained battalions of the Roman Empire could ever really vanquish. Why? Because, as it seems to me, their life-long, race-long, constant, furious battle with the sea — when it swept over the land as if to wipe them from the face of the earth, and they again and again drove and shut it back with dykes — had given them that united vigor and love of liberty and native land which made it impossible to wrest either from them. My next point is that New England farm life made a race full of the love of learning. Next to God and home and native land, they loved knowledge; next to the home and the church, in natural order of sequence, inevitably came the school house and the col- lege. They loved learning, partly because they were created in God's own image, that is, endowed with intellect and moral sense, and partly because the peculiar circumstances of their sur- roundings made knowledge a necessity. They must study the forces of nature to understand them and to overcome and utilize them. Their long winter of snow with its short days and almost New England Society of impossible profitable work, and with its long evenings, made it necessary for them, as well as possible, to study and to think; to plan for the future; to investigate. And so New England, far more than the settlements farther south along the coast, far more than any equal area, almost, on earth, is dotted over thick with school houses, academies, colleges ahd universities. My next point is that New England farm life naturally and in- evitably created a love of and a capacity for invention. This is one branch of learning, one department of science, one means of conquering nature, one mode of making God's forces and God's materials work with man and not against him. Why was the spirit of invention more brilliantly active in New England than in any other spot on God's green earth? Partly for the reasons just given, and more specifically because the scantiness of the returns of agri- culture forced the farmers to be mechanics and inventors, as well as students, gave them the manual power, the dexterity, the deft- ness with tools and machines, the knowledge of physical and mechanical laws and principles, without all of which successful in- vention is impossible. In every farm home in the olden time was some kind of manufacturing industry, for both the men and women. John Adams' father, the father of a line of presidents and distin- guished diplomats and statesmen, was a small farmer who eked out the slender returns of his farm by working as a shoemaker. Spinning, knitting, braiding straw and palm leaf and leghorn hats, and bonnets were common. Elias Weld, who was my neighbor the last ten years of his long life, in his early and mature life was a country doctor in Vermont, who eked out his practice with his farm, and who adopted his orphan nephew, John G. Whittier, and took him often on his long rides through the mountain scenery of New England, and thus educated him in the love of nature and of nature's "books." William Cullen Bryant's early life was quite similar. Daniel Webster's father was a hard-working farmer of slender means. Who can doubt, to return for a moment to my former thought, that the love of beauty infused into these young souls by their New England hill-surroundings was that which breathed in everlasting beauty in the " Thanatopsis," in "Snow Bound," and in Webster's immortal orations and legal arguments? Who can suppose that the first named wonderful poem, which Mr. Dana, the editor of the North American Revieiv, at first sight de- clared " Never was written this side of the Atlantic," could ever have been written by a college freshman if he had not always breathed the New England mountain atmosphere. Who can sup- pose that the massi/e grandeur of Daniel Webster's oratory could ever have existed but for the mountains and the mountain air of New Hampshire and Vermont? Or that the New England painters and other artists owed nothing to the splendid scenery that en- wrapped their early lives like a garment? To return, from this digression into the field of beauty, once more to the field of invention : — close to almost every farm house Cleveland and the Western Resettle. was the little shop, where were made in the winter time the ox- yokes, ox-bows, ax-helves, fork-handles, harnesses and tools for the summer's farm work, as well as little manufactured articles for sale. Often close by the farm house, too, on the mountain brook or creek, stood the little shop with turning lathe whose water- wheel was turned by the mountain stream, and in which countless tools, implements and articles of wooden-ware and furniture were manufactured. Or, on the larger streams, the saw mill and grist mill, which were of use not only or chiefly for the products there turned out, but still more for the inventive skill and power there developed. And so we cannot wonder that the water-wheel sug- gested other modes of using nature's mighty forces or that from these farm homes and shops there grew up a race of inventors, such as the world never before saw produced from an equal population. This last summer for a few weeks I studied New England and her resources somewhat more carefully than ever before. I stood upon many of her mountain tops. From Mount Holyoke I looked over the beautiful valley of the Connecticut, and with telescope looked into the very windows of Smith College in Northampton, and of Amherst, and of tlie State Agricultural College; while close by on the other hand stands Mount Holyoke Female College, mother of best education for our women — and I said : *' Yes, the farms are more or less abandoned up these rough hillsides, but the rich valley lands are still well cultivated and the farmers froni the hillsides, through these grand institutions and others like them, have educated sons and daughters that are a power in God's universe — men that have thrown the great dam across the great Connecticut at Hol- yoke, with its thousand feet of length and its eighty feet of fall, and liave thus made that mighty river do far more work to bless man- kind than all the farmers who have left all the abandoned farms of all New England could ever do with their rugged farms and their little home shops. Another day I stood upon the Catskills and looked up and down the great valley of the Hudson, and off into beautiful Berkshire County, Mass., and the same line of thought there filled my soul with thanksgiving, not with sadness. Another day I stood on Mansfield, the highest summit of the Green Moun- tains, and looked off upon Montreal, Quebec, the White Mountains, and down on Lake Champlain ; and thought how the Green Moun- tain boys met the British on the plains and waters below, and took their forts and drove them back to Canada. Another day I stood on Greylock, highest of New England mountains except the White range, and as I noted how the forests were creeping down Greylock and its range, and down all the parallel ranges for fifty miles east and west, and saw Williamstown with its college and factories, and North Adams and Old Adams and Pittsfield, and Pontoosic Lake, and other lakes, and other manufacturing towns lying below, the same kind of optimistic thoughts filled my mind ; and I said : "Yes, the rugged farms on these hillsides have been abandoned, and the forests are creeping down their sides, but every shower of New England Society of rain, and every drift of snow that fills all these mountain gorges, and swells these valley streams must descend more than a thousand vertical feet and turn innumerable wheels of industry before it loses itself in the mighty ocean ; and the inventive spirit born and bred on these rough hill farms in the olden time is what has made this so !" Another day I followed one of these little rivers — little as they would call it in the West, mighty, as we must call it in the East — I followed it from the sea level all the way up through Rhode Island and Massachusetts — a long and constant and almost un- broken and mighty city — a hugh hive of human industry. A hundred miles, almost, of long brick factories and pleasant homes of their intelligent operatives whose lives are spent in the manu- facture of these smaller and more costly lines of articles where little power and much skill convert nature's materials into the countless finished products whose raw material gains a hundred or a thousand fold in money value by such manufacture ; and 1 said to myself: "The wealth of New England lies, first of all, in her people, and next in her numerous mountain streams with their thousand or more feet of fall. First, in the people, who by their inventive skill, nay, their genius let me say, have utilized every ' foot-pound ' of pressure of those little rivers as they seek the sea." And I said again: "This little river, with its rocky bed, its numerous waterfalls, its steep sides — this little river, which could be swallowed up by the great Missouri, and be lost in it without increasing its volume, is well nigh as mighty by reason of its water- falls and its inventive people, as is the vast Missouri for its agri- culture. For the Missouri for two thousand miles, with its vast volume, its soft bottom, its low banks, and its lack of fall, turns scarcely a wheel of human industry." Such, then, was old-time New England farm life, and such the sort of men and women that it made. Its atmosphere, its ocean- wafted breezes, its winter snows, its blue skies, its glorious land- scapes, its inherent difficulties which could be overcome only by energy — inevitably created a race of men and women instinct with the love of beauty, the love of grandeur, and the love of God, the love of victory, the love of learning and the spirit of invention. Such men and women have laid under tribute to man's brain and hand all God's forces — material, intellectual and moral. Some indeed have abandoned those farms and that farm life, but they have done so simply because they cculd "do better." They have gone forth into every nook and corner of God's green earth, and they have carried help and health and strength and vitality and sweetness and hope wherever they have gone. Their blood has mingled with the blood of other states and other nations and it has always carried strength and vigor of mind and body wherever it has gone. What a blessed thing that New England lay between Old England and the prairie West, and that the Pilgrims and the Puritans inevitably drank in "her beauty and her strength " before Cleveland and the Western Reserve. they settled the more fertile West. Think for a moment what would have been the case if from the New York Bay all up the coast to northern Maine, God had placed the level, fertile prairie soils, and the less vigorous climate of Illinois, Missouri and Kansas. Would there ever have been a Declaration of Independ- ence? Should we ever have had the net-work of railways that ramifies our continent? Would God's lightning to-day be flashing our messages, sounding our far-heard words, lighting our cities and speeding our suburban traffic? Would Yale, Harvard, Amherst, Dartmouth, Williams, Smith, Wellesley, Mt. Holyoke, and scores of other New England Colleges have sent forth light and joy and gladness into the whole world? Would the sort of men and women that our New England farm life of the olden times produced ever have been given to the world? THE WOMEN OF NEW ENGLAND. Address of Miss Mary Evans. Mr. President, atid friends of the New England Society : You have given me a comprehensive theme, comprehensive as to quality and quantity, as to time and space. The women of New England ! How large that goodly company and how good ! From Rose Standish and fair Priscilla, through days colonial and years of revolution — say rather, of resistance to tyrrany, through periods formative in the life of the new nation or critical for free- dom and union, through the era of pioneering when "westward the course of empire took its way," through evil days and good days they pass before us in brave review, the women of New England, calm, strong, steadfast, side by side with the pilgrim fathers on their way to worship, keeping the hearth fires bright while the men went out to labor or to battle, rearing great flocks of children in lowly homes on stern hill sides, pondering many things in their hearts till out of that abundance, the mouth must needs speak, the pen must needs write for faith and freedom, these women of New England — who can tell what they have been in the making of the nation — nay, what they are, for they are not dead nor sleeping in this year of our Lord, the two hundred and seventy- sixth from the day we celebrate ; whether they tarry in the East or go forth to the West or live again in their daughters of these In- terior States, the sun never sets upon the peaceful kingdom of their good works. Heroism is the same to-day as ever. It is as hard to endure cold and hunger as a home missionary on the frontier as in the old days in New England. Consecrated courage is the 10 New England Society of same in blood stained Armenia where New England women are choosing to suffer affliction with their dear people rather than to come home to safety and rest. Let us thank God for the women of New England in the days that are gone and the days that are ours ! But New England women have thought little of the praise of man or woman. I fear that some of them would have thought it a sad overturning of things that should remain fixed forever if they could have forseen that, on the celebration of such a day as this their spokesman would be a spokeswoman. They have done their duty without thinking of praise. Nor is it just to utter indiscrimi- nate praise as if the women of other parts of our land were not also brave and steadfast. There were pilgrims in Pennsylvania for con- science sake ; in New York there were housewives from Holland with love of liberty born in them and transmitted to their sons ; there were exiles from France — in the decoration of our programs this evening, the lilies of France remind us of the Huguenot strain in the life blood of the nation. Wherefore, then, shall we praise above others the women of New England? They were pioneers. '* They created that distinctive America to whose ideal, despite occasional protest and temporary reaction all parts of the nation are steadily conforming." Strangely enough I found this fine tribute to their "distinctive America" in an En- glish paper The Japan Mail, published in Yokohama. They chose no genial soil in which to plant the seeds of free- dom. It was winter when they came, and such winters followed as they had never known in Old England. True, there were hard- ships in other colonies, biting cold, creeping damps, but not New England winters, lingering, as Lowell tells us, late into spring, "those bacle'ard springs That kind o' haggle with their greens and things." But it was in men and women together that these circumstances of trial brought forth such fruits as strength, endurance, thrift, dili- gence, self-restraint, self-sacrifice. What did the women more than the men? Doubtless on that New England farm, the man of the house from early dawn to latest eve endured hardships which our luxurious age can scarcely realize, but the woman's weaker frame and her added burdens called for endurance of a peculiar kind and led to the evolution of some peculiar qualities. Is it too much to ask whether that inventiveness, that skill in making much out of little which characterizes New Englanders everywhere, did not descend from the New England mothers, even more than from the fathers? Ruskin cannot say enough of the qualities requisite in cooking inventiveness among them, and we may well remember with respect the New England kitchen with the mother bringing marvels to pass out of scanty means, all the while the children clinging to her and all the while her patience growing great, her self-control heroic Cleveland and the Western Reserve. ii Should we not also claim for the women of New England the greater part in poetic insight, in the deep thoughts on life and duty coming to light in their sons of song and eloquence? Thus Whittier pictures for us in Snow Bound "the prompt, decisive father, wasting no words," the mother's fitting phrase "so rich and picturesque and free," and his Life and Letters tell us that mother and sisters alone saw aright the budding promise of the poetic boy. But our age is critical, comparing and analyzing. What have New England women given to the life of the nation besides these virtues of the home, this inspiration to duty? Straightway we think of the church. And although other daughters have done virtuously, zealously, wives and mothers of Dutch Reformers, of Lutherans, Moravians, Scotch Presbyterians, yet it is significant that the earliest movements of far-off and high empires to conquer distant lands for Christ, these had their birth in the hearts of New England mothers. They first gave their sons who, afterwards, gave themselves. In New England were formed those " Female Cent Societies," the precursors of Woman's Boards, Woman's Unions and woman's work of every name. Pathetic name, the "Cent Society," letting in a flood of light not only on the straitended resources of humble homes, but also on the small allowance which, even in better circumstances, a woman could call her own. High spirited, large hearted women were "silent partners" in the house- hold where the labors were equal but the financial profits often unshared. New England women were not only active in the enter- prises of the church, but they were loyal to its theology which must have weighed more heavily upon their mother hearts than they dared to think. They leaned hard upon the eternal justice, believing that, somehow, it must be the other side of the eternal love. New England women were great in the home and the church, but they were also great in the school. And here I find what seems to me the crowning gift of New England manhood to the life of the nation. It did not manifest itself so greatly in the period when all of woman's gifts were needed in the development of home and church, but in the quiet of the home, in the silence and repression of the church of the times, those qualities were in development which were to bless the world through generations of women teachers. New England born. This was a movement distinctively of New England. The Middle States were more conservative as to the place of the daughter in the home, nor was it necessary that she should be thrust out or that she should go out to earn her own living. There was also more of class prejudice, " school teacher" being, if not a term of reproach, at least on a level with milliner and dressmaker. The New England girl had no scruples about earning her own living. Then, too, she wanted to see the world, and, better still, she wanted to do good, to give, as well as to get. New England women had somehow out-stripped their sisters of other States in learning their lessons of liberty and equality ; or, 12 New England Society of rather, having learned them in the seclusion of their hills and val- leys, they were prepared beyond others to put them into practice and to teach what they had learned. Forth they went. One came to our old Academy in southern New Jersey, with a wonder working book, just published, the Life of Mary Lyon. So it happened that neither the old Academy nor Philadelphia schools, good as they were, were good enough, and so it has come about that I should have the distinguished privilege of speaking for New England women in this presence to-night, al- though I am a New Englander only by education and observation. Perhaps, however, nearly forty years of training and opportunity may give some right to speak while a deep sense of the debt I owe to New England women would make me ashamed to be silent. The women teachers of New England were representative women. Mary Lyon was an embodiment of New England life and charac- teristics. Simplicity, sincerity, "this one thing" always before her, and how was she "straitened till it should be accomplished," this one thing, to open doors everywhere into the goodly heritage of learning, not alone for learning's sake, but for Christ's sake, to go anywhere, to go where others would not go, to be ^afraid or ashamed of nothing save not to know and do her duty ; this was a gift of New England womanhood, not to the nation only, but to the world. The outward substance of her Mt. Holyoke lies in ashes as many a New England home is deserted and dust mingles with dust on many a hill side. But the spirit of the teacher is marching on, not only in higher education, greater opportunities in multitudes of women teachers all over the land, but, let us hope and pray, in a spirit of devotion to truth and duty, in a wide love that can reach and would even the heterogeneous populations of our day. The teacher cannot close without teaching, the moral must be seen and felt. We cannot afford to forget what has been put into the life of the nation by the women of New England. How faith- less and ungrateful shall we be if we do not mingle with our praises some earnest resolves that the inheritance shall not be lost. We lack, we want, let us try to regain their simplicity and sincerity in the midst of our complex life with its agitated architecture — no wonder we are coming back to colonial lines and spaces — with its rush and its multiplicity. We lack, we want, let us try to recover their reverent attitude, their strong purpose, their determination to conquer every hurtful thing in the national life. We lack, we want, contentment. Let us try to be content with a few things earned, paid for and therefore truly enjoyed. We are witnessing in our literature a revival of interest in lowly home life. It must be for good that we have been taken by storm as it were, by Drumtochty and Thrume. Dr. Weslum MacLure is a man, to be sure, but there are Margaret Howe and Leebie and Jess, these for Scottish life; and for our own New England the sympathetic pictures, so tender, graceful and true of Sarah Orne Cleveland and the Western Reserve. ij Jewett, the sterner, more tragic and some times less true sketches of Mary Wilkins. Surely it is not just to please us by photographic studies of life and character. Any movement in literature has meaning. We are to go back that we may go forward, gathering inspiration for the problems of our lives from the noble examples of the past. And there is need of all the "prayers laid up" in New England homes by teachers, by mothers, by fathers at the family altar, there is need of courage, of faith, of hope for hu- manity that, in our day and generation we may be wise as they were to all, and strong to do. LAWS AND LEGAL REFORMS OF NEW ENGLAND. Address of lion, Edward H. Fitch. The place of the landing of the Pilgrims from the Mayflower, has become noted in song and story. " Plymouth Rock" has been the theme of the poet, and the subject of the painter. It is not my purpose to-night, to add to that literature, either in prose or poetry. I call your attention in the brief period-allot- ted to me, to the effect upon our country and its laws and juris- prudence, of that unintentional, but providential landing. Their pastor at Leyden, John Robinson, on July 27th, 1620, wrote them a letter, which they received at Southampton. The following extracts from that letter are worthy of preservation. " Wnereas you are to become a body-politic, using amongst yourselves, civil government, and are not furnished with any per- sons of special eminence above the rest, to be chosen by you into office of government; let your wisdom and godliness appear, not only in choosing such persons as do entirely love, and will dili- gently promote the common good ; but also in yielding unto them all due honour and obedience in their lawful administrations, not beholding in them the ordinariness of their persons, but God's ordinance for our good; nor being like unto the foolish multitude who more honour the gay coat, than either the virtuous mind of the man or glorious ordinance of the Lord. But you know better things, and that the image of the Lord's power and authority which the magistrate beareth is honourable, in how mean persons soever. And this duty you both may the more willingly, and ought the more conscientiously to perform, because you are at least for the present to have only them for your ordinary governors, which yourselves shall make choice of, for that work." Note the language : "Whereas you are to become a body-politic using amongst yourselves, civil government." This is the first 14 New England Society of written declaration I have found, making manifest the intention of the "Fathers" to establish a civil government, and choose their own officers. This letter was brought with them, and on that long and delayed voyage, was read, and its contents fully comprehended. They approved the suggestions, and decided to act upon the advice of their beloved pastor therein contained. When the "Mayflower" came to anchor in Cape Cod Harbor, where no patent from any King had granted rights, or provided a form of government, and they had determined to land and settle there, "the Fathers," by a solemn compact made between them- selves on the "Mayflower," before landing; in the words of Dr. Cheever, "took the business of patent, government, and all civil and religious rights, into their own hands and became in reality, an independent Republic." Listen to that compact. "We, whose names are underwritten, having undertaken for the glory of God and advancement of the Christian faith, and honour of our King and country ; a voyage to plant the first colony in the northern parts of Virginia, do by these presents, solemnly and mutually in the presence of God, and one of another, covenant and combine ourselves together into a civil body-politic, for our better ordering and preservation, and furtherance of the ends afore- said; and by virtue hereof to enact, constitute, and frame such just and equal laws, ordinances, acts, constitutions, offices, from time to time as shall be thought most meet and convenientfor the general good of the Colony; unto which we promise all due sub- mission and obedience. In witness whereof, we have hereunder subscribed our names. Cape Cod, nth November, Anno Domino, 1620." What an appreciation they had of their undertaking, and of the way to secure its accomplishment, and make it permanent. It has been said that God's order is. Principles, Providences, Persons. " Principles are eternal ; Providences develop principles ; Principles make persons." This was made manifest in the acts of the "Pilgrims" after landing, as stated in their "Journal" of March 23rd, 1621, "proceeded on with our common business, from which we had been so often hindered by the savages coming, and concluded both of military orders and of such laws and orders as we thought behooveful for our present estate and condition, and did likewise choose our govennor for this year, which was Mr. Johh Carver, a man well approved amongst us." They could not adopt the laws of England, as they were fleeing from those. It would take time and experience to frame a new system. They took the Mosaic, for as had been said "they had a code of laws in every man's hand in the Bible." This was the commencement of changes in the laws of England, and the enactment of those suitable to their condition and neces- sities, both in this and the other Colonies in New England, and particularly in Connecticut. Cleveland and the Western Reserve. i£ They abolished primogeniture, entailment and imprisonment for debt, and so changed the laws of inheritance that, in the absence of a will, all the childten should inherit equally, both realty and personalty. In the words of Prescott Hall, "Indeed I may go further and say that there is scarcely a change o^ an improvement called for or suggested by the distinguished Lord Brougham, in his great speech upon law reforms in England, delivered in the House of Commons, in the year 1812; but what may be found among the enactments of legislatures, and the practice of Courts in the Eastern States." These great changes and improvements in the laws, as I have shown were begun at once, and were continued up to the time of the Revolution. In short, again quoting from Prescott Hall, "with a bold defiance of customs immemorial, and of forms rendered sacred by antiquity, they commenced the progress of legal reform from the moment their feet first pressed the sod of their new-found country. With no effected disregard for the wisdom and learning of their ancestors, with no pretentions to a more perfect knowledge of man's true social condition than that which prevailed at home, they did nevertheless at once institute the inquiry as to how much of an antiquate system was suited to their wants and conditions." Having the common Statute law of England open and before them, and with a steady eye upon ancient precedents, they began a system of legal change at once radical, yet conservative. In criminal law they made radical changes. They at once re- duced the number of crimes made punishable in England with death, from one hundred and fifty, to eleven. About 1630, one of the members of the Colony with malice, killed one of his neighbors. His trial was conducted by observing all the forms of law. An indictment by grand jury, and verdict by a petit jury, and sentenced. He was executed, not under the laws of England: but on the divine command "Whosoever sheddeth man's blood, by man shall his blood be shed." As Dr. Bacon states : "The greatest and boldest improvement which has heen made in criminal jurisprudence by any one act, since the dark ages, was that which was made by our " Fathers," when they determined that the judicial laws of God, as they were delivered by Moses, should be accounted of moral equity, and gen- erally bind all offenders, and be a rule to all the Courts." The laws, and changes in the laws, were enacted at the town- meetings, at which the citizens of the Colony first, and afterwards the Township, exercised all those functions of government, which are now performed in Town, City, County and State. Here, every citizen was an equal, each striving for the common good, each bearing his share of the public burden, each feeling his responsibility, and each one acting upon principle to maintain and perpetuate principles. i(t New England Society of Thus under Providence, persons were made who wrought out the eternal principles of right, justice and freedom. The experience gained in the town meetings, and in framing laws for themselves, taught them the need of a closer union among the Colonies, inspired the Declaration of Independence, the Federal Constitution and the Ordinance of 1787. While recognizing that need, the order to "establish justice, insure domestic tranquility, provide for the common defense, pro- mote the general welfare, and secure the blessings of liberty to our- selves and our posterity, ' ' they guarded well the rights of the States. In the articles of Confederation and perpetual Union, declaring " Each State retains its sovereignty, freedom and independence, and every power, jurisdiction and right, which is not by this con- federation expressly delegated to the United States, in Congress assembled." In the Constitution, providing, "The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people." The Ordinance of 1787, passed by Congress, under the Articles of Confederation, on July 13th, 1787, "for the government of the territory of the United States, northwest of the River Ohio," is a most remarkable act. This ordinance illustrates, not only the wisdom of the " Fathers," but their comprehension of the need of a free and independent people. "Great were the hearts, and strong the minds, Of those who framed in high debate, The immortal league of love that binds Our fair broad empire, State with State." The citizens of Ohio, are under a deep debt of obligation for that ordinance. It should be studied by all the people, and the Articles of Compact therein should be found in the readers used in our schools. It was passed for "the purpose of temporary government," for the territory of the United States, northwest of the River Ohio. In Section 2, it provides that estates, both of resident and non- resident proprietors in the said territory, dying intestate, shall descend, and be distributed among their children, and the descend- ants of a deceased child, in equal parts; the descendants of a de- ceased child or grand-child to take the share of their deceased parent, in equal parts among them. That there should be no distinction between kindred of the whole and half blood ; and saving in all cases, to the widow of the intestate, her third part of the real estate for life, and one-third part of the personal estate. It provided that estates might be conveyed by will and deed, giving the manner of making the same. Cleveland and the Western Reserve. ij Sec. 13. And for extending the fundamental principles of civil and religious liberty, which form the basis whereon these repub- lics, their laws and constitutions, are erected ; to fix and establish those principles as the basis of all laws, constitutions, and govern- ments, which forever hereafter shall be formed in the said terri- tory; to provide, also, for the establishment of States, and per- manent government therein, aud for their admission to a share in the Federal councils on an equal footing with the original States, at as early periods as may be consistent with the general interest. Sec. 14. It is hereby ordained and declared, by the authority aforesaid, that the following articles shall be considered as articles of compact, between the original States and the people and States in the said territory, and forever remain unaltered, unless by com- mon consent, to wit : These Articles are six in number. Article i. No person, demeaning himself in a peaceable and orderly manner, shall ever be molested on account of his mode of worship, or religious sentiments, in the said territories. Article 2. The inhabitants of the said territory shall always be entitled to the benefits of the writs of habeas corpus, and of the trial by jury; of a proportionate representation of the people in the legislature, and of judicial proceedings according to the course of the common law. All persons shall be bailable, unless for cap- ital offences where the proof shall be evident, or the presumption great. All fines shall be moderate ; and no cruel or unusual pun- ishment shall be inflicted. No man shall be deprived of his liberty or property, but by the judgment of his peers, or the law of the land, and should the public exigencies make it necessary, for the common preservation, to take any person's property, or to demand his particular services, full compensation shall be made for the same. And, in the just preservation of rights and property, it is understood and declared, that no law ought ever to be made or have force in the said territory, that shall, in any manner what- ever, interefere with or effect private contracts, or engagements, bona fide, and without fraud previously formed. Article 3. Religion, morality, and knowledge being necessary to good government and the happiness of mankind, schools and the means of education shall forever be encouraged. The utmost good faith shall always be observed towards the Indians ; their land and property shall never be taken from them without their consent; and in their property, rights and liberty, they never shall be invaded or disturbed, unless in just and lawful wars authorized by Congress; but laws founded in justice and humanity shall from time to time, be made, for preventing wrongs being done to them, and for preserving peace and friendship with them. Article 4. Provides that the territory and the States formed therein, shall forever remain a part of the United States, and be subject to all acts and ordinances of the United States in Congress assembled, and shall be constitutionally made. That "No tax shall be imposed on lands the property of the United States ; and i8 New England Society of in no case shall non-resident proprietors be taxed higher than residents. The navigable waters leading into the Mississippi and Saint Lawrence, and the carrying places between the same, shall be common highways, and forever free, as well to the inhabitants of the said territory as to the citizens of the United States, and those of any other States that may be admitted into the con- federacy without any tax, impost, or duty therefor." Article 5. Provides that there shall be found in the said ter- ritory not less than three nor more than five States ; and gives the boundaries of three. The Eastern State being Ohio, was bounded as follows : By a direct line drawn due north from the mouth of the Great Miami to the territorial line, by the territorial line, Pennsylvania and the Ohio River. That when either of the said States shall have 60,000, free inhabitants therein, such State shall be admitted by its delegates, into the Congress of the United States, on an equal footing with the original States, in all respects whatever ; and shall be at liberty to form a permanent Constitu- tion and State government : Provided, The Constitution and government, so to be formed, shall be a republican, and in con- formity to the principles contained in these articles. Article 6. There shall be neither slavery nor involuntary servi- tude in the said territory, otherwise than in the punishment of crimes, whereof the party shall have been duly convicted : Pro- vided always, that any person escaping into the same, from whom labor or service is lawfully claimed in any one of the original States, such fugitive may be lawfully reclaimed, and conveyed to the person claiming his or her labor or service as aforesaid. Governor Chase, in commenting upon this ordinance, says : "This remarkable instrument was the last gift of the Congress of the old Confederation to the country, and it was a fit consumma- tion of their glorious labors. "At the time of its promulgation, the federal Constitution was under discussion in the convention. On the whole, these articles contain what they profess to contain, the true theory of American liberty. The great principles promulgated by it, are wholly and purely American." Later, speaking of the growth of Ohio and her institutions, he says: " The spirit of the ordinance of 1787 pervades them all. Who can estimate the benefits which have flowed from the interdic- tion, by that instrument of slavery and of legislative interference with private contracts? One consequence is, that the soil of Ohio bears up none but free men ; another, that a stern and honour- able regard to private rights and public morals characterizes her legislation." 1 have thus hastily sketched some of the important events in the legal history of this country. Enough, however, to excite both wonder and admiration. Enough to show that, in the words of John Fiske, "the skillfully elaborated American system of federal- Cleveland and the Western Reserve. ig ism appears as one of the most important contributions that the English race has made to the general work of civilization." Governed by principles, under providence they founded the Republic, and left it to their descendants, with a trusting faith in its permanence. The lesson of the hour, on this "Forefathers' Day" is, will we, their descendants, strive to perpetuate and preserve, as they did to build up and establish it? If we do, their faith in their work will be justified, and our children's children will celebrate "Forefathers' Day" as citizens of a common country, undivided, peaceful and permanent. In the words of the poet, they will say as we do now, " We live in freedom ; let us clasp each other by the hand ; In love and unity abide, a firm, unbroken band ; We cannot live divided, the Union is secure, God grant that while men live, and love, this Nation may endure." PECULIARITIES OF THE PILGRIMS. Address of Rev. J. W. Malcolm. It seems to me the one thing this audience needs in this the clos- ing address, is to be thoroughly solemnized — to be elongated in your physiognomy — to be moved into a lachrymose susceptibility, and mellow liquidity. As to the physical condition of the Pilgrims we shall soon see they were human beings just like us. They ate, drank, slept and walked just we do. Their ladies had tongues just as our ladies have tongues — and had much occasion to use them, just as our ladies have. Socially, however, their ladies were pecu- liar. They loved to stay at home and to think of home, while ours, love to flit from store to store and revel in the sweet buy and buy, and buy. Our ladies love to study art and occultism. Their ladies took more to the plainer studies, such as geography. Libbie Garner, it was, who asked John Rowland how far it was around the world, and John, it was, who answered her: "Why, my child, it is only twenty-four inches, you are all the world to me." The courtship of Miles Standish was "peculiar." Its dignity and pathos is not likely to be reproduced in the experience of the de- scendants of the Pilgrims in this anniversary. As compared with the Puritans, the Pilgrims were peculiar. They were more humane than mild. Take it in the matter of medicine and treatment of children, and the Puritan was harsh. Here is his prescription for worms: "Take one peck of garden 20 New England Society of snails, bruise them and put them into a canvas bag and hang it up, and set a dish under it to catch the liquor that droppeth therefrom. Add to this two handfuls of calendine, also two handfuls of bear's fat, two of aquimony, two of wood-sorrel, two of betony, two of red dock roots, three gallons of strongest beer, 6-penny worth of beaten saffron, six ounces of strained hartshorn, and give two pints on an empty stomach the first thing in the morning, before the worms have had their breakfast." But now behold the peculiarity of the Pilgrims, so mild, so humane. This is their prescription for worms : "Hyripus semplex of one snail raised to the third dilu- tion, suffused with aroma of one burdock, taken in aqua multa ad captandum ad libitum." The distinctive characteristic difference between the Pilgrim and the Puritan, with their origin and peculiarities, has never been well understood. They were far apart from each other. To be serious, I wish to pay a tribute to the moral courage of the Pilgrims and the steadfast manner in which they absolutely refused to compromise their convictions in the least. It was a wonderful thing in the life of the Pilgrims that in an age of monarchy and despotism they should be able to plan a pure ecclesiastical democracy ; it was a strange sight to see these people moved as by some strange power formulating a church organization allowing for the full play within it of all the human faculties. In this they seemed to be, indeed, the children of providence. What else than Divine inspiration and guidance can account for these people leaving their homes, their native hearth hallowed by the ashes of their dead, and a father-land full of all the enchantment of childhood and fond recol- lection. How easy it would have been, says Joel Hawes, to have made a few little overtures, to have reasoned away the convictions of eonscience, to have adjusted themselves to their environment, and to have saved themselves all the torture, the imprisonment, the death at the scaffold, the dreary exile, and the slow anguish upon foreign, savage shores. When we think of the Puritans, we can see that it is quite natural that they having suffered from ritualism, should seek to stay within their own church and purify it from that which had injured them ; but when we look at the Pilgrims taking the dread step of separatism in obedience to the high mandates of an inspired conscience, it seems more than extraordinary. In the low countries the contrast is equally striking. The Dutch are brave and sturdy, the Pilgrims are devout and full of holy bold- ness. At the University of Leyden, Calvinism was dogmatic. In the Church of John Robinson was breadth of view and liberality of spirit. As compared with the episcopacy of whatever shade, the people of Scrooby and later of Leyden, were divine in their charity. In short, these people stand on the crests of the Christian centuries markedly different from all others save the Apostles and their immediate successors. Long live the memory and example of the Pilgrims in their " peculiar" way of furnishing the principles of right living. Cleveland and the Western Reserve. 21 NEW ENGLAND LIFE AND CHARACTER. Centennial address of Hon. William McKinley. It gives me sincere pleasure to meet and address the Nev/ En- gland Society, of the City of Cleveland and the Western Reserve. Those of us who are descendents of New England join with us who are not descendents of New England in this pause to give tribute to the men who did so much for civilization and for the establishment of free government on this continent. There has been every variety of characterization of the New England Pilgrim, and Pioneer. Some of it of a friendly character, and others of an unfriendly character. I recall to-day the characterization of the gifted son of New England, now dead, George William Curtis, whose memory we cherish. He said: "The Puritan was harsh, severe, sour, bigoted and intolerant, but that God had sifted three kingdoms to find the seed-grain with which to plant a free republic, and that he had done more for liberty than any man in Roman history." It is said that the blood of New England courses through the veins of a quarter of the population of the United States. I know not how this may be, but I do know, that the conscience, and the ideas, and the principles of New England, courses through every vein and artery of the American republic. Well may you be proud to be descendents of New England! "No lack is in your primal stock, "No weakling founders, builded here, "They were the men of Plymouth Rock, "The Puritan, and the Cavalier." They fought on every battle field of the republic, from Concord and Bunker Hill, to Gettysburg and Appomattox, and the torch of liberty which they lighted illuminates the whole world. Stick to your Puritan heritage, but let the freedom of the age, its light, and hope, and sweetness, add to the stern faith your fathers had. 22 New England Society of new €ndland Society of Cleveland and Uicinity. (INCORPORATED.) For the purpose of fostering and promoting a kindred spirit among the SONS AND DAUGHTERS of NEW ENGLAND, and their descendants, and the cherishing of those ties which bind us to our native soil and its institutions, and for social and intellectual im- provements, we enroll our names, residents of Northern Ohio, as entitled to membership. (Revised Enrollment, 1897.) Arms, Dr. Chas. C VT 370 Amesbury Ave. Arms, S. Elizabeth CONN 370 Amesbury Ave. Adams, Alfred CONN 1096 Willson Ave. Avery, Elroy M CONN 657 Woodland Hills Ave. Avery, Katharine H. T MASS 657 Woodland Hills Ave. Abbott, Fred A ME 1270 Slater Ave, Abbott, William MASS 977 Proppect St. Abbott, Mrs. C. Tounglove CONN 977 Prospect St. Adams, Comfort A MASS 46 Streator Ave. Ahenwood, D. W CONN 402 Jennings Ave. Ambler, Mrs. Annie M N. H 402 E. Madison Ave. Ang-ell, E. A R. 1 495 Russell Ave. Angell, Mrs. E. A CONN 495 Rus-sell Ave. Adams, S. F VT East Cleveland. Adams, Mrs. Eliza D VT East Cleveland. Aldrich, William MASS West Dover, O. Avery, Charles A CONN : Painesville, O. Arnold, D. J. C MASS New London, O. Ames, J VT New London, O. Arnold, S MASS New London, O. Ainger, CD. VT Andover, O. Alden, Isaac Carey MASS Akron, O. Alden, Emma Llllie CONN Akron, O. Avery, Hezekiah CONN Euclid, O. Alleyn, Watson VT Hiram, O. Alden, Drantha L MASS Hiram, O. Alexander, Mary V CONN Akron, O. Austin, W. S CONN Huntsburg, O. Allen, G. F VT Huntsburg, O. Andrews, Calista ME Oberlin, O. Akins, A. E CONN The Lenox. Akins, Linnie D CONN The Lenox. Bacon, Richard CONN 40 Hilburn Ave. Brainard, H. M N. H East Cleveland. Barrett, R. C MASS 42 Cedar Ave. Barrett, Mrs. R. C MASS 42 Cedar Ave. ■Briggs, Sam R.I 48 Cedar Ave. Briggs, Ada L CONN 48 Cedar Ave. Bradley, Arthur CONN 818 Case Ave. Buel, A. P CONN 1333 Willson Ave. Barber, Judge G. M MASS 585 Sibley St. Bates, Theo. M MASS 76 Mayfield St. Beardslee, C. H CONN 163 Bolton Ave. Blood, R. A MASS 45 Woodland Ct. Cleveland and the Western Reserve. 23 Benedict, S. H CONN 1604 Euclid Ave. Bolton, C. E MASS 202 Cuyahoga Bldg. Bolton, Sarah K CONN 202 Cuyahoga Bid. Barstow, S. K ME 394 Sibley St. Buss, W. D N. H 30 Hinman St. Bulkeley, W. P MASS 14 Oak St Bailey, Geo. J R. 1 938 Cedar Ave. Babcock, P. H MASS 19S1 Euclid Ave. Babcock, Caroline B CONN 1981 Euclid Ave. Bingham, William CONN 789 Euclid Ave. Babcock, Charles MASS 1961 Euclid Ave Bourne, E. H MASS 845 Case Ave! Bourne. Olivia H MASS 845 Case Ave. Black, C. H ME 13 Griswold St. Brooks, Dr. M. L CONN 289 Prospect St. Brooks, Thos. H CONN 894 Euclid Ave. Burgess, Solon VT 510 Euclid Ave. Burgess L. F VT 510 Euclid Ave. Burgess, Mra L. F CONN 510 Euclid Ave. Barnett, James CONN 697 Euclid Ave. Brovi^n, Alvin R MASS 165 Adelbert St. Bierce, Mrs. Sarah M ME 62 Streator Ave. Buck, Rev. Florence MASS 160 Huron St. Boynton, Judge W. W N. H 1781 Euclid Ave! Baker, Jeannette R VT 92 Edgewood Place. Burnham, W. S VT 16 Kirk St. Blackwell, Nellie Oviatt CONN 213 Franklin Ave. Brooks, Sam'l C CONN 173 Bolton Ave. Brooks, Emily M CONN 172 Bolton Ave. •Bridgman, Theodore MASS 840 Logan Ave. Bridgman, Mrs. Louisa VT 840 Logan Ave. Baker, Geo. W VT 947 Case Ave. Barnes, Sidney MASS Talmadge, O. Barnes, Hannah MASS Talmadge, O. Barnes, Sylvester MASS Talmadge O Bierce, L. V MASS Talmadge, O. Bates, Mrs. Sabra MASS Twinsburg, O. Brown, A. J MASS Twinsburg! O. Breck, Joseph H MASS Newburg, O. Baldwin, B. W CONN Jefferson,' O. Baldwin, J. H CONN Jefferson' O Bailey ,D. W CONN Jefferson! O. Bailey, A. H CONN Jefferson. O. Brown, Raleigh MASS Rockport O Bassett, D MASS Rockport, O. Bassett, Mrs. Chas MASS Rockport O. Bartlett, Mrs. Jane T CONN No. Olmsted! o! Brown, J. S MASS Berea', o! Brown, Mrs. Elizabeth MASS Berea' O Billings, S. C MASS Kirtland! o! Billings, E. X) MASS Kirtland, O. Billings. Mrs. O. C MASS Kirtland, O. Bates, R. C MASS Willoughby, O. Bates, Mrs. R. C CONN Willoughby O. Bates, W. A 'MASS Willoughby,' O. Baker, S. L CONN Willoughby O. Baker, Mrs. S. L MASS Willoughby,' O. Beebe, Pamelia MASS Elyria O Bo wen, Mrs. S. H CONN Elyria! O. Brodie, Mrs. Jane MASS Strongsville, O. Brown, Mrs. Harriet W VT Strongsville O Bishop, T. J MASS Andover.* O. Black, R. A MASS Andover, O. Black, R. A MASS Andover, O. Butler, Charles MASS Andover O Bailey, L. E CONN Parkman, O. ♦Died 1896. 2^ New England Society of Bentley Edwin S CONN Hudson, O. Bell, Eleanor Peck VT Hudson, O. Baldwin, Anna Peck CONN Akron, O. Baldwin, Celia A VT Akron, O. Burlingame, Geo. G MASS Akron, O. Burlingame, Eliza A MASS Akron, O. Burling-ame. Geo. F MASS Akron, O. Burnell, Eli MASS Willoughby, O. Burnell, Mrs>. Ell VT Willoughby, O. Baker, E. H MASS Willoughby, O. Baker, Wm CONN Willoughby, O. Belden, A. M CONN Willoughby, O. Bush, L.. H MASS Willoughby, O. Barnes, Harley CONN Painesville, O. Bates, George A CONN Painesville, O. Benjamin, J. M CONN Painesville, O. Bingham, S. D VT Akron, O. Bingham, Clara E VT Akron, O. Buckingham, Wm. J CONN Akron, O. Buckingham, Frances P CONN Akron, O. Buckingham, Hulda CONN Akron, O. Bolton, Roswell A R. I Mesopotamia, O. Baker, Elbert H MASS Willoughby, O. •Baker, Mrs. Ida S CONN Willoughby, O. Baldwin. David C CONN Elyria, O. Brainard, Geo. W N. H 364 Sibley St. Brainard Mrs. Maria L VT 364 Sibley St. Brainard, J. M N. H 1093 Prospect St. Brainard, Henry M N. H East Cleveland. Brainard, Mrs. F. A VT East Cleveland. Brainard, Bessie M N. H East Cleveland. Brainard, A. W N. H 704 Prospect St. Brainard, Annie M N. H 704 Prospect St. Bowers, Eva C CONN Euclid, O. Bowen, Seth MASS East Cleveland. Bowen, Mrs. S CONN East Cleveland. Babcock, Wm. A CONN 49 West Trenton St. Bower, Buckland P CONN 1246 Cedar Ave. Bradford, Mrs. Mary Scranton CONN 569 Euclid Ave. Bardwell, John N CONN East Cleveland. Bardwell, Jane H CONN East Cleveland. Barnes, O. M CONN Huntsburg, O. Bo&worth, N. C VT Kirtland, O. Bosworth, L.. A. M VT KirUand, O. Brown, G. Morton VT Conneaut, O. Brown, J. E VT Conneaut, O. Browne, Myron G CONN 1304 Willson Ave. Bridgman, Cynthia E CONN Huntsburg, O. Burton, Dr. E. D MASS East Cleveland. Burton, Mrs. E. D MASS '.East Cleveland. Burton, Martha B MASS East Cleveland. Brand, Rev. James MASS Oberlin, O. Bushnell, Rev. Ebenezer CONN 727 Genesee Ave. Bushnell, Mrs. E. K CONN 727 Genesee Ave. Beckwith, Mrs. Maria W MA'S'S 112 Arlington St. Beckwith, Fred R MASS 112 Arlington St. Beckwith, Julia Howe CONN 112 Arlington St. Brigden, C. A CONN Mesopotamia, O. Brigden, Frances E VT Mesopotamia, O. Barney, Mrs. Nellie VT 86 Vienna St. Colwell, A. G CONN 871 Prospect St. Clay, Oliver P VT 41 Windsor Ave. Clay, Ina P VT 41 Windsor Ave. Curtiss, S. H CONN 621 Prospect St. Carter, Frank Li MASS 187 Central Ave Carter, Benj. L MASS 7 Gale Ave. Chandler, F. M N. H 712 Logan Ave. Chamberlln, Frank S VT 909 Case Ave. Cleveland and the Western Reserve. 25 Chamberlin, Mrs. F. S VT 9f>9 Case Ave. Cady, Horace H MASS 118 Water St. Cady, Geo. W MASS The Stiilman. Clark, Charles H MASS 308 Prospect St. Cbgswell, B. S MASS 95 Dorchester Ave. Cog-swell, Helen M MASS 95 Dorchester Ave. Chase, Charles W MASS 656 Prospect St. Chase, Almira F MASS 656 Prospect St. Cowles, J. G. W CONN 581 Sibley St. Cowles, Lois M VT 581 Sibley St. ■Clark, Charles C MASS 308 Prospect St. Conant, O. B VT 136 Muirson St. Chandler, Mrs. Robt VT 2374 Euclid Ave. •Childs, Henry B MASS 586 Prospect St. Childs, Edwin D MASS The Lennox. Caldwell, Judge H. J CONN 1204 Cedar Ave. Caldwell, Mrs. H. J CONN 1204 Cedar Ave. Chandler, J. M R. 1 200 Summit St. Chandler, Mrs. J. M N. H 200 Summit St. CoQlton, W. Smith MASS 70 Miles Ave. Corner, Horace B MASS 750 Doan St. Corner, Mrs. H. B CONN 750 Doan St. ♦Carlton, C. C CONN 23 Eagle St. Crocker, T. D CONN 845 Euclid Ave. Carter, William MASS Talmadge. O. Carter, H. S MASS Talmadge, O. Cutler, Rev. Calvin MASS Talmadge, O. Culter, Fanny MASS Talmadge, O. Cannon, Mrs. H. r MASS Twinsburg, O. Chamberlin, O. E VT Twinsburg, O. Chamberlin, W. W VT Twinsburg, O. Crosby, D. L CONN Jefferson, O. Cad well, J. P CONN Jeffersom, O. Cadwell, Ida Baldwin CONN Jefferson, O. Carter, Delos MASS Bedford, O. Colson, Thomas MASS .Brecksville, O. Coateg, William MASS Brecksville, O. Clark, Dr. Wm MASS Berea, O. Clemens, J. W R. I No. Dover, O. Clemens, Mrs. J. W R. I No. Dover, O. Cahoon, J. M VT No. Dover, O. Cahoon, Ida M VT No. Dover, O. Coo ley, George VT Dover, O. Clemens, Dr. Celia r. i No. Dover, O. Champney, Prof. L. J MASS Painesville, O. 'Cummings, Henry H N. H Painesville, O. Cummings, Alice J N. H Painesville, O. Chapman, N. S ME New London, O. Chapin, Wm. H CONN New London, O. Cushing, Dr. Chas. F ME Elyria, O. Gushing, Mary H ME Elyria, O. Cushing, Dr. Chas. H ME Elyria, O. Carpenter, Mrs. B. C MASS Strongsville, O. Corn well, Mrs. C. J VT Andover, O. Carpenter, Dwight MASS West Andover, O. Conant, Amelia VT Parkman, O. Cook, Fred T VT Parkman, O. Case, Chauncey H CONN Hudson, O. Chamberlain, W. I CONN Hudson, O. Chamberlain, Mrs. W. I CONN Hudson, O. Conger, Arthur L VT Akron, O. Conger, Emily Bron.son CONN Akron, O. Grouse, Geo. W MASS Akrorl, O. Grouse, Martha Parsons MASS Akron, O. Collister, Willis CONN Willoughby,' O. Collister, John CONN Willoughby, O. •Died 1896. 26 New England Society of Cowles, Grant MASS Kirtland, O. Cowles, Agnes Morley MASS Kirtland, O. Crary, William MASS Kirtland, O. Crary, Mrs. William VT Kirtland, O. Cleveland, G. P CoisTN Willoughby, O. •Crawford, Geo VT Willoughby, O. Colvin, Alonzo MASS South Newburg. O. Crafts, Edward MASS Auburn, O. Colton, Geo. H CONN Hiram, O. Cook, Garry L VT Hiram, O. Coe. W. W VT Hiram, O. Cross, E. A CONN Hiram, O. Casement, J. S CONN Painesvllle, O. Casement, Mrs. J. S CONN Painesvllle, O. Chamberlain, Mrs. P. P MASS Solon, O. Childs, Irwin S MASS Painesvllle, O. Cozad, H. J CONN Akron, O. Coates, Mrs. Lillian A CONN Akron, O. Cleaf, Mrs. Amelia M VT Akron, O. Condit, Mrs. Paul P N. H. ".'.'.'.'.".'.".!'....."..'... .364 Sibley' St. Chisholm, Mrs. W. B N. H East Cleveland Cristy, Mrs. A. B CONN 45 Anndale Ave. Cozad, Justus L, MASS 56 Mayfield St. Coe, Mrs. Antonette B CONN East Cleveland Chamberlain, Prof. W. I CONN Hudson O. Conkey, Mrs. Andrew L MASS Warrensville', O. Clark, Henry MASS Warrensville, O. Coburn, Mrs. J. M MASS East Cleveland. Clark, L. D VT Huntsburg, O. Clark, Mrs. Carrie A MASS Huntsburg, O. Clark, Mary A. O MASS East Cleveland Currier, Rev. Albert H n. H Oberlin, O. Clark, Mrs. W. W CONN Collinwood, O. Clark, Geo. A CONN Collinwood, O. Dickman, Judge F. J r. 1 449 Prospect St. Duncan, A. R., Jr vT 1267 Willson Ave. De Forest, Cyrus H CONN 31 Fifth Ave. De Witt, William MASS 64 W. Clinton St. De Witt. Mrs. M. A MASS 64 W. Clinton St. Dockstader. C. J CONN 885 Case Ave. Day, Wilson iM MASS 340 Superior St. Davis. William B VT 38 Cheshire St. Dawes, J. O MASS 857 Doan St. Dean, Mrs. E. L VT 27 Dean Pl Deming, George CONN cor. E. Madison & Hough'. Demmg. Mrs. C. B CONN cor. E. Madison & Hough. Doan, Norton CONN East Cleveland. Doan, Walter S.. CONN East Cleveland. Delamater, Mrs. Ehza L CONN 211 Franklin Ave. Dunham, Asa VT Bedford, O. Dickinson, S. C MASS Willoughbv, O. Doolittle, Charles E CONN Painesvllle O. Doolittle, John T CONN Painesvllle O. Doolittle, Robert E CONN Palnesville, O. Doolittle, N. Marshall CONN Painesvllle O Doolittle, Bella Pratt CONN Painesvllle' O Dibble, Mrs. M. H VT Elyr a O Dewitt, B. C VT !.!.!!!! iElyria' O Dewitt, Mrs. A. E MASS Elvria, O. Dole, Hev. S. K MASS Parkman, O. Denison, Helen Trowbridge MASS Huds n, O. Deming, William J * MASS Rootstown, O. Dickinsonr, W. J MASS Rootstown, O. Dickinson, Dotha C MASS Rootstown, O. Deming, H. A CONN Rootstown', O. Deming, Cordelia M CONN Rootstown, O. Dean, J. W MASS Mayfleld, O. Cleveland and the Western Reserve. 2J ^ean, D MASS Mayfleld, O. Dutton, Clarence N. H Auburn O Dean, Prof. B. S CONN Hiram' O* Dille. Ann Olivia MASS Eucl d' o' Dille, Willis H MASS Eucid' o' Day, William A CONN Sheffield'©' Day, Mrs. William A MASS Sheffield ' o' Day, Henry K MASS Elyria O* Day, Mrs. Henry K MASS Elyria' O Danforth, Kate Inger3oll MA SS East Cleveland Dockstader, Lazzie CONN 113 Cedar Ave' Davis, Henry S N. H 739 Giddings Ave. De Witt, Elizabeth C CONN Elyria O Edwards, William MASS 582 Prospect' St P^dwards, Harry MASS 582 Prospect St Ellsworth, James W CONN 48 S. Genesee Ave. Esty, Ezra B MASS 128 Bolivar St. Ensign, John E CONN 574 Prospect Pt Ensign, Grace O MASS 574 Prospect St! Eustus, Frank VT 79 Professor St. Ellsworth, Emily Oviatt CONN 213 Franklin Ave Evans, Mrs. O MASS 453 Bolton Ave! Emery, Almon MASS Newburg O Elder, Martin A MASS Elyiia O. Elder, Carrie H CONN Elyria' O Enos, Mrs. Mary P VT Andover, O. Elwell, Lutie Stewart CONN Wi'loughby O Eddy, Mrs. S. M CONN East Cleveland. Edwards, Jennie B MASS Huntsburg O. Ely, William A MASS Elyria O. Ely, George H MASS Elvria, O. Ely, Anna Moody MASS Elvria, O. Flint, E. S VT 203 Perry St. Ferry, O. N VT 238 Quinby Ave. Farrar, CH MASS 35 Greenwood St. Ford, Henry MASS 26 Cornell St. French, Chnton VT cor. Bond and Rockwell. Foster, Arthur B MASS 568 Cedar Ave. Foster, Mrs. A. B CONN 568 Cedar Ave. Eraser, Rev. J. G VT 775 Doan St. Fuller, Charles H CONN 169 Euclid Ave, Ford, Lewis W MASS 29 Sibley St. Ford, Anna E CONN 29 Sibley St. Fisher, Waldo A MASS 962 Willson Ave. Fisher, Angelene H MASS 962 Willson Ave. Fisher, Harry W MASS 49 White Ave. Fisher, Estelle B MASS 49 White Ave, Ford, Horace MASS 2619 Euclid Ave. Ford, H. Clark MASS 2464 Euclid Ave. Ford, Frank L MASS 2220 Euclid Ave. Foote, Mrs. J. T r. i 216 Princeton St. Ferguson, Mrs. Laura. A CONN 181 Franklin Ave. Foster, George H MASS 39 Lincoln Ave. Fenn, Andrew A CONN Talmadge, O. Fenn, Richard T CONN. Talmadge, O. Fenn, Nelson CONN Talmadge, O. Fenn, Mrs. Floi a W CONN Talmadge, O. Field, D. E VT Collinwood, O. Field, Emma F N. H Collinwood, O. French, N E MASS Jeffrson, O. Fitch, Edward H CONN Jefferson, O. Fitch, Alta D N. H Jefferson, O. Ford, Rev. J. C MASS Jefferson, O. Fisher, Lloyd N. H Newburg, O. Farr, Mrs. Murray CONN Rockport, O. Foster, Nathan CONN Berea, O. Foster, Mrs. Betsey MASS Berea. O. Foster, Edwin J MASS Wllloughby, O. 28 New England Society of Foote, H. P MASS West Dover, O. Flint, Mrs. L,. M CONN New London, O. Ford, Mrs. H. J CONN. Parkman. O. Fenn, Mrs. D. A MASS Hudson, O. Foster, H. B MASS Hudson, O. Ford, W. J CONN Hiram, O. Ford, Mrs. W. J MB Hiram, O. Fuller, Mrs. Edith H N. H East Cleveland. Fuller, Emma T CONN EJast Cleveland. Fl-ost, Mrs. Mary Hart CONN Mentor, O. Fraser, Mrs. J. G VT. 775 Doan St. Fay, Byron N. H 857 Doan St. Fay, Eliza A CONN 857 Doan St. Greene, John E VT. 295 Franklin Ave. Greenoug-h, M. S MASS 600 Prospect St. Goodsell. T. H CONN 85 Water St. Gwenn, W. H VT 264 Washington St. Gates, Mrs. Nellie MASS. Station G. Green, J. O MASS 293 Forest St. Gerritt, A. J MASS 132 Merchants Ave. Gleason, L. A CONN 17L Jennings Ave. Gleason, Mrs. E. D CONN 171 Jennings Ave. Guernsey, F. E VT 137 Jennings Ave. Griffin, Mrs. H. A CONN 33 Hawthorne Ave. Gardner, Geo. W MASS 247 Euclid Ave. Gardner, Samuel S MASS 40 Hay ward St. Greene, S. C R. 1 1685 Euclid Ave. Gilkey, E. H VT. Jefferson, O. Gleason, C. M MASS Jefferson, O. Gidding-s, Kate CONN Jefferson, O. Graves, E. J VT Jefferson, O. Gardner, Mrs. Sarah S CONN Berea, O. Graves, C. J ' --VT Strongsville, O. Graves, Mrs. O. C VT Strongsville, O. Graves, Mrs. Dora CONN Strongsville, O. Goodman, Mrs. Maria C VT Parkman, O. Gunter, Henrietta D CONN Akron, O. Gardiner, George W R. I Mesopotamia, O. Garford, Mrs. Mary Nelson n. H Elyria, O. Gates, Miss Nellie MASS Station G. Gaylord, Mrs. Wilbur N. H East Cleveland. Goodrich, E. F CONN Oberlin, O. Gallup, Noyes P CONN. 221 Union St. Harman, R. A MASS. 930 Prospect St. Higbee, Edwin C CONN 721 Prospect St. Herrick, R. R MASS 444 Prospect St. Hodge, O. J CONN 1492 Euclid Ave. Hodge, Carl CONN 178 Lincoln Ave. Hils, C. "W. Herbert VT 55 Brenton St. Harris, Prof. E. D VT.' 136 Kennard St. Herrick, Prof, F. H YT 2374 Euclid Ave. *Hall, George E CONN 1662 Lament St. Hall, Julia B MASS 1662 Lament St. Hudson, Mrs. G. V VT 34 Fulton St. House, Martin CONN 468 Jennings Ave. Haydn, Rev. H. C CONN 1594 Euclid Ave. Hale, Judge John C N. H 1749 Euclid Ave. Hale, Carrie Sanborn MA SS 1749 Euclid Ave. Holt, Henry C CONN 94 Kenilworth St. Hull, George L CONN 35 Riverside Ave. Howe, Charles S MASS 103 Cornell St. Henninges, Mrs. R. E vT 112 Mueller Ave. Hull, Mrs. Annie E MASS 360 Euclid Ave. Henry, Mrs. Charles CONN West Cleveland. Herrick, Gamaliel E MASS 689 Euclid Ave. Herrick, J. F MASS East Cleveland. Herrick, Myron T. MASS 1549 Cedar Ave. ♦Died 1896. Cleveland and the Western Reserve. 2Q Hobart, M. M MASS 1170 East Madison Ave. Hobart, Mrs. Elizabeth W CONN 1170 East Madison Ave. Hatch, Henry R VT 1S95 Euclid Ave. Hatch, Arthur C VT 171 Bolton Ave. Horton, Dr. W. P VT 598 Scovill Ave. Hunt, H. B MASS. 20 Hickox St. Hunt, Jas. T MASS 91 Sixth Ave. Hunt, Mrs. J. T MASS 91 Sixth Ave. Harrington, John ME 355 Franklin Ave. Harrington, Mrs. John ME 355 Franklin Ave. Hale, S. C CONN. 760 Doan St. Hudson, J. E N. H 279 Huntington St. Hudson, Lizzie J MASS 279 Huntington St. Hyde, Gustavus A MASS 85 Kennard St. Hubbard, A. T MASS 160 Kennard St. Hammond, Geo. F MASS 166 Euclid Ave. ♦Hammond, Mary B ME 166 Euclid Ave. Hubbard, H. W CONN 226 Bank St. Hawley, D. R VT 43 Sibley St. Hall, George CONN. 857 Euclid Ave. Hamlin. E. B CONN 160 Van Ness St. Hurd, McClellan MASS 130 Bolton Ave. Hurd, Helen Grace MASS 130 Bolton Ave. Horton, Dr. Rollin H VT 84 White Ave. Harris, Brougham E MASS T^akewood Ave. Harris, Byron C MASS Lakewood Ave. Hickox, Rev. D. L. MASS East Cleveland. Hickox, Mrs. D. L MASS East Cleveland. Holden, Liberty E ME The Hollenden. Holden. Mrs. Ella L VT 53 Linden Ave. Hurd, Frank CONN 1687 Euclid Ave. Hurd, Carrie White MASS 1687 Euclid Ave. Hall, Beuben MASS Dover, O. Hall. Mrs. Reuben MASS Dover, O. Hemin way, T. B MASS New London, O. Heminway, Manning MASS New London, O. Haynes, M. S MASS Strongsville, O. Haynes, Josephine MASS Strongsville, O. Haynes, Tamzen E MASS Strongsville, O. Harmon. C. E MASS Andover, O. Hall, Edwin CONN Elyria, O. Hall, Mary M MASS Elyria, O. Hughes, Mrs. Ida MASS Collinwood, O. Hyde, Wilbur VT Willoughby, O. Holmes, Charles MASS Willoughby, O. Hopkins, C. H VT Willoughby, O. Hall, H. H MASS Willoughby, O. Hills, C. W CONN Willoughby, O. Haskell W. H ME Willoughby, O. Haskell, Mrs. W. H N. H Willoughby, O. Hunt, Thaddeus ••••VT Willoughby, O. Hayes, C. G N. H. Auburn, O. Hutchinson, R. P CONN Hiram, O. Hodges, W. B MASS Painesville, O. Hale, O. W CONN. Akron, O. Hale, Mrs. O. W CONN. Akron. O. Hinman, William CONN Talmadge, O. Hinman, Mrs. Nellie CONN Talmadge, O. Herrick, Mrs. J. T MA SS Twinsburg, O. Hanchett Seth R r-ONN Twinsburg, O. Hanehett, Mrs. S. R MASS Twinsburg, O. Hurlburt, J. C CONN Jefferson, O. Howells, W. D.. Jr MASS Jefferson, O. Howells, Mrs. J. A MASS Jefferson, O. Hathaway, Milo MASS. Newburg, O. Hathaway, James MASS. Newburg, O. Haines, Mrs. Charles CONN Rockport, O. •Died 1896. 30 New England Society of Hawkins. Nettie CONN Rockport O. Hulet. J. T MASS Berea O. Hulet, Mrs. Mary E MASS Berea, O Hinman, Aaron CONN Berea O. Hastings, Russell MASS Willoughby,' O. Hastings, Margaret S. MASS Willoughby, O. Hastings, Hezekia:h CONN Willougliby. O. Hastings, Mary P ^ MASS Willoughby, O. Hastings, Benj MASS Willoughby, O. Hastings, Ruth MASS Willoughby, O. Harbach, Thomas MASS V/illoughby, O. Hurst, J. N MASS West Dover, O. Hine, Celia White MASS Akron, O. Hale, O. W CONN. Akron, O. Hale, Mrs. O. W CONN Akron, O. Hale. H. C CONN. Akron, O. Hale, John P CONN Akron. O. Hill. J. C CONN Elyria, O. Hills, Henry L, VT 315 Sibley St. Hills, Marion C VT 315 Sibley St. Hills, Clarence P VT 315 Sibley St. Hills, W. D VT 372 Sibley St. W}^' Norman E VT 372 Sibley St. Hills, Charles C. VT The Lennox. Hawgood Mrs. Eliza B j^^SS East Cleveland. Hobart, Donly CONN 1254 Broadway. Hobart, Mrs. D CONN 1254 Broadway. Hobart, Miss Ella CONN 1254 Broadway. Harper. Robert VT Painesville O. Harper, Mrs. Maud VT Painesville O. Howard, Mrs. Jane VT. 128 Vega Ave! Hatch, U. C CONN. .!".'.".'..!'."".".".'. East Cleveland! Hatch, Mrs. U. C CONN East Cleveland. Hall, Lucien B CONN 388 Sibley St. Hall, Mrs. L. B r. 1 388 Sibley St. Hawkins, Albert vT 66 Oakdale St. Helman, Byron E MASS 1170 Willson Ave. Hart, Frank W. . CONN 378 Sibley St. Hall, Mrs^^ Porter B CONN 70 Bertram St. Horton, Fred W VT Middlefield, O. Hardy, M. D MASS South New'burg, O. Hawley, R. K CONN 2013 Euclid Ave. Huntington, Mrs. E. H MASS 891 Prospect St. Higgins F. E VT Conneaut, O. Hunt, H. H VT Conneaut, O. Inghs, Andrew CONN 4 Gertrude St. Ingraham, T. S VT 1387 Detroit St. Ingham, Wm. A CONN 203 Franklin Ave. Ingham, Mrs. W. A vT 203 Franklin Ave. Ingham, Rev. Howard M CONN East Cleveland. Ingham IVy-s H. M. . n. H East Cleveland. Ingersoll, Judge Jonathan E MASS 1045 Prospect St. Ingersoll, Mrs. Mary MASS 1045 Prospect St. Ingersoll, Geo. A MASS 1517 Euclid Ave. Ingersoll, Alvan F MASS East Cleveland. Ingersoll, Mary E MASS 45 Arlington St. Ingersoll, Joseph MASS 1719 EUclid Ave. Ingersoll, Harriet N MASS Berea, O. Johnson, Isabel W MASS. 178 Kennard St. Jones, Orville L, CONN 16 Cheshire St. Jones, Mrs. Addie M r. i 15 Daisy Ave. Jack, M. LeRoy N. H 329 Prospect St. Judd, C. S CONN 3S4 Jennings Ave. *Jennings, Jno. G VT 194 Jennings Ave. Jennings, Jno. Jr VT 67 Jennings Ave. Jennings, Mrs. J. G CONN 67 Jennings Ave. ♦Died 1896. Cleveland and the Western Reserve. ^i Jewett, Portei- MASS Newburg, O. Jackson, A. A MASS Newburg, O. Johnson, Leverett Hubbard VT Bement, O. June, J. H CONN New London, O. Johnson, Mrs. Townsend MASS. New London, O. Jenks, Linden MASS Willoughby. O. Jenks, Wm MASS Notting-ham, O. Jenks, Edward MASS Mayfield, O. Johns, Mrs. Susan L VT 1620 Harvard St. Keith, Francis C VT 797 Superior St. Keith, Harriet C VT 797 Superior St. Keith, Nat S VT 273 Perkins Ave. Knowles, C CONN 328 Euclid Ave. Kitchen, Dr. H. W MASS 126 Prospect St. Kitchen, Mrs. Grace A CONN 126 Prospect St. Kendall, F. A N. H 44 Cornell St. Kendall, Virginia W N. H 44 Cornell St. Kelly, Mrs. S. A CONN 1430 Cedar Ave. Keith, Walter L VT 26 Wilbur St. Keith, Mrs. W L MASS 26 Wilbur St. Kelly, Robert H CONN 56 Merchant Ave. King, Mrs. F CONN East Cleveland. Knight, T S MASS 1370 Cedar Ave. Knight, Mrs. T. S MASS. 1370 Cedar Ave. Kelly, Mrs. L. C MASS 57 Hough Place. Kilbourne, Margaret Moody CONN Painesville O. Kelly, E. A VT Chagrin Falls, O. Kelly, Mrs. E. A CONN. Chagrin Falls O. Kelly, Mrs. Rose E MASS Willoughby, O. King, Mis. M. Enos VT Andover, O. Kohler, Fannie Coburn CONN Akron, O. Kennedy, Hiram VT 1699 Euclid Ave. Kirtland, Mrs. Hattie Swift MASS Poland, O. Kolb, Mrs. Myrta Howard VT 128 Vega Ave. King, F. J VT 31 Hillside Ave. Kirk, William H CONN East Cleveland. Kirk, Martha W CONN East Cleveland. Kinney, E. J CONN Huntsburg, O. Kinney, Philena S ". ..VT Huntsburg, O. King, Lucretia M MASS Huntsburg, O. Knowlton, Isabel M MASS 1457 Detroit St. ♦Little. Dr. Hiram H VT Euclid Ave. Lindsey, Theo. S MASS 11 Granger St. Lindsey, Mrs. T. S CONN 11 Granger St. Latham, Charles A CONN. 2 Hough Place. Lyman H. F CONN 419 Sibley St. Langdon, C. J MASS 345 Prospect St. Lee, Dr. H. J VT 71 Tilden Ave. Lee, Mary O VT 71 Tilden Ave. Lindsey, Dr. T. D MASS 19 Dorchester Ave. LamsonI Isaac P CONN 174 Jennings Ave. Lamson, Mrs. I. P CONN 174 Jennings Ave. Lindsey, Frank W MASS 282 Huntington St. Lindsey, Mary MASS 282 Huntington St. Laird, Mrs. Nellie F N. H 16 Library Ave. Ladd, Rev. Henry M CONN South Logan Ave. Ladd, Mrs. H. M CONN South Logan Ave. Leach, Orris MASS. Twinsburg, O. Lane C. B CONN Twinsburg, O. Lane H. C CONN Twinsburg, O. Loomis, A. N CONN Jefferson. O. Lutton, Wm MASS Newburg, O. Ludlow, Rev. A. C MASS Newburg, O. Lathrope, Dr. Geo MASS Dover, O. Lyman, Mrs. Anna CONN New London, O. Lord, Mrs. L. W VT Hudson, O. •Died 1896. 32 New England Society of Loomls, Merritt R. I Hiram, O. Lyman. C. R MASS Bristolville,' O. Lyon, S. S CONN 897 Scovill Ave. Lyon, Frank M CONN 897 Scovill Ave. JLyoni, H. H CONN Strongsvllle, O. Mellen, Lucius F MASS 484 Prospect St. Marten, E. C MASS 79 Alanson St. Morse, Mrs. S. N YT 144 Perry St. Mason, Stephen A CONN 496 Bolton Ave. Moore, James W CONN 603 Society for Savings. Moore, Emily Cowles CONN 603 Society for Savings. Morley, J. H N. H 728 Prospect St. Morton, A. D MASS 23 Hawthorne Ave. Morton, J. T MASS. 23 Hawthorne Ave. Moore, F. B R.I 723 Case Ave. Mansfield, Harry MASS 160 Kennard St. Marble, Van Ness M N. H 68 Irvington St. Meriam, J. B MASS 535 Euclid Ave. Meriam, Helen Morgan MASS 535 Euclid Ave. Meriam, Edmund B MASS 535 Euclid Ave. Moses, Nelson CONN 815 Fairmount St. Morgan, E. N MASS 469 Euclid Ave. Morgan, Charles H MASS East Cleveland. Merrill, F. A N. H 1009 Cedar Ave. McKisson, Robert E CONN 84 Tilden Ave. Martin, Daniel MASS 12 Granger St. Morgan, Professor E. V CONN 2374 Euclid Ave. Marsh, Abby N. Qi MASS Station G. Murdoch, Rev. Marion MASS 160 Huron St. Metcalf, Rev. I. W MASS 427 Clark Ave. Mills, Rev. Chas. S MASS 220 Jennings Ave. Mills, Mrs. Alice Morrill MASS 220 Jennings Ave. Mayhew, F. C MASS Hotel Wilmot. Merwin, Mrs. May J N. H 1088 East Madison Ave. Mason, Mrs. Samuel N. H. 1088 East Madison Ave. McMillen, Mrs. Annie T CONN Eiast Cleveland. Mason, Orville L CONN 496 Bolton Ave. Mason, Mrs. Etta B VT 496 Bolton Ave. Mapes, C. C MASS Collinwood, O. Mapes, Augusta A .MASS Collinwood, O. Miller, Mrs. W. C. D MASS Berea, O. Miles, William CONN. Newburg, O. Mastick, Herny VT Rockport, O. Mastick, Mrs. Mary MASS Rockport, O. Meacham, Norman MASS Berea, O. Messinger, Henry VT. New London, O. Metcalf, E. W MASS. Elyria. O. Metcalf, Mrs. E. W MASS. Elyria, O. Metcalf, I. S MASS. Elyria, O. Merrick, Joseph E CONN Strongsvllle, O. Morley, B. O MASS Andover, O. Morley, Henry MASS Andover, O. Morley, J. E MASS Andover, O. Manley, Mrs. Birdsell MASS Andover, O. Merrill, S. Cowles CONN Andover, O. Marvin, P. F CONN Andover, O. Metcalf, Emily E CONN Hudson, O. Mills, A. D CONN Hudson, O. Marvin, U. Leslie CONN Akron, O. Marvin, D. Rockwell CONN Akron, O. Moore, Mrs. T. M VT Willoughby, O. Morley Thomas MASS. Mentor, O. Munn, H. J CONN Hiram, O. Munson, H. N CONN Mentor, O. Moore Franklin H VT 962 Willson Ave. Moore, Mrs. Sarah C R. 1 962 Willson Ave. Cleveland and the Western Reserve. jj Mapes, George C MASS Collin wood, O. Mapes. Henrietta Frusell MASS Coliinwood u. Miller, Mrs. Mary C CONN 36 Knox St. MeCrosky, Sophia Barber N. H lilast Cleveland. Mussey, Henry E CONN Elyria, O. Mussey, Caroline E CONN Elyria, O. Mussey. E. K CONN Elyria, O. Metcalf, Flora M CONN 636 Clark Ave. Metcalf, R. F CONN Elyria, O. Mead, Rev. E. C R. I Burton, O. Moxham, Harriet VT Mesopotamia, O. Mills. G. T N. H 635 Prospect St. Morgan, Herman L CONN 235 Union St. Meacham, Levi E ME 103 Jennings Ave. Meacham, Lina B ME 103 Jennings Ave. Myers, Mrs. Clara T MASS E. Cleveland. Myers, Clara B MASS E. Cleveland. [Myers, Julia E MASS E. Cleveland. •Myers, Katherlne MASS ^E. Cleveland. Noyes, H. N VT 90 Bond St. Nixon, Mrs. S. G MASS 144 Perry St. Newberry, J. G CONN 660 Cedar Ave. Noyes, Will H VT 125 Water St. Noyes, W. P. S VT 125 Water St. Newton, T. G CONN 2 Franklin Court. Northrup, C. C CONN 784 Hough Ave. Needham, G. E VT 1147 Willson Ave. Nason, Millard H MASS 67 Fifth Ave. Nason, Mrs. M. H MASS 67 Fifth Ave. Nichols, O. A MASS Twinsburg, O. Nichols, Mrs. O. A MASS Twinsburg, O. Nichols. O. P MASS Twinsburg, O. Norton, R. M CONN Jefferson, O. Nichols, Mrs. R. M CONN Jefferson, O. Nichols, Mrs. L MASS Rockport, O. Nichols, H. B CONN Elyria, O. Nevins. W. J CONN Elyria, O. Nevins, Mrs. S. F MASS Elyria, O. Nye. David J VT Elyria, O. Nye, Mrs. David J VT Elyria, O. Nelson, Mrs. Frances Sanf ord CONN Elyria, O. Olney, Prof. Chas. F CONN 137 Jennings Ave. Olney, Mrs. C. F CONN 137 Jennings Ave. Osborne, Joseph A MASS 579 The Arcade. Osborne. H. W MASS 1255 Euclid Ave. Ogram. J. W CONN East Cleveland. Ogram, Jennie CONN East Cleveland. Ogram, Katharine CONN East Cleveland. Oviatt. Orson Minor CONN 213 Franklin Ave. Oviatt. Frances Hammond CONN 213 Franklin Ave. Osborne Scott CONN. Newburg. O. Ogilvey. C. J MASS Strongsville, O. Ogilvey, Mrs. Angle MASS Strongsville, O. Owen, Daniel CONN Parkman, O. Pitkin, LfUcius M. VT 41 Windsor Ave. Pitkin, Mrs. Sarah B VT 41 Windsor Ave. Parsons, Richard C CONN 594 Prospect St. Parsons, Mrs. R. C CONN 594 Prospect St. Phinney. Ben j. F MAS® 354 Franklin Ave. Prentiss, Perry N. H 79 Fifth Ave. Pratt, H. F MASS 31 Euclid Ave. Parsons, J. Burton MASS 662 Prospect St. Perdue, Eugene H ME 1129 Willson Ave. Pratt, Dana J MASS 59 Cedar Ave. Palmer E A CONN 117 Water St. Palmer, S. B CONN 372 Bolton Ave. Palmer, Mrs. W. K MASS 484 Prospect St. Peck, D. B VT Superior St. Peck, Mrs. Frances A CONN Superior St. 34 iWo' England Society of Perry, A. T N. H 814 Case Ave. Perry, Lydia K N. H 814 Case Ave. Potter, Geo. H N. H 769 Case Ave. Pennington, Melatcah MASS 2030 Euclid Ave. Perkins, Edwin R N. H 1775 Euclid Ave. Perkins, Mrs. B. R N. H 1775 Euclid Ave. Pope, Louis L CONN 464 Bolton Ave. Pope, Lida M MASS 464 Bolton Ave. Paine, Seth T CONN Forest City House. Perry, A. A MASS 85 Vienna St. Perry, Emeline A MASS 85 Vienna St. Perry, Arthur A MASS 62 Dorchester Ave. Perry, Ella R MASS 62 Dorchester Ave. Pope, D. L CONN 448 Bolton Ave. Pope, Mrs. D. L, MASS 448 Bolton Ave. Pettibone, Sherman CONN Talmadge, O. Pettibone, Mrs. S CONN Talmadge, O. Peck, Herbert CONN ' Talmadge, O. Peck, Antoinette CONN Talmadge, O. Parks, W. A MASS T'winsburg, O. Pomeroy, A. H MASS Berea, O. Pomeroy, O MASS Berea, O. Palmer, Mrs. Lucinda MASS Newburg, O. Poole, Dr. A. W MASS Newburg, O. Parker, C. M CONN Berea, O. Pratt. P CONN Painesville, O. Pratt, F. P CONN Painesville, O. Parker, H. M VT Elyria, O Parker, Geo. M VT Elyria, O Parker, Mary C VT. Elyria, O Pond, M. M CONN Elyria, O Pope, C. H MASS Oberlin, O. Pickett, W. S MASS Andover, O. Pickett, Henry MASS Andover, O. Pickett, Sally Birchard MASS Andover, O. Pardee, R. A VT Andover, O. Perry, Dr. P. E CONN Andover, O. Peck, Josiah MASS Andover, O Pitkin, F. H MASS Andover, O. Parmelee, W. B. . . . v N H Hudson, O. Parsons, S. B MASS Rootstown, O. Pelton, John MASS Willoughby, O. Page. Frank CONN Kirtland, O. Parsons, S. B CONN Hiram, O. Pierce. E. H CONN Hiram, O. Potts, S J MASS Painesville, O. Pinney, C. A VT Mesopotamia, O. Paul, Hosea VT 598 Norwood Ave. Paul, Emma Plum CONN 598 Norwood Ave. Phelps, Charles MASS East Cleveland. Phelps, Mrs. Martha B MASS East Cleveland. Phelps, Miss Martha E MASS East Cleveland. Parsons, Lucius B CONN Chardon, O. Peck, Mary Anna CONN 156 Forest St. Pratt, Mrs. Dana J MASS 22 Lin wood St. Plum, Henry CONN Cuyahoga Falls, O. Plum, Nancy Newell CONN Cuyahoga Falls, O. Patch, M. G CONN East Cleveland. Peck. Thomas Knowlton CONN Hudson, O. Peck, Jennie Webster CONN Hudson] O. Perkins, Henry B CONN. Warren] O. Perkins Eliza Baldwin CONN Warren, O. Peck, N ewton VT. . .' Brookfield, O. Pinney. H. B VT Mesopotamia, O. Pinney, Jennie VT Mesopotamia, O. Pomeroy, Dr. Harlan MASS -..116 Ingleside Ave. Pomeroy, Fred T MASS 382 Dunham Ave. Peck, John S CONN Oberlin, O. Peck, Mrs. Emma B CONN Oberlin, O. Cleveland and the Western Reserve. j£ Reed, Wm. E VT 125 Fourth Ave. Rees, Wm. F VT 977 Prospect St Rice, Percy W MASS 1812 Euclid Ave. Rice, Walter P MASS 1812 Euclid" Ave. Rudd, Wm. C MASS 33 Ctieshire St. Raymond, Henry N CONN 502 Euclid Ave. Robertson, Geo. A CONN ....501 Cedar Ave. Robinson, Mrs. Ida Odell AIASS 73 Fourth Ave. Rouse, B. H CONN. 43 Sibley St. Rouse, Mrs. E. W CONN. 43 Sibley St. Rouse, Geo. W MASS 461 Prospect St. Rouse, Henry C MASS 898 Euclid Ave. Rolfe, S. L ME 2374 Euclid Ave. Ritchie, James MASS The Lenox. Ritchie, Mrs. Jas MASS The Lenox. Richards, Rrs. J, M MASS Station G. Rawson, M. E VT 762 Genesee Ave. Rawson, Mrs. M. E VT 762 Genesee Ave, Rose, E. G MASS 109 Cedar Ave. Rose, Sarah P MASS 109 Cedar Ave, Ripley, W. C VT 4 College St. Ranney, Henry C MASS 772 Euclid Ave. Reader, C'has. E MASS 791 Doan St. Reed. Prof. E. W VT Painesville, O. Ransom, J. C CONN Hartland, O. Runyan, P.lrs. Carrie M VT New London, O. Ring, Mrs. Nellie CONN Strongeville, O. Roberts, J. W VT Andover, O. Read, Mathew S MASS Hudson, O. Read, Orissa E CONN Hudson, O. Rogers, E. E MASS Hudson, O. Rogers, Mrs. E. E CONN Hudson, O. Rideout, S. E VT Hudson, O. Rideout, Mary CONN Hudson, O. Reed, H. O MASS Root3town, O. Reed, Julia A MASS RootsHown, O. Rayncld, A. G CONN Akron, O. Randall, C. H .....VT Willoughby. O. Randall, Mrs. H VT Willoughby, O. Richards, Gilbert A MARS Middlefleld, O. Reed, L. L MASS Auburn, O. Russell, Almon VT Hiram, O. Russell, F. A M.\.SS Hiram, O. Ryder, J. J VT Hiram, O. Richmond. Dr. Linn CONN Andover, O. Raymond, A. G MASS Painesville, O. Richards, Anna VT Elyria, O. Richards, Rev. H. A. N M.VSs! 31 Hillside Ave. Richards, Mrs. H. A. N vT 31 Hillside Ave. Reed, Mrs. W. L CONN Melrose Ave. Root, John H MASS Brunswick, O. Root, Frank M MARS Berea, O. Root, Samuel L MASS Berea, O. Roberts, Mrs. A. B CONN 1020 Willson Ave. Raymond, Samuel A CONN Glenville, O. Sterling, F. A CONN 939 Euclid Ave. Sterling. Emma B CONN 939 Euclid Ave. Stone, S. E VT 1193 East Madison Ave. Stone, Mrs. Lizzie M MARS 1193 East Madison Ave. Sherwin, Henry A VT 1437 Euclid Ave. Sherwin, John A VT ...11 Morse Ave. Spencer, P. M .-••CONN 1421 Euclid Ave. Spencer, Harriet E M.ASS 1421 Euclid Ave. Seymour, Belden VT The Lenox. Stearns, E. .7 N. H 23 Burt St. Stilson, Sherman H CONN ?9 Cedar Ave. Stilpon, Isabel H CONN 29 Cedar Ave. Snow, Joseph H MASS 136 Franklin Ave. 36 New England Society of Smith, Lester A MASS 55 Brenton St. Sherman, Dr. H. G MASS 2S9 Harkness Ave. Sherman, Jane Sophia MASS 289 Harkness Ave. Sholes, T. G R. 1 402 N. Perry St. Sholes, Fred T R. 1 73 Tilden Ave. (Snow, Justin MASS 38 Hough Place. Stevens, Milo B VT 578 Cedar Ave. Stanton, John N R. 1 802 Prospect St. Stanton, Mrs. J. N R. 1 802 Prospect St. ■Stanton, Lizzie R. 1 802 Prospect St. Sanders', Dr. J. C N. H 608 Prospect St. Smith, Stiles C CONN 690 Euclid Ave. Smith, George S. ..• CONN 508 Giddings Ave. Strong, E. E CONN 82 Brookfield St. Strong, Mary E. C CONN 82 Brookfield St. Strong, W. N CONN 2 Hough Place. Seelye, Thomas T CONN 94 Ingleside Ave. Sargent, H. Q N. H 35 Hayward St. Sargent, Eliza E. S N. H 35 Hayward St. Sanderson. F. M MASS 166 Sawtell Ave. Sanders, Harriet P MASS 166 Sawtell Ave. Sawyer, A. W MASS 48 Lincoln Ave. Searles, Paul C CONN 77 Merchant Ave. Strong, Asahel W MASS 49 Fourth Ave. Severence, S. L MASS 60i Woodland Ave. Severence, L. H MASS 605 Woodland Ave. Sherwln, N. B VT 1805 Euclid Ave. Sherwin. Mrs. Lizzie M VT 1805 Euclid Ave. Saunders, C. L ME 342 Erie St. Saunders, Elizabeth ME 342 Erie St. Smith, S. Lewis CONN 690 Euclid Ave. Snow, Mrs. Jane Elliott CONN 221 Clinton St. Sanders, Dr. Kent N. H 645 Prospect St. Sessions, Sam'l W CONN 149 Jennings Ave. Sessions, Mrs. S. W CONN 149 Jennings Ave. Sutliff, Chas. G CONN 143 Jennings Ave. Smith, Fred K CONN 22 Jay St. Smith, Chas. H MASS 121 Cedar Ave. Smith, Louisa J MASS 121 Cedar Ave. Stanley, J. L CONN 40 Vienna St. Smith, Reuben F CONN 441 Dunham Ave. Smith. Rebecca P CONN 441 Dunham Ave. Sawtelle, E. M CONN. East Cleveland. Sheldon, Mrs, Cordelia VT 206 Franklin Ave. Shirley, Mrs. Perrin MASS 440 Bolton Avp. Smith, Fred C VT 488 Bolton Ave. Scribner, Geo. Weed MASS 476 Bolton Aye. Seymour, Rev. John A CONN East Cleveland, O. Seymour, Sarah K VT Ea.3t Cleveland. O. Sawyer, Dr. P. H MASS 54 Streator Ave. Sawyer, Caroline L CONN 54 Streator Ave. Sherwin, Geo. N VT 1805 Euclid Ave. Stevens, Mrs. Harriet MASS Twinsburg, O Starkey, H. E CONN Jefferson, o. Simonds, Mrs. Louisa W CONN Jefferson, 6. Spencer, Mrs. Nellie VT Rockport, O. Smeadly, James CONN Berea. O. Smeadly, F. S CONN Berea. O. Stevens, Chauncy MAS« West Dover, O. Stockwell, Mary Avery CONN Painesvillp! O. Stockwell Norris P CONN Painesvillo, O. San ford, Mrs. E. J CONV Painesvillf, O. Sanford, Henry H CONN Paine sville! 'O. Skinner, H. G N. H New London, O. Smith, Mra A. H (MASS Elyria, O. Stilson, F VT Strongsville, O. Stra.tton. J. E MASS Andover O. Small, Rev. Chas H MASS Hudson. O. Cleveland and the Western Reserve. jj Small, Cora S VT Hudson, O. Starr, G. L, CONN Hudson O. Starr, Mry. G. L. CONN Hudson' O. Scott, Stiles E CONN Hudson' O. Scott, Ella Case CONN Hudson, O. Seymour, Cora M MASS Rootstown^ O. Spelman, H. L MASS Rootstown, O. Spelman, Julia A MASS Rootstown, O. Sherman, Wm MASS Mayfield, O. Sherman, Peleg MASS Mayfield, O. Stockwell, Mrs. Willis VT Willoughby, O. Snow. Oliver F MASS Auburn, O. Slade, Wm. H MASS Euclid, O. Stevens. Lucius E MASS Noble, O. Stocking, O. C CONN Hiram. O. Scott. C. J CONN Painesville, O. Stevens, M. Ellen MASS Akron. O. Sanderson. E. B VT Mesopotamia. O. Smyth, Mrs. P. H CONN East Cleveland. Sanford. Eliza Milbarke CONN Elyria. O. Sanford. Amanda Seeley CONN Elyria. O. Sanford, Elias Frederick CONN Elyria. O. Smith, C. W ME 512 The Ellington. Smith, Mrs. C. W ME 512 The Ellington. Slaughter, Mrs. A. C CONN 1254 Broadway. Slaughter, May CONN 1254 Broadway. Schauffler, Mrs. Henry A CONN 1532 Broadway. Snow, Mrs. Jane Elliott CONN 221 Clinton St. Swift, Mrs. Sarah Spaulding MASS... East Cleveland. Swift, Grace H MASS East Cleveland. Smith, Mrs. Louisa Porter MASS Elyria, O. Spicer. Mrs. Fanny W MASS 384 Prospect St. Strong. A. W MASS Huntsburg, O. Seymour, Gideon MASS Rootstown, O. Sawyer, Dr. P. S CONN 54 Streator Ave. Sawyer, Mrs. Caroline CONN 54 Streator Ave Shipherd. Mrs. Frances E CONN 282 Prospect St. Skinner. L. S CONN 607 Hough Ave. Smith, Mrs. W. L MASS Elyria, O. Strong. C. E CONN Huntsburg, O. Strong, F. L MASS Huntsburg. O. Swing, Mrs. Alice Mead MASS Oberlin, O. Tidd, E. B MASS 724 Genesee Ave. Topliff, I. N CONN 1452 Euclid Ave. Taylor, Henry A MASS East Cleveland. Taylor, Rev. L. L CONN 649 Prospect St. Talbot. J. T MASS 2374 Euclid Ave. Tuttle, Mrs. W. H CONN 253 Clinton St. Tillinghast. J. M CONN Weddell House. Tillinghast, J. M., Mrs CONN Weddell House. Talbot, L. J MASS 124 Dunham Ave. Talbot, Mrs. L. J MASS 124 Dunham Ave. Treadway. A. R CONN 97 Jennings Ave. Treadway, L. H CONN 97 Jennings Ave. Tilton. T N. H 100 Merchant Ave. Taylor, Mrs. B. F MASS 128 Olive St. Thwlng, Rev. Chas. F ME 24 Belleflower Ave. Thwing. Mrs. C. F ME 24 Belleflower Ave. Treat, David B CONN Talmadge. O. Treat, Catharine P CONN Talmadge. O. Turney. Mrs. Joseph MASS Newburg, O. Thayer. Newton MASS Berea, O. Thayer, Mr.'^. Newton MASS Berea, O. Taylor, V. A VT Berea, O. Tisdell. Walter C CONN Painesville, O. Tildell, Mary L C^ONN Painesville, O. Taylor, V. A MASS Bedford, O. Townsend, H. W MASS New London, O. ^8 New England Society of Tarbell, L. J CONN" Willoughby, O. Turner, A. A CONN Hiram, O. Tracy, F. B MASS Euclid, O. Tilden, Mason B CONN Hiram, O. Tilden, George .' CONN Hiram, O. Thompson, Philander.... MASS Middlefield, O. Tyler, Mrs. Emma R R. I Mentor, O. Taylor, C. W MASS East Cleveland. Taylor, Chas. Herbert MASS East Cleveland. Tuttle, A. W CONN Huntsburg, O. Tenney, Rev. Henry M N. H Oberlin, O. Topliff, John A VT... Elyria, O. Upson, Andrew S CONN 1612 Euclid Ave. Upson, Mrs. A. S CONN 1612 Euclid Ave. Upson, J. E CONN 275 Bolton Ave. Upson, Henry G CONN 72 Merchant Ave. Underwood, R. A R. I Mesopotamia, O. Uram, Mrs. Clara A N. H 888 Case Ave. Voris, A. C CONN Akron, O. Vorls, Lizzie H CONN Akron, O. Vial, Fred VT Willoughby, O. Van Tassell, Mary J CONN 19 Mueller Ave. Webster, J. Howard N. H 925 Prospect St. Whitney, H. W MASS 300 Cedar Ave. Whitney, E. E MASS 496 Cedar Ave. Williams, Geo. W MASS 464 Bolton Ave. Williams, John C MASS 696 Dennison Ave. Warner, T. M VT 258 Bolton Ave. Wolcott, Herbert W CONN 87 Public Square. White, Thos. H MASS 1840 Euclid Ave. White, Almira L MASS 1840 Euclid Ave. White, Howard W MASS 1814 Euclid Ave. White, Rollin C MASS 1467 Euclid Ave. Wickham, Mrs. G. V CONN 242 Harkness Ave. Walker, E. R MASS 732 Giddings Ave. White, Hudson T MASS 366 E. Prospect St. Whitmarsh, Chas. W MASS 430 Bolton Ave. Whitmarsh, Mrs. Ida A N. H 430 Bolton Ave. Whipple, Wm. B MASS 99 Lyman St. White, Judge H. C MASS 344 Harkness Ave. White, Mrg. H. C CONN 344 Harkness Ave. Walton, John W CONN 2659 Euclid Ave. Walton, Gertrude R N. H 2659 Euclid Ave. Welch, Geo. P MASS 1161 Prospect St. Welch, Maria H MASS 1161 Prospect St. Wardwell, J. W N. H The Arcade. Whittlesey, Henry S CONN 382 Bolton Ave. Wilson, Thos. H MASS 80 Spangler Ave. Wilson, Mrs. T. H MASS 80 Spangler Ave. Welch, Henry C MASS 102 Ingleside Ave. Wood, M. H MASS 2374 Euclid Ave. Wood, Marvin W MASS 2277 Euclid Ave. Weston, Prof. S. F ME 2374 Euclid Ave. Weston, Sarah E ME 2374 Euclid Ave. Ward, Hubert H VT 863 Fairmount St. Ward, Harriet Porter VT 863 Fairmount St. Wilson, Mrs. W. H CONN 320 Prospect St. Webb, Mrs. Ella I CONN 102 Alanson St. Wait, A. M MASS 881 Case Ave. Wait, Mrs. A. M MASS 881 Case Ave. Winship, John O ME 100 Kensington St. Winship, Helen M ME 100 Kensington St. Winship, Dr. A. T ME 524 Prospect St. Williams, E. F CONN 63 Mentor Ave. White, John G N. H 187 Lake St. Woods, Mrs. J. S MASS 626 Hough Place. Wadsworth, Mrs. Lizzie CONN 462 Euclid Ave. Walworth, John CONN East Cleveland. Cleveland and the Western Reserve. jg Walworth, Mrs. John MASS East Cleveland. Walworth, A. W MASS East Cleveland. Walworth, F. H M.4SS East Cleveland. Walworth, Anne CONN ^ 512 Euclid Ave. White, E. W MASS 480 Bolton Ave. Williard, A. M MASS 57 Holyoke Place, Wlnslow, A. P MASS 124 Olive St. Whitman, Bryant P MASS 95 Cornell St. Whitman, Kate Ford MASS 95 Cornell St. Wright, Frank H., Jr CONN Talmadge, O. Wright, Harriet C CONN Talmadge, O. Wolcott, Mrs. Harriet CONN Talmadge,©. Wade, Edward C MASS Jefferson, O. Wade, Mrs. E. C VT Jefferson, O. Woodbury, F. H VT Jefferson, O. Warner, Charles E CONN Jefferson, O. Warner, Cornelia A CONN Jefferson, O. White, A. C CONN Jefferson, O. Wisner, Mrsi. H. B MASS Berea, O. Wood, Mrs. Nathaniel CONN Rockport, O. Wright, Charles Wilson MASS WlUoughby, O. Wright, Mrs. C. W CONN Willoughby, O. Williams, Mrs. Clark MASS Dover. O. Wolverton, Prof. N. T VT Painesville, O. ♦Williams, Rev. E. E CONN Elyria, O. Washburn, Geo. G N. H Elyria, O. Weeks, Mrs. W. I) VT Elyria, O. Wheller, Mrs. W. J MASS Strongsville, O. White, C. S CONN Strongs.vllle, O. White, Mrs. P. L MASS Strongsville, O. Wade, S. M MASS Andover, O. Warren, Mrs. T. Wade MASS Andover, O. Wight, Sam'l Pardee MASS Andover, O. Webster, M. Evelyn CONN Hudson, O. Webster, Ellen M VT Hudson, O. ♦Wait, George MASS Willoughby, O. Wait, Mrs. Arthur MASS Willoughby, O. Wells, Rev. H. H MASS Willoughby, O. Wells, John MASS Kirtland, O. Whiting, Charles CONN Kirtland, O. Wells, Myron MASS Willoughby, O. Wilbur, Wm MASS Bissel's P. O., O. Wing, Willis S CONN Auburn, O. White, A. V VT Hiram, O. Wakefield E. B ...VT Hiram, O. Wakefield' Mrs. E. B CONN Hiram, O. Wyman, Lloyd CONN Painesville, O. Wood, Lewis J CONN Painesville, O. Wyman, Vaughn E VT Painesville, O. Welton, Mrs. Frank CONN East Cleveland. Wyman, Mrs. Frances MASS 42 Van Ness Ave. Williams, Alex MASS So. Kirtland O. Williams, Mary Goodwin VT So. Kirtland O. Wadsworth, Captain Wm CONN 466 Euclid Ave. Wadswor th, Mary Elizabeth N. H 466 Euclid Ave. Walworth, Ida MASS East Cleveland. Walworth, Antoinette MASS East Cleveland. Wetmore, Henry CONN Cuyahoga Falls O. Webb, Ella Sturtevant CONN 102 Alenson St. Wright, R. W CONN Akron O. Wright, Mrs. R. W CONN Akron O. Wells, Mary B CONN Willoughby O. Winship, Elmer E MB 29 Linwood St Waters, George F VT 286 Superior St. Wright, Darwin E CONN 749 Logan Ave. Wright, Helen B CONN 749 Logan Ave. Young, Clinton VT Hiram, O. Young, Allyn A CONN Hiram, O. •Died 1896. LIBRftRY OF CONGRESS 014 042 079 7 ** IPflcirims IRetiirninc? from Cburcb.' w "