! BgMHBHIf n»i^^^^ ■|H| ^^^^^H ^^^^^^^^H ^^^^^^^^^^^^H ^^^H ^^H ^^^^^^^H ■ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^H ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^1 ^^^^^^^^H ^H 1^^^^^^^ ^H^^^l H^ ^ ^^^1 ^1 ^^H 1 '' t^^^^^^^^^^^^^i ^^^^H '^^^^^^^^^^^1 ^^^^H ^^^^^^^^1 ^ ^^^^H ^^ ''^^^M ^^M B \:^"S- ^^^^'J^^S' ^°^:^^">^ ^°^:^"'^^ ^ '%. WAS[}o. as^(BTr®f^o (^ii^tiVlA^ C^yi'. y-' MEMORIALS Massachusetts Society The Cincinnati. EDITED BY JAMES M. BUGBEE. BOSTON: PRINTED FOR THE SOCIETY. 1890.

/gENERAL WASHINGTON To face titUpage v/HON. HAMILTON FISH 3 . 4 MAJOR-GENERAL STEUBEN 6 - /captain JUDAH ALDEN 79 y ADAMS BAILEY (Adm. 1S25) 85 i' CAPTAIN LOUIS BAURY DE BELLERIVE 94 . V ALFRED L. BAURY, D.D 97 . V LIEUTENANT FREDERIC F. BAURY 99 . V HON. JOHN BROOKS 115 / CAPTAIN HENRY BURBECK 124 V LIEUTENANT-COLONEL DAVID COBB 136 i HON. SAMUEL C. COBB 141 4 LIEUTENANT EBENEZER DAVIS 159 V HON. CHARLES STEWART DAVEIS 163 ■/ LIEUTENANT THOMAS EDWARDS ,Si . y HON. WILLIAM EUSTIS 1S5 ' i REAR-ADMIRAL CHARLES H. DAVIS 192 J MAJOR-GENERAL SILAS CASEY 212 i CAPTAIN BENJAMIN GOULD 21S y JOHN HOMANS, M.D 250 4 LIEUTENANT-COLONEL WILLIAM HULL 257 A MAJOR-GENERAL HENRY J. HUNT 279 -i COLONEL HENRY JACKSON 2SS i M.AJOR-GENERAL HENRY KNOX 297 4. REAR-ADMIRAL HENRY K.THATCHER 315 4 AMOS A. LAWRENCE 322 Xll LIST (JF PUKTKAITS. PAGE • J CAPTAIN JOHN LILLIE 330 • V MAJOR-GENEKAL BENJAMIN LINCOLN 333 • J SAMUEL K. LOTHROP, D.D 345 » ^ BRIGADIER-GENERAL FRANCIS W. PALFREY 375 . V COLONEL TIMOTHY PICKERING 391 . y HON. FRANKLIN PIERCE 395 . J COLONEL JAMES W. SEVER 42S • /captain SAMUEL SHAW 432 . V ROBERT G. SHAW 436 . V FRANCIS G. SHAW 43S > V HON. CHARLES SUMNER 46S • ^ DAVID TOWNSEND, M.D 4S0 • \ FREDERIC TUDOR 4S8 . y JOHN COLLINS WARREN, M.D 501 j JONATHAN MASON WARREN, M.D 503 CONTENTS. PAGE Past and Present Members xvii Historical Sketch of the General Society 3 Annals of the Massachusetts Society 37 Biographical Notices of Members •]^ Sppcntiii. Statement of Dr. William Eustis . 531 Note on the Original Members of the Massachusetts Society 533 Officers of the Massachusetts Society from 1783 to 1890 542 Act of Incorporation, 1806 .... 544 By-J^aws and Rules of the Massachusetts Society . . 546 Officers of the General Society from 1783 to 1890 . 549 Rules and Regulations of the General Society. . . 551 Members of the American Order of the Cincinnati IN France 553 Index 559 MASSACHUSETTS SOCIETY OF THE CINCINNATI. PAST AND PRESENT MEMBERS. iHajsstacljujsettjai ^octet^ of tl)e Cincinnati. PAST AND PRESENT MEMBERS. Arraiti^cd Alphabetically and Successwnally. The names of original members are printed in black letter, and the sur- names are given in the form in which they appear on the original roll. The statement of rank appended is that on which those members contributed to the principal fund of the Society. The names set in, immediately following, are those of the successors to the original members, in the order of their suc- cession, with a statement of their relationship to the original member. Where the surnames of the successors are not the same as those of their predeces- sors, they are inserted again in their alphabetical position on a hue with the original members, but in italic capitals, to distinguish them from the others; and the name of the original member is added. Those marked with a star (*) do not appear on the Treasurer's Journal, although they are on the original autograph list. Those marked with a dagger (t) appear on the Journal, but not on the autograph list. The references ni the right-hand column are to the pages containing the biographical notices. Page SHjfiOt, StCpfjCn, Captain 77 CHASE, STEPHEN ABBOTT, grandson, adtnitted 1863 78 CHASE, WILLIAM, grandson, adm. 1878 ... 78 CH.ASE, FRANCIS, grandson, adm. 188.6 .... 78 SIDlJOtt, JJOStai^, Ensign 78 SlSamS, ?itKnrg, Surgeon 78 ailfen, JUTiat), Captain 79 ALDEN, SAMUEL, son, adm. 1875 80 ALDEN, AMHERST A., grandson, adm. 1886 ... 80 aUfn, Katljl. CCOlt, Captain .81 aUcn, Koal),t Major . Si anus, JOtfjam, Lieutenant . Si XVlll MASSACHUSETTS SOCIETY OF THE CINCINNATI. Pace SlntirCtoS, 2HiUiam, Lieutenant 82 armstronfl, Samuel, Lieutenant 82 ARMSTRONG, SAMUEL, son, adm. iSii .... 83 ARA'OLD. See Frost, Satnuel. ^SJjlffi, ifHOSCB, Major 83 Austin, JJOJjn, Lieutenant 83 AUSTLN, I'HOMAS, brotiier, adm. 1792 84 35atltS, SlBamS, Captain 84 BAILEY, ADAMS, son, adm. 1825 85 BAILEY, ADAMS, grandson, adm. i860 85 BAILEY, WALTER LANG, great-grandson, adm. 1S79 86 iSailCS, ILUtljCr, Captain 86 BAILEY, CALVIN, brother, adm. 1824 87 BAILEY, BERNARD CALVIN, nephew, adm. 1861 . 87 BAILEY, SAMUEL DONNELL, grand-nephew, adm. 1877 88 iJaltOm, JOSrpfj, Lieutenant 88 iJalHtoin, JctlUMjan, Colonel . 89 BALDWIN, LUKE, son, adm. 1809 89 JSallantinr, KlJCnCJCt, Surgeon's Mate 89 JJallart, EJadUam ?l?uTJSOit, Major 89 BALLARD, JOHN OSGOOD, son, adm. 1841 ... 90 BALLARD, EDWARD, grandson, adm. 1855 ... 90 iSancrOft, SamCS, Lieutenant 90 BANCROFT, JAMES, son, adm. 1809 91 BANCROFF, HENRY, son, adm. 1856 91 iSarlOW, JOEl.t chaplain 91 J3aSSCtt, UaraCijial), Lieutenant-Colonel 94 IJaurs tit JJcllmbc, Houis, Captain 94 BAURY, FREDERIC, son, adm. 1813 97 BAURY, ALFRED LOUIS, son, adm. 1823. ... 97 BAURY, FREDERIC FRANCIS, grandson, adm. 1867 99 JACKSON, ALFRED BAURY, great-grandson, adm. 1888 100 PAST AND PRESENT MEMBERS. XIX Page ^aVlitS, f^Otiiiaii, Lieutenant-Colonel loo BAYLIES, EDMUND, son, adm. 1857 102 BAYLIES, EDMUND LINCOLN, great-grandson, adm. 1881 102 B£Z£, CHARLES UPHAM. See Cogszvell, T/wmas. UenSOn, JJOSiftUa, Captain 103 BINNEY, HORACE, adm. in 1796, as son of Dr. Bar- nabas, Orig. Mem. Penna. Society 103 Clafet, IStltDarlt, Lieutenant 104 BLAKE, ROBERT, son, adm. 1S09 104 i3Iancl)art(, Soljii, Captain 104 iSIO^QCt, ClalClJ,* Lieutenant 104 390U)lrS, Malpij ?i^att, Lieutenant and Adjutant ... 104 BOWLES, LUCIUS QUINTIUS CINCINNATUS, son, adm. 1814 106 BOWLES, LEONARD CROCKER, son, adm. i860 . io6 BOWLES, STEPHEN WALLACE, grandson, adm. 18S0 106 iSoiUman, Samuel, Lieutenant 107 JJraBfOClr, antrrcto.t Lieutenant 107 BRADFORD, ROBERT FORBES, grand-nephew, adm. 1880 108 JUraTJfort, esamalicl, Colonel 109 BRADFORD, ALDEN, son, adm. 1812 no BRADFORD, THOMAS GAMALIEL, grandson, adm. 1859 HI BRADFORD, LAURENCE, gt.-grandson, adm. 1889 . in iJratlfOrft, Gamaliel, Lieutenant 112 BRADFORD, GAMALIEL, son, adm. 1824 .... 113 BRADFORD, GAMALIEL, grandson, adm. 1852 . . 114 JJratrfortJ, Motif rt, Captain 114 Uramf)an, J)OSi)Ua, Lieutenant 115 JSriflijam, ©Cfflin, Surgeon's Mate 115 JJrOOfeS, JJOljn, Lieutenant-Colonel, Commandant ... 115 BROOKS, ALEXANDER SCAMMELL, son, adm. 1825 120 KEYES, ALEXANDER BROOKS, great-grandson, adm. 1869 120 XX MASSACHUSETTS SOCIETY OP" THE CINCINNATI. Page iJrOton, "iBittntitV, Lieutenant 12 1 BROWN, FREDERICK WILLIAM S. A., son, adm. 184s 122 33tOU)n, ©UlJCt,* Captain-Lieutenant 122 BRYANT. See Mason, David, Jr. JJUfltJCt, 2SBtoarTr,t Lieutenant 122 JiJUlIarXl, SlSa, Lieutenant 123 BULLARD, JAMES, grand-nephew, adm. 1859 . . 123 BULLOCK, FREDERICK PRESCOTT. See Prescott, Joseph. iSurlJCCfe, PKUrS, Captain 124 BURBECK, WILLIAM HENRY, son, adm. 1S50 . . 127 JSurnam, JoJjn, Major 127 DOLAND, JOHN J., grandson, adm. 1872 . . . . 12S UUSSCg, Ksaialj,* Captain-Lieutenant ....... 129 CJallfntrrr, %tA)\\, Captain-Lieutenant 129 CALLENDER, JOHN, nepiiew, adm. 1802 .... 130 CarlCton, JHOSCS, Lieutenant 130 ffiarlCtOll, ©SflOOlJ,* Lieutenant 13° CASEY. See Goodalc, Nathan. (KaStaillfl, [JPCttr], Lieutenant 131 CJjamlJcrs, fWattljCto, Cnptain 131 djajJin, Samuel, Lieutenant . . . , 131 CHASE. See Abbot, Stephen. Clap, CCalfft, Captain 132 TRUMBULL, GEORGE CLAPP, grandson, adm. 1873 132 TRUMBULL, CHARLES PERKINS, grandson, adm. 1S86 133 apl)rtl), Captain :59 iiai'lJg, .SamUtl, Major 159 DAIVS, CHARLES HEA'RY. See Freeman, Constant. iBatlCS, lEiJCUCJCr, Lieutenant and Brigade Quartermaster . 159 DAVEIS, CHARLES STEWART, son, adm. 1809 . 163 DAVEIS, JOHN TAYLOR OILMAN, grandson, 1865 172 HASKINS, DAVID GREENE, Jr., great-grandson, adm. 1876 172 Paxils, JJamCS, Lieutenant 173 iBabiS, JlOljn, Lieutenant and Adjutant 174 DAVIS, WILLIAM P., son, adm. 1S19 174 JStan, 213aalter,t Captain 174 DEARBORN, HENRY, Colonel, trans, from N. H. Society 1 74 DEARBORN, HENRY ALEXANDER SCAMMELL, son of Col. Henry, adm. 1832 176 Mix, TSTatljan, Captain 177 IBOtlflC, ILCtil, Lieutenant 177 DO LAND, JOHN F. See Burnam, John. HOlIibCr, IJrtCC,* Captain 178 UrCto, Sfti), Major 178 DREW, SETH, son, adm. 1824 179 DREW, CLEMENT, grandson, adm. 1854 .... 180 DREW, GEORGE HENRY, great-grandson, adm. 1890 180 IBUfKcltl, SOt)n, Regimental Surgeon 180 lEatOn, ISrniamtn, Lieutenant 181 EATON, CHARLES MARVIN, great-grandson, adm. 1873 181 IStrtoarHS, SrijOmaS, Lieutenant and Judge Advocate . 181 EDWARDS, JOHN, son, adm. 1839 182 EDWARDS, CHARLES, grandson, adm. 1887 ... 183 lEfllfStOn, ^jarial), Lieutenant and Paymaster .... 183 IBmfrson, Wcftrmial), Captain 184 PAST AND PRESENT MEMBERS. XXUl Page EMERSON, HENRY, son, adm. 1843 184 EMERSON, NATHANIEL WHITTIER, grandson, adm. 1863 184 Enters, 3iSjpJjraim, Captain 185 lEUStiS, MliUiam, Hospital Surgeon ....... 185 EUSTIS, WILLIAM, grand-nephew, adm. 1848 . . 187 JSiJCrett, ^ElatCaJ), Lieutenant 187 ISgSaJrtEaU, 21lllUam, Lieutenant 188 jFclt, SOHatljaU, Captain 188 FELT, OLIVER, son, adm. 1826 188 jFfrnallr, EOiiian* Lieutenant-Colonel 189 iFtnlCS, James lEHtoartlS fSutV, Regimental Surgeon 189 JFt'nlefi, Samuel, Regimental Surgeon 190 jFiSfe, JJOSepI), Regimental Surgeon 190 FISKE, JOSEPH, son, adm. 1839 190 iFIos^, lEtenejer, Ensign 191 FOSTER, ANDREW. See Cmigk, Andrew. iFOSteC, 3£llBt)a, Ensign 191 jFOSter, JKfjOmaS, Lieutenant 191 JfOtoleS, JIOljU, Captain 191 FOVVLE, JOHN, son, adm. 1824 192 jFreeman, ^Constant, Captain-Lieutenant .192 DAVIS, CHARLES HENRY, grandson, adm. 1843 . 192 DAVIS CHARLES HENRY, great-grandson, adm. 1880 201 jFreeman, 3ri)omas Habts, Lieutenant 201 jFvinfe, Samuel, Ensign 201 jFl'OSt, Samuel, Captain 202 ARNOLD, SAMUEL FROST, grandson, adm. 1833 . 202 ARNOLD, LEONARD, grandson, adm. 1841 ... 203 iFcotfjtuflljam, 13enjamin, Captain 203 FROTHINGHAM, BENJAMIN, son, adm. 1826 . . 203 iFrsf. iFtetrericlt, Ensign 204 iFuUer, J)Ol)U, Captain 204 XXIV MASSACHUSETTS SOCIETV UF THE CINCINNATI. Page eSautrnrr, Sawts, Captain 204 eSarrrtt, ^ntrrcU), Lieutenant 205 CJrCOVflC, JJOljll, Captain-Lieutenant 205 O'BRIEN, EDWARD KAVANAGH, grandson, adm. 1880 206 (jSiDtJS, ffialEi), Major 207 GILBS, ALEXANDER HAMILTON, son, adm. 1819. 207 ffiCHJCl't, iUcnjamin, Lieutenant 207 CSOOtialC, Watl)aU,t Captain 207 GOOD ALE, LINCOLN, son, adm. 1830 211 CASEY, SILAS, grandson of Captain Goodale, adm. 1870 212 CASEY, THOMAS LINCOLN, great-grandson, adm. 1882 216 eSooTJtoin, jFraiuis He Uaron, Surgeon's Mate . . 218 GOULD, BENJAMIN APTHORP, adm. in 1864 under the rule of 1854 218 eirrfaton, SOi)n, Brigadier-General 223 CSrraton, SoJjn 2iaijccIU)rtsljt, Ensign 224 CSi'faton, a^ttljartr ?i(,?umpJji-c», Ensign 225 CErecn, iFtantis, Captain . . . 225 GREENE, BENJAMIN HENDERSON, son, adm. 1853 225 GREENE, GEORGE FRANCIS, grandson, adm. 1889 226 GREENE, HORACE, adm. in 1858 under the rule of 1854 226 ^rCCnlCaf, SSJilliam, Lieutenant 227 GREENLEAF, SAMUEL, son, adm. 1834 .... 228 ®fritlICg, SOtjn, Captain-Lieutenant ........ 228 P^all, SJamrS, Lieutenant 228 HALL, GEORGE, son, adm. 1848 ....... 229 HALL, JAMES, grandson, adm. 1855 229 HALL, GEORGE WINSLOW, great-grandson, adm. 1887 230 ?l^amUn, Africa, Ensign 230 FAST AND PRESENT MEMBERS. XXV Page PERRY, ANDREW POLADORE, great-grandson, adm. 1S72 230 Ji^ancocfe, iSrldjcr,* Captain 231 HANCOCK, HENRY KILLAM, son, adm. 1S39 . . 231 ^aVt, 30i}n, Regimental Surgeon .231 HART, SAMUEL, son, adm. 1842 ....... 233 CUMMINGS, PRENTISS, great-grandson, adm. 18S0 234 pjartsljorn, JTJjomas, Captain 234 fi^at'Otn, lEUsIja, Captain-Lieutenant 235 fkfas'ktn, ISlnatijan, Captain 235 |i?aSfecU, JlOnatljan, Lieutenant 236 HASKINS, DAVID GREENE, Jr. iae Davis, Ebeneser. ?i^aStinjJS, JOi)n, Captain 236 HASTINGS, EDMUND TROWBRIDGE, son, adm. 1839 236 HASTINGS, EDMUND TROWBRIDGE, grandson, adm. 1863 237 HASTINGS, EDMUND TROWBRIDGE, gt.-grandson, adm. 18S5 237 ?i^Catl), SkilUam.t Major-General 237 HEATH, WILLIAM SAMUEL, grandson, adm. 1S44 241 J^cfitooolr, JJciilamin, Captain 241 HEYWOOD, BENJAMIN FRANKLIN, son, adm. 1858 242 HEYWOOD, JOHN GREEN, grandson, adm. 1871 . 243 ?l^tlftCEtl), aaitlliam, Lieutenant . 243 fkfUXy Jtrcmiai), Lieutenant 243 |£|lltTJS, JSartlEtt,* Captain-Lieutenant 244 ^tta)tll, JJdijtt, Lieutenant and Inspector of Music . . 244 ?i^Ol)i)g, SOJ)Jl, Captain 244 HODGE. See Thachcr, Dr. James. ti^OlfiCOOft, BatJitr, Captain 244 Ji^Oltlfn, Slai'On.t Captain 245 ll^OltTflt, ^IJCl, Captain 245 J^OlTTflt, Soijn, Lieutenant 246 HOLDEN, EDGAR, grandson, adm. 1888 .... 247 XXVI MASSACHUSETTS SOCIETY UK THE CINCIiXNATI. Page %}OUitn, ILtti, Lieutenant 247 JifOUanti, Ktiorg, Lieutenant 248 fLfOllantl, }3ai*fe, Lieutenant 248 HOLLAND, CHARLES TURNER, son, adm. 1862 . 250 f^OllinttV, iJCSSf, Captain 250 ?1^0manS, SOljn,* Surgeon 250 HUMANS, JOHN, son, adm. 1840 252 HUMANS, CHARLES DUDLEY, grandson, adm. 1869 253 HUMANS, JUHN, great-grandson, adm. 1887 ... 254 ^OOktV, ZiiJeon, Lieutenant 255 HOOKER, ZIBEON, son, adm. 1841 255 fi}OttOn, 2£liSlja, Ensign 256 fLfoiinin, JWidjacl dSafivitl, Captain 256 J^oiat, Micljarft Surcomfi, Ensign . 256 HOWE, THOMAS, brotlier, adm. 1803 256 HOWE, RICHARD SURCOMB", neplievv, adm. 1825 256 HOWE, THOMAS, nepliew, adm. 1828 256 li^tlll, SMilUam, Lieutenant-Colonel 257 CLARKE, SAMUEL CLARKE, grandson, adm. 1873 270 flaunt, ISpftraim, Lieutenant 270 HUNT, LEWIS CASS, grand-nepliew, elected 1883, placed on rolls 1890 271 fi^Unt, 3ri)0maB, Captain 275 HUNT, HENRY JACKSON, grandson, adm. 1867 . 279 li^Urtl, JOljn [Jr.], Ensign 283 KnflCrSOlI, dSeOVQt, Lieutenant 283 INGERSOLL, GEORGE GOLDTHWAIT, son, adm. 1818 283 JACKSON, ALFRED BAURY. See Baury dc Belkrive. Jacfeson, Stmasa, Ensign 284 SatftSOn, CEljarlCS, Ensign 284 JACKSON, CHARLES E., grand-nephew, adm. 1890 284 SaCfeSOn, IBanirl, Lieutenant 285 PAST AND PRESENT MEMBERS. XXVU Pace JACKSON, DANIEL, son, adm. 1834 286 JACKSON, FRANCIS, grandson, adm. 1870 . . . 286 SlatfeBOU, 7Biitnt}tV, Lieutenant 287 JACKSON, EBENEZER, son, adm. 1857 287 JaCfeSOn, f^tntS, Colonel 288 JACKSON, EDWARD, nephew, adm. 1S09 . . . . 2S9 JACKSON, JOSEPH HENRY (afterward took the name of Thayer), grand-nephew, adm. 1826 . . . 290 JatfeBon, Jtticl)ael, Coionei 290 JncfeSOn, JHt'djacl [Jl*.],* Lieutenant 292 JatbSOIl, Simon, Captain 292 Satfeson, i!rJ)omas, c.iptain 292 JACKSON, THOMAS, son, adm. 1802 293 JcffcrtS, Samuel, Lieutenant 293 JOljnStOn, 3)01)11,* Captain 293 SOREN, JOHN JOHNSTON, grandson, adm. 1840 . 294 JONES, WILLIAM FREDERICK. See Moor, William. KEYES, ALEXANDER BROOKS. '&t^ Brooks, John. BlUam, SOSCpf), Captain 295 ISinjJ, ZclJUlOU, Captain 295 Unap, JWO.SCS, Major, 295 KNAPP, HIRAM, son, adm. 1857 , 296 KNAPP, GILBERT CLARK, grandson, adm. 1S66 . 296 ItnOtolfS, Lieutenant 497 2129alfeCl', lEtltoartl, Lieutenant and Paymaster ... 497 fSIalfeCC, JiOficrt, Captain 49S SMartJtoCll, UOSCplj, Lieutenant 498 WARDWELL, WILLIAM H., grandson, adm. 1S57 . 498 JEiBarrcn:, ^UriCl, Lieutenant 499 S^aarrcn, JantfS, JJr., Lieutenant in the Navy ... 499 WARREN, HENRY, brother, adm. 1825 500 WARREN, WINSLOW, nephew, adm. 1829 .... 500 WARREN, WINSLOW, grand-nepliew, adm. 1870 . . 500 SUacrEn, JJOljn, Lieutenant 501 WARREN, JOHN COLLINS, admitted as honorary mem- ber in 1847; as regular member in 1S54, under rule of that year 501 WARREN JONATHAN MASON, son, adm. 1863 . 503 WARREN, JOHN COLLINS, grandson, adm. 1871 . 503 2!23atson, JIHilHam, Captain 503 fflSaattlCS, JHaSOn, Captain 504 JEJUcfii), CSCOrflC, Captain 504 JEJUcfilJCr, ilanttl, Lieutenant 504 WEBSTER, DANIEL, adm. in 185 1, as an honorary member 504 SaacIliltfltOn, ISllBlja, Lieutenant 504 WELLINGTON, ELISHA, son, adm. 1804 .... 504 JESacHS, JJfnj'anrin, Lieutenant 505 JMCUS, JJamrS, Lieutenant 505 WELLS, REV. ELEAZER MATHER PORTER, son, adm. 1829 505 NELSON, HENRY WELLS, grandson, adm. 1890 . 507 ffiSacllS, JEljOmaS, Captain 50S WELLS, SAMUEL ADAMS, son, adm. 1808 ... 508 SMCSSOIt, SaWfS, Colonel 509 WETMORE, GEORGE PEABODY. See Shepani, Willi a m (Ensign). XXXVIU MASSACHUSETTS SOCTETV OF THE CINCINNATI. Page aSllljitC, lEBtoaVll, Lieutenant 509 JMIjltC, fL^affitlti, Captain 510 SMJjitina, JOftn, Lieutenant 510 ■ WHrriNG, \VILLL\M DANFORTH, grandson, adm. 1877 512 212ai){tlMfU, Samuel, Surgeon 513 WHirWELL, FREDERICK AUGUSTUS, grandson, adm. 1889 513 WanUy IB'btmitV, Lieutenant 514 WILD, EBENEZER, son, adm. 1814 515 WILD, CHARLES TIDD, grandson, adm. 1871 . 515 SBilUams, auraljam, Captain 515 2i21IllIiam.S, lB\}t\U}n\ Lieutenant 516 eUilUamS, SOlJ«> Captain 516 WILLIAMS, JOHN, son, adm. 1826 517 EaailHamS, SOBfpl), Captain 517 WILLIAMS, HENRY HOWELL, Jr., grand-nephew, adm. 1S26 517 SlSDtlltatniS, KottCt, Lieutenant and Paymaster ... 518 WILLIAMS, ROBERT PEARCE, son, adm. 1837 . 521 WILLIAMS, .ALEXANDER, grandson, adm. 1862 . 522 ffiJHtnfl, 5)onatijan, Ensign 523 fJHillSlOto, JJOljn, Captain 523 WINSLOW, JOHN, son, adm. 1822 524 WINSLOW, CHARLES HENRY, great-grandson, adm. 1870 525 WINSLOW, JOHN EDW.A.RD, great-great-grandson, adm. 1889 525 WOLCOTT, JOSHUA HUNTINGTON, adm. in 1876, under the rule of 1854 526 aSJOOTltliTroC, (J^ljn'St01)l)Cr, Captain 527 gUaOOTHUartr, Samuel, Surgeon's Mate 527 ¥eOmanS, JOljn, Lieutenant 528 LIST OF MEMBERS. JULY 4, 1890. 1SS6. 1841. 1877. 1879- 1881. 1876. 1890. 1859. 1877. 1850. 1882. 1873- 1873- 1856. 1882. 1880. 1880. 1890. 1873. 1887. 1863. 1864. Alden, Amherst A. Arnold, Leonard . Bailey, Samuel D. Bailey, Walter L. Baylies, Edmund L. Bell, Charles Upham Bowles, Stephen W., M.D. Bradford, Gamaliel . . Bradford, Laurence . Bradford, Capt. Robert F. Bryant, John, M.D. . . . BuUard, James Bullock, F. Prescott . Burbeck, William H. . . Casey, Brig.-Gen. Thomas Lincoln, U. S. A. . . . Chase, Francis Clapp, Charles B. ... Clarke, Samuel C. . . . Cobb, Hon. Samuel C. . Cooper, Rear-Admiral Geo. H., U. S. N Crocker, Lewis C. ... Cummings, Prentiss . Davis, Commander Charles Henry, U. S. N. . . . Drew, George H Eaton, Charles M. . . . Edwards, Charles .... Emerson, Nathaniel W. Gould, Benjamin Apthorp, LL.D Greene, George F. . . . U. S. Post-OfSce, Boston. Somerville. Bath, Me. Calcutta, India. 66 Wall St., New York, N. Y. Lawrence. Springfield. Cambridge. Duxbury. U. S. Navy. Cohasset. Sherborn. Kansas City, Mo. New London, Ct. Washington, D. C. Salem. Portland, Me. Marietta, Ga. 235 Boylston St., Boston. 88 Clinton Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Allston. Brookline. Washington, D. C. 10 Copeland Street, Roxbury. Wellesley Hills. Danforth St , Portland, Me. Union League Club, N. Y. City. Cambridge. Brookline. xl LIST OF MEMBERS. 1887. Hall, George Winslow . . 1876. Haskins, David Greene, Jr. 1873. Heywood, John G. . . . 1888. Holden, Edgar, M.D. . . 1887. Romans, John, M.D., 2d . 1888. Jackson, Lieut. Alfred B. . 1890. Jackson, Charles E. . 1870. Jackson, Francis .... 1854. Jones, William F. ... 1869. Keyes, Capt. Alexander B. 1888. Lawrence, Amory A. . . 1879. Lawton, Charles O. . . . 1867. Lee, William Raymond . 1855. Lillie, Daniel C 1867. Lincoln, Benjamin 1 888. Lothrop, Thornton K. . . 1885. Lovell, Joseph P 1889. Mason, James Means 1859. McKendry, George Albert . 1878. Moore, Chief Engineer John W., U. S. N. . 1867. Moseley, Edward S. 1890. Nelson, Henry Well: 1874. Nixon, Marcellus . 1880. O'Brien, Edward K. 1890. Palfrey, John C. . 1888. Perkins, John W. 1872. Perry, Andrew P. 1866. Peters, John L. 1887. Pickering, John . 1859. Pierce, Josiah . . 1889. Pierce, Kirk D. . 1SS8. Pope, Ivory H. . 1845. Preble. William Pitt 1890. Remick, Otis . 1857, Richardson, George D. 1888. Sargent, Ignatius . 1881. Savage, William H. 1862. Sawyer, Paymaster Geo. A., u'. S. N 187 1 . Sever, Rev. Winslow Warren 1S75. Seward, Richard T. . . . D. Chelsea. 83 Devonshire St., Boston. Worcester. Newark, N. J. 184 Marlborough St., Boston. U. S. Army. Middletown, Ct. Lanesville. 70 Columbia St., Dorchester. U. S. Army. 68 Chauncy St., Boston. 187 Warren Ave., Boston. 135 Amory St., Jamaica Plain. North Easton. Dennysville, Me. 8 Congress St.. Boston. 112 Madison Ave., New York. Portland, Me. Westborough. Navy Yard, Mare-Island, Cal. Newbury port. Geneva, N. Y. Framingham. Thomaston, Me. Belmont. Portland, Me. Glenwood, Medford. Worcester. Salem. London, S. W. Hillsborough, N. H. U. S. Custom House, Boston. Cambridge. Colorado Springs, Col. Stoneham. Waquoit. Falmouth, Harvard. Washington, D. C. Central Falls. R. I. 1389 Washington St.. Boston. LIST OF MEMBERS. xli 1884. Shaw, George Russell 1852. Shute, Daniel .... 1883. Sikes, Henry Knox . . 1885. Smith, Alfred E. . . . 1881. Smith, William H. . . 1880. Sproat, Henry Hamilton 1862. Stoddard, John T. . , 1846. Storey, Charles W. . . 18S7. Story, Capt.JohnP.,U.S A 1890. Sumner, Lieut-Col. Edwin V 1874. Torrey, William . 1870. Townsand, Brevet Maj.-Gen Edward D., U. S. A. . 1SS6. Trumbull, Charles P. . 1S74. Tudor, Frederic . . 1885. Turner, (Jeorge H. . . 1865. Vose, Rev. James G. 1876. Vose, Thomas S. . . . 1857. Wardwell, William H. . 1 871. Warren. J. Collins, M.D. 1S70. Warren, Winslow 1877. Wetmore, George Peabody 1877. Whiting, Commodore Wil- liam D.. U. S. N. . 1S89. Whitvvell, Frederick A. 1 87 1. Wild, Charles Tidd . 1862. Williams, Ale.xander . 1S89. Winslow, John E. . . 1S76. Wolcott, J. Huntington 113 Newbury St., Boston. South Hingham. Peoria, 111. Bronxville, N. Y. Raymond, Me. Freetown. Plymouth. Brookline. Washington, D. C. U. S. Army. Bath, Me. Washington, D. C. Beverly. 28 Brimmer St , Boston. Norwell. Providence, R. I. Thomaston, Me. 1743 Washington St., Boston. 58 Beacon St., Boston. 39 Court St., Boston. Newport, R. L Brooklyn, N. Y. 41 Tremont St., Boston. Chelsea. 139 Newbury St., Boston. Cambridge. 238 Beacon St., Boston. xlii LIST OF MEMBERS. PERSONS ELECTED, ADMISSION NOT COMPLETED. Date °' Name. 1787? *Tucker, Samuel . . 1788. *Litligow, William *VVigo;leswortli, Edward 1790. *Hunt, Abraham . . 1S05. *Bates, Joseph . . . 1816. *Greaton, Jolin . . 1826. *Eustis, Gen. AbraJiam 1828. *Peirce, Jos. Hardy, Jr. 1828. *Parker, Edward . . 1828. ♦Lincoln, Theodore . 1S29. *Vose, Thomas P. 1838. *Reniick, Timothy 1850. *Sawyer, James Lucius 1855. *Lawrence, Abbott . Address. Captain Revolutionary navy. Major Revolutionary army. Colonel " Captain " " grandson of Gen. John. nephew of Gov. William. son of Joseph. of New York, son of Lieut. Elias. son of Gen. Benjamin. son of Capt. Thomas. of Cornish, Me., son of Capt. Timothy, son of Ensign James, son of Major Samuel, son of Surgeon J. B. Swett. son of Ensign Africa, of Berwick, Me., eldest son of Lieut. Nathaniel, grand-nephew of Capt. Joseph, grand-nephew of Lieut. Benjamin, great-grandson of Lieut. Ebenezer. grandson of Major John Burnam. grand-nephew of Lieut. Samuel, son of Admiral James W. A., and great-grandson of Capt. .Samuel, grand-nephew of Joseph W Leiand. great-grandson of Capt.-Lieut. John Johnston, great-grandson of Lieut. Park Holland. Note. — Henry 1>. Thomas of Washingtun was elected a member in 1SS5, to succeed his grandfather, Dr. John Thomas ; but it afterward appeared that he had been elected at the same time a member of the New York State Society, and being a resident of that State, had properly chosen to accept membershii) there. 1873- 1876. 1879. 1885. *Swett, Samuel *Hamlin, Poladore *Nason, L. Q. C. . *William, Henry Howell Dana, Benjamin . . Jackson, Arthur H. . Burnham, John W. . Newman, Wm. H. H. . Nicholson, Wm. H. D. . I 8S9. Richardson, Wm. K. 1890. Soren, George Wales 1S90. Eaton, Wm. Lutlier . HISTORICAL SKETCH SOCIETY OF THE CINCINNATI. HISTORICAL SKETCH. THE formation of the Society of the Cincinnati was the natural result of a desire on the part of the officers who had served together in the War of the Revolution " to per- petuate the remembrance of the achievement of national in- dependence, as well as the mutual friendships which had been formed under the pressure of common danger." It appears from an entry in Jefferson's diary (March i6, 1788), that Knox, in a conversation with Adams as early as 1776, expressed a " wish for some ribbon to wear in his hat or in his button-hole, to be transmitted to his descendants as a badge and a proof that he had fought in defence of their liberties. He spoke of it in such precise terms as showed that he had revolved it in his mind before." Dr. William Eustis, of Boston, who was on intimate terms with many of the prominent officers in the American army, and who took an active part in the organization of the Society of the Cincinnati, has left on record a statement^ of "the first moving in the said Institution," so far as he was cognizant of it. He states that while the army was quartered at New Windsor and West Point, on the Hudson, in 1782, Captain Richmond of the Maryland line, then aide-de-camp to Major- General Gates, talked with him about the unhappiness of the coming separation, and suggested that the officers should ' The statement will be found in tlie Appendix. 4 HISTORICAL SKETCH OF THE meet in some central place and form a society to preserve the friendship which so stroni^ly subsisted between them. Captain Richmond, it appears, made a minute of his plan of organization, and gave it to Dr. Eustis to elaborate; but a few days afterward it was learned " that such a design was executing at West Point among the officers there ; and it was not long before the Proposals came out, from which were framed the articles which now make the Institution of the Society of the Cincinnati." The original copy of the Proposals referred to is in the handwriting of General Knox, and is now among the papers left by his grandson Admiral Thatcher, in the care of the New England Historic-Genealogical Society. It is entitled " Rough draft of a society to be formed by the American officers and to be called the Cincinnati," and is dated " West point, 15 April, 1783." ^ It is evident, from the statement made by Dr. Eustis, that the idea of forming some kind of an association bj' which the officers would be brought together from time to time after their retirement from active service was prevalent in the camp before Knox's " Proposals " took shape, and that the credit of originating the idea cannot be awarded with certainty to any individual ; but as Knox was the author of the " Pro- posals," which are in substance the same as the " Institution " afterward established, he deserves the title of FOUNDER OF THE Cincinnati. The disaffection existing in the winter of 1 782-1783 among all ranks in the army was widespread and menacing. A com- mittee of officers, of which Major-General McDougall was the head, waited upon the grand committee of Congress, and represented that without an immediate payment of some part of what was then due, the discontent alike of officers and sol- 1 A fac-simile of this interesting document, the existence of which was long unknown, is given in the niemoiial volume of this Society published in 1S73. SOCIETY OF THE CINCINNATI. 5 diers could not be soothed ; that a mutiny might ensue, and that it would be hard to punish soldiers for a breach of en- gagements to the public which the public itself, in the person of its representatives in Congress, had already broken. It was a source of irritation that the members of the legislatures never adjourned till they had paid themselves fully; that all on the civil lists regularly received their salaries, and that all on the military lists were as regularly left unpaid.^ An anony- mous address, now known to have been written by Major John Armstrong, aide-de-camp to Major-General Gates, was cir- culated among the troops on March lo, 1783, with the secret connivance of the General, and with the purpose of precipi- tating a crisis. It ended with these words: "Appeal from the justice to the fears of government, and suspect the man [meaning Washington] who would advise to longer for- bearance." A meeting was called for the following day, the iith of March. Washington received a copy of the address on the morning of the iith, and immediately issued a general order disapproving the anonymous and irregular invitation, and at the same time requesting all the highest officers and a representation of the rest to meet four days later, that is, on the 15th of March. The meeting called by the anonymous address was given up ; and when the officers assembled on the 15th, Washington was present, and made such a power- ful appeal to their honor and patriotism that it completely changed the current of feeling which had for several months been setting so strongly against the existing government. It is not perhaps too much to say that Washington's words and acts on that occasion saved the Republic. Knox seconded the efforts of his chief with characteristic courage and hearti- ness. As chairman of a committee, he reported a series of resolutions which declared, among other things, " that the ' See Bancroft's History of the Formation of the Constitution, vol. i. chaps. 5 and 6. 6 HISTORICAL SKETCH OF THE officers of the American army view with abhorrence and reject with disdain the infamous propositions contained in the late anonymous address to them." The resolutions were adopted unanimously ; and on the day Congress was apprised of what had taken place, nine States immediately concurred in commuting the half pay promised the officers into a sum equal to five years' full pay, to be discharged by certificates bearing interest at six per cent. Such was the condition of aff'airs when Knox produced his plan for a voluntary association in which those who had " so conspicuous an agency in the American Revolution . . . should pledge themselves to each other to support, by all means consistent with the laws, that noble fabric of united independence which at so much hazard and with so many sacrifices they had contributed to erect." ' It appears from the official records that the " Proposals " having been com- municated to the several regiments of the respective lines, they appointed an officer from each, who, in conjunction with the general officers, met at the "Cantonment of the American army on Hudson's river," May lO, 1783, to consider them. Major-General Steuben, the senior officer present, presided ; and that fact led many to suppose that the scheme originated with him, and to criticise it accordingly as the work of a foreigner accustomed to class distinctions, and naturally de- sirous of seeing them established in the country of his adop- tion. At this first meeting the "Proposals" were read and discussed ; and after some amendments had been made, they were referred to a committee consisting of Major-General Henry Knox, Brigadier-General Edward Hand, Brigadier- General Jedidiah Huntington, and Captain Samuel Shaw. The committee was instructed " to revise them, and pre- pare a copy to be laid before the officers at the next 1 See .'Me.xander ILimiltuii's rc-purt lu the New Vurk Society, 1786. ryr^ SOCIETY OF THE CINCINNATI. 7 meeting, to be holden at Major-General Baron de Steuben's quarters, on Tuesday, the 13th inst." The revised *' Institution," reported to the meeting on the 13th of May, is in the handwriting of Captain Shaw, the Secretary of the Committee. The official record states simply that it was "accepted," as follows: — INSTITUTION. It having pleased the Supreme Governor of the Universe, in the disposition of human affairs, to cause the separation of the colonies of North America from the domination of Great Britain, and, after a bloody conflict of eight years, to establish them free, independent, and sovereign states, connected, by alliances founded on reciprocal ad- vantage, with some of the greatest princes and powers of the earth ; To perpetuate, therefore, as well the remembrance of this vast event, as the mutual friendships which have been formed under the pressure of common danger, and, in many instances, cemented by the blood of the parties, the officers of the American army do, hereby, in the most solemn manner, associate, constitute, and com- bine themselves into one society of friends, to endure as long as they shall endure, or any of their eldest male posterity, and, in failure thereof, the collateral branches ^ who may be judged worthy of becoming its supporters and members. The officers of the American army, having generally been taken from the citizens of America, possess high veneration for the char- acter of that illustrious Roman, Lucius Quintius Cincinnatus ; and being resolved to follow his example, by returning to their citizen- ship, they think they may with propriety denominate themselves THE SOCIETY OF THE CINCINNATI. The following principles shall be immutable, and form the basis of the Society of the Cincinnati : — An incessant attention to preserve inviolate those exalted rights and liberties of human nature for which they have fought and bled, ' See the proceedings at the meeting of the General Society in 1S54, et seq., post. 8 HISTORICAL SKETCH OF THE and without which the high rank of a rational being is a curse instead of a blessing. An unalterable determination to promote and cherish, between the respective states, that union and national honor so essentially necessary to their happiness and the future dignity of the American empire. To render permanent the cordial affection subsisting among the officers : This spirit will dictate brotherly kindness in all things, and particularly extend to the most substantial acts of beneficence, ac- cording to the ability of the society, towards those officers and their families who unfortunately may be under the necessity of receiving it. The general society will, for the sake of frequent communications, be divided into state societies, and these again into such districts as shall be directed by the state society. The societies of the districts to meet as often as shall be agreed upon by the state society, those of the states on the fourth day of July, annually, or oftener, if they shall find it expedient, and the general society on the first Monday in May, annually, so long as they shall deem it necessary, and afterwards, at least once in every three years. At each meeting the principles of the Institution will be fully con- sidered, and the best measures to promote them adopted. The state societies will consist of all the members resident in each state respectively ; and any member removing from one state to an- other is to be considered, in all respects, as belonging to the society of the state in which he shall actually reside. The state societies to have a president, vice-president, secretary, treasurer, and assistant-treasurer, to be chosen annually, by a majority of votes, at the state meeting. Each state meeting shall write annually, or oftener, if neces- sary, a circular letter to the other state societies, noting whatever they may think worthy of observation respecting the good of the society or the general union of the states, and giving information of the officers chosen for the current year. Copies of these let- ters shall be regularly transmitted to the secretar)'-general of the society, who will record them in a book to be assigned for that purpose. SOCIETY OF THE CINCINNATI. Q The state society will regulate everything respecting itself and the societies of the districts consistent with the general maxims of the Cincinnati, judge of the qualifications of the members who may be proposed, and expel any member who, by conduct inconsistent with a gentleman and a man of honor, or by an opposition to the interests of the community in general, or the society in particular, may render himself unworthy to continue a member. In order to form funds which may be respectable, and assist the unfortunate, each officer shall deliver to the treasurer of the state society one month's pay, which shall remain forever to the use of the state society ; the interest only of which, if necessary, to be appropriated to the relief of the unfortunate. Donations may be made by persons not of the society, and by members of the society, for the express purpose of forming per- manent funds for the use of the state society, and the interest of these donations appropriated in the same manner as that of the month's pay. Moneys, at the pleasure of each member, may be subscribed in the societies of the districts, or the state societies, for the relief of the unfortunate members, or their widows and orphans, to be appro- priated by the state society only. The meeting of the general society shall consist of its officers and a representation from each state society, in number not exceed- ing five, whose expenses shall be borne by their respective state societies. In the general meeting, the president, vice-president, secretary, assistant-secretary, treasurer, and assistant-treasurer-general shall be chosen, to serve until the next meeting. The circular letters which have been written by the respective state societies to each other, and their particular laws, shall be read and considered, and all measures concerted which may conduce to the general intendment of the society. It is probable that some persons may make donations to the gen- eral society, for the purpose of establishing funds for the further com- fort of the unfortunate, in which case such donations must be placed in the hands of the treasurer-general, the interest only of which to be disposed of, if necessary, by the general meeting. All the officers of the American army, as well those who have lO HISTORICAL SKETCH OF THE resigned with honor, after three years' service in the capacity of officers, or who have been deranged by the resolutions of Congress, upon the several reforms of the army, as those who shall have con- tinued to the end of the war, have the right to become parties to this Institution : provided that they subscribe one month's pay and sign their names to the general rules, in their respective state societies, those who are present with the army immediately, and others within six months after the army shall be disbanded, extra- ordinary cases excepted ; the rank, time of service, resolution of Congress by which any have been deranged, and place of residence, must be added to each name ; and as a testimony of affection to the memory and the offspring of such officers as have died in the ser- vice, their eldest male branches shall have the same right of be- coming members as the children of the actual members of the society. Those officers who are foreigners, not resident in any of the states, will have their names enrolled by the secretary-general, and are to be considered as members in the societies of any of the states in which they may happen to be. And as there are, and will at all times be, men in the respective states eminent for their abilities and patriotism, whose views may be directed to the same laudable objects with those of the Cincinnati, it shall be a rule to admit such characters as honorary members of the society, for their own lives only ; provided always that the number of honorary members in each state does not exceed a ratio of one to four of the officers or their descendants. Each state society shall obtain a list of its members ; and at the first annual meeting the state secretary shall have engrossed on parchment two copies of the institution of the society, which every member present shall sign, and the secretary shall endeavor to pro- cure the signature of every absent member ; one of those lists to be transmitted to the secretary-general to be kept in the archives of the society, and the other to remain in the hands of the state secretary. From the state lists the secretary-general must make out, at the first general meeting, a complete list of the whole society, with a copy of which he will furnish each state secretary. The society shall have an Order by which its members shall be known and distinguished, which shall be a medal of gold, of a proper SOCIETY OF THE CINCINNATI. II size to receive tlie emblems, and suspended by a deep blue ribbon two inches wide, edged with white, descriptive of the union of France and America, viz. : — " The principal figure CINCINNATUS, Three senators presenting him with a sword and other military ensigns ; on a field in the background, his wife standing at the door of their cottage ; near it a plough and instruments of husbandry. Round the ivhole, OMNIA RELIQUIT SERVARE REMPUBLICAM, On the reverse. Sun rising; a city with open gates, and vessels entering the port. Fame crowning Cincinnatus, with a wreath inscribed, VIRTUTIS PRiEMIUM. BeUnc, Hands joined, supporting a heart, with the motto, ESTO PERPETUA. Round the whole, SOCIETAS CINCINNATORUM INSTITUTA A. D. 17S3." The society, deeply impressed with a sense of the generous as- sistance this country has received from France, and desirous of per- petuating the friendships which have been formed, and so happily subsisted, between the officers of the allied forces in the prosecution of the war, direct that the president-general transmit, as soon as may be, to each of the characters hereafter named, a medal containing the order of the society, viz. : — His Excellency the Chevalier de la Luzerne, Minister Pleni- potentiary, His Excellency the Sieur Gerard, late Minister Plenipotentiary, Their Excellencies — The Count D'Estaing, The Count de Grasse, The Count de Barras, The Chevalier de Touches, 12 HISTORICAL SKETCH OF THE Admirals and Commanders in the Navy, His Excellency the Count de Rochambeau, Commander-in-Chief, And the generals and colonels of his army, and acquaint them that the society does itself the honor to consider them members. Resolved, That a copy of the foregoing Institution be given to the senior officer of each state line, and that the officers of the respective state lines sign their names to the same, in manner and form follow- ing, viz. : — " We, the subscribers, officers of the American army, do hereby voluntarily become parties to the foregoing Institution, and do bind ourselves to observe, and be governed by, the principles therein con- tained. For the performance whereof we do solemnly pledge to each other our sacred honor. "Done in the Cantonment, on Hudson River, in the year 1783." That the members of the society, at the time of subscribing their names to the Institution, do also sign a draft on the paymaster-gen- eral in the following terms (the regiments to do it regimentally, and the generals and other officers not belonging to regiments, each for himself, individually), viz. : — "To John Pierce, Esquire, Paymaster-General of the United States. " Sir, — Please to pay to treasurer for the state association of the Cincinnati, or his order, one month's pay of our several grades respectively,^ and deduct the same from the bal- ance which shall be found due to us on the final liquidation of our accounts, for which this shall be your warrant." 1 The monthly pay of the several grades of officers in the revolutionary army was as follows : — Ensign %io.oo Lieut of infantry 26.60 „ navy 30.00 Capt.-lieuts. and lieuts. of artil- lery 3.3-30 Captain of infantry 40.00 „ artillery and cav. . . 50.00 ,, navy 60.00 Major of infantry 50.00 „ artillery and cav. . . 62.45 Lieut.-col. of infantry $60.00 „ artillery 75.00 Colonel of cavalry . 93-67 „ infantry . 75.00 „ artillery . 100.00 Brig.-general . . . 125 00 Maj. -general . . . 166.00 Surgeon 60.00 Surgeon's mate . . 42.00 Chaplain .... 75.00 SOCIETY OF THE CINCINNATI. 1 3 That the members of the several state societies assemble as soon as may be, for the choice of their president and other officers ; and that the presidents correspond together and appoint a meeting of the officers who may be chosen for each state, in order to pursue such further measures as may be judged necessary. That the general officers, and the officers delegated to represent the several corps of the army, subscribe to the Institution of the gen- eral society, for themselves and their constituents, in the manner and form before prescribed. That General Heath, General Baron de Steuben, and General Knox, be a committee to wait on his Excellency the Commander-in-Chief with a copy of the Institution, and request him to honor the society by placing his name at the head of it. That Major- General Heath,i second in command in this army, be — and he hereby is — desired to transmit copies of the Institu- tion, with the proceedings thereon, to the commanding officer of the Southern army, the senior officer in each state, from Pennsylvania to Georgia inclusive, and to the commanding officer of the Rhode Island line, requesting them to communicate the same to the officers under their several commands, and to take such measures as may appear to them necessary for expediting the establishment of their state societies, and sending a delegation to represent them in the first general meet- ing, to be holden on the first Monday in May, 1784. The meeting then adjourned without day. Another meeting of the officers was held by request of the president, Major-General Steuben, on June 19, 1783, at which he stated that he had, agreeably to their request, transmitted to his Excellency the Chevalier de la Luzerne, Minister Pleni- potentiary from the Court of France, a copy of the Institution of the Society of the Cincinnati, with their vote respecting his E.xcellency, and the other characters therein mentioned ; ' It is a curious fact that the officer thus selected was the oiily one who subse- quently renounced the order of the Cincinnati. See his letter in the Biographical Notice. 14 HISTORICAL SKETCH OF THE and that his Excellency had returned an answer, declaring his acceptance of the same, and expressing the grateful sense he entertains of the honor conferred on himself, and the other gentlemen of the French nation, by this act of the Convention. It was thereupon resolved, that the letter of the Chevalier de la Luzerne be recorded in the proceedings of the day, and deposited in the archives of the Society, as a testimony of the high sense this Convention entertains of the honor done to the Society by his becoming a member thereof. Major-General Steuben having also communicated a letter from Major L'Enfant, enclosing a design for the medal and order, containing the emblems of the Institution, it was — Resolved, That the bald eagle, carrying the emblems on its breast, be established as the order of the Society, and that the ideas of Major L'Enfant respecting it, and the manner of its being worn by the members, be adopted. That the order be of the same size, and in every other respect conformable to the said design, which for that purpose is certified by the Baron de Steuben, President of this Con- vention, and to be deposited in the archives of the Society as the original, from which all copies are to be made. Also, that silver medals, not exceeding the size of a Spanish milled dollar, with the emblems as designed by Major LEnfant, and certified by the Presi- dent, be given to each and every member of the Society, together with a diploma, on parchment, whereon shall be impressed the exact figures of the order and medal, as above mentioned ; anything in the original institution, respecting gold medals, to the contrary, notwith- standing. The president was instructed to transmit the thanks of the Convention to Major L'Enfant for his care and ingenuity in preparing the designs, and request a continuance of his atten- tion in carrying the designs into execution. It was also resolved " that his Excellency the Commander- in-Chief be requested to officiate as President-General until the first General Meeting, to be held in May, 1784. SOCIETY OF THE CINCINNATI. 1 5 Ballots were then taken for Treasurer-General and Secre- tary-General, and McDougall was elected to be the former and Knox the latter. Washington accepted the presidency, and in a letter to the Count de Rochanibeau, dated Oct. 29, 1783, referred to the Institution as follows : — " The officers of the American army, in order to perpetuate that mutual friendship which they contracted in the hour of common dan- ger and distress, and for other purposes which are mentioned in the instrument of their association, have united together in a society of friends under the name of Cincinnati ; and having honored me with the office of president, it becomes a very agreeable part of my duty to inform you that the Society have done themselves the honor to consider you and the generals and officers of the army which you commanded in America as members of the Society. " Major L'Enfant, who will have the honor to deliver this letter to you, will e.xecute the Order of the Society in France, amongst which he is directed to present you with one of the first Orders that are made, and likewise with Orders for the other gentlemen of your army, which I take the liberty to request you would present to them in the name of the Society. As soon as the diploma is made out, I will have the honor to transmit it to you." The foregoing proceedings had no sooner been made pub- lic than a violent outcry was raised against the promoters of the organization. It is not difficult to understand the popular feeling on the subject when we consider the disloyal utterances in which some of the officers, especially those in Gates's di- vision, had indulged, and the suspicion which at that time naturally attached to any institution in which the hereditary principle was recognized. In October, 1783, yEdanus Burke, a justice of the Supreme Court of South Carolina, issued a pamphlet' under the name of " Cassius," in which he set • "Considerations on the Society or Order of Cincinnati, lately instituted by the Major-Generals, Brigadier-Generals, and other officers of the American Army ; 1 6 HISTORICAL SKETCH OF THE forth that " the Institution created a race of Hereditary Pa- tricians or nobility," — "an hereditary Peerage " that would soon " occasion such an inequahty in the condition of our in- habitants that the country will be composed of only two ranks of men, — the patricians or nobles, and the rabble." He endeavored to show that the object of the promoters of the Society was the overthrow of the Republic and the usur- pation of supreme power. " They have laid in ruins," said he, " that state of civil equality which our laws and the nature of a Republican government promised us." And he went on to say that " the Cincinnati would soon have and hold an ex- clusive right to offices, honors, and authorities, civil and mili- tary." The evils were deep-rooted and past remedy; for the parties to the great iniquity were powerful, designing, and numerous. " The number of Peers," he said, " is not far short of ten thousand,^ and every generation will be adding to their numbers." Judge Burke, although the first, was not alone in the as- sault. Mr. Jefferson saw in the Society opposition to the " letter of some of our Constitutions and to the spirit of all of them," — opposition to " the natural equality of man." He considered it " the germ whose development is one day to destroy the fabric we have reared," and that " the day will certainly come when a single fibre left of this Institution will produce an aristocracy which will change the form of our governments from the best to the worst in the world." Many years later he stated that the expression he had used in a famous letter, — " the Samsons in the field and Solomons in Council, but who had had their heads shorn by the harlot England," — was " meant for the Cincinnati generally." He proving that it creates a race of Hereditary Patricians or Nobility." Philadelphia, Robert Bell, T7S3. ' The original number of the Cincinnati was less than one fourth of the num- ber which Judge Burke's imaginative mind feared. Each gener.ation has lessened their number. At present there are 410 members. SOCIETY OF THE CINCTNNATL. IJ declared himself to have been " an enemy to the Institution from the first moment of its conception," considered " their meetings objectionable," and " the charitable part of the Institution still more likely to do mischief," and advised them to " distribute their funds, renounce their existence," and " melt up their eagles." To Samuel Adams's watchful and suspicious mind, the asso- ciation presented an odious hereditary distinction of families, " a plan disgustful to the American feeling." And because " one of the Order had received a majority of the votes " in the town of Boston for an elective office, the old Patriot was afraid the citizens were " not so vigilant as they used and still ought to be." John Adams considered it " the deepest piece of cunning yet attempted ; it is sowing the seeds of all that European Courts wish to grow up among us, viz., of vanity, ambition, corruption, discord, and sedition." At a later period in life, and in reply to a complimentary address from the Society in South Carolina, he spoke of them as " enjoying the sweetest of rewards in the grateful affection of their fellow-citizens," and closed by saying, " When the Cincinnati of South Carolina pledge their lives, their fortunes, and their sacred honors, I believe no man will doubt their integrity." Dr. Franklin indulged in some ridicule of the Institution, and condemned the members as " forming an order of Hered- itary Knights ; " but he subsequently accepted an honorary membership in the Society. John Jay thought that the " Order will eventually divide us into two mighty factions." In reply to a suggestion to be- come an honorary member of the Society, he said that " he was neither young enough nor old enough to desire that honor." Mirabeau, who subsequently played so conspicuous a part in the French Revolution, was deeply stirred by the establish- lO HISTORICAL SKETCH OF THE ment of such an institution in the land of democracy; and, taking Judge Burke's work as a basis, he issued a tract, which he subsequently translated into English, and published in London Sept. 30, 1784, under the title of " Considerations on the Order of Cincinnatus." The following quotation will give an idea of the line of argument pursued by the foreign critic : — " The institution of the Order of Cincinnatus is the creation of an actual patriciate and of a military nobility, which will erelong become a civil nobility, and an aristocracy the more dangerous because, being hereditary, it will perpetually increase in the course of time, and will gather strength from the very prejudices which it will engender ; be- cause, originating neither in the constitution nor the law, the law has provided no means to control it, and it will immediately overbear the constitution of which it forms no part ; till the time shall come when, by repeated attempts, made sometimes clandestinely and sometimes openly, it will at length have incorporated itself into the constitution, or when, after having for a long time sapped its foundations, it will in the end overturn and utterly destroy it." (p. 5.) The denunciation was not confined to individuals. Gov- ernors of several of the States presented the Society to the consideration and censure of the Legislatures; some of whom directed inquiries, and others passed hostile resolutions. The General Court of Massachusetts resolved that " the Society was unjustifiable, and, if not properly discountenanced, might be dangerous to the peace, liberty, and safety of the United States in general, and this State in particular." The assertion of several writers, that those who joined the Order were dis- franchised in some of the States, is incorrect ; the hostility to it did not go to that extent.^ Washington felt strongly the violence of the popular clamor, 1 McMaster, the latest writer on the subject, in his " History of the People of the United .States," vol. i. p. 16S, says ■ " The officer who subscribed to its laws laid down in manv States his rights of citizenship." SOCIETY OF THE CINCINNATI. 1 9 and was willing to make concessions to the prevailing excite- ment, which in the light of history it must be admitted were conceived in an overestimate of the reality and of the honesty of the hostility to the Society. " However ill-founded," says Marshall, " the public prejudices might be, he (Washington) thought this a case in which they ought to be respected, and if it should be found impracticable to convince the people that their fears were misplaced, he was disposed ' to yield to them in a degree, and not suffer that which was intended for the best of purposes, to produce a bad one.' " Knox thus described the condition of public sentiment in New England, in a letter to Washington, dated at Boston, Feb. 21, 1784: — " The Cincinnati appears (however groundlessly) to be an ob- ject of jealousy. The idea is, that it has been created by a foreign influence in order to change our form of government ; and this is strengthened by a letter from some of our ministers abroad. Burke's pamphlet has had its full operation. The cool, dispassionate men seem to approve of the institution generally, but dislike the hereditary descent. The two branches of the legislature of the State have chosen a committee ' to inquire into any associations or combina- tions which have [been] or may be formed to introduce undue dis- tinctions in the community, and which may have a tendency to create a race of hereditary nobility contrary to the confederation of the United States and the spirit of the Constitution of this Common- wealth.' They have not reported, and perhaps will not. The same sentiments pervade New England. The Society have had a respect- able meeting in Boston on the i6th inst., at which General Lincoln presided : General Heath was not present. A committee was chosen to attend the General Meeting at Philadelphia next May, — General R. Putnam, Colonel Cobb, Lieutenant-Colonel Hull, Major Sargent, and myself. Probably two only will attend. It was thought prudent not to make any honorary members at present." La Fayette wrote to Knox from Paris, under date of Jan. 8, 1784:- 20 HISTORICAL SKETCH OF THE " Our association meets with great success. On Thursday next a sufficient number of Eagles will be made to answer immediate pur- poses. I intend inviting all the American officers to my house, and to conduct them in a body, with our regimentals, to the General of the French army, to whom we will present the marks of the associa- tion. You will receive many applications relative to an addition to the brotherhood. But as nothing will be decided before the assembly in May, I have time to send you my observations." From Paris Colonel Gouvion wrote to Knox, in March, 1784: — " The Order succeeds extremely well in this country, but the news we have from America gives me some uneasiness. The .\merican gentlemen who are in Paris, and not members of the Society, are much against it ; chiefly Mr. Jay, who went the other day so far as to say that if it did take well in the States he would not care whether the Revolution had succeeded or not." It was well understood that in Congress the Society was viewed with secret disapprobation : — " What are the sentiments of Congress on this subject," said Jeffer- son, in answer to Washington's inquiries, " and what line they will pursue, can only be stated conjecturally. Congress as a body, if left to themselves, will, in my opinion, say nothing on the subject. They may, however, be forced into a declaration by instructions from some of the States or by other incidents. Their sentiments, if forced from them, will be unfriendly to the institution. If permitted to pur.sue their own track, they will check it by side blows whenever it comes in their way ; and, in competitions for office on equal or nearly equal ground, will give silent preferences for those who are not of the fraternity." The first General Meeting after the disbanding of the army took place at the City Tavern, Philadelphia, on May 4, 1784. Washington was unanimously chosen President; Major-Gen- eral Gates, Vice-President; and Major-General Kno.x, Sec- retary. In a long address to the members of the Convention Washington urged with much warmth and feclinfr that those SOCIETY OF THE CINCINNATI. 21 parts of tlie institution which had excited hostile criticism should be changed ; and he declared his determination to withdraw from the Society if the popular feelings on the sub- ject were not respected. The general sentiment was in favor of concession ; and on the 13th of May, on the recommenda- tion of a committee, the Convention agreed that the following material alterations and amendments should be made : — " That the hereditary succession should be abolished ; that all in- terference with political rights should be done away ; and that the funds should be placed under the immediate cognizance of the sev- eral legislatures, who should also be requested to grant charters for more effectually carrying our humane designs into execution." A circular letter, signed by Washington, was sent to the several State Societies urging their concurrence in the pro- posed alterations. The Massachusetts Society concurred in the alterations at the annual meeting on the 4th of July following; but several of the other State Societies either declined to concur or neglected to take any action upon the subject. At the sec- ond General Meeting, in 1787, it was resolved that the alter- ations could not take effect until they had been agreed to by all the State Societies. At the General Meeting, May 5, 1800, a committee reported that — " From the silence which the State Societies have observed, after the pressing Circular Letters of the General Meeting, your Committee are led to conclude that they do not accede to the proposed reform ; and your Committee conceive therefrom that they are authorized to report to the General Meeting — " That the Institution of the Society of the Cincinnati remains as it was originally proposed and adopted by the officers of the American Army, at their Cantonments on the banks of the Hudson River, in 1783." This report was unanimously adopted. ^ ' The meeting of 17S4 proceeded, as did also several of the subsequent meet- ings, up to 1800, as though the proposed amendment to the Institution were already 22 HISTORICAL SKETCH OF THE The action of the General Meeting, in 1784, was sufficient, however, to allay in most minds the distrust of the Society which had been excited by the comments of Judge Burke and others. But the neglect to ratify that action caused Washing- ton to look forward to the Triennial Meeting, in 1787, with some apprehension. On the 2d of April of that year he wrote to Knox: — " If I should attend the Convention [to frame the Constitution of the United States], I will be in Philadelphia previous to the meeting of the Cincinnati, where I shall hope and expect to meet you, and some others of my particular friends, the day before, in order that I may have a free and unreserved conference with you on the subject of it ; for I assure you this is, in my estimation, a business of a deli- cate nature. That the design of the Institution was pure, I have not a particle of doubt ; that it may be so still, is perhaps equally unques- tionable ; but qiicere, Are not the subsidence of the jealousies of it to be ascribed to the modification which took place at the last Gen- eral Meeting? Are not these rejected in toto by some of the State societies, and partially acceded to by others? Has any State so far overcome its prejudices as to grant a charter? Will the modifica- tions and alterations be insisted on or given up in the next meeting? If the first, will it not occasion warmths and divisions? If the latter, and I should remain at the head of this Order, in what light would my signature appear in contradictory recommendations? In what light would the versatility appear to the foreign members, who per- haps are acting agreeably to the recommendations of the last General Meeting? These, and other matters which may be agitated, will, I fear, place nie in a disagreeable predicament if I should preside, and were among the causes which induced me to decline the honor of it, previously to the meeting." General Mifflin presided at the General Meeting of the Cincinnati on May 7, 1787. Washington, who was in Phila- in force and operative, notwithstanding that in the Circniar of 17S4 to the State Societies, it was submitted to those .Societies for their rntificatiou. This doubt- less misled Marshall into the erroneous statement that the Constitution was al- tered and " the hereditary principle relinquished" Sjiarks, Guizot, Ilildrelh, and Washington Irving made the same error. SOCIETY OF THE CINCINNATI. 23 dclphia at the time for the purpose of attending the Con- vention to frame a Constitution for the United States, attended the meeting, but took no part in the proceedings. He was, however, re-elected president of the General Society of the Cincinnati, and continued to be re-elected and to perform the duties of the office until his death. The succession to membership in the Society has always been a fruitful theme for discussion. In reporting to the New York Society, in 1786, against the adoption of the modified Institution recommended by the General Society, Alexander Hamilton said the provision in regard to the duration or suc- cession of the Society was not expressed in terms sufficiently explicit, " and as far as it may intend an hereditary succession by right of primogeniture is liable to this objection, — that it refers to birth what ought to belong to merit only, a principle inconsistent with the genius of a society founded on friendship and patriotism." At a meeting of the General Society held on May 4, 1829, " a question having arisen whether, in case of the death of a member having no male issue except a grandson, the issue of a daughter, such grandchild shall be preferred to collaterals ; the Society conceives the true construction of the Constitution to be that the grandchild shall be preferred, he being in the direct line of descent." A committee appointed in 1848 to investigate the subject of the admission of members submitted a long report in 185 I, in which they stated that — " It is in vain, in the present diversity of practice, to exact a uniform rule, or extract from the variety more than a general prin- ciple ; or to insist upon any ground but one that shall embody the spirit, and embrace the objects of the original Institution in its comprehensive scope, limiting the succession to the blood of the Revolution. 24 HISTORICAL SKETCH OF THE "The Committee is, therefore, brought to the conclusion that the Institution remains on the original foundation of 1783, subject, how- ever, to some modification of the strict technical construction of the terms therein used with regard to the hereditary succession, congenial to the spirit of our civil institutions, and in accordance with the sense of the General Society and of the State Societies, as expressed in reference to the proposed amendment of 1 784 ; that the right of succession is not absolute even in the eldest son, but is subject to the right of the Society to judge whether he be ' worthy of becoming its supporter and member.' That this right of the Society to judge of the merit of the applicant applies equally to the eldest son and to the ' collateral branches ' descending from the original members ; and thus that the right of succession, by title of primogeniture, is wholly subordinate to the claim of worth and merit on the part of the applicant. " The Committee believe this to have been the final intention of the framers of the Institution, and also to be a fair construction of the language of that instrument. At all events, the silent action and usage of the Society, in all its branches, for considerably more than half a century, has given a construction to this principle which cannot well now be questioned." The Committee reported an ordinance giving expression to this construction, and also recognizing, in terms, the right of any State Society to admit all the adult male descendants of any officer of the American Army of the Revolution, who was, or who was entitled to have become a member of the Society, but not the absolute right of such descendants to claim ad- mission without regard to the judgment of the Society. The several State Societies to which the ordinance was sent did not concur in its adoption ; and at the meeting on May 17, 1854, the following resolutions were adopted and sent to the State Societies : — Resolved, That each State Society shall have the full right and power to regulate the admission of members, both as to the qualifi- cations of the members and the terms of admission. Provided, that admission be confined to the male descendants of original members, SOCIETY OF THE CINCINNATI. 2$ or of those who are now members (including collateral branches as contemplated by the original Constitution) ; or to the male descend- ants of such officers of the Army or Navy as may have been entitled to admission, but who failed to avail themselves thereof within the time limited by the Constitution ; or to the male descendants of such officers of the Army or Navy of the Revolution as may have resigned with honor or left the service with reputation ; or to the male collateral relatives of any officer who died in service without leaving issue. Resolved, That the male descendants of those who were members of State Societies which have been dissolved, may be admitted into existing Societies upon such terms as those Societies may think proper to prescribe. Resolved, That the foregoing resolutions be proposed to the several State Societies and their assent be requested thereto ; and upon such assent being given by each of the remaining Societies, the Secretary- General shall issue notice thereof to each Society ; and thereupon the said resolutions shall become operative, and each State Society shall be at liberty to act upon the power given thereby.^ These resolutions did not receive the assent of all the State Societies ; and at a meeting of the General Society held in Trenton, in May, 1856, at which delegates were present from five States, — namely, Massachusetts, New Jersey, Pennsylva- nia, Maryland, and South Carolina, — the following resolution was adopted : — Resolved, Th:it the resolution adopted at the last Triennial Meeting, requiring the assent of the several State Societies to the resolutions in relation to the admission of members, as the condition on which the said resolutions shall become operative, be, and the same is hereby, repealed. At the meeting of the General Society in May, 1884, it was resolved " that the General Society conceives the true con- struction of the Institution to be that where a descendant of an original member or person otherwise entitled to member- ship shall apply for membership and be otherwise eligible, he ' See annals of the Massachusetts Society, July 4, 1S54, for action tliereon. 26 HISTORICAL SKETCH OF THE should not be deemed to be ineligible by reason of not being a citizen of the United States. The rules of the several State Societies with regard to the admission of new members are not uniform. In Massachusetts membership is limited to a single individual of the same line. The South Carolina Society voted, in 1799, that unless the General Society should adopt a system for perpetuating the organization, the line of conduct to be observed by that So- ciety in the future would be to admit to membership all the male descendants of original members both in the male and female branches ; also, on certain conditions, the descendants of officers who, having served with reputation, died during the war, or who, having been entitled to become members, died within six months after the army was disbanded ; also, on a three-fourths vote and one month's pay, officers who had served six years at any time in the army or navy of the United States, or who, after three years' service, had been deranged by act of Congress. > In all the societies from the beginning, a brother or a nephew of an original member has been deemed to be eligi- ble ; and direct male descendants, through female collateral lines, have, upon failure of original male lines, been admitted, in preference to kinsmen more remote. The admission of nephews has been extended in Massachusetts and New York to one claiming through a sister of an original member. In 1822 the first and only instance occurred in Massachusetts of the choice of a cousin as the nearest male relative to succeed a deceased member.^ At the meeting of the General Society in May, 1829, it was resolved : " That the members residing in any State not having a State Society of the Cincinnati may form themselves into such State Society." At the meeting in May, 1884, it was 1 See annals of the Massachusetts Society, under date of 1799, July 4. - William Lyman succeeded his cousin. James W. Lyman. SOCIETY OF THE CINCINNATI. 2"] resolved that the words " any State " in the foregoing resolu- tion of 1829 " shall only be construed to include any of the thirteen original States." ^ At the meeting of the General Society in May, 1884, it was resolved : " That it is the opinion of the General Society that when an application for relief from any member, or from his family, or from the descendant of any original member is found to be necessary, such application should be made to the State Society wherein was deposited the contribution of the propositus of such applicant to the permanent fund."^ Of the thirteen State Societies organized under the Consti- tution, as agreed upon by the officers of the American Army in 1783, only seven are now represented at the meetings of the General Society. The Massachusetts Society, organized June 9, 1783, and incorporated by the General Court March 13, 1806, had three hundred and forty original members.^ The number of heredi- tary members reported at the Triennial Meeting in May, 1890, was eighty-eight. The Rhode Island Society was organized June 24, 1783, and incorporated by the State, Feb. 28, 18 14. It had seventy-one original members. At the annual meeting on July 4, 1832, at which less than a quorum was present, it was voted to dissolve the Society and distribute its funds. It does not appear, however, that any distribution was made ; but the bulk of the permanent fund was lost, probably through bad investments. In 1878 the descendants of some of the 1 See proceedings of the Massachusetts Society, July 4, 1805, on the petition of General Rufus Putnam and others, members of the Society who had removed to Ohio. Annals, post. 2 See rule of the Massachusetts Society, adopted in i852 and repealed in 1887. Also biographical notice of Ensign Frederick Frye. * Dr. Joseph Prescott, the last survivor of the original members of the Massa- chusetts Society, died in 1852. Lieutenant Robert Burnet, Jr., of the New York Society, who was born on Feb. 22, 1762, and died on Nov. 29, 1S54, was the last survivor of the original members in this country. 28 HISTORICAL SKETCH OF THE original members took steps to resuscitate the Society, which, it was represented, had been, since 1832, in a state of sus- pended animation. The original charter rights of the Society were affirmed by the State Legislature (Feb. 28, 1878); and after some discussion the General Society passed a resolve (April 15, 1 881), by a vote of twenty-one to thirteen (the Massachusetts and New York delegates voting in the nega- tive), "that the Rhode Island Society be admitted to full membership as Cincinnati ; that the delegates present be en- titled to all the privileges and powers appertaining to such office." ^ The number of hereditary members reported in May, 1S90, was forty-two ; honorary members, seven. The Au-w York Socict}' was organized on June 9, 1783. Between the years 1804 and 1825 repeated applications were made to the State authorities for a charter, but without suc- cess. The number of original members was two hundred and thirty; the number of hereditary members reported in May, 1 890, was fifty-seven ; honorary members, eight. The AVif yr/'j-rr Society was organized on June 11, 1783, but has never been incorporated. The number of original members was one hundred and ten ; the number of heredi- tary members reported in May, 1890, was eight}-; honorary members, ten. The Pennsylvania Society was organized on Oct. 4, 1783, and incorporated under the general laws of the State, April 4, 1792. The number of original members was two hun- dred and sixty-eight; the number of hereditary members reported in May, 1890, w-as forty-two; honorary members, four. 1 No definite rule of action has been prescribed by the General Society with a view to the reorganization of any dissolved State Society, although the subject has at several different times been considered. An elaborate report on the Rhode Island case will be found in the Proceedings of the General Society for I SS I . SOCIETY OK THE CINCINNATI. 29 The Maryland Society was organized on Nov. 21, 1783, but has never been incorporated. The number of original members was one hundred and forty-eight; the number of hereditary members reported in May, 1890, was thirty-four. The South Carolina Society was organized on August 29, 1783, and incorporated by the State Legislature, Dec. 16, 1824. The number of original members was one hundred and thirty-One; the number of hereditary members reported in May, 1890, was si.vty-seven. It appears that these seven societies now in existence had twelve hundred and ninety-eight original members, and that they now have four hundred and ten hereditary mem- bers and twenty-nine honorary members. The Nc'ni Hampshire Society ceased to hold meetings after 1823, and it soon after became extinct by the death of all its members. The Records were presented to the New Hamp- shire Historical Society, and extracts from them are printed in the si.xth volume of the Society's Collections. There were only twenty-eight original members. The Connccticjit Society voted, on July 4, 1804, to dissolve and to distribute the funds among the original members, their legal heirs or representatives. At a subsequent meeting it was voted that all money belonging to the Society, not paid to the members by a certain date, be placed in the Treasury of Yale College, in trust as a place of safe keeping for the members or their legal representatives. The records and documents were placed in the custody of the Historical So- ciety at Hartford. There were two hundred and fifty-six origi- nal members ; and at the time of the dissolution seventeen hereditary members and seven honorary members had been elected. In 1888 steps were taken to reorganize the Society; and at the Triennial Meeting of the General Society in May, 1890, a formal application was made for recognition. The question 30 HISTORICAL SKETCH OF THE was referred to a special committee to be reported upon at the meeting in 1893. The Virginia Society held no formal meeting after 1803. In 1822 the Standing Committee began to take the sense of the members as to the disposal of the Society's permanent fund; and on Oct. 13, 1824, they formally deeded the same to Washington College, now the Washington and Lee Univer- sity. The fund now in possession of the University amounts to something over twenty-five thousand dollars. There were two hundred and sixty-four original members of this Society. Some of the descendants have recently taken steps to re- organize ; and the question of their recognition will probably be passed upon at the next meeting of the General Society. The Delaware Society continued in existence but a short time. There were twenty-seven original members. The Societies of Nortli Carolina and Georgia did not send delegates to the General Meeting after 1790; but there ap- pears to have been an election of officers in the Georgia Society in 1795. In France the Society met with great favor in the begin- ning. A translation of the Institution having been forwarded by the Count de Rochambeau to the French Minister of War, the latter notified him of the approbation of the king, who permitted the French members of the order to appear at court with the new decoration ; the only foreign order previ- ously suffered to be worn in his service being that of the Golden Fleece. The first list prepared by the general-in-chief comprised seven general officers, eight brigadiers, and eighteen colonels. These made a subscription of sixty thousand francs, in aid of the impoverished officers of the American army; but Wash- ington, in the name of his associates, courteously declined to accept the gift. So many applications were made by officers desirous of obtaining the distinction of membership, that SOCIETY OF THE CIXCINNATI. 3 I finally the right of accepting or rejecting their requests was transferred to the Society in France. ^ The Revolution of 1789 broke up the French Society; and in 1793 a number of its leading members — D'Estaing, Custine, Lauzun, Dillon, and Broglie — fell beneath the guillotine. Some of the de- scendants of the original members started a movement to reorganize the Society just before the coup d'etat of Louis Napoleon, but it was checked by that tragic affair. The Centennial celebration at Yorktown, in 1881, in which a number of the descendants of French officers who had served in the War of the Revolution took part, led to a re- newal of the efforts to resuscitate the Society in France. At the Triennial Meeting of the General Society July 28, 1887, the revival of the Society was authorized ; and the work of reorganization, under the direction of M. le Marquis de Rochambeau, acting President, has already made substantial progress. At the meeting of the General Society in May, 1881, it was resolved " that a commemorative medal be prepared, with appropriate design and inscription, to celebrate the occasion of the Centennial Anniversary of the foundation of the Society." The medal was designed and executed under the supervision of General Palfrey of the Massachusetts Society, and was fur- nished upon requisition to members of the several State So- cieties. The price of the medal in gold was twenty dollars ; in silver, two dollars ; and in bronze, one dollar and thirty cents. The General Society having decided not to commemorate the centennial anniversary otherwise than by striking these medals, the State Society of New York invited, informally, ■ A complete list of the members, extracted from Baron de Girardot's pam- phlet, will be found in the Appendix. 32 HISTORICAL SKETCH OV THE members of other State Societies who were in the city of New York to join them on May 14,^ 1883, in an excursion up the Hudson River to Washington's headquarters at Newburgh and General Steuben's headquarters at Fishkill. The different State Societies were well represented on the occasion, and the proceedings on the spot where the Society of the Cincinnati was founded were highly impressive. In 1887 the General Society was invited to send representa- tives to the celebration of the Centennial Anniversary of the adoption of the Federal Constitution, at Philadelphia on Sep- tember 15-17. The invitation of the Centennial Commission said : " Knowing the patriotic relation which the members of this Society bear to the great work which we commemorate in September, we desire, in their person, to do honor to their ancestors who contributed so much to the work of the Con- stitutional Union." The Massachusetts Society was well represented by General Henry Jackson Hunt, U. S. A. The principal officers of the Cincinnati having been officially invited to take part in the Centennial celebration in New York April 29 and 30, and May i, 1889, commemorative of the or- ganization of the National Government under the Constitu- tion, the occasion seemed an appropriate one for an informal gathering of such members of the Cincinnati belonging to the several State Societies as desired a special observance of the anniversary. Arrangements were accordingly made for a subscription banquet on the evening of April 27 (Saturday), and for religious services on the following day. The banquet took place at the Lawyers' Clubhouse in New York, and was attended by a good number of members from each of the State Societies. In the absence of the President and Vice-President-General, the Hon. Samuel C. Cobb, President of the Massachusetts Society, w^as invited ' May 13, the clay on which the Institution was adopted, fell on Sunday in 1SS3. SOCIETY OF THE CINCINNATI. T,;^ to preside. In welcoming those present to the pleasures of the occasion, he said, — "As successors of the brave and patriotic men who formed this brotherhood, this meeting is both timely and appropriate ; for it is not too much to say — I am sure the historical records will bear me out in saying — that the founders of this organization were the fore- most actors in the various movements which culminated in that ' more perfect union of the States,' secured by the Federal Constitution which went into operation a hundred years ago. Very happily, therefore, this Centennial anniversary furnishes the opportunity for a renewal and strengthening of our views of allegiance to the principles and purposes upon which this Institution was founded, so that its benefi- cent work may be perpetuated and its members made worthy of a glorious heritage." Speeches were made by the Hon. R. B. Hayes, ex-Presi- dent of the United States ; the Hon. Asa Bird Gardiner, Secretary-General of the Cincinnati ; the Hon. James Simons, ot South Carolina; the Rt. Rev. Wm. S. Perry, D.D., Bishop of Iowa ; the Hon. Frederick S. Tallmadge, President of the Society of Sons of the Revolution ; David G. Haskins, Jr., Esq., and others. The commemorative services of the Cincinnati were held in St. Paul's Chapel on Broadway. The form of service used was substantially the same as that used by Bishop Provoost, in the same chapel, on the occasion of the inauguration of President Washington, April 30, 1789. The services were conducted by Bishop Perry, of Iowa (who preached the ser- mon) and by the Rev. Charles C. Pinckney, D.D., Chaplains- General of the Order of the Cincinnati. At the Triennial Meeting of the General Society, held in Baltimore, May 7-10, 1890, there was a full representa- tion from the existing State Societies, and the proceedings were marked with all the enthusiasm of earlier days. The following general officers were elected : — 3 34 GENERAL OEFICERS. PRESIDENT-GENERAL. HON. HAMILTON FISH, LL.D., Of the New York State Society. VICE-PRESIDENT-GENERAL. HON. ROBERT MILLIGAN McLANE, Of the Maryland State Society. SECRETAR Y-GENERAL. HON. ASA BIRD GARDINER, LL.D., Of the Rhode Island State Society. ASSISTANT SECRETARY-GENERAL. MR. THOMAS PINCKNEY LOWNDES, Of the South Carolina Society. TREASURER-GENERAL. MR. JOHN SCHUYLER, C. E., Of the New York State Society. ASSISTANT TREASURER-GENERAL. • MR. HERMAN BURGIN, M.D., Of the New Jersey State Society. ANNALS CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. ANNALS CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. THE first meeting of the members of the Massachusetts Society was held at the cantonment of the Massachu- setts Hne near Newburgh, on the Hudson, June 9, 1783. Brigadier-General Paterson presided. A committee appointed to receive the votes for officers of the Society reported at an adjourned meeting on the 20th of the same month. On open- ing the ballots (which were sealed), it was found that one hundred and fifty had been cast, and that the Society had chosen — Major-General Benjamin Lincoln Major-General Henry Knox . . Colonel John Brooks .... Colonel Henry Jackson . . . Captain Benjamin Heywood . . Presiderit. Vice-President. Secretary. Treasurer. Assistant- Treasurer. The next meeting was held in Boston on the i8th of Feb- ruary, 1784. A committee was appointed to prepare by- laws ; and three members were chosen from each county to inquire into the situation of distressed members. 1784, March 23. A committee of both Houses of the State Legislature, appointed to inquire into the existence, nature, object, and probable tendency of the Order or Society called the Cincinnati, made a report, which was accepted by the two Houses, as follows : — 38 ANNALS OF THE " That the said Society called the Cincinnati is unjustifiable, and if not properly discountenanced, may be dangerous to the peace, liberty, and safety of the United States in general, and this Com- monwealth in particular. The Committee also report, as their opin- ion, that it is proper that further consideration of measures suitable and necessary to be taken, with respect to the Society of the Cincin- nati, be referred to the next sitting of the General Court." This recommendation was not acted upon, as the General Society, at its meeting in May, 1784, proposed to the State Societies that certain changes shbuld be made in the Insti- tution in deference to the popular feeling on the subject. At the annual meeting, July 4, 1784, the Massachusetts Society accepted the proposed changes. At the annual meeting in 1786 this action was so far reconsidered that special instruc- tions respecting the amended Institution were given to the delegates to the next General Meeting. The first annual meeting of the Society was held July 4, 1784, at the " Bunch of Grapes " tavern, in State Street, Bos- ton; and that continued to be the place of meeting for five years, after which Concert Hall, on the corner of Court and Hanover Streets, was used regularly until 1822 and occasion- ally until 1846. Between 1822 and 1834 meetings were fre- quently held at the Exchange Coffee House. From 1848 to i860 the Society met and dined at the United States Hotel, and since that date its meetings have been held at the Parker House. At the first annual meeting a committee was appointed to petition the Legislature to grant a charter of incorporation to the Society. The right of joining the Society was limited to that month, with the exception of those officers who had previously applied to sign the constitution, and with the fur- ther exception of the officers of the navy, who were allowed one year more for the purpose. 1785, July 4. Dr. William Eustis was elected Vice-Presi- CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 39 dent of the Society in place of Major-General Knox, who had removed to New York; and the Secretary was instructed to transmit to General Knox the thanks of the Society for his services during the past year.^ 1786, July 4. The proceedings at the dinner were reported in the " Independent Chronicle " of July 6, as follows: ^ — ■ " The Society of Cincinnati met at the Bunch of Grapes on the 4th of July, being the anniversary of their meeting. The day was cele- brated with the greatest good humor ; and after dinner the following toasts were drunk : — 1. The Day. 2. The United States in Congress assembled. 3. The Allies of America. 4. The President-General of the Cincinnati, our late illustrious Commander-in-Chief. 5. The Marquis of Fayette and our Brethren this day assembled in France and America. 6. The Governor and Commonwealth of Massachusetts. 7. Agriculture, Commerce, Arts, and Sciences. 8. The Soldiers of the late American Army. 9. The memory of those who have fallen for their country. May the fate of their widows and orphans be tempered with justice and mercy. 10. Just in herself, may America have the confidence to insist on a punctual fulfilment of the Treaty of Peace. And 11. May her Militia support her measures, and prove the bulwark of her freedom. 12. May the enemies of pie b lie faith, public honor, and public justice hold no place in the Councils of America. 13. Perpetuity to the Federal Union, and perpetual infamy to the man who would dissolve it. " On announcing the fourth toast, a discharge of thirteen rounds from Copp's Hill evinced the joy which prevails among all orders of 1 He was still retained on the rolls as a member of the Society. ^ It will be interesting to compare the toasts given at this dinner — the first of which we have a report — with the toasts given at the Centennial Celebration in 1883. See post. 40 ANNALS OF THE men whenever the name and virtues of a Washington are brought up to view." • 1786, Oct. II. At a special meeting of the Society a com- mittee, of which Major-General Knox was chairman, was appointed " to prepare an address to the Legislature of the Commonwealth on the subject of our public securities, and also to bring in a draft of resolves proper for the Society to adopt, expressive of the abhorrence of the late tumults and disorder, and of our determination to support the present government." The following paragraph is extracted from the address accepted by the meeting : — " From causes unforeseen to the army and over which they had no control, their public securities have remained unpaid to this late hour ; and now, to our great chagrin and injury, we see arts practising to de- ceive and mislead the people into measures which we are confident they would blush to avow upon better information. We are there- fore, in justice to ourselves, compelled to say that the suggestion thrown out, that the officers and soldiers of this State have univer- sally sold their public securities are without foundation ; and that the argument drawn from these suggestions, viz., that justice to them for- bids the redemption of the public securities at their nominal value, is erroneous. Some of the officers and soldiers, indeed, have been re- duced to the hard necessity of selling them for a sum short of their real value ; yet very many of them are still holders of their State securities particularly, and should they now be denied payment agreeably to the face of the notes, they would suffer in a more aggravated degree than their too much injured brethren have done. Those who now hold them have not only been necessitated to bor- row, but many have borrowed under every disadvantage ; the ex- traordinary premiums which have been given have been a constant drain upon their capitals, and should a further deduction be made thereon by redeeming the notes at an undervalue agreeably to the principles of some, the injury which would be experienced on the whole by the present holders would exceed those which would have been sustained had the debt been annihilated the instant it became due." CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 4 1 Among the resolutions adopted was the following: — " As citizens and as public creditors, this Society are interested in the preservation of the Constitution, and so long as life and its attend- ant blessings, so long as public faith and private credit are made the sacred objects of government agreeably to its original institution, this Society pledge themselves to support it by every means and every exertion in their power." 1787, April II. It was voted to constitute and appoint a Standing Committee of thirteen members, to meet monthly, to examine the claims of candidates for admission, and report thereon, and to transact all other business for the Society, the officers of the Society to be members ex officio, and five mem- bers to constitute a quorum. This body, annually re-chosen and subsequently enlarged, has ever since continued to admin- ister the benefactions and the general affairs of the Society. It was voted that an oration should be delivered before the Society on the Fourth of July ensuing. ^ At this meeting the delegates to the General Meeting, to be held in Philadelphia, were instructed " to promote the original objects of the Institution by an invariable attention to its original principles." This done, they go on to say, " We would not have you contend for any secondary points in opposition to the opinion of our brethren. It is the wish of this Society that its existence may be preserved by election, giving the preference to the nearest akin to any deceased officer, and not by hereditary descent." ' There were six of these orations, the first four of which, delivered in the Old Brick Meeting House, were printed : the two last were given at the Stone Chapel. They were as follows : — Col. John Brooks 1787. Col. William Hull 1788. Dr. Samuel Whitwell 1789. Col. William Tudor 1790. Dr. William Eustxs 1791. Thomas Edwards, Esq '79-- 42 ANNALS OF THE 1787, July 13. At a meeting of the Standing Committee it was ordered that the following resolution be published in the public papers : — " IVhercas Luke and Elijah Day have, by openly joining, leading, and conducting the late rebellion in this Commonwealth, rendered themselves particularly odious and obnoxious to this Society : there- fore Resolved, That their month's pay be returned to them by the treasurer, as they are not and never have been considered as mem- bers of this Society." 1788, During this and the following year a number of the most valuable members of the Society removed to the North- west Territory, where, under the leadership of Generals Rufus Putnam and Benjamin Tupper, they founded at Marietta the first white settlement in Ohio. Among these enterprising pioneers were Colonels Sprout and Stacy, Major Robert Oliver, Captains Nathaniel Cushing, Nathan Goodale, Zebulon King, Robert Bradford, Jonathan Stone, Haffield White, and Jonathan Haskell. 1789, July 4. At the annual meeting, relief was granted to a distressed member, — the first instance of the bounty of the Society having been solicited. The Standing Committee were in 1 791 empowered to afford relief to such as were intended to be thus aided by the original association, not more than twenty dollars to be granted to an individual nor more than one quarter of the annual interest to be thus appropriated. The programme of ceremonies at the annual meeting in 1789 is well worth a place in these annals: — " The sub-committee, appointed to form an arrangement for the celebration of the anniversary of Independence, beg leave to report : — " I. The Society to meet at the usual place at 10 o'clock k. u., and proceed to business. " 2. The oration to be delivered at the Old Brick Meeting House at I 2 o'clock at noon, permission having been obtained from a com- CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 43 mittee of the church, and the sexton to toll the bell at the hour appointed. " 3. That the Rev. Mr. West, senior clergyman (not already in- vited), be requested to pray; and, with the Rev. Mr. Clarke, be invited to dine with the Society. " 4. That there be a master and four marshals of ceremonies to conduct the business of the day. [These were. General Henry Jackson, master ; Major Gibbs, Captains Nicholson and Simeon Jackson, and Colonel Winslow, marshals.] "5. As some of our worthy brethren are unable to dine with the Society on account of the expense attending, we beg leave to recom- mend that each member of the Society who meets on the 4th inst. pay into the hands of the master of ceremonies six shillings lawful money as his full proportion of the expense of the day ; that the master of ceremonies call the bill not exceeding the sun's setting, and the treasurer of the Society be directed to pay the deficiency of the bills out of the interest on the funds in his hands. " 6. That the Society walk in procession from the Bunch of Grapes, to hear the oration, in the following order : — Two marshals. The Society, Visiting brothers, Standing Committee, Chairman, Orator, supported by the Clergy, Secretary and Treasurer, Master of Ceremonies, President and Vice-President, supported by two Marshals. " 7. When the procession arrives at the door of the church, the whole are to halt, open, and face inwards. The two marshals in the rear will then lead the procession ; the members will follow in suc- cession. The same order will be observed on the return from church ; and the two marshals in front will halt at the Bunch of Grapes, open, face inwards," etc. " Your committee beg leave further to report, that they have agreed with Mrs. Lobdell, at the Bunch of Grapes, to have the en- tertainment at her hotel, for fifty gentlemen ; pay her four shillings lawful money each ; she to provide the best dinner the season and 44 ANNALS OF THE market will afford, agreeable to a memorandum furnished her ; we finding our own wine, paying her one shilling lawful money a bottle for drawing the corks, and three lawful money a double bowl of punch. " As we are of opinion that the best liquors will be most accept- able to the Society, we have agreed for the best Madeira wine at fourteen shillings lawful money per gallon, and the best claret wine at two shillings per bottle. " It is recommended that the fragments of the table be sent to the prisoners in gaol, and distributed to them under the direction of the High Sheriff, if he will please to take that trouble upon himself. " At dinner the master of ceremonies will sit on the right hand of the President. The four marshals will take their places at equal distances, two on each side of the table." On Sept. 14, 1789, the members of the Society dined on board the "Leopard," a French ship of seventy-four guns. The Marquis de la Galissoniere, a member of the Order of the Cincinnati, was captain. On September 24 the Society gave the French officers a brilliant entertainment in Concert Hall. On October 27 following. President Washington, then on a visit to Boston, was waited on by the Society, accompanied by the Viscount de Ponteves, the Marquis de Traversay, and the Chevalier de Braye, of the French Society. ^ Vice-President Eustis, in behalf of the Society, made the following address : "Amidst the various gratulations which your arrival in this me- tropolis has occasioned, permit us, the members of the Society of the Cincinnati in this Commonwealth, most respectfully to assure you of the ardor of esteem and affection you have so indelibly fixed in our. hearts, as our glorious leader in war and illustrious example in peace. " After the solemn and endearing farewell on the banks of the Hudson, which our anxiety presaged as final, most peculiarly pleas- ing is the present unexpected meeting. On this occasion we can- ' These names do not appear in Baron Girardot's list of members of the French Society. Bee Appendix. CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 45 not avoid the recollection of the various scenes of toil and danger through which you conducted us ; and while we contemplate various trying periods of the war and the triumphs of peace, we rejoice to behold you, induced by the unanimous voice of your country, entering upon other trials and other services ahke important and in some points of view equally hazardous. For the completion of the great purposes which a grateful country has assigned you, long, very long, may your invaluable life be preserved ! And as the admiring world, while considering you as a soldier, have long wanted a comparison, may your virtue and talents as a statesman leave them without a parallel ! " It is not in words to express an attachment founded like ours. We can only say that, when soldiers, our greatest pride was a prompti- tude of obedience to your orders ; as citizens, our supreme ambition is to maintain the character of firm supporters of that noble fabric of federal government over which you preside. " As members of the Society of the Cincinnati, it will be our endeavor to cherish those sacred principles of charity and fraternal attachment which our Institution inculcates. And while our conduct is thus regulated, we can never want the patronage of the first of patriots and the best of men." To which the President responded as follows : — " To the Members of the Society of the Cincinnati in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. " Gentlemen, — In reciprocating with gratitude and sincerity the multiplied and affecting gratulations of my fellow-citizens of this Commonwealth, they will all of them with justice allow me to say that none can be dearer to me than the affectionate assurances which you have expressed. Dear indeed is the occasion which restores an intercourse with ray faithful associates in prosperous and adverse fortunes ! and enhanced are the triumphs of peace participated with those whose virtue and valor so largely contributed to procure them. To that virtue and valor your country has confessed her obligations ! Be mine the grateful task to add the testimony of a conviction which it was my pride to own in the field, and it is now my happiness to acknowledge in the enjoyments of peace and freedom. 46 ANNALS OF THE " Regulating your conduct by those principles which have hereto- fore governed your actions as men, soldiers, and citizens, you will repeat the obligations conferred on your country, and you will trans- mit to posterity an example which must command their admiration and obtain their grateful praise. " Long may you continue to enjoy the endearments of fraternal attachment, and the heartfelt happiness of reflecting that you have faithfully done your duty ! " While I am permitted to possess the consciousness of that worth which has long bound me to you by every tie of affection and esteem, I will continue to be your sincere and faithful friend." 1792, July 4. The admission of a brother of a deceased member first occurred at this meeting; and it was ordered that in future no person be admitted a member but by ballot. 1796, July 4. The Standing Committee having examined the pretensions of Mr. Horace Binney, only son of the late Dr. Binney, an original member of the Society of Pennsyl- vania, recommended him to the Society as a member, and he was accordingly admitted.^ It was ordered, that no member shall have the right to vote on the business of the Society until he is twenty-one years of age. Also, that the Standing Committee shall dis- tribute the entire annual interest of the funds, not otherwise appropriated by the Society, among the imfortunate members or their widows or orphans ; and that distant objects might not suffer from a want of information of the time and place of distribution, the committee were instructed to give public notice of their meetings for this purpose, where applications might be made, and the money, when granted, paid ; in order that the bounty might be as equally and extensively shared as originally contemplated by the Institution. ' Horace Binney was only sixteen years old at that time, and he continued to be a member of the Society until his death in 1875, — a period 0/ sevenly-nine years. See biographical notice, post. CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSEll S. 47 1798, July 4. On General Henry Jackson's motion, an address was voted to the President of the United States, on the critical and alarming state of the country as it respected the French Republic, pledging the Society to support and defend the government. I799> July 4- -At this meeting, a letter dated May 23, from the South Carolina Society, was read ; also the following ex- tract from the Journals of the Cincinnati of the State of South Carolina: "March 4, 1799. The Committee who were ap- pointed at the last meeting to digest the report of the Com- mittee for perpetuating the Society, as agreed the 25th ult., reported the same, which was read, adopted, and is as follows : — Report. — " That it be recommended as a line of conduct for this Society in future to observe, should the General Society not think proper to adopt a system for perpetuating the same : — " I. That all the sons of original members, and all the male descendants of any original members, whether such descent be derived through a male or female branch ; or of such officers as, having served with reputation, died during the last war ; or having been entitled to become members, died within six months after the army was disbanded, who may be judged worthy of becoming its members and supporters, — may be elected into this Society, on application, after attaining the age of twenty-one years, provided three fourths of a legal Quarterly Meeting are in his favor. That each member so elected shall pay into the hands of the treasurer, for the use of the fund, the sum of thirty dollars. " 2. That all the officers, commissioned, staff, or brevet, who have served in the army or navy of the United States, since the peace with Great Britain, for six years, and who still continue therein, or who, after having served as aforesaid for six years, left the service with reputation, or who shall have been deranged by any act or resolution of the Congress of the United States, after having served with repu- tation for three years ; and all those who are or shall hereafter be appointed to a command in the army or navy of the United States, commissioned, brevet, or staff, and who shall have served therein 48 ANNALS OF THE with reputation for six years, or who shall be deranged by any act or resolution of Congress after a service with reputation for three years, — may be admitted into this Society, upon application, by election, provided three fourths of a legal Quarterly Meeting are in his favor, and upon payment of one month's pay into the treasury of this Society, according to the respective ranks of the applicants for admission. " 3. No election shall be valid without the name of the candidate shall be openly proposed at a regular quarterly meeting previous to the quarterly meeting at which the ballot shall be held." The Standing Committee of the Society of the Cincinnati of Massachusetts, to whom was referred the above report, and also a circular letter from the General Meeting at Philadelphia, May 24, 1799, reported as follows: — "By the first Institution of the Society, formed a. d. 1783, the officers of the American army associated ' to endure as long as they shall endure, or any of their eldest male posterity, and in failure thereof the collateral branches who may be judged worthy of becoming mem- bers.' By this Institution, the eldest male branches of officers who died in the service had also a right to become members. "In the year 1784 an alteration of the original Institution was proposed by the General Meeting, and transmitted to the several State societies. By this constitution the hereditary succession was done away, without substituting any means of preserving the exist- ence of the Society. " On the 4th of July, 1 784, the Institution, ' as altered and amended,' was accepted by the Society of Massachusetts. "July 4, 1786, the Massachusetts Society voted as follows; viz., 'That the vote of the Society, passed July 4, 1784, accepting the Institution as altered and amended, be reconsidered so far as to give instmctions to the delegates to be chosen to the next General Meet- ing respecting the said Institution.' " In April, 1787, instructions were given providing that vacancies should be supplied by elections from the oldest male heirs of de- ceased members, and that no alterations should be made by virtue of which the funds could be removed from the possession and control of the State Societies. These instructions were, in substance, again CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 49 given in 1789. In 1793 the General Meeting recommended to the State societies to pass votes rendering vahd the proceedings of seven States present at a General Meeting. " By which it appears that, as the vote of Massachusetts, accepting the Institution as altered and amended, was afterward reconsidered, and as a number of the other State societies did not accept the same, the Society rests on the original Institution of a. d. i 783." The Committee proposed the following votes for the con- sideration of the Society : — " I . In lieu of the hereditary succession provided by the original Institution, it is the opinion of this Society that vacancies should be supplied by an election of members by ballot, in which the eldest male heir of a deceased officer should be considered the candidate, and that the assent of three fourths of the members present at a regular meeting should be necessary to his admission ; and in case such candidate should fail to be admitted by the before- mentioned majority, the next eldest male heir should become the next candidate, and so on until an election should be effected. " 2. That all such alterations and amendments of the Institution of the Cincinnati as shall be concurred in by the representatives of seven State societies present in the next General Meeting shall be obligatory, and inviolably observed by every State society ; excepting that no alteration or amendment shall be made or become obligatory by virtue of which the funds shall be removed from the possession and control of the State societies. " 3. That the delegates to the next General Meeting be furnished with an attested copy of the preceding votes for their instruction and government ; and that in any other alterations which may be proposed the Society confide in their discretion and judgment to make such decision as shall promote the honor and interests of the Institution." The report was accepted, and the yotes were adopted. 1800, Jan. 15. At a special meeting it was ordered "that the members of the Society continue to wear a black crape cockade in the hat till the 5th day of July ne.xt, as 5Q ANXALS OF THE a badge of mourning for their deceased President-general, George Washington; " and " tliat the Standing Committee appoint some member of the Society to dehver an oration at the annual meeting on the fourth of July next, commemora- tive of the American Revolution, and of the virtues and talents which distinguished the eventful life of the illustrious Washington." ' 1800, July 4. It was ordered, that the Standing Committee procure three hundred printed copies of the original Insti- tution, together with the names of the original members of the State association. - 1801, July4. It was ordered, that the Standing Commit- tee consist of fifteen members, and that seven members form a quorum for granting money. Also that no person be ad- mitted a member of the Society until he shall have attained the age of twenty-one years. 1802, July 5. It was ordered that persons hereafter ad- mitted, in right of succession, as members, subscribe a form of declaration, to the effect that they are sons or next eldest male heirs of deceased members, and that they will be gov- erned by the rules of the Society. 1803, July 4. The Standing Committee was " instructed to prefer a memorial to the Legislature for an act of incorpora- tion to enable the Society the better to hold and manage their funds. ^ 1805, July 4. " The Standing Committee to whom was re- ferred the petition of General Rufus Putnam, and our other brethren resident in the State of Ohio, — praying that a cer- ' It does not appear that an oration was delivered in accordance with this vote ; that before the town authorities, July 4, was delivered by Joseph Hall, Esq. - Published in 1801, — ten pages. No copy of this publication can be found among the Society's collections. There was one in the Barlow library which was sold in New York in February, iSgo. ^ The Act was passed May 13, 1S06. See Appendix. CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 5 1 tain proportion of this State Society's funds, equal to what they, the petitioners, originally subscribed and paid in, may be refunded and transmitted them for the purpose of forming a fund for a Society of Cincinnati, which they have thought proper to create in that State, — after having maturely con- sidered the subject of said petition, and given it all that deliberate and candid attention justly due to their distant and respected brothers, unanimously report adversely to the said petition, for the following reasons : — " I. By the Constitution of the Society it was clearly intended to form one family of brethren, to consist of thirteen cantons, and no more, for ever. Nor is there any provision, either expressed or im- plied, given either to the General Meeting or to either of the State societies, to create any additional society, or to transfer any part of the original funds for this purpose.' " 2. The stock of the Massachusetts Cincinnati was expressly sub- scribed and paid into the treasury for the exclusive use of the mem- bers of that State Society, so long as they should continue members, and no longer. Could a few individuals detach themselves and erect another State society, others might withdraw themselves and funds, and erect branches in the same State ; and thus the strength and respectability of the original institution would be weakened, and one of its most important objects be defeated. " 3. Should the request of the memorialists be acceded to, we should set a precedent which might render us obnoxious to the cen- sure of other State societies, and our authority so to act disputed and denied by the General Society, and thus a spirit of discord be intro- duced to the infinite detriment of that union upon which the common good of our institution is so dependent. " Whilst bound to state this our dissent to a novel, and what we must consider an irregular proposal, we wish our worthy brethren of Ohio, our faithful comrades in honor and in toil, to be assured of our unabated friendship ; that we hold their subscriptions as a sacred deposit for their benefit, in common with the other members ; and that if misfortune at any time should compel an appHcation for pecu- ' See the action of tlie General Society at meetinc;'^ in 1829 and 1 8S4, a^/i". 52 ANXALS OF THE niary aid, we will most cheerfully and promptly give to it all the weight which the individual would be entitled to were he an inhabitant of any part of this Commonwealth." 1806, July 4. Regulations were adopted, which in iSii were incorporated into the By-laws of the Society. 1806, Aug. 5. It was ordered by the Standing Committee, " That as a mark of respect to the memory of our deceased friend and brother, Thomas Edwards, Esq., our Secretary, and Judge-Advocate-General of the late Revolutionary army, the Society be requested to attend his funeral on the morrow." 1806, Oct. 13. The Society, in testimony of their sense of the faithful services of General Henry Jackson, as their Treas- urer for twenty-three years, " in which time their funds have been preserved in a manner equally honorable to him and satisfactory to the Society," voted him " a silver cup not exceeding two hundred dollars in value," engraved with the arms of the Society. The cup was ordered from Eu- rope, but was not received until February, 18 10, some time after General Jackson's decease. 1806, Nov. 21. The Standing Committee recommended to the members of the Society to wear black crape on the left arm for thirty days in testimony of their affection and respect for their deceased friend, Major-General Henry Knox, late Vice-President-General of the Society. 1808, July 4. The Committee to whom were referred let- ters from Lieutenant-Colonel Bayard and others at Pittsburg, and also of Matthew McConnell and others at Philadelphia, on the subject of an application to Congress for compensation on account of the depreciated currency, in which they were paid the commutation of five years' pay, reported it " not expedient to join in the application." " 1809, Jan. 6. The Standing Committee of the Cincinnati have the painful task of announcing to the Society the death of their old CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 53 friend and companion, General Henry Jackson. His services and his usefulness as a member of the Institution from its earliest estab- lishment as an active member of the Committee ; as the Treasurer, who has preserved and managed the funds for nearly twenty-six years, are recorded in the prosperity of the Society and in the grate- ful hearts of his brother officers. Sensible of his worth and afflicted by his death, the Committee recommend an observance of the follow- ing votes as the last token of respect from his surviving brethren : " That the Society walk in procession at the funeral of their late Treasurer, General Henry Jackson, on Saturday next ; that the usual emblem of mourning be attached to the Badge of the Society, and that black crape be worn on the left arm." 18 10, May 9. Upon receiving news of the death of the President of the Society, General BENJAMIN LINCOLN, it was ordered that the Society attend his funeral at Hing- ham, and that the members wear black crape on the left arm for thirty days. July 4. General John Brooks was chosen President, to fill the place of General Lincoln, who had presided over the Society from its organization in 1783, to May, 1810, "with the entire approbation of every member, and the grateful tribute of his surviving comrades, for his happy guidance and affectionate attentions during so long a period." The thanks of the Society were presented to Dr. Eustis for his long services as Vice-President of the Society.' i8li,July4. By-laws were reported and accepted by the Society.^ In 1 8 12 the Society caused a copy of its Institution, pro- ceedings, and list of members to be prepared, four hundred of which were printed. 1 The election of Brooks to be President instead of Eustis, who was in the line of promotion, was a surprise to both of the men, and brolce the friendship which had formerly existed between them. Eustis knew that Brooks had not sought the position ; but he thought that Brooks ought not to have .iccepted it under the circumstances. .Some years afterward a reconciliation took place; and in 1S23 Eustis succeeded Brooks as Governor of the Commonwealth. ''■ Printed in the Appendix, with alterations subsequently made. 54 ANNALS OF THE 1813, July 4. Dr. Stephen Thayer having presented to the Society a portrait of General Henry Jackson, the Secretary, Dr. Townsend, thus acknowledged the gift : — " Sir, — The Secretary of the State Society of Massachusetts has been specially instructed to return you their thanks for the portrait you have been so good as to present them, of the late General Henry Jackson, their former Treasurer, and to assure you that they shall pre- serve it as a precious relic, annually to remind them how much they are indebted to the integrity and care of that excellent deceased officer and brother." ^ 181 7, July 4. The Society proceeded in a body to the Exchange Coffee House, the head-quarters of James Mon- roe, President of the United States, then visiting Boston, and presented to him the following congratulatory address : — " Sir, — While meeting you as one of our most distinguished brothers, permit us especially to thank you for furnishing an oppor- tunity of saluting another chief magistrate of the United States taken from our ranks, and to offer you all the assurance of respect and affection which it becomes a society like ours to present, and which we pray you to accept as flowing from hearts first united by the powerful sympathies of common toils and dangers. " Although time is fast reducing our original associates, we trust that while one remains he will never desert the standard of freedom and his country, nor our sons forget the sacred duties their sires had sworn to discharge. We fought to obtain security, self-government, and political happiness; and the man who can approve both the principles and the means can never be indifferent to the social designs which such a warfare contemplated, for among those pur- poses were included the restoration of good humor, good man- ners, good neighborhood, political integrity, with a spirit of mild and manly patriotism. " We congratillate you, as the highest representative of our beloved country, that party animosity has on all sides so far subsided before 1 The portrait is deposited with the New England Historic-Genealogical Society. CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 55 the day-star of sound national policy, and we look with confidence to a wise and liberal administration of the presidency to produce its ter- mination. .\nd now, sir, on bidding you a long farewell, — for from our lessening number such another occasion can scarcely again occur, — we join our best wishes that you shall seek a retreat from the honor- able fatigues of public energies in which so large a portion of your life has been employed, that your retirement may be accompanied by the applause of the wise and the concurrent blessings of a prosperous and united Republican Empire." To this address the President made the following reply: " The affectionate address of my brothers of the Cincinnati awakens in my mind the most grateful emotions. " No approbation can be more dear to me than that of those with whom I have had the honor to share the common toils and perils of the war for our independence : we were embarked in the same sacred cause of liberty, and we have lived to enjoy the reward of our common labors. Many of our companions-in-arms fell in the field before our Independence was achieved, and many less fortunate than ourselves lived not to witness the perfect fulfilment of their hopes in the prosperity and happiness of our country. You do but justice to yourselves in claiming the confidence of your country, that you can never desert the standard of freedom. You fought to obtain it in times when men's hearts and principles were severely tried ; and vour public sacrifices and honorable actions are the best pledges of your sincere and devoted attachment to our excellent Constitution. " May your children never forget the sacred duties devolved on them, to preserve the inheritance so gallantly acquired by their fathers. May they cultivate the same manly patriotism, the same disinterested friendship, and the same political integrity which has distinguished you, and that unite in perpetuating the social concord and public virtue on which the future prosperity of our country must so essentially depend. I feel most deeply the truth of the melan- choly suggestion, that we shall probably meet no more. While, how- ever, we remain in life, I shall continue to hope for your countenance and support, so far as my public conduct may entitle me to your confidence ; and in bidding you farewell, I pray a kind Providence 56 ANNALS OF THE long to presen'e your valuable lives for the honor and benefit of our country." The Society then accompanied the President to the Old South Meeting House, where the annual oration was de- livered ; after which, in compliance with an invitation from the supreme executive, they paid their respects to the Gov- ernor and Council of the Commonwealth at the State House, where they partook of a " sumptuous " collation, at which the President was an honored guest. 1824. Upon La Fayette's arrival in Boston, in August of this year, the Society joined in the procession which received him on his entrance into the city. He was escorted by the Boston regiment to the head of the mall on Tremont Street, where the scholars of the public schools were drawn up to receive him. Taking up his residence in the mansion on the corner of Beacon and Park Streets, he appeared upon the balcony, with Governor Eustis and ex-Governor Brooks on either side of him, clad in their old continental uniforms, while the troops composing the escort passed in review. On Friday, August 26, the Society proceeded in a body to the headquarters of General La Fayette, where the follow- ing address, written by General Brooks, was read to him : " Sir, — The Society of Cincinnati of Massachusetts seize the earliest moment, after your arrival in this city, of extending to you the hand of friendship and affection. We offer you our most cordial congratulations on your safe arrival again, after a lapse of forty years, on the shores of our favored country, — once the theatre of our united toils, privations, and combats with a powerful foe ; now the peaceful domain of a great, a free, and independent people. " We hail you, sir, in unison with the millions of our fellow- citizens, — we most respectfully hail you as a statesman, as a philan- thropist, and as the early, inflexible, and devoted friend not only of our beloved country, but of the sacred principles of civil liberty and human rights. But we greet you under more tender and hallowed associations in the endearing relation of a brother soldier wlio in CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 57 the ardor of youth commenced in the field with us your career of glory in the holy cause of liberty and American Independence. But here recollections crowd upon us too powerful for utterance. Words would but mock the deep emotions of our hearts, should we attempt to express them in contemplating the character, attributes, and services of the paternal chief under whose auspices we trod together the field of honor. To the profound veneration and love for his memory which penetrates your bosom, we refer you as a transcript of our own. It would be vain to imagine the joy that would swell the great mind of Washington, were he still living, to recognize with our nation the generous disinterestedness, the glowing ardor, the personal sacrifices, and the gallant achievements of his much-loved La Fayette. " But it is equally vain to endeavor on this occasion to exclude such reflections from the mind, or to deny it the melancholy pleasure of lingering on the solemn reality, that not a single individual of the general staff of the army of the American Revolution survives to participate in the joy that your presence in the United States has awakened. " To us it is peculiarly grateful that you are permitted, after the lapse of so long a period, to witness the consummation of the prin- ciples of our Revolution. You will perceive, sir, that the hopes and predictions of the wise and good men who were your particular associates in the arduous struggle have been fulfilled, have been surpassed. You will behold a great people united in their principles of jurisprudence, cemented together by the strong ties of mutual interests, and happy under the fostering influence of a free and energetic government. " You will therefore allow us to reiterate our felicitations on your safe arrival among us, and to welcome you once more to the good land which your youthful valor contributed to elevate and distinguish. May your future life be tranquil and happy, as your past has been useful, uniform, and glorious." To this address La Fayette thus replied : — "Amidst the inexpressible enjoyments which press upon my head, I could not but feel particularly eager and happy to meet my beloved brothers-in-arms. 58 ANNALS OF THE " Many, many, I call in vain ; and at their head our matchless paternal chief, whose love to an adopted son I am proud to say you have long witnessed. " But while we mourn together for those we have lost, while I find a consolation in the sight of their relations and friends, it is to me a delightful gratification to recognize my surviving companions of our Revolutionary army, — that army so brave, so virtuous, so united by mutual confidence and affection. That we have been the faithful soldiers of independence, freedom, and equality, — those three es- sential requisites of national and personal dignity and happiness ; that we have lived to see these sacred principles secured to this vast re- public, and cherished elsewhere by all generous minds, — shall be the pride of our life, the boast of our children, the comfort of our last moments. Receive, my dear brother soldiers, the grateful thanks and constant love of your old companion and friend." 1825, March 2. At a special meeting to take action on the death of General John Brooks, President of the Society, resolutions were adopted recognizing "his public services and private virtues, and especially his faithful and honorable dis- charge of the duties of President of this Society during the period of fifteen successive years, in which he manifested the same pure and ardent devotion to the interests of his Revolu- tionary compatriots, and to the cause of civil liberty, by which his whole life had been invariably distinguished." It was or- dered that the Society attend his funeral, and wear the usual badge of mourning for thirty days. 1825, July 4. Dr. David Townsend was chosen President, to fill the vacancy occasioned by the death of General Brooks. 1828, July 4. At the annual dinner, which was this year set at Fenno's Hotel in Cornhill Square, the Society "were joined," says its record, " by several old members whom they had not met for many years, among whom were Colonel Trumbull [the painter] of New York, Colonel Rice of Ver- mont, and General John K. Smith of Maine ; and adjourned CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 59 after a social afternoon (during which they were honored by a visit from his Excellency the Governor and suite, agreeably to invitation) spent amidst grateful recollections of the past and anticipations of future national blessings and prosperity." 1829, July 4. Major Judah Alden was chosen President in place of Dr. David Townsend, whose decease was duly noticed. 1834, July 4. Resolutions were read and adopted, relative to the decease of La Fayette, " the consistent and uniform friend of civil liberty, for whose public and private virtues, for whose heroic deeds and generous sacrifices for the welfare of mankind, his memory will be cherished in our hearts with sentiments of the highest respect." A copy of the resolu- tions, together with a letter of condolence, was forwarded by the Society to the bereaved family. General Benjamin Pierce, in a letter to the President of the Society, dated June 26, 1837, resigning the Vice-Presidency in consequence of a paralytic shock in the preceding Febru- ary, thanks the members for the kindness and attention re- ceived at their hands, " having," he says, " for a long time passed the happiest day of almost every year in the circle of its members ; " and he concluded by expressing the hope that " no distribution of its funds may take place while there shall be a widow or the immediate family of any officer standing in need of assistance." 1843, June 17. The Society participated in the celebration on this day of the completion of Bunker Hill Monument. A grand procession, composed of the military, various associa- tions, delegations from the States, members of the national and State governments, including the President of the United States and about one hundred of the veterans of the Revolu- tion, moved from the State House to Monument Square. Daniel Webster was the orator, and at least one hundred thousand people were assembled upon the spot. 6o ANNALS OF THE 1845, July 4. Captain James Sever was elected President in place of Major Judah Alden, deceased, whose worth is thus recognized in the records of the Society : — " It having pleased Almighty God to remove from this world the soul of the late venerable President of this Society, Major Judah Alden ; and whereas his death has diminished by one more those few links which visibly unite us to the times and deeds of our Fathers ; and whereas this deceased brother of our Fathers was one of those few men whose stern honesty prove that ' an honest man 's the noblest work of God ; ' and also whereas our deceased President was in a direct line, and was in local habitation a descendant of those original settlers whose feet first pressed the stern bosom of Plymouth Rock, — therefore Resolved, That we contemplate our loss with sadness and solemnity, as one of no ordinary character ; and further Resolved, That we cling to our original members with more tenacity, more respect, and more affection, the more dimin- ished they become ; and also Resolved, That we sincerely sympathize with the family of our veteran and venerable brother, and tender to them our cordial condolence." At this meeting the following vote was adopted : — " That the admission of honorary members of the Cincinnati, for life only, shall be confined to those who shall be the lineal descend- ants or representatives of those who were distinguished by eminent military virtue and service in the Revolutionary War. " In consideration of the eminent patriotism and military conduct of Colonel Prescott, Commander at Bunker Hill, who did not con- tinue in service so as to become an original member of the Society, and of the conspicuous merit of his grandson and eldest male de- scendant, William H. Prescott, whose genius as a historian has cast so much lustre upon the literature of his country and the character of his ancestry, it is unanimously voted that William H. Prescott be admitted an honorary member of the Cincinnati of Massachusetts." 1846, July 4. Colonel Henry Burbeck was elected President, in place of Captain James Sever, whose character and ser- vices arc properly noticed in the Society's records. CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 6 1 1847, July 5. It was voted that " in token of the eminent virtue of Dr. John C. Warren, the nearest representative of the name and blood of the martyred patriot who fell in the first great battle of American Freedom, and of his own kin- dred zeal and general benevolence for mankind, as well as that his worthy Father also was an officer who served faith- fully in the army of the Revolution, he be admitted an honorary member f>f this Society." It was also voted " that in the election of honorary mem- bers it is distinctly understood by the Society that such election does not confer the right of an original member, or give any honorary member any title to any portion of the funds of the Society; nor are they entitled to vote or eli- gible to any office." 1848, Oct. 3. At a special meeting called on account of the death of President Burbeck (the last of the original mem- bers who held that office), appropriate resolutions were passed, and a delegation appointed to attend his funeral at New Lon- don, Conn. This aged veteran, then in his ninety-fourth year, and who had been thirty-eight years in the military service of his country, sent to the Society, June 8, 1848, the following sentiment, which was read at the annual dinner: — " The original ' Society of the Cincinnati,' — the forlorn hope in es- tablishing the Independence of these United States of America. By their example may their successors labor to preserve and perpetuate the liberties that their patriotism acquired." The Society erected a granite obelisk to the memory of General Burbeck in Cedar Grove Cemetery, near New Lon- don, Conn. 1849, July 4. Robert G. Shaw was chosen President of the Society. At the annual dinner, among many interesting reminiscences of the patriots of the Revolution, particularly those of Dr. Warren, Mr. Thomas Jackson read the eulogium 62 ANNALS OF THE pronounced by the late Hon. Harrison G. Otis in the Legisla- ture of Massachusetts, on Major-General Heath, " the com- panion of Washington, the honest patriot, the Christian soldier; " and it was voted to have the same inserted in the Record Book of the Society. 185 1, July 4. A feeling and eloquent tribute was paid by the Rev. A. L. Baury to the memory of Thomas Jackson, many years Secretary of the Society, whose " manly honesty, Saxon simplicity, genuine rectitude of purpose, and earnest philanthropy " entitle him to grateful remembrance. At this meeting the Hon. Daniel Webster was admitted as an honorary member, and the following entry was made on the records : — " In laying down in peace arms assumed for the establishment of freedom and independence, the first principles upon which our fathers founded this institution at their last cantonment on the North River as its ' immutable basis ' having been ' an unalterable deter- mination to promote and cherish between the respective States that union and national honor so essential and necessary to their happi- ness and the future dignity of the American Empire,' joined to ' an incessant attention to preserve inviolate those exalted rights and liberties of human nature, for which they had fought and bled, and without which the high rank of a rational being is a curse instead of a blessing,' and deeming that there would always be men in those States eminent for abilities and patriotism directed to the same laud- able objects as those of the Cincinnati,' — providing likewise for the admission of such characters as honorary members ; and this Society having recognized the birthright which eminent civil virtue may in- herit from military worth in the War of the Revolution, in the honors it has paid only to the blood of Prescott and Warren ; — " And as the Hon. Daniel Webster has shed a fresh glory around Bunker Hill, and has cast a filial lustre upon the honest fame of a brave and patriotic sire, who fought on the memorable' day of Ben- nington, in extending and acknowledging the bond of fraternal affinity, we would mark our sense of his own distinguished character and ser- vices, as well as our respect for the sacred principles of the Institution, CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 63 by inscribing his name upon its honored roll, and accordingly elect him an honorary member." A special meeting of the Society was held on Oct. 26, 1852, to take action on the death of Daniel Webster. Resolutions were adopted, and the members were requested to wear crape for thirty days. 1852, July 5. The death of the Vice-President, Dr. Joseph Prescott, the last survivor of the original members, was an- nounced; and resolutions were adopted, testifying to his learning, ability, and merit, as well as to his courteous and gentlemanly bearing. 1853, July 4. Charles S. Daveis, of Portland, was chosen President of the Society, to succeed Robert G. Shaw, de- ceased. Resolutions were adopted commending Mr. Shaw's active benevolence and warm sympathies, and it was voted that for si.x months the members wear badges of mourning at all their meetings. 1854, July 4. The rules respecting the succession and ad- mission of members, adopted at the General Meeting of the Society at Baltimore, May 17, were unanimously adopted by the Society of Massachusetts, as the basis of future action. These provide that each Society shall have the full right and power to regulate the terms and qualifications for the admis- sion of members, providing that admission be confined to the male descendants of original members (including collateral branches) ; or to the male descendants of such officers of the army or navy as may have been entitled to admission, but who failed to avail themselves thereof within the time pre- scribed ; or to the male descendants of such officers of the army or navy of the Revolution as may have resigned with honor or left the service with reputation ; or to the male col- lateral relative of any officer who died in service, without leaving issue; and that the male descendants of those who 64 ANNALS OF THE were members of State societies which have been dissolved may be admitted into existing societies. 1855, July 4. Ordered that the amount to be paid to the Society by members admitted under the new ordinances adopted at the last meeting be 5340.' 1856, July 4. It was ordered that such new member as had no ancestor who had joined the Society at its original formation, and who neglects or refuses to pay the entrance money, shall thereby cut off his own claim and the claim of any descendant to admission at a future time until the amount has been paid. The same rule applies to such members as shall pay in part and not in whole. And it was further or- dered, in 1858, tiiat such delinquent member shall not be considered as acquiring or having acquired any more than a life interest in said Society, nor be regarded as trans- mitting any claim, right, interest, or privilege whatever until the specified sum has been paid. At this meeting ^the Society took appropriate notice of the decease of their distinguished associate, Dr. John C. Warren, admitted as an honorary member in 1847, and a regular member in 1854. 1858, Nov. 23. President Daveis addressed the Society, paying a feeling tribute to the memory and services of its late Secretary, Adams Bailey; the Society also expressing its sense of bereavement by appropriate resolutions. In 1859 a new edition of the Institution, Proceedings, etc., was printed for the Society. 1862, July 4. The Committee appointed to consider the subject of grants of pecuniary aid to the original members and their descendants, and as to the policy to be hereafter observed in making them, after expressing the opinion that the term " orphan " was used by the founders of the Society 1 This amount was increased in 1S72 to $700. For the amount of pay of each sjrade, see note to tiie *' Institution," in Historical Sketch. CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 65 in an extended sense, meaning by it their children after their decease, without reference to their being minors, reported the following rule, which was adopted : — " That all grants of aid hereafter to be made by the Standing Com- mittee shall be confined to the children of original members, and to such members and the widows and children of such members ' as may be under the necessity of receiving it.' " * A resolution was adopted at this meeting expressing regret at the death of a venerable associate, the Rev. David Smith, of Connecticut, aged ninety-five ; " the last link which con- nected the men of the present generation with the men of the Revolution." 1865, July 4. At the annual meeting resolutions ex- pressive of the sorrow of the members at the loss of their President, Charles S. Daveis, and of the Assistant-Treas- urer, John Bryant, were placed upon the Society's records. The Rev. Alfred L. Baury, D.D., was chosen President; he died in December following. 1866, July 4. Rev. Dr. Baury, having died in December, 1865, resolutions of respect to his memory, and in recogni- tion of the value of his services to the Society were adopted. Colonel James W. Sever was chosen as his successor. 1870, July 4. Suitable resolutions were adopted and placed on record, testifying the respect of the Society for its deceased Vice-President, Dr. Winslow Warren ; also for the late Frank- lin Pierce, ex-President of the United States, Dr. B. F. Hey- wood, and Zibeon Hooker, late member of the Standing Committee. 1 87 1, July 4. Resolutions of respect for the memory of the late President, Colonel James W. Sever, and of sym- pathy with his widow, were adopted ; and an eloquent and ■ Repealed in 1SS7. See the action of the General Society in 1884. S 66 ANNALS OF THE touching tribute was paid to his memory by Dr. Samuel Hart, of Brooklyn, N. Y., his classmate and life-long friend. At this meeting Rear-Admiral Henry Kno.x Thatcher was elected President. 1872, July 4. The Vice-President, Samuel C. Cobb, on behalf of the special Committee appointed in 1871 to pre- pare a new edition of the Institution and Proceedings of the Society, presented a catalogue of the members, com- piled by Mr. Francis S. Drake, and asked for further time to prepare the proposed memorial volume. Dr. Samuel Hart, of Brooklyn, N. Y., read a written com- munication on Revolutionary Claims, drawn up by the Rev. Dana Clayes, who afterward addressed the Society verbally on the subject. The Triennial Meeting of the General Society was held in Boston, May 29, 1872. The delegates were the guests of the Massachusetts Society, by whom they were entertained at a banquet given in their honor. At this meeting all the existing State Societies were represented. 1877, July 4. The following rule was adopted : — " The succession and admission to membership of this Society shall descend to the heir male unless for satisfactory reasons another be chosen, in which case the membership shall extend to the life only of the person so elected ; and at his decease the then existing heir male of the original member shall be the person first to be considered on a new election." 1878, July 4. Mr. William Perkins stated that he was no longer able to serve the Society as treasurer; and on motion of Mr. Cobb it was voted that the thanks of the Society be tendered to him for the very able and satisfactory manner in which he had conducted its financial affairs during his service of thirty-one years, — -a service characterized by great fidelity to dut)% by remarkable business sagacity, and by a graceful CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 67 urbanity toward the members and beneficiaries. A commit- tee was appointed to procure and present to Mr. Perkins a piece of silver plate. Winslow Warren, Esq., was elected Treasurer to fill the vacancy caused by the declination of Mr. Perkins; and David Greene Haskins, Jr., Esq., was chosen Assistant Secretary in place of Mr. Warren. At this meeting the following rule was adopted : — " That a Committee of Finance, to consist of three members, be elected by ballot annually. It shall be the duty of this Committee to advise the Treasurer and Assistant Treasurer in regard to the invest- ment of all funds belonging to this Society ; and no investment or change of investment shall be made without the concurrence of this Committee. The Committee of Finance shall also further audit the accounts of the Treasurer before each annual meeting." 1880, April 6. A special meeting of the Society was called to take action on the death of its President, Rear-Admiral Henry Knox Thatcher. The Vice-President, Hon. Samuel C. Cobb, made an address, and resolutions prepared by Rev. Dr. Lothrop were adopted. The resolutions stated that in his long career in the navy of the United States, an accom- plished seaman, a gallant officer, a wise and considerate com- mander, a loyal, brave, and patriotic man, of calm, fearless courage, ready in the face of danger and of death to do his duty at all times and at all hazards, Rear-Admiral Thatcher had rendered services to his country at home and abroad, in peace and in war, that entitled him to be held in grateful honor and remembrance. At the annual meeting on the 5th of July following, the Hon. Samuel C. Cobb was elected President of the Society; Charles D. Homans, M.D., Vice-President; and General Francis W. Palfrey, Secretary. 1881, Oct. 4. A special meeting of the Society was held to act on an official invitation extended to the members of 68 ANNALS OF THE the Society to attend the Centennial Celebration at York- town. The following members were appointed delegates : Mr. President Cobb, Mr. Vice-President Homans, Mr. Treas- urer Warren, Mr. Secretary Palfrey, the Rev. Dr. Lothrop, Mr. Benjamin Lincoln, General W. Raymond Lee. And it was voted that a general invitation to be present at the cele- bration be sent to all the members of the Society. Also that the Standing Committee should have full powers to entertain the French visitors to the Yorktown Celebration should they come to Boston. 1883, July 4. The one hundredth anniversary of the organization of the Massachusetts Society was commem- orated by an able and eloquent historical address delivered by the President, the Hon. Samuel C. Cobb. In closing he said : — " Standing thus at the opening of the second century of this Society's existence, we have just cause to congratulate ourselves upon the record it has made. " Let us look forward hopefully and confidently to the work that is before us, remembering always that to us has been committed for the time being all the interests, all the nobly conservative influences and associations, of this time-honored Society. " A glorious heritage is ours ; but this inheritance imposes upon us important duties and responsibilities, which can be neither overlooked nor neglected if we would prove ourselves to be worthy of it. " There is an old proverb which is to the effect that if we would be the equals of our fathers, we should be superior to them ; that is to say, as they occupied higher ground than those who preceded them, so, to be their equals, we must advance our position beyond theirs. " Let us see to it that the principles of honor, of a broad patriot- ism, and of an unswerving devotion to duty are the cardinal principles of our action, not only as members of this brotherhood, but as citizens of this republic which our fathers helped to found, and which they looked to their descendants to preserve, to strengthen, and to make the noblest among the nations of the earth. CINCINXATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 69 " Then shall an influence for good go forth from this organization which shall be worthy of its founders and of their successors ; an in- fluence founded upon the everlasting principles of justice, charity, and truth, which shall be transmitted in all its strength and fulness to the generations which shall succeed us. Esto Perpetua." The address was ordered to be printed for distribution to the members. As a matter of historical interest the pro- gramme of proceedings at the Centennial Dinner, which took place at the Parker House at two o'clock p. M., are here given: — Toasf-masUr David G. H.«kins, Jr. Chaplain . . . The Rev. S.^iiUEL K. Lothrop, D.D. TOASTS. I. Tlie Memory of Washington. (Standing, in Silence.) Music : " Washixgtox's Mvrch." II. The Day and Year we Celebrate : The Birthday of our Na- tion, and the Centennial of our Order. We honor the memory of those who declared our Independence and of those who fought for it. Music : " Hail, Columbia." Historical Address by the President, the Hon. Samuel C. Cobb. Alusic : " The Marseillaise." Address by the Rev. Samuel K. Lothrop, D.D. III. The Health of our Honored Preside?it : The last President of the first century, the first President of the second century of our Order. Long may he live in health, honor, and prosperity, to preside over the meetings of this Society ! Response, by the President. "JO ANNALS OF THE IV. The Army and Navy of the United Stales ; Few in number, but mighty in spirit ; worthy sons of the men of Bunker Hill and Valley Forge, of Lake Erie, New Orleans, and Buena Vista. Music : " The Star-Spangled Banner." V. TAe Clergy : Zealous and powerful advocates of the rights of man, whether in the pulpit, the forum, or the battle-field, in 1776 or 1883. " Those who, regardless of an earthly prize, Offer their lives a double sacrifice, — To God for men, to men for God : that band Of noble men, — the Clergy of our land." Mnsie. Response, by the Rev. James G. Vose, of Providence, Rhode Island. VI. The Surgeons of 1776, 18 12, 1846, and 1861 : Fearless mes- sengers of mercy amidst the horrors of the battle-field ; freely shedding their own blood at their country's call ; true to-day, as in 1775, to the motto, — " Dulce et de- corum est pro patria mori." Music. Response, by the Vice-President, Charles D. HoiUNS, M.D. VII. Plymouth Rock : The stepping-stone from mediaeval traditions to modern liberty and equal rights. " Like cleaves to like ! The wandering exiles found A rock, firm as their wills, on which to rest ; No yielding clay, no fiower-besprinkled ground, Would suit these men, — stern, tempest-tossed, oppressed. The gray old rock, ne'er yielding to their tread, Stamped its own impress on the little flock ; And we, the children of the noble dead. Still thrill with reverence for Plymouth Rock." Music : " America." Response, by Gamaliel Bradford. CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 7 1 VIII. The Beneficiaries of the Society : The needs of the children only strengthen our remembrance of the patriotic deeds of the fathers. Response, by Winslow Warren. IX. Our Brethren of the other State Societies : May the sacred ties of sympathy and love that united in their infancy the thirteen fair sisters, bind ever closer . together the seven survivors in their mature years. Music: "Y.'VNKEE Doodle." Response, by the Rev. Winslow Warren Sever, of Poughkeepsie, N. Y. Closing Remarks by the Toast-master. Music : " AuLD Lang Syne." [The two poetical sentiments were written for this occasion by Mrs. Mary C. D. Watson, granddaughter of the late Hon. Charles S. Daveis, President of the Society ] 1887, July 4. Resolutions offered by Mr. Edward S. Moseley were adopted, stating that the virtues of Dr. Ho- mans, late Vice-President of the Society and formerly Sec- retary, secured the cordial esteem of all who knew him ; his discretion commanded their respect, and the amiability of his character secured their affection. A wise physician, a judicious counsellor, and a trusted friend, he was an espe- cially valuable member of the community; and his profes- sional distinction was made manifest by the action of the Medical Society of the State, in conferring upon him the highest honor in its gift. Winslow Warren, Esq., was chosen Vice-President to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Dr. Romans; Gamaliel 72 ANNALS OF THE Bradford was chosen Treasurer in place of Mr. Warren ; and William Frederick Jones was chosen Assistant Treasurer. 1889, July 4. The annual reunion had a special interest, as it marked the completion of the first hundred years of the Republic under a Constitution " framed and established," as President Cobb said, " largely through the patriotic and wisely directed efforts of the founders of the General Society of the Cincinnati. Washington, its first President-General, and many of his fellow-members, who with him had sustained the shock of battle, were among the foremost actors in the various movements which culminated in that more perfect union of the States secured by the Federal Constitution." The President's address on this occasion was ordered to be printed for distribution to the members. The subject of printing a new memorial volume of the So- ciety was referred to the Standing Committee with full powers. 1890, July 4. In welcoming the members of the Society to the annual meeting, President Cobb said, — " We may well congratulate ourselves that the one hundred and seventh anniversary of the formation of our Society finds it in a highly prosperous condition, carrying out in letter and spirit the beneficent purposes of its founders. The recent Centennial Cele- brations in commemoration of the adoption of the Constitution and of the permanent organization of the different branches of the Na- tional Government have called attention anew to the powerful influ- ence exerted by the original members of the Cincinnati in securing what Chief-Justice Chase very happily defined as ' an indestructible Union composed of indestructible States.' " The President stated that at the regular meeting of the Standing Committee in November, 18S9, the publication of a new volume of memorials of the Society was authorized, and the work would be ready for delivery early in the autumn. David Greene Haskins, Jr., Esq., was elected Secretary of the Society, to fill the vacancy occasioned by the death of CINCINNATI OK MASSACHUSETTS. 73 General Francis \V. Palfrey; and John Homans, 2d, il.D., was chosen Assistant Secretary in place of Mr. Haskins. It was voted that in accordance with a precedent established in 1812, the following persons who had been elected members, but who had died before subscribing the declaration in the man- ner prescribed by the rules, be placed upon the rolls, namely: Henry Bryant, M.D., elected in 1865 ; Brigadier-General Lewis Cass Hunt, elected in 1883. In accordance with recommendations contained in the President's Address, it was voted : — (i) That the rules of the Society be amended so that in case a person admitted to membership is in active ser\'ice in the army or navy of the United States, and is unable to attend the regular meet- ing of the Society next following his admission, he may make and subscribe the declaration before a notary-public or justice of the peace, and transmit the same to the Secretary to be affixed to the record book of the Society. (2) That the Secretary be authorized to have a copy made of the Society's records from 1783 to 1883, and deposited in the library of the Massachusetts Historical Society. (3) That the President and Mr. Daniel C. Lillie be authorized, in behalf of the Society, to erect at North Easton, Mass., a suitable monument to mark the grave of Captain- Lieutenant Elisha Har\'ey, a gallant officer in the War of the Revolution, and an original mem- ber of this Society. A declaration made and subscribed in accordance with the above-mentioned vote (i) was received from Lieutenant- Colonel Edwin Vose Sumner, U.S.A., elected in 1876, as the successor to the Hon. Charles Sumner. On the recommendation of a Committee,^ consisting of Charles U. Bell, Benjamin A. Gould, and Charles W. Storey, the following resolutions were adopted and incorporated into the rules of the Society: — 1 The recommend.itions were accompanied by an interesting and valuable report written by Dr. Gould, which was filed with the Society's papers. 74 ANNALS OF THE CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. ( 1 ) That a failure on the part of any ehgible person to apply for admission within a reasonable time after being informed of the exist- ence of his claim may be interpreted as a waiver thereof. (2) That since a waiver can in any case be regarded only as the renunciation of a claim, not as the transfer of a right, none can be recognized which would impair the subsequent eligibility of a minor. (3) That priority of claim through descendants through a female line be construed according to the same rules which govern priority in the male line ; namely, those of primogeniture according to the common law, so far as applicable. Officers of the Society for 1890-1891. President. HON. SAMUEL CROCKER COBB. Vice-President. WINSLOW WARREN, Esq. Secretary. DAVID GREENE HASKINS, Jr., Esq. Assistatit Secretary. JOHN HOMANS, 2d, M.D. Treasnrer. GAMALIEL BRADFORD. Assistant Treasurer. WILLIAM FREDERICK JONES. Standing Committee. Charles W. Storey. Benjamin Lincoln. Benjamin Apthorp Gould. John Collins Warren. Edward Strong Moseley. James Gardiner Vose. Alexander Williams. Charles Upham Bell. Wm. Raymond Lee. Thornton Kirkland Lothrop. J. Huntington Wolcott. Thomas Lincoln Casey. BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES. BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES. [The names of original members are printed in black-letter, and are given in alphabetical order. The names of hereditary members are given in the order of their succession, whether having the same or a different surname.] Strpf)cn atjljot. He was b. Andover, Mass., 12 Aug. 1749; d. Salem, 12 Aug. 1 8 13; was a lieut. in Capt. Benj. Farnum's Co. of Col. Eben. Francis's reg., 1777. In Capt. Farnum's diary, under date of 28 March, 1777, is the following entry: "This day Lieut. Stephen Abbot, with about 40 men, marched from Andover in order for Bennington." He was com. capt. 28 May, 1778, in Tupper's (nth) reg.; was at West Point in that reg. in 1779-80; was in M. Jackson's (8th) reg. in 1781-83; was first "Captain Commandant" Salem Cadets, com. dated July 10, 1786; maj.-gen. 2d div. Mass. militia, 1797-1801. After the war he engaged in mercantile pursuits in Salem; and was a public-spirited and highly respected citizen. The descent of Capt. Abbot from George * Abbot, who came from Yorkshire about 1640, settled in Andover in 1643, and d. Dec. 1681, was through his eldest son John? b. 2 March, 1648, d. 19 March, 1 72 1, who m. Sarah, dau. of Richard Barker ; Stephen? b. 16 March, 1678, d. 27 May, 1766, and Sarah, dau. of Ephraim Stevens; and Stephen^ (his father), b. 1709, d. Nov. 1768, and Mary, dau. of George Abbot. Capt. Abbot m. Sept. 24, 1769, Sarah (b. Dec. 3, 1749, d. April 1 1, 1805), dau. John Croel of Salem. Had three sons (who all died 78 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE young) and eight daughters. The succession in the Cincinnati is from Polly (Mary), the second child, b. June 3, 1772, d. April 26, 1861. STEPHEN ABBOT CHASE. Eldest grandson of Capt. Stephen Abbot, whom he succ. in 1863; b. 22 Aug. 1796; d. 26 July, 1876. His father, Abijah Chase (son of Abner Chase), b. 22 March, 1770, in Salem; m. 10 Sept. 1795, Polly (Mary), dau. Capt. Stephen Abbot. Stephen Abbot Chase was for many years agent of the Newmarket Mfg. Co., and later was the first Superin- tendent and Manager of the Eastern Railroad. WILLIAM CHASE. Brother of the preceding, whom he succ. in 1878; b. 28 June, 1 813; d. (from an accident at a railroad-crossing in Salem) 8 July, 1885. He was a hardware-dealer in Salem. FRANCIS CHASE. Brother of the two preceding, adm. 1886; b. 15 Dec. 1817; was for many years in active service as a civil engineer on railroads in Mass., Vt., and N. H. His last active service was as Manager of the Portland, Saco, and Portsmouth R. R. from 1863 to 1873. Resides in Salem. He was of Andover; was com. ensign 19 Oct. 1781 ; and was in Sprout's (2d)reg. in 1783. He is probably the person of the name b. in Andover 29 Dec. 1759, who d. Lemington, Vt, Feb. 1837. He was b. Roxbury, Mass., 29 June, 1758; d. Peekskill, N. Y., June, 1793; H. U. 1775; surgeon's mate in Wesson's (9th) reg. 1777-80; com. surgeon, 14 May, 1781 ; in Tupper's (6th) reg. 1783. iJ?!^^-'^-. CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 79 His descent from Henry ' Adams, who d. in Braintree, Mass., Oct. 1646, was through Henry"' b. 1604, killed in Medfield by the Indians, 25 Feb. 1675-6, and Elizabeth Paine, killed by accident in 1676; Henry^ b. Medfield 19 Nov. 1657, and Prudence, dau. of John Frary ; Henry, ^ b. 1 702, who m. Jemima, dau. of Hon. Joshua Morse of Medfield; Rev. Amos^ (his father), b. Medfield, i Sept. 1728, H. U. 1752, settled pastor of the First Church, Roxbury, 1753, d. Dorchester, 5 Oct. 1775, m. 18 Oct. 1753, Elizabeth, dau. of Dea. Henry Prentice. The other children of Rev. Amos were : Rev. Thomas, minister of Camden, S. C, who d. there 16 Aug. 1797; and Sarah, m. 6 Oct. 1789, to Giles Richards of Boston, who left numerous de- scendants. Jiuttalj aiUcn. He was b. in Duxbury, Mass., 3 Oct. 1750, on the farm still occupied by a descendant of John Alden, the pilgrim, who settled there in 163 1 ; d. 2 March, 1845. At the com- mencement of the war he was an officer of the minute com- pany in Duxbury, and also its clerk ; was com. ensign in Cotton's reg. in May, 1775; was 2d-lieut. in Capt. Samuel Bradford's Co. same reg. in July, 1775 ; lieut. in Bailey's rcg. in 1776; capt. in the same i Jan. 1777; served through the war, and at its close received the brevet of major. He was dexterous in the use of arms, possessed great physical strength, and was a skilful, brave, and prudent of- ficer. Vice-President Mass. Soc. Cin. 1825-29; Presi- dent from 1829 until his death, in 1845. In 1780 he m. VVelthea, dau. of Dea. Peleg Wadsworth, who d. 3 March, 1841, ae. 81. His descent from Hon. John Alden} who m. Priscilla Mullins, and d. 12 Sept. 1686, ae. 87, was through Capt. Jonathan;^ b. 1627, d. Feb. 1697, and Abigail Hallet ; Col. John^ b. 1680, d. 24 July, 1739, and Hannah Briggs ; Col. Brtggs* (his father), b. 8 June, 1723, d. 4 Oct. 1796, and Mercy Wadsworth. The children of Maj. Judah and Welthea Alden were — 8o BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE Lucia, 5 Dec. i 780, m. Capt. Silvanus Smith. John, 2 Nov. 1784, who inherited the old homestead, m. Mary Winsor, and had: Mary, 28 Oct. 181 1 ; John, 14 April, 18 13, who m. a Brewster; Henry, 3 Nov. 181 5, who m. Sarah Ann Woodward. Briggs, 6 Oct. 1786, a sea-captain; d. before his father. Mercy, 24 Sept. 1788, m. H. R. Packard, and d. 1840. JuDAH, II Aug. 1790, d. 15 Dec. 1792. Welthea, 13 Aug. 1792, m. Wm. James of Scituate. Hannah, 4 Jan. 1795, d. 1804. JuDAH, 9 June, 1797, d. 20 April, 1806. Mary Ann, 12 March, 1801. Samuel. SAMUEL ALDEN, M.D. He was the youngest child of Major Judah, whom he succ. in 1875; b. Duxbury, 24 Jan. 1803; d. Bridgewater, 5 July, 1885; H. U. 1821; M.D., Dartmouth, 1825. Was for a time connected with the Almshouse, East Cambridge, and the Mass. General Hospital. Settled in Bridgewater in 1825, as practising physician, and remained there until his death. He m. Jan. 29, 1829, Mary A. Hyde. Had several children. AMHERST A. ALDEN. He was the third son of Capt. Briggs Alden, and nephew of Dr. Samuel, whom he succ. in 1886; b. Duxbury, 15 May, 1830. He was educated at Partridge Academy, in his na- tive town. At the age of seventeen he went to Illinois and taught school for a time. While there he made the ac- quaintance of Abraham Lincoln, then unknown to fame. On returning to Mass., he served for a time as private secretary to Daniel Webster. In 1850 he was appointed to a clerkship in the Boston Post-Office. He is still con- nected with the postal service, having been promoted to the charge of a division in the Boston Office. CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 8 1 He m. Aug. i, 1852, Georgina M., dau. of Peleg Cook. Chil- dren: Carrie M., b. 4 Sept. 1853; Jennie D., b. 4 April, 1856. WatJjanifl Qtoit STlUn. He was b. New Gloucester, Me., 29 Aug. 1759; was a lieut. and paym. in Marshall's (lOth) reg. in 1777; com. capt. 12 Oct. 1782; in Brooks's (7th) reg. 1783. He re- sided in New Gloucester, Me., which he represented in the Me. Legislature in 1 800-2; and was a Justice of the Peace in Cumberland Co. from 1801 to his death in Sept. 18 19, at the Insane Asylum, Charlestown, Mass. His descent from Joseph,^ who came to Gloucester in 1674, d. 6 Oct. 1724, se. 71, who m. in 1680 Rachel Griggs, was through Joseph?\i. 1681, d. 6 April, 1 750, who m. Mary Coit ; Capt. William * (his father), b. 171 7, an early settler of New Gloucester, who had thirteen children. He enlisted from Tyringham ; was a lieut. in Fellows's reg. at the siege of Boston, May, 1775; ist lieut. in Asa Whit- comb's (6th) reg. 1776: com. capt. 16 Oct. 1776; in Wig- glesworth's, afterwards Calvin Smith's (13th) reg. 1777-80; in Vose's (ist) reg. from 1 78 1 until promoted major, and deranged i Aug. 1782. He was a pensioner, living in Mass. in 1820, but d. soon after, as a son, Ezra, of Whiting, Vt., applied for admission to the Society in 1823. jotf)am ^tncs. He was b. Bridgewater, Mass., 15 Oct. 1743 ; was a sergt. from May to 31 Dec. 1775 in D. Lothrop's Co. of Bailey's (2d) reg. ; also in Jacob Allen's Co. of Gary's reg. in N. Y. 9 Aug. 1776; com. lieut. in Bailey's reg. i Jan. 1777; and on the fall of his capt. (Jacob Allen), at Stillwater, took com- mand of the company, and retained it until the peace. He 6 82 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE resided in W. Bridgewater until about 1C02, when he re- moved to Middlefieid, Otsego Co., N. Y., where he d. 9 May, 1812. He was twice m., but left no descendants. His descent from William ^ of Braintree, b. 6 Oct. 1605, d. 1 1 Jan. 1654, and Elizabeth Hayward, was through John^ b. 24 March 1647, d. W. Bridgewater, 1726, and Sarah, dau. of Dea. John Willis ; Capt. Thomas^ b. 21 Feb. 1682, d. 3 Feb. 1737 ; Solomon'^ (his father), b. 16 Jan. 1709, d. 12 July, 1745. JSaaflUam STntirciDS. He was com. 2d lieut. in Crane's artillery i Feb. 1777, 1st lieut. 13 Sept. 1780; taken prisoner, i June, 1779, at Fort La Fayette on the Hudson near Stony Point, and ex- changed 19 March, 1781. He d. at Cambridgeport, Mass., 14 March, 1816, se. 6"] . A dau. Elizabeth Rush was living in Boston in 1850. Samuel artnstronij. He was b. Boston, 10 Aug. 1754; d. there 10 Dec. iSlO. With his brother John and his father (Col. John), he was in the battles at Brooklyn and at Harlem, where the latter was killed. Com. ensign in M. Jackson's (8th) reg. i Jan., and lieut. 7 Oct. 1777; adjutant same reg. i June, 1778- 31 Dec. 1779; lieut. and paym. from i Jan. 1780, to the peace. He joined Maj. Dearborn's light infantry at Still- water, 12 Sept. 1777, and was in the battles w'ith Burgoyne, and endured the privations of Valley Forge. ASSIST. Sec. Mass. Soc. Cin. i 798-1 806. He was the son of Col. John Armstrong and Christian Bass, who descended from John Bass and Ruth Alden. His brother, Capt. John, was the father of Lieut.-Gov. Samuel T. Armstrong. Six members of this family served in the war of 18 12. By his wife Nancy, only dau. of Major Josiah Allen (b. 21 Sept. 1765, d. 11 April, 1829), he had — CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 83 Samuel, who succ. to membership in the Society. James, d. 28 July, 1848, leaving children. George W., b. Boston, 22 Feb. 1792, d. 23 March, 1867. He was a heut. 40th U. S. reg. in the war of 181 2. Eliza Caroline. SAMUEL ARMSTRONG. Eldest son of Lieut. Samuel, whom he succ. 1811 ; b. Boston, 5 Feb. 1786; d. in service at Governor's Island, 8 Sept. 18 19; app. ensign, 4th U. S. inf. 15 April, 18 12; 2d Heut. Sept. 1812; ist lieut. March, 18 14; served in the battle of Tippecanoe, and was afterwards successively aide to Generals Porter and Scott. Unm. JHoscs Sr!8i)lfS. He was b. Stockbridge, Mass., in 1751; d. Lee, Mass., 25 Aug. 1791 ; grad. Yale Coll. 1767; entered the army- early in 177s as a lieut. in Paterson's r^g. at the siege of Boston; com. capt. (same reg.) 5 Nov. 1775; in Vose's (ist) reg. from 1777 until promoted major, 6 Jan. 1780; afterwards in Putnam's (5th) reg. ; and retired from the service with reputation, i Jan. 1783. He left a wife and three children. 3oi}n Austin. He was a conductor of military stores from i Jan. 1777; was com. 2d lieut. in Crane's artillery, 17 May, 1780; and d. a few years after the war. His descent from Richard^ tailor (1662), Charlestown (probably son of Richard who came in the " Bevis " from Southampton, 1638), and Abigail, dau. of Wm. Bachelder, was through James,^ b. at Charlestown, 27 June, 1679, d. 23 June, 1741, who m. Mary, dau. of Capt. Peter and Elizabeth (Lynde) Tufts; John* (father of John and Thomas), was b. at Charlestown, 28 Nov. 1722, m. 27 Sept. I 750, Susanna, dau. of Robert and Susanna (Johnson) Screech. 84 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE THOMAS AUSTIN. Eldest brother of Lieut. John, whom he succ. in 1792; b. Charlestown, Mass., 7 Sept. 1762; d. i8i6; H. U. 1791. He was a merchant, and resided in Cambridge, Mass. He m. 22 March, 1807, Martha, dau. Gideon Frost of Cambridge. They had Susan Screech, b. 25 July, 1808, d. Cambridge, 12 July, 1885. ^^ams iSailrs. He was b. Scituate, Mass., 27 Jan. 1749; d. Charlestown, 26 July, 1824. His parents removed to West Bridgewater soon after he was born. He entered the reg. of Col. John Bailey (2d) in 1775 as quartermaster; was com. paym. with the rank of lieut. i Jan. 1777, and capt. i Nov. 1778, serving until the close of the war. He then became a farmer in his native town, and held various positions of trust; was ASSIST. Sec. of the Mass. Soc. Cin. in 1808, and Assist. Treas. in 1809-24; and in 18 10 was app. Supt. of the U. S. Marine Hospital, Charlestown,* Mass. His descent from Thomas} who was of Boston in 1643, ^id with his wife Ruth was of Weymouth in 1661, was through his eldest son yi>//«,^ who removed to Scituate ab. 1670; was admitted freeman, 1684; m. Sarah, dau. of Gowin and Elizabeth (Ward) White of Plymouth, 25 Jan. 1672, and d. 1718. His second son Joseph,^ b. Oct. 1679, ™- Miss Adams, a granddau. of the pil- grim John Adams, and had eight children, the youngest of whom was Adams* (father of Capt. Adams), b. 1722, who m. in 1746 Sarah, dau. of Jonathan, Jr., and Sarah (Field) Howard. Capt. Bailey m. 17 Jime, 1779, Mary, dau. of Nathaniel and Mary (Otis) Little, b. 16 Nov. 1749, d. 21 March, 1821. Her ancestor Thomas Little came to Plymouth from Cumberland, Eng., it is said, in 1630, and 19 April, 1633, m. Ann, dau. of the pilgrim Richard Warren. * The hospital was in Charlestown at that time, and it was the custom to have anon-medical man for superintendent. '^^^c^ CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 85 ADAMS BAILEY. He was the only child of Capt. Adams Bailey, whom he succ. in 1825 ; b. Scituate, 28 April, 1789; d. Boston, 20 Nov. 1858. He received a public school education in Boston, and was subsequently an assistant to his father in the Marine Hospital at Charlestown. In 181 5 he was appointed to an office in the Boston Custom House, being first a clerk and afterward deputy collector, and remaining until Oct. 1857, with the exception of the years 1841—43. As an officer, he was remarkably prompt and accurate, and was universally popular. He was Assist. Secretary of the Society in 1834-51, and Secretary from 1851 until his death. From the resolutions of the Society which this event called forth, the following extract is taken : — " He inherited from his father the genuine spirit of this institution ; and the office of secretary, to which he was last elected, he held most acceptably until his death. He was the honored successor of Edwards and Townsend, and Callander and Jackson, and like them he loved to give assiduous attention to its benevolent and charitable ministrations." He m. Ellinor, dau. of Col. Johnand Susannah (Herbert) Hathome of Salem, 25 Dec. 1815. She d. 9 Sept. 1852. Her father, a descend- ant of Justice Hathome, of Salem witchcraft memory, was for many years a merchant in Salem. She possessed a gifted and cultivated mind, and a cheerful and amiable disposition, which was tested by many years of suffering as an invalid. Two sons and three daughters survived their parents. ADAMS BAILEY. Grandson of Capt. Adams, and eldest son of the preced- ing, whom he succ. in i860, was b. Boston, 21 May, 1818; d. Scarsdale, N. Y., 21 Feb. 1878. His boyhood and youth were passed in Boston, where he received his education and business training. In his early manhood he went to India, first 86 BIOURAI'HICAL NOTICES OF THE as supercargo ; afterwards he went into business in Calcutta, in the firm of Foster, Rogers, & Co., and continued there twelve years. In 1861 he removed to New York, where he engaged in business, having his home in Scarsdale, Westches- ter Co. He inherited the uprightness and strength of charac- ter of his Puritan ancestry, combined with intelligence, keen wit, and strong affections. He m. 21 May, 1856, Caroline Walter, dau. of William Bailey Lang. They had — Adams, b. April 29,- 1857, d. July, 1870. Walter Lang, b. May 15, 1858. Herbert Otis, b. Aug. 2, 1859. Susanna Hinckley, b. June 29, 1864. Frederic William, b. Feb. 14, 1875. WALTER LANG BAILEY, Great-grandson of Capt. Adams and second son of the preceding, whom he succ. in 1879, was b. Calcutta, India, May 15, 1858. He is at this date (1890) engaged in busi- ness in Calcutta. 2Lutt)cr MaiUs- He was b. Hanover, Mass., 14 Sept. 1752 ; d. there 12 Ma}-, 1820. His father. Col. John Bailey of Hanover, was lieut.- col. of Thomas's reg., which marched to Roxbury in April, 1775 ; succ. Thomas as col. i July, 1775, and commanded the 2d Mass. reg. until 31 Dec. 1780. Luther was adjutant of his father's reg. in 1775; lieut. and quartermaster in 1776; com. capt. 7 July, 1777, and served through the war. He was an able officer. This reg. was one of those that fortified Dorchester Heights on the night of March 4, 1776; took part in the operations in and near New York in the following summer and autumn ; in the battles of Trenton, Princeton, and Monmouth ; and also in the campaign ending in the surrender of Burgoyne. CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 87 Capt. Bailey was accomplished in manners, and easy and pleasant in conversation and address, and was often called upon to serve as chairman of public meetings in his native town. The descent of Luther Bailey from Thomas'^ of Boston in 1643, and Ruth his wife, was through John ^ and Sarah (White) Bailey ; John^ b. 5 Nov. 1673, d. Hanover, June, 1752, who m. 19 Feb. 1700, Abigail, dau. of Dea. Samuel Clapp ; John* b. 23 May, 1703, d. 28 Sept. 1778, who m. II April, 1723, Elizabeth Cowen ; Col. John^ (his father), b. 30 Oct. 1730, d. 27 Oct. 1810, who m. 18 Oct. 1750, Ruth Randall. She d. 3 June, 1820, a;. 90. Luther m. 21 Oct. 17S4, the accomplished Miss Silvester Little, who d. 27 June, 1788, ae. 35, leaving two daughters who d. in childhood. CALVIN BAILEY. Brother of Capt. Luther, whom he succ. in 1824; was b. Hanover, 1760 ; d. Bath, Me., 1835. He was a clockmaker by trade, an ingenious workman, and an upright and honest man. By his wife Sarah, dau. of Col. John Jacobs of Scituate, who d. Hanover, 24 Nov. 1846, a;. 82, he had — LuciNDA, II July, 1794, ni. Stephen Curtis of Scituate, 1816, and d. 1818. Bernard Calvin. Edwin, 7 May, 1798, d. s. p. Aug. 1828. Luther and Martin, d. in infancy. Capt. Henry, 2 Aug. 1801, m. Sarah Gardner, 16 Jan. 1832. Eliza, 5 July, 1803. Sarah, 20 Aug. 1S05, m. Lemuel Dwelley, Jr., of Hanover. BERNARD CALVIN BAILEY. Son of Calvin, whom he succ. in 1861 ; b. Hanover, Mass. 17 May, 1796; d. Bath, Me., June 13, 1876. He removed, in 18 1 5, to Bath, Mc, became a successful merchant and ship- 88 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE owner; Mayor of Bath, 1853-54; and President of the Marine National Bank of Bath. He m. 20 May, 1820, Jane Doten Donnell of Hanover, who d. Bath, 14 Dec. 187 1, and had — Sarah Jane, Feb. 1821, m. George Davis in 1841. Col. Samuel Donnell, 22 July, 1825. LuciNDA, May, 1829. SAMUEL DONNELL BAILEY. Grand-nephew of Capt. Luther, and only son of the pre- ceding, whom he succ. in 1877, was b. Bath, Me., 22 July, 1825. He was educated at Bath and Gorham ; has been engaged in ship-building and in the ship-chandlery business, and is a large ship-owner; was Mayor of Bath in 1870; is now (1890) President of the Marine National Bank in that city, having succeeded his father in 1876. He m. Nov. 1873, Susan Jane, dau. of Hon. James Patterson White, of Belfast, Me., and formerly Mayor of that city. No children. Sosctflj 2}alcom. He was b. Templeton, Mass., 1752 ; d. at Worcester, 4 Nov. 1827. He belonged to a company of minute-men which re- sponded to the call on the 19th April, 1775 ; was in Moore's Co. of Nixon's reg. in May -Dec. 1775 ; in Andrew Haskell's Co. of Marshall's reg., and engaged in fortifying Boston Har- bor in 1776; sergeant in Abel Holden's Co. of Nixon's (6th) reg., and com. ensign, 12 Nov. 1777; served in the campaign against Burgoyne ; com. lieut. in Capt. P. Clayes's Co. 20 April, 1781 ; in C. Smith's (6th) reg. 23 April, 1782; dis- charged, 3 Nov. 1783. In his application for a government pension, he stated that he was worth ^400 when he entered the service, in the course of which that sum had been en- tirely e.xpended. CINCINNATI OB' MASSACHUSETTS. 89 l)ctiutl)an ]$al1rtDtn. He was b. Woburn, Mass., 13 Jan. 1732; d. Brookfield, Mass., II June, 1788. He was a captain in the expedition to Crown Point in 1755; and to Ticonderoga and Ft. Du Quesne in 1758; prominent in the Provincial Congress of Massachusetts in 1774-75; active in planning the defensive works around Boston in 1775 ; com. assistant engineer, rank of capt., 16 March; lieut. col. (continental establishment) 26 April; and col. of engineers, 3 Sept. 1776, to 26 April, 1782. He served under Gen. Lincoln in suppressing Shays's rebel- lion. He gave ii^ioo to Leicester Academy. His descent from Henry Bahhinn} of Charlestown in 1640, after- ward of Woburn, who m. i Nov. 1649, Phebe, dau. of Ezekiel Richardson, d. 14 Feb. 1698, was through Henry^ b. 15 Nov. 1664, d. 7 July, 1739, who m. 4 May, 1692, Abigail Fisk ; Isaac^ (his father)^ b. 20 Feb. 1700, who m. 24 March, 1726, Mary Flagg. LUKE BALDWIN. Only son of Col. Jeduthan, whom he succ. in 1809; d. in 1832. His son John A., of Dunstable, N. H., applied for membership in 1834. ISIirnrfcr iSallanttnr. He was b. (probably in Westfield, Mass.) 12 July, 1756; com. surgeon's mate in Nixon's (6th) reg. 20 May, 1780; dis- charged, June, 1783 ; afterwards practised as a physician in Schodack, N. Y., until 1822, when he removed to Marion, Ohio, where his two sons had settled. He had in all eight children. aaiiUiam jS^utrson iSallavtJ. He was of Amesbury, and d. Dec. 1814, leaving a widow, Keziah, who d. at Hopkinton, N. H., 3 June, 1832. He served as capt in James Fryc's (Essex) reg. May-Dec. 90 BIOGRAI'HICAL NOTICES OF THE 1775, and in the battle of Bunker Hill; was in Asa Whit- comb's (6th) reg. 1776; in Brooks's (7th) reg. 1777-79, and in campaign against Burgoyne ; com. major in July, 1779, and in Bigelow's (15th) reg. until discharged, i Jan. 1 78 1. He possessed a good estate at the commencement of the war, but at its close found himself nearly reduced to poverty. He left several sons and one daughter. JOHN OSGOOD BALLARD. Eldest son of William H.,whom he succ. in 1841 ; d. Hop- kinton, N. H., April, 1854, se. 86. He taught school for many years, married in 1800, and engaged in business, but failed in 18 19, and afterward kept a boarding-school. REV. EDWARD BALLARD, D.D. Eldest son and only child of John O., whom he succ. in 1855; b. Hopkinton, N. H., 11 Nov. 1804; d. rector of St. Paul's (Protestant Episcopal) Church, Brunswick, Me., 14 Nov. 1870. He was in early life a school-teacher. Received the degree of D.D. from Trinity College in 1865. Samts 35antroft. His ancestors settled ab. 1640 in the northwest part of Lynn, called Lynn End, now Lynnfield, where he was b. ab. 1756, and d. Boston, 2 April, 1803. Com. ensign in Bridge's reg. May, 1775, and present at Bunker Hill and siege of Boston; com. lieut. in M. Jackson's (8th) reg. 12 May, 1780, and served through the war. He then settled in business as a grocer in Boston, and was for some years prior to his death an Inspector of the Customs in that city. James his father, b. ab. 1732, d. Aug. 1814, was a housewright and farmer, and is said to have behaved with great bravery in the Lexington battle. Lieut. Bancroft m. ab. 1783 Sally Parsons of Leicester, who d. 1795, oe. 41, and had — CliNCINNATI OK MASSACHUSETTS. 9 1 James. Henry. Charles, 19 April, 1788, d. Montreal, Canada, 1834, m. Mary Ann Jones of Barre, Mass., and had Henry, Charles, and James. Henry d. leaving children ; Charles was a Prot. Ep. clergyman at Montreal, with a family ; James, a bank officer at Hamilton, Canada, no children. Sally P., 16 Jan. 1790, lived in Brooklyn, N. Y. Harriet, 24 Sept. 1793, m. Benj. C. Cutler, Brooklyn, N. Y. JAMES BANCROFT. Son of Lieut. James, whom he siicc. in 1809, was b. Lynn- field, 30 Dec. 1784. He was a merchant in Phila., where he d. 13 March, 1855. He m. Rebecca Smith of Phila., and left a dau., who m. Elias Baker of New Brunswick, N.J. She d. leaving two young sons, fames B. and Frederick Baker. HENRY BANCROFT. He was b. Lynnfield, 9 Aug. 1786, succ. his bro. James in 1856, and d. 15 Aug. 1872. He m. Oct. 16, 1821, Eliza Motley, and had two sons, who d. unm. ; and a dau., who m. in 1 841 Cyrus Wakefield, of Wakefield, Mass., and who had no children. Joel iSatloUi. He was b. Redding, Ct., 24 March, 1754; d. Zarnowice, Poland, 22 Dec. 1812. He was the son of Samuel and Esther (Hull) Barlow, and a descendant of the John Barlow who first appears as a resident of Fairfield, Ct., in 1668. Joel grad. at Yale Coll. in 1778, and spent the two following years in New Haven in post-graduate studies, waiting for a tutor- ship in the College. In 1780, near the end of the summer, he was commissioned Chaplain in Poor's (3d) Brigade, Mass. 92 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE line, then engaged in guarding the passes of the Hudson. He served in that capacity until Oct. 1783, when the brigade was disbanded. He then settled in Hartford, Ct, studied law, wrote a great deal of poetry, revised Dr. Watts's version of the Psalms, and started a weekly paper, called " The American Mercury." In 1786 he was admitted to the bar, and in the following year he published " The Vision of Columbus," a poem which had a popular success. In 1788 he went to France as the agent of the Scioto Land Co. The subsequent failure of the Company to fulfil its obligations cast unmerited odium on their agent. It does not appear that he was cul- pable, but only that he was wanting in business experience. After the failure of his special mission he became interested in French politics, joined the Girondists, and contributed largely to the literature of the day. The greater part of the years 1790-92 he spent in London, where he wrote " The Con- spiracy of Kings," and a volume of political essays, entitled " Advice to the Privileged Orders." The last-named work was widely read at the time, and discussed with much heat. Burke assailed it; Fox eulogized it; the British Government suppressed it, and proscribed its author. Barlow fled to France, where he was received with much favor. The Na- tional Convention conferred upon him the title of Citizen of France. Save Washington and Hamilton, he was the only American on whom the privileges of French citizenship had been conferred. In Dec. 1792, he accepted an invitation to accompany the Commissioners of the National Convention to Savoy for the purpose of organizing it as a French Depart- ment. While there he was nominated to represent the de- partment in the National Convention, but failed to be elected. In the little inn at Chambery, at this time, he wrote the poem " Hasty Pudding," which gives him a higher place in litera- ture than any other of his works. In 1796 he accepted an appointment from the United States Government to act as CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 93 assent at Algiers, with a general oversight of the relations with the Barbary States. He performed his mission to the satisfaction of the government, and having released the prisoners, and concluded treaties with Algiers, Tunis, and Tripoli, he returned to Paris in Sept. 1797. His chief oc- cupations for the next seven years were of a literary char- acter; but he still continued to take an interest in the political movements in Europe and America. In 1798 he wrote a letter to Washington, with a view to harmonizing the differences between France and the United States ; but his purpose was misunderstood or wilfully misrepresented by the Federalists, who assailed him with the utmost viru- lence. In 1805, after an absence of eighteen years, he returned home, having made a moderate fortune while in France, and bought an estate on Rock Creek, between Georgetown and the Capitol, which he named Kalorama, In 1807 he published the " Columbiad," a long epic poem. " It abounds in beautiful passages, but is overburdened with political and philosophical disquisitions, and disfigured by singularities of expression." In 18 1 1 the relations between the United States and France were of the gravest character, and Pres. Madison selected Mr. Barlow as in all respects the fittest man to represent this country in an attempt to settle the differences. In Auo_ of that year he sailed in the frigate " Constitution ;" but on his ar- rival at Paris, Napoleon was too much occupied with his pro- jected invasion of Russia, to give much thought to a treaty with this country. It was not until the latter part of the fol- lowing year that a definite appointment was made for the American Minister to meet Napoleon at Wilna in Poland. After a rough journey he reached the place appointed only to find the French army in retreat from Russia. He started on his return to Paris, but the condition of the country was such that it was impossible to procure suitable food or lodg- 94 i;i(x;raphical notices ok the ing. He became seriously ill, and at the little village of Zarnowice, on the farther side of Cracow, he was obliged to stop, and five days later he died. R. W. Griswold, in his " Poets and Poetry of America," says of him : " As an author he belonged to the first class of his time in America; and for his ardent patriotism, his public services, and the purity of his life, he deserves a distinguished rank among the men of our golden age." \ He m. 26 Jan. 1781, Ruth Baldwin of New Haven. She d. at Kalorama, 29 May, 1818, s. p. iSavatiyinii ISaauttt. He was an active patriot, and a member of the Committee of Correspondence. Com. lieut.-col. of Bradford's (i4thy reg. 19 Nov. 1776; deranged, I Jan. 1 78 1, and d. Falmouth, Mass., 13 June, 1813, as. 81. He was a descendant of Col. IVilliam,^ of Sandwich, through Nathan,^ who removed to Chilmark ; and William^ b. 1702, who m. Anne Mayhew. He m. 4 June, 1761, Mercy Bourne, and had : Anne, 1762; Mary, 1764; and Love, 1775. 2Louts 3Jaur» He i^clIcinUr. He was b. in St. Domingo, 16 Sept. 1754; d. Middle- town, Ct., 20 Sept. 1807. His father, John Baury, was a captain of cavalry, and his mother, Marie Jane Guillotin de la Vigerie, was a relative of the celebrated Dr. Guillotin of Paris. Louis was educated at the military school of Brienne, France, and began his military service in 1768, as a volunteer in the reg. of Saintonge ; he was made sub-lieut. of a legion in 1769. Having passed, with leave, to St. Domingo in 1771, he was in 1773 made lieut. in the battalion of militia at Fort Dauphin. In 1776 he was appointed aide-de-camp to Count D'Argout, with the rank of capt. of infantry. In 1779 he /?^^..^'^»^if*^, 7 £/l-<.>L' ^ o CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 95 was made capt.-comdt. in the corps of Chasseurs of St. Do- mingo, and in this rank he served during the campaign of Savannah. He commanded five hundred men of his corps at Martinico, under the Marquis de BouilH, during a part of the years 1779-80. He was in the ship "Hannibal," com- manded by the Count de la Motte Piquet, in the engage- ments with Admiral Parker, which took place in 1779 and 1780. During the years 1781-83 he served in the cam- paigns in America and the Windward Islands, with the rank of capt. in the " train of grenadiers and troops of disem- barkation."* After the war, Capt. Baury became a citizen of Boston, and paid the local taxes in 1784-85. He was married there 7 June, 1784, to Mary Clark, b. Middletown, Ct., July 19, 1767, dau. of Elisha and Sarah Clark, and granddau. of Hugh Hall, a well-known Boston merchant. In the early part of 1787 he acted as aide-de-camp to Gen. Lincoln in putting down Shays's rebellion. In acknowledging his services Gen. Lincoln said : " The zeal and fortitude, the spirit and bravery, which marked every part of your conduct merit my esteem and entitle you to my thanks." Capt. Baury had a plantation in St. Domingo, and appears to have spent a part of his time there until 1802. For some years before his death, in 1 807, he lived in Middletown, Ct. In 1788 Gen. Vincent certifies that " M. Baury de Bellerive, Planter of this Colony, has not resumed his command in the troops of his most Christian Majesty, since the year 1780, when the corps of volunteer Chasseurs, in which he served as capt.-com'dt. of a company, was formed." Rev. Alfred L. Baury stated, in 1850, in support of the claim of his mother to a pension from Congress, that his father received pay for his military services in the American army frorn 1780 * This statement of service is taken from a paper (on file in tlie Pension Office at Washington) signed by Capt. Baury de Rellerive, and dated at Cape Franjois, i8 April, 17SS. The French General Commandant (Vincent) certifies to the truth u£ the statement- g6 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE until the end of the war, and in support of the statement re- ferred to his contribution in Continental securities of one month's pay to the principal fund of the Mass. Soc. of the Cincinnati. In this connection it may be of interest to state the circumstances under which Capt. Baury became a member of the order. He signed the original autograph list as " Baury De Bellerive," and did not designate his rank. At a meeting of the Standing Committee of the Society in 1787, a sub-committee reported favorably on his claims for mem- bership, stating that M. Baury had made three campaigns in the Southern States of America, as an officer in the French armies commanded by Count d'Estaing, Count de Grasse, and the Marquis de Vaudreuil ; that since rendering those services he had cheerfully attended Gen. Lincoln as aide-de- camp during the critical state of the rebellion in IMassachu- setts ; that he had in every sense become a citizen, and formed connections here which would probably continue through life ; that he possessed an unspotted reputation as a gentleman and a man of the purest honor; and that he was warmly attached to the interests of this country and desirous of associating with the Cincinnati, to whom he felt himself strongly affected. The report was approved, and it was recommended that a particular resolution be passed by the Institution, stating the services which were held to entitle M. Baury to membership, and providing that the case should not be considered as a precedent in any future proceedings of the Society. At the Annual Meeting in 1789, Capt. Baury was admitted in accordance with the Committee's recom- mendation. Capt. Baur}''s eldest son, Francis, was appointed a midshipman in the navy, and served on the " Trumbull." When war was impending between France and the United States, Capt. Baury could not endure the thought that his son might be called upon to fight against the land of his birth, and he withdrew him from the service. In 1801, while ^oC. f)OuUAlj. CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 97 France was engaged in the reconquest of St. Domingo, Capt. Baury went there with his son, and the latter was appointed on Rochambeau's staff, and was killed in action in March, 1802. FREDERIC BAURY. Son of Capt. Louis, whom he succ. in 1813; b. 1792, d. 1 8 14. He was appointed a midshipman in 1809, and first joined the frigate " Essex." Later he was transferred to the " Constitution," and was serving in her when she cap- tured the " Guerriere " and the " Java." After these actions he was promoted to a lieutenancy and transferred to the " Wasp." For gallant services in the capture of the " Rein- deer," June 28, 1 8 14, Congress ordered that a sword be presented to him. But before the order could be carried out he was drowned by the sinking of the " Wasp " after the capture of the "Avon," in Sept. 1814. The sword was sub- sequently presented to his brother, Rev. A. L. Baury. ALFRED LOUIS BAURY, D.D. He was the fourth son of Capt. Baury (de Bellerive) ; adm. 1823 as succ. to his bro. Frederic ; b. Middletown, Ct., 14 Sept. 1794; d. Boston, 26 Dec. 1865. Hfe received his early education at Bacon Academy, Colche.ster, Ct. In 1809 he became a clerk in the service of Mr. Josiah Williams, of Mid- dletown ; and in 18 14 began business there for himself, which two years later, he transferred to Tarborough, N. C, where he passed three winters. In 18 18 he returned to New Eng- land, and began the study of theology with Dr. Titus Strong of Greenfield, Mass. He removed soon after to Guilford, Vt., where he became a lay reader, and was instrumental in estab- lishing there the parish of Christ Church. Sept. 28, 1820, he was admitted to deacon's orders by Bishop Griswold, but continued to officiate at Christ Church till May, 1822. Here 7 98 BIOGRAl'HICAL NOTICES OF THE his ministrations were both attractive and impressive ; and his memory is still cherished. Removing to Newton, Mass., he was in July, 1822, chosen rector of St. Mary's, continuing in its charge until 21 April, 1851, having been ordained priest, 28 Nov. 1822. Mr. Baury, on retiring from this post, did not lay aside the ministerial office. As early as 1832 he began to exercise a supervision of the ancient parish of St. Paul's, in Hopkinton; and after his retirement from the full duties of the pastoral office, he continued to officiate there, when the parish was not otherwise supplied, till the day of his death. He also under- took the care of the glebe belonging to this parish, acting as attorney for the " Society for the Propagation of the Gospel in Foreign Parts," which has held this property in trust since 1742. In 1855-58 he was rector of St. Mark's Church, Bos- ton, dividing his time between this and St. Paul's Church, Hopkinton. From 1833 to 1843 he was secretary of the con- vention of the Protestant Episcopal Church in Mass. As treasurer of the " Society for the Relief of Widows and Or- phans of Deceased Clergymen of the Diocese of Mass.," its funds were, through his exertions, largely increased. He received the degree of A.M. from Yale College in 1848, and that of D.D. from the same college in 1865. He was chosen Vice-President of the Cincinnati, 4 July, 1853, and President in 1865. In 1847 he was made a corresponding member of the New England Historic-Genealogical Society. Dr. Baury published, in 1841, a sermon on the occasion of the funeral of " Zibeon Hooker, an Officer of the Revolution- ary Army; " and a sermon entitled an " Historical Sketch of St. Mary's Church, Newton Lower Falls, being the 25th anni- versary of the incumbent's first officiating in that church," in 1847. As a preacher, he was clear and impressive, modelling his style upon that of the old English divines. In his personal JyU. clx^»- . 10 (Xa>^vva) . CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. gg appearance he was tall, erect ; in figure and movement, grace- ful and dignified. His fine, classical features, his silvered hair, his urbane, courteous, yet cordial manners, rendered him an agreeable companion ; and he will long be remembered in Boston as one of the best specimens of a gentleman of the old school. He m. I July, 1839, Mary Catharine, daughter of Daniel Hen- shaw, and niece of David Henshaw (Sec. U. S. Navy), of Middle- bury, Vt. FREDERIC FRANCIS BAURY. Only son of Alfred Louis, whom he succ. in 1867; was b. 20 Feb. 1843 ; d. City of New York, 18 Feb. 1888. He was appointed Acting Master's Mate in the U. S. Volunteer Navy (having previously served in the Mercantile Marine), 14 Aug. 1 861, and attached to the frigate " Congress ; " promoted to be Acting Master in May, 1862, for " gallantry and meritorious conduct " in the engagement between the " Congress " and the rebel ram " Merrimac." Mr. Baury fired the first shot against the " Merrimac " in this famous contest which marked the beginning of a new era in the history of naval warfare. He subsequently took part in the various attacks on Charles- ton, S. C, between 1862 and 1864; beheaded a boat expedi- tion in which he cut out and captured, in the Savannah River, the English steam vessel " Alliance," with her cargo and a crew of 29 men. In Sept. 1864 he was promoted to be Act- ing Volunteer Lieutenant, for " meritorious conduct," and ordered to the frigate " Colorado." He was present at both attacks upon Fort Fisher, in Dec. 1864 and Jan. 1865, in the last of which he was severely wounded while gallantly leading a company of sailors to the assault on the works. He was mentioned in Commodore Henry Knox Thatcher's despatches to the Navy Dept. for "bravery and meritorious conduct in face of the enemy." .A.t his own request, he was honorably XOO BIUGKAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE discharged from the service, 8 Feb. 1869, and resided in New York until his death. ALFRED BAURY JACKSON. Great-grandson of Capt. Baury de Bellerive ; was b. Brook- lyn, N. Y., 24 Nov. 1859. He succ. Frederic Francis Baury in 1888. His great-grandfather, David Jackson, was a sur- geon in the war of the Revolution, and died in 1800. His grandfather, Samuel Jackson, was Professor of the Institute of Medicine in the University of Pennsylvania. His father, bamuel Jackson, Medical Director U. S. Navy, m. Catherine Henshaw Baury, daughter of the above-named Rev. Alfred Louis Baury. Alfred Baury Jackson received his education in the public schools of Charlestown, the English High School in Boston, and the Military Academy at West Point. He graduated at West Point, 13 June, 1883, and was promoted at that date to be 2d lieut. 9th Cav'y. He served with his reg. at Fort Riley, Kan., and in the Indian Ter. from i Oct. 1883, to il June, 1885 ; afterwards at Fort McKinney, Wyo., and Fort Leaven- worth, Kan. Since 28 Aug. 1887, he has been on duty at the U. S. Mil. Acad., West Point, as Instructor of Mathe- matics. He was promoted, i Feb. 1889, to be ist lieut. 9th Cav'y. He was b. at Uxbridge, Mass., 17 Sept. 1756; d. Dighton, 26 April, 1843. The family removed to Taunton when he was quite young. He grad. Harvard Coll. 1777, and imme- diately entered the army as lieutenant in H. Jackson's reg., in which he served until Nov. 1777. He was then appointed aide-de-camp to Gen. Lincoln, with the rank of major, and served through the southern campaigns. He became inti- CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. lOI mate with that gallant officer and accomplished gentleman, John Laurens, and joined him in the audacious and success- ful enterprise of capturing a British armed schooner without striking a blow. When Gen. Lincoln capitulated at Charles- town, Major Baylies became a prisoner of war; but as soon as his exchange was effected, he rejoined the army and served in Lincoln's division at the siege of Yorktown. After the surrender of Cornwallis, and the appointment of Lincoln as Secretary of War, Baylies, who had been promoted to a lieutenant-colonelcy, served as one of Washington's aides, and spent some time at Mt. Vernon. In 1784 he returned to Mass., and married a daughter of Gen. Lincoln. When the government was organized under the new Constitution, he was appointed, 4 Aug. 1789, Collector of Customs for the port of Dighton. In 1810 he was appointed, by Gov. Gore, Judge of Probate for the county of Bristol. This employment was entirely foreign to his previous pursuits; but he soon acquainted himself with its multifarious details, and acquired an accurate and critical knowledge of the whole code of probate laws, — expounded them with clearness, precision, and even technical accuracy. Just, upright, impartial, and humane, he fulfilled every function of his office with the most scrupulous fidelity. In 1814 he was elected by the General Court of Massa- chusetts a member of that celebrated body known by the name of the Hartford Convention. In 1834, at the age of 78, and in the full vigor of his mental faculties, he resigned the office of Judge of Probate, and retired from all public employments. When he left the army, his health was much impaired ; he held to life by a slender thread, which the slightest accident might have broken ; but by the habit of strict regularity and temperance, he reached a great age, with a constitution rather strengthened than enfeebled by the progress of years. I02 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE The vigor of his mind never failed ; his perceptions were clear and acute ; his conversation marked with strong sense, abounding with anecdotes and interesting reminiscences of the Revolution, exhibited, almost to the last days of his life, the liveliness of youth, without any of the garrulity of age, — always tasteful, animated, and correct. His descent from Thomas Baylies^ of Colebrook Dale, Eng. (who came to Uxbridge, Mass., about 1737), and Esther Sargent, was through Nicholas- (b. May 19, 1719, O. S. ; d. 26 July, 1807), who m. Elizabeth Parks of Newton in 1738. Hodijah^ was the youngest of six sons of Nicholas. His children were — Edmund. AVillum. Amelia. Benja.min Lincoln. EDMUND BAYLIES. Eldest son of Hodijah, whom he succ. in 1857 ; b. Dighton, 22 Sept. 1787; d. Taunton, 16 May, 1878. He m. 1819, Eliza Ann, dau. of Phillips Payson, of Charlestown, Mass. Children — Elizabeth, who m. Wickham Hoffman of N. Y. Ruth, who m. Maturin Livingston of N. Y. Edmund Lincoln, 18 May, 1829, H. U. 1850 ; d. Geneva, Switzer- land, 28 Nov. 1869 ; m. Nathalie E., dau. of Robert Ray of New York City, and had : Edmund Lincoln, Walter Cabot, Cornelia Prime, and Ruth. EDMUND LINCOLN BAYLIES. The eldest son of Edmund Lincoln, and grandson of Ed- mund, whom he succ. in 1881 ; was b. New York City, 2 Dec. 1857; educated Phillips Acad., Exeter, 1875; H. U. 1879; LL.B., Harv. Law Sch. 1882. He is a lawyer, and resides in the city of New York. He m. 18 Jan. 1887, Louisa, dau. of Alexander Van Rensselaer. CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. IO3 Josf)ua JScnson. First lieut. in Joseph Ward's (25th) reg. 1775-76; com. capt. in R. Putnam's (5th) reg. i Jan. 1777; served to the close of the war, and d. a few .years afterwards. HORACE BINNEY, LL.D. He was the son of Barnabas, a surgeon in the Revolution- ary army and an original member of the Penn. Society, b. 1 75 1, grad. Brown University, 1774, who settled in practice in Phila. after the war, and d. 21 June, 1787. Horace was b. Phila., 4 Jan. 1780; d. there 12 Aug. 1875; H. U. 1797. He was admitted to the Mass. Society in 1796, being then sixteen years of age and a junior at Harvard. After completing his studies he returned to Phila., and in 1802 was admitted to the Penn. Society in succession to his father. He appears, however, to have kept up his connec- tion with the Mass. Society ; and he served as chairman of one of its committees as late as 1844. He was a member of the Penn. Legislature in 1806, and a member of Congress in 1833-35. At a comparatively early age he attained a lead- ing position at the Phila. bar. In 1844 he argued before the Supreme Court of the United States (Daniel Webster being his opponent), the great case in which was involved the validity of the trust created by the Girard will for the establishment and maintenance of a college for orphans. The argument excited the admiration of the legal profes- sion, not only in this country but in Great Britain. He was a most accomplished lawyer; had a fine, commanding per- son, a handsome face, a dignified and graceful manner, and a melodious voice perfectly under his control and modulated with unusual skill. During the war of the Rebellion he published three pam- phlets in support of the power claimed by Pres. Lincoln to suspend the writ of habeas corpus. I04 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE His son, Horace, Jr., b. 3I Jan. 1S09, d. 3 Feb. 1870, was a prominent lawyer in Phila., founder of the Union League, and its president at the time of his death. He was a housewright in Boston; was com. Heut. in 1776; 2d lieut. in Crane's artillery, 10 Sept. 1778; reg. quarter- master in 1783; and d. 1792, leaving a widow, Dorcas, and six children. She was living in Boston in 1837, se. 81. His grandson, Joseph, applied in 1844 for a government pension. ROBERT BLAKE. Eldest son of Lieut. Edward, whom he succ. in 1809; was a painter by trade, and resided in Boston, where he d. ab. 1854. He was of Sutton, Mass. ; com. captain in Wesson's (9th) reg. I March, 1777; and d. a pensioner in N. Y. City, 9 Aug. 1 82 1. (talcb aJloHstt. A lieut. in the N. Hampshire line ; joined the Mass. So- ciety in 1788. After the war he was a merchant of Boston, and was drowned in the harbor while on a gunning excur- sion, 12 Aug. 1789. He was b. Boston, 10 March, 1757; d. Machias, Me., Sept. 1813. Com. ensign in Paterson's reg. 1776; lieut. and adju- tant, 28 Feb. 1779, and served to the end of the war in Vose's (ist) reg. He was present at Saratoga, Monmouth, and Yorktown, and commanded the first company that CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. I05 entered New York City on its evacuation by the British in Nov. 1783. He was a brave and efficient officer, and on leaving the army, in 1784, received the brevet of captain. He settled in Machias, Me., in 1788; was its postmaster and town clerk at the time of his death, and was also clerk of the courts of Washington County. He was a true patriot and an honest man. His descent from John Bowks'^ of Roxbury in 1639, ^"d Eliza- beth, dau. of Isaac Heath, was through Rev. John^ bap. 1 7 June, 1653, H. U. 1671, a representative and speaker of the house in 1690; d. 27 March, 1691, who m. Sarah, only child of E.ev. John Eliot; Maj. Johti,* h. 15 March, 1685, H. U. 1702, d. 28 March, 1737, who m. 10 Sept. 1706, Lydia, dau. of Col. Saml. Checkley ; Joshua* (his father), b. 3 May, 1722, d. 31 Aug. 1 794, who m. Mary, dau. of Capt. Ralph Hartt, a noted shipbuilder of Boston. Ralph Hart Bowles m. in 1788 Hannah, dau. of Rev. Josiah Crocker, pastor of the first church in Taunton, a woman of great energy of character, and much esteemed for her many virtues. She d. Roxbury, 10 July, 1848, ae. 82. Her mother was the sister of Gen. David Cobb, and also of Sarah, wife of Hon. Robert Treat Paine, a signer of the Declaration of Independence. Her bro. Capt. Joseph Crocker was the first Assist. Sec. of the Society. The children of Ralph and Hannah were — Lucius Quintius Cincinnatus. Hannah Crocker, 20 April, 1791, d. in infancy. Stephen Jones, 7 July, 1793, merchant, d. Roxbury, 26 March, 1846, m. Elizabeth Thorndike, dau. of Col. Joseph Wallace, Jr., of Harrington, Me., and had Hannah Crocker, who m. Rev. Philip Wolfe; Elizabeth Wallace, 3 March, 1829, m. J. Wingate Thornton ; Mary Hart, m. Chas. E. Pike ; Stephen Wallace, 2 1 Dec. 1835 ; John Eliot, 21 Aug. 1842, d. 26 Feb. 1853 ; Lucy B., 8 Nov. 1845, m. Seymour Lyman. Leonard Crocker, Sept. 1796. Wm. Ralph Hart, Sept. 1799, d. 1851. Mary Jones, May 6, 1802, m. Fred'k A. Burrall, merchant of New York, d. 1845. I06 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE LUCIUS QUINTIUS CINCINNATUS BOWLES He was the eldest son of Ralph Hart Bowles, whom he succ. in 1814; was b. Machias, Me., 6 March, 1789; d. unm. Roxbury, July, 1843. After an apprenticeship to John West, bookseller in Boston, he removed to Montpelier, Vt., and while there commanded a company which marched to Platts- burg in 18 14, and served to the end of the war. He was in business as a publisher, for a time, in New York ; afterwards he returned to Machias to live, and was elected to the State Senate for one or two terms. LEONARD CROCKER BOWLES. Third son of Ralph Hart Bowles, succ. his bro. L. O. C. Bowles, in i860; ASSIST. Sec. from 1863 to 1873; b. Ma- chias, Me., 12 Sept. 1796; d. 2 March, 1876; publisher in Boston. He m. 7 Oct. 1824, Catharine Gushing, eldest dau. of Martin Lincoln of Hingham, granddaughter of Gen. Benjamin Lincoln of the army of the Revolution. They had — M.iRV Eliz.\beth, who m. William Crosby, bookseller of Boston. Catharine Leonard, unm. Martin LnsicoLN, merchant, Boston ; m. Fanny M.. dau. of George Darracott, Boston. STEPHEN WALLACE BOWLES, I\I.D. The eldest son of Stephen Jones Bowles, and grandson of Ralph Hart; was b. Machias, Me., 21 Dec. 1835 ! adm. 1880. He was educated at Williams Coll. and the Coll. of Phj'sicians and Surgeons, N. Y. City. He served as Acting Asst. Surgeon, U. S. A., during the war of the Rebellion (1861-65), and afterwards settled in Springfield, Mass., as a practising physician. He has also served as one of the Commissioners of Prisons in Mass. CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. IO7 He m. Oct. 12, 1859, Elizabeth, dau. Dr. Chauncy Belden. They had — Lucv, b. Jan. i, 1862. Elizabeth, June 20, 1864. Stephen Wallace, April 4, 1866. John Elliot, April 9, 1868. Harry Thornton, March 7, 1877. .Samuel ISotuman. He was b. Lexington, Mass., 2 Dec. 1753; d. Wilkes- barre, Pa., 28 June, 1818. He enlisted at the beginning of the Revolution ; was an ensign in Greaton's (3d) reg. ; com. lieut. in Vose's (ist) reg. 22 April, 1782; served at Lexing- ton, and in many battles of the war; and, as com. of the guard, walked arm in arm with Andre to the place of that officer's execution. He moved to Wilkesbarre ab. 1789. Capt. nth U.S. Infantry, 8 Jan. 1799-June, 1800. His descent from Nathaniel^ of Watertown, 1^36-37, who d. 21 Jan. 1682, and his wife Anna, was through Francis^ who m. 26 Sept. 1 66 1, Martha Shennan, and d. Cambridge Farms, 16 Dec. 1687, se. 57 ; Joseph} b. 18 May, 1674, d. 8 April, 1762, and Phebe ; Thaddeus'^ (his father), b. 2 Sept. 171 2, who m. 2 Dec. 1736, Sarah, dau. of Dea. Joseph Loring. He m. in Phila. 3 Nov. 1784, Eleanor Ledlie, whose parents were from Ireland, and had a family of children, some of whom have been quite distinguished. antrrfto JSratrfortt. Son of Hon. Gamaliel, and great-grandson of Gov. Wil- liam; was b. Duxbury, Mass., 2 June, 1745; d. there i Jan. 1837; H. U. 1771 ; paym. in Bradford's (14th) reg. i Jan. 1777-31 Dec. 1780; lieut. 26 Nov. 1779; in Brooks's (7th) reg. I Jan. 1781, until discharged, 16 April, 1782. He was afterwards a teacher.- By his wife, Mary Turner, of Pern- lOS BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE broke, he had one son, Dr. James Harvey, who d. Duxbury, 28 Feb. 1863, unm. ROBERT FORBES BRADFORD. He was the grandson of Seth Bradford, 'brother of Lieut. Andrew, and was b. Boston, 9 Dec. 1836; adm. 1880. He was educated at the pubHc schools in Boston, and at tlie Naval Academy, Annapolis, Md. He graduated from the Naval School in 1856, and during the next three years was on duty in the European squadron and in the West Indies and the Gulf of Mexico. After passing his examina- tion, in 1859, he was ordered to the U. S. sloop-of-war " Portsmouth " as acting-master, and was on the coast of Africa until 1861. He was commissioned lieutenant in that year, and served as executive officer of the gunboat " Cho- cura." He was in the North Atlantic blockading squadron during 1861-62; took part in the attack on the batteries at Sewell's Point, and the reduction of Yorktown and Glouces- ter. On 16 July, 1862, he was commissioned as lieut. -com- mander, and served as executive officer (1863-64), first on the "Juniata," and later on the " De Soto," attached to the flying squadron, and afterwards to the East Gulf blockading squadron. During 1865-67 he was on duty at the Naval Academy as instructor in gunnery. In 1868 he was execu- tive officer of the " Minnesota," on special service, and in the following year he was ordered to the command of the gunboat "Aroostook" in the Asiatic fleet; afterwards to the command of the " Ashuelot," on the same station. In 1870 he was detailed as assistant to the chief of the bureau of Yards and Docks; and in June of that year he was commis- sioned as commander. During the ensuing ten years he served as inspector of ordnance at Pittsburg, Pa., and at the Portsmouth, N. H., Navy Yard, and as commander of the "Marion," in the European squadron. On 15 Oct. CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. IO9 1881, he was commissioned as captain. From Jan. 1887, until Oct. 1889, he was commander of the naval station at Portsmouth, N. H. He was subsequently detailed to the command of the new steel cruiser " Philadelphia." He m. 3 Dec. 1862, Caroline, dau. of Alfred L. Baury. Children — Robert Forbes, 9 Dec. 1864. Frederick W., 2 Jan. 1867. Pauline Baury, 2 Nov. 1868. Caroline Beckford, 21 Sept. 1870. Catherine Henshaw, 6 June, 1872. Edith Bellerive, 13 Nov. 1874. Sarah Edmunds, 27 April, 1880. Baurv de Bellerive, 2 March, 1882. dKamalttl ISralffortr, Col. He was b. Duxbury, Mass., 2 Sept. 1731 ; d. there 9 Jan. 1807. He was one of six brothers, four of whom served in the war of the Revolution, — three of them as officers. Two of the three are on the membership rolls of this Society; the other died in the service. They were four generations re- moved from Gov. Wm. Bradford of the Plymouth Colony; the graves of their ancestors are discoverable in the old burial-grounds of Duxbury and Plymouth. Their father, the Hon. Gamaliel Bradford, was one of the King's Council- lors, but was in full sympathy with the cause of the colo- nists, and was prevented only by age from taking an active part in the movement for independence. Gamaliel, the sub- ject of this notice, served in the French and Indian war as capt. and major. In 1775, on the outbreak of hostilities with Great Britain, he was serving as one of the magistrates of the colony. On i Jan. 1777, he was com. col. of the 14th reg. Mass. continental troops, and served till the army was disbanded on the banks of the Hudson, in 1783. He IIO BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE lived afterwards in Duxbcry till his death, 9 Jan. 1807. He is mentioned in the accounts of the day as commanding the State troops on the visit of Washington to Boston in 1789. Mr. Gamaliel Bradford of this Society has a miniature of Col. Bradford, painted in camp by Thaddeus Kosciusko, the Polish patriot, then an engineer officer in the Continental army. Col. Gamaliel m. 10 March, 1757, Sarah Alden. Children — Perez, 14 Nov. 1758, m. Judith Cooper and had Samiui and Judith, who m. a Huntington. Sophia, 16 Nov. 1761, d. 2 Feb. 1855. Gamaliel, 4 Nov. 1763, m. Elizabeth Hickling. Alden, 19 Nov. 1765. Sarah, 24 Feb. 1768, m. W'm. Hinckley. Jerusha, 30 Jan. 1770, m. Ezra Weston. Daniel, 27 Dec. 1771, m. Sarah Drew. Gersho.m, 3 Feb. 1774, rn. Sarah B. Hickling, and d. 8 Aug. 1844. ALDEN BRADFORD, LL.D. Third son of Col. Gamaliel, whom he succeeded in 1812; was b. Duxbury, 19 Nov. 1765; d. Boston, 26 Oct. 1843. He graduated from Harvard College in 1786; tutor there, 1791-93; pastor of a Congregational church at Wiscasset, Me., 1793-1801 ; Clerk Mass. Supreme Court; Secretary of State of Mass. 1812-24. He was a member of the Mass. Historical Society, and was president of the Pilgrim Society in the early part of this century. He presented the first sub- scription for the Pilgrim National Monument at Plymouth, lately completed and dedicated. Mr. Bradford wrote three histories of Massachusetts, illustrating different periods, which have a reputation for accuracy, and are still consulted as standard works. He was also the author of " New England Biography," and other works. He received the honorary degree of LL D. from Bowdoin College in 1803. CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. I I I He m. in 1795, Mary Stevenson. Their children were — Margaret Boies, 28 May, 1796. Wm. John Alden, 19 Nov. 1797, H. U. 1816, d. 1858. Lucy Ann, 14 Sept. 1800, m. Henry Dwight. Thomas Gamaliel. Duncan, 15 Aug. 1804, H. U. 1824. Isabella Thomas, 25 April, 1806. Sarah, 28 April, 1808. John Robinson, Sept. 1S13, d. 1828. THO.MAS GA.MALIEL BRADFORD. He was the second son of Alden, whom he succ. in 1859; b. Boston, 13 Dec. 1802; d. there 23 March, 1887; H. U. 1822. Most of his life was passed in Boston. For some years he resided in Philadelphia, where his literary labors, especially on the " Encyclopaedia Americana," and " Mur- ray's Cyclofiaedia of Geography," were most conveniently prosecuted. Later on, he established a private school in Boston ; and later still, travelled and resided abroad for sev- eral years as a tutor to many young men. The latter part of his life was spent in retirement. He was a scholar in every sense of the word, a man of strong intellectual interests and sympathies. He was most highly valued for the simple, modest, and affectionate traits of character which attracted every one who knew him. LAURENCE BRADFORD. Great-grandson of Col. Gamaliel, through his youngest son, Gershom ; was b. in Hubbardston, Mass., 17 Sept. 1842; adm. 1889, as succ. to Thomas Gamaliel. He went to sea at an early age. In May, 1863, he was appointed by the Secretary of the Navy a mate in the U. S. Volunteer Navy, and served there until Aug. 1865, when he received an hon- orable discharge. He served off Wilmington with the block- I I 2 UIUGRAPIIICAL NOTICES OF THE ading squadron, and on the Virginia rivers ; participated in the capture of Richmond, being attached to the first vessel that reached the city at the time of its surrender. Later, he had an opportunity to enter the regular navy, but having engaged in another pursuit, the Cffer was not accepted. After the close of the war he was educated for a civil en- gineer, and has since practised this vocation. His descent from Gov. VVm. Bradford ■* of the Plymouth Colony was through Major William^ b. Plymouth, 17 June, 1624, d. 20 Feb. 1 703-4, who m. Alice Richards ; Lieut. Samuel,^ b. Plymouth, 1668, d. Duxbury, 11 April, 1 714, who m. Hannah Rogers, July, 1689 ; Hon. Gamaliel,^ b. 18 May, 1704, d. 24 April, 1778, whom. Abigail Bartlett, 30 Aug. 1728; Col. Gamaliel^ b. 2 Sept. 1731, d. 4 Jan. 1807, who m. Sarah Alden, March 10, 1757 ; Gershoin,^ b. Duxbury, 3 Feb. 1774, d. 8 Aug. 1844, who m. Sarah B. Hickling, Oct. 3, 1802 ; Claudius (his father), b. 20 Jan. 1801, d. 3 Feb. 1863, who m. Maria W. Bradford, 12 April, 1830. Laurence m. 9 April, 1878, Hattie H., dau. Rev. Joseph H. Phipps. Children — Gershom, b. 14 May, 1879. Edward Wild, 23 Nov. 1883. eSamalicI JJratrforti, acput. Second son of Col. Gamaliel; b. Duxbury, 4 Nov. 1763; d. Boston, 7 March, 1S24. He received his early education under the care of Hon. George Partridge. At the age of thir- teen, he accompanied his father to the American camp ; was com. ensign in his reg. (14th) in 1779; lieut. 3 Sept. 1780; and remained in service until 1783. During the latter part of his service he was in Brooks's (7th) reg. After the war he followed the sea as a means of livelihood, mak- ing a voyage to France in 1784. In 1798 he was offered the command of the frigate " Boston " by President Adams, but declined the appointment. While commanding a mer- chant-ship, in 1799, he was attacked in the Mediterranean by CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. II 3 four French privateers, whom he successfully resisted. In the following year, in beating off two large French armed vessels, he received a wound in the thigh, which rendered amputation necessary. Quitting the .sea in 1808, he was in 1 8 13 app. warden of the State Prison. In 1820 he received the honorary degree of A.M. from Harvard University. By his wife, Elizabeth Hickling, he had — Dr. Gamaliel. George Partridge, H. U. 1825. Sarah, m. Samuel Ripley. John B. Elizabeth. Margaret S., m. S. Ames. Daniel N., d. 1821. Hannah R., m. A. H. Fiske. Martha T., m. J. Bardett. DR. GAMALIEL BRADFORD. Eldest son of Lieut. Gamaliel, whom he succ. in 1824; b. Boston, 17 Nov. 1795; d. there 22 Oct. 1839; H. U. 1814. At the age of twelve he accompanied his father on a voyage to Europe, and was for nine months a student in a Catholic seminary at Messina. He was for one year an assistant teacher in the Boston Latin School. He attended the med- ical lectures at the University of Edinburgh in 1819-20, and on his return began practice as a physician in Boston. Dur- ing the winter of 1824-25 he delivered an excellent course of lectures on physiology in Boston, in connection with Dr. John Ware. He gave up practice in 1827; superintended a large brewery in South Boston until 1833; and from that time till his death was superintendent of the Mass. General Hospital. Dr. Bradford was a frequent contributor to the journals and periodicals of the day; and his address to the Mass. Temperance Society, his Letter to Fletcher, Sprague, and Otis on Slavery, and his speech on Slavery before a committee of the Mass. House of Representatives in 1831, were published in pamphlet form. 114 blOGKAl'llICAL NUTICKS OK THE In March, 182 1, he m. Sophia, dau. of Col. Nathan Rice, by whom he had — Harriet, 2 Feb. 1827, d. 16 Feb. 1828. Francis, 2 Feb. 1829. Gamaliel. Sarah, 9 May, 1833. GAMALIEL BRADFORD. Son of Dr. Gamaliel Bradford, whom he succ. in 1852 ; was b. Boston, 15 Jan. 1831 ; H. U. 1849. He was a mem- ber of the banking firm of Blake Bros. & Co. from 1858 to 1868, when he retired from business and devoted himself to study, chiefly of political science. He has been a volumi- nous contributor to newspapers and magazines, especially the New York " Nation," but has never published anything in per- manent form. He delivered two courses of lectures before the Lowell Institute, one on British India and one on Modern Europe. ASST. Treas. Soc. of the CINCINNATI from 1877 to 1887; Treasurer since 1887. He m. 30 Oct. 1861, Clara Crowninshield, dau. of Henry W. Kinsman. Children — Gamaliel, b. 9 Oct. 1863, who m. Helen H. Ford and had Gamaliel (seventh of the name), b. i8 June, 1888. Charles Kinsman, b. 26 March, 1866, d. 24 July, 1875. ilottrt JSratrfort. Son of Robert Bradford of Kingston, grandson of John, who was the oldest grandson of Gov. William ; b. Plymouth, Mass., 1750; d. Belpre, Ohio, 1823. He was in the battle of Bunker Hill, and in nearly all the pitched battles fought in the Eastern and Middle States, closing his military career at Yorktown. He was com. ensign in Bailey's (2d) reg. 1776; licut. and quarterm. I Jan. 1777, and capt. 21 June, 1779. He received, with many other ofiicers of light infantry y-^^'f/i^. CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. I I 5 under the orders of La Fayette, the gift of a sword, which was in 1854 in the hands of his only surviving son, O. L. Bradford, of Wood Co., Va. He was one of the early pioneers to Ohio, having emigrated to Marietta in 1788, and settled at Belpre in 1789. By an epidemic, in 1792, he lost all of his children but one. He m. Keziah, dau. of Nathaniel Little of Kingston. Josljua iSramtiaU. Com. ensign in Bradford's (14th) reg. 1777; lieut. 5 Feb. 1779; in Brooks's (7th) reg. 1783; d. before 1812. ©riflin* iJnflfjam, pt.Ii. He was the son of Francis and Phebe (Ward) Brigham, of New Marlboro', Mass. ; was surgeon's mate in Warner's reg. I Aug. 1777; com. in Bailey's (2d") reg. 25 April, 1781. He m. Eleanor Soule, and resided after the war, as a prac- tising physician, in Schoharie, N. Y., where he d. about 1815. Dot)n iSrooUs, M.M., ILH.B. Son of Capt. Caleb and Ruth (Albree) Brooks ; was b. in Medford, Mass., 31 May, 1752; d. there i March, 1825. He attended the town school, where he formed an intimacy with Benjamin Thompson, afterwards Count Rumford, with whom he kept up a correspondence until the death of the Count. At the age of fourteen he was received into the family of Dr. Simon Tufts, who educated him for the medical profession. At the age of twenty-one he began the practice of medi- cine in Reading, and was soon afterwards chosen captain of a company of minute-men of that town. At their head he marched on the memorable 19th of April, and in the vicinity of Concord met the British on their retreat. The talent and * So written on the autograph list. Il6 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE bravery he displayed on that occasion procured his promo- tion. In May, 1775, he was chosen major of Bridge's reg., and on i Jan., 1776, Congress appointed him major of Webb's (19th) reg. On the night of the i6th of June, 1775, he volunteered his services in intrenching Bunker Hill and in watching the movements of the enemy, and on the morning of the 17th was sent by Col. Prescott to Gen. Ward at Cambridge for reinforcements. Being obliged to perform this duty on foot, he could take no part in the contest on the hill. His reg. was present at the siege of Boston and the retreat from Long Island, and in the battle of White Plains so ably covered the retreat as to receive the acknowledgments of Washington for its gallant conduct. It was included in the division which, under Gen. Lee, reinforced Washington on the right bank of the Delaware. Major Brooks bore his share of the hardships of the winter campaign, and remained with the regiment until the term of its enlistment had expired. He was made lieut.-col. of Michael Jackson's (8th) regi- ment, I Jan., 1777, which he commanded in consequence of the disability of its colonel. Joining the Northern army, he volunteered with his command in August for the relief of Fort Stanwix, then attacked by Col. St. Leger ; and to Brooks, it is said, belongs the merit of having planned the successful ruse by which that object was effected. In the battle between Gates and Burgoyne, on Bemis Heights, 19 Sept., Lieut.-Col. Brooks occupied the ex- treme left of the American line, and was engaged with the German troops. His regiment was the last to quit the field. In the still more important and severely contested action of the 7th of October, Brooks's regiment was particularly con- spicuous. He turned the right of the enemy's encampment, and stormed the redoubt occupied by the Germans. Their CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. I I 7 commander, Col. Breyman, was killed, and the works were gallantly carried, Brooks's regiment remaining masters of the ground. In Col. Trumbull's picture of the surrender of Burgoyne, Brooks is a prominent figure. His conduct in this battle is thus described by an eyewitness: "When the Colonel saw that the decisive moment had come, he lifted his sword in the air and cried, ' Follow your Colonel at double quick ! ' He immediately led the way to the top of the in- trenchments, crying, ' Come on, come on ! ' They did come on ; and a most bloody and violent conflict ensued, in which they decided the fate of the day." Brooks then joined the army under Washington, and while at Valley Forge was named in special orders to assist Baron Steuben in bringing into practice his new system of military tactics. When the British evacuated Philadelphia, Washington marched in pursuit. At Monmouth, 28 June, 1778, the two armies came in conflict; and Col. Brooks, as adjutant-gen- eral to Gen. Lee, was prominent in the events of the day. He was commissioned, il Nov., 1778, lieut.-col. commanding the 7th continental regiment, formerly Alden's. After the troops had again taken post on the banks of the Hudson, Brooks was employed under Steuben as inspector, in which position he rendered valuable service, acquired the confi- dence of Washington, and established an enviable reputa- tion alike for military science and personal qualities. This was especially shown upon the appearance of the " Newburgh Addresses," in March, 1783. Washington, to whom this was a most an.xious moment, appealed to the officers to withhold their countenance from the suggestions they con- tained. Col. Brooks was one of the committee of officers who e.xpressed their views upon this subject in resolutions, the importance of which in quieting the excitement of the army at this critical moment cannot be overestimated. " On IlS BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE this occasion the Commander-in-Chief rode up to Brooks with intent to ascertain how the officers stood aftected. Find- ing him, as he expected, to be sound, he requested him to keep his officers in their quarters, to prevent them from at- tending the insurgent meeting. Brooks repHed, ' Sir, I have anticipated your wishes, and my orders are given.' Wash- ington, with tears in his eyes, took him by the hand and said, ' Col. Brooks, this is just what I expected from you.' " Like most of his brothers-in-arms, Brooks retired in pov- erty from the service of his country, and at once resumed his profession in Medford and its vicinity, as the successor of his old friend. Dr. Tufts. In 1786 he was made maj.-gen. 3d division Mass. militia, and in 1798 was nominated a brig.-gen. of the provisional army, but declined. He was frequently chosen a representa- tive to the General Court; and as a member of the Conven- tion of 1788, by wliich the Constitution of the U. S. was adopted, gave to that measure a hearty support. For sev- eral years he was a senator for the county of Middlesex, and a member of the Executive Council ; U. S. Marshal for the District of Mass. 1791-96; and appointed 20 Dec. 1796, Inspector of the Revenue for Survey No. 2, in the District of Mass. During the war of 18 12 Gov. Strong appointed him adjutant-gen. of the State. From 18 16 to 1823, Brooks was Governor of Massachu- setts, bringing the State to a good degree of internal har- mony, and allaying party animosities, — a task for which he was admirably fitted. His addresses to the legislature dis- play large and liberal views of the policy of the State. In the language of Chief-Justice Parker, " he maintained the dignity of the office, and thereby honored the people who bestowed it; receiving all distinguished strangers with be- coming attention and courtesy. Bred in the best school of manners, — a military association of higii-minded, accom- CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. I 1 9 plished officers, — his deportment, though grave and dignified like Washington's, was nevertheless warm and affectionate. In the chair of state, when receiving the gratulations of a happy- people on the birthday of their independence ; on the mili- tary field, reviewing our national guard, the militia; at his own humble but honored mansion, taking to his breast his early friend, ' the nation's guest,' — what young man of taste and feeling could be unmoved at his soldierly air, his grace- ful demeanor, covering but not impairing the generous feel- ings of a warm and affectionate heart ! He was one of the last and best samples of that old school of manners, which, though it has given way to the ease and convenience of mod- ern times, will be regretted by some as having carried away with it many of the finest and most delicate traits of social intercourse." As a physician he ranked in the first class of practitioners, possessing in an eminent degree those qualities which were calculated to render him the most useful in his professional labors, and the delight of those to whom he administered relief. His mind was well furnished with practical knowl- edge, and he was sympathetic, patient, and attentive. After his voluntary retirement from the chair of state, he still continued to serve the community in various positions of trust and responsibility. He was president of the Mass. Medical Society, of the Washington Monument Society, of the Bunker Hill Monument Association, and of the Mass. Bible Society. He was the first Secretary of the Cincinnati of Mass.\chusetts (1783-86), and delivered (1787) the first of the series of Fourth of July orations in- augurated by the Society. He was PRESIDENT of the Mass. Society from 18 10 until his death, and was Vice- President of the GENERAL Society, 181 1-25. From Har- vard he received the honorary degree of A.M. in 1787, of M.D. in 1810, and of LL.D. in 1817. I20 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE His descent from Thomas'^ Brooks, who came as supposed from Suffolk, Eng., settled in Watertown, 1631, and finally in Concord in 1636, where he d. 21 May, 1667, was through Caleb,^ b. 1632, d. 29 July, 1696; Ehenezer^ b. 24 Feb. 1670, d. 11 Feb. 1743, m. Abigail, dau. of Dr. Thomas Boylston, who d. 26 May, i 756, ae. 82 ; Caleb* (his father), b. 8 July, 1694, d. 21 Nov. 1766, m. 2d Ruth Albree, i Mar. 1750. John m. Lucy Smith, who d. 26 Sept. 1791, ae. 38. They had — Lucy, 16 June, 1775, m. 2 Oct. 1803, Rev. John O'Kill Stuart of Kingston, C. W., d. 1813, leaving one child, Geo. O'Kill Stuart, who has been Mayor of Quebec. Alexander Scammell. John, 20 May, 1 783, fell at the battle of Lake Erie, 10 Sept. 1813, unm. He began to study medicine, but afterward entered the navy, and was killed in the action with an English squadron, a cannon-ball having severed one leg from his body at the hip. ALEXANDER SCAMMELL BROOKS. He was the only surviving son of Gov. John Brooks, whom he SUGG, in 1825 ; b. Medford, 19 Oct. 1781 ; killed 19 Dec. 1836, by a steamboat explosion, at St. John's bar, coast of Florida. App. first lieut. U. S. light artillery, 3 May, 1808 ; capt. 3d artillery, 12 March, 1812 ; brevet major, for gallantry at Plattsburg, 11 Sept. 1814; major 3d artillery, 26 April, 1832; lieut.-col. 4th artillery, 6 April, 1835. He m. 28 ISLay, 181 7, Sarah Turner of Boston. Their children were — John, who d. a Passed Midshipman U. S. N., 4 June, 1843. Lucy, who m. 30 May, 1843, Hon. Edward L. Keyes of Dedham, d. 10 May, 1887. They had : Caivline Florence, 23 March, 1844; Alexander B., and George Stuart his twin, 28 July, 1846; Edward Livingston, 26 Sept. 1848 ALEXANDER BROOKS KEYES. Son of Edward L. and Lucy { Brooks) Keyes ; great-grand- son of Gov. John, and grandson of Alexander S. Brooks, CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 121 whom he succ. in 1869 ; b. Dedham, Mass., 28 July, 1846. Capt. Keyes was com. 2d Heut. ist batt. Mass. heavy artil- lery, 28 May, 1864; 2d lieut. 12th U. S. inf. 23 Feb. 1866; 1st lieut. 30th U. S. inf. 9 Feb. 1867; brevet-capt. 2 March, 1867, for gallant and meritorious services during the war; transferred to lOth cavalry, i April, 1870, and commissioned capt. 6 Dec. 1873. He m. I Feb. 1870, Virginia, dau. of Lucien B. Maxwell, at Cim- maron, N. Max. Children — Berenice M., b. 21 Nov. 1870. Alexander H., b. 4 March, 1872, d. 25 Aug. 1872. Maxwell, b. 15 July, 1873. Lucy Brooks, b. 12 Sept. 1874. Alexander Brooks, b. 18 Nov. 1877, d. 2 Jan. 1880. Edward A., b. 30 Aug. 1880. Ethel F., b. 31 Dec. 1884. Geoffrey, b. 30 Oct. 1888. ISfJcncitr JBroton. He was b. Quincy, Mass., April, 1757; d. Newton Corner, Mass., I Sept. 1844. Private in the Co. of minute-men of Capt. P. B. Adams, in Dec. 1774; corporal in Jacob Loud's Co. of Greaton's reg. 1775 ; transferred to Thayer's Co. of Whitney's reg. 1776; sergeant in Judah Alden's Co. of Bailey's (2d) reg. 1777; com. ensign in Bailey's, 28 Sept. 1777; com. lieut. in Vose's ( 1st) reg. 21 March, 1782, in which he served until the reg. was disbanded, 3 Nov. 1783. He was in several battles preceding that of Saratoga, where he was wounded by a musket-ball in the right shoulder; served in Vose's light inf. reg. under La Fayette, in the Virginia campaign ; was in several skirmishes, including those of Hot Water Springs and Green Springs, and was at the siege of Yorktown. 122 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE He m. Feb. 1789, Hannah Parker of Roxbury, and had : Eliza- beth ; Frederick W. S. A. ; and Catfl^rine, who d. young. FREDERICK VV. S. A. BROWN. Eldest son of Ebenezer, whom he succ. in 1845 ; b. 1792; master of signals in Boston Harbor for twenty-five years, and d. Boston, 5 July, 1850. ®Iit)cr iSroton. He was b. Lexington, Mass., 25 July, 1753 ; com. lieut. in Gridley's artillery in 1775; in Knox's in 1776; capt. -lieut. in Crane's in 1779. After the war he was an innholder in Concord until 1789, when he removed to Virginia, and set- tled on the Ohio River, giving to the place the name of Browtivillc. He was living there on a government pension in 1820. He is credited with a service in the army of three years and six months, to 28 May, 1779. His descent from John Browii^ of Watertown, 1632, d. 1636, ae. 36, and his wife Dorothy, was through John^ b. England, 1 63 1 , who m. 24 April, 1655, Esther or Hester Makepeace; Joseph,^ b. 1677, d. II Jan. 1764, who m. in Watertown, 15 Nov. 1699, Ruhamah Wellington ; Bcnjajitin* (his father), bap. 3 July, 1720, d. iSoi, m. 22 Dec. 1742, Sarah, dau. of Wm. Reed. lETrtoartr JSuflficc. He was b. Roxbury, Mass., 3 July, 1756; d. 31 Oct. 1804. Com. lieut. and quartermaster in Baldwin's reg. of artificers, 1777; 1st lieut. in Parker's Co., same reg., 12 Nov. 1779; later he served in Hazen's reg. His name does not appear on the autograph list of the Mass. Society ; but he contributed his month's pay, and his name is on the parchment roll in the archives of the General Society. His descent from Edward Biigby^ who came to this country in 1634 and settled in Roxbury, Mass.. was through Joseph ^^ b. Rox- CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. I 23 bury, 6 June, 1640, who m. Experience Pitcher; Edward^ b. Rox- bury, Jan. 31, 1669, who m. Abigail Hall; Datiicl^ (his father), b. Roxbury, 14 July, 1703, who m. Abigail Rice. He m. Ruth Blackman, by whom he had several children. ^sa JSuIIarTr. He was b. Sherborn, Mass., 27 April, 1758; d. there 23 Dec. 1804, leaving no child. He was a private in Benj. Bullard's Co., Jona. Brewer's reg., in May-Dec. 1775, and present at Lexington and Bunker Hill; com. ensign in S. Brewer's 12th reg. 7 Oct. 1777; lieut. in Sprout's (12th) reg. 5 July. 1779. His descent from Benjamin ^ BiiUard of Watertown in 1637 ^^s through Benjamin^ one of the first settlers of Sherborn, who d. 1689, and Martha Fairbank of Dedham ; Capt. Samuel,^ b. 26 Dec. 1667, d. 10 Dec. 1727, who m. June, 1690, Deborah, dau. of James Ather- ton ; Lieut. Benjamin* b. 16 Feb. 1697, ^- 1762, m. 20 Dec. 1721, Miriam, dau. of Samuel Morse; Qo\. Samuel^ (his father), b. 2 Aug. 1729, d. 5 March, 1807, m. 10 July, 1754, Mary, dau. of James Coolidge. JAMES BULLARD. He was the grandson of James, the eldest bro. of Lieut. Asa, and was b. Sherborn, 20 Jan. 1813; adm. 1859. He inherited the homestead in Sherborn, and is a merchant and farmer. He was one of the selectmen of the town for several years and has also served as assessor, and in other offices. He m. 18 Aug. 1841, Elizabeth M., dau. of Mark Lothrop. Children — Edward Bretney, b. 27 Aug. 1843; d. 9 March, 1885, leaving one son, Harold Kendall, b. 14 Oct. 1874. Agnes Howard, b. 31 May, 1848. Marietta Leslie, b. 4 Dec. 1850. Carrie Isabel, b. 28 Dec. 1852. 124 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE ^tnvs 13urt)ecfe. The following letter, written by Gen. Burbeck, when in his ninety-third year, to Charles S. Daveis, Esq., of Portla'nd, dated 20 Aug. 1846, comprises the principal events of his career: — " My native place is Boston, where I was born in the year i 754. I spent the early part of my hfe at Old Castle William (now Fort Independence, Boston Harbor), with my father, who was the second officer in command. My education was not such as can be obtained now in the same situation of life, but on a par with the rest of the officers in general. As they obtamed the object they desired (viz., the independence of the country), a classical education could not have done more or better. I attended the common writing-school of the day, eighty years ago, under the superintendence of ' Master Tileston,' but for the principal part of my education I am indebted to my father. " When the battle of Lexington took place, I was in Boston, where every boat and means was taken to prevent the inhabitants from leaving the town. In a short time provisions grew scarce, and regulations were then made for the citizens to leave ; and, a pass be- ing given, their trunks, &c., were examined by British officers, for arms of all kinds. My father being proscribed, and in the pay of the British ordnance department, by a previous arrangement some time before made his escape by crossing from Noddle's Island (now East Boston) to Cambridge, and reported himself to the ' Committee ©f Safety,' or ' Provincial Congress,' of which Dr. Joseph Warren was chairman or president. " I left Boston soon after, as a member of a family of my acquaint- ance, and proceeded to Cambridge ; there joined my father, who was making arrangements for a laboratory to prepare ammunition, &c. I then joined a company of volunteers, commanded by Captain Horton (with two six-pounders). On the 19th May, 1775, I re- ceived a commission, signed by Dr. Joseph Warren, which I thmk is one of the oldest commissions in the Revolutionary service. I was appointed a lieutenant in the Massachusetts line, commanded by CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. I 25 Colonel Richard Gridley,* and again appointed on the ist January, 1776, a lieutenant in a regiment of artillery in the Massachusetts line of the continental army, commanded by Colonel Henry Knox. Again appointed the ist January, 1777, a captain-lieutenant in a regiment of artillery in the Massachusetts line, commanded by Colonel John Crane. Was promoted to a captaincy in said regiment and line the 12th September, 1777, and continued in that regiment to the end of the war, 1783, at which time the army was disbanded and I returned to private life with the brevet rank of major. " During the campaign of 1775 I remained with the army at Cam- bridge. In April, 1776, I marched with the army to the city of New York, and remained with it until the evacuation, September, 1776. During the different operations of that year I was at White Plains and New Jersey, &c. In the year 1777 I joined the army at Saratoga, remained with it a short time, and was ordered to join the main army in Pennsylvania, under the command of General Wash- ington, and was with it during the different engagements at Brandy- wine, Germantown, &c., and closed the campaign at Valley Forge. In 1778 I marched with the army from Valley Forge through New Jersey, and was engaged at the battle of Monmouth. I remained with the army at White Plains during the campaigns of 1779, r78o, 1 781, 1782, and 1783, in the States of Connecticut, New York, and New Jersey. In October, i 786, I was again called into service, and appointed a captain in a battalion of artillery, commanded by Major John Doughty. In 1787 and 1788 I was stationed at West Point, inactive. In August, i 789, I was ordered with my company to join General Lincoln, Colonel Humphries, and Mr. Griffin, to Georgia, as commissioners to form a treaty with the Creek nation ; but through some misunderstanding the treaty failed. The next year it was again renewed, and accomplished in New York. I then returned to New York, and raised a company. Was ordered back to Georgia, and built a fort on St. Mary's River, then the boundaries of the United States. I remained in command until June, 1792 ; then, being pro- moted to a major, I joined the army at Pittsburg, raised for the de- fence of the frontiers, under the command of General Anthony Wayne. On the 30th April, i 793, we took boats and floated down * His name does not appear in the list of officers in Col. Henshaw's orderly book of July, 1775. 126 lUOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE the Ohio river to Legionville, and there spent the winter. In Octo- ber (same year), the army marched six miles in advance of Fort Jefferson, 80 or 90 miles from Cincinnati, into the enemy's country. On the 23d December, 1793, I was ordered with a detachment, con- sisting of eight companies of infantry and one of artillery, with orders to take possession of the field of action of the 4th November, i 791, and there to fortify and establish a post, which was called Fort Re- covery. After completing the work, and recovering two brass field- pieces, which were sunk in a branch of the river Wabash, near the battle-ground, and collecting a great number of skulls (say 200), also many bones, we paid the last respects to those who fell on the 4th November, 1791, by three times three from the same artillery that was lost on that fatal day, but now recovered by this detach- ment of the legion. I returned to the cantonment, and received a handsome compliment in general orders for my services. In August, 1 794, the army marched into the enemy's country. On the 20th of that month an action took place, which resulted in the total defeat of the Indians ; and a peace took place, with a surrender of all the posts of ours in their possession. In September, 1796, I went with two companies to take possession and command at Fort Mackinaw, where I remained until 1800. I was then ordered to Washington, from whence I superintended the forts from Norfolk to Portland un- til the war of 181 2, when I commanded at New York, Newport, New London, and Greenbush. At the close of the war in 181 5, not being retained on the peace establishment, I returned to private life, a poor citizen, after serving my country for nearly 40 years. I have resided in this place with my wife ever since 1815, and have had six children, four of whom are now living." Gen. Burbeck was PRESIDENT of the MASS. See. CiN. from 1846 to his death. He was buried at the Cedar Grove Ceme- tery, New London ; and over his grave the Society erected a handsome granite monument. Upon the front of the obelisk, on a shield, is the following inscription: — BRIGADIER-GENERAL HENRY BURBECK, Born in Boston, Mass., June 8, 1754; Died at New London, October 2, 1848. CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSET IS. 12'] Upon the cube on which the obelisk stands is engraven : The Massachusetts Society of the Cincinnati dedicate this mon- ument to the memory of their late honored President. He was an officer of the United States from the commencement of the Revolu- tionary war until near the close of his hfe. By a patriotic and faith- ful discharge of the high and responsible duties of a gallant soldier, and an exemplary citizen, he became as justly and eminently dis- tinguished as he was rightfully and universally respected. Erected MDCCCL. Col. Wm. Burbeck, his father, was of EngHsh parentage, but b. Boston, 1715, and d. there 22 July, 1785. He was a carver, and his work is still visible on the Corinthian pillars in King's Chapel. He studied gunnery and artillery, and was many years stationed as gunner at Castle William in Boston Harbor. He was lieut.-col. of the artillery in the winter of 1775-76, and subsequently resumed his post at the Castle. His name appears in the list of Commissioned officers of the Mass.' line in 1777-79 ^s " Colonel of y" train and Com' at Lab'y." Gen. Henry, by his wife Lucy E. Rudd, had : Sus.iN Henrietta, 23 Sept. 1815, m. Lieut. E. Kibby, and d. 15 Sept. 1839 ; Char- lotte Augusta, 8 March, 1818 ; Henry Wm., 31 May, 18 19, d. 19 Feb. 1840; Mary Elizabeth, 7 March, 1821, m. Chandler Smith, N. Y. ; WiLLLiM Henry; John Cathcart, i Feb. 1826. WILLIAM HENRY BURBECK. Eldest son of Gen. Henry, whom he succ. in 1850; b. New London, 3 Oct. 1823; resides in that city; engaged in mer- cantile pursuits. Joljn iSurnam.* He was b. Ipswich, Mass., 10 Dec. 1749; d. Derry, N. H., 8 June, 1843 ; was a lieut. in Warner's Co. of Little's reg. at * The name is given as it appears in the autograph list. 128 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE Bunker Hill, and in the battles of BrookI}-n, Trenton, and Princeton; com. capt. of light infantry in M. Jackson's (8th) reg. I Jan. 1777, and in the battles with Burgoyne, relief of Fort Stanwix, battle of Monmouth, and capture of Stony Point; served under Greene in 1780, and under La Fayette in Virginia, and was one of the storming party at the capture of the British redoubt at Yorktown ; com. major 9 Jan. 1783. Col. John Brooks, who commanded the 8th in the absence of Col. M. Jackson, said of Burnam that he was one of the best disciplinarians and most gallant officers of the Revolution. He was one of the founders of Marietta, Ohio, in 1788, and owned a valuable estate at the mouth of the Muskingum River; but left it, and settled in Derry, N. H. His descent from Dea. John''- Buniham, Sen., of Ipswich, 1635, who d. 5 Nov. 1694, and Mary his wife, was through John^ who d. I 716 ; John? who m. Ann, dau. of Capt. Thomas Choate ; Samuel » (his father), who m. 17 Nov. 1743, Martha Story. Maj. John m. Abigail Collins, by whom he had — S.AMUEL, a sea-captain, commanded a privateer in the war of 1 81 2, lost at sea. Eliza, who m. John Doland. Abig.«l Maria, m. Jonathan Ireland. Charles, d. young. John, a merchant in Cincinnati, d. in Dunbarton of consumption and left two daus. : one m. Groesbeck of Cincin., and the other a Gallagher. George, b. 1802, d. i Jan. 185 i, m. 1828, Eliza A. McNiel, and had four sons. JOHN J DOLAND. Grandson and eldest male heir of Major John Burnam, whom he succ. in 1872; was b. Derry, N. H., 29 Aug. 1826; d. 6 April, 1884. He resided in Lawrence, Mass., for over 31 years; was a member of the Massachusetts House of Repre- sentatives for the years 1862 and 1863 ; President of the City CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. I 29 Council of Lawrence in 1868 and 1869; Secretary of the Essex County Manufacturers' and Mechanics' Institute for a number of years ; and Assistant Editor of the New England Odd Fellows' Journal during its continuance. He also held many minor municipal offices. He was of Stoughton, Mass., where he d. in Jan. 1785. In May, 1775, he was an ensign in Heath's reg. ; was a lieut. in Greaton's (24th) reg. at siege of Boston; com. capt. -lieut. in Crane's artillery, i Jan. 1777, and served through the war. J)oi)n (Tallcntcr. He was the son of Eliezer Callender of Boston, and d. Alexandria, Va., in Oct. 1797. He was a member of Pad- dock's Artillery Co. before the Revolution, and com. a com- pany of artillery belonging to Gridley's reg. at the battle of Bunker Hill. Having expended all his cartridges early in the action, a supply of six-pounder cartridges was sent him for his four-pounder guns, and he ordered his men out of the range of the enemy's shot, so that the cartridges might be reduced, and thus enable him to resume his fire. At this mo- ment Putnam rode up, ordered him back, and charged him with cowardice, upon which charge a court-martial, held shortly after the battle, sentenced him to be cashiered. He then joined Capt. John Johnston's Co., and in May, 1776, ap- pears on the roll of Capt. Pierce's Co., in N. Y., as a " cadet." In the battle of Brooklyn, L. I., 26 Aug. i yyO, he was wounded, his superior officers killed ; and he took command of the pieces, which were served with great coolness, courage, and effect until its close, when he was taken prisoner. As soon as he was exchanged, Washington directed the sentence of the court-martial to be erased from the orderly book, restored 9 130 BIUGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE him to his rank, and gave liim command of several important stations. Capt.-lieut. in Crane's art. i Jan. 1777, to the close of the war; in Sullivan's R. I. campaign in 1778. After the war he was a merchant in Virginia. JOHN CALLENDER. Son of Capt. Eliezer of Virginia, and nephew of Capt. -Lieut. John, whom he succ. in 1802. Assist. Sec. of the Society 1806-8 and 1809-21; Sec. 1821-33. He was b. Boston, 4 Feb. 1772; d. there 20 Nov. 1833 ; entered the Latin School in 1779; grad. at H. U. 1790; was an attorney, representa- tive in the Mass. Legislature, clerk of the Sup. Judicial Court, and a lieut. in the Boston Light Infantry on its institution in 1798. He delivered the oration before the town authorities of Boston, July 4, 1797. Of him it was said by Rev. Dr. Baury: "He was the life of the Society and the soul of Concert Hall." Eliezer, his father, m. 23 Nov. 1768, Elizabeth, sister of Gov. Gore. John m. 23 Nov. 1 794, Catharine Templeman of George- town, Md. ; had no issue. JWoscs Carlcton. Of Boxford ; d. 26 Sept. 1835 ; sergeant in Putnam's (5th) reg. I Jan. 1777; com. ensign and quartermaster, 1780; com. lieut. (same reg.) 7 May, 1782. He resided in Haverhill after the war, and was a government pensioner. He left one child, Lemuel C, of Newmarket, N. H. ©sijooTi Carlfton. Of Haverhill, son of Jeremiah and Eunice (Taylor) Carle- ton ; b. 1742; d. Litchfield, N. H., June, 18 16. He served in the Provincial army at Louisburg; entered the Rev. army in April, 1775 ; was ensign and quartermaster in Sargent's (i6th) reg. in 1776; lieut. in Bigelow's (15th) reg. 1777; trans- CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. I3I ferred to McFarland's (invalid) reg. in Dec. 177S, in conse- quence of general debility, and granted half-pay. After the war, he taught mathematics in Boston and elsewhere ; and published maps of Boston* and of N. H., Mass., and the U. S., and treatises on mathematics and navigation. He was a noted pedestrian. His widow Lydia was living in Fran- cestown, N. H., in 1822. IJftcr (Kastainfl. Of France; com. licut. in H. Jackson's (i6th) reg. 24 April, 1779; aide to Gen. Duportail ; in 3d reg. 1783. SHattf)ciiJ CCijamtJcrs. Of Chelmsford; d. Dunstable, ab. 1809, leaving a widow, Martha. Lieut, in Varnum's (9th) reg. 1776; com. capt. in Nixon's (6th) reg. 11 Nov. 1779; served through the war. .Samuel Cljapiit. He was b. Springfield, Mass., 18 June, 1750; was in Natchitoches, La., in 18 10, and prob. d. there unm. He was a lieut. in Paterson's reg. in 1775-76; com. 2d lieut. in Shep- ard's (4th) reg. i Nov. 1777; com. istlieut.20 March, 1779; afterward in H. Jackson's (4th) reg. His descent from Dea. Samuel^ Chapin of Boston, 1641, who removed to Springfield in 1642, d. 11 Nov. 1675, and wife Cisily, was through Japhet^ b. 1642, d. 20 Feb. 1712, m. 22 July, 1664, Abilenah Cooley ; Samuel^ b. 4 July, 1665, d. 19 Oct. 1729, m. 24 Dec. 1690, Hannah Sheldon ; Elisha * (his father), b. 16 July, 1707, com. at Fort Massachusetts in 1754, massacred by Indians at Hoo- sack near Williamstown, 11 July, 1756, m. 30 March, 1737-38, Miriam, dau. of Joseph and Margaret Ely. His nephew Wm. Dewey of Springfield applied for admission unsuccessfully in 1853. * His first map of Boston, drawn in 1795, "f''oni actual surveys," was 14 1-2 X 9 inches- In iSoo he issued "a new plan of Boston," 27 x 20 inches. 132 BIOGRAI'HICAL NOTICES OF THE (taltb mav. He was the son of Joel and Elizabeth (Burke) Clap, and was b. Hardwick, Mass., 9 Feb. 1752 ; d. Greenfield, Mass., 5 June, 1812. His great-great-grandfather, Nicholas Clap, was born in Dorchester, Eng., in 1612, and came to America in 1633, in company with his bro. Thomas, having been preceded in 1630 by his cousin, Capt. Roger Clap of Salcombe Regis. He settled in Dorchester, Mass. ; was twice married, — first, to his cousin Sarah, sister of Capt. Roger Clap (commander of the Castle, capt. of the Dorchester Co., and lieut. of the Ancient and Honorable Artillery Co.) ; second, to Abigail, widow of Robert Sharp, of Brookline. He was a large land- owner in Dorchester and the neighboring towns, and gave to the town of Dorchester, by deed, the rents and profits of Thompson's Island for the support of a free school. He d. 24 Nov. 1679. Caleb Clap was one of the first to respond to the call to arms in 1775, serving as a private at Lexington and Bunker Hill. In Aug., 1775, he was sergt.-major in Col. Doolittle's reg. ; in 1776 ensign in the 26th Mass. reg. ; in 1777-82 lieut. and adjt. in Wesson's (9th) reg.; com. capt. in H. Jackson's (4th) reg. 9 April, 1782, serving until the close of the war. He then settled in Greenfield, Mass., and represented the town in the General Court in 1799. He m. 17 March, 1782, at Rutland, Mass., Elizabeth, dau. of Capt. John and Lucy F. Stone. They had two sons (who died young) and seven daughters. GEORGE CLAPP TRUMBULL. He was the son of George A. and Louisa (Clap) Trumbull, and the eldest grandson of Capt. Caleb Clap, whom he succ. in 1873; b. Worcester, Mass., i March, 18 18; d. Cambridge, CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. I 33 Mass., 25 Ma}', 1885. He was asst. quartermaster-general on Gov. Andrew's staff from 1863 until the close of the war; U. S. pension agent for Mass. from 1865 to 1870; treasurer North End Savings Bank from 1870 until his death. He ni. at Antrim, N. H., 21 Oct. 1865, Nancy Moore, dau. of Mark and Alice B. Woodbury. CHARLES PERKINS TRUMBULL. Brother of the preceding, whom he succ. in 1886; b. 12 Sept. 1830. He was educated at Worcester, Mass., and at Bridgeport, Ct. At the outbreak of the Rebellion he en- listed in the light infantry Co. of Newburyport, and marched to Washington through Baltimore. After serving the three months' term, he enlisted in the 34th Mass. reg., and served as quartermaster's sergeant. After the war he was appointed inspector in the Boston Custom-House. Resides in Beverly, Mass. He m. I June, 18S7, Sarah H., dau. of Amos Heywood. He was a twin bro. of Capt. Caleb, and was b. Hardwick, Mass., 9 Feb. 1752; d. Montgomery, Vt, 5 Nov. 1810. Com. lieut. in M. Jackson's (8th) reg. i Jan. 1777; was in the cam- paign against Burgoyne, and severely wounded at Stillwater; afterward in Wesson's (9th) reg. as lieut. and quartermaster. After the war he m. Nabby, sister of Charles Barnard of Boston, and in 1792 removed to Montgomery, Vt., being the first settler in that town. He was elected to the Leg- islature of Vt. during the years 1803-7 and 1808-10. It is said that the resemblance between the two brothers was so perfect that they could not be distinguished, the one from the other, except by their dress. They were of the " old school," — intelligent, affable, polite, and accessible to all. 134 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE Their descent from Deacon Nicholas Clap^ mentioned above, was through Nathaniel;^ h. 15 Sept. 1640, d. 16 May, 1707, who m. 31 March, i658, Elizabeth, dau. of Lawrence Smith; Deacon Johnj^h. 7 April, 1671, d. 26 Nov. 1735, ^^o m. Silence , 1699, and resided in Sudbury, Mass. ; John,^ oldest child of Deacon John and Silence Clap, b. 21 March, 1700, d. 12 April, 1788, who m. March, 1723, Abigail Estabrook ; Jocl^ (their father), oldest son of John and Abigail, b. 2 July, 1726, d. in 1770, who m Elizabeth Burke, 14 Oct. 1749. He was at one time in the army during the French war. JOEL CLAPP, D.D. Eldest son of Lieut. Joshua, whom he succ. in 1838; was b. Montgomery, Vt. (the first person born in tliat town), 14 Sept. 1793; d. Claremont, N. H., 21 Feb. 1861. In 1810 he entered the University of Vermont, but the sudden death of his father compelled his return home the ne.xt year. He afterward studied law, and was admitted to practice ; but that profession not proving congenial, he turned his atten- tion to theology, and, 2 Oct. 1818, was ordained deacon in the Protestant Episcopal Church by Bishop Griswold of Mas- sachusetts, who also ordained him as priest, 17 Sept. 18 19. He was rector of -the Trinity Church in Shclburne, Vt., for eight years, doing a great deal of missionary work. In 1828 he began to confine his labors to Bethel and Woodstock. In 1832 he accepted a call to Gardiner, Me., where he remained eight years, and in 1848 became rector of a parish in Bellows Falls, Vt., remaining there ten years. In 1858 he took charge of St. Philip's Church, Philipstown, New York. In i860 he accepted the post of chaplain and superintendent of the Home for the Aged and Orphans, at Brooklyn, N. Y. On account of failing health he withdrew from this office, and returned to the parishes of Montgomery and Berkshire in Vermont, closing his work just where it was begun forty years before. CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. I 35 He represented his diocese in seven sessions of the Gen- eral Convention, was thirteen years secretary of the Diocesan Convention, and for seven years was president of the Stand- ing Committee. He received the degree of D.D. from Nor- wich University in 1849. The character of Rev. Dr. Clapp is thus summed up by a writer in the " American Quarterly Church Review," for 1861 : " His most striking excellences were humility, modesty, and kindness ; sympathy with sor- row and suffering; and forbearance in judgment. He was also remarkable for an entire surrender of heart and purpose to truth and simplicity. The character of Dr. Clapp's mind was rather solid than brilliant. With him religion was rather a faith to be received, a life to lead, than a system of theo- logical opinion." He m. abt. 1 8 1 6, Abigail Peckham of Petersham, Mass. CHARLES BARNARD CLAPP. Eldest son of Dr. Joel, whom he succ. in 1S73; was b. Sheldon, Vt., 23 Oct. 1817; educated at Gardiner, Me.; is a bookkeeper; resides in Portland, Me. He m. Sept. 1844, Mercy Porter, dau. of Edward Swan. Children : Agnes Howard, b. 10 Aug. 1846. Charles Porter, b. 22 Jan. 1848. JOSEPH CLARK. He was an original member of the Conn. Society, who after- ward became a member of the Mass. Society by right of resi- dence. He was b. 1755; d. Boston, i Aug. 1814; was app. I Dec. 1776, conductor of military stores belonging to Mass. ; resigned, 10 March, 1781. Had the rank of capt. JOSEPH HILL CLARK. Eldest son of Capt. Joseph, whom he succ. in 18 16. 136 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE ^ctcc ©lasts. He was b. Framingham, Mass., 28 March, 1754; d. Bridge- port, Vt., 1834; ensign in Nixon's (6th) reg. 1776; com. lieut. 1777; com. capt. 13 April, 1780. Selectman of Fra- mingham six years; removed to Bridgeport, Vt., in 1803. His descent from John^ of Watertown, 1639, was through Peter^ b. 27 May, 1639, d. 18 July, 1708 ; James ^ and wife Mary; James, Jr} (his father), b. 10 June, 1710, d. Jan. 1 79S, m. (second) Abigail Gleason, 28 May, 1740. Peter m. Jan. 1785, Polly Nixon, and had : Polly, 22 July, 1785, m. Harris of Bridgeport, Vt. ; Sophia, 25 Sept. 1786, d. unm. 1804 ; Nancy, 5 June, 1788, d. young; Amy, 23 March, 1790, m. Hem- menway, and d. young; Dana; Francis, bap. June, 1794, m. , Crowfoot, Vt. ; George, bap. July, 1796. m. in Shelburne, Vt. ; SuKEY, bap. Nov. 1798, d. 1802. REV. DANA CLAYES. Eldest son of Capt. Peter, whom he succ. in 1844; t>. Fra- mingham, Mass., 3 Oct. 1792; d. Wakefield, Mass., 30 Oct. 1877; Middlebury Coll. 1815 ; Andovcr Sem. 1820; ordained, 4 July, 1821; pastor Congregational Church in Meriden, N. H., 1821—37; home missionary in Vassalboro', Industry, Jefferson, etc., Me., 1841-51. He was b. in Attleborough, Mass., 14 Sept. 1748; d. Bos- ton, 17 April, 1830; H. U. 1766. The celebrated Master Marsh, of Old Braintree (now Ouincy), prepared him for college. After his graduation, he commenced the study of medicine, under Dr. Perkins, and was engaged in successful practice in his native place when the Revolutionary move- ment began, in which he was an early and prominent actor. He was secretary of the Bristol Co. Convention in 1774; and /^^-^^^^ CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. I37 as a member of the General Court convened in Oct. 1774, was the colleague of Robert Treat Paine, a signer of the Declaration of Independence.* Early in 1777 he was com- missioned lieut.-col. in Henry Jackson's (i6th) reg., in which he encountered some hard service, particularly at Springfield, N. J. ; at Monmouth ; and at Quaker Hill, R. I., where he led what may be called a forlorn hope, to delay with 20 men the progress of the Hessian cavalry. His activity, talent, and high military qualities attracted the attention of the Com- mander-in-Chief, who, on 15 June, 1781, appointed him one of his aides, in which capacity he participated in the capture of Cornwallis. He remained in this position until 1784, hav- ing also been com. lieut.-col. commanding the 5th reg. (late Rufus Putnam's) 7 Jan. 1783, and a brig.-gen. by brevet. After the Commander-in-Chief took leave of the army. Col. Cobb passed considerable time at Mt. Vernon, as a member of Gen. Washington's military family. Returning to his home early in 1784, Col. Cobb resumed his profession, and was in that year app. to the bench of the Court of Common Pleas, where he continued 12 years. He was also maj.-gen. of the 5th div. Mass. militia in 1786-93. During the insurrection in Massachusetts in 1786-87, when the courts of justice were threatened by lawless and des- perate men, determined to impede the processes of the law for the collection of debts, Judge Cobb was called upon to act both in his judicial and his military capacity. To protect the meeting of the County Court at Taunton, in September, 1786, the militia were ordered out. "The robe of the judge was thrown aside, the martial garb resumed. Court day arrived. Sounds ominous and threatening aro.se from the * In Col Wm. Henshaw's orderly book (July, 1775), reprinted in the Pro- ceedings of the Mass. Historical Society, vol. xv. p. 75, the name of David Cobb appears as 2d lieut. in Capt. Wm. Head's company of Col. John Thomas's regiment. In the list printed in 4 Force, vol ii. pp. 8:5, S26, Solomon Shaw's name is given instead of David Cobb's. 138 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE mob ; but when the citizen-soldiers were seen steady at their posts, extended in double lines from the doors of the court- house, and when the resolute demeanor of the commander was observed, the tone of defiance sunk to that of remon- strance, and the General was entreated to withdraw his soldiers. 'Away with your whining!' was his determined and memorable reply. ' I will hold this court if I hold it in blood. I will sit as a Judge, or I will die as a General.' In an instant all was quieted ; the mob stole off secretly and silently, and the laws triumphed." * A somewhat similar scene was enacted in October of the same year, upon the opening of the session of the Supreme Court. " On one side of the village [Taunton] was posted a large body of armed insurgents : on the other, the sup- porters of government, the defenders of the laws. The can- non were planted, the matches were lighted and waving. Had the government selected for their commander one who was either rash or timid, that peaceful village might have witnessed transactions equal in atrocity to the most horrible of the French Revolution. The responsibility was great, but the man was equal to the emergency. He drew a line with his sword on the ground, and said to the rebel leader, ' Pass that line and I fire ! The blood be upon your own head ! ' Again the laws triumphed : the court sat in peace, the insurgents dispersed ; and from that day to this, in that county, not an arm has been raised to resist the civil authority." f Elected in May, 1789, sole representative of Taunton to the General Court, he was at once chosen Speaker, retaining that position until 1793, when he became a member of the * From the address of Hon. Francis Baylies, on the Life and Character of Gen. David Cobb, July 2, 1830. t Gen. Cobb's report to Gov. Bowdoin concerning the riotous demonstration in Oct. 17S6, is printed in the Collections of the Old Colony Historical Societj', No. 4, pp. 83-S5. CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 139 Third Congress. In 1795 he settled with his family in Maine, as agent of the "Bingham Purchase; " and in 1799 was ap- pointed agent of the proprietors of Gouldsboro', Me. In 1802 he was elected to the Senate from the eastern dis- trict, and was immediately chosen President of that body, a post he held for three years. . He was in 1808 elected to the Council; was Lieut.-Gov. of Mass. in 1809; was one of the Board of Military Defence during the war of 18 12; Chief- Justice C. C. P. for Hancock Co. in 1803-9; and maj.-gen. of the loth div. of the State militia in 18 13. He took up his final residence in Taunton in 1820. He received the honorary degree of Master of Arts from New Jersey College in 1783, and from Brown University in 1790; was a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and of the Mass. Medical Society, and was VicE-President of the Mass. Society of the Cincinnati in 1810. Gen. Cobb was the parent of the flourishing academy at Taunton ; and whenever any public good was to be effected, was active and efficient, contributing from his own resources to the full extent of his means. As a physician, he was sa- gacious, learned, and eminently successful. As a soldier, he was fearless and intrepid, calm and collected in danger, rapid and decisive in judgment, and prompt in execution. To the courts he brought a competent knowledge of the law. Although he was not a lawyer, his clear perceptions and strong sense enabled him to detect sophistry, and to remove the impediments with which artifice and legal inge- nuity too often contrive to embarrass the progress of justice. A Federalist in politics, he was distinguished for his love of order and his attachment to the Constitution. As the pre- siding officer of a public body, he was unrivalled. Graceful and dignified in his deportment, he despatched the public business with ease and facility, and won by his impartial per- formance of the duties of the chair the praise even of his 140 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE adversaries. His manners and disposition were pleasing ; his wit and humor, his fund of anecdote, and above all his powers of conversation, his vivacity, and flow of language, made him the delight of his friends, and a most acceptable guest at the social board. Hon. Joseph Williamson, of Belfast, Me., thus describes the General's appearance and manners: "In stature he v^^as large, and had a full face and over-awing eye. He was hasty in temper, and expressed himself with much energy and a most commanding voice. I have heard him order a lawyer to silence, and to his seat, with a power of voice and feeling that was almost overwhelming. On a certain occasion, sup- posing that an attorney at the bar was guilty of a fraudulent act, he exclaimed with great force, while on the bench, ' A dishonest lawyer ! he is worse than the devil, for he violates personal confidence and a sacred oath ! ' His costume was that of the Revolution. When he attended court, he wore a tri-cocked hat, broad-backed coat, a single-breasted jacket with pocket-flaps, breeches with bands and buckled at the knee, and high white top-boots. He walked with a measured gait, his military air having become second nature." His descent from AusUn ' or Augustine'^ Cobb was through Mor- gan^ b. 29 Dec. 1673, d. 30 Sept. 1755, m. 22 May, 1735, Flsther Hodges; Thomas^ (his father), who m. Lydia, eldest dau. of James Leonard of Taunton. Col. David m. in i 766, Eleanor Bradish, and had — Eleanor, 23 March, 1767, d. 30 Oct. 1842, m. James Hodges. Betsey, 5 June, 1768, d. April, 1830, m. P^benezer Smith. Thomas, 29 Jan. 1772, d. Oct. 1844, m. Abby Hall. WiLLWM Gray, 10 Feb. i 773, unm., killed, 4 Nov. 1791, in battle with the Indians, being an ensign under Gen. St. Clair. Eunice, 17 Nov. 1774, d. 6 June, 1826, m. 1792, Hon. S. S. Wilde, and had nine children. Mary, 26 July, 1776, d. 17 Oct. 1S51. m. Col. John Black of Ellsworth, Me. CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. I4I David, 3 April, 1778, unm., killed by Indians on N. W. Coast, 24 Oct. 1794. Sally, 15 Jan. 1780, d. se. ab. 17. Ebenezer Bradish, 30 Oct. 1781, d. bef. 1840. Henry Jackson, 18 Dec. 1784, d. unm. July, 1848. Geo. Washington, 14 Jan. 1790, m. Abby Crocker, dau. of Hon. Samuel of Taunton. After d. of bro. David in 1794, G. W. prefixed David to his name; d. 27 Feb. 1832. His children were : George Thomas ; Samuel Crocker, m. 1 848, Aurelia L. Beattie ; Elizabeth Baylies, m. Baylies Sanford of Boston ; Sarah Crocker, m. Curtis Guild of Boston. SAMUEL CROCKER COBB. Son of David G. W., and grandson of Gen. David, wliom he succ. in 1856; was b. in Taunton, 22 May, 1826. He was fitted for college at the Bristol Academy in Taunton; but cir- cumstances led to a change in the course of life which had been originally marked out for him, and at the early age of sixteen he entered a foreign shipping-house in Boston. As supercargo he went on several voyages to distant ports, and acquired a thorough knowledge of the trade relations between different parts of the world. At a later day he established a house of his own, in which he successfully carried on the same business for over thirty years. He served as a member of the Roxbury Board of Aldermen in 1861 and 1862; and on the annexation of Ro.xbury to Boston, in 1867, he was chosen by unanimous vote as the first representative from that section of the city to the higher branch of the City Coun- cil. After serving one term he declined a re-election. From 1869 to the close of 1873 he was a member of the city Board of Directors for Public Institutions, and introduced many eco- nomical reforms in the management of that department of the local government. In Dec. 1873, lit.' was chosen Mayor of Boston by a nearly unanimous vote. " Although not 142 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE specially identified with any political party, his sympathies after the dissolution of the Whig party to which he originally belonged, were generally with the Democratic party on national questions. He was a firm believer, however, in a non-partisan administration of local affairs; and so well did he act up to his convictions in that matter, that the citizens elected him for three successive terms, — the last time against the united opposition of the two leading political parties. During these three years (1874-76) a great many important measures were acted upon." * In accordance with his recommendation an act was passed by the Legislature in 1S75, authorizing the appointment of park commissioners, with authority to take lands, lay out public parks, and make rules for their government. The men whom Mayor Cobb selected for the service were not only highly competent, but were willing to serve without pay. He also took the initiative in devising a plan for improving the drainage of the city, by which some thirteen miles of inter- secting sewers were built, pumping-works established at Old Harbor Point, and an outlet given to deep water through a tunnel under Dorchester Bay. In view of the great expendi- tures involved in the enlargement of the water-works, he urged the City Council to place the Water Department under the charge of a paid commission ; and an act was accordingly passed authorizing him to appoint such a commission. Among other important measures which received Mr. Cobb's support during his administration of the Mayor's office were those providing for the appointment of registrars of voters, and inspectors of elections, and the limitation of municipal indebtedness. He took the opportunity afforded by the adoption of the last-named measure to urge upon the City Council the policy of raising by taxation, annually, a suffi- * Memorial History of Boston, vol. iii. p. 2S4. CINCINNATI OK MASSACHUSETTS. 1 43 cient amount of money to pay for all expenses incurred by the city, except for the enlargement of the water-works ; it was known and highly applauded as the " Pay as you go " policy. " Perhaps the most notable event of Mr. Cobb's adminis- tration, certainly the one which possesses the greatest histori- cal interest, was the celebration of the one hundredth anni- versary of the Battle of Bunker Hill. On the evening of June 16, 1875, there was a very remarkable meeting in Music Hall. Many of the men who had taken a leading part in the war of the Rebellion — rebel and patriot, the soldier of the Union and the soldier of the Confederacy — met for the first time in peace, and with a common object, — the commemora- tion of the most important of the series of events which re- sulted in the creation of an independent nation. The Mayor's address of welcome was admirably adapted to the spirit of the meeting, and met with a very cordial response from the city's guests. On the following day there was a great pro- cession, composed of various military and civic bodies, and an oration on the site of the historic battle-ground by Charles Devens, Jr., a justice of the Supreme Court of the Common- wealth." * After his retirement from the Mayor's office Mr. Cobb was chosen President of the National Revere Bank; but re- signed in March, 1878, when he was chosen Actuary of the Mass. Hospital Life Insurance Co., to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Hon. George Tyler Bigelow, formerly Chief- Justice of the Supreme Court. That position he now holds. During the past 25 years he has held many other positions of trust and responsibility, connected with the business, philan- thropic, and charitable institutions of the city and the State, and his name has been connected with every movement to promote good government or to increase the spiritual and material prosperity of the people. * Memorial History of Boston, vol. iii. p. 2S7. 144 lilOGRAPHlCAL NOTICES OF THE In 1865 he was chosen SECRETARY of this SOCIETV, to fill the vacancy caused by the promotion of Col. Sever to the Vice-Presidency; in 1871 he was chosen Vice-President in place of Admiral Thatcher, promoted to be President; and in 1880 he was chosen President in place of Admiral Thatcher, deceased. Of his untiring interest in the beneficent work of the Society, it is unnecessary to say anything here. He m. 1848, Aurelia L., dau. of William Beattie, Esq., of Rock- land, Me. No children. JTljomas CtojjstocII. He was b. Haverhill, Mass., 4 Aug. 1746; d. Gilmanton, N. H., 3 Sept. 1810. His father, Nathaniel, had 19 children, eight of whom served in the war of the Revolution, their united services amounting to forty years and some months. Thomas was captain of the company raised at Haverhill, 19 April, 1775. He started for the scene of hostilities on that day, leaving unburied his child Joseph, who had died three days before. He was at the battle of Bunker Hill and the siege of Boston, serving in S. Gerrish's (afterward L. Baldwin's) reg. On 21 Feb. 1777, he was com. major in Vose's (ist) reg., and served in that capacity until the end of the war. He then settled in Gilmanton, N. H., where he held a number of town offices; from 1784 to 1810 he was Chief- Justice of the Court of Common Pleas His descent from John Coi^swcll^ (b. 1592, d. 29 Nov. 1669), of Westbnry Leigh, Wilts, Eng., who m. 10 Sept. 161 5, Elizabeth, dau. of Rev. Wm. Thompson, and emigrated to Ipswich in 1635, was through William^ b. 161 9, d. 15 Dec. 1700, who m. 1649, Su- sanna, dau. of Adam Hawkes ; /<;/!«,'' b. 12 May, 1665, d. 1710, who m. Hannah, dau. of Dea. Wm. Goodhue, Jr. ; Nathaniel* b. 19 Jan. 1707, d. 23 March, 1783, who m. 31 Jan. 1740, Judith, dau. of Joseph Badger. CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 1 45 Thomas m. 26 Feb. 1770, Ruth, dau. of Gen. Joseph Badger, and had — Nathaniel, b. 19 Jan. 1773, d. Red River, La. or Ark., Aug. 1813; Dartm. Coll. 1794. Judith, who m. Hon. Nathaniel Upham of Rochester (Judith Almira, dau. b. 26 March, 1811, m. 20 June, 1831, Hon. James Bell). Thomas, killed in the war of 1S12, at Chateauguay, N. Y., 26 Oct. 1813. William, b. i Nov. 1784, capt. in war of 181 2. Fr-Wcis, b. 24 April, 1787, Dartm. Coll. 181 1, a lieut. in the army, and d. Plattsburg, N. Y., 8 Dec. 181 2. Pearson, b. 14 Feb. 1790. Frederick, b. 23 March, 1792. Alfred, b. 27 June, 1795. CHARLES UPHAM BELL. Son of James and Judith Almira (Upham) Bell, and great- grandson of Capt. Thomas Cogswell, whom he succ. in 1876; was b. Exeter, N. H., 26 Feb. 1843 ; grad. Bowdoin Coll. 1863. He served in the war of the Rebellion as a private in Co. C, 42d Mass. Vols. ; was president of the Common Council of Lawrence in 1881, and presidential elector 8th Dist. Mass., in 1888. He is one of the Overseers of Bowdoin Coll., a trustee of the Brewster Free Academy, and a trustee of the Essex Sav- ings Bank. He has held other positions of trust and responsi- bility ; and is author of an inde.K to Mass. Reports. He m. 21 Nov. 1872, Helen Maria, dau. of Joseph P. Pitman of Laconia, N. H. She d. 28 March, 1883. Children — Alice Lyon, b. 21 Oct. 1873. Mary White, b. 25 July, 1875. Joseph Pitman, b. 10 Jan. 1877. Helen Pitman, b. 27 June, 1879. He m. (second), 10 April, 1884, Elizabeth Woodbury Pitman, sister of his first wife. 146 BIUGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THK The younger bro. of Maj. Thomas; was b. Haverhill, Mass., 2 Oct. 1752; d. Dover, N. H., 28 Jan. 1826. He was ensign in his brother's company in May, 1775, and served at the battle of Bunker Hill and the siege of Boston. In 1776 he was com. as lieut. in L. Baldwin's reg. ; and on i Jan. 1777, he was com. capt. in Wesson's (9th) reg. He was in the bat- tles of Trenton, Princeton, and Monmouth, and served until the end of the war. While in the army in New Jersey he had charge of some Hessian prisoners, two of whom escaping to the river, he rushed in and recaptured them both. At the battle of Monmouth he displayed such energy and bravery that Gen. Washington, who was an eyewitness of his deeds, pointed him out by a feather in his cap, and promoted him on the spot. After the war he settled in Dover, N. H., and served in both branches of the N. H. Legislature. He became a member of the N. H. Society of the Cincinnati by right of residence, and was Vice-President from 1803 till 1809, and President from 1809 till 1823. He m. 20 Nov. 1785, Lydia (Baker), widow of Capt. S. Wal- lingford, and had — SoPHM, 20 July, 1786, m. J. M. Currier of Dover, d. i8 Sept. 181 7, leaving several children. JOSEPH BADGER UPHAM. He was the great-grandson of Amos Cogswell, whom he succ. in 1878; b. Portsmouth, N. H., 25 Dec. 1840; d. there 14 Aug. 1889. He grad. Bowdoin Coll. 1861, and entered the U. S. Navy as 3d asst. engineer, 17 Nov. 1862. He was pro- moted to be passed asst. engineer, i Jan. 1868; and placed on the retired list of the navy, 27 Dec. 1875, on account of ill health caused by service in the war of the Rebellion. CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. I47 Samutl ©oflstocU. A relative of Amos and Thomas; was of Windham, Ct., and died before 181 2 ; com. lieut. in H. Jackson's ( i6th) reg. I July, 1777; dep. judge advocate in Brooks's (7th) in 1783. He was b. Boston, 1757, d. Pawtucket, R. I., 29 Aug. 1833. Com. 2d lieut. in H. Jackson's (i6th} reg. I Feb. 1777; ad- jutant, 27 Oct. 1778-9 April, 1779; com. ist lieut. i March, 1779; reg. quartermaster, i Jan. 1782 -July, 1784; distin- guished at Quaker Hill, R. I., in Aug. 1778, and at Springfield, N. J., in June, 1780; said to be a brave officer and a good disciplinarian. He m. in June, 1789, Polly Aborn of Paw- tucket, and removed to R. I. in 1797. His dau. MarY ANN Howe was living in Dec. 185 i. Z3at)iti Qtools^. He was b. Weston, Mass., 12 March, 1751; d. Portland, Me., 27 Oct. 1823. Before the Revolution he was a butcher in Boston, and a member of Paddock's Artillery Co. ; com. 1st lieut. Knox's artillery, i Jan. 1776; capt. in Crane's artillery, 14 March, 1778. He used to relate that the night before the battle of Monmouth he slept on a gun-carriage, and dreamed that his lieutenant was wounded precisely as he himself was in the battle that ensued. HORATIO GATES COOK. Only son of Capt. David, whom he succ. in 1824; b. 1784; d. Portland, Me., 20 Jan. 1863. ISjcfeicl Qtoopet. OfDanvers; was an ensign in Hutchinson's reg. in 1775- 76; lieut. in Putnam's (5th) reg. 1777-82; com. capt. in 148 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE Sprout's (2d) reg. 7 Jan. 1783; removed to Ohio in 1788; and was living at VVarrenton, O., in 1807. Samuel CEooiJer. He was b. Boston, 1760; d. near Alexandria, Va., 19 Aug. 1840; com. 2d lieut. Crane's artillery, i Feb. 1777; quarter- master, 14 May, 1778; lieut. and adjutant, 1783. He was the official inspector of pot and pearl ashes in N. Y. City and County, 1808-30. Transferred to N. Y. Society in 1804. His son Samuel, b. 1798, grad. at West Point, 1S15 ; served in the Mexican war as asst. adj. -gen.; became adj. -gen. U. S. army, 1852 ; resigned his commission in March, 1861, and was appointed by Jefferson Davis adj. -gen. Confed. army. He organized the Confed. forces, and had the highest rank in the service. He was captured with Davis in 1865, was paroled, and died in 1876 at his home, near Alexandria, Va. GEORGE HENRY COOPER. Grandson of Lieut. Samuel, whom he succ. in 1889; was b. Fort Hamilton, N. Y. harbor, 29 July, 1822. He was appointed midshipman in the U. S. navy, 11 Aug. 1837, ^"^1 during that year was attached to the fleet on the coast of Florida, which was co-operating with the army against the Seminole Indians. From 1838 till 1842 he was attached to the frigate " Constitu- tion " on the Pacific. He was promoted to be passed mid- shipman in June, 1843, and served on the " Flirt" during the Mexican war. From 1847 till 1851 he was attached to the Yard at Norfolk; and during the five years following he served on the "Susquehanna" in the East India squadron. He was com. lieut. 8 May, 1851, and on his return from the East Indies was again assigned to duty at Norfolk. Afterward he served on the frigate " Roanoke," in the home squadron, and later at the Portsmouth Yard. In July, 1862, he was appoint^'d commander, and given the supply-vessel CINCINXATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 1 49 " Massachusetts," of the Atlantic squadron. In 1863 he took command of the " Mercedita," in the South Atlantic blockading squadron. For some weeks he commanded the monitor " Sangamon," employed on picket-duty off Charles- ton harbor, and in shelling Fort Sumter and the batteries on Sullivan's Island. Later he was stationed at Stone Inlet, S. C, as senior naval officer, co-operating with the army. From 1863 till 1867 he commanded successively the " Sonoma," the " Glaucus," and the " Winooski." He was com. capt. in Dec. 1867, and stationed at the Norfolk Yard. Afterward he was on sea duty for some time in command of the frigate " Colo- rado." During 1872-73 he was commandant at the Norfolk Yard. In June, 1874, he was appointed commodore, and as- signed to the command of the Yard at Pensacola. From 1878 till 1880 he was president of the Board of Inspection; and later commandant of the Brooklyn Yard. In 1881 he was com. Rear Admiral, and given command of the North Atlantic station. In 1884, being then 62 years of age, he was, in accordance with the Act of Congress, placed on the retired list. He m. II Dec. 1844, Caroline Augusta, dau. of Guy Carleton Wheeler. Children — Imogen P.^ge, b. 28 Sept. 1845. Mason Sinclair, b. 10 July, 1847. George Henry, b. 30 July, 1851. Charles Morril, b. i Nov. 1856. William Hamilton, b. 28 Aug. 1861. ANDREW CRAIGIE. He was the son of Andrew and Elizabeth Craigie ; b. Bos- ton, 7 June, 1743; d. Cambridge, Mass., 19 Sept. 1819; educated at the Boston Latin School ; appointed Apothe- cary-General in the Continental service, i Jan. 1777, on Gen. Washington's recommendation, under the resolution of 150 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE Congress reorganizing the Medical Department. After faith- ful service, most of the time in Philadelphia, he was honor- ably discharged, 3 Nov. 1783. He then settled at Cambridge, having purchased the Vassall estate, — well known as Wash- ington's Headquarters, and, later, as the home of Henry W. Longfellow, — for which he paid :£3,7SO, a large sum for those days. He was interested in the construction of the bridge which still bears his name, from West Boston to Lech- mere's Point, East Cambridge. He was an original member of the N. Y. Society, but became a member of the Mass. Society by right of residence. ANDREW FOSTER. Eldest son of Andrew Foster, and grand-nephew of Gen. Andrew Craigie, whom he succ. in 1875 ; was b. Boston, 5 Jan. 1815; d. about 1885; H. U. 1833; adm. Suffolk Bar, 1836. He resided in New York City during the latter part of his life. Soijn (ifranr. Col. Crane, commander of the Mass. reg. of artillery in the continental service during the Revolutionary war, was b. Braintree, Mass., 7 Dec. 1744, and d. at Whiting, Me., 21 Aug. 1805. He was one of the famous "Tea Party" in Dec. 1773, and came near being killed on that occasion by the falling of a chest of tea on his head. He was a member of Adino Paddock's Artillery Co., and took an active part in all the patriotic movements of the day. He followed the trade of a house-carpenter; but as that branch of industry had, with others, been paralyzed by the " Boston Port Bill," which went into operation, i June, 1774, Crane with his partner, Ebenezer Stevens, went to Providence, R. L Here, upon receiving the news of the battle of Bunker Hill, they raised two companies of artillery, with which they marched CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. I5I to Roxbury, and joined Gridley's reg., Crane receiving the com. of major, and Stevens that of captain, in the R. I. " Train." Crane was constitutionally bold and daring, as well as ambi- tious of military glory ; and possessing a remarkably keen vision, was exceedingly skilful as an artillerist, — a talent he had frequent opportunities to display during the siege of Boston. On 8 July, 17751 a little after two o'clock in the morning, Majors Tupper and Crane, with a number of volun- teers, attacked the British advanced guard at Brown's House, on Boston Neck, routed them, and burned two houses. This was regarded as a very " brave action," and " well performed." During the siege he commanded a breastwork on Boston Neck. Com. maj. in Knox's art. reg. i Jan. 1776, he accompanied the army to New York ; and while cannonading a British frigate which was running past his batteries at Corlaer's Hook, 14 Sept., was severely wounded by a cannon-ball which carried off a part of his foot, disabling him for several months. Com. col. i Jan. 1777, he raised a reg. in Mass., officered chiefly of those who had been trained under Pad- dock, Gridley, and Knox; a Corps not exceeded in discipline, valor, and usefulness by any in the service. It was principally employed with the main army, and near the person of the Commander-in-Chief, and was relied on as an essential auxil- iary in the most important battles. No military organization in that army participated in so many eventful scenes, or won more laurels. Besides the actions of the main army, portions of it were with .Sullivan in the R. I. campaign, with Gates at Saratoga, and in the heroic defence of Red Bank on the Delaware. He was brcvetted a brig.-gen. 30 Sept. 1783, and after the peace formed a partnership with Maj. Lemuel Trescott, in the lumber business, at Passamaquodd}', Me., in which they were 152 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE unsuccessful. The connection was dissolved, and he finally settled in Whiting, Washington Co., Me. " Col. Crane," says Gen. Burbeck, " possessed great reso- lution, energy, and courage, and was at the same time per- fectly cool and gentlemanly in danger ; in short, he was Gen. Knox's factotum in cases of emergency." Though entitled to a pension on account of his wound, which had to some.ex- tent disabled him, he was too high-spirited to accept such assistance ; but ill health and poverty finally overcame his scruples, and just previous to his death he made his application. His descent from Hcniy'^ Crane of Dorchester, b. 1624, was through Ebenezer'^ of Milton, b. 10 Aug. 1665, who was in the Can- ada Expedition of 1690, and Mary Tolman ; Abijah^ (his father), who m. 3 March, 1 733, Sarah Field, who d. 3 Sept. 1 742, and (second) 7 Jan. 1 743, Sarah Beverley. Their children were Col. John, .^bijah, and Miriam. Col. Crane m. in 1767 Miss Wheeler, and had — John, 1768, d. 1835. Abijah. Isaac. Alice, 1770, d. 1841, m. William Allan. Their only son, George W., left an only son, George Hayward, b. Boston, 1832. Mehitable, 1779, d. 1846, m. John .'Mien. CiURLOTTE, 1782, d. 1840, m. Horatio Gates .\llen. Joljn Crane. Of Hanover, N. H. ; surgeon of Vose's (ist), afterward of C.Smith's (6th) reg. (1781-83); d. 1805. JOHN HUNTINGTON CRANE. Only son of Surgeon John Crane, whom he succ. in 1809; b. Hanover, N. H., 1780; d Louisville, Ky., 26 Sept. 1822; Dartmouth Coll. 1799. He read law, began practice in Straf- CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. I 53 ford, Vt., removed to Boston, and afterward to Sandusky, O., and finally to Louisville, Ky. He never married. Soscpl) etrocfecc. He was son of Rev. Josiah, of Taunton; b. 24 Feb. 1749; d. [3 Nov. 1797; H. U. 1774; com. lieut. in Greaton's (3d) reg. i6Sept. 1778; resigned, 24 July, 1 781, having performed four years and nine months' service in the army. First Assist. Sec. of the Society, 1794-98. His descent from William'^ Crocker of Scituate in 1636, and wife Alice, was through ybj-M/e," b. Barnstable 19 Sept. 1647, d. 2 Feb. 1698, who m. Melatiah, dau. of Gov. Thos. Hinckley, 22 Oct. 1668 ; Josiah^ b. 8 Feb. 1684, d. 10 Oct. 1721, who ni. 10 .April, 1718, Desire Thacher ; Rev. Josiah * of Taunton (his father), b. 30 Oct. I 719, d. 28 Aug. 1774, and Rebecca, dau. of Ebenezer .Allen. Joseph m. 15 .'\pril, 1779, Hannah, dau. of Rev. Samuel Mather of Boston, b. 27 June, 1752, d. 10 July, 1829. They had five sons and five daughters. SAMUEL M.ATHER CROCKER. Eldest son of Capt. Joseph, whom he succ. in 1804; b. 10 May, 1783; d. Milford, Mass., 9 March, 1852; H. U. 1801. He practised law successively in Douglas, U.xbridge, Fitch- burg, and Milford, Mass. He m. Charlotte Coffin. They had — Samuel Mather, b. 11 Aug. 1812, d. 15 Dec. 1879. Joseph, b. 28 Nov. 1813, d. 13 Aug. 1885. Allen, b. 16 Nov. 181 5, d. 11 Jan. 1849. WiLLL'iM, b. 15 Aug. 1 81 8 (is living in Chicago). George, b. 21 July, 1820, d. 20 Dec. 1889. James, b. 18 March, 1822, d. 26 Feb. 1853. SAMUEL MATHER CROCKER. Eldest son of Samuel Mather, whom he succ. in 1855 ; was b. Douglas, Mass., 11 Aug. 1S12; d. Bcllingham, Mass., 15 154 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE Dec. 1879; m. 1834, Cemelia, dau. of Willard Wilcox. They had — Marcelus M., b. 5 Nov. 1834, d. 16 March, 1837. Charlotte, b. i Aug. 1836. Emily Sophia, b. 29 Jan. 1838, d. 17 June, 1844. Francis Allen, b. 21 March, 1840, d. 22 June, 1843. Willard, b. 27 June, 1842, d. 2 July, 1843. Elizabeth, b. 4 March, 1844. Clara Amelia, b. 22 Dec. 1845. Lewis Cass, b. 16 April, 1849. Joseph Willard, b. 7 March, 1852. Francis Herbert, b. 16 Dec. 1853. Albert Henry, b. i Dec. 1858, d. 4 Jan. 1883. LEWIS CASS CROCKER. Fourth son of the above-named Samuel Mather (whom he succ. in 1882), and great-grandson of Lieut. Joseph; was b. Milford, Mass., 16 April, 1849. He is a commercial trav- eller, and resides in Allston, Mass. He m. (first) 20 Nov. 1871, Maggie E., dau. of Wm Corcoran, by whom he had William F'rancis, b. 22 Nov. 1873, and Frederic Albert, b. 20 Jan. 1875, d. 6 May, 1882. He m. (second) i Nov. 1877, Carrie, dau. of John Smith, by whom he had Bessie May, b. 20 March, 1882 ; Ethel Francis, b. 17 Jan. jFlorcncc (Crotolcj?. Sergt. in John Johnston's Co., Knox's artillery, in Feb. 1776; 2d lieut. in Crane's artillery, i Jan. 1777; com. 1st lieut. I Oct. 1778. A certificate from Gen. Knox, dated West Point, 12 July, 1783, says of Lieut. Crowley: "In the discharge of his duty he has at all times approved him- self an attentive, brave, and intelligent officer." He was living in Boston in 1793. CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. I 55 He was b. Pembroke, Mass., 8 April, 1753; received a common school education, and learned the trade of a house- carpenter, which he was following near Boston when the Rev- olutionary war broke out. Com. a lieut. in Trescott's Co. of Brewer's reg. in July, 1775; ist lieut. same Co. in A. Whit- comb's (6th) reg. Jan. 1776; capt. in Paterson's, afterward Vose's (ist) reg. i Jan. 1777; in Rufus Putnam's reg. in 1780; brigade major, i Dec. 1781 ; engaged in many bat- tles and skirmishes, and noted as a most successful partisan officer. In May, 1 780, while stationed at the outposts oi the so-called " neutral ground " between Kingsbridge and White Plains, N. Y., he surprised and captured a detachment of De Lancey's corps of Tories, and being pursued by Col. Simcoe's mounted rangers, repulsed the attacks of that of- ficer, and reached his post with all the prisoners. For his bravery and skill in this affair, he was highly complimented by the Commander-in-Chief After the war he removed from Boston to Marietta, O., where, soon after his arrival in Aug. 1788, he was com. by Gov. St. Clair as a capt., and in 1797 colonel of the 1st reg. of militia. One of tlie founders of the Belpre colony in 1789, and d. there in Aug. 1814. His descent from Matthnv^ Gushing oi Hingham, 1638, b. 1588, d. 30 Sept. 1660, and his wife Nazareth Pitcher, was through John^ b. 1627, who was an assistant in 1689-91, d. 1708, who m. in 1656, Sarah, dau. of Nicholas Jacob ; John, Jr. ,^ b. 28 April, 1662, d. 1737, Judge of the Sup. Court, who m. 20 May, 1687, Deborah Loring of Hull; Elijah,^ h. 2 March, 1698, who m. Elizabeth Barker in 1724; Elijah, Jr!" (his father). Nathaniel m. in Nov. 1775, Elizabeth Heath, by whom he had six sons and six daughters : of these were Nathaniel, Henry, Varnum, Thomas, Sally, and Elizabeth, all of whom m. and settled in Ohio. 156 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE STljotnas Ousting. Gen. Thomas Humphrey Gushing was b. Pembroke, Mass., in Dec. i/SS- He was a sergeant in his brother Nathaniel's company in 1776, and was in Arnold's naval battle on Lake Ghamplain; com. 2d lieut. in Paterson's (afterward Vose's), reg. 28 March, 1777; ist lieut. 12 Jan. 1778, and was taken prisoner, 14 May, 1781. App. capt. 2d U. S. inf. 4 March, 1791, serving under Gen. St. Glair; major 1st sub. legion, 3 March, 1793; inspector, 24 F"eb. 1797; adjutant and in- spector of the arm}', i April, 1802 ; col. 2d inf 7 Sept. 1805 ; adj. -gen. and brig. -gen. 2 July, 1812, and commanded at Sto- nington, Gt , when the attack of the British squadron under Admiral Hardy was repulsed in 1814; Gollector of the Port of New London from Jan. 181 5, until his death, 19 Oct. 1822. He fought a duel with Mr. Lewis, M.G. from Va., in which his life was saved by his watch, which was struck by his ad- versary's ball. An account of Gen. Gushing's trial by court- martial was published in 1812. ]3rnjamtn Dana. He was b. Boston, 24 Feb. 1752; d. unm in that city, 3 April, 1836. Lieut, in Wigglesworth's (13th) reg.; com. ist lieut. 24 Feb. 1778; in Sullivan's campaign in R L, and served through the war. After the army was disbanded, he went into business in Boston as a banker and financial agent, and won the respect and confidence of his contemporaries. His descent from Richard'^ Dana of (\imbridge, Mass., 1637, d. 2 April, 1690, m. ab. 1648, to Anne Bullard, was through Benjamin,'^ b. 20 Feb. 1660, d. 13 Aug. 1738, m. 24 May, 1688, Mary Buck- minster; Benjamin,^ b. 28 April, 1689, lived in Brighton, d. 5 June, 1 75 1, m. 23 July, 1724, Anna Francis; fohn* (his father), b. 10 July, 1725, d. 26 Dec. 1793, m. in 1748, .\bigail Smith. CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 1 57 ISAAC DANA. Only surviving bro. of Lieut. Benjamin, whom he succ. in 1837, was b. 9 Dec. 1768; d. Watertown, Mass., 12 July, 185 1. He learned the carpenter's trade, and carried on the business of a builder. He m. Hannah Fisher, cousin of Hon. Fisher Ames. They had two sons and si.x daughters. BENJAMIN DANA. Eldest son of Isaac, whom he succ. in 1846; b. Newton, Mass., 16 June, 1804; d. Watertown, Mass., 13 April, 1866. He held various town offices and positions of trust during his forty years' residence in Watertown. He was one of the founders and a director of the Watertown Bank, and served for many years as adjutant and major of the 4th reg. M. V. M. He m. II April, 1829, Martha Stratton, dau. of Capt. Charles Stratton of Weston and Watertown, and had — BENJ.4MIN, b. 28 Feb. 1830. Charles Stratton, b. 21 April, 1834. Benjamin Dana was elected in 1876, to succeed his father. He resides in London, Eng. Josijua ZSanfortJ). Son of Joshua, who commanded a battalion at the battle of Bennington; was b. in Western (now Warren), Mass., 26 Nov. 1759; d. Pittsfield, Mass., 30 Jan. 1837. Younsj Danforth, who was qualifying himself for college when the Revolutionary war began, entered his father's com- pany as its clerk at the age of 15, discharging at the same time the duties of surgeon's mate. He was made ensign in 1776; lieut. and paymaster in 1778 ; 1st lieut. Sprout's (12th) reg. 28 July, 1780; and in 1783 was in .Sprout's (2d) reg. 158 lilOGKAl'IIICAL NOTICES OF THE Present at the siege of Boston, 1775-76; surrender of Bur- goyne, 17 Oct. 1777; winter quarters at Valley Forge, 1777- 78; battle of Monmouth, 28 June, 1778; Sullivan's R.I. campaign, 1778; and in 1781 commanded for some months a post on the Hudson near Tappan Bay, and was engaged in several skirmishes with the enemy. In May, 1784, he removed to Pittsfield and engaged in business with Col. Simon Larned. Aide-de-camp to Gen. Paterson, 1787; postmaster of Pittsfield from 1794 to his death ; several times a representative in the Legislature ; Associate Justice of the County Court of Sessions, 1807, and its Chief-Justice in 1808; U. S. Marshal for the i8th District, also Principal Assessor and Collector of the U. S. Revenue (app. by Mr. Madison) ; member of the Governor's Council in 1827-28; and also held many town offices. Capt. in Mc- Cobb's reg. U. S. vols. Nov. 1812; capt. 45th U. S. inf April, 1814-June, 1815. By his first wife Salome, dau. of Hon. David Noble of Williams- town, m. 15 Jan. 1786, who d. 30 Jan. 1837, he had — Maria, 6 April, i 792. Henrietta, 20 Oct. i 793. Harriet D., 8 Dec. 1795. Joshua Noble. Amelia, 4 July, 1801, who m. Roberts. George Washington, a teacher ; ) Twins Samuel Adams, 5 May, 1804 ; d. 1866 ) Salome, 23 April, 1808. Frances E., 24 Nov. 18 10. REV. JOSHUA NOBLE DANFORTH, D D. Eldest son of Joshua, whom he succ. in 1843 ; b. Pittsfield, Mass., I April, 1798; d. Newcastle, Del., 14 Nov. 1861 ; Williams Coll. 1818; D.D. of Delaware Coll. 1855. He studied theology at Princeton ; was licensed by the Presby- tery of New Brunswick ; was settled successively at New- CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. I 59 castle, Del. (1825-28), Washington, D. C. (1828-33), Lee, Mass. (1834-38); and Alexandria, Va. (Second Church); and at the time of his death was agent of the Colonization Society, and had been prominent in the Temperance Re- form. He left only one son, who was insane. Japlj^t]) Bantrls. Of Holliston; b. 1738; d. ab. 1806. Lieut, in Joseph Read's (i3thj reg. at siege of Boston; com. capt. in Nixon's (6th) reg. 27 March, 1777, and served to the end of the war. Son of Samuel and Experience (Adams) Daniels, and (probably) grandson of Robert of Medfield, who settled in Sherborn prior to 1715, and who was (probably) grandson of Robert of Cambridge. Japheth m. Melaliah , who was living in 181 2, se. 72, and had — Cynthia, 17 May, 1765. OsiiMUS, 28 Dec. 1768. AftiARrAH, 28 Nov. 1770, m. 1794 Olive Ryder, and resided at Palmyra, Portage Co., O. Sabra, 10 Sept. 1772. Japheth, 14 Aug. 1777, m. Betsey Rider, 1800. Melatuh, 2 Nov. 1779. Samuel Batlis- Was of York, Me., where he d. early in 1807. Capt. in Scamman's reg. in May, 1775; in Prescott's reg. in 1776; in Bailey's (2d) reg. i Jan. 1777; com. major in Brooks's (7th) reg. I Nov. 1778; afterward in M. Jackson's (8th) reg. He left a widow Mary, and a son Reuben, who d. in 1808, leaving a widow and three young children. Wbtntitv BaDis. Ebenezer Davis (or Davies), the eldest son of William and Jane (Stewart) Davis, was born in Newton, N. H. in 1754. While he was still a bov, his father removed to Mass. l6o BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE and died, lea\ing a widow and three sons, — Ebenczer, William, and Charles. When the Revolutionary war began, Ebenezer joined a company of forty-eight minute-men of Bradford, under the command of Capt. Nathaniel Gage, and promptly responded, 19 April, 1775, to the Lexing- ton alarm. After seven days of service the company was dismissed ; but the members immediately joined Col. James Frye's Essex Co. reg. of eight months' men, and marched to Cambridge. At Bunker Hill the company oc- cupied an exposed position, but sustained no loss. It is said to have been one of the most effective companies in the battle, having been drilled by an English deserter. When the regiment's term of service expired, young Davis seems to have enlisted as a sergeant, i Jan. 1776, under Capt. Joshua Read, in the ist Rhode Island reg.. Col. Varnum. This regiment, after the evacuation of Boston, marched to N. Y., fought at Long Island, Harlem Heights, and White Plains; served under Gen. Lee until his capture in N. J.; then rejoined Gen. Washington, and at his request patri- otically remained in the service till i Feb. 1777, a month after their term expired. They were actively engaged at Princeton, and at the Assanpink Creek, where it is said the young sergeant distinguished himself by gallant conduct. Davis enlisted, 25 March, 1777, under Capt. Samuel Carr, in the 9th Mass. reg., Col. James Wesson, and served as a sergeant until 2 March, 1779, when he was promoted to the rank of ensign. This regiment served under Gen. Gates in the campaign against Burgoyne ; took an active part in the battles of Bemis's Heights ; wintered at Valley Forge ; and was at the battle of Monmouth, where its colonel was badly wounded. In the autumn of 1781 Ensign Davis was assistant com- missary of issues to Gen. Muhlenberg's (ist) brigade of La- fayette's Light Infantry in the Yorktown campaign. In 1782 CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. l6l he was ensign in Col. Micliael Jackson's (8th) reg. ; and by the report of a board appointed, 3 Sept. 1781, to arrange the rank of the subaltern officers of the Mass. line, he was eighth on the list of ensigns. He was promoted, 5 Nov. 1782, to the rank of lieut. in Capt. John Hobby's company of the 3d Mass. reg., Col. Greaton, his promotion dating from 15 March; and in 1783 he was appointed quartermaster to the 3d Mass. brigade, which position he held at the close of the war. On leaving the army, Lieut. Davis re- turned to Bradford, and soon afterward removed to Fal- mouth Neck (now Portland, Me.), where he passed the remainder of his life. He retained to the last his fondness for a military career, and was highly recommended for a colonel's commission in the new United States army in 1792. He even thought of going to France, during the first enthu- siasm of the French Revolution, to offer his services to the patriots. He was commissioned, 5 Feb, 1787, capt. in the 6th div. of the Mass. militia. In 1798, when Congress voted to raise an army often thousand men, in anticipation of war with France, although already suffering from the lingering disease that ended his life, he wrote to his friend. Gen. Wm. Shepard, then a member of Congress, expressing his wish to re-enter the service, and asking his influence with the President to procure him a suitable position. The people of Portland appointed him, 1 1 June of the same year, on a committee to superintend the erection of necessary defences for the town. He joined the Portland Lodge of P'ree Masons, 6 Jan. 1785, was elected Junior Warden the same day, and in June was chosen Master, retaining the office till 1795. He died, after a tedious illness of two years, 14 Nov, 1799, at the age of 4-S years. Capt. Davis is described as a noble- looking man, of fine manners and soldierly bearing, wear- ing the old-fashioned cocked hat and small-clothes. l62 BIUGRAPHICAL NOTICES OK THE The following graphic picture of him is contained in a letter written, 24 July, 1834, by his old friend and comrade. Gen. Benjamin Pierce, Governor of New Hampshire, to the Hon. Charles S. Daveis: — " While I write, the recollection of your gallant father is con- stantly recurring to me. As he died when you were young, and few individuals now living can speak of him to you from a long and inti- mate acquaintance in early life, I will avail myself of this opportunity to give you some of my own recollections. Our acquaintance com- menced in the spring [of] 1777, at Bemus [Bemis's] Heights, near the ground where the battles were afterward fought. He could not at that time, I think, have been more than twenty years of age, and his appearance is at this moment fresh in my recollection. His face was fine, indicative of great moral firmness ; and when interested upon any subject, his countenance was lit up with a high degree of animation. His hair was black, but, as was the custom of that day, always powdered when on duty ; eyes dark and full of expression. He was about six feet and one inch in height, his figure perfectly symmetrical, and his motions those of an elegant and accomplished soldier. This description would seem unnecessarily particular to an indifferent individual, but I am writing to a son, to whom minute facts will not be without interest. Your father, like myself, entered the service young. In 1777 we were sergeants in the same brigade, — he in Col. Wesson's, and myself in Col. Jackson's regiment. The regiments encamped and served side by side, and we were intimate from that period to the close of the war. We received our promo- tions about the same time, and generally served in the same grade. Your father was deservedly beloved by all who were so fortunate as to make his acquaintance. In habits he was remarkably correct ; and every duty devolved upon him, whether in the camp or in the field, was sure to be performed with promptness and alacrity. In a word, it was conceded by all, that your father, in mind and in heart as in person, combined what a gallant oflScer and finished gendeman should be." William Davis, father of Ebenezer, was of Newton, N. H. He 'was m. 24 Dec. 1751, at Kingston, N. H., to Jane, youngest dau. of Ebenezer and Elizabeth (Johnson) Stewart of Rowley, and /^X^^Z^ -^^ Q^,Alj:2L^i^^-^_^i^ CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. I 63 probably granddaughter of Duncan Stewart, an early settler and ship-builder of Newbury. They had three sons; namely, (i) Eben- ezer ; ( 2 ) William, who served in the array 177 7-80, m. Hannah Buck of Haverhill, 25 June, 1780, d. Haverhill, 9 April, 1827, leaving descendants; (3) Charles, who enlisted in 1777 for the war, and is supposed to have d. unm. in the West Indies. Capt. Davis was m. (ist) July, 1785, at Bradford, to Priscilla, dau. of Deacon Ebenezer Gjiffin of Bradford, and of his wife Priscilla, dau. of Benjamin and Priscilla (Hazen) Kimball. Issue : one child, who d. in infancy, 19 Oct. 1786. Mrs. Davis d. 22 Oct. 1786. He was m. (2d) 21 Aug. 1787, at Portland, to Mehitable Griffin, a younger sister of his first wife. Issue : Charles Stewart Daveis, b. 10 May, 1788. After Capt. Davis's death his widow was m. 7 Nov. 1800, to John McLellan, and d. 21 April, 1823. CHARLES STEWART D.WEIS. Charles Stewart Daveis, the only son of Capt. Ebenezer Davis and his wife Mehitable Griffin, was born in Portland, Me., 10 May, 1788. By his father's early death, in 1799, he was left at the age of eleven years to the care of an e.xcellent mother. After re- ceiving the rudiments of his education in his native town, he was sent, in June, 1802, to Phillips Academy, Andover, where, under the instruction of its principal, Mark Newman, he was fitted for college. In 1803 he entered Bowdoin College, and graduated in 1807, at the head of its second class. On leaving college, Mr. Daveis entered the law office of Nicholas Emery, Esq., of Portland ; and was in 1810 admitted to the bar. He opened an office in Portland, where he re- mained during the whole of his long professional career. At the bar of Cumberland County Mr. Daveis came into successful competition with able lawyers, among whom he took a high rank. While he was well versed in the principles 164 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE of the Common Law, it was in the less known branches of Equity and Admiralty that he acquired his chief reputation. He was almost the first in the State to devote attention to equity practice, of which the older members of the bar were generally ignorant and distrustful ; and his acquirements in this branch were highly esteemed by Judge Story, who was his warm personal friend, and for whom he cherished the strongest admiration. He was an eminent admiralty lawyer, fearlessly espousing, at the risk of his personal safety, the cause of the sailors, who were then regarded when at sea as little better than slaves, — a condition of things which he, in conjunction with Mr. Justice Ware, the learned and able Judge of the United States District Court, did much to amend. Mr. Daveis was m., i June, 181 5, at Exeter, N. H., to Elizabeth Taylor, youngest daughter of Hon. John Taylor Oilman, Governor of New Hampshire, and his wife Deborah, daughter of Maj.-Gen. Nathaniel Folsom, of Exeter. In 1818, on the election of Samuel Fessenden as major- general of the twelfth division of Massachusetts militia, Mr. Daveis accepted a position on his staff, as division inspector, which he retained until 1827, when he received an appoint- ment as senior aide to Gov. Lincoln. It was at this time that he first took an active part in con- nection with the controversy with which for many years he was so intimately associated, and of the history, facts, argu- ments, and condition of which he has been pronounced on good authority to have known more than any other man in the State or nation. This was the dispute relating to the northeastern boundary of Maine, which had been for many years pending between the United States and Great Britain, but was now suddenly brought to a crisis by the action of the Provincial authorities of New Brunswick, in serving legal process on American settlers in the disputed country ; and CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 1 65 especially in arresting on his own land, granted to him by the States of Maine and Massachusetts, one John Baker, a citizen of the former State, who was carried to Fredericton for trial. Gov. Lincoln promptly despatched Col. Daveis as special agent of the State, bearing a letter to Sir Howard Douglas, the Lieutenant-Governor of New Brunswick, to obtain infor- mation with regard to these aggressions, and to demand the release of Baker. Proceeding to St. Stephen's, Mr. Daveis hired horses and a guide, and set out across the country for Fredericton, a distance of over eighty miles, arriving 25 Nov. 1827, after a journey of four days through the wil- derness, performed partly on horseback and partly on foot. The Governor declined to recognize him in an official ca- pacity; but he was treated with the most distinguished polite- ness, during his stay, by the members of the government, officers, and gentry of the place. After some delay, owing to the Governor's illness, Mr. Daveis proceeded to Houlton and Woodstock, and collected what evidence he was able, in the absence of official recognition, to obtain in relation to the British aggressions. In January, 1828, he returned to Port- land, and presented to Gov. Lincoln a report setting forth at length the information that he had acquired on the subject. The mission had proved unsuccessful, and Baker was tried and convicted in spite of all remonstrances. The controversy, in accordance with the Treaty of Ghent, and by virtue of a convention between the two governments, was now submitted to the arbitration of the King of the Netherlands ; and Hon. Albert Gallatin, and Judge Preble, of Portland, were appointed commissioners to prepare the American case. Judge Preble, who was sent as minister to the Hague, was anxious to avail himself of Mr. Daveis's valu- able services in the capacity of Secretary of Legation, an office which the latter declined. He consented however, at the earnest solicitation of the Judge, to accept an appoint- 1 66 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE ment as special confidential agent of the United States, to prepare and present the evidence in the American case. Sir Howard Douglas, recalled from New Brunswick, was charged by the British government with a similar mission. Mr. Daveis sailed from New York for Havre, ii Jan. 1830, and 13 March reached the Hague. After completing his duties there, he made a brief trip to England and Scotland, in the course of which he spent much time attending the courts at Westminster Hall and the debates of Parliament, and also had the opportunity of making the acquaintance of some of the most eminent men of the period. He sailed from Liverpool, 11 July, and reached Boston in safety, after a long voyage. The unsatisfactory award of the arbiter — being a mere suggestion of a compromise — was not recognized as bind- ing by the United States. The question remained open; and after some disheartening years of ill-conducted and fruit- less negotiation, a bill was at length introduced into Congress, providing for a survey by national authority of the disputed border-line. Anxious to secure its passage, Hon. Edward Kent, at this time Governor of Maine, with the advice of his Council, commissioned Mr. Daveis, 25 April, 1838, as a special agent to co-operate with the Maine delegation in Congress in securing that result, and also to attend to some other mat- ters connected with the controversy. Mr. Daveis reached Washington, 10 May, and devoted himself ardently to the work. The results were eminently favorable. A general interest in the subject was awakened ; and although the bill was laid on the table, resolutions reported in the Senate by Hon. James Buchanan were unanimously adopted in both branches, strongly maintaining the right of Maine in the controversy. Of Mr. Daveis's efforts Gov. Kent says : " I think I can confidently say that no agent or envoy ever labored more diligently or more intelligently or efficiently CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 1 67 than he did during that warm summer of 1838. . . . By his earnest persuasions he induced both Mr. Webster (on the 4th of July) and Mr. Buchanan, and otliers, to espouse our cause distinctly and earnestly, in strong speeches. He alone brought the whole question out of its narrow locality in the State into a national matter, regarded as one of in- terest to the whole country, involving questions of peace and war, which were fast becoming imminent and perilous. ... I have always believed that Maine owed more to him than to any other man in thus bringing the whole subject before the nation and compelling action." In a letter addressed to Mr. Daveis, under date of 15 July, 1838, Gov. Kent says : " You have breathed into them the breath of life, and have done more to advance our cause, and place this matter on its true basis, and bring the administration to a right position than any other man has ever done. I am more than satisfied; I am delighted, not more with the success than with the skill and indefatigable and persevering and able manner in which you have presented and enforced our right." Mr. Daveis submitted to the Governor a lengthy and valuable report of his mission, which was laid before the Legislature. The following year, the draft of a convention having been received from England, the Secretary of State, Mr. Forsyth, made a special visit to Maine, to learn the views of the lead- ing men. With this object, at the President's suggestion. Gov. Fairfield and Senator Williams of the dominant party, and Ex-Governor Kent and Mr. Daveis as representatives of the Whig opposition, were invited to a private conference. They met Mr. Forsyth at Portland, 18 June, and after a har- monious consultation for two days, drew up and signed a paper, disapproving the British proposition and the counter- project of the American government, and embodying their own views in the matter. 1 68 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE In 1 841 Mr. Daveis, being a member of the State Senate, as chairman of the joint special committee on the North- eastern Boundary, submitted, 30 March, an able report of fifty-five pages, accompanied with a series of resolutions breathing a spirit of calm determination, which were adopted unanimously in the Senate, and in the House by a large majority. In May he was summoned to a private confer- ence on the subject, at Boston, with Mr. Webster, then Secretary of State. The following year Lord Ashburton's special mission, re- sulting in the Treaty of Washington, closed the vexed ques- tion forever. In this last act of the drama Mr. Daveis took no part. During the long years in which he was identified with the controversy, his feelings had become warmly enlisted on the side of his native State ; and he was recognized as one of the most uncompromising and zealous advocates of her right. It was not unnatural therefore that while acqui- escing in the result, he could not give his cordial approval to the terms of settlement. In politics Mr. Daveis was a Federalist, and afterward a Whig. Unlike most of his political associates, however, he admitted the justice of the war of 1812. In 1840 he was elected to the State Senate. He presided at its organization, and served as chairman of the joint special committee on the Northeastern Boundary, and also as chairman of the joint standing committee on the Judiciary. In 1848 he was an active supporter of Gen. Taylor for the Presidency, and was nominated on the Whig State ticket for elector-at-large, but was beaten by a considerable plurality, the State casting its vote for Gen. Cass. Through all his engrossing public and professional duties, Mr. Daveis never failed to find time for literary pursuits, in which he delighted and excelled. A diligent student, gifted with fine abilities and a rare memory, he acquired an eminent CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 1 69 reputation for scholarship, and especially for familiarity with classical lore. He wrote much, and in his earlier years often in verse ; and was a frequent contributor to the newspapers and periodicals of the time, including occasionally the "North American Review." He also delivered many public ad- dresses, charming his hearers by the grace of his manner no less than by the beauty of his language. His productions were elaborately prepared, and carefully adapted to express the most delicate shades of meaning. His literary abilities were first brought to public notice by an oration on Greek Literature, delivered in Sept. 1808, at Bowdoin College, before the Peucinian Society, of which he had been among the founders ; and afterward published in the " Monthly Anthology," prefaced with a highly compliment- ary editorial note. This oration procured him an invitation to contribute to that fastidious publication, and an election as corresponding member of the Anthology Club. Among his other public addresses may be mentioned an oration de- livered to the Federal Republicans of Portland, 4 July, 1812 ; a historical oration at Fryeburg, 19 May, 1825, on the hun- dredth anniversary of Lovewell's Indian fight; an oration delivered, at the request of the citizens' coinmittee, 9 Aug. 1826, on the death of Adams and Jefferson; and a second Fourth of July oration at Portland in 1831. In 1853 he wrote for the New Hampshire Historical Society a memoir of Gov. Gilman, which was read at Exeter on the hundredth anniversary of the Governor's birth, 19 Dec. Mr. Daveis was a diligent student of American history, and collected much material for a life of Gen. Knox, which was to have formed one of the concluding series of Mr. Sparks's biographies, and for which the General's family papers were placed at his disposal. Professional duties, however; the extended scope of the work, embracing a sketch of the ar- tillery service during the Revolutionary war; and finally an 170 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE attack of paralysis, — indefinitely postponed the completion of this cherished design, which, though perhaps never for- mally renounced, remained at last unfulfilled. To his Alma Mater Mr. Daveis always cherished a strong attachment, and served her faithfully for many years. In 1820 he was chosen a member of the Board of Overseers, of which he was several years Vice-President; and in 1836 he became one of the Trustees, retaining the position until induced by declining health to resign it in 1864. He was a member of the Phi Beta Kappa Society, of which he was for many years Corresponding Secretary, and later Vice-President and President. On the formation of the Alumni Society, of which he was chosen the first President, i Sept. 1835, he delivered an oration which was commended by Judge Story as " full of strong and vivid thought," and pronounced to " add to his former efforts a new claim upon the grati- tude of the scholars of the country." In Sept. 1839, at the inauguration of Prcs. Woods, Mr. Daveis delivered a Latin address, which was responded to by the President. He also wrote, in 1854, an address for the dedication of the new King Chapel at Brunswick. In 1844 he received from the college the degree of Doctor of Laws. Mr. Daveis was in 1828 elected a member of the Maine Historical Society, and was subsequently chosen a corre- sponding member of the Historical Societies of Massachu- setts and New Hampshire, and an honorary member of those of New York and Georgia. In 1814 he was chosen an hon- orary member of the Phi Beta Kappa Society at Harvard College, there being then no chapter of the Society at Brunswick. In the Mass. Society of the Cincinnati Mr. Daveis always felt the warmest interest, and for many years took a very active part. Elected a member in 1809, at the age of twenty-one years, as successor to his father, he was in 1839 CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. IJI chosen a member of the Standing Committee, on which he served until 1851, when he was elected Vice-President. In 1853, on the death ot Robert G. Shaw, he was chosen President of the Society, and was successively re-elected to that office until his death in 1865. He prepared, by di- rection of the Society, a new edition of its " Institution and Proceedings," which in 1859 was ordered to be printed. He also wrote for Appleton's Cyclopeedia a historical account of the Society. He was often chosen delegate to the meetings of the General Society, and in 1854 was elected Vice-Presi- DENT-General, an office which he retained until his death. In his active career Mr. Daveis was suddenly arrested, 28 April, 1850, by a stroke of paralysis, which partially de- prived him of the use of his right side. Ten years later, 3 April, i860, his wife died, after a long period of feeble health. Mr. Daveis survived her nearly five years, under the constantly increasing burden of bodily infirmity, en- during with unmurmuring Christian resignation the inac- tivity so wearisome to an energetic and social spirit, until 29 March, 1865, when, in his native town, onthe site of his father's old home, he quietly breathed his last, at the age of "jG years. Mr. Daveis was a man of earnest religious character, the beauty and sincerity of which were amply attested by his whole life, and most of all by the last sad years of feeble- ness and bereavement, borne with heroic and touching resig- nation. Of a truly chivalrous nature, he combined in a rare degree manly energy and fearlessness with a womanly ten- derness and purity; commanding the sincere respect of all, and the warmest affection of those whose privilege it was to know him well. Though an untiring worker, he always found time to encourge those who were deserving of aid, especially young men. He was not prone to entertain extreme views, and his bearing towards his opponents was ever respectful and courteous. His manners were dignified, courtly, affable ; 172 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE and, under whatever provocation, always eminently those of a Christian gentleman. He had five children ; namely, — John Taylor Gilman, M.D., of Portland. Edward Henry, a member of the bar in Portland, editor of some volumes of law reports; b. 3 .\pril, 1818, m. 8 June, 1853, Susan W. Bridge of Augusta, Me. Has two daughters. Mary Cogswell, b. 27 March, 1820, m. 20 Dec. 1842, the Rev. David Greene Haskins, S.T.D., of Cambridge, Mass. Has one son, David Greene Haskins, Jr., and two daughters. Anna Ticknor, b. it April, 1823, m. 8 June, 1847, Charles Jones of Portland. Has one daughter. Caroline Elizabeth, b. ii Dec. 1826, d. 13 Dec. 1827. JOHN TAYLOR GILMAN DAVEIS, M.D. Eldest son of Charles S. Daveis, whom he succ. in 1865 ; b. Portland, Me., 21 March, 18 16; d. there 9 May, 1873. He was educated at the Round Hill School, at the academies of Portland and Exeter, and at Harvard University (class of 1836), and was one of the Sophomore Class the whole of which was dismissed for rebellion. He then studied medi- cine at the University of Pennsylvania, where he graduated in 1837, and at Boston, and began practice in 1840 in his native city, where he resided until his death. He was a skil- ful oculist. He received the honorary degrees of M.D. (1837) and of A.M. (1858) from Bowdoin College. He m. II Oct. 1847, Frances Ellen Gordon, by whom he had three daughters ; namely, Anne Emery of Portland ; Frances, who d. in infancy ; Elizabeth Taylor, who m. George Abbot, now of Cambridge, Mass., and has two daughters. DAVID GREENE HASKINS, JR. Son of Rev. David G. and Mary C. (Daveis) Haskins, and only grandson of Charles S. Daveis, whom he succ. in 1876; CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. I 73 was b. Roxbury, Mass., 5 March, 1845 '> H. U. 1866; Harvard Law School, 1869; admitted to the bar at Boston, 1870; Re- cording Sec. N. E. Historic-Genealogical Society, 1873-90; AssT. Sec. of the Mass. Soc. Cin., 1878-90; Secretary, 1890. Jamrs Patois. He was a native of old Deerfield or Conway, Mass. ; d. Amity, Alleghany Co., N. Y., in Aug. 1817, ae. ab. 72. Com. lieut. in Greaton's (3d) reg. i Jan. 1777. He sers'ed seven years, and was present at the surrender of Burgoyne and of Cornwallis ; was afterward a farmer in Whitestown, Oneida Co., N. Y. ; and about 1809 he settled in Scio, now Amity, Alleghany Co., residing on the farm of his son Henry until his death. The descent of his wife, Irene Ticknor, from Sergeant IVilliam ^ Ticknor, of Scituate, b. Kent, Eng., often selectman of Scituate, and an officer under Gen. Cudworth, in Philip's war (1675), who m. 29 Oct. 1656, in Boston, Hannah, dau. of John Stockbridge (she d. 1665), was through William' b. 1664, m. 1696 Lydia, dau. of Dea. Joseph Tilden, and removed to Lebanon, Ct., in 1710 ; John* (her father), b. 1699, d. 1751, m. at Lebanon, Ct., in 1724, Mary Bailey, and had nine children, of whom Irene (b. 1747, d. Aug. 1 81 5) was the eighth. Hon. George Ticknor, LL.D., author of the " History of Spanish Literature," was a descendant of John? The children of James and Irene (Ticknor) Davis, all of whom were b. in Mass., were — James, who was a waiter in his father's company, and who d. near Geneva, N. Y., leaving a number of children. Cyrus, of Seneca Falls, N. Y. Harry, a farmer and deacon of the Baptist Church in Scio, who had ten children. Charles, farmer, also of Scio ; one of the storming party which, in the war of 181 2, took Fort George, U. C, and d. there in 1 8 14, leaving a wife and six children, one of whom. Henry, was a resident of McGregor, Iowa. LuciNDA, who m. Levi Stanhope. Philinda, who m. Hyde. 174 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE Joljn 2iat)t!$. Of Kingston, Mass.; d. Norway, Me., in 1816. Entered the army as a private in Peleg VVadsworth's Co., Cotton's reg. 6 May, 1775 ; was serg.-major of Pope's Co., Shepard's (4th) reg. 22 Jan. 1777, to 3 Jan. 1778, when com. ensign; com. heut. and adjutant same reg. 14 April, 1780; and served to the end of the war, having been present at Bemis's Heights, Monmouth, and Quaker Hill, R. I. He removed to Norway in 1814. WILLIAM P DAVIS. Eldest son of John, whom he succ. in 1819. His bro. Thomas was living in 1850. asialttr ZSran. He was b. (probably) New London, Ct., 5 Sept. 1751; d. in western N. Y., ab. 1827, while on a visit to a son. Lieut, in Wigglesworth's (13th) reg. 1777; in Sullivan's R. L cam- paign in 1778; com. capt. in Marshall's (loth) reg. i Jan. 1783. He had an older brother, Scth, who was one of the first settlers of Phelps, N. Y. Son of Seth and ]\Liry (Waterus) Dean, m. i June, 1741. By his wife Abigail he had — Harvey, b. 16 Aug. 1778 ; Pauline, b. 21 May, 1782 ; Chauncey, b. 5 April, 1784; ISA.4C, b. 8 Feb. 17S6; Fannt, b. 14 March, I 790 ; Ednah, b. 19 Feb. i 794, m. David Thomas of Aurora, N. Y. ; Lucius Q. C, b. 7 May, i 796. HENRY DEARBORN. He was an original member of the N. H. Society, but sub- sequently became a member of the Mass. Society by right of residence. He was b. Hampton, N. H., 23 Feb. 1751 ; d. Roxbury, Mass., 6 June, 1829. He began practice as a physician at Nottingham Square, N. H., in 1772, but took a CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. I 75 special interest in military affairs, and emploj'ed such time as he could spare from his profession in studjing the art of war. On the alarm from Lexington he collected a company of sixty minute-men and marched to Cambridge, reaching that place early on the 20th April. He was soon after appointed capt. in Stark's reg., and took part in the battle of Bunker Hill. He was in Arnold's expedition to Canada, and was taken prisoner in the assault on Quebec. Having been ex- changed in 1777, he was appointed major in Scammell's reg., and took part in the battles of Stillwater, Saratoga, Mon- mouth, and Newtown, and the siege of Yorktown. He dis- tinguished himself at Monmouth by a successful charge. In 1 78 1 he was appointed on Washington's staff as deputy- quartermaster-general, with the rank of colonel. After the war he went to ]\Ionmouth, ]\Ie., and in 1789 was appointed ' U. S. marshal for that State. He was elected to Congress in 1793, and served two terms. Pres. Jefferson appointed him Secretary of War in 1801, and he held that position until Pres. Madison took office in 1809. He was then ap- pointed collector of the port of Boston, and occupied that place until 1812, when he was appointed senior maj.-gen. U. S. army, and assigned to the command of the Northern Department. He captured York (now Toronto), 27 ^\pril, 1813, and Fort George, 27 May following. In July of that year he was recalled (on account of political intrigue, it is said) and placed in command of the city of New York. Pres. Monroe appointed him minister to Portugal in 1822. After serving two years he resigned, returned home, and settled in Roxbury, Mass. He published an account of the battle of Bunker Hill, and wrote a journal of his expedition to Canada.* His descent from Godfrey'^ Dearborn, one of the original settlers of Exeter, with Wheelwright, in 1639, who d. 4 Feb. 1686, and • Printed in the Proceedings of the Mass. Historical Societ)-. 2d series, vol. ii. pp. ::7 5-305. 176 BIOGRArillCAL NOTICES UF THE Dorothy, widow of Philemon Dalton, was through Hcnry\^ b. prob. in Eng., d. 18 Jan. 1725, ae. 92, who m. 10 Jan. 1666, Ehzabeth Merriam ; John? b. 10 Oct. 1666, d. 22 Nov. 1750, who m. 4 Nov. 1689, Abigail Bachelder; Simeon^ (his father), b. 31 July, 1706, d. 13 Sept. 1766, who m. 5 Dec. 1728, Sarah Marston. He m. 28 March, 1780, Dorcas Osgood. HENRY ALE.XANDER SCAMMELL DEARBORN. Son of Gen. Henry, whom he succ. in 1832; b. Exeter, N. H., 3 March, 1783; d. Portland, Me., 29 July, 1851. He spent tvvo years at Williams College; graduated at William and Mary College in 1803 ; studied law under William Wirt, afterward with Judge Story, and practised for a time in Salem and Portland. He afterward superintended the erection of forts in Portland harbor; was deputy-collector under his father, and succ. him as collector of the port of Boston in 1813-29; commanded the troops in Boston harbor in 181 2, the Ancient and Honorable Artillery Co. in 1816; brig. -gen. Mass. militia, 18 14; was a member of the Mass. Constitutional Convention of 1820; a representative in the Mass. Legisla- ture from Roxbury in 1 830; member of the E.xecutive Coun- cil in 1831; M. C. 1831-33; adj.-gen. of Mass. 1834-43; Mayor of Roxbury, 1847-51. He was active in originating and forwarding many useful works ; among them Bunker Hill Monument, the Hoosac Tunnel, and the beautiful ceme- teries at Mount Auburn and Forest Hills. He was a voluminous writer. Besides numerous contri- butions to periodicals, he was the author of the following printed works: "Commerce of the Black Sea," 3 vols, with charts ; " History of Navigation ; " " Defence of Gen. H. Dearborn against the Attack of Gen. Hull; " "Internal Im- provement and Commerce of the West ; " " Sketch of the Life of the Apostle Eliot; " a work on " Woad," or Pastel; and addresses on various public occasions. He left a large CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. I 77 number of volumes in manuscript; among otliers, " Life and Correspondence of Gen. H.Dearborn," in 11 vols. 4to ; "Ac- count of the Battle of Bunker Hill; " " Inquiry into the Con- duct of Gen. Putnam in relation to the Battle of Bunker Hill;" "Treatise on Grecian Architecture," 2 vols.; "Life of Col.W. R. Lee, U.S.A.," 2 vols.; "Life of Commodore Bainbridge," I vol.; "Life of Jesus Christ," 2 vols.; "Me- moir of Mount Auburn." He was a member of the American Academy and other scientific bodies. In 1811 he delivered the Fourth of July oration for the Bunker Hill Association. He was PRESIDENT of the Gen. Soc. of the CiN. from 1848 to 1851. He m. at Salem, 3 May, 1807, Hannah Swett, dau. of Col. Wil- liam R. Lee, and had — Julia Margarett.4, b. 25 Jan. 1808, m. 23 Jan. 1834, Hon. Asa W. H. Clapp of Portland, d. 3 June, 1867. Henry George Ralegh, b. 22 June, 1809, m. 6 July, 1840, Sarah Thurston. Civil engineer. W1LLLA.M Lee, b. 12 June, 181 2, Engineer Croton Water Works, d. N. Y. 15 March, 1875. He left a son, Win. Henry Dearborn, b. 10 Dec. 1 86 1, who is a civil engineer in N. Y. City. Watljan 13 ip. Of Woburn; lieut. in Wood's Co., L. Baldwin's reg. 1775- 76; com. capt. in Wesson's (9th) reg. i March, 1777; in M. Jackson's (8th) reg. in 1783. He m. 16 Nov. 1769, Elizabeth Wyman of Woburn. She d. 28 Feb. 1780, a;. 31 years 6 months. Of Beverly; pensioner, living in New York in 1820; com. lieut. in Marshall's (loth) reg. 15 Dec. 1778; in Vose's reg. in 1783. 178 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE l^ctcc Hollibcr. He was adjutant in Paul D. Sargent's (i6th) reg. 1775-76; acting major of brigade (Sargent's), Oct. 1776; com. capt. in H.Jackson's (i6th) reg. 1777; Inspector of Boston Custom House many years, and until his death, 23 June, 1816, a. 6^,. He was b. Kingston, Mass., 2 June, 1747; d. there 18 May, 1824. In early life Major Drew was engaged in ship-build- ing, the occupation of his ancestors for many years. He was a member of Wadsworth's Co. of minute-men, and re- sponded promptly on receiving the Lexington alarm. Com. 2d lieut. in Bailey's (2d) reg. i July, 1775; 1st lieut. i Jan. 1776; capt. same reg. i Jan. 1777; major, 7 Jan. 1783; pres- ent at the siege of Boston, battles of Trenton, Princeton, and Monmouth, and at the surrender of Burgoyne. He was a mem- ber of the court which tried Joshua Hett Smith as an accom- plice of Andre. Postmaster of Kingston for many years previous to his death ; representative in the General Court, 1794. 1795. 1797. 1803. and 1804; app. Justice of the Peace in 1797. Previous to the war of 1812-15, he was an agent of the government to superintend the erection of forts in Plymouth harbor and at Fairhaven. He was a punctual attendant at the annual meetings of the Cincinnati,' and was, in the absence of the President, frequently called to the chair. Distinguished for activity of mind as well as of body, he sustained also the reputation of a brave and discreet officer, and merited and received the approbation and esteem of all with whom he was associated. His descent from /lStUiam 3Bs»arOitan. Ensign in Bigelow's (15th) reg. 1777; com. lieut. 2 April, 1779; in 5th reg. in 1783. Sonatljajt iFclt. He was b. Dedham, Mass., April, 1748; d. Wrentham, Mass., 5 Nov. 1800. Served in Pond's Co. at the battle of Lexington; com. lieut. in Shepard's (4th) reg. i Jan. 1777; capt. same reg. 14 Oct. 1781 ; was in Brooks's reg. in 1783, and after the war returned to his farm with a constitution broken down by hardship and exposure in the service. Hem. 18 Nov. 1784, Eunice Brastow. She d. 1S02. They had — Patfy, b. 29 Sept. 1785, d- Attleboro', m. Everett. Oliver. Joseph, b. 13 Nov. 1788, d. Savannah, 30 Jan. 1861, m. Anna Maria Foote. Nancy, b. 5 April, 1793, d. Boston, 20 Sept. 1865, m. John C. Proctor. OLIVER FELT. Eldest son of Jonathan, whom he succ. in 1826; b. Wren- tham, 20 March, 1787; d. there 5 Nov. 1846. Col. Felt was prominent in town affairs, represented Wrentham several years in the State Legislature ; was a member of the State Senate in 1845, and was a colonel of militia. He m. Alniira Shepard. His eldest son Oliver S. d. in 1838, and his grandson Olive/- S. in 1869. He had also J. A. Felt, merchant of Boston ; and Annie E. B. Felp. CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 1 89 JToiJias iFccnalTr. He was b. Kittery, Me. (on the site of the present Navy- Yard), I Feb. 1744; d. there 15 Aug. 1784. He was com. capt. in Scamman's reg. i May, 1775, and served in the siege of Boston; was in Phinney's reg. i Jan. 1776; com. major in Brewer's reg. 6 Nov. 1776; com. lieut.-col. in M. Jackson's (8th) reg. 6 March, 1779; in Marshall's (lOth) reg. 1782-83. Col. Fernald's name appears in duplicate on the original roll of the Mass. Society. The one written last is identified as his autograph. The family in the U. S. descended from Renald Fenialil, who was the first surgeon among N. H. settlers. He came from England in 1630, with colonists who settled at Strawberry Bank, the present site of Portsmouth. He lived on the island now occupied by the U. S. Navy Yard. He had seven children (four sons and three daughters). He d. in 1656. His son William d. 5 July, 1728. He had fifteen children, the fourteenth being Tobias, b. 3 Dec. 1702 ; d. II May, 1761. He had six children; the youngest was Tobias, the subject of this notice. Col. Fernald m. 1 7S0, Dorcas Mclntire of York, Me. They had — Harriet, b. 22 Nov. 1781, d. 26 Sept. 1826, unm. Juliet, b. 13 June, 1783. She m. Daniel Lane, an officer in the war of 181 2, who had for a time command of the forts in Bos- ton harbor. He d. Newtonville, Mass., 1873. They had Har- riet, b. 1810, who m. 1830, Albert Bingham, Belfast, Me. (he d. Aug. 1878; she now resides in Belfast, Me.) ; Albert, d. ; Daniel, a resident of Belfast ; Franklin, d. ; and others. James IStitoac^B ISucr iFinlts. Com. surgeon in Bigelow's (15th) reg. 25 Feb. 1778; in 5th reg. in 1783. Received the honorary degree of A.M. from Brown University in 1803. I go BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE Samuel jfinltS' Com. surgeon in Bradford's (14th) reg. 10 April, 1778; in Brooks's (7th) reg. 1782-83. He was b. Lexington, Mass., 24 Dec. 1752; d. 25 Sept. 1837. Having studied medicine and begun to practise at the opening of the Revolutionary war, he was com. surgeon's mate in Vose's (ist) reg. 1777; surgeon, 17 April, 1779; served in the army seven years, and was present at the sur- render of Burgoyne and of Cornwallis. Dr. Fisk was a mem- ber of the Mass. Medical Society. His descent from DavU''- Fisk (or Fiske) of Watertown, 1637, was through Davict;- b. 1624, d. 14 Feb. 1710, who m. Lydia Cooper; David^ b. i Sept. 1648, d. 23 Oct. 1729, who m. Sarah ; Robert,^ b. 8 May, 1681, d. 18 April, 1753, m. 27 May, 1718, Mary Stimpson ; Joseph^ (his father), b. 18 Oct. 1726, d. 8 Jan. 1808, m. 13 Dec. 1 75 1, Hepzibah Raymond. He m. 31 July, 1794, Elizabeth Stone, b. 13 Nov. 1770, d. 6 March, 1849. They had — Elizabeth, b. 15 June. 1795, d. Bloomingdale, N. Y., 28 March, 1834, m. Richard Fisher. Joseph. JoN.AS Stone, b. 9 May, 1799, d. 23 March, 1828, m. Pamela Brown, and had two children. Sarah Ann, b. 18 May, 1802, d. 27 Dec. 1825. Franklin, b. 16 Oct. 1804, d. 23 March, 1868. Elmir.-\, b. 24 June, 1808, d. 22 Jan. 1834. JOSEPH FISKE, M. D. Eldest son of Dr. Joseph, whom he succ. in 1839; b. Lex- ington, Mass., 9 Feb. 1797; d. there 4 May, i860; member of the Mass. Medical Society. CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. I9I He m. 12 Nov. 1829, Mary Gardner Kennard of Eliot, Me., b. 17 Oct. 1795, and had — Joseph Alexander, 8 March, 1S30, m. Love Langdon Dodge of Methuen, and lived at Lawrence. Timothy Kennard, 5 .'\ug. 1833, m. 25 Dec. 1857, Barbara Peters. Com. ensign in Vose's (ist) reg. 23 Oct. 1781 ; living in Blue Hill, Me., in 1799. ISU'sija iFostcr. Com. ensign, 15 June, 1781 ; in 6th reg. in 1782-83. i!rt)omas jFostcr. Of Cape Ann; d. in the West Indies, 16 Dec. 1793. Com. ensign in M. Jackson's (8th) reg.; lieut. 6 Oct. 1780, and served to the close of the war. His widow Lucy was living in Gloucester in 1801. Two daughters and a son, aged seven years, were living in 1796. joJ)n jFotolcs. He was b. Watertown, i Feb. 1756; d. there 31 Dec. 1823. Lieut, and adjutant in Wigglesworth's (13th) reg. in 1777-78 ; in Sullivan's R. L campaign in 17.78 ; com. capt. same reg. 20 June, 1779; in Mellen's (3d) reg. in 1783. Selectman of Watertown in 1790 and 1792. Edmund, his grandfather, was of Newton, m. Mercy , 1718, d. 14 Oct. 1726. Edmund, his father, b. Newton, 23 Sept. 1719, was a cordwainer of Watertown, m. 1 7 March, i 745, .Abigail Whitney. John m. 8 Jan. 178-, Mary Cooke of Newton, and had — Charles, b. i Nov. 1782, killed in a duel. Harriet, b. 10 Sept. 1784, m. Wm. Smith of Lowell. Elizabeth, m. Charles Smith of Quincy. Maria, b. 14 Dec. 1787, m. Britten of Oxford, N. H. John. 192 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE JOHN FOWLE. Son of Capt. John, whom he succ. in 1824; b.Watertown, 3 Nov. 1789, killed 25 April, 1838, by the explosion of steamer " Moselle" on the Ohio River. Com. 2d lieut. 9th inf. 9 April, 1812; 1st lieut. April, 181 3; capt. June, 1814, and wounded in the battle of Niagara; major 3d inf 4 March, 1833 ; lieut. - col. 6th inf. 25 Dec. 1837. Instructor in infantry tactics at West Point Military Academy, 1833-38. By Pauline Cazenove of Alexandria, D. C, he had a daughter who m. Henry F. (Smith) Durant. Constant jFrrcman. He was bapt. at Charlcstown, Mass., 27 Feb. 1757, and entered the Boston Latin School in 1766. Com. lieut. in Knox's artillery in 1776; capt. -lieut. in Crane's artillery, i Oct. 1778; app. capt. 2d U. S. inf. March, 1791, — declined; com. major 1st artillerists and engineers, 28 Feb. 1795 ; lieut.- col. 1st artillery, i April, 1802; brevet-col. 10 July, 1812; mustered out on reduction of the army, 15 June, 181 5. Ac- countant of the Navy Department at Washington, and Fourth Auditor from March, 18 16, to his death, 27 Feb. 1824. His descent from Samuel^ Freeman of Watertown, 1630, was through Samuel^ b. 11 May, 1638, d. Eastham, 30 Jan. 1712, who m. 12 May, 1658, Mary, dau. of Constant Southworth ; Constant^ b. 31 March, 1669, d. 1745, who m. 1 1 Oct. 1694, Jane Treat; Con- stant,^ b. 25 March, 1 700, d. 1 759, who m. 20 Oct. 1 726, Ann Larkin ; Constant, Jr^ (his father), who m. 23 Sept. 1754, Lois Cobb, and had Col. Constant and Rev. James Freeman, D.D. CHARLE.S HENRY DAVIS, LLD* Grandson of Col. Constant Freeman, whom he succ. in 1843 ; was born in Boston, 16 Jan. 1807; d. Washington, D.C., 18 * This biographical notice is tal;en mainly from a paper written for the American Academy of Arts and Sciences by Prof. James Mills Peirce, of Har- vard University. -^;^. .4 ^-^ CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 1 93 Feb. 1877. His father, Hon. Daniel Davis, was a lawyer of distinction, and long Solicitor-General of the State of Mass. Daniel Davis had settled first in Portland (then Falmouth), but moved to Boston in 1804, and built a house which is still standing on Somerset Street, and in which the subject of this notice was born. This house is now occupied by the N. E. Historic-Genealogical Society. Charles Henry was educated at the Boston Latin School, and entered Harvard College in 1821. He left college two years later to enter the United States Navy. His uncle, Col. Freeman, was Fourth Auditor of the Treasury at that time; and it was through his interest that a midshipman's warrant was procured for his nephew, which bore date 12 Aug. 1823. Although Davis never graduated at Harvard, the University conferred on him in 1841 the degree of A.B., and in 1868 that of LL.D. ; and his name stands in the triennial catalogue in the list of members of the class of 1825. A beautiful win- dow in the Memorial Hall in Cambridge commemorates the fact that he was the oldest representative of the University and the senior in rank who served during the civil war. His first cruise in the navy was on board the frigate "United States," then on the Pacific station. For the next fifteen or twenty years his life was passed in the usual duties of his profession. He became passed-midshipman in 1829, and lieutenant in 1834. Another cruise in the Pacific, a cruise in the West Indies and to the Mediterranean, and ser- vice in the Brazils filled the time until about 1840, when he took up his residence in Cambridge. During this period of his early life his character had formed by reading, reflection, and intercourse with the world, and his habits of thought and feeling bore ever after deep and pleasant traces of the educa- tion of these earlier years. At this first period of leisure from the active duties of his profession, Davis undertook a serious course of reading, appljing himself particularly to the study 194 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE of mathematics, which he pursued under the guidance of Prof Benjamin Peirce, his life-long friend. In 1842 he was ordered to duty on the Coast Survey, of which Prof Bache was next year appointed superintendent ; and he continued as one of the most valued officers of this service until 1849. He in- vestigated the velocity and direction of tides and currents in New York harbor, in the Gulf Stream, and in the neighbor- hood of Nantucket; and the ability which he displayed on this work led to his frequent appointment on commissions, both then and subsequently, to examine the principal har- bors of the country. These researches engaged him in the general study of the laws of tidal action, in which he made valuable additions to knowledge, and in which he was led to the adoption of new and striking views, embodied in his •■ Memoir upon the Geological Action of the Tidal and other Currents of the Ocean" (Mem. Am. Acad., new series, vol. iv.) and his " Law of Deposit of the Fl^od Tide" (Smith- sonian Contributions, vol. iii.). The object of these publica- tions, which have made him known to men of science as a hydrographer of learning and skill, was to exhibit the law of connection between the currents of the sea and the alluvial deposits on its borders and in its depths, and to show that this law had contributed in past ages, and is still contributing, to the determination and modification of the forms of conti- nents. At the same time with the performance of this valu- able scientific work, he was rendering service by labors of a more directly practical utility. His discovery, between 1846 and 1849, of dangerous shoals (Davis's New South Shoal, etc.) lying in the track of vessels sailing from New York to Europe, or from Boston to the West Indian and Southern ports, attracted public attention to the value of the Coast Survey, which had not then attained the position it now holds; and he received special letters of commendation from merchants and insurance companies. CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 1 95 Lieutenant Davis was fietached from the Coast Survey in 1849 to become the first superintendent of the new " Ameri- can Ephemeris and Nautical Almanac," which owed its foun- dation directly to his efforts. The following extract from a letter of Prof. Bache to the Secretary of the Treasury, dated 17 July, 1849, shows the estimation in which he was held by his distinguished chief: — " The official reports of the progress of the Coast Survey have, from time to time, brought the name and services of Lieutenant Davis very prominently before the Department as marked by all the qualities which insure distinction in such a work. The loss of his services will be deeply felt ... In parting with this most valued officer for a field of duty alike honorable to him and useful to the country, I desire to place on the records of the Treasury Depart- ment the strongest expression of my sense of his merits in the career which he leaves." Lieutenant Davis rendered important benefits to the coun- try in the successful organization and conduct of the " Nautical Almanac." The work was placed on a higher plane than the " British Nautical Almanac " which had heretofore been used in this country. The first volume appeared in 1852, and was favorably received on both sides of the Atlantic ; and it may safely be said that with the exception of the Coast Survey, no scientific work inaugurated in this country has redounded more largely to the national credit. In the work of the of- fice there was a freedom from the irksome restraints of disci- pline which, though it might work badly under other circum- stances, was very favorable to the development of a school of mathematicians. Besides men like Peirce and Walker, who had attained eminence before becoming connected with the office, the names of President Runkle, Professors Winlock and Newcomb (the present Superintendent), Chauncey Wright, and William Terrel may be cited as representatives of the 196 BIOGRAPHICAL NUTICES OF THE men who were first brought out through their connection with the " Nautical Almanac." In 1854 Davis was promoted to the rank of commander, and in 1857 he published an English translation of Gauss's " Theoria Motiis Corporum Coelestium," which has remained a standard edition among astronomers and mathematicians. Commander Davis's period of superintendency of the " Nautical Almanac " was interrupted by a three years' cruise in the Pacific, in command of the sloop-of-war " St. Mary's." During this cruise he made investigations of the guano deposits among certain of the remote Pacific islands, and in 1857 he gave striking proof of the independent decision of character and willingness to assume responsibility for which he was ever distinguished in the service. William Walker, an Ameri- can adventurer and filibuster, had invaded Nicaragua with a small army of followers, and had been elected president in June, 1856. His arbitrary acts provoked a domestic insurrec- tion, seconded by several surrounding States and by agents of the Vanderbilt company whose route of transit across the isthmus had been broken up by Walker. Walker was de- feated in several battles, and finally besieged in Rivas by a greatly superior force. The " St. Mary's " had been sent to the coast to watch events ; and Commander Davis, acting on his own responsibility, and without explicit instructions from the commander-in-chief of the squadron, marched to Rivas with the ship's company of the " St. Mary's," raised the siege, and accepted the surrender of Walker, conveying him to Panama. This step saved many lives and prevented serious complications, and was fully approved by the United States government. In 1861, on the outbreak of the civil war, Commander Davis's connection with the "Nautical Almanac" ceased, and he was called to Washington. His knowledge of the coast and particularly of the Southern harbors, many of which he had CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 1 97 examined while serving on various liarbor commissions, made his services of peculiar value to the government. He served as member of a board organized to inquire into and report on the condition of the Southern coast with a view to offensive naval operations on the part of the United States. This in- quiry led to the organization of the fleet which was placed under the command of Flag-Officer Du Pont, and of which Davis was fleet captain and chief of staff. The first bril- liant naval achievement of the war was the reduction and cap- ture of Port Royal. Davis was prominently engaged in both the planning and execution of this great action, in which two strong forts, fully manned and mounting forty-three guns of heavy calibre, yielded after four hours' action with the fleet. In Flag-Officer Du Pont's official report of 1 1 Nov. 1861, he says of Commander Davis : — " In the organization of our large fleet before sailing, and in the preparation and systematic arrangement of the details of our con- templated work — in short, in all the duties pertaining to the flag- officer — I received his most valuable assistance. He possesses the rare quality of being a man of science and a practical officer, keep- ing the love of science subordinate to the regular duties of his pro- fession. During the action he watched over the movements of the fleet, kept the official minutes, and evinced that calmness In danger which, to my knowledge for thirty years, has been a conspicuous trait in his character." While still fleet-captain, Davis served in placing obstruc- tions to the entrance to Charleston harbor; and in May, 1862, he was appointed flag-officer of the Mississippi Flotilla, re- lieving Flag-Officer A. H. Foote. He assumed command of the flotilla off Fort Pillow; and a day or two later he, with seven vessels, beat off a squadron of eight iron-clads which had steamed up the river to attack him. The action was a spirited one, and lasted nearly an hour. Three of the enemy's vessels were disabled, but avoided capture under the guns of igS BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE Fort Pillow. On 5 June Fort Pillow was abandoned by the Confederates, and on the 6th Davis steamed down the river and brought on a general action with the enemy's fleet of iron-clads and rams opposite Memphis. The action was a spirited and brilliant one, and resulted in the capture and destruction of all the Confederate vessels but one, and the surrender of Memphis. Davis then joined Farragut, and was engaged in various operations near Vicksburg and in the Yazoo River until September, when he was forced through ill health to relinquish his command. In this year (1862) the Bureau of Navigation was estab- lished in the Navy Department, and Davis became its first chief. In 1863 he received the thanks of Congress, and was promoted to the rank of Rear Admiral, for his services on the Mississippi. At the close of the war, in 1865. he became Superintendent of the Naval Observatory at Washington, and in 1866, in compliance with a resolution of the Senate, prepared a valuable " Report on Interoceanic Railways and Canals," which was revised and reprinted in 1870, and which has formed the basis of instructions for subsequent surveys of Isthmian routes. In 1867 Admiral Davis embarked for his last cruise, in command of the naval forces on the South Atlantic station, and hoisted his flag on board the new frigate " Guerriere," a magnificent vessel of an advanced type of naval architecture. In 1868, while still in command of the South Atlantic squad- ron, he became involved in an unpleasant controversy with the United States ministers to Brazil and Paraguay, growing out of the war existing in Paraguay, then subject to the dictatorship of Lopez. Without going into details which would occupy more space than can be given here, it is suf- ficient to state that in this affair Admiral Davis's reputation suff"ered nothing in the service nor among those outside who fully understood the merits of the case. But his enemies. CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 1 99 although they failed in their attack on his professional repu- tation, were hardly capable of realizing the extent of their success in imbittering the closing years of his active career. His sensitive and generous nature shrank from the coarseness and virulence of this personal controversy. Admiral Davis returned from South America in 1869, and was for several years commandant of the Navy Yard at Nor- folk. In the winter of 1 873-74 he was again appointed Super- intendent of the Naval Observatory, in time to take part, as chairman of the Transit of Venus Commission, in completing the preparations for the expeditions of 1874. In 1874-75 Congress made appropriations for printing the records of the "Polaris" expedition to the Arctic seas, commanded by the late Capt. C. F. Hall ; and Admiral Davis was asked to take charge of the work. The " Narrative of the North Polar Expedition," his last work, was published in 1876. The government had purchased the whole of Hall's journals and records; and a second volume, which was to contain the story of Hall's former expeditions, was begun. The summer of 1876 in Washington was an unusually hot and unhealthy season. Admiral Davis's health had been failing for some time, but he worked faithfully and with great interest on the " Narrative " through the whole summer, and was engaged on the second volume up to within four days of his death. In November he was member of a board to visit the site for a naval station at Port Royal. On his return from this, his last active duty, his health failed rapidly, and he died at the Observatory in Washington. He was buried on the banks of the Charles River, in the Cambridge Cemetery, within sight of the city of his home. His dear friend Benjamin Peirce has since been laid by his side. In character he was singularly true, sincere, and simple. " He was an admirable officer. He had the true spirit of command, — strong, dignified, and quiet; and one that, not 200 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE needing artificial support, was accompanied by a thoroughly friendly relation with his officers and men. He was a charm- ing companion, abounding to the last in a natural freshness and gayety of spirit ; and he had one of the most honorable, upright, true, generous, and gentle hearts that ever beat." At the annual meeting of the Mass. Society of the Cincinnati, 4 July, 1877, Rev. Dr. Lothrop spoke feehngly of the death of Rear-Admiral Davis, and offered resolutions, which were unanimously adopted by a rising vote, stating that the Society held his memory in profound and grateful respect; that it honored him for his large scientific attainments and labors, for his skill, bravery, and gallant bearing as a naval com- mander, and for his thorough devotion of his talents and energy at all times, in peace and in war, to the best interests of his country and the progress of mankind. His descent from Robert^ Davis of Barnstable, 1638, was through y^ij'?//;," b. Barnstable, 1662, d. Barnstable, 1729, whom. Hannah Cobb, dau. of Elder Henry Cobb of Plymouth, March, 1695 ; Daniel^ b. Barnstable, 28 Sept. 1713, d. Barnstable, 22 April, 1799, m. (2d) Mehitable Sturgis, wid. of John Sturgis and dau. of Josiah Davis, 7 July, 1761 ; Daniel^ (his father), b. Barnstable, 8 May, 1762, d. Cambridge, 27 Oct. 1835, m. Lois Freeman, dau. of Col. Constant Freeman, 7 March, 1786. Charles Henry was m. in 1842 to Harriet Blake, dau. of Hon. Elijah Hunt Mills of Northampton, U. S. Senator from Massachusetts. His widow survives him. There were six children. The oldest son, Constant Freeman, a young man of great promise, and whose char- acter closely resembled that of his father, d. in 1867 in Brazil, whither he had gone in search of health. He graduated at Harvard in the class of 1864. The second son, Charles Henry, is a member of the Society, and is noticed below. The third son, Frank Du Pont, graduated at Harvard in 1870, was successful as a banker in New York until his health failed, and d. at Nice in 1879. Of the three daughters, all living, one is the wife of Hon. Henry Cabot Lodge of Massachusetts ; the second is m. to Brooks Adams, Esq., of Boston, and the third to J. D. Henley Luce, Esq., of Boston. CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. CHARLES HENRY DAVIS. Son of Admiral Davis, whom he succ. in 1 880; was b. Cambridge, Mass., 28 Aug. 1845. He was educated at the U. S. Naval Academy; app. acting midshipman, 29 Nov. 1861 ; midshipman, 12 July, 1862; ensign, i Nov. 1866; master, i Dec. 1866; lieut., 12 March, 1868; lieut.-com- mander, 30 June, 1869; commander, 30 Oct. 1885. At this date (1890), stationed in Washington at the Office of Naval Intelligence, Navy Department. He ID. 31 March, 1875, Louisa Maria, dau. of John Van Pelt Quackenbush, M.D., of Albany. Children — Elizabeth, b. 14 Jan. 187S. Charles Henry, b. 23 April, 1885. D.ANIEL, b. 20 Nov. 1886. STljomas Habis jFrccman. Son of David and Abigail (Davis) Freeman ; b. Barnstable, Mass., 25 March, 1757. Com. ensign in Bradford's (14th) reg. 31 Jan. 1777; lieut. i April, 1778; in Brooks's (7th) reg. in 1783. Grandson and legatee of Mrs. Bethia Gorham, of Barnstable, widow. His mother, a widow, was appointed his guardian, 1 1 July, 1769. Her will, 18 Sept. 1788, gives to her sister Lucy Garrett, and to Sarah, \vife of Isaiah Parker, all her property, in case her son T. D. Freeman does not return. Samuel jFtinfe. He was the son of Dr. John, and grandson of Rev. Thomas Frink, the first ordained minister of Rutland, Mass., and was b. there in 1763. Entering the army in 1780, he was com. ensign in M Jackson's (8th) reg. 5 July, 1782, and d. Paxton, Mass., 1846. 202 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE He m. 1790, Ester Nichols of Carlisle, and had — John Adams, Kennebec, Me., b. 1809, resides in Paxton, Mass. Isabella, Rutland, Mass., b. 18 15, m. Ebenezer Parker, and re- sides in Holden, Mass. Alice, b. 181 8. Samuel, b. 1820. Samuel iFrost. He was b. Framingham, Mass., 13 July, 1752; d. there i Nov. 181 7. Entered the army in 1776; com. lieut. in Nixon's (6th) reg. i Jan. 1777; lieut. and adjutant, 1778-79; adjutant and paymaster, 1780-81, continuing in the latter capacity until 1784; com. capt. 12 Oct. 1782. He was for four years a Selectman of Framingham and a Trustee of the Framing- ham Academy. His descent from Thomas ' Frost, of Sudbury, who m. 1 2 Nov. 1668, Mary Goodridge, was through Samuel^ b. 23 Nov. 1686, d. 2 Aug. 1736, who m. I Feb. 1710-11, Elizabeth Rice; SamueP (\\\% father), b. 13 Dec. 17 15, d. 12 March, 1799, who m. 19 June, 1750, Rebeckah How. He m. 3 Sept. 1787, Mary Heard of Wayland. They had — Sarah, b. 28 Dec. 1788, m. in 1809, Thos. Arnold. REBECiciH, b. 28 April, 1 791, d. ae. 38. Mary, b. 25 April, 1793, m. Chapin Allen. Abigail, b. 4 April, 1795. Clarissa, b. 23 May, 1797, m. Henry How of Sudbury. Hannah, b. 15 .'\ug. 1799. Harriet, b. 17 Feb. 1802, m. Reuben Hunt. Eliza, b. 12 Oct. 1804, m. Ransom, lives in Maine. Julia Ann, b. 12 March, 1S07, m. Joseph Taylor of Kennebunk. SAMUEL FROST ARNOLD. Son of Thomas Arnold and Sally, eldest dau. of Capt. Samuel Frost, whom he succ. in 1833. He was. b. Framing- ham, Mass., 28 Jan. 1813, and d. 2 Nov. 1835. CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 203 LEONARD ARNOLD. Brother of Samuel Frost Arnold, whom he succ. in 184 1. He was b. in Framingham, 2i July, 1817; resides in Somer- ville, and 25 Oct. 1842, m. Irene G. Clarke, by whom he had — L. Frank, b. 4 Sept. 1845, accountant, m. 25 Oct. 1877, Lilla E., dau. of Leonard Poole. Irene Adelaide, b. 19 Nov. 1850, d. 21 June, 1854. JJcnjamin iFrotijtiiflijam. He was b. Boston, Mass., 6 April, 1734; d. Charlestown, Mass., 19 Aug. 1809. He was a cabinet-maker; served in Gridley's artillery in the war of 1756-63, and was a capt.-lieut. in his reg. in 1775, and in Kno.x's in 1776; com. capt. in Crane's artillery, i Jan. 1777; served through the whole war; was wounded at Germantown. He was the son of Benjamin and Mary (Edwards) Frothingham, and m. 4 May, 1762, Mary, dau. of John and Judith (Upham) Deland. They had — Mary, b. 17 Feb. 1763, d. unm. 22 Oct. 1829. Esther, b. 17 Dec. 1764, d. 1765. Elizabeth, b. 22 Feb. 1767, d. young. Esther, b. 7 Jan. 1770, m. Rev. Daniel Emerson of HoUis, d. 14 March, 1849. Sarah, b. 19 July, 1772, m. Seth Sweetser of Newburyport. Benjamin, bapt. 3 April, 1774, d. i Oct. 1775. Benjamin. Hannah, d. 23 Aug. 1830, je. 51. BENJAMIN FROTHINGHAM. Eldest son of Benjamin, whom he succ. in 1826; b. Charles- town ; d. there Aug. 1832, se. 56, unm. He was a cabinet- m:iker. 204 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE jFretJcritfe iFffit. He was b. Andover, 9 June, 1760; d. a pensioner in N. Y. City, 30 Jan. 1828. Com. ensign in Vose's (ist) reg. i Feb. 1781,10 3 Nov. 1783 ; capt. ist U. S. artillerists and engineers, 2 June, 1 794-1 June, 1802. Daniel M. Frye, his son, was admitted a member of the N. Y. Society in 1836, on condition of his paying " into the funds of the Society one month's pay, upon the rank held by his father in the Continental army previous to its dissolution." He d. in 1859, without complying with the condition. His son Frederick was ad- mitted into the N. Y. Society, apparently without conditions, in 1859. He d. in 1881 ; and his widow, a resident of New Orleans, applied in 1882 for aid from the Mass. Society. It was at first refused (under the rule of 1862), but subse- quently allowed. Son oi John, of Andover, m. 9 June, 1789, Margaret, dau. of Capt. Daniel Mackay. They had: Margaret O., b. 1798, who m. Forman ; and Daniel Mackay, who joined the N. Y. So- ciety in 1836, and was succ. by his son Frederick on his decease, 8 Feb. 1859. JJoljn jFuUrr. Of Sherborn, Rutland County, Vt. ; living in 1820. Lieut, in Bradford's (14th) reg.; com. capt. 16 April, 1780; in H. Jackson's (4th) reg. in 1783. Sames ©artrncr. Conductor in Knox's artillery reg. in 1776; lieut. and ad- jutant in Crane's artillery, 1777; com. capt.-lieut. 22 Feb. 1780. CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 205 ^ntJrtto Gffarrttt. Of Barnstable, where he was a pensioner; living in 1820. Ensign in Brooks's (7th) reg. in 1780; com. licut. 25 Oct. 1781 ; in 6th reg. 1783. "Richard Garrett of Barnstable m. in 1721, Elizabeth Stevens of Rochester, Mass., and had Andrew, h. 12 Oct. 1723, who in 1753 m. Temperance Parker. The latter I suppose to be the parents of Lieut. A. G." — Letter of Rev. Frederick Freeman. Joljn ©corflf. He was b. Braintree, Mass., 175 1; d. Watertown, Mass., 22 Jan. 1820. He was said to be one of those who helped to destroy the tea in Boston Harbor in 1773 ;* com. ensign in Gardner's, afterward Bond's (25th) reg. May, 1775 ; 2d lieut. Jan. 1776; 1st lieut. April, 1776; ist lieut. Crane's artillery, I Jan. 1777; capt. -lieut. i Oct. 1778. He served from the beginning to the close of the war; was present at the siege of Boston ; was instrumental in saving the boats and baggage of Sullivan's retreating army at Chambly, 15 June, 1776, and in protecting the rear; and was wounded in the leg, at the defence of Fort Mifflin, on the Delaware, in Nov. 1777, by a ball from the "Augusta." He suffered severely from this wound, and finally died from its effects. Capt George was a faithful soldier; so much so as to acquire from his com- rades the sobriquet of " Captain Particular." He was a de- voted patriot, a man of high moral character, and a finished gentleman. After the war he, with Capt. Thomas Vose and Major Daniel Jackson, engaged in business in Watertown, in which he continued until his death. * His name does not appear, however. In the list printed in the collection of letters and documents relating to the subject. 206 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE He was the son of John George and Phipps, and m. 29 Oct. 1787, Margaret, dau. of Capt. VVm. Main, of Charleston, S. C. She d. Thomaston, Me., 8 Sept. 1854, se. 95. They had — WiLLL«i Main, b. 29 Oct. 1 789, lost at sea. John, Jr., b. 2 July, 1791, d. 9 July, 1833. Sarah Main, b. 2 Dec. 1792, m. 28 Oct. 1819, Ch. Merrill of Thomaston. Marianne, b. 2 Sept. 1794, m. 30 Sept. 1822, John O'Brien of Thomaston, Me., d. 23 Sept. 1870. Lucy Jones, b. 10 Sept. 1796, m. Clinton Thayer of Watertown, d. 18 June, 1821. Margaret, b. 16 March, 1S03, m. 1S24, Hon. John Ruggles of Thomaston. EDWARD KAVANAGH O'BRIEN. Son of Hon. John O'Brien, and grandson of Capt. John George, whom he succ. in 1880; was b. Thomaston, Me., 3 Feb. 1833. I^s has been since 1855 a member of the firm of Burgess, O'Brien, & Co., merchants, lime-manufacturers, and shipbuilders. He was a member of the Maine Senate, 1868 and 1869; Democratic candidate for Congress in 1874 and 1876; for several years a member of the Democratic State Committee ; a member of the Maine House of Repre- sentatives, 1888 to 1891 ; a member of the Legislative Com- mittee to attend the Centennial of the Inauguration of Wash- ington, at New York, in 1889; Trustee of the Thomaston Savings Bank from its organization ; Trustee of the " Ed- ward O'Brien Church Fund," created in 1878 by his uncle the late Hon. Edward O'Brien (a large shipbuilder and ship- owner, who was distinguished for his enterprise, integrity, and philanthropy) ; and a Director in the Knox & Lincoln Railroad Co. for several years. He m. 2 .-Xpril, 1856, Elvira O., dau. of \\'m. O. Masters. She d. 6 June, 1 88 1. No children. CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 207 Of Rhode Island; d. Chailestown, Mass., 6 Nov. 1818, EC. 68. Com. adjutantof Glover's (14th) reg. i Jan. 1776; capt. 12 March, 1776; major, 29 July, 1778; commandant of Wash- ington's body-guard, 1776-791 in Sprout's (2d) reg. in 1782- 83 ; slightly wounded at the capture of one of the British redoubts at Yorktown. In 1798 Gen. Knox recommended him for lieut.-col.-commandant of a regiment about being raised, saying, " No officer of the late American army would discipline and command a regiment with better effect." He m. Jan. 1787, Catharine, dau. of Stephen Hall of Boston. A dau. Catharine N. m. A. C. Park. ALEXANDER HAMILTON GIBBS. Eldest son of Major Caleb, whom he succ. in 18 19. He was b. Boston, 2 Aug. 1791 ; vvas a merchant of Roxbury ; capt. of Ancient and Honorable Artillery Co. in 1823; and d. 5 March, 1827. IStniamin dRUfitKt He was probably the son of Capt. Daniel of Brookfield, Mass., and was b. 31 May, 1755. He was ensign in Putnam's (5th) reg.; com. lieut. 17 April, 1782.* Watljan (ffiooTialE. He was b. Brookfield, Mass., 11 Nov. 1744. His early years were spent upon a farm in Rutland, where he also learned the trade of a brick-mason, thus laying the founda- tion for a vigorous, muscular frame, which enabled him in after years to undergo the fatigues and hardships to which he * The Benjamin Gilbert who joined the N. Y. .Society of the Cincinnati was another person. 208 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE was exposed. About 1771 he removed with his wife and three children to Brookheld, where he purchased a farm, upon which he resided when the war of the Revolution began. He had taken an active part in the organization of the volunteer " minute-men " of that day, and was one of the first after the Lexington fight to join the army around Bos- ton. In July -Nov. 1775, he was a lieut. in David Brewer's reg. stationed at Roxbury. On 15 March, 1776, he was com. a 1st lieut. in Bond's (_2Sth) reg., which, in April following, he accompanied to New York, where he was detached for service in the engineer department under Lieut.-Col. Rufus Putnam, while his regiment proceeded to take part in the invasion of Canada. Employed in constructing works to pro- tect New York, he took part also in the other operations for its defence. He was com. capt. i Jan. 1777, in Rufus Putnam's (5th) reg., with which he joined the army of Gen. Gates, near Stillwater, N. Y., then opposing the invasion of Gen. Bur- goyne. The woods being filled with hostile savages, no infor- mation could be obtained respecting the enemy until Capt. Goodale voluntarily undertook to perform this hazardous duty, in which he succeeded perfectly, having penetrated the hostile camp and brought off si.x prisoners, besides gaining the desired information. His success induced Gen. Gates to continue him in this kind of duty, in which he had, before the surrender of Burgoyne, captured 121 prisoners from the enemy. In the battle of 7 Oct. at Saratoga, Putnam's regi- ment was prominently engaged. Toward the close of the action, the 5th and 6th regiments, under the command of Putnam, stormed in front the redoubt which was in ad\ance of the extreme right of the British line, and which was occupied by the German troops of Col. Breyman, at the same moment that Learned's brigade, in which was Jackson's (8th) reg., led by Lieut.-Col. Brooks, entered on its left and rear. Bur- goyne having made a retrograde movement after the battle, CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 2O9 a pursuit was ordered by Gen. Gates ; Capt. Goodale, with a party of volunteers, leading the advance. It was soon found that the enemy was strongly posted, instead of being on the retreat; and the troops were recalled, not, however, until Capt. Goodale had captured an advanced party of the Brit- ish, consisting of one officer and thirty-five men. Before retreating a party of volunteers cut adrift some boats loaded with Burgoyne's stores, which were tied to the right bank of the Hudson. This bold act " was accomplished chiefly through the fearless activity of Capt. Goodale, who was noted for daring exploits." On 17 Oct. Burgoyne surren- dered. In the spring and summer of 1778 Capt. Goodale was engaged with his command at West Point in the con- struction of Fort Putnam, named after the colonel of his regiment. In the latter part of August, 1778, he was or- dered to hold an important point near Valentine's Hill, an advanced position of the force under Gen. Charles Scott, who watched the British outposts near King's Bridge, N. Y. Here he was attacked on the 30th by an ovenvhelming force under Lieut. -Cols. Simcoe and Emmerick ; and after a brave and determined resistance, prolonged until two thirds of his small party were slain or disabled, he was wounded and taken pris- oner. After his return home, in the latter part of 1780, he suffered from a long sickness, no doubt induced by the horri- ble prison life to which he had been subjected. After recov- ering, he continued in service throughout the war, and became entitled to half-pay, commutation, and bounty land ; but failed to receive the promotion to which his important services and his sufferings fully entitled him, holding the rank of major by brevet only. After the war, he bought a farm in Brook- field, and was remarkable for his industry and skill in its management. This he sold, however, early in 1788, on asso- ciating himself with " The Ohio Company," and removed with his family to Marietta, whence he went in April, 1789, to H 2IO BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE Belpre. His removal to Ohio was performed in a novel man- ner, the wagon containing his household goods and part of his family being drawn by a team composed of three cows and a bull, which he had previously trained to work together, and with which the journey was performed with ease and in as short a time as it could have been with oxen. This stock, which he had carefully selected, afterward became highly celebrated in southeastern Ohio, where it was known as the " Goodale breed." Soon after his arrival, in Aug. 1788, he was appointed by Gov. St. Clair a captain of light infantry ; and on the erection at Belpre, in 1790, of a stockaded fort to protect the settlers from the Indians, this work, which was called the " Farmer's Castle," was placed under his command. The fort having be- come overcrowded, early in 1793 a palisaded work containing two block-houses was built about a mile below it, called " Goodale's Garrison," in which he placed his family about 20 Feb. 1793. On i March, while at work in a clearing about forty or fifty rods from the garrison, he was surprised and car- ried off captive by a party of Indians. His fate was not known until years afterward, when three Indians who had belonged to the party informed Col. Meeker at Detroit that they had seized, gagged, and carried off a man whose description exactly answered that of Major Goodale. They intended to take him to Detroit and get a large ransom for him ; but somewhere, on the Miami or at Sandusky, he fell sick and died. This was a severe blow to his family, and also to the little isolated community of which he was the life and soul. " His memory," says Judge Barker, one of the early colonists, " was for many years fresh and green in the hearts of his con- temporary pioneers, and is still cherished with respect and affection by their descendants." His descent from Robert'^ Goodak, b. England, 1603-4, who with his wife Katherine left Ipswich, Eng., Ajiril, 1634, and settled in CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 2 I I Salem, was through Zachariah- b. Salem, 1639, who m. Elizabeth, dau. of Edward and Mary Beauchamp ; John,' b. 10 Aug. 168 1, went to Marlborough, Mass., ab. 1702, d. 11 May, 1752, who m. 8 Sept. 1703, Elizabeth, dau. of John and Elizabeth (Baker) Witt of Lynn, who d. 29 July, 1738; Solomon* (his father), b. 24 May, 1707, d. 1744-45, who m. 18 May, 1732, Anna, widow of Samuel Walker, dau. of John and Hannah (Corliss) Hinds. Nathan m. 11 Sept. 1765, Elizabeth, dau. of John and Susannah (Gates) Phelps of Rutland (b. i .April, 1743, d. Franklinton, O., 24 Jan. 1809). They had^ Sarah, b. 28 May, 1766, d. May, i8i8,ra. 1788, Cornelius Delano of Massachusetts. He was b. 15 Aug. 1764, and d. June, 1824. Samuel, b. i Feb. 1768, d. 23 Dec. 1770. Timothy Ware, b. 21 Feb. 1770, d. 7 Jan. 1796, s. p. Elizabeth, b. 7 Oct. 1772, d. 2 .Aug. 1830, m. 25 Oct. 1789, Wanton Casey, Esq., of Rhode Island. He was b. 24 Feb. 1760, and d. 17 Dec. 1842. Cynthl\, b. 31 July, 1774, d. 3 March, 1861, m. (ist) 1793 (?) Dr. Samuel Barnes of Massachusetts; m. (2d) 8 June, 1808, Hon. James Kilboume, who d. 24 April, 1850. Susanna, b. 13 Nov. 1778, d. 19 Aug. 1828, m. March, 1804, Hezekiah Smith of Connecticut. He was b. 6 April, 1776, and d. 4 Jan. 1842. Lincoln, b. 25 Feb. 1782, d. 30 April, 1868, s. p. Theodosu, b. 25 Feb. 1785, d. 6 April, 1832, m. 6 April, 1806, Thomas Swearingen of Virginia. He was b. 19 Dec. 1779, and d. 29 Sept. 1863. Lauretta, b. 25 Dec. 1787, d. 15 Nov. 1793. LL\COLN GOODALE, M.D. Only son of Capt. Nathan, whom he succ. in 1830; was b. Brookfield, Mass., 25 Feb. 1782; d. Columbus, O., 30 April, 1868. He was taken by his father to the mouth of the Muskingum, O., 9 Aug. 1788, being then in his seventh year. His residence during youth and early manhood was at Marietta and Belpr^, O., where he received a common- school education, and studied medicine and surgery under 212 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE Dr. Leonard Jewctt of the latter place. In 1805 he moved to Franklinton, in Franklin Co., O., and began the practice of his profession. In 181 2, before the declaration of war with Great Britain, he volunteered for service in the army, and was appointed by Gov. Return Jonathan Meigs surgeon's mate in Col. Duncan McArthur's regiment. He participated in the operations against Detroit, was taken prisoner at Hull's surrender, and sent to Maiden, where he attended a number of our wounded soldiers, performed several surgical opera- tions, and took the convalescents, as soon as they were re- leased, to Cleveland, O. He returned to Franklinton in October, 181 2. Here, in addition to the practice of medi- cine, he entered into mercantile business, opening a store for drugs and general merchandise. In 1 8 14 Dr. Goodale re- moved from Franklinton to Columbus, on the opposite bank of the Scioto, about this time accepted as the permanent lo- cation of the State government. He enlarged his business, and gradually gave up the practice of medicine. He was closely identified with the interests of Franklin County and of Columbus ; filled the position of county recorder, and for three years (1821-23) was one of the nine trustees of the borough of Columbus. He was untiring in his efforts to build up the material interests of Columbus ; and although he accumulated a large fortune, was noted for his hospitali- ties, his liberality, and his charities. In 1888 a bronze bust of Dr. Goodale, by J. O. A. Ward, was erected in Goodale Park, Columbus, — a beautiful piece of ground, forty acres in extent, given to the city by Dr. Goodale in 1851. He d. unm. in 1868, honored and regretted by the entire community. SILAS CASEY. Son of Elizabeth (Goodale) and Wanton Casey, and nephew of Dr. Lincoln Goodale, whom he succ. in 1870; was b. in East Greenwich, R. I., 12 July, 1807; d. Brooklyn, N. Y., 22 '-^^ Q^^XtVb C^ ci^'-e CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 213 Jan. 1883. His grandfather, Silas, an extensive importing merchant before the Revolution, and his father. Wanton, who was educated in France during P'ranklin's residence there, were natives of East Greenwich. In his youth he was cele- brated for adventurous feats ; was educated at the academy in his native town and at West Point; and on graduating, I July, 1826, was app. brevet 2d lieut. in the 7th inf , stationed at Fort Towson, Ark. While here he led a small party in a successful skirmish with some marauding Indians, whom he surprised and defeated with loss. His subsequent commis- sions are as follows: 2d lieut. 2d inf, 1829; assist, com- missary subsistence, Feb. 1836; ist lieut. June, 1836; capt. July, 1839; brevet-major for Contreras and Churubusco, 20 Aug. 1847; brevet-lieut.-col. for Chapultepec, 13 Sept. 1847; lieut.-col. 9th inf. 3 March, 1855 ; brig.-gen. of vols. 31 Aug. 1861 ; col. 4th inf. 9 Oct. 1861 ; brcvet-brig.-gen. U. S. A., and maj.-gen. vols, for Fair Oaks, 31 May, 1862; brevet- maj.-gen. U. S. A. 13 March, 1865, for gallant and meritorious services during the Rebellion. During the Florida war he was app. capt. in a reg. of Creek Indian vols. He rejoined his company in Jan. 1840; and having distinguished himself in the battle of Pilaklikaha (19 April, 1842), was recommended by Col. Worth, his com- mander, for the brevet of major. He was actively engaged in Mexico in the battles of Contreras and Churubusco ; and at the storming of the Castle of Chapultepec, while leading his men through a terrible fire, was severely wounded in the abdomen when near the Mexican batteries, a wound which confined him to his bed for a month. For his ser- vices and conduct in the war with Mexico, he received a beautiful silver vase from the inhabitants of his native town, and a resolution of thanks from the Legislature of Rhode Island. In Nov. 1851, while stationed in California, Casey attacked and defeated the Coquille River Indians, whom he completely subdued. 214 UIOGRAl'HICAL NOTICES OF THE In 1854 he was president of a board of officers which cor- rected and revised Hardee's hght infantry tactics, and also of that which adopted a manual for Colt's revolver pistol. In March, 1856, Lieut. -Col. Casey, in a campaign of twenty- five days, completely subdued the Puget Sound Indians in Washington Territory. Pending the controversy between the United States and the British Government respecting the boundaries of each in that territory, Lieut.-Col. Casey, in obedience to orders, occupied and fortified San Juan Island, which place was, by agreement between Gen. Scott and the British authorities, afterward occupied jointly by the two nations. This question was finally settled in favor of the United States by the arbitration of the Emperor of Germany. On arriving in New York, in Aug. 1861, he repaired to Washington, offered his services to the Government in sup- pressing the Rebellion, and was assigned to the duty of organizing into brigades, disciplining, and instructing the volunteer troops arriving there. On 20 March, 1862, he was assigned to the command of a division in the army of the Potomac, and accompanied it under Gen. McClellan to the Peninsula. Having been, contrary to his advice and opinion, ordered to Seven Pines (Fair Oaks), where his di- vision was within six miles of Richmond, without support on either flank, — " pushed like a wedge into the presence of the enemy," — he commenced work energetically, digging rifle- pits and cutting abatis, to strengthen as much as possible his false position. Here, on 31 May, Casey was attacked by an overwhelming force under Gens. Longstreet and Hill ; and after a severe conflict of three hours, was driven from his position, with a loss of 1,430 in killed, wounded, and missing, out of a total force of less than 5,000 men. Says an e}e- witness: "The veteran warrior Casey had been in the thick- est of the fight, directing and animating; . . . and nearly one third of his command had found a soldier's death, or were maimed and helpless from the fight." CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 215 Besides his promotion, Gen. Casey received the thanks of the Legislature of his native State for his bravery and skill in this battle. On 30 June he was relieved from the command of his division by Gen. McClellan, and ordered to the White House on the Pamunkey, where he successfully performed the duty of evacuating that depot, destroying those supplies that could not be taken away. On 11 Aug. he was again placed on duty to receive, organize; and instruct the volun- teers arriving at Washington ; and on this date the system of tactics for the U. S. army by Casey was adopted by the Gov- ernment. During his period of duty in Washington, Gen. Casey equipped, organized, and in a preliminary manner in- structed about 300,000 volunteer troops, — a service of great importance to the country, admirably performed. He was in July, 1868, retired, at his own request, after active service for forty-two years, and resided in Brooklyn, N. Y., until his death. His descent from Thomas'^ and Sarah Casey of Newport, R. I., abt. 1658, was through. y4^/i2/« ^ of Newport, R. I., b. abt. 1667, d. April, 1765, m. 8 March, 1706, Mary, dau. of Edward and Mary Greenman of Newport; Thomas^ of East Greenwich, R. I., b. 18 Nov. 1706, d. 20 April, 1797, m. 22 Nov. 1728, Comfort, dau. of Thomas and Sarah Langford of East Greenwich, R. I. ; Silas * of East Greenwich, R. I., b. 5 June, 1734, d. 27 Sept. 1814, m. 7 May, 1759, Abigail, dau. of Daniel and Mary (Wanton) Coggeshall of North Kingston, R. I. ; Wanto?i^ of East Greenwich, R. I., b. 24 Feb. 1760, d. 17 Dec. 1842, m. 25 Oct. 1789, Elizabeth, dau. of Maj. Nathan Goodale, and Elizabeth (Phelps), his wife, of Brook- field, Mass. Silas m. (ist) 12 July, 1830, Abby Perry, dau. of Hon. Dutee Jerauld and Abigail Coggeshall (Perry) Pearce of Newport, R. I. She was b. 12 July, 1813, d. 10 March, 1862. He m. (2d) 12 July, 1864, Florida, dau. of Charles and Julia (Crawford) Gordon of Washington, D. C. She was b. 8 Sept. 1831. Children by first wife — 2l6 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE Thomas Lincoln, b. lo May, 1831, brig.-gen. chief of engineers, U. S. A. Frederick Cummings, b. ii March, 1833, d. 13 Jan. 1834. Abby Pearce, b. 9 May, 1838, d. 25 Feb. 1886, m. 28 Nov. i860, Lewis Cass Hunt, brevet-brig.-gen. U. S. A. He was b. 23 Feb. 1824, d. 6 Sept. 1886. Silas, b. ii Sept. 1841, capt. U. S. N, m. 4 Oct. 1865, Sophie Gray, dau. of Henry Foxhall and Sophie Gray (White) Heber- ton of Philadelphia. She was b. i March, 1842. Elizabeth Goodale, b. i6 Feb. 1844, m. 28 Nov. 1862, Col. Robert Nicholson Scott, U. S. A. He was b. 21 Jan. 1838, d. 5 March, 1887. Edward Wanton, b. i Dec. 1850, lieut. U. S. infantry. By second wife — Julla Clifford, b. 3 May, 1865, m. 26 June, 1888, Hildreth Ken- nedy Bloodgood of New York City. Frederick Gordon, b. 26 Sept. 1866, d. 22 Dec. 1867. THOMAS LINCOLN CASEY. Eldest son of Gen. Silas Casey, whom he succ. in 1882; was b. in Madison Barracks, Sacketts Harbor, N. Y., 10 May, 1 83 1, and was graduated at the U. S. Military Academy as brevet 2d lieut. corps of engineers in 1852. His first service was as assistant engineer upon the harbor works of Delaware Bay and River and the construction of Fort Delaware until 1854. From 1854 to 1859 he was assistant professor of civil and military engineering at the Military Academy, and from 1859 to 1861 in command of engineer troops on Puget's Sound, Washington Territory. He became capt. of engineers, 6 Aug. i86i,and served during the Civil War as engineer on the staff of the general com- manding the Department of V^irginia, as superintending engi- neer of the construction of Forts Gorges, Preble, Scammell, Popham, and Knox, and the sea-coast batteries on the coast of Maine, and on special duty with the North Atlantic squad- CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 21/ ron during the first expedition to Fort Fisher, N. C, Dec. 1864. He was made major of engineers, 2 Oct. 1863, and brevetted lieut.-col. and colonel 13 March, 1865. He contin- ued in charge of the construction of fortifications on the coast of Maine until 1867, when he was placed in charge of the Division of Fortifications in the engineer bureau of the War Department in Washington, D. C, and continued upon this duty until 1877, when he was charged with public build- ings and grounds in the District of Columbia,. the Washing- ton aqueduct, and the construction of the building for the State, War, and Navy departments, which structure he com- pleted in 1888. He was made lieut.-col. of engineers, 2 Sept. 1864. In 1878 he was selected as the engineer to complete the Washington Monument. This he accomplished, 6 Dec. 1884, by placing a new and enlarged foundation beneath the old one; by carrying the shaft from a height of 150 feet to 500 feet; and crowning it with a pyramidion 55 feet in height in place of the flat terminal of the original design. He was promoted colonel corps of engineers, 13 March, 1884, and in 1886 became president of the Board of Engineers in New York City. On 6 July, 1888, he was appointed brigadier- general and chief of engineers U. S. A., with office in Washington, and on 2 Oct. 1S88, was by Act of Congress designated to erect the new building for the Library of Con- gress. Besides numerous official reports and articles upon engineering, he has contributed sketches to historical and genealogical magazines. He m. 8 May, 1856, Emma, dau. of Prof. Robert Walter and Louisa [Ferguson] Weir, N. A., of the U. S. Military Academy. She was b. 2 June, 1834. Children — Tho\us Lincoln, b. 19 Feb. 1857, captain corps of engineers, U. S. A. Robert Jerauld, b. 31 Aug. 1859, d. 7 Aug. i860. Harry Weir, b. 17 June 1861, d. i Sept. 1880. Edward Pearce, b. 18 June, 1864, architect and civil engineer. 2l8 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OK THE iFrantis He iSaron (ffiootitoin. He was b. in a town adjoining Plymouth, Mass., ab. 1760; d. Frankfort, Me., 19 Feb. 1S16. He was com. surgeon's mate of Bradford's (14th) reg. i Jan. 1777; was in H. Jack- son's (9th) reg. in 1781 ; in Mellen's (3d) reg. in 1783. Removing to Frankfort, Me., in 1796, he practised medicine there until his death, which was caused by being thrown from his carriage. He was also a justice of the Court of Common Pleas of Hancock County (181 1), and a judge of the Supreme Court. He m. at Plymouth, Mass., in Jul}', 1787, Jane, eldest dau. of Rev. Chandler Robbins. BENJAMIN APTHORP GOULD, LL.D. He was b. Boston, 27 Sept. 1834, and was adm. in 1864, under the rule of 1854. His grandfather, Capt. Benjamin Gould, was ensign in Little's reg., and was wounded 19 April, 1775. It is recorded of him that on the morning of that day he had been ploughing in the meadow on the opposite side of the road from his father's house, which is still stand- ing, and came home for breakfast. His feet being wet, he sat down in the chimney-corner to change his stockings and shoes, and was thus occupied when he heard the signal given for the minute-men. He sprang up at once, took down his musket from where it hung over the fireplace, seized a loaf of bread from the table, and stopping only to kiss his mother, started for the rallying-place at the church with one foot dry- shod and the other wet. The company started immediately on their march, and took part in the fight on the Concord road at Menotomy, near East Lexington. At nightfall he was lying wounded in a house on that road. A touching allusion to the wound then received from a bullet which struck him on the right cheek, fracturing the bone, is con- tained in the poem by his daughter Hannah F. Gould, en- n '^5^W ^iJZ^/c; CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 219 titled " The Scar of Lexington." He subsequently took part in the battles at Bennington, Stillwater, and Saratoga, and was captain of the guard at West Point at the time of Arnold's treason, which he was one of the earliest to dis- cover independently. Benjamin Apthorp Gould, son of Capt. Benjamin, was b. at Lancaster, Mass., 15 June, 1787. He graduated at Harvard College in 18 14, having in that year already taken charge of the Boston Latin School, by special permission of the college faculty. He remained in that position until the spring of 1828, editing meanwhile several books for the use of the pupils of the school. These found almost universal adoption throughout the country, and remained in general use for a long series of years. He was thus the editor of the earliest American editions, not only of Virgil, Ovid, and Horace, but of any classic author. Mr. Gould seems to have been peculiarly successful in securing the affection and respect of his pupils, many of whom yet survive. His health compelled him to resign after fourteen years of service ; and after two years of travel he engaged in commerce as a ship- owner and importer of cargoes from China and the East Indies, at first chiefly in connection with his father-in-law. He m., in 1823, Lucretia Dana, dau. of Nathaniel Goddard, and d. in Boston, 24 Oct. 1859. Benjamin Apthorp Gould, son of the foregoing, was b. in Boston, 27 Sept. 1824. On leaving college he served for a year as master of the Roxbury Latin School, which was transformed, while under his direction, from a high school to one for classical training. In the summer of 1845 he resigned this charge, in order to pursue his scientific studies in Europe, where he remained until the end of the year 1848, visiting the various observa- tories, and working for some time at those of Greenwich, Paris, Berlin, and Gottingen. Returning, he established and 2 20 KIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE maintained for twelve years the " Astronomical Journal," which, although suspended in 1861, was resumed in 1886, and is still continued. At the beginning of 1852 he took charge of the longitude work of the U. S. Coast Survey, which he continued to direct until 1867. The electric telegraph had then been only recently extended over the country, and the methods and apparatus for employing it in the determina- tion of longitudes had not been perfected. This work he accomplished, and thus determined a large number of lon- gitudes throughout the country previous to the adoption of the same methods in Europe. In 1856-59 he organized the Dudley Observatory at Albany, and together with Professors Bache, Henry, and Peirce, his colleagues in the scientific Council of the Ob- servatory, succeeded in maintaining it as a scientific institu- tion in opposition to the original trustees who had delegated all authority in its management, but desired to make it an advertisement and plaything. When actual violence released him from further responsibility, he returned to his home and his astronomical studies. In the latter part of the war for the Union, he took charge of the statistical department of the U. S. Sanitary Commis- sion, and in 1868 published the " Military and Anthropo- logical Statistics of American Soldiers," which contains many important results concerning the physical statistics of man, the laws of his proportions, growth, stature, weight, strength, etc., and of the distribution of populations by ages. In 1862-65 he superintended the computation of the un- reduced observations of the Washington Observatory, which covered a period of more than twelve years. Immediately upon the successful establishment of the At- lantic cable in 1866, he sailed for Europe in behalf of the U. S. Coast Survey, taking the necessary instruments and assistance, built a little observatory at Valencia, in Ireland, CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 22 1 and succeeded in making the observations and carrying out the operations needful for determining the longitude between Washington, on the one hand, and Greenwich on the other, before the English astronomers had thought it possible to begin the work, although they too had made all preparations for undertaking it. In May, 1870, he started with his family for South America, to carry out a long-cherished plan for making a thorough survey of the southern heavens and forming a catalogue of southern stars. For this purpose he had, three years previously, arranged the mode of procedure and bespoken the instruments, which were, however, more than two years in construction. Mean- while the Argentine minister to the United States, Mr. Sarmiento, had become strongly interested in the project ; and upon his election in 1868 to the Presidency of the Argentine Republic, he induced Dr. Gould to abandon the original plan for a private expedition, and to carry out the work under national authority. The design was success- fully accomplished; an observatory was built in the town of Cordoba, at the western limit of the great pampas, and organized as a permanent national institution. The undertak- ing, which had been intended to occupy three years, grew into fifteen before the whole work was completed ; but its extent was more than proportionally greater than that originally planned. In 1885 the work was completed. In its fourteen quarto volumes of results are contained: (i) a description of all the stars perceptible by the naked eye from the South pole to 10° north, with a determination of the brightness of each and a rearrangement of the southern constellations; (2) a catalogue, giving the positions and magnitudes of more than 73,000 stars, determined as sharply as possible from one observation each; (3) another catalogue, with the positions 222 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE of about 33,500 stars, determined by not less than four ob- servations each, made with the highest precision attainable in the present condition of practical astronomy; and, finally, all the individual observations from which these results were derived. Numerous interesting discoveries naturally attended these researches. In 1872 Dr. Gould organized the Argentine Meteorological Office for studying the climatic laws, of the South American Continent, regarding which practically nothing at all was at that time known, excepting the records of a very few ob- servations made at a few points on the Atlantic and Pacific coasts. He established stations throughout the interior, — from the Andes to the Atlantic and from the torrid zone to Cape Town, — so that, from the results thus obtained, the general distribution of rain, atmospheric pressure, tempera- ture, wind, and storms had become known before his de- parture from the country in 1885. Five volumes of the annals of the Meteorological Office were published during his sojourn at Cordoba, and sundry others have been since published by his successor. This institution, as well as the Observatory, continues in active operation, each being now under the direction of one of Dr. Gould's former assistants. Furthermore numerous determinations of longitude and latitude were made b\- him, or under his direction, for geographical purposes ; and the magnetic constants observed at different places. He m., in 1861, Mary Apthorp, only dau. of Hon. Josiah Quinc}', Jr. This gifted woman shared all the discomforts and sacrifices entailed by the long exile to a region where, at the time of their arrival, few of the comforts and none of the luxuries of the life to which she had been accustomed could be found. In his dedication of the first of the star- catalogues to her memory, Dr. Gould bears witness that the vast undcrtakinLf would nc\'cr have been bcsjun without CINCIXXATI OF MASSACHUSErrS. 223 her encouragement, carried on without her abundant and supporting sympathy, nor completed without her practical assistance. They had five children — Susan Morton Quincy, b. 27 Aug. 1862. LUCRETIA GODDARD, b. 20 Nov. 1 864. Alice Bache, b. 5 Jan. 1868. Benjamin Apthorp, b. 8 Feb. 1870. Mary Quincy, b. 16 April, 1872. Dr. Gould's descent from Zacclietis^ Gould (b. 1589 at Hemel Hempsted, Hertfordshire, England, and of Lynn and Topsfield about 1639) was through yi?/i« (b. 10-21 June, 1635, d. 26 Jan. 1709-10), who m. 2 Oct. 1660, Sarah, dau. of John Baker; Zaccheus"^ (b. 25 March, 1672, d. 29 April, 1739), who m. 21 Jan. 1702, Elizabeth, dau. of John Curtis ; John^ (b. 29 Jan. 1709-10, d. 21 June, 1778), who m. 5 Jan. 1 748-9, widow Esther (Giles) Bixby ; Capt. Beti- jamin* (b. Topsfield, 15 May, 1751, d. 30 May, 1841), who m. 19 July, 1 781, Griselda Apthorp, dau. of Gershom Flagg of Boston and Lancaster. iloljn CScraton. He was b. Roxbury, Mass., 10 March, 1741 ; d. there 16 Dec. 1783. Before the war he was a trader in Roxbury, and a brigadier with the rank of licut. in the Governor's Horse- Guards (1774). He was major and lieut.-col. of Heath's reg. early in 1775; col. (24th, late Bond's), i Jul}', 1775; and of the 3d continental reg. Mass. line, until com. brig.-gen. 7 Jan. 1783. In the following Oct. he returned home on account of sickness, and died a few weeks afterward. He performed sev- eral daring exploits during the siege of Boston. On the night of 2 June, 1775, he carried off from Deer Island 800 sheep and lambs, together with a number of cattle ; and on 12 July, with 136 men, he went to Long Island, and burned the barns and other buildings, and stores collected there. His regiment was ordered to Canada in April, 1776; but rejoined Washington's army in Dec. just before the battles of Trenton and Prince- 224 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE ton ; and was in Nixon's brigade in the operations and battles ending with the surrender of Burgoyne. He was a prominent member of Christ Church, Boston, of which his brother James was rector. He was the son of John and Catharine Greaton, and in 1760 m. Sarah, dau. of Richard and Ann Humphreys. Richard d. i Aug. 1759, ae. 59; Ann, d. 20 April, 1753, se. 33. Mrs. Sarah Greaton, b. 9 Aug. 1742, m. (2d) Samuel Ridgway, and d. 14 May, 1822. John and Sarah had — Ann, b. 6 Dec. i 762, m. 23 Feb. i 784, Samuel Heath of Ro.xbury, and d. 28 Nov. 1830. R1CH.4RD H. LucRETiA, b. 20 Dec. 1769, d. unm. 12 Oct. 1857. John, b. 30 Sept. 1771, d. 26 April, 1772. Katv, b. 27 Jan. 1773, d. March, 1859, m. James Dana, a teacher at Brigliton ; they had a son, Samuel Heath, bapt. i June, 1794. Sally, b. 7 Dec. 1774, d. 13 Sept. 1775. S.iVLLY M., b. 13 Feb. 1781, m. Joseph Heath, d. March, 1863. Harriet, b. 19 Sept. 1782, d. 7 Sept. 1783. John, b. 31 Oct. 1783, d. 17 Sept. 1791. Joljn EOfjffltorfflljt (Srcaton. He was b. Boston, 1761 ; d. unm. in N. Y. City, in Feb. 1815. James, his father, brother of Gen. John, was b. 10 July, 1730, d. 1773, Y. C. 1754. He was a Prot. Episc. clergyman; was rector of Christ Church, Boston, in 1759-67, and of the church at Huntington, L. I., from 1767 to his death. He m. (in Boston) Mary, daughter of John, and great- granddaughter of the celebrated Rev. John Wheelwright, a founder and the first minister of Exeter. His widow, after his decease, m. Dr. B. Y. Prime, and d. March, 1835, ae. 91. John W. was com. ensign in Greaton's (3d) reg. 16 July, 1782, and after the war commanded a merchant ship. He joined the N. Y. Society by transfer in 1796, and was succ. in that So- ciety by his nephew John W. CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 225 JSttljartr pjumpftrcg (ffireaton. Son of Gen. John; b. Boston, 8 Aug. 1765; d. New Or- leans, in July, 1815. Com. ensign in Greaton's (3d) reg. 30 Nov. 1781 ; app. lieut. 23d U. S. inf. 4 March, 1791 ; severely wounded in St. Clair's battle with the Miami Indians, 4 Nov. 1791; capt. Feb, 1793- i June, 1802. He m. (ist) 6 Feb. 1787, Sarah Bourn, who d. Sept. 1798, and left a dau. Lucretu A., and a son, John, who d. in 1866, in Charles- ton, S. C, leaving an unm. dau. John was elected a member of the Society in 181 6, but failed to qualify. iFrann's CSrccn. He was b. Charlestown, Mass., 1750; d. Boston, 5 Sept. 1 83 1. Com. 2d lieut. in Paterson's reg. 27 March, 1777; ist lieut. Vose's (ist) reg.; com. capt. 30 Aug. 1780; deputy- muster-master in Rhode Island, 12 Feb. 1778-12 Jan. 1780. Left the army, 3 Nov. 1783. Vice-Pres. of the MASS. Soc. CiN. 1829-31. Son of Wm., of Charlestown, whose father came to that place, m. a Sloan, and afterward returned to England, and d. there. Shortly afterward his widow returned to America, and Wm., his father, was b. on the passage. Capt. Green m. (ist) Brown, and had sev- eral children, none of whom survived. His second wife was Mary, dau. of Benj. Henderson. She d. Boston, 9 Jan. 1829. His second son, Ellis B., was a captain in the Mexican war. BENJAMIN HENDERSON GREENE. Third son of Capt. Francis, whom he succ. in 1853; b. 24 Feb. 1802; d. 12 March, 1889. He was a bookseller and publisher in Boston during the early part of his life. At the time of his death he was a resident of Brookline. Dur- ing and after the civil war he was secretary and disbursing agent for the Mass. Soldiers' Fund, and disbursing agent for 15 2 26 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE the Boston Soldiers' Fund, until those funds were exhausted. He was Assist. Sec. of the Society from 1859 to 1863, and a member of the Standing Committee for over twenty-five years. Pres. Cobb says of him : " Mr. Greene was an earnest and useful member of the Society, constant in his attendance upon the stated meetings so long as his health permitted. He was well known in Boston, and was connected with several philanthropic and charitable institutions, to whose interests he devoted himself with great assiduity and faithfulness. He was an excellent man in all the relations of life." He m. 9 Dec. 1830, Elizabeth Clark, dau. of George Darracott. She d. 26 March, 1889. They had four children, the eldest alone surviving them. GEORGE FRANCIS GREENE. Eldest son of Benjamin H., whom he succ. in 1889; was b. Boston, Mass., 15 Sept. 1832. In 1853 he went to Australia in the service of a mercantile house; remained there three months, and then went to Calcutta; was in India through the sepoy rebellion; returned to America in 1862; has since been engaged in the East India business. He m. 28 June, 1S82, Hannah Frances, dau. of William Ellis. HORACE GREEN, M.D., LL.D. Adm. in 1858 under the rule of 1854, as the representative of his father. Dr. Zeeb, who d. Brandon, Vt. in 1821. Horace was b. Chittenden, Vt., 24 Dec. 1802 ; d. at Greenmount, Sing Sing, N. Y., 29 Nov. 1866; M.D. of Middleb. Coll. 1824; LL.D. of U. of Vt. 1853; Prof Med. Coll. Castleton, Vt., 1840-43 ; and in the N. Y. Med. Coll. 1850-60. He studied medicine in Rutland, in Philadelphia, and in Paris, and prac- tised in Rutland and in N. Y. City. Dr. Green was the author of several medical works, and was one of the founders in 1850 of the N. Y. Med. Coll. Dr. Zeeb was one of four brothers CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 227 from Winchendon, Mass., all of whom were at Bunker Hill, where two of them, one of whom was Major James, were mortally wounded. He was in the battles of Bunker Hill, White Plains, Bennington, and Saratoga. The second brother, Nathan, a lieut., was killed at Monmouth. He m. (ist) 20 Oct. 1829, Mary Sigourney Butler, by whom he had — Anna Sophia, b. 27 April, 1832. Hem. (2d) 27 Oct. 1841, Harriet Sheldon Douglass. Children — Sarah Douglass, b. 19 Nov. 1842. Harriet Sheldon, b. 27 Aug. 1844. Catharine Douglass, b. 5 July, 1846, d. 7 July, 1847. Horace Douglass, b. i Jan. 1848. Henry Loomis, b. 16 March, 1849. Mary Walton, b. 7 Nov. 1850, d. 6 Feb. 1854. John Douglass, b. 4 June, 1852, d. 11 Aug. 1853. George Walton, b. 9 May, 1854. Edmund, b. 26 Feb. 1856, d. 17 Sept. 1856. Lucia Butler, b. 25 March, 1857. 212SiUtani fiSrccnlcaf. Of Haverhill; d. there 29 March, 1833. He entered the Revolutionary army as a private in Jan. 1776; was in 1777 app. ensign in Smith's (13th) reg. ; com. lieut. 13 Feb. 1778. He was at the battle of Harlem Heights, the battles with Burgoyne, Sullivan's campaign in Rhode Island, bore the standard of his regiment at Monmouth, and was in the battle of Brooklyn Heights, and the memorable retreat from Long Island. After the war he returned to Haverhill and kept the Sun Tavern. His father, William, was for a time captain of a militia company at the beginning of the war. Lieut. William, Jr., m. 16 March, 1788, Abigail Soley, who d. 4 Feb. 1804. They had — Eliza, b. 18 June, 1788, m. 22 Nov. 18 10, Hiram Plummer. Ann, m. 29 Jan. 1822, Wesley Balch. Samuel. Sophia, b. 14 Oct. 1797. 225 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE SAMUEL GREENLEAF. Only son of Lieut. William, whom he succ. in 1834; was b. II Sept. 1795 ; d. 12 Dec. 1856. He m. I Oct. 1820, Dolly Osgood. They had — William Hovey, b. 20 Dec. 1820, who served four years in the war of the Rebellion ; and two sons who died young. JJofjii (ffinHIcg. He was a member of Paddock's artillery before the war ; com. capt.-lieut. of Crane's artillery, i Jan. 1777; and was a pensioner, living in New York in 1820. Samrs f^aU. He was b. Cohasset, 22 Feb. 1750; d. 3 April, 1819. He was a mason by trade, and before the war was a member of Paddock's artillery Co. In 1776 he was a sergt. in Knox's art. reg. ; was com. 2d licut. 20 Dec. 1776; 1st lieut. in Crane's art. reg. 12 Sept. 1777; capt.-lieut. 12 April, 1780, and served through the war. In Aug. 1782, he had charge of the labora- tory at Salisbury. James, his father, believed to have come from Scotland, was of Hingham as early as 1740; was a shipwright, and built and launched vessels in Cohasset. Capt. James, who was six feet two inches in height, and well made, was engaged in the battles of White Plains, Brandywine, and Monmouth. All three, who have represented this family in the Society, have met their death by accident. Capt. James walked out of an open window in the Exchange Coffee House, Boston, in his sleep, breaking his ankle, and d. from its mortification after amputation ; and his son George d. in consequence of an injury to his spine, caused by a fall from a wharf. By his wife, Persis, who survived him, he had — Henry Knox, b. 27 Nov. 1786. James, b. 18 Feb. 1788. George. CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 229 GEORGE HALL. Eldest surviving son of James, whom he succ. in 1848; b. Cohasset, 29 Jan. 1790; d. there 18 July, 1854. He followed the sea from boyhood, and later in life was engaged in the fishing business. When quite a young man, he was presented with the Humane Society's gold medal for saving the lives of a shipwrecked crew on Cohasset Rocks. He had seven sons and five daughters ; namely, J.^mes ; Isaac ; George ; Abraham ; Samuel C. ; Henry K. ; Winslow G. ; Mary ; Cynthia ; Harriet ; Lizzie C. ; Anna. JAMES HALL. Eldest son of George, whom he succ. in 1855 ; b. Cohasset, 9 Aug. 1817; d. at sea, 16 Oct. 1870. He was a shipmaster, and at the time of his death commanded the ship " Orion," bound from the Chincha Islands via Callao to New York. She had doubled Cape Horn, and was in lat. 57° S., 16 Oct., when she encountered a severe gale, accompanied by a heavy cross sea. During the night the ship broached to, and every sail set was torn to rags with a report like a clap of thunder. At the same time a huge sea towered over the port-quarter, broke on board, sweeping the mate and two men at the wheel overboard, and driving Capt. Hall back- ward through both cabins, crushing him to death in the wreck. The ship was taken safely into Montevideo by a common sailor named Jacob Wreith, who assumed the com- mand and who displayed a heroism and seamanship beyond all praise. To his exertions the preservation of the vessel and the lives of the survivors of the crew was mainly due. Capt. Hall had followed the sea from boyhood, and was a Efood man and an able seaman. He left a wife and daughter. 230 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE GEORGE WINSLOW HALL. Great-grandson of Capt. James, and nephew of the above- named James, whom he succ. in 1887 ; was b. Cohasset, Mass., 9 Nov. 1849; educated in Chelsea, Mass., where he now lives. He was b. in Pembroke, Mass., 1756; d. Waterford, Me., 1808. When he was but a lad, his father removed to Har- vard, Mass. Entering the army at the beginning of the Revolutionary war as a waiter, he was com. ensign, i Jan. 1 78 1, and served to the end of the war. In 1788 he removed to Waterford, Me., then a wilderness. He spent his winters in teaching, and, possessing more than ordinary talent, held many responsible offices in the town. On one occasion, the orator engaged for the Fourth of July oration failing to ap- pear, Mr. Hamlin, at the request of his townsmen, took his place, and made an address with which all were satisfied. His father had a large family. Four of the sons were named, re- spectively, Europe, Asia, Africa, and America. Another son, Dr. Cyrus, was the father of Hon. Hannibal Hamlin. Africa m. in 1785, Susannah Stone of Groton. They had — Nabby, b. Aug. 1786, d. 1863. POLADORE, b. 2 Feb. 1789, d. 27 July, 1870. Almira, b. Feb. 1791, d. 187 1. Susan, b. Feb. 1793, d. 1847. CosTiLLO, b. July, 1797, d. 1834. Lvdia, b. Aug. 1801, m. John Wilkins, resides at Waterford. ANDREW POLADORE PERRY. Grandson of Poladore Hamlin and great-grandson of Africa Hamlin, whom he succ. in 1872; was b. Waterford, Me., 31 Oct. 1839. He was a teacher of music in Boston from 1S66 to 1873, when he was appointed postmaster at Glenwood, CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 23 1 Medford, Mass. With the exception of a short interval dur- ing the Cleveland administration he held the office contin- uously until, in 1890, the free-delivery system was introduced in Medford, and he was then appointed superintendent of " Station A." He carries on business as a grocer in addition to his official duties. He is unm. He was b. 19 Feb. 1754; d. Ro.xbury, Mass., 14 May, 1813. Ensign in Paterson's reg. 1776; com. lieut. in Vose's (ist) reg., 28 March, 1777; capt. 6 Jan. 1780; resigned, 2 Nov. 1780, after four years and ten months' service. Nathaniel Hancock, his ancestor, was of Cambridge, in 1635. Belcher, by his wife Ann Ackers (b. 12 Nov. 1760, d. 28 Nov. 1847), had — Henry Killam ; Anne, b. Aug. 1 790 ; Ebenezer, b. 20 March, 1792; William, b. 19 Jan. 1794; Mary; Belcher, b. 19 July, 1800; Hannah; John. HENRY KILLAM HANCOCK. Son of Capt. Belcher, whom he succ. in 1839; b. Brook- line, Mass., 8 Dec. 1788 ; d. Boston, 8 July, 1854. He carried on the business of an upholsterer in Boston. Hem. 10 Dec. 1829, Mary Ann Slack (b. 21 Feb. 1795, d. 5 Sept. 1871). Their only child — Hannah Killam, b. 18 May, 1835, m. 11 Nov. 1854, Edward A. Hunting of Boston. They had Maiy A. and Hannah. Soljn SQ^art. He was b. Ipswich, Mass., 23 Oct. 1751 ; d. Reading, Mass., 27 April, 1836. His emigrant ancestor settled in Ipswich as early as 1636. His father, John Hart, was a lawyer. He studied medicine under the eminent Dr. John Calef; began practice in Georgetown, now Bath, Me., at the age of nine- teen, and, young as he was, was well patronized. An ardent 232 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE lover of liberty, he joined Col. Prescott's reg. as surgeon in 1775, and accompanied it to New York in April, 1776. Upon its being disbanded, he joined the 2d reg.. Col. John Bailey, of which he was com. surgeon i Jan. 1777, continuing with it until its disbandment in July, 1784. Dr. Hart accompanied his regiment in every action in which it took part ; was one of those appointed to attend the execution of Major Andre, which he described as the saddest scene he ever witnessed ; and he enjoyed the confidence, and in some degree the intimacy, of the Commander-in-Chief. The latter having on one occa- sion selected him to bring ^2,000 in gold from Boston to the camp for the use of the army, Dr. Hart successfully performed ■ the hazardous duty, though a part of the journey was through a region infested with thieves and Tories. After the war he purchased a residence in the South Parish of Reading, near Crystal Lake, and soon had a large professional business, which extended to all the neighboring towns. Though never seeking civil or political honors. Dr. Hart received a liberal share of both. He was a Justice of the Peace and of the Quorum, and also of the Sessions, and was eight years in the House of Representatives, and five years in the Senate of Massachusetts. He dearly loved the Society of the Cincin- nati, always attended its meetings and hoped for its perpe- tuity. He was its VicE-President from 1834 until his death. He m. ab. 1778, Mary, only child of Capt. Abraham Gould of Stoneham. She d. 15 Nov. 1838. Their children were — Mary, b. 26 Sept. 1779, m. Henry Prentiss of Paris, Me., d. 13 April, 1857. Abraham, b. 29 Sept. 1782, d. 5 Oct. 1833. John, b. 15 April, 1785, studied medicine, and d. 5 March, 1810. WiLLUM, b. 30 Jan. 1787, d. 17 May, 1800. SAR.AH, b. 23 Oct. 1 788, m. Dr. Thad. Spaulding of South Reading, Mass., d. 24 June, 1829. LuciNDA, b. 21 Jan. 1790, second wife of Dr. Spaulding. Samuel. Belinda, b. 23 Feb. 1798, d. 27 Jan. 1799. CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 233 SAIVJUEL HART, M.D. Son of Dr. John, whom he succ. in 1842; b. Reading, Mass., 27 Nov. 1796; d. 3 Sept. 1878; H. U. 1817. He studied medicine with his father, and at the Harvard Medical School, and received his medical degree in 1821. In Dec. 1822, he settled in Beverly, where he had considerable prac- tice ; but, the labor attending it being considerably greater than the remuneration, he removed in July, 1828, to Oswego, N. Y., where he had a large practice. Impaired health, re- sulting from excessive professional labors, occasioned his removal in Oct. 1855, to Brooklyn, N. Y., where his health was soon regained, and he again resumed practice. Dr. Hart was a member of the American Medical Asso- ciation, and of the Medical Societies of New York and of Massachusetts. He was also President of the Medical Socie- ties of Oswego and King's Counties; President of the Oswego City Medical Association, and a Curator of the Medical De- partment of the University of Buffalo. At the annual meet- ing of the Mass. Society of the Cincinnati, 4 July, 1879, it was resolved: "That in the life and character of Samuel Hart, M.D., we have a winning exhibition of the beloved physician, whose professional skill and care and kindness secured him a grateful benediction in many a household ; whose integrity, purity, and honor as a man, with his stead- fast faith and practical piety as a Christian, gained him the perfect respect and confidence of all who knew him." In Sept. 1823, he m. Chariotte, youngest dau. of Andrew Newell, merchant of Boston. They had — CHARLorrE, b. 16 Nov. 1824. John, b. 6 April, 1827, a young man of great promise, who d. 20 Jan. 1859 Russell, b. 9 Aug. 1829, d. 9 July, 1830. CiEORGiANA Olivia, b. 19 June, 1831, d. Brooklyn, 10 Apnl, 1S63. 2 34 BIOGRAVHICAL NOTICES OF THE Charles Samuel, b. 19 Dec. 1S35, educated as a druggist; hos- pital steward ; had charge of the dispensary department of the hospital at the Point of Rocks, Va., during the civil war. PRENTISS CUMMINGS Great-grandson of Dr. Samuel Hart, whom he succ. in 1880; was b. Sumner, Me., 10 Sept. 1840; H. U. 1864. He was Latin tutor at Harvard, 1866-70; Asst. U. S. Atty. Dist. Mass. 1873-81 ; Member of the Common Council of Boston, 1881-83; Representative from Boston to the General Court, 1884-85; President Cambridge R. R. 1885-87; Vice-Pres. West End Street Railway Co. 1887-90, and now (1890) counsel for that company. His descent on the fiither's side was from the Scotch family of Comyns, early settlers in New England. His great-grandfather, Oliver Cumins of Dunstable, Mass., was a soldier in the war of the Revolution. His grandfather, Oliver, who spelled his name " Cum- ings," was also a soldier in that war, and was one of the first settlers in Sumner, Me. He ra. for his second wife Phoebe Churchill, dau. of a Revolutionary soldier. Their second son, Whitney Cummings, who was the first to adopt the present spelling of the name, was the father of Prentiss. His descent from Hr.Jokn Hart, noticed above, was through Dr. Hart's dau. Mary, who m. Henry Prentiss. Their oldest dau., Mary Hart, m. Whitney Cummings. Henry Prentiss was the son of Rev. Caleb Prentiss of Reading, Mass., who led his parishioners from his church to the batde of Lexington. It thus appears that all the male ancestors of Prentiss Cummings who were of an age to make it pos- sible, took an active part in the war of the Revolution. Prentiss m. 25 Feb. 1880, Annie Delena, dau. of Alonzo Lawrence Snow. JTljomas ?l|artsi)orn. He was b. Reading, Mass., 1742 ; d. Salem, Mass., 6 May, 1819. Served as a soldier in the French war (1756-63); CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 235 sergt. in Batchelder's Co. of Bridge's reg. 1775; ensign in Sargent's (i6th) reg. 1776;. com. lieut. in M. Jackson's (8th) reg. I Jan. 1777; capt. 26 July, 1779. He settled in Salem in 1783, where he was an officer of the customs and deacon of the First Church. He was the son of Thomas and Abiah ; and m. (ist) Tamar Flint; (2d) 7 Oct. 1805, Abigail Cleveland. He left no children. His heirs were the children of his brothers, Nathaniel and Jonathan. iSUslja Ji^arbcs. He was b. in Taunton, Mass , but removed to Easton be- fore 1767; d. there 11 Feb. 1821. He was sergt. in Capt. Drury's Co. of Knox's artillery in May, 1776; com. 1st lieut. in Lamb's artillery, 28 June, 1778; capt. -lieut. 1780. He was at the battle of Brooklyn Heights, where he distinguished himself by standing to his guns after the other members of the company had retreated, and by a skilful and daring manoeuvre preventing the British from getting possession of them. He was on duty at the execution of Major Andre, and subsequently served at the siege of Yorktown. After the war he lived in Taunton for a time, but returned to Easton in 1790. 2Elnat1b BIOGRAl'HICAL NOTICES OF THE Gen. St. Clair at that post. Here St. Clair was attacked by an overpowering force under Burgoyne, and was obliged to re- treat to the Hudson River and join Gen. Schuyler, — a move- ment which excited a great clamor against him. Major Hull wrote a letter defending St. Clair, which was published in the newspapers of the day. Gen. Schuyler was also obliged to retreat before Burgoyne, to the west bank of the Hudson. In this retreat Major Hull commanded the rear guard; and though fiercely attacked by the British and Indians, he made a successful resistance. For his conduct on this occasion Major Hull received the thanks of Gen. Schuyler. In the battles of 19 Sept. and 7 Oct. 1777, which resulted in the capture of Burgoyne's army by Gates, Major Hull took part. On the morning of 19 Sept. he commanded a picket guard of 250 men in front of the left wing of the camp, which afterward, by order of Gen. Arnold, was rein- forced with 300 more, and held its ground from noon until dark, losing 150 men in killed and wounded. Major Hull again, 7 Oct., commanded the advance guard in front of the left wing; and when about noon Burgoyne moved from his camp to attack the Americans, Major Hull was ordered to join his force of 250 men to three regiments of Arnold's right wing and Morgan's riflemen to oppose him. This was so successfully done, that both the first British line, and the second under Frazer which came to the support of the first, were driven back to their camp. The next day Burgoyne retreated to Saratoga, where he was obliged to surrender. After this event his regiment was ordered to join Gen. Washington near Philadelphia, and in Dec. the army went into winter quarters at Valley Forge. Major Hull was at this time selected for one of the as- sistants of Baron Steuben, who brought to the army as its inspector-general the discipline and drill of Frederick of Prussia, under whom he had served. CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 259 Major Hull, 19 May, 1778, was with a detachment sent by- Washington to reinforce La Fayette, who was hard pressed by the British at VVhitemarsh near Philadelphia. At the battle of Monmouth, 28 June, the 8th Mass. reg. was com- manded by Major Hull, the colonel being invalided, and the lieut. -colonel acting as adjutant to Gen. Lee. The advantage was with the Americans ; but it was not a victory, owing to the misconduct of Lee. In the winter of 1779, Lieut. -Col. Brooks being absent on leave. Major Hull was in command of the regiment, which was ordered to Poughkeepsie, at that time the seat of the State Government, for winter quarters. Hardly were they established, when orders came to move to Kingsbridge, on the lines near New York. This produced great discontent in the regiment ; a remonstrance written by the non-commissioned officers was addressed to the com- mander, and it was feared by the officers that the men would refuse to march. Major Hull immediately paraded the regi- ment, arrested the ringleader, whom he had tried by court- martial, and punished in the presence of the regiment, which then commenced its march to White Plains. Here Major Hull remained the whole winter, with 400 men ; and being eighteen miles in advance of the American forces, and in the face of the whole British army, his safety depended on con- stant vigilance. The service was so severe that 200 men with officers were sent from the army every ten days to relieve one half of the detachment. Major Hull himself visited his outposts every day, riding about twenty miles during the day, and as much every night. He was never surprised. In June, 1779, Washington stationed most of his troops in the Highlands; and Major Hull was employed in building four forts near West Point, when on the 14th of July he was ordered to join his corps to the forces of Gen. Wayne, for the capture of Stony Point. In the assault which followed, on the night of the 15th, Major Hull's detachment from the 260 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICKS OK THE 8th Mass. reg. was in the right cohimn, which was led by- Wayne himself. The assault was made with the bayonet, not a shot being fired, except by a party under Major Murfee, who were ordered to open fire on the opposite side of the fort, to distract the attention of the garrison. It was not a surprise, as has been stated by some historians, as the attack was made under a heavy fire of artillery and musketr}-, which commenced before the storming columns reached the fort. Major Hull was promoted, 12 Aug. 1779, to the rank of lieut.-colonel, and was transferred to the 3d Mass. reg. About this time the appointment of aide to Gen. Washing- ton was offered to Col. Hull, and would have been accepted but for the remonstrance of Baron Steuben, who requested him to retain his situation as inspector, which he did during the year 1780. In Jan. 1781, Col. Hull asked permission to attack the British post at Morrisania, on the East River, which was held by Col. De Lancey, with a force of about 500 Loyalists. Washington granted leave, though he expressed himself not sanguine of success. Six hundred men were assigned to Col. Hull for the enterprise. They were to march thirty miles over bad roads, with swollen streams to be crossed, and attack a nearly equal force about four miles in the rear of a large part of the British arm)'. These impediments so much delayed the march that the plan of a surprise failed, and the enemy were on the alert when Col. Hull reached Morrisania. A short conflict ensued, which resulted in the defeat of the Loyalists, with the loss of fifty-two prisoners, sixty horses, and a number of cattle. The barracks were set on fire, with a great quantity of forage belonging to the British army ; and though hotly pursued, Col. Hull with his prisoners re- treated in safety to the American lines. For the successful conduct of this expedition Col. Hull received the thanks of Washington and of Congress. CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 26 1 In July, 1 78 1, Col. Hull was stationed with his regiment in the Highlands, under Gen. Heath, and was appointed ad- jutant and inspector-general of the army at West Point, and performed the duties of these offices until the summer of 1783, when, hostilities having ceased, he was ordered with eight companies of infantry to West Chester, to protect the inhabitants of that region from the refugees and Tories, until civil government should be organized. When the British troops evacuated New York, 25 Nov. 1783, Col. Hull commanded the troops which escorted the Commander-in-Chief into the city, and was complimented by him on the excellent appearance and high state of discipline of his men. When Washington took leave of his officers in New York, 4 Dec, Col. Hull was in command of the military escort ; and when, by direction of Congress, Gen. Washington disbanded the army, with the exception of one regiment and a corps of artillery. Col. Hull was selected by him for licut. -colonel of the regiment. In 1784 Col. Hull was sent by the Government to Quebec, to demand possession of Forts Niagara, Detroit, and Macki- nac, which, by the treaty, should have been delivered up a year before. The British commander, however, declined to give them up. Col. Hull established his residence in Newton, Mass., in 1786, and here he began the practice of the law. When the militia was called out in that year, for the suppression of Shays's rebellion, Gen. Lincoln was placed in command, and Col. Hull accompanied him as a volunteer. In Jan. 1793, Col. Hull was appointed by the President a commissioner to make arrangements with the Canadian Gov- ernment for a treaty with the Indians in the Western country, with whom the United States were at war. He was instructed to remonstrate against their infraction of treaty pledges, and 262 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE also against the practice of supplying the Indians with arms and ammunition for use against a friendly nation. Gov. Simcoe was civil, but was indisposed to enter into these ques- tions, which were happily set at rest by Wayne's victory over the Indians that year. In the winter of 1798 Col. Hull was in England; and the spring he passed in France, where he witnessed the proceed- ings of the revolutionary tribunals in Paris. Soon after his return to Boston, he was appointed by the Governor judge of the Court of Common Pleas, and was elected major-general of the third division of the militia of the State, He was likewise elected Senator in the State Legisla- ture. These positions he held until in 1805 he was appointed Governor of Michigan Territory, by Prcs. Jefferson. He was also appointed Indian agent, an office which was then con- nected with that of executive magistrate. In 1805, with the exception of a small strip of land about Detroit, the islands of Mackinac and Bois Blanc, and a piece of ground opposite Mackinac, six miles by three in extent, all the present State of Michigan, as well as most of Ohio and Indiana, was in the possession of the Indians. Gov. Hull made a treaty with them in 1807, by which they ceded to the United States an extensive territor}' on the southeastern side of Michigan, in payment for which annui- ties were granted to the tribes. Many of the chiefs, however, headed by Tecumseh, refused their assent to this treaty; and it was believed by the traders and agents, that an extensive league was being formed against the Americans, to include all the tribes east of the Mississippi. In Feb. 18 12, Gov. Hull being in Washington, accounts came to him from Detroit, that the Indians were becoming hostile ; and he urged the necessity of a military force for the protection of the inhabi- tants of that exposed frontier. War with Great Britain was imminent. The President called upon the Governor of Ohio CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 263 to furnish l,300 militia, prepared for actual service. The command of these troops, with the rank of brig.-gen., was offered to Gov. Hull by the President, but was declined. Col. Kingsbury, of the 4th U. S. inf., was then ordered to take the command, but he fell sick on his way to Washington. Gov. Hull, on being again applied to, reluctantly accepted the appointment, with no other object, as he stated, than to march the troops to Detroit for the protection of the inhabi- tants against the Indians. At this time the lakes were in possession of the British, the Indians were their allies, and the inhabitants of Canada outnumbered twenty to one the people of Michigan. In three separate memorials addressed to the War Department in 1809, 181 1, and 1 8 12, Gov. Hull had urged the necessity of a fleet on Lake Erie. Gov. Hull, who was now also a brig.-gen., at once proceeded to Dayton to take command of the troops. These consisted of three regiments of militia under the command of Cols. McArthur, Findley, and Cass. They were badly armed and half clothed, and neither the State of Ohio nor the General Government had made any provision for their equipment. At Urbana, 10 June, Gen. Hull was joined by Lieut.-Col. Miller with a part of the 4th infantry, consisting of 300 effective men, making his force then 1,500, which was the largest number he had at any time under his command. From Urbana the distance to Detroit was more than 200 miles, through a wilderness. A road had to be cut through the forest by the army; bridges, causeways, and block-houses were built, and the latter provided with garrisons, which labors were borne by the army with patience. The rapids of the Maumee were reached about the end of June; war was declared by the United States on the i8th, but Gen. Hull received no information of it until July 2, fourteen days afterward, though the British commander at Maiden 264 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE had heard of it by letters franked by an American cabinet officer. In consequence of the delay in transmitting to Gen. Hull this important intelligence, a vessel in which he had shipped baggage, important stores, intrenching tools, and the invalids of the army, was taken by the British. On the 5th of July the small army arrived at Detroit. On the 9th orders were received from Washington, dated fifteen days before, authorizing Gen. Hull to commence offensive operations ; and on the 12th he crossed the river into Canada. Gen. Hull there intrenched himself, issued a proclamation to the Canadians, and detached Col. McArthur to pursue the Indians who were in the neighborhood, and to go to the river Thames for provisions. He returned on the 17th with 200 barrels of flour and some military stores. Meantime events were occurring which threatened to make the position of the American army a very dangerous one. These were, first, the fall of Mackinac, which had been taken with its garrison of sixty men by a force of 625 Canadians and Indians. By this event all the Indians of the North- west were encouraged to unite against the Americans ; and a body of some 1,700 Indians and members of the Northwest Company were soon on their march for Maiden. A second source of danger was the interruption of Gen. Hull's communications with Ohio. Lake Erie was com- manded by a British fleet, and there were no American armed vessels upon it. The wilderness between Detroit and Ohio was filled with hostile Indians; and there was no other source besides Ohio whence supplies or reinforcements could come. Gen. Hull had in many letters to the administration insisted on the occupation of the lakes as essential to military suc- cess, and had a right to believe that, if ordered on this duty, he would be supported with a naval force ; but none was pro- vided till two years after the fall of Detroit. CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 265 Hearing that some cattle were on the way from Ohio, intended for his army, Gen. Hull detached Major Van Home with 250 men to bring them into camp; but the party was attacked by the Indians, and entirely defeated. Thirdly, according to the original plan of the campaign, it was de- termined that Canada should be invaded both at Detroit and Niagara. The charge of one of these invasions had been given to Gen. Hull, and he had thus far performed his part. He had cut his road through the wilderness and had invaded Canada. He did this, relying on prom- ised support. He had asked for a fleet on Lake Erie, co- operation at Niagara, and reinforcements from Ohio ; and he was disappointed in all. As early as June 26 Gen. Dearborn was ordered to Albany to prepare a force for actual service in the direc- tion of Niagara, Kingston, or Montreal ; but so great was the confusion in the War Department that Dearborn did not know whether or not he was to command at Niagara. On the 26th of July the Secretary of War directs Gen. Dearborn to co-operate with Gen. Hull at Niagara, and Dearborn writes on the 28th, asking, " Who is to have command in Upper Canada? " No troops being collected at Niagara, and having no need of troops in that quarter. Gen. Brock, the British commander, was able to send rein- forcements to Maiden. No movement being made by the Americans on Lake Champlain, Sir George Provost was able to send troops to Upper Canada; and instead of co- operating with Gen. Hull, as he was ordered, Gen. Dearborn acceded to an armistice, proposed by Sir George Provost, by which he agreed that the troops opposed to each other at Niagara should act on the defensive only, thus allowing Brock to send reinforcements to Maiden, while he deprived himself of the power of aiding Gen. Hull by demonstrations on the Niagara frontier. 266 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE Gen. Hull found himself therefore entirely deprived of the promised assistance. Under these circumstances the safety of his army demanded the reopening of the com- munications with Ohio. Gen. Hull therefore recrossed the river on the 7th of August, leaving a sufficient force in- trenched to hold the British shore. The same day Col. Miller was detached with 600 men to open the road towards Ohio. About fourteen miles from Detroit he met with a body of British and Indians, whom he defeated; but such were the difficulties of the road that Col. Miller was obliged to return without effecting his ob- ject, although he was within eighteen miles of the river Raisin, where there was a large convoy of provisions under Col. Brush. On the 14th Gen. Hull sent off Cols. McArthur and Cass with another detachment, to try by another road to reach Col. Brush and escort him to Detroit with the supplies for the arm}'. While these operations were taking place in the American camp, Gen. Brock was moving to the relief of Maiden with a force of 550 men. At that place he was joined by Tecumseh with 1,000 warriors; and on the i6th he sent to Gen. Hull a summons to surrender, which the General refused ; and that afternoon fire was opened upon Detroit from Sandwich, which was returned by an American battery of 24-pounders. Early the next morning Brock crossed the river about five miles below Detroit, his landing being protected by a large force of Indians and two ships of war. His inten- tion was to wait in a strong position covered by his ships ; but, hearing of the absence of Cass and McArthur, with 500 men, he decided on an immediate attack. He was preparing for an assault, when Gen. Hull surrendered the place. His defence for taking this step rests on the following propositions : — CIN'CINXATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 267 1. An army in the situation of that of Gen. Hull on the i6th of August, 1 81 2, cut off from its supplies, and with no adequate means of opening its communications, must inevitably fall. 2. That, in this situation, to fight would have been a useless expenditure of life, and would have unnecessarily exposed the in- habitants of the territory to Indian cruelties. 3. That this situation was not his fault, but that of the Govern- ment, of Gen. Dearborn, and of circumstances for which no one is probably responsible. 4. That the troops of Gen. Hull on the i6th of August were much inferior in number to those of his antagonist. 5. That the provisions of the amiy were nearly exhausted, and no further supplies could be obtained.* To most of the country, who were ignorant of the true state of affairs, the news of the surrender came without warning, and the excitement was great. The Federalists, who opposed the war, made use of this disaster to show that they had been right, and threw the blame upon their opponents and the administration. At first the Government scarcely attempted to defend itself; but it soon found a man ready to assist it to throw the whole blame of the disaster upon the unsuccessful General. This was Col. Cass, who went to Washington and wrote his celebrated letter of 10 Sept. 18 12, which has been the principal source of all sub- sequent charges against Gen. Hull, and was even received as evidence on his trial. The object of the letter was to show that the whole blame was chargeable to the commander; that he wanted neither men nor supplies, and that the British might have been defeated with perfect ease but for the cowardice of the Gen- eral. This letter was published extensively, and had great * It would occupy too much space to give the details which prove these propositions , they may be found in the following works, from which most of this memoir has been compiled : Report of Trial of General Hull at Albany, 1814; Memoirs of the Campaign of 1812, by William Hull j Military and Civil I.ifc of General Hull, by his daughter, Mrs. Campbell, and his grandson, James Freeman Clarke. 268 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE effect on the public, who did not know that Col. Cass had written both to his brother-in-law and to Gov. Meigs, only a few days before the surrender, that the army was in want of everything, and must perish unless assisted. As soon as Gen. Hull was exchanged he was placed under arrest, and charges for capital offences were brought against him. A court-martial, of which Gen. Wade Hampton was president, was summoned to assemble at Philadelphia, where Gen. Hull appeared for trial. But this court was dissolved by Pres. Madison without reason assigned. After Gen. Hull had been another year under arrest, a new court was assembled at Albany, 3 Jan. 18 14, of which Gen. Dearborn was appointed president. Both the construction and the pro- ceedings of this court were unfair to the accused. The man whose errors or misconduct had been a principal cause of the disaster was its president, and most of its members were young officers of no experience, some of them aides of Gen. Dearborn, and under his patronage. The proceedings of the court were unfair, the opinions of witnesses being received in evidence ; and although the best legal assistance was afforded to the prosecution, the counsel for the accused was not al- lowed to address the court. Charges of treason, cowardice, and neglect of duty were exhibited against Gen. Hull, and he was found guilty of the two latter, and sentenced to be shot. Pres. Madison approved the sentence, but remitted the execution of it. There was no need of its execution. The object was gained, which was to screen the administration from disgrace or ruin. Some victim was necessar}', and the unsuccessful General became the scapegoat for the President and his party. Gen. Hull was acquitted of the charge of treason. The charge of cowardice was substan- tiated by the opinions of the militia officers, who thought that the General looked, on the day of the surrender, as if he was terrified. CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 269 After the court-martial in 18 14, Gen. Hull returned to his farm in Massachusetts, where he passed the remainder of his life in agricultural pursuits. It was not until 1824 that he was able to procure from the War Department copies of documents necessary for his vindication, all his papers hav- ing been lost by the capture and burning of the vessel by which they were sent from Detroit to Buffalo. He then pub- lished "Memoirs of the Campaign of 1812," which, where they were read, had the effect of changing public opinion, formed as it had been from the statements of government newspapers and military men who, like Lewis Cass, had risen on the downfall of Gen. Hull. In 1825 a public dinner was given to Gen. Hull b}- leading men of Boston, to express their sympathy and respect for him. The same year he visited his native town of Derby, Conn., where he was received with much attention ; but the fatigues of the journey brought on an illness which proved fatal. He d. Nov. 25, 1825, aged seventy-two years. Gen. Hull was a man of fine personal appearance and of polished address, combined with frank and soldierly manners. He was of an amiable and kindly temper, and his latter days of trial were much soothed by an affectionate family. His descent from Richard'^ Hull, made a freeman of Massachu- setts in 1634, of New Haven in 1639, d. 1662, was through Dr. /ohn,'^ bapt. 24 May, 1640, first of Derby, afterward of Wallingford, where he was a large landholder, d. 6 Dec. 1711 ; Joseph,^ b. 1662, d. 1744, m. in 1691 Mary, dau. of Secretary Isaac Nicholls, who d. 1 733 ; Joseph* b. 1694, a farmer, many years member of the General Assembly; Joseph^ (his father), b. 1728, d. 1775, who m. in 1749 Eliza Clark of Lyme. (Com. Isaac Hull was grandson of this Joseph.) He m. in 1781 Sarah, only dau. of the Hon. Abraham Fuller of Newton, who survived him less than a year. They had a family of seven daughters, and one son, Capt. A. F. Hull, 9th U. S. inf., who was killed at the battle of Lundy's Lane, July, 1814, ae. 28. 270 lUOGRAinilCAL NOTICES OF THE Rebecca Parker, dau. of Gen. Hull, m. 18 May, 1805, Samuel Clarke. They had Samuel C. Clarke, Rev. James Freemari Clarke, D.D., and four other children. SAMUEL CL.'VRKE CLARKE. Grandson of Gen. Hull, whom he succ. in 1873 ; * was b. Newton, Mass., 27 Feb. 1806; educated at the Boston Lath: School. He was engaged in the drug business in Boston 1820-30; in South America, 1833; '" the East Indies, as supercargo, 1834-36; in Boston, 1836-39; in Chicago, as a druggist, 1839-71. He has since lived in the South, mostly at Marietta, Ga. His descent from Thomas ' Clarke, of Plymouth, Mass., b. 1623, d. 1698, and Susan Ring, of Plymouth, was through Andreui^ Ply- mouth, 1635, and Mehitable, dau. of Thomas Scottow of Boston, m. 167 1 ; Nathaniel^ of Harwich, Mass., b. 1682, m. 1720, Abigail Hedge of Yarmouth; Barnal>as,*h. Harwich, Mass., 1722, shipmas- ter and merchant in Boston, d. 1772, m. 1748, Hepzibah, dau. of Thornton Barrett of Boston; Samuel,^ b. Boston, 1754, merchant and shipowner, major m Boston regiment, 1777, d. in 1778 of dis- ease contracted in R. I. campaign, m. 1778, Martha, dau. of Obadiah Curtis of Boston; Samuel,^ b. Boston, 1779, a physician, Dartmouth College, practised in Newton and Boston, d. 1830, m. m 1805, Rebecca Parker, dau. of Gen. William Hull, of Newton. Samuel m. 4 June, 1849, at Mackinac, Mich., Lucinda M., dau. of John Lamed of Providence, R. L They had — Edith, b. Chicago, 28 Aug. 185 1, d. there 26 Jan. 1862. iEpI)ratm ^unt. He was b. Watertown, Mass., 5 Nov. 1758; d. Albany, 16 Oct. 1805 ; brother of Capt. Thomas Hunt. Com. licut. in H. Jackson's (9th) reg. 9 Aug. 1781. He left a widow, Catha- rine, two sons, and a daughter in .Albany. * Mr. Clarke was elected a member in 1S29; but owing to absence from the country, he did not sign the articles until 1873. CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSKTTS. 2/1 His descent from Enoch ' Hunt, of Weymouth, a first settler, was through Epliraim^ d. 22 Feb. 1686-87, se. 77, and Anna Richards; Thomas^ of Boston, b. 1648, d. 11 Feb. 1721-22, who m. Judith Torrey; Samuel,^ of VVatertown, b. 9 Feb. 1689, d. 1774, m. Mary Langdon, 24'~April, 1712 ; John^ (his father), b. 19 Nov. 1716, d. 19 Jan. 1777, and Ruth Fessenden. LEWIS CASS HUNT, He was grand-nephew of Lieut. Ephraim Hunt, whom he succ. by election in 1883 ;* b. Fort Howard, Green Bay, Wis., 23 Feb. 1824; d. Fort Union, 6 Sept. 1886. His father, Lieut. Samuel W. Hunt, U. S. A., died at Jefferson Barracks, Mo., near St. Louis, in 1829, and the boy was taken to an uncle's in Detroit. When a lad of fifteen, after a short term at Kenyon College, finding that his uncle had been much em- barrassed by the financial depression of 1837, he proceeded to St. Louis, and found employment as clerk on a Mississippi steamboat, where he learned the river business as a prepara- tion for a commission house. Near the close of his engage- ment, the steamer was " snagged," sunk, and abandoned by her other officers. He stuck to the wreck with a few of the crew, succeeded in saving the valuable engines and other property, and then entered the commission house of Kim- ball & Co., of New Orleans. Before going on the river, he had applied for a cadetship at West Point, but was refused the appointment on the ground that his brother had graduated there. After he had been in the * lie was ill, at the time of his election, from disease contracted in the ser- vice, and died before he was able to attend the annual meeting and sign the articles. In view of all the circumstances it was voted at the annual meeting in July, 1890, that his name be placed on the rolls as though he had become a duly qualified member. There was a precedent for such action. Rev. Thos. Thacher was elected in 1812; he died before signing the articles, and at the next annual meeting it was voted that his name be enrolled " as having been a member." 272 r.KJGRAI'llICAL NOTICES OK THE house of Kimball & Co. for a year and more, he was surprised at the receipt of a cadet appointment, which, as he now had flattering business prospects, he was disposed to decline ; but Mr. Kimball urged him to secure the education thus ofifered, and said that his place in the house should be open to him after his graduation, should he then desire it; and he accepted. The story of his long-delaj'ed appointment was a curious one, and will perhaps serve as a partial illustration of his character. When he went on board the steamboat at Cincin- nati, en route to St. Louis, he found himself near two gentle- men who were earnestly discussing some question of political history. Observing that he was attentive and interested, one of tlie gentlemen playfully appealed to him on a disputed question of fact, and of principle involved, to which he promptly replied, to the evident surprise and gratification of his questioner. Then followed a long conversation, in which the lad was subjected to a close examination. When he was about leaving, the gentleman said, " So you are going to St. Louis, and are a grandson of Col. Hunt [who died near St. Louis, in command of the troops there, in 1808] ; now, if you ever want anything in which I can aid you, don't forget to apply to me; my name is Thomas H. Benton." The young man did not presume upon this, but made his application for West Point to the Representative from St. Louis. It was many months after his application was rejected that the Rep- resentative applied for a midshipman's appointment, instead, and requested Senator Benton's aid. On hearing the name and identifying the applicant, Mr. Benton immediately said, " He shall have an appointment, and the one he asked for, to West Point, or I will know the reason why ! " and soon procured it. Entering the Military Academy in 1843, he graduated in 1847, was appointed a 2d lieutenant of infantry, and pro- CLNCINXATI UF MASSACHUSETTS. 273 ceeded to Mexico, where he served until the end of the war. In the winter of 1847-48 he was one of the party of officers that ascended the volcano of Popocatapetl, — a circumstance that afterward proved of interest and pleasure to him, as it led to an acquaintance with Humboldt, from whom he re- ceived many kindnesses. While in Mexico he contracted camp diarrhoea, from which he never recovered. He served on the Canada frontier 1848-52, and in Washington Territory against the Trinity River Indians until broken down by his Mexican disease. He was on sick-leave 1854-58; most of the time under treatment in Europe. On his return he marched from Fort Leavenworth to Washington Territory, and was promoted capt. 4th inf., May, 1S55. In 1859 Gen. Harney occupied San Juan Island, in Puget Sound, the ownership of which was in dispute with Great Britain, and placed a company of the 4th infantry, under Capt. Pickett, afterward the well-known Confederate general, in possession. This threatened serious consequences, as the British had a naval force there sufficient to give them control. Harney refused to recede from his position ; but Gen. Scott, who was sent to arrange matters, soon came to an under- standing with the admiral. It was agreed that there should be a joint occupation ; and a company of British marines, under Capt. Bazalgette, was landed on the island. As there had been much hot feeling excited on both sides, Gen. Scott deemed it important that the commanders of the two com- panies should be men of tact and discretion. He selected Capt. Hunt's company to relieve Pickett's ; the British and American captains became excellent friends, and very soon all ill-feeling passed away. In 1861 Capt. Hunt's regiment was ordered to the Army of the Potomac, and served at the siege of Yorktown and the battle of Williamsburg. Appointed colonel 92d N. Y. vols. 22 May, he took command, 24 May, and was se- iS 274 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE vercly wounded at the battle of Fair Oaks, 31 May. He re- sumed command of his regiment in Sept., was engaged in the operations about Suffolk, Va., and in several expeditions to the Blackwater. He joined Gen. Foster's e.xpedition into North Carolina, and was distinguished in the actions at Kinston, 15 Dec, Whitehall, 17 Dec, and Goldsborough, 18 Dec. 1862, — for which he was appointed brig.-gen. of vols. He continued in command of his brigade until July, 1863, when, disabled for field service by his wound and disease, he was placed in charge of the draft rendezvous in Connecticut. In March, 1864, he was selected by Gen. Grant for impor- tant special duty in Kansas and Missouri. In 1864 he was ordered to the command of the defences of New York har- bor. On 16 Jan. 1866, he was mustered out of the volunteer service. After the war he served on the frontiers, in Texas, on the plains in Dakota, Utah, and Washington Territories. He was promoted major 14th inf., 8 June, 1863; trans- ferred to 4th inf, 21 Aug. 1866; lieut.-col. 20th inf. 29 March, 1868; col. 14th inf, 19 May, 1881. Although a life-martyr to the disease he had contracted in Mexico in 1848, he continued almost steadily on duty after his return from Europe, until he became so much re- duced that, as a last resort, he was advised to try the dry climate of New Mexico. He left San Diego, Cal., in the latter part of Aug., 1886, for Fort Union, which post he reached on the last day of that month. The intense heat of the weather and unexpected delays in the journey so ex- hausted his strength that he died a week after his arrival, and after a service of nearly forty years. For his gallant and meritorious services in various bat- tles and in the field during the war, he received the suc- cessive brevets of major, lieut.-col., col., and brig.-gen. in the army. CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 275 Gen. Hunt ra. in i860, Abby, dau. of Gen. Silas Casey, U.S.A. His wife d. in Ann Arbor, Mich., six montlis before her husband. They left issue, surviving — Bessie Perry, b. 1861. Lewis Casey, b. 1863. Robert Herrick, b. 1865. Henry Jackson, b. 1869. He was b. VVatertown, Mass., Sept. 1754; d. Bellefontaine, Mo., 18 Aug. 1808. He served in the Watertown company of Gardner's re'g., which marched to Lexington, ig April, 1775, reaching the "meeting-house" there just as Lord Percy's brigade joined the one retreating from Concord. In the pursuit, as young Hunt states in a letter, he "got sev- eral shots at them." Soon after he was appointed sergt. in Craft's company, of the same regiment, and served with it at Bunker Hill. In Jan., 1776, he was appointed ensign in Bond's (25th Mass.) reg., and served with it in the Canada campaign. The service was severe, the exposure great, and few lived to return to Boston, Col. Bond himself dying at Ticonderoga. Ensign Hunt, broken down by hard service and disease (small-pox), was sent home in Dec, 1776, and was soon after appointed a lieut. in Col. Henry, Jackson's i6th Mass., afterward consolidated with the 9th, and finally numbered the 4th reg. He was promoted capt. -lieut. I Feb. 1777, and capt. March i, 1779. In Oct., 1777, the regiment proceeded to Lancaster, Pa., and afterward to Valley Forge. It was the first to enter Philadelphia when the British evacu- ated the city the following June. The next day Capt. Hunt was sent with twenty-five men to ascertain their line of re- treat. Crossing the Delaware at Cooper's Ferry, he followed their rear-guard closely until sunset, ascertained that they had taken the Monmouth road, returned to Philadelphia, and 2/6 JIIUGRAI'HICAL NUTICES Of THE reported to the generals. The next day the regiment crossed at the same ferry, and was soon followed by the troops under Gen. Charles Lee. On the morning of the battle of Mon- mouth, it came upon the rear of the enemy in position, and met La Fayette and Steuben (who seem to have been recon- noitring alone in advance) in full flight, closely pursued by the i6th British light dragoons. Capt. Hunt says: — " They fell into our rear, and ordered us to form against the horse. The baron had lost his hat, and one of our soldiers got it for him. We formed line, with orders from the colonel to reserve our fire. The dragoons, however, wheeled and went off. We then formed platoons and advanced, when the enemy opened a cannonade, but their shot mostly went over us. Looking to the rear, I found that Gen. Lee's troops were retreating ; and for his conduct that day he was afterward suspended. Our regiment had to retreat also, until we met the Commander-in-Chief, — a joyful sight to me, for the British were coming on rapidly, — and the battle soon commenced. . . . Night came on ; we slept on our arms, and the British re- treated before daylight. Our regiment lost twelve stout men by the heat only ; the British lost many in that way. We then marched through the Terseys to King's Ferry and White Plains ; soon after accompanied Sullivan to Rhode Island, and were engaged in the battle of Quaker Hill, near Newport, our regiment losing eight offi- cers, and forty-five privates killed and wounded." Capt. Hunt now saw much hard service. In 1779 he was wounded in the capture of Stony Point. In P'eb. 1781, Washington organized three select battalions of" light infan- try." Hunt's was one of the eight New England companies that constituted Gimat's battalion, " which was probably the finest in the Continental army at Yorktown or anywhere else." * It served throughout the Virginia campaign under La Fayette, and was distinguished at the affair of Green Springs, under Wayne. At the siege of Yorktown, when on * " The Yorktown Campaign," by Prof. Johnston : Harper's, iSSi. CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 277 14 Oct. Washington determined to carry by assault the two British redoubts nearest the York River on the American right, one was assigned to the veteran French regiments " Gatenois," and " Royal Deuxponts," under Baron de Viomenil (the storming party consisting of their grenadier and chasseur companies, led by Count William de Deuxponts), and the other to the " light infantry," under Col. Alexander Hamil- ton, — Gimat's battalion having the post of honor. Both commands, under the general direction of La Fayette, ad- vanced promptly at the given signal. The French, stopping to remove abatis, lost ninety-two men ; the Americans, rush- ing over these obstructions, lost only thirty-four, killed and wounded. Both works were gallantly carried. Of Gimat's battalion the colonel himself, Capt. OIney of R. I., and Hunt of Mass., and Lieut. Mansfield of Conn, were wounded with the bayonet. This was the last severe fighting of the Revolu- tion. Washington in general orders unstintedly praised the troops engaged, officers and men ; La Fayette declared that his " light infantry " were " equal to the best troops in the world ; " and the gallant Viomenil complimented them in his official report. Count de Rochambeau, the French general-in- chief, petitioned Louis XVL to restore to the Gatenois regi- ment, in recognition of this exploit, their old and honored name and motto, " Auvergne, sans tache;" which the king did, writing on the petition, " Good for Royal Auvergne." A commission was issued by Gov. Bowdoin of Massachu- setts, 18 Nov. 1786, appointing Hunt "captain in the troops raised by this Commonwealth for the service of the United States ; this to constitute a sufficient warrant itiitil a eomniis- sion is issued by the Secretary at War." Another commission was issued to him by Arthur St. Clair, 2 April, 1787, as Presi- dent of Congress, appointing him a capt. in the 2d reg. in the army of the United States, from 20 Oct. 1786. The constitutional government of 1789 adopted the army 278 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE of the Confederacy. Hunt was again commissioned as capt. in the 2d reg. from 4 March, 1791, and as major 2d sub. legion, 18 Feb. 1793. He was engaged in Wayne's Indian campaign of 1794, promoted lieut.-col. ist inf., i April, 1802, and colonel of the same regiment 11 April, 1803. After Wayne's campaign he commanded at Fort Defiance, O. ; Fort Wayne, Ind. ; Fort Industry (Toledo, O.) ; Detroit and Mackinac, Mich. When the territory of Louisiana was trans- ferred by France to the United States, he crossed the Missis- sippi with his regiment, and established his headquarters at Bellefontaine, above St. Louis, near the mouth of the Mis- souri, where he d. 18 Aug. 1808. He was the son ol John of Watertown (H. U. 1734) and Ruth (Fessenden) Hunt; was a brother of Lieut. Ephraim Hunt, also an original member of the Mass. Society. He m. 16 Aug. 1784, Eunice, dau. of Samuel and Abigail (Sanderson) Wellington of Waltham. They had — George, b. 1785, d. early. Henry Jackson, b. 1788, m. Ann, dau. of Angus Mackintosh of Moy, chief of Clan Mackintosh and " captain of Clan Chat- tan." He d. 1827, first mayor of Detroit. Ruth, b. 1790, m. Dr. Abraham Edwards. George, b. i 791. Thomas, b. 1793, in U. S. A., war of 1812, fought at Chippewa, Niagara (where he was wounded). La Cole Mill, etc., resigned 1836, d. Detroit, 1838. Abby W^., b. 1797, m. 181 2, Capt. afterward Col. Josiah Snelling, U. S. A. (Her son Lieut. James G. served in the Mexican war from Palo Alto to the Valley of Mexico, was brevetted lieut. for Cherubusco, capt. for Molino del Rey, — he was in storm- ing party and desperately wounded, — d. capt. loth inf 1855.) John Elliot, b. 1798, d. Toledo, O., 1877. (His son Lewis C, capt. 67th Ohio inf., led his company in assault on Fort Wagner, S. C, 18 July, 1863, and his regiment in assault on Fort Gregg, lines of Petersburg, Va., 2 April, 1865.) Samuel W., b. 1799, d. lieut. 3d inf. at Jefferson Barracks, Mo., JlcAA^n, I J./riopv A CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 279 n Sept. 1829, m. 1818, Julia Herrick of Plattsburg, N. Y., and had Henry J., U. S. k.,- Lewis C, U. S. A., zxiA Julia H. Charles C. P., b. 1802. Mary L., b. 1803, m. Tunis S. Wendell of Detroit, d. in Detroit (son Capt. Charles E., ist Mich, inf., killed 30 Aug. 1862, assault of Stonewall Jackson's line, second Bull Run). Eliza M., b. 1804, m. James G. Soulard of St. Louis, Mo. HENRY JACKSON HUNT. Son of Samuel \V. and Julia (Herrick) Hunt, and grandson of Col. Thomas Hunt, whom he succ. in 1867; was b. in Detroit, Mich., 14 Sept. 1819, and d. in Washington, D. C, II Feb. 1889. He, entered the U. S. Military Academy in 1835; was appointed 2d lieut. of the 2d artillery in 1839, and 1st licut. in 1846. He served in the war with Mexico (1846-48) in Duncan's battery A, 2d artillery, and was en- gaged in the siege of Vera Cruz, the capture of San Antonio, the battles of Cerro Gordo, Cherubusco, Molino del Rey, the storming of Chapultepec and Garita San Cosme, and the cap- ture of the city of Me.\ico. At Molino del Rey he received two wounds. In 1852 he was promoted to be captain; and during the years 1856-59 he served as a member of the board to revise the system of " Instruction for Field Artil- lery." He was author of the new system of artillery tactics recommended by the board, adopted by the War Depart- ment, and used during the war of the Rebellion. His work forms the basis of the present tactics for all arms in our ser- vice. During the years 1861-62 he was president of the board to test projectiles and rifled field-guns ; also a member of the boards of 1862 and 1867 on the "Armament of Forti- fications," and president of the " Permanent Artillery Board " of 1867, which prepared the plan for the organization of the artillery schodl at Fort Monroe. The record of his services during the war of the Rebellion 2So BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OK THE covers the operations of the Army of the Potomac from the battle of Bull Run in 1861 to the surrender of Lee on 9 April, 1865. He was promoted to be major of the 5th artillery early in 1861, and soon after colonel and aide-de-camp to Gen. McClellan. He organized the reserve artillery of the Army of the Potomac, and commanded it until 5 Sept. 1862, when he was appointed chief of artillery of that army, and served in that capacity until May, 1865. On 15 Sept. 1862, he was appointed brigadier-general of volunteers " for meri- torious services;" in 1863, lieutenant-colonel of the 3d ar- tillery; and in 1869, colonel of the 5th artillery. His brevet appointments for service in the two wars were as follows : captain, " for gallant and meritorious conduct in the battles of Contreras and Cherubusco ; " major, " for gal- lant and meritorious conduct in the battle of Chapultepec; " colonel, " for gallant and meritorious services in the battle of Gettysburg;" brigadier-general, "for gallant and meri- torious services during the siege of Petersburg, and in the campaign terminating with the surrender of the insurgent army under Gen. R. E. Lee;" major-general, for "gallant and distinguished conduct in the battle of Gettysburg, and for faithful and meritorious services in the campaign from the Rapidan to Petersburg, Va." He had command in the Lidian Territory in 1865-66. In April, 1866, he was " honorably mustered out of volunteer service," and returned to the command of the 5th artillery. He had charge of the frontier on the Canadian border east of Lake Ontario during the disturbances in May, 1870. He broke up the armed Fenian organizations, turned in their arms to the U. S. Arsenal, collected the men, some 1,400 in number, and sent them to their homes without expense to the Government. He was in command of the District of North Carolina from July to Sept. 1870, the Governor having proclaimed it to be in a state of insurrection on ac- CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 28 I count of Ku-Klux outrages. In 1875 he was placed in com- mand at Charleston, S. C. His energetic suppression of the riots in that city immediately following the presidential elec- tion led to his recall (presumably for political reasons) until the electoral commission made its report, when he was or- dered back to his post without being informed as to the nature of the charges, if any, made against him. He was placed on the retired list 14 Sept. 1883, after an uninterrupted service of forty-four years. Congress soon after passed a bill to raise him to the full rank of major- general ; but Pres. Arthur vetoed it, apparently for the sole purpose of making his action consistent v.ith that taken by him in the Fitz-John Porter case. On 15 May, 1885, the President appointed Gen. Hunt governor of the Soldiers' Home in the District of Columbia, which position he held at the time of his death. In publishing his death to the army, the Secretary of War (Mr. Endicott) said: "The conspicuous record of this gallant veteran, the survivor of two wars, who, though retired from ac- tive service, was yet on duty under the orders of the President when he died, calls for more than a passing notice. His ser- vice in peace, no less than in war, was distinguished by zeal, fidelity, and thoroughness. His personal character was such that his memory will ever be cherished by those with whom he served. He was the chief of artillery of the Army of the Potomac; and within a few years has followed to the grave those great captains under whom he organized and com- manded the largest, most perfectly equipped, and effective body of artillery that the history of warfare records. It is needless to recite his deeds. The army of to-day knows them well; the army of the future will find them in history; they may be read in the six brevets given him for his service in the Mexican war and the war of the Rebellion." A writer in the " Army and Xa\\- Journal " has said very 282 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE happily that Gen. Hunt " always seemed a compound of Thackeray's three best characters, — Col. Nevvcome, Major Dobbin, and Gen. Lambert, — modest as he was learned, and sympathetic as he was brave." One who knew him well says: "There was probably no officer in the United States army who was more popular with both officers and men than Gen. Hunt. Modest, un- assuming, warm-hearted, and just to all, he was indeed the true type of a soldier and a gentleman. His record during the Mexican and civil wars entitled him, in the opinion of foreign military men, as well as those of his own country, to the first rank among artillerists. He will live in history as the general who at Gettysburg commanded the batteries (numbering a hundred guns) that checked the famous charge of Pickett and insured to the Union arms a glorious victory." Prof. Mahan, in his lecture on that battle, said: "Gen. Hunt saved the day at Gettysburg." William E. Birkhimer says: "His reports and other official communications re- garding the organization for and administration of artillery in campaign, its proper function in war and employment on the battle-field, written during the Rebellion, have never been surpassed, either in comprehensive grasp of the sub- ject or its practically useful treatment, by any officer in any arm)'." Gen. Hunt greatly valued his connection with this Society, and was always eager to perform his part in any work which tended to promote the objects of the order. He m. (ist) 18 Dec. 1851, Emily C, dau. of Gen. E. de Russy, U. S. engineers, who d. May 12, 1857, by whom he had — Emily C, b. 1852, d. 1873. Henry Jackson, b. 1855, d. May, 18S6. He graduated at the U. S. Naval Academy in 1875 ; was appointed ensign, 1878 ; served with distinction in the Jeannette Relief Arctic expedition in 1881-83 l joined the Greeley Search Expedition in 1S84, from which he CI^■CINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 283 returned in broken health to die two years later. He m. 27 June, 1883, Henrietta, dau. of Adj. -Gen. R. C. Drum, U. S. A., by whom he had Richard C. D., b. 14 April, 1884; Heiiry Jackson, b. 31 Dec. 1885. Gen. Hunt m. (2d), 27 Dec. i860, Mary Bethune, dau. of Gen. Henry Knox Craig, chief of ordnance, U. S. A., and a great- granddaughter on her mother's side of George and Mary Faneuil Bethune of Boston, Mass., by whom he had — CoxwAY Bethune, civil engineer, graduate of Troy Polytechnic. Maria Bethune. JuLL4 Herrick. Presley O i iipi «M -. MAAA«a John Elliott. Q Jane Bethune. Joljn ?i^urlf, Jr. He was b. Boston, 1760; d. there 21 Aug. 1784. Com. ensign in H. Jackson's (9th) reg. 18 June, 1781. His descent from John"^ ////ra' of Boston, 1639, d. 23 Sept. 1690, and wife Mary, was through yizci?^ - of Charlestown, 1670, d. 7 Sept. 1694, as. 41, who m. 21 Dec. 1675, ^1^° Willson ; Jacob? b. 21 Sept. 1676, d. 23 Sept. 1749, who m. Eliza Tufts j Jacob* A. Boston, 1768, who m. (in London) Eliza Mason; &nAJohii^ (his father), b. Boston, 9 Dec. 1727, H. U. 1747, sec. to Gov. Went\vorth of New Hampshire, member of the Provincial Council, d. 1809, who m. in 1755, Eliza Foster. y Baker. Samuel Jcffcrtrs. A sergt. in Burbcck's Co. of Knox's reg. in 1776; com. 2d lieut. in Crane's artillery, 1777; ist lieut. i Oct. 1778; in service at West Point as late as Aug. 1784; d. before 1812. JJoijn Joijitston. He was b. Boston, ab. 1753; d. there 28 June, 1818. Thomas Johnston, his father, was known as an escutcheon- maker, and built the first organ of American manufacture used in Boston. He d. in 1765, and was interred in King's Chapel burying-ground. John was in early life apprenticed to John Gore, a house and sign painter, father of Gov. Gore ; and was, before the war, a member of Paddock's artillery com- pany. In April, 1775, he joined Gridley's artillery reg. as a lieut.; was com. a capt. -lieut. in Knox's reg. i Jan. 1776; and at the battle of Brooklyn, L. I., 27 Aug. 1776, was severely wounded and made a prisoner. He spoke often in after years of the skill of Surgeon Eustis (afterward Gov. of Mass.) in suc- cessfully treating his case ; but the severity of the wound com- pelled his retirement from the service in Oct. 1777, and he resumed his art in Boston, where he kept a shop in Court Street, near the head of Gore's Alley. He painted many likenesses of the Revolutionary and other celebrities of his day; but in color and in drawing, owing to limited oppor- 294 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE tunity for study, liis productions were somewhat deficient. Among his portraits are those of Gov. Increase Sumner, now in the Mass. Senate Chamber; Gov. Wm. Philhps and family; Major Samuel Shaw; Gov. Samuel Adams (destroyed by fire many years since); and one of Mrs. Adams, which is still preserved. He painted the sign of " The Good' Samari- tan," which was displayed in front of Thos. Bartlett's apothe- cary store in Old Cambridge, many years ago ; but in the " priest passing by on the other side " he gave such a striking likeness of Rev. Dr. Walter of Christ Church, that the sign had to be changed. Dunlap calls Johnston " a man of wit and talent." He m. Miss Spear, dau. of a Boston merchant, and had one or two sons who d. in infancy, and four daughters, two of whom (Mrs. Soren and Mrs. Newell) had issue. His last surviving dau., Gfl^ce F., was living in 1853. JOHN JOHNSTON SOREN. Son of John and Sarah (Johnston) Soren, and eldest grand- son of John Johnston, whom he succ. in 1840; b. Dorchester, 18 Oct. 1803; d. Boston, 20 Feb. 1889. He was teller of the Washington Bank from 1825 to 184S; and cashier of the Boylston Bank from 1848 to 1S75, when he retired from active service. He was, at the time of his death, the senior member of the Cincinnati Society. " Had he chosen lo devote himself lo art he might have won dis- tinction as a landscape-painter. He was a gentleman of refined tastes, of quiet and unostentatious demeanor, and in all respects a most worthy and exemplary citi/^en." He m. 3 June, 1828, Fanny Wales, and had several children. His son, George Wales Soren, of New York, was elected in iSgo as his successor. CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 295 Soscpi) Itillam. He was b. Gloucester, Mass., 1739. Com. 2d lieut. in Hutchinson's (27th) reg. 5 May, 1775; ist lieut. in Putnam's (5th) reg. 1 Jan. 1777; capt. 14 Oct. 1780. He was con- tinued in the service after the war, being the officer directed to take possession of the posts at Flushing, Jamaica, and Flamsted.L. I. He received an honorable discharge in 1806, when he returned to Massachusetts. Joseph, his father, d. in Gloucester, 12 March, 1806, aged lOO years, 11 months, 12 days. Zcfjulon Bins. He was b. Raynham, Mass., 16 Oct. 1750. Com. lieut. in Bradford's (14th) reg. in 1777 ; capt. 4 Oct. 1780; in Brooks's (7th) reg. in 1783. He emigrated to Ohio in 1788, and settled in Belpre, leaving his family in Rhode Island. He intended to return for them as soon as he had prepared a house and raised a crop for their support, but was killed by the Indians, May i, 1789. His widow afterward settled in Newport, R. I. His descent from Philip'^ King, who removed in 1680 from Brain- tree to Raynham, and m. ab. 1680, Judith, dau. of Rev. William Whitman of Milton, was through yi?/;;?,^ b. ab. 1681, d. 5 Oct. 1741, who m. in 1700, Alice Dean, d. 1746 ; David^ (his father), b. 1712, d. 6 July, 1753, m. Rebecca Dean. Zebulon's son, Charles B., was a portrait-painter. IHosFii Bnap. He was b. Mansfield, Mass., 1743 ; d. Franklin, Mass., 7 Nov. 1809. Com. capt. in Joseph Read's reg. May, 1775; in Shepard's (4th) reg. i Jan. 1777; served in Sullivan's R. I. campaign in 1778; com. major of Marshall's (loth) reg. 5 Nov. 1778; in 5th reg. in 1783. 296 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE He m. in 1772, Margaret Tiffany, b. Mansfield, 1757, d. 6 Aug. 1840. They had: Hiram; Peggy, b. 18 April, 1789; Alfred, b. 6 Oct. 1791 ; Melville, b. 24 Dec. 1793 ; Polly, b. 18 Aug. 1796 ; George W., 29 Dec. 1799. HIRAM KNAPP. Eldest son of Moses, whom he succ. in 1857; b. Franklin, Mass., 18 April, 1787; d. 18 Aug. 1S65. His children were: Gilbert Clark; Emilia, b. 26 Feb. 1816, m. Edward Hunt; Sylvia L., b. 5 Dec. 181 7, m. James S. Rand; Hiram, Jr., b. 20 April, 1S20, and resides in Athol. GILBERT CLARK KNAPP. Eldest son of Hiram, whom he succ. in 1S66; b. Franklin, Mass., 12 Jan. 1814; d. 27 Aug. 1883. He was in business in Richmond, Va., from 1843 to 1852. Afterward he went to Worcester, Mass., and was in business there for a time. He m. 22 Jan. 1856, Lucinda Cloddard, b. 2 May, 1 831, and has: James Herbert, b. 7 June, 1857, and resides in Franklin ; Josephine Gilbert, b. 14 Dec. i860, d. 2 July, 1863 ; Matilda Gertrude, b. 22 Jan. 1865. He was the son of Capt. James and Martha (Stillman) Knowles of Wethersfield, Ct. Soon after the battle of Lex- ington, he joined Capt. Meigs's Co. in Middletown, Ct., and marched to Cambridge; was com. licut. in Knox's artillery reg. in 1776; lieut. and paym. in Crane's artillery reg. i Jan. 1777; 1st lieut. I Aug. 1778; capt.-lieut. 13 Sept. 1780; and finally, closing his paymaster's accounts in 1785, went to Ohio, where he was on the first jury at Marietta in 17S8, and d. unm. in 1796. His younger brother, James, was an ofii- cer in the Revolutionary navy. His sister Martha m. John Strong. CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 297 One of the distinguished figures in the war of the Revolu- tion, and the leader in the formation of the Society of the Cincinnati; was b. in Boston, Mass., 25 July, 1750. Hi? paternal ancestors were from the Lowlands of Scotland, a place bearing that name being found on the southern border of the Clyde, within the barony of Renfrew. During the reign, of James I. many Scotch Presbyterians settled in the north of Ireland, whence numbers of them subsequently emigrated to America. In the year 1729 some of these emi- grants landed in Boston, bringing with them their pastor, John Morehead, and founded in Bury Street a religious society, which was the origin of the Federal Street Church, afterward the scene of William Ellery Channing's labors. It is remarkable that the first two names found on the baptismal records of this society, of which the parents of Knox were members, are those of Knox and Campbell. The tradition in the family of Knox was that they came from the vicinity of Belfast, Ireland, and that William, his father, was born in St. Eustatius, one of the West Indies. He was m. at Boston, 1 1 Feb. 1735 (O. S.), by Rev. Mr. More- head, to Mary, dau. of Robert Campbell. He was a ship- master, and the owner of a wharf and a small estate on Sea Street (now Federal), near Summer, which he was in 1756 compelled by misfortune to relinquish. In 1759 he went to St. Eustatius, where he d. 25 March, 1762, aged fifty years. His widow, Mary, d. in Boston, 14 Dec. 1771, aged fifty- three. Henry, the seventh often sons, of whom only four attained to manhood, was b. in a house on Federal Street, formerly Sea Street, opposite the head of Drake's wharf* He en- * The larger part of the original structure — a wooden building with a gam- brel roof — is still standing, and may be seen in the rear of No. 235 Federal Street. 298 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE tercd the Boston Latin School in 1758, and soon after graduating secured employment in the bookseller's shop of Wharton & Bowes, on Cornhill. He showed a fondness for books, especially those on military subjects, and acquired a good knowledge of the French language. Of a robust and athletic frame, and an enterprising and resolute character, he was foremost in the contests between the North and South Ends, — two rival sections of Boston, to the latter of which he belonged. On the evening of the affray of 5 March, 1770, which took place in King Street, known as " The Boston Massacre," Knox endeavored to keep the croud away from the soldiers, and when Capt. Preston came upon the ground, " took him b}' the coat and told him for God's sake to take his men back again, for if they fired his life must answer for the consequence ; " to which the Captain replied that " he was sensible of it, and seemed in great haste and much agitated." Having attained the age of twenty-one, Knox quitted his employer and began business on his own account. In Edes & Gill's "Gazette" of 29 July, 1771, the following notice appears : — " This day is opened a new London Bookstore by Henry Knox, opposite Williams' Court in Cornhill, Boston, who has just imported in the last ships from London a large and ver)' elegant assortment of the most modern books in all branches of Literature, Arts, and Sciences (catalogues of which will be published soon), and to be sold as cheap as can be bought at any place in town. Also a complete assortment of stationery." " Knox's store," says Gen. Henry Burbeck, a contem- porary, " was a great resort for the British officers and Tory ladies, who were the ton at that period ; " and Harri- son Gray Otis long afterward described it as " one of great display and attraction for young and old, and a fashionable morning lounge." CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 299 Writing to Longman, the London bookseller, in 1774, Knox says : — " This whole continent have entered into a general non-importa- tion agreement until the late acts of parliament respecting this govern- ment, etc., are repealed, which will prevent my sending any orders for books until this most desirable end is accomplished. I cannot but hope every person who is concerned in American trade will most strenuously exert themselves, in their respective stations, for what so nearly concerns themselves." He was thoroughly identified with the measures taken at that time by the local leaders to resist the aggressions of the British Government. At the age of eighteen, in obe- dience to a strong natural bent, he had joined a military company ; and when the ' Boston Grenadier Corps " was formed by Capt. Joseph Peirce, he was one of its founders and was second in command. On 16 June, 1774, he m. Lucy Flucker, second dau. of Hon. Thomas Flucker, Secre- tary of the Province. The Secretary, who is described as " a high-toned Loyalist of great family pretensions," was at first opposed to the match ; but his opposition appears to have been overcome. It is said that large promises were made to Knox to induce him to stand by the represen- tatives of the royal government ; but he remained true to the principles of local self-government, and soon after the contest at Concord and Lexington left Boston in disguise, " his departure having been interdicted by Gage," and re- ported for duty at Gen. Ward's headquarters in Cambridge. He was engaged in reconnoitring service on the day the battle of Bunker Hill was fought. Afterward he aided in constructing the military works around Boston, and received the commendation of Washington for his energy and skill. John Adams, writing to Knox from Philadelphia, 1 1 Nov. 1775, says: — 300 BIOGRArHICAL NOTICES OF THE " I have been impressed with an opinion of your knowledge and abihties in the military way for several years, and of late have en- deavored, both at camp, at Watertown, and at Philadelphia, by men- tioning your name and character, to make you more known, and consequently in a better way for promotion. " It was a sincere opinion of your merit and qualifications which prompted me to act this part, and therefore I am very happy to be able to inform you that 1 beheve you will very soon be provided for according to your wishes ; at least you may depend upon this, that nothing in my power shall be wanting to effect it." On the 8th of the same month, Washington wrote to the President of Congress : — " The council of officers are unanimously of opinion that the com- mand of the artillery should no longer continue in Col. Gridley ; and knowing of no person better qualified to supply his place, or whose appointment will give more general satisfaction, I have taken the liberty of recommending Henry Knox to the consideration of Congress." Kno.x was commissioned by Congress, 17 Nov. 1775, to be colonel of the artillery regiment. Before receiving his commission, however, he was despatched by the Commander- in-Chief on a very important expedition to Ticonderoga to procure cannon and stores from the fort at that place and transport them across country to Cambridge. In this expe- dition, which was entirely successful, Knox showed that he was fertile in resources, and possessed of great boldness and vigor. On the night of 4 March, 1776, under cover of a brisk cannonade from Kno.x's batteries at Cobble Hill, Lechmere's Point, and Roxbury, Gen. Thomas ' took possession of Dor- chester Heights, commanding the town and harbor of Boston, which he so strongly fortified that the British commander de- cided to evacuate Boston on the 17th.* * The Fluckers accompanied the royal troops to Halif.ix, and sailed thence to England, where the father and mother of Mrs. Knox both died, — the former, CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 3OI Knox, with his artillery, then followed Washington through Rhode Island and Connecticut to Long Island and New York City. After being driven out of the city, he writes to his brother William from the Heights of Harlem, 23 Sept. 1776: — " There is a radical evil in our army, — the lack of officers. We ought to have men of merit in the most extensive and unlimited sense of the word. Instead of which, the bulk of the officers of the army are a parcel of ignorant, stupid men, who might make tolerable soldiers, but [are] bad officers ; and until Congress forms an estab- lishment to induce men proper for the purpose to leave their usual employments and enter the service, it is ten to one they will be beat till they are heartily tired of it. We ought to have academies in which the whole theory of the art of war shall be taught, and every other encouragement possible given to draw persons into the army that may give a lustre to our arms. As the army now stands, it is only a receptacle for ragamuffins. You will observe I am chagrined, not more so than at any other time since I 've been in the army ; but many late affairs, of which I 've been an eyewitness, have so totally sickened me, that unless some very different mode of conduct is observed in the formation of the new army, I shall not think my- self obliged by either the laws. of God or nature to risk my reputa- tion on so cobweb a foundation." After a series of disasters, Washington retreated through the Jerseys, and across the Delaware River near Trenton. Here the pursuit ceased, and an opportunity soon otTered to restore the drooping spirits of the patriot army. Under cover of the night, Washington recrossed the Delaware, — Knox superintending the passage, — and fell upon Trenton, cap- turing the entire garrison. Writing to his wife of this affair, on 28 Dec. 1776, Kno.x says: — " His Excellency the General has done me the unmerited great honor of thanking me in public orders in terms strong and polite. in March, 17S3; the latter, in Dec. 17S5. Mrs. Knox accompanied her husband when he left Boston in June, 1775, and appears to have been heartily in sym- pathy with his patriotic purposes. 302 moilRAPIIICAL NOTICES OF THE This I should blush to mention to any other than to you, my dear Lucy ; and I am fearful that even my Lucy may think her Harry possesses a species of little vanity in doing [it] at all." Writing again, 2 Jan. 1777, he says: — " We are collecting our force at this place, and shall give batde to the enemy very soon. Our people have exerted great fortitude, and stayed beyond the time of their enlistment, in high spirits, but want rum and clothing. Will it give you satisfaction or pleasure in being informed that the Congress have created me a general officer, • — a brigadier, — with the entire command of the artillery? " * On the day after this letter was written, the battle of Princeton occurred, of which Knox gives a detailed account in a letter to his wife, 7 Jan. It appears to have been upon his recommendation that Morristown was subsequently selected as the winter quarters of the army. Knox was sent eastward to see to the casting of cannon and the establish- ment of laboratories. Writing to Washington from Boston, under date of i Feb., he says: — " Upon my arrival here, I was much surprised at the very extra- ordinary bounty offered by the State (S86|) for recruits for the ser- vice. Part of a regiment, consisting of four hundred men with a detachment of one hundred and fifty artillery, marches to-morrow and next day for Ticonderoga. The enlistments in this town have been exceeding rapid. General Ward is here ; but whether he acts as a councillor of the Massachusetts or a continental general is diffi- cult to say. There must be one battalion of artillery raised in this State ; for all the old artillerymen, who have been two years in the service and acquired some experience, are from this town and col- ony. If the Congress should still adhere to Brookfield in preference to Springfield, it will delay everything for three or four months. I wrote General Greene from Springfield that it was the best place in all the four New England States for a laboratory, cannon foundry. etc., and I hope your E.xcellency will order it there." * His commission w.is dated 27 Dec. 1776, the day following the victory of Trenton, but before the news had reached Congress. That body had previously resolved to augment the artillery to a brigade of four regiments. CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 303 In the following May (i///) he was with Gen. Greene planning the defences of the North River. Writing to his wife on the 21st, he says: — " We have the most respectable body of continental troops that America ever had, no going home to-morrow to suck, — hardy, brave fellows, who are as willing to go to heaven by the way of a bayonet or sword as any other mode. With the blessing of Heaven, I have great hopes in the course of this campaign that we shall do some- thing clever." On the attempt at this time to place a foreign officer in charge of the Continental Artillery, Washington wrote to the President of Congress, that the appointment would cause the retirement of Gen. Kno.x, " one of the most valuable offi- cers in the service, and who, combating almost innumerable difficulties in the department he fills, has placed the artillery upon a footing that does him the greatest honor ; " and he further characterizes him as " a man of great military reading, sound judgment, and clear conceptions." Knox took part in the operations at Philadelphia, and in the battles of Brandywine and Germantown, of which he writes fully to his wife. On the 15th of November, after the fall of Fort Mifflin, Knox, with De Kalb and St. Clair, was sent to provide for the security of Red Bank. This post, known as Fort Mercer, fell, however, after a brave defence on the 1 8th. In the council of war on 26 Oct., and again on 3 Dec. Knox opposed the project of an attack on the enemy's lines at Philadelphia, giving on the day last named these reasons: " Our entire want of clothing; the impossibility and impracti- cability of surprising 10,000 veteran troops in a well fortified city; the impossibility of our keeping the field to besiege their works and city regularly, being almost totally deficient in warlike apparatus for so arduous an enterprise; and the uncertainty of obtaining a sufficient number of militia to 304 UIOGKAPIilCAL NOTICES OF THE warrant the enterprise." He proposed that the army go into winter quarters, with the right at Lancaster and the left at Reading, provided a sufficiency of houses and good cover could be had there; if not, that it should be hutted about thirty miles from Philadelphia, near the Schuylkill. The army wintered at Valley Forge, somewhat nearer the city; and Knox took advantage of the cessation of active opera- tions to visit his wife at Boston. At the battle of Monmouth, which occurred on June 28, and of which he ever after spoke with much pride, Knox re- connoitred in front, rallying the retreat, and bringing up the rear with a brisk fire from a battery planted in the night, directed by his brigade adjutant, the Chevalier Mauduit Duplessis. Of the services of this arm, Washington, in gen- eral orders, says he " can with pleasure inform Gen. Knox and the officers of the artillery that the enemy has done them the justice to acknowledge that no artillery could have been better served than ours." The French army under the Count de Rochambeau, des- tined to co-operate with the Americans, arrived at Newport in July, 1780; and on 21 Sept. Washington, La Fayette, and Knox visited the French general and admiral, De Ternay, at Hartford, to concert the details of a plan of operations. While returning from this meeting, they heard of Arnold's treason, and immediately hastened to West Point. Knox was one of the board of general officers which tried Major Andre and condemned him to death as a spy. The next important movement in which Knox took part was the investment of Yorktown, which took place in the latter part of Sept. 1781. On 19 Oct. he writes to his wife: '' I have detained William until this moment that I might be the first to communicate good neii.^~^^l^f^ CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 33 1 scarcely a shoe, when the soldiers were so disheartened that a whole brigade of militia to which I was then annexed deserted me in one night, leaving my artillery without protection, except a small band of veterans, which with some address I kept together by my com- pany, — - if on that memorable, that most important night for Amer- ica, when her liberty or bondage was vibrating by a single thread, I did my duty at the attack of Trenton, that night which, it may almost be said, sealed the independence of our country, — if in the advance of the army to Princeton, almost barefooted, over frozen ground, where the brave Gen. Mercer fell a few feet from my side in the first of the attack, — if at Chad's Ford, on the Brandywine, I sustained the heat of the action, and brought off my artillery safe, — if on that dark, dismal night at Paoli, with Gen. Wayne, ... I brought off my artillery through morasses and woods, after having been surrounded by the enemy ; and being in front of the column with Gen. Wayne, in the attack of Germantown, where we drove the grenadiers and guards nearly three miles, I supported a soldier's character through the day, — if on that melting Sunday, in addition to my other duties at Monmouth [28 June, 1778], I took the first prisoner by single combat, a sergeant of grenadiers, with his arms, and brought him to Gen. Lee, from whom we received early infor- mation of the enemy's position and strength, — if at the close of eight years' service, as far as I know my own heart, I sheathed a sword without a tarnish by dishonor, which had been the companion of my toils during that period, ... if there is any merit in these transactions, I would only claim my little share by having done the duty assigned me on the theatre of the late war." The following certificate was given him by Washington, under date of i Dec. 1783: — " Whereas Capt. John Lillie hath behaved with great propriety during his military service, I have therefore thought proper to grant this certificate, thereby making known that the said Capt. Lillie en- tered the army as a second lieutenant of artillery the ist of May, 1775 ; that he was appointed to a first lieutenancy in the year 1776, to a captain-lieutenancy in 1777, and in Aug. 1780, was promoted to be a captain. He was also appointed aide-de-camp to Maj.-Gen. Knox, on the first day of May, 1782. In all which several stations and 332 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE capacities I do hereby further certify and make it known that the aforesaid Capt. Lilhe has conducted himself on all occasions with dignity, bravery, and intelligence." Major Samuel Shaw, writing of him in 17S1 (Journals, p. 91), says that his "reputation as an officer is second to none of his rank in service." Capt. Lillie was presented vyith a sword by Washington, and also with one by La Fayette, which is now in possession of his grandson, Hon. Henry L. Pierce. Major Samuel Shaw, also an aide to Gen. Knox, was cousin to Lillie. In 1868 his grandchildren, John and Daniel C. Lillie, erected a monu- ment to his memory in the cemetery at West Point. He m. 20 Jan. i 7S5, Elizabeth Vose of Milton, by whom he had — Eliza Smith, b. 30 July, 1 786, m. Col. Jesse Pierce, father of Hon. Henry Lillie, b. 23 Aug. 1825, and Edward Lillie (LL.D.), b. 29 March, 1S29. Patience H., b. 11 April, 1789. John. Mary Anna, b. 22 Aug. 1794, m. Woodward, living in Pal- myra, N. Y., in 1808. Samuel Shaw, b. 3 Jan. 1796. Daniel Thomas, b. 15 Sept. 1797. JOHN LILLIE. Eldest son of Major John, whom he succ. in 1812; b. Milton, Mass., 8 May, 1791 ; d. Willimantic, Ct., 20 Jan. 1855. He was the eighth cadet admitted to West Point Academy, whence he graduated in 1805 ; was for a short time during the war of 181 2 a capt. of Mass. militia; was afterward engaged in mercantile business near Boston, sub- sequently in Maine, and after 1848 in Willimantic. DANIEL CAMPBELL LILLIE. Eldest son of John, whom he succ. in 1855 ; was b. in Kcn- ncbunk. Me., 27 Feb. 1S28. Received his education in the %7/^'t^:^ CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. ^^^ public schools and at the Bridgewater Academy. Resides in North Easton, Mass. He m. 19 April, 1849, Hannah Augusta, dau. of Smith Adams Stearns. " They have — Marianna Woodward, b. Aug. 31, 1867. iSftiiamtn ILincoIn. Major-gen. of the Revolutionary army, and the first PRESI- DENT of the Mass. Society of the Cincinnati ; was b. at Hingham, Mass., 24 Jan. 1733. Thomas Lincoln, his emigrant ancestor, who was from Suffolk County, England, was by trade a cooper; was granted a house-lot in Hingham, Mass., in 1636, and this house-lot is still in possession of his descendants. His great-grandson, Col. Benjamin, a maltster and a farmer, was for several years a member of the General Court, and one of the Council of Massachusetts in 1753-70. His elder son, the subject of this sketch, received the rudi- ments of an ordinary English education at the common schools of the town, and pursued the calling of a farmer. In 1757, and for many years thereafter, he was town clerk. In 1752 he was made a justice of the peace for the county, and in 1763 for the Province. He was active in the opposition made to the measures of the British ministry, was. a member of the Legis- lature in 1772-74, and of the Provincial Congress of 1774-75, of which body he was Secretary; and he was also a member of the Committee of Supplies, upon whom devolved the ardu- ous duty of providing munitions for the impending contest. He acted as President of Congress during the last week of its session in July, 1775, in the absence of James Warren, and was then appointed a member of the Council. In 1755 he was commissioned by Gov. Shirley as an officer of militia; was appointed major of the 3d Suffolk reg. in 1 77 1, and its lieut.-col. in 1772. In Feb. 1776, he was com- 334 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OK THE missioned by the Council as a brig. -gen. ; and in May, 1776, a maj.-gen., and had the chief direction of military affairs in Massachusetts throughout the summer. Under his directions the militia erected batteries upon some of the islands in Boston harbor, by which, 14 June, several British armed ships which had remained in Nantasket road after Howe's army had left Boston were driven from the bay. Lincoln was appointed, 2 Aug., to the command of the militia which had been called into active service at or near Boston, and thenceforth gave all his time to military duties, which included the construction of defensive works in Boston harbor. After the defeat at Long Island, one fifth of the Mass. militia were drafted and ordered to New York under his command. They reached Fairfield, Ct., at the close of Sept.; and a portion, under Lincoln, joined Washington at York Island. His services were of such importance that upon Washington's recommendation Congress, 19 Feb. 1777, appointed him a major-general in the continental service. While at Boundbrook, the most advanced post of the army in New Jersey, with about 500 men, he was, through the neglect of his patrols, surprised at daybreak of 13 April by Cornwallis and Grant ; but before the two columns of the enemy closed in his rear, he effected a retreat, with the loss of about sixty men killed, wounded, and taken, and three small pieces of artillery. Detached to join the Northern army operating against Burgoyne, he reached Fort Miller, 29 July, and soon collected a large force of militia at Man- chester, Vt. By sending Warner's reg. to the aid of Stark, he contributed greatly to the success of that officer at Ben- nington, by which the British invading army was so seriously crippled. He also detached a successful expedition under Col. Brown against the British post at Lake George, and on 22 Sept. joined Gates's army at Stillwater, leaving detachments to block up the road against Burgoyne's retreat. CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 335 Placed in command of the right wing, he had no share in the action of 7 Oct. ; but on the foUowing morning, while leading a body of militia to take post in the enemy's rear, he encountered a small party of British soldiers, whom he mis- took for Americans, and was severely wounded, being struck by a shot which fractured his right leg. After a tedious and painful confinement of nearly a year, he recovered the use of his leg; but he walked lame for the rest of his life. Re- joining the army in Aug. 1778, he was, 25 Sept., appointed to the chief command in the Southern department, and reached Charleston, S. C, early in Dec. Here he was soon actively employed, for on the 25th he learned that the ene- my's fleet had arrived at Tybee ; and on the 29th that they had effected a landing, routed the Americans under Gen. Robert Howe, and gained Savannah. He immediately put his troops in motion to prevent the enemy from overrunning Georgia. On 2 March, 1779, Gen. Ashe was defeated at Brier Creek ; and thus Lincoln lost nearly one fourth of his army. On 23 April, being reinforced, he resumed his plan of covering the upper part of Georgia by marching to Augusta. Meanwhile Prevost, the British commander, hav- ing moved toward Charleston, to induce Lincoln to relinquish his design, the latter recrossed the Savannah, and returned to that city. He attacked Gen. Prevost at Stono, 20 June, but was obliged to retreat after a severe action, the co-oper- ating force under Moultrie having failed to appear until some time after the battle was over. The numerous difficulties and embarrassments he had to contend with at the South, and the unfavorable effect of the climate upon his health induced him to desire a release from his burdensome command; and Congress voted in complimentary terms to allow him to resign his separate command and to rejoin the main army; but the earnest remonstrances of Gov. Rutledge, Gen. Moul- trie, and others led him to reconsider his determination. 336 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE Early in Sept., in conjunction with Count d'Estaing, an attack was made upon Savannah, Ga., which was summoned to surrender on the i6th. On the 17th Col. Maitland, an active and skilful British officer, succeeded in entering the town with a reinforcement, and it was concluded to try the efifect of cannon and mortars. Before proper siege-works could be completed, the Count informed Lincoln that the siege must either be immediately abandoned, or a final effiDrt made to take the town by storm. The latter course being adopted, an assault took place, 9 Oct., and was made with the utmost gallantry, but was unsuccessful : the attacking columns were repulsed with great loss, and the siege was at once raised. Savannah would doubtless have fallen, had the assault been made immediately after the junction of the two allied armies, and before Maitland had reinforced it. Gen. Lincoln at once returned to Charleston, and applied himself actively in preparations for its defence. Sir Henry Clinton, with 8,000 men, arrived at the mouth of the Savan- nal», 30 Jan. 1780, and on being soon afterward joined by Gen. Paterson with 1,400 more from Savannah, proceeded to attack Charleston. The British fleet having run past Fort Moultrie, the command of the harbor was lost, and the place rendered untenable. The first parallel of the besiegers being completed 10 April, the garrison were summoned to an unconditional sur- render, which was promptly refused. Firing was immedi- ately commenced, to annoy and retard the enemy in their approaches, and continued till the 13th, when their batteries were opened, and a constant fire was kept up by both par- ties till the 20th, when the second parallel being finished, within 300 yards of our lines, terms were offered by the gar- rison, but rejected. Hostilities were renewed on the 2 1st, and continued with redoubled fury to the 23d, when the enemy began their third parallel from 80 to i 50 yards from CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 337 our lines. From this to 8 May they were employed in mak- ing three batteries thereon, when another demand of sur- render was made by the besiegers. Terms were again sent out, but not acceded to ; and a heavy and incessant fire was maintained from the 9th to the nth, when it was found neces- sary to capitulate. Says the General : — " Having received an address from the principal inhabitants, and from a number of the country militia, desiring that I would accept the terms, and a request from the Lieut.-Governor and Council that the negotiations might be renewed ; the militia of the town having thrown down their arms ; our provisions, saving a little rice, being exhausted ; the troops on the lines being worn down by fatigue, having for a number of days been obliged to lay upon the ban- quette ; our harbor closely blocked up ; completely invested by land by 9,000 men, at least the flower of the British army in America, besides the large force they could at all times draw from their marine, and aided by a great number of blacks in their laborious employments ; the garrison at this time (exclusive of sailors) but little exceeding 2,500 men, part of whom had thrown down their arms ; the citizens in general discontented ; the enemy being within twenty yards of our lines, and preparing to make a general assault by sea and land ; many of our cannon dismounted, and others silenced for want of shot ; a retreat being judged impracticable, and every hope of timely succor cut off, — we were induced to offer and accede to the terms executed on 1 2 May." The motives and feelings that prompted Gen. Lincoln rather to risk a siege than evacuate Charleston were most honorable to him as a man and a soldier. He could not cal- culate on the utter despondence and inactivity of the people who should have come to his succor. The toils, an.xieties, and hazards of the siege gave the fullest scope to his wisdom, patience, and valor. His exertions were incessant. He was on the lines night and day, and for the last fortnight never undressed to sleep. Notwithstanding his ill success, Lincoln suffered no diminu- 33^ BIOGRAl'HICAL NOTICES OK THE tion of the respect and confidence of the army and its Com- mander-in-Chief, or of Congress and the country at large. Having been exchanged in November for Gen. Phillips, he took the command of a division of the army at New Wind- sor, in June, 1781 ; accompanied it southward in August, and had his full share in the .siege of Yorktovvn and the capture of Cornwallis. On this occasion the latter was obliged to accept precisely the same terms of capitulation that he had aided in imposing upon Lincoln at Charleston. Congress, 30 Oct., 1 781, appointed Gen. Lincoln Secretary of War, which post he resigned in October, 1783. He then resumed the care of his farm; engaged in the purchase and settlement of wild lands in Maine, where he established one of his sons; and in 1784, and again in 1786, was appointed one of the Mass. commissioners to treat with the Penobscot Indians. During Shays's insurrection in 1786-87, Lincoln, as major- general of the first division of the Mass. militia, was placed in command of the State troops ; and by prompt, skilful, and decisive measures, the insurgents were speedily dispersed. Gen. Lincoln was elected Lieut. -Gov. of the State m 1788, and was a member of the Mass. Convention which in Feb 1788, ratified the Federal Constitution. In Aug. 1789, he was appointed Collector of the Port of Boston, and held office until his resignation, in 1809. In the autumn of 1779 he was appointed a commissioner, together with Cyrus Griffin and David Humphreys, to treat with the Creek In- dians; and in April, 1793, he was one of the commissioners to make peace with the Indians north of the Ohio, but was unsuccessful. His journal of this expedition has been published in the Collections of the Mass. Historical So- ciety. He became a member of that Society in 1798, aftid contributed papers published in its Collections: "On the Climate, Soil, and Value of the Eastern Counties of the District of Maine ; " " On the Religious State of the Eastern CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 339 Counties;" and "On the Indian Tribes: the Causes of their Decrease," etc. He also contributed a paper " On the Growth of Trees," etc., to Cary's "American Magazine." He was one of the early members of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences ; and was President of the Mass. Society of the Cincinnati from 1783 until his death. In 1780 the honorary degree of Master of Arts was conferred on him by Harvard College. The following delineation of his life and character, from the pen of Rev. Dr. Kirkland, President of Harvard College, was read before the Mass. Historical Society, and published in Vol. III. second series, of their Collections : — " The interval between General Lincoln's relinquishment of the office of Collector and his death passed in much serenity. He daily experienced the increasing weight of years, but without any severe pain. After a short attack of disease, he expired on the 9th of May, 1 8 10, aged 77 years. " In General Lincoln's character, strength and softness, the esti- mable and amiable qualities, were happily blended. His mind was quick and active, yet discriminating and sound. He displayed a fund of thought and information, derived from select though limited reading, from careful observation of men and things, from habits of thinking, and from conversation. A degree of enthusiasm or exulta- tion of feeling upon the objects of his pursuit belonged to his tem- perament, but it was under the control of good sense and sober views. He was patient and cool in deliberarion ; in execution, prompt and vigorous. A real and effective but not forward or bustling energy pertained to his character. His virtues maintained their proper bounds, and were well tempered together. He was con- spicuous for plain, strict, inflexible integrity, imited however with prudence, candor, a liberal and compassionate disposition. He had, it was said, by constitution strong passions ; but they were so dis- ciplined by reason and religion, and qualified and counteracted by good sentiment and generous feelings, that they never betrayed him into any extravagance, nor suffered him to give way to any impulse of anger. His composure and self-possession, his exemption from 340 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE any apparent weakness or folly, uniform discretion and integrity, made him revered ; whilst the goodness of his disposition and his frank and cordial manners engaged affectionate regard. He knew how to exercise command without exciting aversion. Paying defer- ence to the rights and feelings of others, whether present or absent, his own were not likely to suffer injury or insult. By an expressive look, which was understood, by an anecdote, by pleasant irony, or more directly, he was sure to notice and to repress any symptoms of impertinence or rudeness which any might show in his presence. " He was always an early riser, temperate in his habits, fnigal without parsimony, diligent and methodical in his business, and able to do much without inconvenience or hurry. The qualities and habits mentioned, with a rational religious faith, and sincere piety, would naturally be attended by ease and health of heart. General Lincoln was habitually cheerful, and was accustomed to look on the bright side of objects. He was tender, but not given to indulging the wail of sensibility or a spirit of repining and discontent. He believed in the great preponderance of good in the human condition, often mentioning particularly the resources and comforts accommo- dated to the successive periods of life, as affording proofs of the goodness of the Creator. He thought gratitude, acquiescence, and hope a tribute at all times due to a wise and benevolent Providence. He was called to encounter adversity in different forms, some of which were of a nature to dishearten an ordinary man ; but his fortitude and equanimity never 'forsook him, and he always main- tained an erect attitude. " As a military commander he was judicious, brave, determined, indefatigable. His distinguished merit in this character was never denied,"whilst all have not agreed in opinion upon some of his plans in the Southern command. Being a soldier of the Revolution, he had to anticipate the effect of experience, and might commit mis- takes. He was surrounded by difficulties ; he met extraordinary dis- appointments in his calculations upon supplies and succors. In the principal instances which issued unfortunately, the storming of Sa- vannah and the siege of Charleston, he had but a choice of evils ; and whichever way he decided, the course rejected would have seemed to many persons more eligible. He had true courage, without rash- ness. His calmness in danger seemed like unconcern ; but he af- CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 34 1 firmed that he never was exposed without feeling deeply interested for his own life and the lives of others. " In civil functions of a public nature, such as the office of lieut.- governor, magistrate, and member of a political body, he took the plain way of probity and patriotism, not despising popular favor, but never pursuing it as an end, and never thinking it an equivalent for the sacrifice of principle. He experienced the benefit of his weight of character and the sense entertained by the community of his pub- lic services, in being suffered to retain his office of Collector, long after the Federal party, to which he belonged, had lost power. " Religion exerted its full influence over the mind and conduct of General Lincoln. He was a Christian of the anti-sectarian, catholic, or liberal sect. He was firm in his faith, serious and affectionate in his piety, without superstition, fanaticism, or austerity. He was from early manhood a communicant, and or a great part of his life a deacon of a church. Amidst the license so common in armies, no profane expression or irreverent sally escaped his lips ; and no stain came upon the purity of his Ufe. " The person and air of General Lincoln betokened his military vocation. He was of middle height, and erect, broad-chested, mus- cular, in his latter years corpulent, with open, InteUigent features, a venerable and benign aspect. His manners were easy and unaffected, but courteous and polite. He delighted in children, and made him- self beloved by them. He admitted young persons of merit to his intimacy, let them into his sentiments on interesting subjects, and was forward to aid their reputation and advancement in the world. He had a high relish for the pleasures of conversation, in which he bore his part without tediousness or prolixity, with good sense, delicate raillery, well-timed anecdote, and always a moral vein. He was a constant and zealous friend. If his judgment was ever surprised by his feelings, it was when he was requested to take pecuniary responsibilities for an old companion-in-arms, which sub- jected him to much temporary inconvenience, though to no ultimate loss. " His house was the seat of real hospitality. The accession to his income during the last twenty years of his life was applied to a decent .provision for his advancing age, to the increase of his chari- ties, and to the benefit of his numerous family. He twice made a distribution of considerable sums among his children. 342 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE " He lived in great conjugal happiness with the wife of his youth more than fifty-five years, and had sons and daughters, in whom and in their descendants he found the greatest solace. He saw his chil- dren established in his town or in neighboring places. In his do- mestic relations General Lincoln was distinguished by his accurate and amiable discharge of every duty." His descent from Thomas ' Lincoln, the cooper, who d. 2 Sept. 1675, ^"^^ ^'^° ™- ^ *^^^- °^ Andrew Lane, was through Benjamin^ b. 7 May, 1643, d. 27 Sept. 1700, m. 6 Feb. 1667, Sarah Fearing; Benjamin^ \>. 16 Jan. 1672; Col. ^«7/a;«/« * (his father), who d. I March, 1771. Gen. Lincoln m. Mary, dau. of Elijah and Eliza- beth (Barker) Gushing, and had — Benjamin, b. i Nov. 1756, H. U. 1777, began the practice of law in Boston, and d. 1 788. By his wife Mary, dau. of James Otis, he had Benjamin, H. U. 1806, a physician, who d. Demerara, in Aug. 1813 ; andjatnes Otis, H. U. 1807, a lawyer, who m. Elizabeth Otis, dau. of Gen. George Stillman of Machias, Me., and d. Hingham, 12 Aug. 1818. Theodore, grad. H. U. 1785; went to Dennysville, Me., May, I 786 ; was a member of the Senate of Massachusetts ; adm. to the Society in 1828, but failed to qualify; and d. 15 June, 1852, EC. 88. Martin, b. Hingham, 19 Aug. 1769, d. there 12 April, 1837. His children and grandchildren still occupy the old homestead, which has now for eight successive generations been the family- seat, — a fact rarely met with in tliis country. THEODORE LINCOLN. Eldest son of Theodore, and grandson of Gen. Benjamin, whom he succ. in 1854; was b. Dennysville, Me., 10 Feb. 1800; d. there 16 April, 1867. He was many years Treasurer of his native town, and was noted for honesty and uprightness. He m. 25 Sept. 1823, Elizabeth C., dau. of Abner Lincoln of Hingham, Mass. His eldest son, Theodore, served three years as an officer in a Maine regiment in the war of the Rebellion, and died, soon after returning to his home in Dennysville, of disease contracted in the service. CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 343 BENJAMIN LINCOLN. Second son of Theodore, whom he succ. in 1867; b. Dennysville, Me , 5 Dec. 1832. He was educated in Dennys- ville, and is engaged in business there as a manufacturer of lumber. He served six years as a member of the Board of County Commissioners for Washington County, and has been for several years a member of the Board of Selectmen of Dennysville He m. 31 Oct. 1856, Deborah R., dau. of Ebenezer Gardner. Children — Sarah G., b. 25 Nov. 1858. William S., b. 12 Sept. i860. Benjamin, b. 13 May, 1863, d. 27 Aug. 1863. Theodore, b. i March, 1866. Hannah G., b. 6 Nov. 1869. Hufus Htncolti. He was b. Taunton, Mass., lo Nov. 1751; d. Wareham, Mass., 1 1 Feb. 1838. He was a lieut. at the siege of Boston; raised a company at Taunton, with which he marched to Ticonderoga; com. lieut. in Bradford's (14th) reg. 31 Jan. 1777; com. capt. 13 April, 1780; in Brooks's (7th) reg. in 1783; was made a prisoner at Darby (now within the limits of Philadelphia) in 1777, and remained a prisoner about a year. He removed in 1799 to Wareham, where he resided until his death. His descent from Thomas ^ Lincoln, the miller, of Hingham, 1635, removed to Taunton 1652, d. 1683-84, se. 80, was through Thomas^ \>. Eng. ; Thomas^ \i. 21 April, 1656, who m. 14 Nov. 1689, Susannah Smith; Thomas,^ d. 11 March, 1761; Ichabod^ (his father), who d. 26 Sept. 1768. Rufus m. Lydia Sprague (b. Lebanon, Ct., 27 Feb. 1758, d. 20 Oct. 1839), and had — Drusilla, m. Spencer Leonard of Wareham. 344 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE Bradford, m. Mercy Gibbs of Warehara. Prudence, m. James Field of Philadelphia. Gamaliel, m. Susan Russell of New Bedford. Minor S., m. (ist) Elizabeth Wheaton of Norton. Lydia, m. Nathan Ellis. RUFUS LINCOLN. Eldest son of Rufiis, whom he succ. in 1856; b. Taunton, Mass., 26 Sept. 1785 ; d. VVareham, Mass., 29 Jan. 1868. By his wife, Mercy Stevens of Fairhaven, he had — Lydia Sprague ; Seth ; Gilbert ; James Field. Joljn Htstaarll. Com. 2d lieut. in Crane's artillery, i Feb. 1777; acciden- tally killed by a fall while a U. S. commissary of public stores at Albany, where his widow Ann was living some years later (1808). SMtlliam HocUtuoot). He was b. Wethersfield, Ct., 21 Jan. 1753; d. Glastonbury, Ct, 23 June, 1828; Yale Coll. 1774; tutor there, 1779-80; chaplain 1st Mass. brigade (Paterson's), 1783 ; pastor of First Church, Milford, 1784-96; and of Glastonbury, 1 797-1 804. His widow, Sarah (Sturges), d. Glastonbury, 31 Aug. 1834. They had — Ann, b. 5 Oct. 1785, m. Geo. Plumer, 7 May, 1807. Sarah, b. 4 April, 1787, m. Joseph Wright, 24 Nov. 1807. Samuel, b. 6 Jan. 1 789, merchant in Glastonbury. William, b. 9 Sept. 1792, d. 6 Dec. 1827. Priscilla, b. 21 Nov. 1796. Jfrcmialj ILor'a. Com. ensign in Nixon's (6th) reg. 15 June, 1781 ; d. Berwick, Me., ab. 1795, leaving a widow Patty (who d. 1803) and four children. J" ^ /t. sJjrUV^ CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 345 SAMUEL KIRKLAND LOTHROP, D.D., LL.D. He was the grandson of Rev. Samuel Kirkland, chaplain in the Continental army, and was adm. in 1868, under the rule of 1854. His father, John Hosmer Lothrop, a native of New Haven and a graduate of Yale College in 1787, m. in 1797, Jerusha, dau. of Rev. Samuel Kirkland (b. Norwich, Ct., I Dec. 1741, d. 28 Feb. 1808), for many years a mis- sionary to the Indians in Oneida County, N. Y. During the Revolutionary war Mr. Kirkland's mission, though not absolutely abandoned, was virtually discontinued^ as he was often absent and at a great distance from Oneida, serving as chaplain in the army or acting as an agent for the Conti- nental Congress in negotiations with the Indians. After the close of the war he removed his family again to Oneida, and devoted himself chiefly to his mission, though he still con- tinued to be an important and valuable medium of com- munication in negotiations between the Government and the Indians; and in 1792, acting under the authority of Gen. Knox, Secretary of War, he succeeded in conducting to Philadelphia a deputation of about forty Indian chiefs; and the friendly relations thus established through his influence between the Government and the Six Nations saved the frontiers of New York and Pennsylvania from being the scene of the savage warfare and barbarity which were soon after exhibited in the Northwest Territory. Samuel Kirkland Lothrop was b. Utica, N. Y., 13 Oct. 1804; d. Boston, 12 June, 1886. He graduated at Harvard University in 1825 and at the Divinity School in 1828. He was ordained pastor of the Second Church, Dover, N. H., 18 Feb. 1829, and remained there until 1834, when he accepted the pastorate of the church in Brattle Square, Boston, as the successor of Rev. Dr. Palfrey. His connection with this church continued until 1876, when with great reluctance 346 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE the proprietors accepted his resignation and adopted a reso- lution in which they reiterated their sense of his fideHty as a Christian minister, their esteem and affection toward him as a friend, and their respect for him as a citizen. In a memoir written for the Mass. Historical Society, Rev. Andrew P. Peabody, D.D., says: — " As a pulpit orator Dr. Lothrop had all the external advantages that can give effect to uttered discourse, — a presence commanding and winning, a grace of attitude, movement, and gesture natural and unstudied, which art might have approached without attaining, and a voice of remarkable power and compass, flexible to the apt expres- sion of every varying mood of mind and feeling. . . . His sermons indicated a large and versatile intellectual ability, accomplished schol- arship, intimate knowledge of the Scriptures and of questions apper- taining to their origin, interpretation, and use, deep thought, and profound religious feeling. They satisfied alike strong thinkers and devout Christian believers. . . . Dr. Lothrop's professional reputa- tion was commensurate with his merits. Few ministers have been called to officiate on so numerous and so important public occasions, and his published occasional sermons in every instance fully justified the choice that rested on him. In his own denommation he held a foremost place, as was evinced by his election for several succes- sive years, and so long as he was willing to serve, as President of the American Unitarian Association. He was conservative in his theological opinions, yet at the same time progressive, and with a mind always open to views of truth that had a just claim on his consideration." Dr. Lothrop received the degree of D.D. from Harvard University in 1852, and that of LL.D. from Hamilton Col- lege in 1885. He held many positions of trust and honor in the charitable, philanthropic, and educational organiza- tions in the city and the State. The only books published by him are : " The Life of Samuel Kirkland, Missionary to the Indians," in Sparks's Am. Biog., and " The History of the Churcli in Brattle Square." He iniblishcd many sermons. CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 347 addresses, and other pamphlets, and was for a considerable time one of the editors of the " Christian Register." At the annual meeting of the Cincinnati Society, 5 July, 1886, the President paid a warm tribute of respect to the memory of Dr. Lothrop, and a series of resolutions, offered by Dr. B. A. Gould, was adopted by a rising vote. He m. (ist) 3 June, 1829, Mary Lyman Buckminster, d. 20 Jan. 1859. They had : Thornton Kirkland; Eliza Lee, m. Charles D. Horaans, M.D. ; Joseph Stevens Buckminster, d. young ; Mary, m. Oliver W. Peabody of Boston ; Olivia Buckminster, m. Lewis William Tappan, Jr. ; Samuel Kirkland. He m. (2d) 22 Nov. 1869, Alice Lindsey, dau. of Rev. Abner and Catherine (Sedgwick) Webb. THORNTON KIRKLAND LOTHROP. Eldest son of the preceding, whom he succ. in 1888; was b. Dover, N. H., 3 June, 1830; educated at the Boston Latin School and Harvard University ; Assistant District Attorney for the v. S. from April, 1861, to July, 1865 ; member of the General Court of Massachusetts, 1859 ; Trustee of the Boston Athenaeum, and of the Mass. General Hospital ; member of the Corporation of the Mass Institute of Technology; mem- ber of the Mass. State Board of Health, 1886-90, and a member of the Mass. Historical Society. He is a lawyer by profession, and resides in Boston. He m. 30 April, 1866, Anne Maria, dau. of Hon. Samuel Hooper. Children — Mary Buckminster, b. 15 July, 1867. Amy Peabody, b. 28 March, 1869. Willl^m Sturgis Hooper, b. 19 June, 1870. Thornton Kirkland, b. 23 Nov. 1872. JJamrs Hobrll. He was b. Boston, 9 July, 1758; d. St. Matthew's Pari.sh, S. C , 10 July, 1850. His grandfather was the celebrated 34^ BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE " Master" John Lovell. His father, James, was a member of the Continental Congress from Dec. 1776 to 1782, and was the first naval officer of customs for the port of Boston, being appointed by Washington, 3 Aug. 1789, and holding the office until 14 Oct. 18 14. James, the subject of this notice, was graduated from Har- vard University in 1776; com. ensign in H. Jackson's (i6th) reg. 25 May, 1777; adjutant, 10 April, 1778; cornet and adjutant of Lee's legion, 1780-83; was in various battles of the war, ending with that of Eutaw Springs, and served under Gen. Lincoln in South Carolina, where he subsequently set- tled as a planter. He left no children. He was Vice-Pre.SI- DENT of the Society, 1849-50. His emigrant ancestor was Capt. William Lovell of Dorchester, in 1630, captain of a coasting vessel, from whom Lovell's Island in Boston harbor was named. J. Smith Lovell, younger brother of James, had numerous descendants. MANSFIELD LOVELL. Grand-nephew and eldest male descendant of Lieut. James, whom he succ. in 1854; was b. Washington, D. C, 20 Oct. 1822. His father. Dr. Joseph, was surgeon-general of the U. S. army. Mansfield graduated at West Point Military Academy in 1842, and was com. 2d lieut. 4th U S. artillery. He served with his regiment during Gen. Taylor's campaign in Mexico in 1846, and was wounded' at the battle of Monterey. He was soon after made adjutant-general of Quitman's com- mand, accompanied it to Vera Cruz, and remained with it in that capacity until the capture of the city of Mexico, where he was wounded at the head of the storming party that car- ried the Belen Gate. For gallant conduct in the assault on Chapultepec and at the gates of the city of Mexico he was made brevet-captain, and soon after was assigned to the com- mand of a battery of light artillery, and retained that ctmi- CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 349 mand until 185 i, when he rejoined his regiment, which was stationed in New York harbor, where he remained until he resigned his commission in the U. S. army in 1854. He then went to reside in the city of New York, and in 1858 accepted the position of Deputy Street Commissioner. When the war broke out he resigned his position in the city government, and with his family went South, where his three brothers then resided. He was soon after appointed major-general in the Confederate army, and in October of that year was assigned to the command at New Orleans. On 24 April, 1862, the Federal fleet passed the forts of the Mississippi below New Orleans, and on the 25th the city was evacuated. On 2 May Gen. Lovell applied for a court of in- quiry, " as an act of justice to himself and officers, as well as to vindicate the truth of history." On 8 May Gen. R. E. Lee, then at Richmond in general charge of army operations, wrote to him : " It is believed that with the means of defence at your disposal you have done all in your power." And on the 24th : " It seems there was nothing left for you to do but to withdraw the troops. I think you may confidently rely upon the judgment of intelligent and reflecting men for the justification of your course, as soon as the facts as they actually existed shall be known." The court was not convened until April, 1863. The record of its proceedings was transmitted to the Confederate War Department on 13 July, but was not acted upon until the fol- lowing November. The opinion of the court was a vindi- cation of the commander of New Orleans. It stated that " Gen. Lovell displayed great energy and an untiring in- dustry in performing his duties. His conduct was marked by all 'the coolness and self-possession due to the circum- stances and his position, and he evidenced a high capacity for command and the clearest foresight in many of his meas- ures for the defence of New Orleans." On 5 Ma}', 1864, 350 BIOCJRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE Gen. Lovell wrote to the Secretary of War asking to be re- stored to the command from which he had been relieved ; but his request for a separate command was not granted. After the war he resided some time in Savannah, Ga., then returned to New York with his family, and practised his pro- fession as a civil engineer until his death. He was engaged as an assistant engineer under Gen. Newton in removing ob- structions to navigation in East River and at Hell Gate. He m. Emily M., dau. of Col. Joseph C. Plympton, a distinguished officer in the war of 1812, the Florida war, and the war with Mex- ico. They had two sons and a daughter. JOSEPH PLYArPTON LOVELL. Son of Gen. Mansfield, whom he succ. in 1885 ; was b. in the city of New York, 28 Sept. 1S51. He is engaged in mer- cantile pursuits, and resides in the city of New York. Banicl Hunt. He was of Falmouth ; was a member of Brackett's Co. of minute-men in April, 1775; sergeant of the same company in Phinney's reg. 10 May, 1775 ; in Skillens's Co. of Francis's reg. 1776; com. 2d lieut. of Francis's reg. 3 Feb. 1777; capt. in Tupper's (nth) reg. 18 March, 1780; in Vose's (ist) reg. 1783. He was living in Westbrook, Me., in 18 19, 2e. 69. rorncliu.s Unman. He was b. Northampton, 7 Jan. 1758; d. Fort Knox, Ind. Ter., 23 March, 1805. Com. ensign, i Jan. 1781 ; in Sprout's (2d) reg. in 1783; app. licut. 2d U. S. inf 4 March, 1791 ; capt. July 1792. Son of Capt. William and Jemima (Sheldon) Lyman. He m. Sarah Mason of Boston. They had one son. CINCINNATI UF MASSACHUSETTS. 35 I JAMES WILKINSON LYMAN. Only surviving son of Cornelius, whom he succ. in 1818 ; d. unm. 1 82 1. WILLIAM LYMAN. Son of Gen. William (who was the elder brother of Cor- nelius), and cousin of James W. Lyman, whom he succ. in 1822. He m. a dau. of Kirk Boott of Lowell, and d. with- out issue. Hajiicl SWtCCas. Com. ensign in R. Putnam's (5th) reg. 10 May, 1782; in Vose's (ist) reg. 1783. iSHilUam ifEtl^rntirs. He was b. in Canton (formerly a part of Stoughton), Mass., 1750; d. there 23 Aug. 1798. He was a private in Capt. James Endicott's Co. which marched on the Lexington alarm, 19 April, 1775. On 27 April, 1775, he enlisted as a private in Capt. Wm. Bent's Co., Col. Greaton's reg., and served until Aug. On 4 March, 1776, he was a corporal in Capt. Endicott's Co., when it marched to Dorchester Heights; was afterward ensign and quartermaster in the 7th reg., and served through Sullivan's expedition against the Indians and their allies in northern New York in 1778-79; was at the Cherry Valley massacre (11 Nov. 1778) when Col. Alden was killed ; * com. lieut. and quartermaster 7th reg. (then Brooks's) 20 Oct. 1781. His father. John McKendry, b. 1716, <\. 24 June, 17S5, came from Antrim, Ireland; m. Mary Tolman. who was b. 1720, d. 24 * He kept a journal from 25 Oct. 1777, to 3 Jan. 17S0, which contains matter of some historical value. It was printed in the Proceedings of the Mass. His- torical Society, 2d series, vol ii. pp. 442-478. 352 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE Dec. 17 74- Lieut. William m. Ruth Tucker of Milton, Mass. She was b. 1 761, d. 2 March, 1806. They had no children. GEORGE ALBERT McKENDRY. Great-grandson of Archibald, only brother of Lieut. Wil- liam, whom he succ. in 1859; grandson of Benjamin, and son of Albert; b. Dorchester, Mass., i Oct. 1836. He is a contractor and builder; served in the 4th Mass. heavy artillery from Aug. 1864 to July, 1865. Resides in West- borough, Mass. He m. I Oct. 1862, Anna Whiting, dau. of Daniel Bacon of Rox- bury, Mass. Children — George Irving, b. 2 June, 1863, d. 25 Aug. 1864. Addie Bacon, b. 18 March, 1866. Annie Whiting, b. 12 June, 1868. Helen Louise, b. 18 April, 1880. Ensign in Bigelow's (iSth) reg. at Rhode Island in 1778; com. lieut. in Bowman's Co., R. Putnam's (5th) reg. 28 June, 1779; adj. same reg. 1780-83. He d. Westborough, Mass., 22 Sept. 1 841, 3e. 86, leaving a widow, but no children. IBaiJiTJ fHason, Jr. He was com. 2d lieut. in Crane's artiller\-, 2 Feb. 1777, and was promoted to be ist lieut. 23 Oct. 1782. His father. Col. David Mason, founded in Boston the military company known as the "Train of Artillery," in 1763. Gen. Knox was afterward one of its commanders. Col. Mason had charge for some time of the arsenal in Springfield. Lieut. David, Jr., died without issue. JOHN BRYANT. He was the nephew of Lieut. David Mason, Jr., whom he succ. in 1802. He was b. Springfield, Mass., 24 Feb. 1780; CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 353 d. Boston, 4 Feb. 1865. He was a well-known merchant of Boston, of the firm of Bryant & Sturgis. From 1846 to 1865 he was ASSIST. Treas. of the SOCIETY. His father, Capt. John, was ordnance officer at the Springfield arsenal, having lost an arm early in the war of the Revolution. His uncle William was killed in one of the first engagements in that war. His descent from William ^ Bryan* who settled in Boston, 28 July, 1679, ^- 7 Oct. 1697, was through yb^^," b. Boston, 25 March, 1689, d. 1722 ;yc/i«,' b. Boston, 1718,01. 13 Aug. 1741, Lois, dau. of Jonathan and Mary (Lincoln) Brown, d. 1758 ; Q.'s.i^X. John'^ Bryant, his father, b. Boston, 19 May, 1742, d. Springfield, i May, 1816, m. 10 Aug. 1779, Hannah, dau. of Col. David and Hannah (Symmes) Mason. John m. in Hanover, N. H., 13 Dec. 1807, Mary Cleveland, dau. of Rev. John Smith of Dartmouth College. HENRY BRYANT, M.D. He was the son of John, and was b. Boston, 12 May, 1820; d. Porto Rico, 2 Jan. 1867;! H. U. 1840. He was a physi- cian, and resided in Cohasset, Mass. He m. 6 Jan. 1848, Elizabeth Brimmer, dau. of William Davies Sohier. Children — Elizabeth, b. 12 Oct. 1848. Mary Cleveland, b. 8 April, 1850. John, b. 8 July, 1851. Henry, b. 10 Feb. 1857. WiLLLWvi Sohier, b. 15 May, 1861. * It will be observed that in the fourth generation the name was changed to Bryant. It is said that Capt. John's commission was made out, by mistake, in the name of Bryant, and he never took the trouble to correct it. t He was elected a member of the Society in 1865, but died before subscrib- ing the declaration in the manner required by the rules. At the annual meeting 4 July, 1S90, it was ordered that his name be placed on the roll. 354 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE JOHN BRYANT, M.D. Son of Henry, whom he succ. in 1890, was b. Cohasset, Mass., 8 July, 1851; H. U. 1873. He is a physician, and resides in Cohasset. He m. 15 Oct. 1878, Charlotte, dau. of John Hull Olmsted. Children — John, b. 29 Sept. 1880. Owen, b. 14 Feb. 1882. Edward Sohier, b. 7 Aug. 1883. He was b. Minterburn, Tyrone County, Ireland, 27 April, 1733, in which year Hugh his father, who was a Calvinist, emigrated to New England, and settled on a farm in Bedford, where he d. in 1759. The son learned the art of surveying, which he afterward practised in addition to his occupation as a farmer. He served five campaigns in the war of 1757-63 ; was taken at Fort Edward, barely escaping with his life, and was com. ensign in Ruggles's reg. 31 March, 1759. In 1773 he settled in Charlemont, now Heath, Mass. ; was appointed early in 1775 lieut. of a company of minute-men, with which he marched to Cambridge on hearing of the Lexington battle, and joining Prescott's reg. was com. capt. 10 May, 1775. At Bunker Hill a ball passed through his right shoulder. He served in Prescott's reg. near New York, afterward in Bailey's (2d), of which he was com. major, 7 July, 1777; com. lieut. - col. of M. Jackson's (8th) reg. i Aug. 1782. He was present at the siege of Boston, the battles of Trenton, Princeton, Sara- toga, and Monmouth, and in the successful attack in Jan. 1 78 1, on De Lancey's Loyalists at Morrisania. He was Town Clerk of Heath in 1791-99; Justice of the Peace in Hamp- shire County, 1785-99; and d. on a return voyage from the West Indies, 14 Oct. 1799. He m. in 1759, Bridget Munroe of Lexington, and had seven children. CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 355 HUGH MAXWELL. Eldest son of Col. Hugh, whom he succ. in 1826; b. Bedford, Mass., 13 March, 1770; d. Heath, Mass., 23 Feb. 1849. WILLIAM MUNROE MAXWELL. Only hving son of Hugh, whom he succ. in 1872 ; b. Heath, Mass., 22 May, 1807; d. there 13 Feb. 1888. Com. ensign Rifle Co. 4th reg. M. V. M. 28 April, 1837; com. lieut. same regiment, 21 Aug. 1S38. He was a farmer, and resided in Heath. He m. I Oct. 1834, Eunice Rugg of Heath. They had — Hugh, b. 5 June, 1836. Orsamus, b. 18 July, 1837. Frederick H., b. 15 Feb. 1841. George, b. 5 Dec. 1842. David, b. 29 April, 1844. OLrvE E., b. 5 April, 1846. Jotjn ptaijnarU. He was b. Framingham, Mass., 14 May, 1753; d. Lan- caster, Mass., 21 Jan. 1823. Acting ensign in Nixon's reg. at the battle of Bunker Hill, where he was wounded, and being unable to walk was borne to Cambridge by his brother, Hon. Needham Maynard. He was com. lieut. in Greaton's (3d) reg. II Nov. 1777; afterward quartermaster. He was made prisoner by the British at White Plains, 3 Feb. 1780. After the war he lived in Lancaster. His descent iromjohn^ Maynard, of -Sudbury, d. 10 Dec. 1672, who m. Mary Axdell in 1646, was through Zachary^ b. 7 June, 1647, d. 1724, who m. in 1678 Hannah Coolidge ; Jonathan^ b. 8 April, 1685, removed to Framingham, d. 1760, who m. 10 Dec. 1714, Mehetable Needom ; y. William H. H. Newman, grand-nephew of Lieut. Samuel, was elected in 1888 as the successor of Henry. Santurl Xicljolsou. He was b. Chestertown, eastern shore of Maryland, 1743; d. senior officer of the navy, at Charlestown, Mass., 29 Dec. 18 II. He was a heut. under Paul Jones in the action be- tween the "Bon Homme Richard" and "Serapis; " was made a capt. 17 Sept. 1779, and early in 1782 commanded the " Deane " of 32 guns, in which he cruised successfully, taking among other prizes three sloops of war, with an ag- gregate of 44 guns. On the reorganization of the navy he was com. capt. 10 June, 1794, and was the first com- mander of the frigate " Constitution," which was built and launched under his supervision. In April, 1806, upon the second reorganization of the navy, he was appointed senior =4 3/0 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE captain. He was instrumental in laying out and building up the Navy Yard in Charlestown, Mass., commanding there for many years. He.m. at Ten Hills Farm, 9 Feb. 1780, Mary Dowse, a niece of Sir John Temple. She d. 16 April, 1815, ae. 57. They had six sons and four daughters. JAMES WILLIA.M AUGUSTUS NICHOLSON. Son of Nathaniel Dowse (i 792-1 822), an officer of the U. S. navy, who served in the war of 18 12, and grandson of Capt. Samuel, whom he succ. in 1875; was b. Ded- ham, Mass., 10 March, 1821 ; d. city of New York, 28 Oct. 1887. He was appointed a midshipman in the U. S. navy in 1838, and was acting master in the Mexican war. In 1853-55 he was lieutenant of the sloop " Vandalia," con- nected with the Japanese expedition under Commodore Matthew C. Perry. At the beginning of the war he com- manded the " Isaac Smith " in the Port Royal expedition, and was commended by Admiral Dupont for coolness and courage. In the winter of 1861-62 he was on service in Florida, and in the spring of 1862 had command at St. Augustine. In July, 1862, he was promoted to the rank of commander, and in 1862-63 he was ordnance officer on the New York station. In 1863-64 he commanded the "Sham- rock " in the South Atlantic blockading squadron before Charleston. At the battle of Mobile Bay he commanded the ironclad " Manhattan," and took a prominent part in the capture of the Confederate ram " Tennessee." He after- ward bombarded and reduced Fort Powell and Fort Mor- gan. After the war he had command of the " Mohongo " in the Pacific squadron, and in July, 1866, was promoted to be captain. In 1871-72 he commanded the flagship " Lan- caster " of the squadron at Brazil. In 1873 he was pro- moted to be commodore, and was in command of the Navy CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 37 1 Yiwd, New York, from Sept. 1876,10 May, 18S0. In Sept. 1880, he was promoted to be rear-admiral, and in the follow- ing year he took command of the fleet on the European station. He received the commendation of the Navy Depart- ment and the thanks of the governments of England, the Netherlands, Belgium, Norway and Sweden, and Egypt for his aid in restoring order and preserving from destruction by fire the city of Alexandria, Egypt, after its bombardment by a British fleet in July, 1882. He was placed on the retired list, 10 March, 1883. It is an interesting fact that, since 1755, eighteen members of the Nicholson family have been in the naval service of the country. Admiral Nicholson's son, William Henry Drake Nichol- son, b. city of New York, 2 Jan. 1847, was elected a member of the Society in 1888. He was b. Framingham, Mass., 7 May, 1736; d. on the passage from Boston to Portland, 12 Aug. 1800. Chris- topher, his father, came to Framingham from the South, and m. about 1726 Mary Sever. John, his elder brother, b. II March, 1727, was a soldier at the capture of Louis- burg, in 1745 ; a captain at the battle of Lake George, 8 July, 1758; led a company of minute-men from Sudbury in the battle of Lexington ; commanded a regiment at Bun- ker Hill, and was severely wounded; com. brig.-gen. 9 Aug. 1776, and commanded the ist Mass. brigade at Stillwater, where a cannon-ball passed so near his head as to impair permanently the sight of one eye and the hearing of one ear. In poor health, he resigned his com. 12 Sept. 1780; removed to Middlebury, Vt., about 1803, and d. there 24 March, 181 5. Col. Thomas Nixon was an ensign in the French war (1756-63); capt. of minute-men, and present 372 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE at the battle of Lexington in 1775 ; lieut.-col. of his brother's (Col. John Nixon's) reg. at the siege of Boston ; col. of the 6th continental reg. from 9 Aug. 1776, to i Jan. 1781 ; dis- tinguished in the battles preceding Burgoyne's surrender in Oct. 1777, and served to the close of the war with bravery and efficiency. He removed to Southborough about 1784. By his wife, Bethia Stearns, he had — Cate, b. 31 July, 1758, m. William Stowell of Worcester, moved to Paris, Me., and d. 1842. Thomas. Asa, b. 17 Aug. 1767, d. i Dec. 1771. Hannah, b. 21 Sept. 1772, m. John Nichols of Southborough. Bethiah, d. Southborough, 19 March, 1823. THOMAS NIXON. Only son of Col. Thomas, whom he succ. in 1802; b. Framingham, Mass., 19 March, 1762, d. there 4 Jan. 1842. He was a fifer at the Concord fight ; quartermaster's sergeant in his father's reg. until discharged, i Dec. 1780. He was a Selectman of Framingham for two years, and a Repre- sentative to the General Court one year. He m. 16 May, 1790, Lydia Hagar, of Marlborough, who d. 21 May, 1822. Children — Warren. Otis, b. it March, 1796, who m. Swain, and moved to Ohio. SuKEV, b. 23 Nov. 1797, d. unm. 3 Aug. 1828. Reny, b. 25 Nov. 1799, d. unm. 29 Jan. 1824. WARREN NIXON. Eldest son of Thomas, whom he succ. in 1843 ; b. Framing- ham, Mass., 9 March, 1793 ; d. there 4 Nov. 1872. He learned civil engineering at an early age, and practised that profession during his active life. He was chairman of the local board of ta.K assessors for forty years ; a Selectman fifteen ; a Repre- CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 373 sentative to the General Court one year. He was also captain of a light infantry company in the militia service. He ra. May, 1818, Salome, dau. of Edmond Rice of Wayland. Children living in 1890 — Laurella, b. 6 April, 1820, m. 4 April, 1849, Aaron Hosmer of Acton, Mass. Olenia, b. 27 Jan. 1822, m. 21 Jan. 1845, Peter B. Davis of Framingham. Salina, b. 23 July, 1825, m. 18 Feb. 185 i, Baxter Rice of South- borough. Marcellus. MARCELLUS NIXON. Only son of Warren, whom he succ. in 1874; was b. Fra- mingham, Mass., 6 June, 1833. He served nine months in the war of the Rebellion, and receives a pension. He is a farmer, and resides in Framingham. He m. 14 June, 1857, Martha A., dau. of Nathan Hosmer; (2d) 9 Nov. 1864, Susan A., dau. of Luther Kendall; (3d) 21 Jan. 1885, Addie, dau. of William A. Swallow. No children. He was b. Fort. Frederic, Pemaquid, Me., 1755; d. N. Y. City, 3 Jan. 1836. After his father's death his mother re- moved with him to Boston, where he entered the Latin School in 1764. On 9 May, 1776, he was com. 2d lieut. in Gill's Co. of Crafts's reg. of artillery, and capt. in H. Jackson's (i6th) rag. 10 May, 1777. He served as an aide to Baron Steuben in 1779, and was a favorite of that officer. He was appointed inspector of the troops remaining in service in 1784; was several times elected to the Legislature of New York; was Speaker of the Assembly; U. S. Senator from 21 May, 1789, till 3 March, I799i and a conspicuous Federalist; and was one of the first Canal Commissioners of New York. He was appointed in 1798 by Pres. Adams, during the quasi war with 374 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE France, adjutant and inspector-general of the army, with the rank of brigadier-general. Baron Steuben, who " loved him like a son for his unreserved devotion, for his jovial and ami- able disposition, and for his energy and zeal," made him one of his executors, and bequeathed to him one half of his es- tate, and the sword and gold box given him by the city of New York. John ^ North, his immigrant ancestor, b. Westmeath, Ireland, came to America in i 730 with his wife, Lydia, and settled in Harrington, at Pemaquid, Me., and d. 1740. His son, Cn'pt. John^ (father of Gen. William), came over with his father in 1730; removed to St. George's River ; was capt. of Fort Frederic and Fort St. George's during the French and Indian war ; judge of the C. C. P. of Lincoln County, appointed in 1760; d. 26 March, 1763. He m. (ist) Elizabeth Lewis, who d. ; (2d) 31 July, 1746, Elizabeth, dau. of James Pitson of Boston. She d. 24 June, 1 789. William m. 14 Oct. 1787, Mary, dau. of Hon. James Duane, who d. II May, 1813. Children — ■ Frederic William Steuben, b. 14 July, 1788, d. 17S9. Marie, b. 12 Aug. 1789, d. 8 June, 181 2. James Duane, b. 28 Jan. 1791, d. May, 1792. Elizabeth, b. 1792, d. unm. 8 June, 1845. William Augustus Steuben, b. i Feb. 1793, m. in 1823 Margaret Bridge, d. 7 Nov. 1845 (LTnion Coll. 18 12), left three children. Adelia, b. 14 May, 1797, m. Major Henry Saunders, U. S. A. ^lE|:anTrer ©liber. Com. ensign, 19 Oct. 178 1 ; in Vose's (ist) reg. in 1783; settled in Belpre, O., in 1789; was a pensioner, living in New York, in 1820; and d. soon afterward, leaving a large family. A nephew, Henry Jackson Oliver, was living at Broad Alban, Montgomery Co., N. Y., in 1827. J^otert (©libtr. He was b. near Boston, 1738; d. Marietta, O., in May, 1810. His parents, who were from the north of Ireland, took ^y>r-y. :^' CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 375 him when quite young to Barre, where his early years were passed on his father's farm. When the war broke out, he was a Heut. of a company of minute-men, with which he marched to Cambridge in April, 1775. He was com. capt. in Doolittle's reg. 12 June, 1775, and was present at the siege of Boston in James Reed's reg. in 1776; com. major, I Nov. 1777, in Greaton's (3d) reg.; brigade major in 1780; brevet- colonel in 1782. He was engaged in the battles with Bur- goyne, and especially in storming the German intrenchments, 7 Oct., under Col. Rufus Putnam, to whose regiment he was then attached. He was a good disciplinarian, and for a time acted as adjutant-general of the Northern division of the army. After the war he bought a farm at Conway, Mass., and volun- teered in 1786-87 in the suppression of Shays's insurrection. He was one of the founders of Marietta in 1788 ; and in 1789, with Major Haffield White and Capt. John Dodge, he erected a saw and grist mill on Wolf Creek in Waterford, the first mills ever built in Ohio. He was one of the leaders in this settlement, and active in its defence against the Indians ; was a Representative of Washington County in the Territorial Legislature in 1798, and one of the five Councillors; was President of the Territorial Council in 1800-3 ' colonel of the 2d reg. militia; and a Judge of the Court of Common Pleas. He m. about 1775 Molly Walker, by whom he had a large family of children. His son William, b. Conway, 1771, was living in Weth- ersfield, Henry Co., 111., in 1849. FRANCIS WINTHROP PALFREY. He was the eldest son of John Gorham Palfrey, the histo- rian ; and was b. Boston, 11 April, 1831 ; d. Cannes, France, 5 Dec. 1889; admitted in 1875, under the rule of 1854. His great-grandfather. Col. William Palfrey (1741-80), on whose account he was admitted, was aide-de-camp to Gen. Wash- 2,^6 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE ington, with the rank of major, in March and April of 1776. He was then appointed paymaster-general of the army, with the rank of lieut. -colonel. In 1780 he was appointed consul- general to France; but the vessel in which he embarked on his mission was lost, with all on board. Francis VVinthrop Palfrey * entered college as the first scholar of his class, coming from the Boston Latin School, and throughout his college course maintained high rank, graduating [1851] with distinguished honors. Immediately after leaving college he entered the Law School, where he subsequently took the degree of Bachelor of Laws ; and later he began the practice of his profession in Boston. Well grounded in the rudiments of his studies, he gave every promise of success at the bar. Soon, however, the great Rebellion broke out, and, like thousands of other young men at that period, appreciating their duties and their responsi- bilities, without hesitation Palfrey offered his services to the Government, which were readily accepted. Commissioned as lieut.-col. of the 20th Mass. vols, in the summer of 1861 [July i], he left the State with his regiment, which very soon afterward was engaged in the battle of Ball's Bluff. During the campaign of the next year this regiment saw a great deal of hard service, and was engaged in many severe battles. In some of these actions Palfrey was in command, and in more than one of them was wounded. At Antietam his shoulder was badly shattered, making a wound which was ultimately the cause of his death. Promoted to the colonelcy [18 Dec. 1862], he was soon obliged to resign from the mili- tary service on accoimt of his disabilities; and 13 March, 1865, he was brevetted a brig.-gen. for gallant conduct at the battle of Antietam, and for meritorious services during the * This sketch of Gen. Palfrey's career is taken from the remarks of Dr. Saimiel A. Green (his classmate) at a meeting of the Mass Historical Society, 12 Dec. 1889. CIN'CINXATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 2)11 war. He was commissioned capt. and lieut.-col. commanding 1st Co. Cadets, M. V. M., 28 Dec. 1870; and aide-de-camp on the staff of the Governor of the Commonwealth, 25 Jan. 1872. In 1S73 he was elected a resident member of the Mass. Historical Society. " His life after the war was a constant struggle against pain and weakness. It was a steady and most gallant fight ; his constant purpose being to do the work for which he felt himself fitted, and the doing of which he therefore felt must be his appointed task in the world. For Gen. Palfrey was a most conscientious man ; ear- nestly desirous to ascertain the proper field of duty, he was equally decided and persistent in the doing of the work. Unfortunately he was so much hampered by his health that he was able to accomplish but little. But his writings, though few, were of the best of their class. His brief memoir of Major Henry Livermore Abbott, of his own regiment, who was killed in the battle of the Wilderness, is an admirable piece of work. A more difficult task, the Life of Brevet Maj.-Gen. William F. Bartlett, was welcomed by the public as one of the most interesting and notable biographies that the war gave to us. His contribution to the Scribner series of the Campaigns of the Civil War, the volume on the .Antietam and Fredericksburg, was carefiilly, impartially, and vigorously written, and is an authority on that period of the war. His paper in ' The Memorial History of Boston ' is a valuable summary of the work of Boston in the civil war." * Just before sailing for Europe, in the autumn of 1889, he had put the finishing touches on Vol. V. of his father's " His- tory of New England," which had been left in manuscript by the writer, but still required some revision. He was elected SECRETARY of this SOCIETY in 1880, and held the position until his death. At a special meeting of the Standing Committee, 24 Dec. 1889, Pres. Cobb spoke feelingly of the character and career of Gen. Palfrey; and a * From remarks of John C. Ropes, Esq., at a meeting of the Mass. Historical Society, 12 Dec. 1889. 2^8 lilOGRAI'llICAL NOTICES OK THE series of resolutions, offered by Winslow Warren, Esq., were unanimously adopted. He m. 2g March, 1865, Louisa Caroline, dau. of Sidney Bartlett of Boston. They had — Marian, b. 13 Nov. 1866. Anna, b. 10 Oct. 1869. Louisa, b. 4 Jan. 1873. JOHN CARVER PALFREY. Brother of Gen. Francis W., whom ho succ. in 1890, was b. Cambridge, Mass., 25 Dec. 1833. He was educated at the Boston Latin School, the Hopkins Classical School, Cam- bridge, Harvard College (A.B. 1853, A.M. 1857), and the Military Academy at West Point, — graduating from the last-named place as the first scholar in the class of 1857. He was com. brevet 2d lieut. corps engineers, U. S. A., i July, 1857; 2d lieut. 31 Dec. 1857; 1st lieut. 3 Aug. 1861 ; capt. 3 March, 1863. He was chief engineer at the capture of Port Hudson, La., for which he was appointed by the President brevet-lieut.-col., U. S. A.; engineer at the capture of Forts Gaines and Morgan, Ala., for which he was made brevet- major, U. S. A.; assist, insp.-gen. and chief engineer 13th army corps, with rank of lieut.-col., U. S. vols., from 15 March to i Aug. 1865; brevet-lieut.-col. U. S. A. for ser- vices at the siege and capture of Mobile, Ala. ; brevet-col. and brevet-brig. -gen., U. S. A., for gallant and meritorious services during the war of the Rebellion. After the war he became Superintendent of the Merrimack Manufacturing Co. at Lowell, and continued in that position until 1874, when he became Treasurer of the Manchester Mills, which office he still holds. He is Vice-President of the Institution for Savings; Vice-President of the Webster National Bank; member of the Militar\- Historical Society of Massachu- CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 379 setts, and Director of the Ministr)- at Large. He resides in Belmont. He m. 21 Oct. 1874, Adelaide Eliza, dau. of Samuel Russell Pay- son. Children — John Gorham, b. 2 Oct. 1875. Francis VV'inslow, b. 27 March, 1877. Hannah Gilbert, b. 13 Dec. 1881. aaron JlarUet. He was b. 12 Nov. 1755, in Sharon or Litchfield, Ct. ; d. Newburyport, Mass., 21 Feb. 1837. He received a warrant from Gov. Hancock as 2d lieut. in Crane's artillery, 7 Nov. 1781, and was com. by Congress, 17 Jan. 1782; was acting paymaster until the close of the war; afterward a merchant in Newburyport, where he held many municipal offices. Up to 1833 he always attended the 4th of July meetings of the Society. He m. Jane, dau. of Matthew Perkins, and a sister of Jacob Perkins, the inventor. She d. 25 Oct. 1815. They had six sons and two daughters. By his 2d wife, Mrs. Mary (Wylie) Knapp, who d. 28 March, 1835, he had one daughter. Henry Pardee, the eldest son (b. 29 June, 1787, d. i July, 1815), m. in 1810 Fanny Long, dau. of Robert and Ruth (White) Long, granddaughter of Judge Philip White of New Hampshire. She d. I July, 1814. Their child, Fanny Maria, b. 10 Oct. 1812, m. 27 March, 1834, William E. Currier of Newburyport, and d. 8 Aug. 1859. Their children were: Henry Pardee; Marie Long; Lewis Augustus; Rufus Choate ; Frederick G. , Fanny yane ; Winfield Scott; Wallace Bruce ; Georgiana Augusta ; Adelaide Wilhelmina. iScnjamiit parfetr. Of Andover; d. 1801. Com. lieut. in Wesson's (afterward H. Jackson's 9th) reg. ; served five years, and retired i Jan. 1783. 3S0 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OK THE lEltas parfecr.* He was the son of Daniel Parker ; was b. Boston, 3 June, 1760; d. Petersburg, Va., 8 Dec. 1798. Present with his brother Daniel at Bunker Hill; com. 2d lieut. in Crane's artillery, 13 Sept. 1777; 1st lieut. 2 Aug. 1780; in Vose's (ist) reg. 1781-83. After the war he was a merchant in Petersburg, Va. Daniel, his brother (H. U. 1773), d. Salem, Mass., in Dec. 1821. He was a 2d lieut. in Knox's artillery, 1776; was afterward in Brooks's (7th) reg., and subsequently taught a grammar-school in Salem. His descent from John ' Parker of Biddeford, Eng., one of the company of Richard Vines, who took lands at the mouth of the Saco River, purchased in 1650 of the Indian Sagamore Robert Hood, " Parker's Island," at the mouth of the Kennebec, d. in 1660, was through y^?//;/,^ b. 1634, killed by the Indians at Casco in 1690, who bought of the Indians in 1659 a large tract of land on the west side of the Kennebec, including what is now Phipsburg (his father, his wife, and brother were all killed by the Indians) ; Daniel^ b. 1667, d. 1694, who moved to Charlestown ; Isaac* b. 1692, d. i 742 ; Daniel^ (his father), b. 1726, d. 1785, who removed during the Revolutionary war to Salem, and who m. Margaret Jarvis. ISAAC PARKER, LL D. Brother of Elias, whom he succ. in 183O; b. Boston, 17 June, 1768; d. 26 July, 1830. He was the eighth son of Daniel and Margaret (Jarvis) Parker; grad. at Harvard University in 1786; studied law in the office of Judge Tudor; settled as a lawyer successively in Castine, Portland (1801), and Boston (1806) ; was a member of Congress from Maine in 1797-99; U.S. Marshal for that district, 1797- i8or; President of Mass Constitutional Convention, 1820, and took a spirited part in its debates when in committee * The original autograph roll is signed E,J Parker, CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 38 1 of the whole; Professor of Law in Harvard University, 1816- 27; Judge of Supreme Court of Massachusetts, 1806-14, and Chief-Justice from 18 14 till his death. He was a member of many of the societies in and about Boston, — the Ameri- can Academy, the Bible Society, and others, — and was always willing to perform his share of the labor incident to such offices. " For more than a quarter of a century he was one of the most influential men in the Common- wealth of Massachusetts. This influence was noiseless and constant; it was found in the temples of justice, the halls of legislation, in the seminaries of learning, at the ballot- boxes, on 'Change, in the social circle, — everj'where. He had genius without eccentricity, and learning without ped- antry. In him firmness was united to flexibility, and deli- cacy with decision." He received the honorary degree of LL.D. from Harvard University in 18 14. He m. Rebecca Hall of Boston, and had Edw.4rd \V. and seven other children. EDWARD WILLIAM PARKER. Eldest son of Isaac, whom he succ. in 1831 ; b. Castine, Me., 5 May, 1795; d. Hyde Park, Mass., 6 Feb. 1873. He had a son, jAMES G. Jol&n JIatcrson. He was the son of Capt. John Paterson ; was b. Farming- ton, Ct., 1743; d. Lisle, Broome Co, N. Y., 19 July, 1808; Y. C. 1762. He studied law, was admitted to the bar, and practised until about 1774, when he moved with his wife's father, Deacon Josiah Lee, to Lenox, Mass., and be- came a member of the Provincial Congress of 1774-75. The news of the battle of Lexington reached Berkshire at noon on the 20th of April ; and at sunrise the following morn- ing the regiment of minute-men, which Paterson had been 382 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE chosen to command, was on the way to Cambridge, where it was employed in constructing the first redoubt thrown up on the hnes about Boston. On the day of the Bunker Hill battle his regiment defended Fort No. 3 in Charlestown, a work of their own construction. After the evacuation of Boston, Col. Paterson was ordered to Canada, where a part of his regiment was engaged in the disastrous affair of the Cedars. After the retreat from Canada, the regiment joined Washington just in time to take part in the battles of Trenton and Princeton. Paterson was com. brig.-gen. 21 Feb. 1777; was distinguished at Saratoga and at Monmouth ; was a member of the board of officers that tried Major Andre, and remained in service to the close of the war. During Shays's rebellion, 1786-87, Gen. Paterson headed a detach- ment of the Berkshire militia, ordered out for its suppres- sion. Subsequently, removing to Binghamton, Broome Co., N. Y., he became Chief-Justice of the County Court; was four years a member of the Assembly; member of the State Constitutional Convention of 1801 ; member of Con- gress, 1803-s; and was Vice-Pres. of the Mass. Society of the Cincinnati in 1785-86. He m. 1766, Elizabeth Lee. They had — JosiAH Lee, b. 8 Oct. 1766, m. Jan. 1788, Clarissa, dau. of Gen. Caleb Hyde. Hannah, m. Eggleston. Polly, d. S. Carolina, unm. Ruth, b. Aug. 1774, m. 14 Nov. 1797. Ira Seymour of Lisle. Betsey, d. unm. John Pierce, b. 5 May, 1787, m. 16 Sept. 1809, Sally Osborn. M.-uiL^^, b. 1 789, m. April, 1 808, Samuel Kilborn of Spencerport, N. Y. He was b. Bedford, Mass, 7 Dec. 1742; d 1829. Present at Bunker Hill ; com. licut. in Alden's (afterward Brooks's 7th) CINXINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 303 reg. ; and was in the battles with Burgoyne, and in Sullivan's expedition against the Indians in northern New York. He m. (ist) Elizabeth Pearl, 9 Feb. 1764, d. 11 March, 1776; (2d) Sarah Pearl, 18 March, 1780, d. Feb. 1847. Soijn J3c(rcr. He was the son of Isaac and Mary (Hardy) Peirce ; b. Boston, 28 Sept. 1750; d. unm. at Fort McHenry, Walnut Hills, near Vicksburg, Miss., 22 July, 1798. Com. lieut. in Knox's artillery in 1776; 2d lieut. in Callender's Co., Crane's artillery, 12 Sept. 1777; capt.-lieut. 12 Sept. 1778. He saw much active service, beginning with the siege of Boston and ending with the close of the war in 1783. Re-entering the service of his country under the Confederation, he was com. lieut. I May, 1787; lieut. of artillery, 29 Sept. 1789; capt. Oct. 1791. Isaac Peirce, his brother (b. 25 Dec. 1753, d. 27 Feb. 1781), was aide-de-camp to Maj.-Gen. Gates with the rank of major. His youngest brother, Hardy Peirce (b. 20 July, 1756), was a lieut. in Knox's artillery, and was killed at Fort Lee, 5 Nov. 1776. His descent from Thotnas} of Charlestown, 1634, freeman 6 May, 1635, d. 7 Oct. 1666, ae. 83, and wife Elizabeth, was through Thomas^ b. England, who was in Woburn as early as 1643, many years Select- man of Woburn, and styled "Sergeant" Thomas, d. 6 Nov. 1683, who m. Elizabeth (d. 5 March, 1688) ; Samuel? b. 7 April, 1656, freeman 1684, who m. 9 Dec. 1680, Lydia Bacon ; Isaac* b. Boston, 22 March, 1687, a freeman and entitled Esq., m. 5 May, 1708, Grace, dau. of Lewis Tucker of Casco ; Isaac ^ (his father), b. Bos- ton, 12 Oct. 1722, d. there 11 Dec. 1811, who m. 5 Jan. 1745, Mary Hardy of Salem, and had eight children. JO.SEPH PEIRCE Eldest brother of John, whom he succ in 1808; b. Boston, 25 Dec. 1745; d. there i Jan. 1828; Boston Latin School, 384 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE 1756. Boston gave to the cause of the Revolution no family more patriotic, devoted, and self-sacrificing than that of Isaac Peirce, 2d, and his four sons here noticed. Joseph, the elder, was a prominent merchant of the town, a man of great integrity, and possessed considerable influence with his fellow-citizens. Feeble health and a young and in- creasing family prevented his taking an active part in the struggle for liberty, which however received the aid both of his purse and his influence. From his store on the north side of State Street he witnessed the " Massacre " of 5 March, 1770. He was the founder of the Provincial "Grenadier" corps, and its commander on the occasion of its first parade, 8 June, 1772 ; Henry Knox, afterward major-general and Secretary of War, being second in com- mand. The splendid uniform, military appearance, drill, and efficiency of this corps are of traditional renown. It elicited the commendation of the British officers then in Boston, and received the special notice of Gov. Gage on his public entry into Boston in May, 1774. Mr. Pierce was the friend and correspondent of Gen. Knox, with whom he was afterward associated in the proprietorship of large tracts of land in Maine. Knox's letters to him were, un- fortunately, lost in 181 1, by the burning of a store in which they were deposited. His son, Joseph Hardy Peirce, succ. him in the Society in 1828, but omitted to qualify himself by making the usual declaration. He was b. Boston, 8 March, 1773; was a mer- chant and supercargo, and made several foreign voyages ; was Secretary of the Board of War of Massachusetts in 1 81 2-14; clerk of the Municipal Court, 1816-30; agent of Massachu- setts for claims against the General Government growing out of the war of 1812; and was lost at sea, while on the passage from New York to Mobile and New Orleans, in Dec. 18^1. CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 385 Joseph m. 6 April, 1771, Ann, dau. of Col. Thomas Dawes. Children — Joseph Hardy, m. Frances Temple Cordis, and had many children. Ann, b. 11 Aug. 1774, d. 10 Oct. 1800, m. John Lathrop, son of Rev. John Lathrop, of Boston. Hannah Dawes, b. 3 Jan. 1783, m. Thos. P. Kettell, d. 1856. Elizabeth Somes, b. 25 Oct. 1787, m. Fitch Pool Putnam. Maria, b. Oct. 1789. HENRY AUGU.STUS PEIRCE. Son of Joseph JJardy, and grandson of Joseph Peirce, whom he succ. in 1856; b. Dorchester, Mass., 15 Dec. 1808; d. San Francisco, Cal., 29 July, 1885. He was educated at public and private schools of Boston. In Oct. 1824, at the age of si.Kteen, he embarked in the " Griffin," commanded by his brother Marcus T. Peirce, for a voyage to the N. W. coast, a country now known as the Territory of Alaska, where he was engaged in the fur trade until the year 1829. He then sailed for Honolulu, where he resided as a merchant until his return to Boston, with a moderate fortune, in 1842. Here he became an extensive merchant and ship-owner, engaged in commerce with the Hawaiian Islands, Russian settlements in Asia, California, Manila, and China. During the civil war he encountered severe losses; and in 1867, having withdrawn in a great measure from business, he settled in Yazoo Co., Miss., as a cotton-planter. Owing to unpropitious seasons, and also to unfortunate speculations in the cotton-market, he lost nearly all the remainder of a once large fortune, accumulated by so much of toil and enterprise. Through the interest of Hon. Hamilton Fish, President-General of the Society and Secretary of State of the United States, he was in May, 1869, appointed U. S. Minister, resident at Honolulu, Hawaiian Islands. He held that position until 1877. In Jan. 1878, being then in San Francisco, he was appointed by King Kalakaua to be Minister of Foreign Affairs in the Hawaiian 386 l!I()GKAriIICAL NOTICES OF THE Government. In July following he resigned and returned to San Francisco, where he took up his permanent residence. Assist. Treas. of the Society, 1865-77. He m. 5 July, 1838, Susan R. Thompson. Children — Ella Augusta, 3 Oct. 1839, m. Frederick Clapp of Greenfield, Mass. Henry Marcus, b. 23 Nov. 1846.* Silas ^Ici'rcf. He was b. Groton, Mass., 27 July, 1750; d. Peterborough, N. H., 22 Nov. 1809. Com. capt. in M. Jackson's (-Sth) reg. 5 Dec. 1779; wounded in the left arm, and afterward a pen- sioner. He m. Hannah, dau. of Gen. Henry Woods, of Pepperell. He was b. Boston, 1742; was a mechanic, and before the Revolution was a member of Paddock's artillery Co. At the battle of Bunker Hill he was a lieut. in Callender's Co.i of which, after the court-martial and temporary disgrace of that brave officer, he was made captain. Com. capt. in Knox's reg. of artillery, i "Jan. 1776; in Crane's reg. of artillery, i Jan. 1777; com. major of the same, 12 Sept. 1778; served through the war, and present at the siege of Boston ; stationed at "Grenadier's" battery, N. Y., in June, 1776; at Harlem Heights in Oct. 1776; at Peek's and Fish Kill, Dec. 1776; Whitemarsh, Nov. 1777; Valley Forge, 1777-78; in Sulli- van's R. I. campaign, 1778; in charge of the park of artillery and military stores at Providence, 1779-81 ; and afterward at West Point. On 10 Nov. 1785, he was appointed to the com- mand of the Castle in Boston harbor, then belonging to the * A full report on the succession to the place made vacant by the death of H. A Peirce will be found on the records of the Standing Committee, 4 July, 1887. CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 387 State of Massachusetts, and continued in command with rank of Heut.-col. until its cession in 1798 to the United States. Col. Perkins d. of yellow fever at Boston, 27 Oct. 1802. His descent from Edmund'^ Perkins of Boston, 1675, who d. ab. 1693, and wife Susannah, widow of John Howlett, dau. of Francis Hudson, was through Edmund;'- b. 6 Sept. 1683, who m. Mary Far- ris ; Willitim^ (his father), and Elizabeth, dau. of William Palfrey of Boston. He m. 20 Dec. 1 763, Abigail Cox. Children — William, lost at sea ab. 1 792, no issue. Samuel. Abigail, m. Benj. Weld of Boston, d. Brunswick, Me. Elizabeth, d. unm. at Brighton, Mass. Ann, b. Providence, R. I., m. Samuel Rogers of Boston, d. Brighton, Mass. Henry, b. Boston, d. at sea, no issue. Charles James, b. Boston, 17 June, 1784, d. Rio Janeiro, 26 Aug. 18 1 7, no issue. La Fayette, b. Castle Island, Boston harbor, 26 March, 1786, M. D. (H. U. 1814), m. Dorcas, dau. of Benj. Abbot, 30 Dec. 181 7, had six children. SAMUEL PERKINS. Eldest son of Col. William, whom he succ. in 1804; b. Boston, 2 Sept. 1770; d. Ro.xbury, Mass., i Aug. 1846. When about thirteen years old he became an apprentice to Major John Johnston, portrait-painter; and at nineteen began the painting business, chiefly on houses and ships, and continued it till about 1815, when he undertook to paint carpets. He built a large factory for this business in Roxbury, which he carried on for some years. President of the Mass. Charitable Mechanics' Association in 1825 and 1826; Assist, Treas. of the Societv of the Cincinnati, 1835-41 ; Treasurer, 1841-45. He m. 16 May, 1793, Elizabeth, dau. of Nathaniel Call of Boston, and had five sons, four of whom d. without issue, and six daughters. 388 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE WILLIAM PERKINS. Eldest son of Samuel, whom he succ. in 1847; was b. Boston, 4 Oct. 1804; d. there 13 July, 1887. He was for many years a prominent and successful merchant in his native city, and held many positions of trust and responsi- bility. He was elected TREASURER of the MASS. Sc^iety of the Cincinnati in 1847, and held the office until 1878, when his associates yielded to his urgent request to be relieved from a service which had become burdensome on account of age. He received the thanks of the Society for his long and faithful services, and a committee was appointed to procure and present to him some token expressive of the value of his services and of the regard in which he was held by his associates. The committee presented to him, on 7 Nov. 1878, a silver salver, bearing the following inscription: — THE MASSACHUSETTS SOCIETY OF THE CINCINNATI TO WILLIAM PERKINS. In grateful recognition of his services as Treasurer of the Society from A.D. 1847 to A.D. 1878, covering a period of thirty-one years. A service distinguished by an integrity as unsullied as it was unques- tioned, a devotion to duty that never flagged, and a demeanor that commanded universal respect and admiration. July 4, 1878. At a meeting of the Standing Committee, 3 Nov. 1887, Hon. Samuel C. Cobb, President of the Society, in speaking of the loss sustained by them in the death of iVIr. Perkins, said : — " To great modesty and simplicity of manner he united inflexible firmness and stern integrity. During forty years he was recognized as one of the most influential members in the councils of this Society ; and I do not hesitate to affirm that during this period no member ren- CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 3S9 dered more important and valuable services. By his death the Mass. Society of the Clnxixnati is deprived of one of its purest and noblest members, and our community loses a well known and estimable citizen." He m. 2 Nov. 1835, Catharine Callender, dau. of John .^mory of Dorchester. Children — James Amory, b. 9 July, 1836, H. U. 1856, ist lieut. 24th Mass. vols., killed at Morris Island, S. C, 26 Aug. 1863, no issue. WiLLiAJi Edward, b. 23 March, 1838. Robert Shaw, b. 6 July, 1842, d. 8 June, 1873. Helen Amorv, b. 25 May, 1846, m. Dr. John Homans of Boston. JOHN WARREN PERKINS. Son of La Fayette Perkins, and grandson of Col. William, adm. 1888, was b. Weld, Me., 17 March, 1820. He was educated at Farmington, Me.; went into business there in 1840; removed to Portland in 1853, and is engaged in busi- ness there as a wholesale druggist. He m. (ist) June, 1845, Margaret Hunter of Farmington, Me. ; he m. (2d) Oct. 29, i86r, Eliza A. Bellows of Lancaster, N. H. Children — Edward W., b. Aug. 27, 1850. M.\RY B., b. May 14, 1863. Maude E., b. June 9, 187 1. He was b. Medfield, Mass., 24 Jan 1742 ; d. Westborough, Mass., 5 Feb. 1822. He enlisted from Mendon as capt. in Col. Joseph Read's reg. in May, 1775 ; com. major in Bailey's (2d) reg. i Jan. 1777; com. lieut.-col. of Bigelow's (15th) reg. I July, 1779; present at the siege of Boston, invasion of Canada, surrender of Burgoyne, and continued in service until i Jan. 1781. 390 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE He m. 30 March, 1768, Beulah Lovett. Children (all b. in Mendon) — Lovett. Daniel, b. 2 7 July, 1 7 70. Sibyl, b. 4 Sept. 1772. SiLVLV, b. 8 Nov. 1783. Hannah, b. 14 March, 17S6. LOVETT PETERS. Eldest son of Col. Andrew, whom he succ. in 1824; b. Mendon, Mass., 19 Jan. 1769; d. Westborough, 15 Jan. 1863. He m. Mary Plympton, and had — Beulah Lovett, b. 2 April, 1797. Andrew, b. ii March, 1799, d. unm. 11 April, 1840. Augustus, b. 7 Nov. 1800, d. Brookfield, Wis., 1847, "■>• ^' Roches- ter, N. Y., 10 Oct. 1830, Lucy Pollard, and hz.d. John Lovett. Onslovi', b. I March, 1802. Mary Plympton, b. 26 May, 1804. William, b. 5 March, 1807. Daniel, b. 9 Nov. 1808. John, b. 26 Dec. 18 10. Hannah Phipps, b. 23 June, 181 2. JOHN LOVETT PETERS. Son of Augustus, and grandson of Lovett, whom he succ. in 1866; b. Detroit, Mich., 11 July, 1831 ; resides in Worcester, Mass. He m. 29 Dec. 1859, Mary Frances Eddy. Children — William Curtis, b. N. Brookfield, Mass., 10 Feb. 1S61. John Eddy, b. Worcester, Mass., 17 Oct. 1866. Lewis Augustus, b. 22 July, 1869. Charles Adams, b. 29 June, 1875. JOBcpl) 33cttfnflCn. Com. ensign in Scamman's (afterward E. Phinney's) York reg. in May, 1775, and present at the siege of Boston; capt. '^y^TT^^Z/Ct/^ \J^^/^ (j^^/. CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 39 1 in L. Baldwin's reg. 1775-76, and in the operations in New York, and battles of Trenton and Princeton; com. major in Wesson's (9th) reg. 26 July, 1779; in Vose's reg. 1781-83; and d. soon after the war. Com. ensign in H. Jackson's (i6th) reg. 1777; com. ist lieut. 14 Oct. 1781 ; aide-de-camp to Gen. Paterson, and com. capt. 30 Sept. 1783 ; received half pay on account of wounds. He m. Feb. 1789, at Charleston, S. C, Susannah Frances Barksdale, and d. 7 Jan. 18 10, at Spring Island, S. C. Com. lieut. in Wigglesworth's (13th) reg. 22 Oct. 1777; served in Sullivan's R. I. campaign, and wounded there (1778); in Mellen's (3d) reg. in 1783. He d. Baltimore, Md., in Sept. 1827, ae. 80, leaving a widow who survived him nearly thirty years. His dau. Mrs. Eliza Spinola, was living in New York in 1850. patn'cfe ^ijflom Com. lieut. 20 June, 1777, in H. Jackson's (i6th) reg., and considered by him " one of the best officers in the line ; " in Mellen's (3d) reg. 1783; app. capt. 2d U. S. inf. 4 March, 1791; killed, 4 Nov. 1791, in Gen. St. Clair's battle with the Miami Indians. TIMOTHY PICKERING. He was an original member of the Pa. Society, but sub- sequently became a member of the Mass. Society by right of residence. He was b. in Salem, Mass., 17 July, 1745; d. there 29 Jan. 1829; H. U. 1763. Admitted to the bar in 392 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE 1768, he became the cliampion and leader of the Whigs of Essex County, and first opposed an armed resistance to the British troops when (26 Feb. 1775), being then a colonel of militia, he interposed to prevent a detachment of regulars from crossing the drawbridge in Salem to seize some military stores. In 1775 he was appointed a judge of C. C. P. for Essex County, and sole judge of the Maritime Court for the middle district. Joining Washington in New Jersej' in the fall of 1776 with his regiment, he was in May, 1777, made adjutant-general of the army. In Nov. following he was made a member of the Board of War, and succeeded Greene as quartermaster-general, 5 Aug. 1780. He performed the arduous duties of that office until 1785. After the war he resided in Philadelphia, and in 1786 was sent by the Govern- ment to adjust a controversy between various claimants to the Wyoming settlement, in the course of which he was very rouglily handled. He favored the adoption of the Federal Constitution in the Pa. Convention, of which he was a mem- ber. He was Postmaster-General of the United States, 7 Nov. 1791-2 Jan. 1795; Secretary of War, Jan.-io Dec. 1795; Secretary of State, 10 Dec. 1795-12 May, 1800. He returned to Salem at the close of 1801, and was elected by the Mass. Legislature U. S. Senator, 1803-11. He was a member of the Board of War of Massachusetts during the war of 1812-15; and a Representative in Congress 1 81 5-17. He was one of the leaders of the Federal party in Ijhe United States, was active in promoting the cause of education, and was a talented writer, a brave and pa- triotic soldier, a disinterested, able, and energetic public officer. He had ten children ; namely, JOHX ; Timothy ; Henry ; Ch.arles ; William ; Edward ; George ; Octavius ; Mary ; Elizabeth. His son, Octavius Pickering, published his " Life and Correspondence " in 2 vols, in 1867. CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 393 JOHN PICKERING. Eldest son of Col. Timothy, whom he succ. in 1843 ; was b. Salem, Mass., 17 Feb. 1777; d. Boston, 5 May, 1846. He studied law in Philadelphia; was in 1797 app. Secretary of Legation to Portugal ; was two years in London as private secretary to Rufus King, U. S. Minister; and practised law in Salem from 1801 to 1827, when he settled in Boston. He was City Solicitor of Boston from 1829 until his death. Although he had a large practice, his great industry and econ- omy in the use of time made him one of the most profound scholars of the country. He was three times Representative to the General Court from Salem, twice a Senator from Essex and once from Suffolk County, and was a member of the Executive Council, In 1833 he was a member of the com- mission for revising the Statutes of Massachusetts. Li 1806 he was elected Hancock Professor of Hebrew in Harvard University, and at a later day was invited to the chair of Greek Literature. He was President of the American Acad- emy of Arts and Sciences, and of the Oriental Society of Bos- ton, and a member of many scientific and literary bodies in Europe. He served as AssLST. Treas. of the SOCIETY of the Cincinnati, in 1845. He was the author of numerous trea- tises upon philolog)% being more or less familiar with twenty- two different languages. His principal work was a Greek and English Le.xicon, begun in 1814, but not finished until 1826. His descent from John * Pickering, of Ipswich in 1634, of Salem in 1637, b. England ab. 1615, d. ab. 1655, and his wife Elizabeth, was through _/. 15 April, 1680, d. 7 April, 1764, H. U. 1 701, minister of First Church, Dover, N. H. 1711-15, who removed to Kingston, Mass., in 1728, and m. 21 Nov. 1728, Sarah (Warren) Little, dau. of James Warren; William^ (his father), b. 12 Oct. 1729, d. 15 June, 1809, who m. 2 Dec. 1755, Sarah Warren. Feb. 22, 1796, he m. Jane Russell of Plymouth, by whom he had five children — James Warren. Thomas Russell, b. 28 Oct. 1798, d. at sea, 15 Sept. 1S36. Jane Russell, b. 13 Jan. 1802, d. 7 Dec. 1876. Elizabeth Parsons, b. 5 June, 1803, d. 22 May, 1876. Sarah Ann Warren, b. 20 July, 1805, d. 8 May, 1886. JAMES WARREN SEVER. Son of Capt. James, whom he succ. in 1847; b. Kingston, Mass., I July, 1797; d. Boston, 16 Jan. 187 1. He entered Dummer Academy in 1811, and grad. H. U. 1817, where his father, grandfather, and great-grandfather had also graduated. While a student of law in the office of Gov. Levi Lincoln in Worcester, in 1S20, he delivered the 4th of July oration at Leicester, his subject being " The Era of Good Feeling." In October of that year he entered the merchant marine service in the employ of the Messrs. Perkins of Boston, making his first voyage to the Northwest Coast of America, 'io^^^x^-^.^-/^-^ CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 429 continuing in the service of this house and commanding an East Indiaman until 1835. He commanded the "Alert," the first ship that ever entered the Canton River without issuing the usual rations of ardent spirits to officers and men, — an experiment which was entirely successful. On quitting the sea, he settled in Boston, and was a member of the Common Council in 1850 and 185 1. In 1853 and again in 1856 he was a member of the House of Representatives, and was Chairman of the Committee of Finance during both terms. He early evinced a fondness for military life, having while at college commanded the Harvard Washington Co., an or- ganization composed of the students, with whom he per- formed escort duty on the occasion of the visit of Pres. Monroe in 18 17. He received from the President in 181 8 an appointment to a cadetship at West Point, which he declined. In 1844 he was adj. of the Independent Cadets, of which corps he was lieut.-col. commanding in 1849 and 1850. He was ASSIST. Sec. of the Mass. Society of the Cincinnati, 1851-59; Secretary, 1859-65; Vice-Pres., 1865; President, 1866-71; Vice-Pres. of the General Society, 1866-71. He took great interest in the objects and purposes of this Society, with which he was so long identified, and always felt it a pleasant duty to discharge the various trusts which it confided to his care. In 1868 he established a scholarship in Harvard University, giving ^2,500 for that purpose. He directed the income to be given to meritorious undergraduates, preference being given to those from his native town, Kingston, or from Plymouth, the birthplace of his mother. He m._7 Dec. 1836, Anne Elizabeth Parsons, dau. of James Carter of Boston, who died 15 Dec. 1877. They had no children. Col. Sever possessed marked traits of character, both moral and intellectual. In his religions and political 43° BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE views he was eminently conservative ; while his integrity, firmness, and intelligence qualified him for public employ- ment, and procured for him the respect and esteem of his friends. REV. WINSLOW WARREN SEVER. He is the grand-nephew of Ensign James, and succ. James W. Sever in 1871. He was b. in Kingston, Mass., 31 Jan. 1832; H. U. 1853; Theological Seminary of Virginia, 1856; ordained deacon (Prot. Epis. Church), 19 March, 1856; priest, 5 March, 1857, and has been successively assistant minister of St. Ann's Church, Brooklyn, N. Y. ; rector of St. Mary's Church, Newton Lower Falls, Mass., and of Christ Church, Lonsdale, R. L; and assistant pastor and superintendent of St. Luke's Hospital, N. Y. He is now (1890) rector of St. George's Church, Central Falls, R. L His grandfather, John Sever, was the brother of Ensign James ; his father, James Nicholas, b. 15 Dec. 1793, d. 9 April, 1869, ni. 14 Nov. 1 81 9, Mercy Foster Russell, a cousin, who d. 3 Nov. 1844. He was b. York, Me., 24 Oct. 1752; d. Augusta, Me., II Sept. 1845. He was brought up on his father's farm, also learning the trade of a mason. Entering the army in May, 1775, as a corporal in D. Bradish's Co. from Falmouth, he was com. ensign in Fernald's Co. of Phinney's reg., and was present at the siege of Boston ; was a lieut. in D. Brewer's reg. in 1776, in the battle of Hubbardton, and the campaign ending in Burgoyne's surrender in Oct. 1777; joined the main army at Whitemarsh In Nov., and wintered at Valley Forge; was com. capt. in E. Sprout's (12th) reg., i April, 1779; app. muster-master of Baron De Kalb's division, 9 Feb. 1778; aide-de-camp to Gen. Heath, 5 Feb. 1781, and CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 43 1 served to the end of the war. In 1783 he settled at Fort Western in Hallowell; was Town Clerk of Hallowell and of Augusta for thirty-five years ; was Clerk of the District Court of Maine in 1 789-1818; Register of Deeds, 1799-18 16; and held successively the commissions of division inspector, brigadier, and maj.-gen. of the eighth division of the State militia. His diary while in the army has been printed in the "Maine Farmer" (Aug. -Nov. 1872). He was ViCE- Pres. of the Mass. Society of the Cincinnati, 1845. His descent from Henry ' Sewall, who settled at Newbury, Mass., removed to Rowley in 1657, d. 16 May, 1700, and who m. 25 March, 1646, Jane, eldest dau. of Stephen Dummer, was through John^ b. 10 Oct. 1654, who m. 27 Oct. 1671, Hannah Fessenden of Cambridge ; Nicholas^ b. i June, 1690, setded at York, Me., m. Mehitable, dau. of Samuel Storer ; Henry ^ (his father). Henry m. (ist) Tabitha Sewall, his cousin, 9 Feb. 1786; (2d) Rachel Crosby, 3 June, 181 1 ; (3d) Elizabeth, dau. of John Lowell of Boston, 9 Sept. 1833. Children — Abig.\il, b. 2 April, 1788, m. 9 Nov. 1809, Eben Hutch. Charles, b. 13 Nov. 1790. M.\RIA, b. II May, 1792, d. 5 Oct. 1795. Susannah, b. 5 April, 1794, m. 27 Sept. 1826, Robert Gardiner of Hallowell, d. 26 April, 1852. William, b. 17 Jan. 1797, d. Illinois, April, 1846. Maria, b. 26 March, 1798, d. 10 Oct. 1798. M.\RY, b. 23 Oct. 1799, d. 25 March, 1825. Caroline Gill, b. 12 April, 1818, m. 27 Nov. 1839, James S. Manley. Susan, b. 8 April, 1820, m. April, 1840, Joseph A. Homan. Henry, b. 3 Dec. 1822. Elizabeth Lowell, b. 7 Nov. 1840, d. 20 April, 1859. He was b. Boston, 1751 ; d. there 27 Nov. 1800, and was buried at Copp's Hill, where his wife Sarah was also interred in March preceding Before the Revolution, he was a hatter 43'^ lUOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE ill Boston, and a member of Paddock's artillery Co. He was a lieut. in Gridley's artillery reg. in 1775; was com. capt.- lieut. in Knox's artillery reg. i Jan. 1776; capt. in Crane's artillery reg. i Jan. 1777, and served through the war. Present at the battle of Bunker Hill, siege of Boston, Fort Montgomery (Oct. 1776,) White Plains, Stony Point, Mon- mouth, and Yorktown, and commanded the artjUery com- pany from Boston, which served under Gen. Lincoln in 1786-87 in quelling Shaj-s's insurrection. THOMAS SEWARD. Son of Capt. Thomas, whom he succ. in 1802; b. Boston, 25 Nov. 1770; d. there 25 April, 1852. He m. 28 Nov. 1820, Susan B., dau. of Benjamin Thompson. They had — Sus.v\ T., b. 12 Aug. 1821, d. Thomas Thompson, b. 19 March, 1S23, d. 2 Nov. 1855. He m, Dec. 1850, Lucy F. Soule of Waldoborough, Me., and left one child, Susan Farley, b. 7 Oct. 1852, now living in Waldoborough. Susan Elizabeth, b. 9 Aug. 1826, d. Richard Thompson, b. 11 Aug. 1827. RICHARD THOMPSON SEWARD. Only surviving son of Thomas, whom he succ. in 1875; was b. Boston, n Aug. 1827. He is a draughtsman, and resides in Boston. Samuel Si^ato. He was the third son of Francis and Sarah (Burt) Shaw, and was b. in Boston, Mass., 2 Oct. 1754. It is said that his grandfather came from Scotland in the reign of Charles the Second, and that his name was Thomas; his father (b. Bos- ton, 29 March. 1721, d. iS Oct. 1784) was a merchant CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 433 engaged in extensive business, and distinguished for intelli- gence and enterprise. He was educated at one of the com- mon schools of Boston, and at the Latin School, then under Master James Lovell. As soon as he became of age he ap- plied for a commission as lieut. of artillery in the Revolution- ary army, then besieging Boston. His application was suc- cessful ; he entered the service on i Jan. 1776, and continued in the army till the close of the war. His career as a soldier, and the estimation in which he was held, are shown by the following' documents : — By his Excellency, George Washington, Esq., General and Com- , mander-in-Cluef of the forces of the United States of America. L.S. This certifies that Captain Samuel Shaw was appointed a lieuten- ant of Artillery in the array of the United States of America, in 1775; the year following he was appointed adjutant ; and in 1777 was pro- moted to the rank of captain-lieutenant and brigade-major in the corps of Artillery, in which capacity he served until August, 1779, when he was appointed aide-de-camp to Major-General Knox com- manding the Artillery, with whom he remained till the close of the war, having been promoted to the rank of captain of Artillery, April 1 2th, 1780. From the testimony of the superior officers under whom Captain Shaw has served, as well as from my own observation, I am enabled to certify that, throughout the whole of his service, he has greatly distinguished himself in everything which could entitle him to the character of an intelligent, active, and brave officer. Given under my hand and seal this third day of November, 1 783. Geo. Washington. By his Excellency's command. Ben. Walker, aide-de-camp. This is to certify that the possessor. Captain Samuel Shaw, has borne a commission in the artillery of the United States of America upwards of eight years, more than seven of which he has been par- 434 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE. ticularly attached to the subscriber, in the capacities of adjutant, brigade-major, and aide-de-camp. In the various and arduous duties of his several stations, he has, in every instance, evinced himself an intelligent, active, and gallant officer, and as such he has peculiarly endeared himself to his nu- merous acquaintances. This testimony is given unsolicited on his part. It is dictated by the pure principles of affection and gratitude, inspired by an unequivo- cal attachment during a long and trying period of the American war. Given under my hand and seal, at West Point, upon Hudson's River, this 5 th day of January, 1784. L. S. H. Knox, Major-Gcneral. Major Shaw was with Gen. Knox until the close of 1783, assisting in the arduous and delicate duties incident to the disbanding of the army. He took an active part in the for- mation of the Society of the Cincinnati, having been sec- retary of the committee of officers who organized it. Like other soldiers of the Revolution, Major Shaw was in debt and without property when he left the army ; but the general confidence which his talents and integrity had in- spired saved him from subsequent embarrassment. A com- pany of capitalists, associated for the prosecution of trade between the United States and China, made him an offer of the position of factor and commercial agent for a voyage then projected. This offer he accepted, only demanding that his friend Capt. Thomas Randall of Boston, who had also been an officer of artillery under Gen. Knox, and who was then as destitute as himself, should be associated with him, and share in the profits of the agency. They sailed from New York in Jan. 1784, and returned in May, 1785. Shortly after his return. Major Shaw received an appointment as secretary in the War office, under Gen. Knox; but on 4 Feb. 1786, sailed again for Canton, having been honorably discharged from his office, and having been CINXINXATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 435 elected by Congress to be " Consul from the United States at Canton," without being entitled to receive any salary, fees, or emoluments whatsoever. This office he continued to hold till his death, being reappointed by Pres. Washington, 10 Feb. 1790. He resided many years in China, making voyages to other parts of the East, and returning twice to the United States, where he was m. 21 Aug. 1792, to Hannah, daughter of Wil- liam Phillips, Esq., of Boston. He must have been pros- perous in business, as his later voyages were made in ships owned by himself; one of which, the " Massachusetts," built by his order, and launched at Ouincy, Mass., in Sept. 1789, of between 800 and 900 tons, was larger than any merchant- vessel before built in the United States. This ship appears to have been fitted out as a man-of-war rather than as a mer- chantman, and was sold by Major Shaw to the agents of the Portuguese Government shortly after her arrival in China. On 17 March, 1794, Major Shaw, being much reduced by a disease of the liver contracted in Bombay, sailed in the ship " Washington " from Canton for the United States, but died at sea, ofT the Cape of Good Hope, on 30 May of the same year.* The journal of James Dodge, surgeon of the ship, speaks of him thus : — " Major Shaw . . . was a man rather tall and portly than other- wise ; of an open countenance and benevolent heart ; cheerful with- out levity, and sedate without reserve ; in the hurry of business he had leisure to attend the distressed, and his hand was ever open to indigence and want. His manners were refined, and his sentiments were worthy the character he possessed ; many a hea\'y heart has been enlivened by his sociabUity ; and his freedom of conversation, * A part of the elegant mansion designed by Charles Bulfinch, the architect, and erected for Major Shaw's residence, is still standing in Bulfinch Place, Boston, and is now known as " Hotel Waterston." It originally had wings con- nected with the main edifice by colonnades, and was surrounded with gardens. 436 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE and familiar deportment towards all the officers endeared him to them by the most pleasant ties." The Hon. Josiah Quincy said of him : — « It was my happiness in my early youth to enjoy the privilege of his acquaintance and correspondence ; and now, after the lapse of more than fifty years, I can truly say that in the course of a long life I have never known an individual of a character more elevated and chivahic, acting according to a purer standard of morals, imbued with a higher sense of honor, and uniting more intimately the quali- ties of the gentleman, the soldier, the scholar, and tiie Christian." Major Shaw was made a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, 25 Aug. 1792; and was app. by Gov. Hancock aide to Maj.-Gen. Henry Jackson, with rank of major in the Mass. militia, 30 Aug. 1792. WILLIAM SHAW. Eldest surviving brother of Major Samuel, whom he succ. in 1800; b. Boston, 30 March, 1756; d. 13 Aug. 1803. On the death of his father, and his elder brother Francis, he pur- chased the interests of all the owners in the crown grant of lands in Gouldsborough, Me., and by good business manage- ment succeeded in making a handsome fortune out of his venture. He subsequently sold his rights to the owners of what was known as " the Bingham purchase," and transferred his residence and his business to Boston. He was twice married. By his first wife, Hannah Proctor, he had a daughter, Judith, who m. William Tuckerman of Boston. By his second wife, Judith Proctor, he had a son, Francis, b. Oct. 1793, who d. without issue, in Jan. 1823. ROBERT GOULD SHAW. Eldest surviving son of Francis (Major Samuel's eldest brother) and Hannah (Nickels) Shaw; succ. William Shaw "L^f^k^^^ — . CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 437 ini8i2; was Treasurer in 1836-41; President, 1849-53. He was b. Gouldsborough, Me., 4 June, 1776; d. Boston, 3 May, 1853. When fourteen years old, he came to Boston with the purpose of sailing as midshipman in his uncle Samuel's ship " Massachusetts," but remained as apprentice to his uncle William, who testified his appreciation of him by leaving him, though young, guardian to his children. As one of the firm of Tuckerman, Shaw, & Rogers, he resided for some years in England. Returning to this country, he became principal of the house of Shaw, Barker, & Bridge ; and after the dissolution of this firm, continued in business under his own name, and that of Robert G. Shaw & Co., until his death, having associated with himself as partners William Perkins (late Treasurer Cincinnati Society), and four of his own sons successively. He was very successful in business ; was for many years President of the old Boston Bank; and throughout his life enjoyed the esteem of his fellow-citizens as manifested in various ways. He was a tender-hearted and open-handed man ; always ready especially to aid young men who were starting in life ; and never, in any one instance, as he told the writer, did he have occasion to regret an act of kindness. At his death, besides other charitable bequests, he left a large amount of money for the establishment of " The Shaw Asy- lum for Mariners' Children," from the income of which, after providing for the support of such as must necessarily be in- mates of the asylum itself, assistance is given to others who are also its proper objects, without removing them from the care of their relatives, or from the life and circumstances into which they were born. He m. 2 Feb. 1809, Eliza Willard, dau. of Samuel (whose first wife was a sister of Major Shaw), and Sarah (Rogers) Parkman. She d. 14 April, 1853. Of their children — Francis George, d. 7 Nov. 1882. Sarah Park-Uan, m. George Robert Russell, d. 14 Aug. 1888. 43S BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE S.MiUEL Parkman, m. Hannah Buck, d. 7 Dec. 1869. Robert Gould, m. Mary Louisa Sturgis, d. 2 Dec. 1853. Anna Blake, m. William Batchelder Greene (5 July, 1S61, Col. 14th reg. Mass. vols, ist Mass. heavy artillery), 23 March, 1864. Gardiner Howland, m. Cora Lyman, d. i May, 1867. Joseph Coolidge, d. a Catholic priest, 10 March, 185 1. Elizabeth Willard, m. Daniel Augustus Oliver, d. 14 Feb. 1S50. QuiNcv Adams, m. Pauline Agassiz. William Henry, d. in infancy. Marun, m. Frederick Richard Sears, d. 9 ALarch, 1855. FRANCIS GEORGE SHAW. Eldest son of the foregoing, whom he succ. in 1858; b. in Boston, 23 Oct. 1809; d. Staten Island, 7 Nov. 1882. He was educated principally at the Latin School in Boston. At the age of sixteen he entered Harvard University as Sophomore, but left at close of first Junior term to enter the counting-room of his father, whose partner he became after some years spent in the West Indies and in Europe. He retired from active business in 1840; translated " Con- suelo," and other works of George Sand ; " The Life of Charles Fourier," and various writings of the Phalan- sterian School; Zschokke's " History of Switzerland," and other books; was President of the National Freedman's Relief Association, and of the New York Branch Freedman's Union Commission. In a privately printed memorial, from which the following extract is taken, his character has been traced by a com- petent and loving hand : — "Passing from college to the counting-room of a great commercial business, his sagacity, energy, and executive power were all brought into successful action. He went to Europe and to the West Indies ; but much of the spirit of trade and many of its practices were un- congenial to him. and he ([uietly withdrew, despite wonder and CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 439 affectionate remonstrance, to lead his own life in his own way. By taste and temperament an outdoor man, he made his home in the rural neighborhood of Boston, busy with country cares and various studies, but interested chiefly in helping other men. He was allied by sympathy more than by much previous actual association with the founders of Brook Farm. But when they chose the site for their enterprise not far from his house, he was soon in the pleasantest relations with the leaders, for their spirit and purpose were in har- mony with his own. He was a parishioner and warm personal friend of Theodore Parker, who lived near him ; and his keen common- sense and mastery of practical affairs were most useful to Parker as to Ripley. Indeed, the hospitality of such a man for every generous endeavor and for all new and humane ideas was a happy augury for the philanthropic pioneers, because it seemed to promise the final- approval and adhesion to their cause of the most conservative and substantial sentiment of the community. . . . Ixjng absence with his family in Europe and a long and final residence upon Staten Island only matured and developed the man, in whom not only was there no guile, but in whom even the most intimate eye could not note a fault. Clarendon might have studied from him his portrait of Falkland ; ' his inimitable sweetness of, and delight in, conversation ; his flowing and obliging humanity ; his goodness to mankind ; and his primitive simplicity and integrity of life.' Disinclined to public life of every kind, he was yet full of the highest public spirit ; and it was but natural that his only son should have been selected by Gov- ernor Andrew to command the first colored regiment that marched from Massachusetts in the war. In his young person all that was best in the New England youth of his time, all the strength of the elder colonial and Revolutionary day, blended with all the grace and tenderness and gentleness of its modern life, the stem old Puritan, softened into a humaner Bayard, was tj'pified. It was the flower of Essex that two hundred years ago was withered in the fatal Indian ambush in the Deerfield meadows. It was the flower of New Eng- land that fell upon a hundred redder fields within a score of years." He m. 9 June, 1835, Sarah Blake, dau. of Nathaniel Russell and Susan (Parkman) Sturgis, and grand-niece of Major Samuel Shaw. Of their children — 440 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE Anna, m. Hon. George William Curtis. Robert Gould, b. lo Oct. 1837 (19 April, 1861, private 7th reg. N. Y. National Guard ; 28 May, 2d lieut. 2d reg. Mass. vols. ; 8 July, ist lieut. ; 10 Aug. 1862, captain of same regiment ; and 17 April, 1863, colonel 54th reg. Mass. vols., colored), m. 2 May, 1863, Anna Kneeland Haggerty, and was killed 18 July, 1863, leading the assault on Fort Wagner, S. C. Susanna, m. Robert Bowne Minturn. Josephine, m. Charles Russell Lowell, Jr. (14 May, 1861, capt. 6th U. S. cav. ; 15 April, 1863, col. 2d Mass. cav. ; 19 Oct. 1864, brig.-gen. vols.), who d. 20 Oct. 1864, of wounds received at the battle of Cedar Creek, Va., the day previous. Ellen, m. Francis Channing Barlow (19 April, 1861, private 12th reg. N. Y. mil. ; 3 May, ist lieut. ; 9 Nov. lieut.col. 6ist N. Y. vols.; 14 April, 1862, col.; 19 Sept. brig.-gen.; 5 Aug. 1864, brevet-maj.-gen. ; March, 1865, maj. -gen. vols.). GEORGE RUSSELL SHAW. Second son of Samuel Parkman Shaw (b. ig Nov. 1813, d. 7 Dec. 1869), and nephew of Francis George Shaw, whom he succ. in 1884; was b. Parkman, Me., 28 Oct. 1848; H. U. 1869. He is an architect, and resides in Boston. He m. 31 Aug. 1874, Emily Mott, dau. of Thomas Mott, the son of Lucretia Mott of Philadelphia. Children — Francis George, b. 13 Aug. 1875. Isabel Pelham, b. 18 Feb. 1877. Thomas Mott, b. 19 Sept. 1878. SUiIliam Sljcjjaiir. He was b. Westficld, Mass., i Dec. 1737; d. there 11 Nov. 1 817. He was a descendant of John Shepard of Mendle- sham, Sul=l"olk, England (15 50).* His grandfather John, of Wetheringset in the same county (b. 1671, d. 10 Aug. 1756), * Miinsell's American Ancestry, vol. i. p. yt. CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 44 1 came to America about 1700, and settled in Westfield, Mass., where he soon afterward married Elizabeth Woodruff. His father, known as Deacon John Shepard (b. 1706, d. 17S0), was an influential and respected citizen of the town, owning considerable landed property, and for a number of years Chairman of the Board of Selectmen. William, the subject of this notice, received only a common-school education, limited at that time in the country towns to instruction in reading, writing, and arithmetic during ten or twelve weeks in the year. His brother David (b. 1744, d. 1819) graduated at Yale College in 1766, and was a surgeon in the Revolu- tionary army. It is said that William " gave early intimations of firmness and decision of character."* In 1754, at the early age of seventeen, he enlisted as a private soldier in defence of the frontier settlements against the incursions of the French and Indians. Two years later he was promoted to be sergeant, and accompanied the provincial troops to Canada. In 1758-59 he served as a lieutenant in the expeditions against Fort William Henry, Ticonderoga, and Crown Point. His name appears on the French war rolls at the Mass. State House as 2d lieut. of Capt. John Bancroft's company, serv- ing from 31 March to i Dec. 1759. From 22 Feb. to I Dec. 1760, he appears on the rolls as captain in command of a company from Westfield and vicinity. After a continuous service of six years, the hardships of which were almost without parallel, young Shepard returned to his native town and settled down quietly as a farmer. In 1760 he m. Sarah Dewey. Rev. Mr. Knapp, afterward his pastor, says of him at this time : — '• His morals and religious principles were not corrupted by his residence in the camp. As a citizen, he was then highly respectable * Funeral sermon by Rev. Isaac Knapp. iS Nov. 1S17. 442 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE and exemplary, employed in agricultural pursuits, affectionately attentive to his then growing family, and strongly attached to his domestic circle." In 1/74 he appears as one of the Committee of Correspond- ence, for the town of Westfield, to carry out the resolves of the Provincial Congress. In June, 1775, he was appointed a lieut.-col. in the regiment commanded by Col. Timothy Dan- ielson, then on duty in the camp at Roxbury. Of his ser- vices during the siege of Boston no records exist; but that they were of value is shown from the fact that on 4 May, 1776, he was promoted to be colonel of the 4th Mass. reg. He was subsequently, says the Rev. Mr. Knapp, "in the hazardous but successful enterprise of bringing off our troops from Long Island ; and when the British landed at Fell's Point, near New York, Col. Shepard was appointed by Wash- ington to guard the retreat of the American army. A few hundred under his command were to check the progress of the whole British army till the American forces could retire to a place of safety. The event proved that he was worthy of so important a trust. In executing this perilous task, he received a wound from a musket-ball which passed through his neck. In a few weeks, however, he so far recovered that he resumed the command of his regiment." He served under Washington during the retreat through New Jersey and the subsequent successes at Trenton and Princeton. Afterward he was detached to join the Northern army under Gates, and took part in the skirmishes and battles which led to the surrender of Burgoyne at Saratoga on 17 Oct. 1777. In the year 1 780 Shepard had command of a brigade, under La Fayette, and continued in that position until his retirement at the end of the war; but his rank was not changed, and he appears on the rolls during that period CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 443 as in command of the " 4th reg." The Rev. Mr. Knapp says : — " As to his military character, he was ever ready at the call of duty, to endure hardship and to face danger. He knew how to command and how to obey. Whatever orders he received from his superiors in office were sure to be executed with promptness and fidelity; and he could command the obedience of those under him without using any profane language. In all the temptations incident to the camp, he, through the grace of God, kept himself pure. He stood high in the esteem of his illustrious Commander-in- Chief. Few if any officers of his rank shared more largely in the confidence of Washington." At the close of the war Col. Shepard returned to his farm at VVestfield, but he was not allowed to rest on his laurels. He was elected to the lower branch of the General Court in 1785 and 1786. On 20 March, 1786, he was chosen major- general of the 4th division Mass. militia; and events soon occurred to justify the wisdom of the choice. It was largely due to the firm but conciliatory policy pursued by him that the insurrection, which had assumed such formidable propor- tions in the western part of the State during the latter part of the year 1786, was so promptly and effectually checked. A competent authority * has stated that, with the exception of the town of Boston and its immediate vicinity, the rebels had at that time (the summer and autumn of 1786) substantially the control of the State. The e.xtent of the disaffection was not known to the State authorities until the danger had passed, and until, order having been restored, the Legislature passed an act disqualifying for civil office those who had taken part in the rebellion. It was then found that in some towns there were not enough men untainted with rebellion to fill the * "Springfield in the Insurrection of 17S6 ;" a paper by Wm. L. Smith printed in the Proceedings of the Connecticut Valley Historical Society, 1876- 1881. 444 KIOGRArillCAL NOTICES OF THE neccssan' town offices, ami further legislation was required to cover such cases. The Supreme Judicial Court was to meet at Springfield on the fourth Tuesday in Sept. The rebels had alrcail}- preventcti the Court of Common Pleas from sitting in a number of the counties, and they now felt thcmsei\-es strong enough to prevent the administration of justice in the highest court. They accordingly gave notice that the Springfield term should not be held. To Gen. Shepard was intrusted the duty of protecting the court. He got together a force consisting of about six hundred militiamen and volun- teers, and took possession of the court-house. On the day appointed for the opening of the court the insurgents paraded w ith a much larger force than Gen. .Shepard hatl been able to collect, but the men were poorly armed and ill disciplined. Daniel Sha\-s, their leader, had made an honorable record as an officer in the war of the Revolution, but was poorly fitted to pla}' the part he had undertaken. He and his followers attempted to intimidate the court; but the judges were not wanting in firmness, and announced their readiness to attend to such business as might properly come before them. They were unable, however, to accomplish much, as the grand iur\- coukl not be got together, and no cases were read)- for trial. After sitting three days, the court adjourned. The rebels in the mean time endeavored to provoke a disturbance by marching and counter-marching past the court-house ; but Gen. Shepard kept his men well in hand, and could not be forced into a false position. .After the adjournment he moved his forces to the federal arsenal, as there was reason to be- lieve that the rebels would soon attempt to secure a supply of arms frc)m that source. -As no hostile demonstrations were made. Gen. Shepard dismissed the bulk of his forces and returned home. Some three months later, however (Jan. 1787), it was known that Shays and his council had deter- mined to seize the arsenal at .Springfield, and after getting a CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 445 full supply of arms and ammunition, make an attack on Bos- ton. Acting under the authority of the Secretary of War (Knox), Gen. Shcpard hastily collected his men again, and oc- cupied the arsenal before Shays was ready to act. The Gov- ernor and Council, recognizing the gravity of the situation, and aided by a loan from Boston capitalists, issued orders for raising and equipping 4,500 men. The chief command in the State was given to Gen. Benjamin Lincoln, whose orders were, first, to protect the sittings of the court at Worcester, and then to use his discretion as to further movements against the rebels. It does not come within the scope of this notice to follow the movements in detail ; it is sufficient to say that the military situation on 24 Jan. was as follows: * Gen. Shcpard was posted at the arsenal with about a thousand men. Shays had just reached Wilbraham on his march from Rutland. A part of Lincoln's command was less than two days' march in the rear of Shays. Luke Day, who, next to Shays, was per- haps the most influential leader among the insurgents, was at West Springfield with about 400 men and boys, said to be well armed and well drilled. He was within easy reach of the arsenal, as the river was frozen over. Eli Parsons, a Berk- shire leader, was in the north parish of Springfield, now Chicopee, with about 400 men. The total insurgent force was about 2,000. Shays sent a message to Day, from the town of Wilbraham, stating that he intended to attack the arsenal on the 25th. Day replied that he could not move on that day, but would be ready on the 26th. The reply fell into the hands of Gen. Shcpard ; and Shays, hearing nothing to the contrary, assumed that Day would co-operate with him. When therefore on the afternoon of the 25 th the rebel column was seen march- ing on the arsenal, Gen. Shepard was ready for the encounter. * Wm. L. Smith's paper; see note, ante, p. 443. 446 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE The report whicli he made to the Governor on the following day tells briefly what took place : — Springfield, 26 ]an. 1787. Sir, — The unhappy time has come in which we have been obliged to shed blood. Shays, who was at the head of about 1,200 men, marched yesterday afternoon about 4 o'clock toward the public buildings, in battle array. He marched his men in an open col- umn by platoons. I sent several times by one of my aids and two other gentlemen, Capts. Buffington and Woodbridge, to him to know what he was after, or what he wanted. His reply was, he wanted barracks, — barracks he would have, and stores. The answer was, he must purchase them dear, if he had them ! He still proceeded on his march, until he approached within two hundred and fifty yards of the arsenal. He then made a halt. I immediately sent Major Lyman, one of my aids, and Capt. Buffington, to inform him not to march his troops any nearer the arsenal on his peril, as I was stationed here by order of your Excellency and the Secretary- at-War for the defense of the publick property ; in case he did, I should surely fire on him and his men. A Mr. Wheeler, who ap- peared to be one of Shays' aids, met Mr. Lyman, after he had delivered my orders, in the most peremptory manner, and made answer that that was all he wanted. Shays immediately put his troops in motion, and marched on rapidly near one hundred yards. I then ordered Major Stephens, who commanded the artillery, to fire upon them ; he accordingly did. The two first shot he endeav- ored to overshoot them, in hope they would have taken warning without firing among them ; but it had no effect on them. Major Stephens then directed his shot through the centre of his [w] col- umn. The fourth or fifth shot put the whole column into the utmost confusion. Shays made an attempt to display his column, but in vain. We had one howit, which was loaded with grape-shot, which when fired gave them great uneasiness. Had I been disposed to destroy them, I might have charged upon their rear and flanks with my infantry and the two field-pieces, and could have killed the greater part of his whole army within twenty-five minutes. There was not a single musket fired on either side. I found three men dead on the spot, and one wounded, who is CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 447 since dead. One of our artillerymen, by inattention, was badly wounded. Three muskets were taken up with the dead, which were all deeply loaded. I enclose to your Excellency a copy of a paper sent to me last evening. I have received no reinforcements yet, and expect to be attacked this day by their whole force combined. I am, sir, with great respect, Your Excellencies [sic] most obedient, humble servant, \\'lLLL\.M ShEPARD. To His E.xcellency James Bowdoin, Esq The paper mentioned as enclosed was signed by Luke Day, and called upon the troops in Springfield to lay down their arms and return to their homes on parole. On the evening of the 25th Shays sent a flag of truce to Gen. Shepard, requesting that the bodies of " five " men killed before the arsenal be delivered to him. The General replied that he could not furnish him at that time with five bodies, as he had but four and one of them was not quite dead ; but if another attack were made on the arsenal he would fill an order for all the dead rebels desired. Shays re- treated to North Springfield during the night, and his men began to fall away from him. Gen. Lincoln reached Spring- field on the 27th, and immediately crossed the river to seize Day. Gen. Shepard moved up the east bank of the river to prevent a junction between Day and Shays. But the " whiff of grape-shot " in front of the arsenal had virtually ended the so-called " Shays rebellion." and there was no further organized resistance to the laws. On 5 Feb. 1787, the General Court recognized the value of Gen. Shepard's services by adopting unanimously in both branches the following resolve : — " That the General Court highly approve of the conduct of Major- General Shepard and the militia of his division for their exertions and spirited defence of the federal arsenal at Springfield against the .3aring attempts and attack of the insurgents." 44''^ BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE This v/as the last active military service performed by Gen. Shepard ; but in the years which followed he served by elec- tion or appointment in many important civil offices. He was appointed by the Governor of Massachusetts to treat with the Penobscot Indians, and by the National Government to treat with the Six Nations. He was chosen Presidential Elector for the first and second elections under the Constitution, 1788- 92. He served as a member of the Governor's Council for five years, — 1792 to 1796 inclusive. In 1797 he was chosen a member of the House of Representatives of the United States, serving there by successive re-elections for a period of six years. The last years of his life were spent quietly on his farm at Westfield, where he d. on 11 Nov. 1817, at the age of eighty. Gen. Shepard might well be taken as a typical soldier of the American Revolution, — brave, earnest, and God-fearing. The rough life of a camp in the critical period between boy- hood and manhood did not corrupt his morals. The sav- a"-ery of border warfare with the Indians did not affect the natural kindliness of his disposition. He appears to have had a certain grim humor of the Cromwellian kind ; and it may be said of him indeed that he was a captain after Cromwell's own heart. Hon. William G. Bates, in his historical address at the celebration of the two hundredth anniversary of the incor- poration of Westfield, said of him : — " His reputation for bravery was established in twenty-two battles ; his sound common-sense and his sympathy for suffering were dis- played not only in his military career, but during the course of a long and useful life. With none of the adventitious aids to advancement which usually raise men to posts of dignity, with but an imperfect education and no elocutionary power, his strong, active appreciation of the fitness of things, ... his character for bravery, uprightness,^ and intelligence commended him to the confidence of the people, CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 449 . . . and he fulfilled the expectations of those who honored him with their confidence." By his wife Sarah (Dewey) Shepard, who d. in 1S29, ae 87, he had — WiLLLVM. Turner, b. 16 Sept. 1762, who m. Lydia Derby, and had Rami, Fanny, and Chautucy. They lived in Hebron, N. Y. Charles? (This name does not appear in the town records.) Sarah, b. 17 Feb. 1767, m. William Eastman of Granby, Mass. Had no children. Noah. Nancy, b. 25 Oct. 17 71, d. St. Albans, Vt., 17 Feb. 1802; m. Hon. Seth Wetmore of St. Albans, i Feb. 1800, and had one son, William Shepard, b. St. Albans, 25 Jan. 1801, d. Newport, R. I., 16 June, 1862. William Shepard Wetmore, by his second wife, had George Peabody. Wareham, b. 29 Dec. 1773, d. 8 July, 1855. He m. (ist) Lucy Marsh of Norwich, Ct., and had four children; (2d) Jerusha Eastman of Granby, Mass., and had five children, of whom three are now living in Westfield ; namely, William, Lyman, and Henry. Lucy, b. 15 Dec. 1778, m. Ephraim Hastings of Heath, Mass., and had four daughters. Henry, b. 24 June, 1782, m. Huldah Shepard, a cousin, and had six children. Removed to Ohio. NOAH SHEPARD. Son of Gen. William, whom he succ. in 1832; was b. 20 Feb. 1769; d. 30 Aug. 1845. He was engaged in business at Otis, Mass., for a time; afterward he was a farmer. He m. (ist) Dolly Watson of Blanford, and had six sons and six daughters ; (2d) Sophia Dewey of Westfield, who d. in 1864. Eldest son of Gen. William ; was b. Westfield, Mass., 19 March, 1760; d. Canandaigua, N. Y., Jul}', 1S23. Com. ensign 450 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE in his father's (4th) reg. i Jan. 1781. He m. (ist) Mar- garet Moseley, and had two children; (2d) Fanny Moseley, and had three children. He removed to Canandaigua, N. Y. ; was deacon of the Congregational Church tliere, and High Sheriff of the county. His cliildren left no descendants. GEORGE PEABODY WETMORE. Grandson of Nancy (Shepard) Wetmore, and grand-nephew of Ensign William, whom he succ. in 1877; was b. London, Eng., 2 Aug. 1846; Yale University 1867, and A.M. 1871; Columbia College, LL.B. 1869; Trustee of the Peabody Museum of Natural History in Yale University; Presiden- tial Elector of the State of Rhode Island, 1880 and 1884; member of the State Committee to receive the Representa- tives of France on their official visit to the State of Rhode Island in Oct. and Nov., 1881 ; elected Governor of Rhode Island, I April, 1885, and for a second term, 7 April, 1886. Resides in Newport, R. I. Daniel Sftutc, ^.JB. He was the son of Rev. Daniel Shute, D.D. (H. U. 1743), who d. 1802, je. 80; was b. Hingham, Mass., about 1755; H. U. 1775. Com. surgeon in H. Jackson's (4th) reg. 14 April, 1782; afterward a physician in Hingham, where he d. 18 April, 1829. DANIEL SHUTE. Son of Dr. Daniel (H. U. 1812; M.D, 1815), a physician of Hingham, who d. there in 1839, and grandson of Surgeon Daniel, whom he succ. in 1852; b. South Hingham, 24 Oct. 1817. He is a shoemaker, and resides in South Hingham. He m. 16 March, 1843, Hannah, dau. of Joseph Milder. Children : D. Waldo, b. 30 April, 1845. Annie W., b. 16 Sept. 1855. CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 45 I He was b. Lebanon, Ct., in Jan. 1746; d. New Marlborough, Mass., 1816. He removed to Berkshire, Mass., in 1770. En- listed as a private in Sowles's Co. of Fellows's reg. in May, 1775 ; was ensign in Noah Allen's Co. of Asa VVhitcomb's reg. 1 Jan. -27 Nov. 1776, and present at Ticonderoga; com. lieut. 28 Nov. 1776; in M. Jackson's (8th) reg. in 1777-79; com. capt. in Smith's (13th) reg. 30 March, 1779; present at Bunker Hill, siege of Boston, capture of Burgoyne, Sullivan's R. I. campaign, and the battle of Monmouth. He had the duty of guarding Major Andre the night before that officer was executed. At the close of more than eight years' service he was the oldest captain in the Mass. line. He m. in Nov. 1766, Sarah, dau. of Seth Dean. Children — Rev. David. Betsey, who m. Aaron Adams. Sarah, m. Ezekiel Foster. Walter Dean, who m. a dau. of Rev. Simon Waterman of Plymouth, Ct. I-UCY P., m. Eliiha Lewis. Almira. Faxn\', m. Rev. Pitkin Cowles of Canaan, Ct. Laura, m. Rev. Jacob Catlin of New Marlborough. DAVID SMITH. D.D. Eldest son of Capt. Ebenezer, whom he succ. in 1846; b. Bozrah, Ct., 13 Dec. 1767 ; d. New Haven, Ct., 5 March, 1862 ; Y. C. 1795. He entered the continental army at an early age, and served during the last year of the war under his father. He was licensed to preach in Oct. 1796; pastor First Congregational Church, Durham, Ct., from 15 Aug. 1799, to Jan. 1832. In 1830 he received the degree of D.D. from Hamilton College. For many years he received youth into 452 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE his family and fitted them for college ; and besides his pro- fessional employments, cultivated a farm with good judgment and success, laboring with his own hands. He m. (I St) Betsey Marsh, by whom he had — David Marsh. He m. (2d) Catharine, dau. of Rev. Dr. E. Goodrich, and had two sons (who d. without issue) and three daughters. ALFRED t:THELBERT S.MITH. Son of David Marsh and grandson of Rev. David, whom he succ. in 1885; was b. Lewiston, Niagara Co., N. Y., 19 Dec. 1822. He was prepared for college, but entered the West Point Military Academy. After studying there for something over a year he resigned, and engaged in mer- cantile and manufacturing business. He has invented a great number of improvements in carriage-axles, railroad appli- ances, and other things, for which numerous patents have been granted. He resides in Bronxville, N. Y, His father, David Marsh Smith, was b. 11 Aug. 1789 ; d. 15 July, 1880 ; Y. C. 181 1. He was a clergyman in the Presbyterian Church, and a missionary to the Tuscarora Indians. In 1835 ^^ removed to Stockport, N. Y., and established the Hudson River Seminary. He was a man of much energy and of high character. He m. Clarissa Parker, of Litchfield, N. H. They had : Robert Walter, d. 6 Dec. 1881 ; Clarissa Ann, d. 24 Dec. 1844 ; Catharine C; Al- fred Ethelbert ; Elizabeth ^/., d. 27 May, 1861 ; David E., M.D. Alfred Ethelbert Smith m. 25 May, 1859, Julia, dau. of Charles Morgan. Children — Julia Ethel, b. 25 Oct. i860. Alfred Ethelbert, b. 21 Feb. 1864. Mabel Parker, b. ii Nov. 1868. Bertha Morgan, b. 6 Sept. 1871. Daisv, b. 14 March, 1874. CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 453 lEtJcncjrr SmitJ). In his application for a pension, filed in May, 1S18, he stated that he was then living in Woolwich, Lincoln Co., Me. ; that he was 66 years of age ; that he had served eight years in the war of the Revolution, having volunteered as a private in Sept. 1775 ; that he was com. lieut. I Jan. 1777, in M.Jackson's (8th) reg. ; served for a time at Boston; after- ward marched to Albany, N. Y. ; thence to Cherry Valley, Oswego County, to protect the inhabitants and property against the Indians and Tories; in Aug. 1777 served in the garrison at Fort Stanwi.x (now Rome, Oneida County), which successfully resisted a long siege of the forces under St. Leger; then rejoined his regiment in the Northern army, and went through the campaign against Burgoyne ; after- ward marched to Pennsylvania, and went into winter quar- ters at Valley Forge ; was in the battle of Monmouth and the storming of Stony Point under Gen. Wayne. He was com. capt. 8th reg. 16 Sept. 1780. His company was dis- banded in June, 1783 ; but he was transferred to H. Jackson's (4th) reg., and continued in the service until Dec. 1783. During the war of 1812 Pres. Madison appointed him lieut.- col. ; but he did not go into active service, owing to age and domestic considerations. He m. 27 Nov. i 794, at Woolwich, Me., Jennet McKown. She was his second wife. He d. at Woolwich, 4 Sept. 1824. She d. 13 Feb. 1854, se. 86. There is no record of any children. Soljn acitfi Smitf). He was b. Boston, 17 Dec. 1753 ; d. Portland, Me., 7 Aug. 1842; was 2d lieut. in Whitcomb's reg. at the siege of Bos- ton; was com. lieut. and adj. of Wigglesworth's reg. (13th) I Jan. 1777; com. capt. 12 Feb. 1778, and in Sullivan's 454 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE R. I. campaign and the battle of Monmoutli, in which he commanded Shepard's reg. and was brigade major; served in the Hght infantry at the siege of Yorktown, was sometime aide to La Fayette, and was conspicuous in the army for bravery and prudence. Sally, his wife, d. 2 Feb. 1837, ae. 68. He had four daughters and three sons. HENRY S.MITH. Eldest son of John Kilby, whom he succ. in 1846; b. Portland, Me., 12 Sept. 1794; d. Raymond Village, Me., 10 Jan. 1 87 1. By his wife, Jane E. Waite, b. 2 Nov. 1799, d. 18 July, 1864, he had — Jane E., b. 25 March, 1823, d. 26 March, 1S65. William H. Caroline W., b. 13 Sept. 1827, d. 29 Nov. 1871. Sarah A., b. 12 Oct. 1829. Mary A., b. 21 Feb. 1832. Harriet E., b. 4 Sept. 1834. Alice W., b. i i Sept. 1837. Nancy C, b. 17 Sept. 1839. Alonzo a., b. 25 Sept. 1843 ; private Co. F. 25th reg. Me. vols. ; d. at Arlington Heights, Washington, D. C, 9 Dec. 1862. WILLIAM HENRY SMITH. Eldest son of Henry, whom he succ. in 1881; was b. Poland, Me., 30 Nov. 1824; was a hotel-keeper, farmer, and cattle-broker in Windham, Me., until 1864, when he removed to Raymond Village, Me., to take charge of the Sawyer hotel, and where he has since lived. He has held office as Select- man and Assessor of the town, and as chairman of the Board of Trustees of the Raymond Village Union Parish. He is a justice of the peace and of the quorum, one of the leaders of the temperance reform movement in the town in 1874, CI^XINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 455 and a charter member of a number of social and charitable organizations. He m. 25 June, 1848, Joann I"" rye, dau. of John Moore of Lewiston, Me. Of Barre, Mass.; was com. i March, 1778, lieut. in R. Putnam's (5th) reg. ; afterward adjutant. Josiai) Smttf). He was b. in 1756; d. Wareham, Mass., 20 June, 1848. He joined the army in 1775; was com. lieut. 27 March, 1780, in Marshall's (lOth) reg.; in 6th reg. in 1783. He was present at Long Island, White Plains, Saratoga, Tren- ton, Stony Point (one of the forlorn hope), Monmouth, and Yorktown. The traitor Arnold once saved his life. Mr. Smith and others, being in pursuit of Indians, were surprised by their ambushed foes, when Arnold rode up, and grasping him by the shoulder rode off with him, mak- ing a successful escape, although his hat and clothing were pierced with balls fired by the Indians in pursuit. Every one of his comrades on this occasion was killed. Mr. Smith left one son. •Stlbanus ^mttl). He was the son of Nathan, and was b. Shirley, Mass., 1746; d. there 12 May, 1830. He was ist lieut. in a company of eighty men that responded to the Lexington alarm, 19 April, 1775; lieut. in Whitcomb's reg. May- Dec. 1775; in Little's reg. at the siege of Boston; com. capt. in Bigelow's (15th) reg. I Jan. 1777, and served in Sullivan's campaign in 1778; in sth reg. 1783. He was a carpenter by trade. 456 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE By his wife Agnes Moors of Boylston, Mass., who survived him, he had — SiLVANUS, b. 1 1 Oct. 1766, d. Feb. 20, 1847, m. Abigail Farley of Groton, and had Abbot, Alary Ann, and Cyntliia. Ruth, b. 28 Jan. 1768, d. unm. Hugh, b. 23 July, 1769. Lucy, b. 6 Sept. 1772, m. Gowan B. Neman, and had one daugh- ter and three sons. Daniel, b. 8 Sept. 1773. Jerusha, b. 30 Sept. 1775, d. 30 Dec. 1789. Agnes, b. 7 Nov. 1777. Simeon Smttl). Lieut in Patcrson's reg. in May -Dec. 1775; capt. in 1783; living on a government pension in New York, in 1820. Simeon Sprinfi. He was the son of William Spring of Newton ; b. 20 Jan. 1752; d. before 1812. Com. ensign in Shepard's (4th) reg. I Jan. 1777; lieut. 20 March, 1779; in Sullivan's R. I. cam- paign in 1778. ISficncKC Sprout. He was the son of Col. Ebcnezer Sprout of Middle- borough, where he was b. 9 Feb. 1752, and became, like his father, an uncommonly tall and portly man. In his youth he assisted his father upon the farm, and learned surveying. He entered the army as a captain, and soon became major in Cotton's reg., in which he served at the siege of Bos- ton. He held the same rank successively in Learned's and E. Francis's reg. in 1776; was com. lieut. -col. of Shepard's (4th) reg. I Jan. 1777; lieut. -col. commanding the I2th reg 29 Sept. 1778, and continued in service with credit to himself and the regiment to which he was attached, until the close of the war. He was in Glover's brigade at Trenton, Princeton, CIXCIXNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 457 and Monmouth, and in Sullivan's campaign in Rhode Island in 1778-79; and being a noted disciplinarian, was made an inspector of brigade under Steuben. He was second in com- mand of the detachment which under Gen. Robert Howe, in Jan. 1 78 1, quelled the mutiny of the N. J. line. After the war he m. Catharine, dau. of Commodore Whipple of Providence, where he engaged in mercantile business ; but being entirely unacquainted with mercantile affairs, he soon failed. In 1786 he was appointed a surveyor of Western lands; and in 1787, on receiving the same appointment from the Ohio Company, led a party of mechanics to the mouth of the Muskingum, where they arrived 7 April, 1788, and began the settlement of Marietta. Col. Sprout, who was six feet four inches high, and well proportioned, received from the Indians, on account of his tali and commanding person, the name of " Big Buck- eye," — the origin of the phrase now applied to natives of Ohio. He was fourteen years sheriff of Washington County (i 788- 1802), and was also colonel of militia, superintending during the Indian war the military posts at Belpre, Waterford, and Marietta. In disposition and temperament he was cheerful and animated ; exceedingly fond of company, quick at rep- artee, much attached to horses and dogs, and very kind- hearted. His later years were devoted to farming. He d. at Marietta in Feb. 1805. His descent from Robert'^ Sproaf (or Sprout), one of Cromwell's officers, who went to Jamaica, whence in 1660 he came to Scituate, Mass., purchased the homestead and other lands in Middleborough in 1 71 1, and d. there in Dec. 171 2, and who m. Elizabeth, dau. of Henry Sampson of Duxbury, was through Lieut. Ebenezer,^ b. 1676, d. 28 Sept. 1726 ; Col. Ebenezer^ (his father), b. 1718, d. 23 Jan. 1786. He was a colonel of militia, and was for some years a mem- ber of the General Court. Mary, sister of Ebenezer and Thomas, m. Lieut. Wm. Torrey. a member of the Cincinnati Society. 458 BIOGRAl'HICAL NOTICES OF THE His only child Sally m. Judge Solomon Sibley of Detroit. They had Ebenezer Sproai Sibley, Col. U. S. A., who served in the war with the Florida Indians, Mexican war, and war of the Rebel- lion ; and Henry II., b. Detroit, Feb. 181 1, governor of Minnesota. THOMAS SPROUT. Brother of Ebenezer, whom he succ. in 1809; b. i Oct. 1756; d. 3 Feb. 1833. He served some time in the army. He m. 8 Oct. 1788, Mary Briggs of Pembroke, Mass., and had — Nabbv, b. II July, 17S9, m. 10 May, 1S13, Peter H. Peirce. Earle. EARLE SPROUT. Son of Lieut. Thomas Sprout, whom he succ. in 1843; b. Middleborough, Mass., 5 Sept. 1800; d. 9 May, 1864. He m. 9 Feb. 1836, Bethania Weston. They had — Mary, b. 3 March, 1837. Henry Hamilton. Thomas Campbell, b. 20 March, 1849 (Y. C. 1871). HENRY HAMILTON SPROAT. Eldest son of Earle Sprout, whom he succ. in 1880; was b. Middleborough, Mass., 10 April, 1842 ; educated at Harvard; was appointed acting assistant surgeon 25th army corps, Feb. 1865, and after Lee's surrender was sent to Texas, where he was discharged in Sept. 1865, on account of sickness. He m. I 7 Sept. 1872, Catharine A., dau. of John Thorpe. They have — Eleanor B., b. ii March, 1874. aaflHam Stacg, He was b. in Salem, Mass., but removed to New Salem, Hampshire Count}', and occupied himself in fnrmin;:;. When CINCINNATI OK MASSACHUSETTS. 459 the news of the Lexington battle arrived, the mihtia company in which he was a lieut. assembled and awaited the orders of its officers. The captain, who was supposed to be tinctured with Toryism, showed some indecision, and the men were beginning to murmur, when Lieut. Stacy addressed them. Pulling his commission from his pocket, he said, " Fellow- soldiers, I don't know exactly how it is with the rest of you, but for one I will no longer serv.e a king that murders my own countrymen;" and tearing the paper in pieces, he trod them under his feet, and took his place in the ranks. The company was summarily disbanded, and reorganized on the spot. Stacy was unanimously chosen captain, and led a small but resolute band to Cambridge. He was com. major of Woodbridge's reg. in May; served in the battle of Bun- ker Hill; was com. lieut. -col. of Ichabod Alden's (7th) reg. I Jan. 1777; and was, 11 Nov. 1778, surprised and captured at Cherry Valley, N. Y., by a large force of Indians and Tories under Cols. Butler and Brant, and only escaped tor- ture at the stake, to which he had already been tied, by making the freemason's sign, v.hich was recognized by the officer in command. He remained a prisoner over four years, when he was exchanged and returned home. In 1789 he moved with his family to the Ohio, and settled at Marietta. Two of his sons, John and Philemon, joined in the settlement in Big Bottom, which was surprised by the Indians 2 Jan. 1791. John was killed; while Philemon, a lad of si.xteen years, was taken prisoner and died in cap- tivity. Col. Stacy, who was greatly esteemed for his many excellent qualities, d. at Marietta, 1804. His second wife was Mrs. Sheffield, a widow from Rhode Island. His youngest son, Gideon, settled in New Orleans, and estab- lished a ferry across Lake Pontchartrain, and was there lost. Col. Stacy left numerous descendants in Washington Co., Ohio. 460 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE SoJjn U. Stafford. He was com. ensign, 30 Nov. 1781 ; was in Mellen's (3d) reg. in 1783; was a surveyor or engineer after the war, and d. ab. 1812 without issue. An uncle, Capt. P. Stafford of Newport, R. I., commanded a privateer out of Boston in 1776. James, his brother, an officer in the Revolutionary navy, d. Trenton, N. J., 19 Aug. 1838. Samuel B.Stafford of Prince George Co., Md., a son of James and nephew of Ensign John R., applied for admission to the Society in 1873 ; but his claim for admission was refused, on the ground that he was not then and never had been a citizen of Massachu- setts, but had resided either in New Jersey or Maryland, where there were State Societies of the Cincinnati, to mem- bership in one of which he would be eligible. Effililliam Stcbrns. Of Dedham ; was a member of Paddock's Artillery Co. in Boston; com. 1st lieut. in Knox's artillery reg. i Jan. 1776; capt. in Lamb's reg. 12 Sept. 1778. He is said to have been one of the best shots with heavy ordnance in the army, and was in the principal battles from Bunker Hill to Yorktown. After the war he was engaged in mercantile pursuits in Cole- raine, Mass. I51)cncKr Stotferr. He was of Lynn, Mass., and d. there ab. 1806. Com. licut. in Greaton's (3d) reg. 1 Jan. 1777. By his wife, Mary Potter, he liad four daughters and two sons — George W. Eben. GEORGE W. STOCKER. Eldest son of Ebcnezcr, whom he succ. in 1848; b. L}'nn, 26 March, 1789; d. I-"almouth, Mc., 5 March, 1867. He was CINCINNATI OI'^ MASSACHUSETTS. 46 1 taken, while in a privateer during the war of 1812, and car- ried to HaHfax. On being released, he served in the U. S. army till 1817. About 1830 he removed to Falmouth, Me. He m. 30 Nov. 1834, Peace Allen of Cumberland. Their dau. Abbie, b. 24 Aug. 1835, m. Allen, and has George Lincoln, b. 22 April, 1865, the only male descendant of George VV. Sonatfjan =Stonc. He was b. New Braintree, Mass., 175 i ; d. Marietta, Ohio, 25 March, 1801. Francis, his father, who was a farmer and a tanner, lost his life while serving under Wolfe at Quebec. Jonathan, after making a two years' whaling voyage, enlisted soon after the battle of Lexington, as orderly-scrgt. in E. Learned's reg., in which he was made lieut. early in March, 1776; was com. paymaster of R. Putnam's (5th) reg. i Jan. 1777; transferred to Bigelow's (iSth) reg. in 1779; and com. capt. 25 April, 1781. He was present at the siege of Boston, and in the battles preceding the surrender of Burgoyne. After the war he settled on a farm in Brookfield, Mass. ; and in 1786-87 assisted Gen. Rufus Putnam in surveying Eastern lands. In 1788 he sold his farm, and bought two shares of the Ohio Company lands, taking his family and household goods to Marietta in 1789. In 1792 he was appointed treas- urer of Washington County. His farm, which was opposite and a little below the mouth of the Little Kenawha, he left to his son Col. John Stone. He m. in 1776, Susannah, dau. of Daniel Matthews. Her mother was a sister of Gen. Rufus Putnam. He left numerous descendants in Ohio. Among his children were — Benjamin Franklin, of Belpre. Samuel, of Licking County. Rufus Putnam, who settled on a farm near McConnelsville. 462 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE :isratf)anicl raham'^ Preble of Scituate, Mass., 1636, and Judith, dau. of Nathaniel Tilden of Scituate (Abraham moved to York, Me., then called " Gorgeana," or " Agamenticus," about 1641, and was the first mayor), was through Abraham^ b. York, 1642, d. 14 Oct. 1 714, who m. Hannah Kelly, 1685 ; Samuel^ b. York, 19 April, 1699, d. 1746, who m. Sarah Muchmore from the Isles of Shoals, 1725 ; Col. Esaias* b. York, 26 April, 1742, d. 1813, who m. 30 June, 1766, Lydia, dau. of Edward Ingraham ; Judge William Pitt^ (his father), b. York, 27 Nov. 1783, d. 11 Oct. 1857, who m. 7 Sept. 1 8 10, Nancy Gale, eldest dau. of Lieut. Joseph Tucker and his wife Mary, dau. of Capt. John Stone. Capt. John Stone was a grandson of Abraham and Hannah Preble. William Pitt Preble, son of Judge Preble, m. i July, 1846, Harriet Tracy, dau. of John Mussey of Portland. Children — Edith, b. Portland, 22 April, 1847, d. 29 Nov. 1848. John Mussey, b. Portland, 19 Dec. 1850, d. 4 Nov. 1851. Henry, b. Portland, 25 April, 1853. William Put, b. Portland, i Oct. 1854. Wallace, b. Portland, 1 7 Aug. 1 85 7. Ernest, b. Portland, 5 June, i860, d. 8 Oct. i860. ffi2B(lHcim JTutror. He was b. Boston, 28 March, 1750; d. there 8 July, 18 19; H. U. 1769. Deacon John Tudor, his father (b. near Exeter, Eng., 18 Sept. 1709; d. Boston, 18 March, 1795, m. Jane Varncy), was for about forty-two years Treasurer of the Second (Old North) Church, Boston, and d. in 1796, st. 86. He was by trade a baker, and was an honorable and useful citizen. William, after his graduation, studied law with John Adams; was admitted to the bar, 27 July, 1772, and became CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 48 7 eminent in the profession. As colonel and judge-advocate- general of the army, he was, from 29 July, 1775, to 1778, at- tached to the staff of the Commander-in-Chief, after which he resumed practice in his native city. In 1777 he conducted with marked ability the defence of Col. David Henley, who had charge of the Saratoga prisoners and who was arrested on the accusation of Gen. Burgoyne for military oppression, and tried by a court-martial. Henley was acquitted, in spite of the eloquence of Burgoyne, who did his utmost to secure a conviction.* Col. Tudor was a member of the Mass. House of Representatives, 1791-95, and of the Senate 1801-3; Secretary of the Commonwealth, 1808 and 1809; Vice-Pres. of the Society of the Cincinnati in i8i 1-19, and delivered the 4th of July oration before that body in 1790. He was one of the founders of the Mass. Historical Society; and the " first meeting " was held at his house in Court Street, on 24 Jan. 1 791. He delivered a spirited oration on the Boston Massacre, 5 March, 1779, and a discourse before the Mass. Charitable Fire Society in 1798. Col. Tudor m. 5 March, 1778, Delia Jarvis, who d. Washington, D. C, 17 Sept. 1843, ae. 90. They had three sons and two daughters, — one of whom m. Robert Hallowell, Gardiner ; the other m. Charles Stewart, afterward commodore U. S. N. WILLIAM TUDOR. Eldest son of William, whom he succ. in 1820; b. Boston, 28 Jan. 1779; d. Rio Janeiro, 9 March, 1830; H. U. 1796. He founded in Dec. 1814, and for some time edited, the * Henley, who was an e.xcitable man, wounded one of the prisoners, named Reeve, who had been insolent to him. Col. Tudor in his closing argument said : " It has been said that Reeve's behavior was only firm, not insolent. Brit- ish firmness often so nearly approaches insoience that Europeans as well as Americans have been very apt to confound them." A memoir of Col. Tudor, written by his son, is printed in the Coll. Mass. Historical Society, 2d ser. vol. viii. pp. 285-325 4o8 BIOGRArillCAL NOTICES OF THE " North American Review," which was, for nearly half a cen- tury, the leading American critical periodical. He acted for a time as the agent of his brother Frederic, founder of the ice-traffic, and was afterward engaged in other commercial transactions in Europe. He was one of the founders of the Boston Athenaeum in 1807, and took the initiative in the erection of Bunker Hill Monument. He was a member of the Mass. Legislature in 1810, 1815, 1816, 1817, and 1820; in 1823 was app. consul at Lima; and in 1827 was app. cliarg^ d'affaires at the court of Brazil, where he negotiated a treaty, — his last public service. In 1809 he delivered the 4th of July oration in Boston, and five years afterward he delivered an address before the Phi Beta Kappa Society at Cambridge on " The Aborigines," which was printed in the second vol- ume of the " North American Review." Besides his con- tributions to periodical literature, he was the author of " Letters on the Eastern States," " Life of James Otis," and " Gebel Teir." A notice and portrait of William Tudor, Jr., will be found in the Proceedings of the Mass. Historical So- ciety, vol. i. pp. 333-337- FREDERIC TUDOR. Brother of William, whom he succ. in 1834; b. 4 Sept. 1783; d. 6 Feb. 1864. " His life, from his earliest manhood, was one of great intellectual as well as commercial activity. As the founder of the ice-trade, he not only commenced an enterprise which added a new subject of export and a new source of wealth to our country, — imparting a value to that which had no value before, and affording lucrative employment to great numbers of laborers at home and abroad, — but he established a claim, which will not be forgotten in the history of commerce, to be regarded as a benefactor of mankind, by sup- plying an article not of luxury only for the wealthy and the well, but of unspeakable comfort and refreshment for the sick and en- CINCINNATI OP' MASSACHUSETTS. 489 feeble;! in tropical climes, and which has already become one of the necessities of life for all who have enjoyed it in any clime. "As a cultivator of fruits and flowers, and trees too, at Nahant, he not only placed himself in the front rank of horticulturists, but he gave a signal instance of how much could be done by ingenuity, perseverance, and skill in overcoming the most formidable obstacles of soil and climate, and obtaining a victory over Nature herself." * FREDERIC TUDOR. Eldest .son of the preceding, whom he succ. in 1874; was b. Boston, Mass., 1 1 Feb. 1845 ; H. U. 1867. He is a civil en- gineer, devoting himself especially to the sanitary branches. He m. 24 June, 1867, Louisa, adopted dau. of Joseph Simes. Children — Frederic, b. 26 March, 1869. Marie Louise, b. 25 July, 1870. Emma Cecilia, b. 25 March, 1872. EuPHEMiA, b. 7 Sept. 1875. Rosamond, b. 20 June, 1878. He was b. m that part of Stoughton, Mass., now called Sharon, in 1738, being the youngest of eight children of his parents, seven of whom were sons. His father died when he was quite young, and he was apprenticed to a tanner in Dor- chester named Withington. At sixteen he went to Easton, and labored on a farm until after his marriage in 1762, when he removed to Chesterfield. He served two or three years as a private soldier in the French war (1757-63), and during two or three winters kept a district school in Easton. On the breaking out of the Revolutionary war he was a lieut. of militia. Joining the army in Cambridge as major of * From remarks of Hon. Robert C. Winthrop, in announcing his death to the Mass. Historical .Society. Proceedings, vol, vii. pp. 304- J07. 490 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE Fellows's reg. in Ma)', 1775, he with 300 men went to Light- house Island, 31 July, 1775; attacked the British guard, which was killed or captured; and burned all the buildings. Com. lieut.-col. of Ward's reg. 4 Nov. 1775 ; of John Bailey's reg. I Nov. 1776; col. nth reg. 7 July, 1777 ; transferred to the loth, 8 Jan. 1 781, and to the 6th on 30 Oct. 1782. He served at the siege of Boston and in the campaign against Burgoyne, and was at the battle of Monmouth, w^here he had a horse killed under him; was app. inspector of Paterson's brigade, 29 March, 1778; and at the close of the w^ar was made a brig.-gen. by brevet. After the war he returned to Chester- field, which he represented in the Mass. Legislature. With Gen. Rufus Putnam he originated and founded the " Ohio Company," and made the first surveys of lands northwest of the Ohio in 1786. Returning from this duty he actively as- sisted Gen. Shepard in quelling Shays's rebellion. He re- moved with his family to Marietta, O., 9 Aug. 1788; engaged actively in promoting the plans and interests of the Ohio Company, and was a justice of the quorum of the first civil court in the Northwest Territory from 9 Sept. 1788, to his death in June, 1792. He m. at Easton, 18 Nov. 1762, Huldah White, who d. Spring- field, now Putnam, O., 21 Feb. 1812. They had — Anselm. Edward White, brig.-gen. of Ohio vols., ser\'ing under Harrison in 1812, who d. Gallipolis, O., 1823. Col. Benjamin, d. Putnam, O., 1815, who left a son, Eihvard U'., of Putnam, O. RowENA, m. Winthrop Sargent, and d. Marietta, O., i 790. SopHLA, m. Nathaniel Wyllis of Connecticut, d. Oct. 1 789. Minerva, m. Col. Ichabod Nye, d. Marietta, April, 1836. SInscIm JTupprr. Eldest son of Gen. Benjamin Tuppcr; b. Chesterfield, Mass., 1763; d. Marietta, O., 25 Dec. 1808. He was com. CINCINNATI OK MASSACHUSETTS. Jgi lieut. and adj. in his father's (i ith) reg. 26 Sept. 1780 ; served through the war, and removed to Ohio in 1788. Jonatt)an Curnrr. He was b. Scituate, Mass., 1743 ; d. there Nov. 1821 ; lieut. in Marshall's (lOth) reg. 1777; com. capt. 4 Oct. 1780; in Putnam's (jth) reg. in 1783. He received a pension from the Government. His descent from Humphrey^ Turner of Plymouth, 1628, after- ward of Scituate, d. 1673, and Lydia Garner, was through yi?/;«,^ Sen., b. England, m. 12 Nov. 1645, Mary, dau. of Jonathan Brewster; Jonathan^ b. 20 Sept. 1646, who m. Martha, dau. of Elisha Bes- bedge ; Jesse* (his father). PEREZ TURNER. Eldest son of Perez (b. 8 Dec. 1772), son of Jonathan, whom he succ. in 1827; was b. Scituate, 12 June, 1804; d. there 17 Nov. 1878. He was a farmer, and lived in Scituate. His son John Henry Turner (b. 7 Feb. 1835, d. 13 Aug. 1883), served in the war of the Rebellion as a private in the 43d Mass. vols. GEORGE HENRY TURNER. Eldest son of John Henry; succ. his grandfather Perez in 1885; was b. Scituate, 13 Aug. 1855. He is a shoemaker, and lives in Norwell, Mass. He m. 5 Oct. 1881, Caroline E., dau. of George H. Briggs. They have — Carrie Louisa, b. 8 Oct. 1883. Jttarlfirs JTurncc. He was the son of Capt. Marlboro and Mary (Curtis) Turner, of Hanover, Mass.; was bapt. 30 July, 1757, and was 492 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE a pensioner, living in 1824. Ensign in Bailey's (2d) reg. i Jan. 1777; com. lieut. 10 Aug. 1781 ; in 5th reg. in 1783. His descent from Thomas^ Turner of Hingham, 1639, who m. 6 Jan. 1652, Sarah, dau. of Thomas Hyland, and d. Nov. 1688, was through Thomas,"^ oi 'S>c\Xx\dXe, 1680; Cakb^ b. 1691 ; Capt. Marlboro^ (his father). Marlbry m. 7 Jan. i 790, Deborah Stockbridge. i^Elcfl JTurncr. He was of Scituate ; was lieut. and quartermaster in Mar- shall's (lOth) reg., served four years, and d. before 1812. JTljomas SJTurncr. He was com. capt. in Col. G. Bradford's (14th) reg. 8 May, 1776; capt. in H. Jackson's (i6th) reg. 24 April, 1779; sub- sequently transferred to Brooks's (7th) reg. and served to the end of the war. He became a member of the N. Y. Society in 1787, but subsequently removed to Charleston, S. C, and joined the S. C. Society. His descent from ^/(';;^//;/rr* of Scituate was through Thomas'' and Sarah Hyland ; Thomas ° and Hannah, dau. of Edward Jack- son ; Ephraun* (his father), b. 1693, and Dorothy Fay. lEItjaf) Vom. He was the son of Elijah and Sarah (Bent) Vose ; was b. Milton, Mass., 24 Feb. 1744; d. there 19 March, 1S22. Cap- tain in Heath's, afterward Greaton's (24th) reg. early in 1775 ; present at the siege of Boston, and promoted to major; com. lieut. -col. of the reg. of his brother Joseph (ist), 2r Feb. 1777, and served with credit through the war, in which four of the brothers were engaged. Moses and Bill, j'ounger brothers, both held responsible stations, the latter being a paymaster. CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 493 His descent from Rol'ert^ Vose of Dorchester, who d. 16 Oct. 1683, ■£.. 84, was through Edwani^^ who d. 29 Jan. 1716, k. 80, and wife Abigail ; Nathaniel^ b. 17 Nov. 1672, d. Oct. 1753, who m. 1696, Mary Belcher; Elijah* (his father), b. 1707. He had two children, Elijah and Rui h ; the latter m. Eben Breed of Charlestown. ELIJAH VOSE. Eldest son of Elijah, whom he succ. in 1822; b. Milton, Mass., I Jan. 1790; d. Boston, Mass., 12 Aug. 1856. He was a successful merchant in Boston for many years ; President and active member of the Mass. Horticultural Society. HENRY VOSE. Eldest son of Elijah and Rebecca (Bartlett) Vose, whom he succ. in i860; b. 21 May, 1817; d. 17 Jan. 1869; H. U. 1837. Lawyer in Springfield, Mass.; member of Mass. Legis- lature, 1857, 1858; Justice of Superior Court, 1859-69. Mr. Vose left no sons. One of his daughters, Mary, m. C. P. Greenough of Boston, and has two sons, Henry Vose and Alfred. There are no other grandsons. FRANCIS VOSE. Brother of Hon. Henry Vose, whom he succ. in 1870; b. 1821; d. 29 Sept. 1880. He was a merchant in New York, and also held large interests in Florida. JJoscpi) IJosr. He was b. Milton, 7 Dec. 1739; d. there 22 May, 1816, on the estate which had been in possession of the family since 1654. He was chosen col. of the district militia in Nov. 1774, and was also major of Heath's Suffolk reg. On the night of 20 July, 1775, Major Vose, with a company of sixty men, " set fire to the light-house in Boston harbor, bringing off a field-piece, a swivel, and the lamps. The boats of a 494 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE British man-of-war, which lay within a mile, pursued the ad- venturous party ; but they were in whaleboats and escaped by rowing." Carpenters were sent down under a guard of thirty marines to repair the light-house ; but on the evening of 30 July Major Tupper attacked them with a party from Squantum and Dorchester, killed the lieutenant of the ma- rines and one man, and captured all the others, fifty-three in number. Major Vose was com. lieut.-col. of Greaton's (24th) reg. 4 Nov. 1775, and accompanied it after the evacuation of Boston to Canada; com. col. 1st Mass. reg. 21 Feb. 1777, and joined the main army under Washington in New Jersey a few weeks later; was present at Monmouth, and in Sulli- van's campaign in Rhode Island in 1778; appointed col. (17 Feb. 178 1) of a regiment of light infantry, with which he took part in the siege of Yorktown. At the close of the war he was made brig.-gen. by brevet. He passed the rest of his days upon his farm in Milton. He m. 5 Nov. 1761, Sarah, dau. of Josiah Howe. Children — S.4RAH, b. 29 July, 1762, m. Dr. George Osgood of Andover. Margaret, b. 4 Nov. 1763, m. Ezekiel Savage. Dolly, b. 20 Nov. 1765, m. Davis Sumner. Nancy (twin with Dolly), m. Elisha Sumner, and had Gen. Ed- win Vose. Solomon, b. 22 Feb. 1768, d. Augusta, 11 Aug. 1S09. Naomi, b. 31 Oct. 1769, m. Joseph Heath. Joseph, b. 19 Oct. 1771, d. unm. Aug. 1825. Isaac D., b. 22 Oct. 1773. Elijah, b. 28 July, 1775. Elizabeth Eliot, b. 2 Oct. 1782. Josiah Howe, b. 8 Aug. 1784, d. New Orleans, 15 July, 1845. ISAAC D. VOSE. Third son of Joseph, whom he succ. in 1816; b. Milton, 22 Oct. 1773; d. a widower without issue at Norfolk, Va., 2 Oct. 1835. CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 495 RUFUS CHANDLER VOSE. , Son of Solomon and Eliza P. (Chandler) Vose, and grand- son of Col. Joseph; succ. Isaac D. Vose in 1837; t). 29 June, 1798; merchant at Augusta, Me.; adj.-gen. of the State in 1838, and d. about 1842. He m. Mary, dau. of Judge Bridge of Augusta, by whom he had six children. JAMES GARDINER VO.SE, D.D. Son of Col. Josiah H. and grandson of Col. Joseph, succ. R. C. Vose in 1865. He was b. Boston, Mass., 3 March, 1830 ; educated Yale College, Andover Theological Seminary, and University of Berlin, Germany: ordained a Congregational minister, 20 Oct. 1857; Professor of Rhetoric at Amherst College, 1856-65 ; Acting Pastor in Dorchester, Mass., 1865 ; since then pastor of the Beneficent Congregational Church, Providence, R. I. He received the degree of D.D. from Brown University, 1874; is Trustee of Wheaton Seminary, Norton, Mass. ; also of Phillips Academy, Andover, Mass. His descent horn Rodcrf^ Vose oi Lancaster Co. Eng., b. 1599, who settled in Milton, Mass., July, 1654, and d. 16 Oct. 1683, was through Edtvard,^ b. 1636, d. 1716; Nathaniel^ b. Milton, 17 Nov. 1672, (1. 9 Oct. 1753, who m. Mary Belcher; Elijah,* b. Milton, I Jan. 1708, d. 5 April, 1802, who m. Sarah Bent in 1729 ; G&n. Joseph,^ b. 26 Nov. 1738, d. 22 May, 1816, who m. Sarah, dau. of Josiah Howe of Dorchester, 27 Dec. 1761; Co\. Josiah Howe^ U. S. A. youngest, son of Gen. Joseph, b. Milton, 8 Aug. 1784, d. New Orleans, 15 July, 1845, who m. Charlotte, dau. of Hawkes Gushing of Scituate, 3 May, 1808. Gol. Josiah H. was a merchant in .-Vugusta, Me.; entered the army in the war of 181 2, with the rank of capt., and at his death was col. of the 4th U. S. infantry. James G. m. 19 Aug. at Greenfield, Mass., Charlotte Elizabeth, dau. of Hon. Franklin Ripley. Children — Charlotte Ripley, b. 25 Aug. 1857. 496 l!lli(,'.KA!'IIlCAL iNOTICES OF THE Sar.\h Fr.\-\klin, b. 8 Dec. 1S59. JosuH Howe, b. 9 April, 1862. Eliz.\beth Euot, b. 3 May, 1868. Robert Heixry, b. 27 June, 1870. Cljomas Tost. He was the son of Jonathan am,! Man' Vose, of Milton; was b. 8 May, 1753; and d. Thoniaston, Me., :!8 Dec. iSiO. He was com. 2d lieut. in Thomas Pcirce's company of Grid- ley's artillery reg. 8 May, 1775; transferred, i Jan. 1776, to Knox's artillery reg.; com. 1st lieut. Crane's artillery reg. I Jan. 1777; capt. (same reg.) 2 Dec. 1778; was one of the officers who guarded Major Andre prior to that officer's exe- cution, and was in many of the prominent battles of the war, continuing in the service six months after the disbanding of the army. He then entered into mercantile business in W'atcrtown, Mass., with his companions-in-arms. Major Daniel Jackson and Capt. John George, but removed in 1787, at the solicitation of his friend Gen. Knox, to Thomaston, Me., where he was associated in business with the General until 1804. He superintended the building of the Knox Mansion, attended at the bedside of his dying friend, and was one of the appraisers of his estate. Capt. Vose was three years sur\c\or of the port of Thomaston, and superintended in 1809 the erection of the fort on George's River, Me. He was a man of fine physical development and remarkable strength ; and possessed good business ability and judgment. His descent from Robert'^ I'osc, who came from England and settled in Milton in 1654, was through Thomas,- who came from Eng- land with his father and who m. in 1641, Waitstill Wyatt ; TJionuis,^ b. 22 Feb. 1667, m. 28 May, 1695, Hannah Babcock ; /('//(///w/; * (his father), b. .Aug. 1704, d. 15 Sept. 1775, who m. Mary Field. He m. 1 784 Sarah, dau. of John, and sister of Capt. John George of Quincy, who d. Thomaston, Me., 20 Feb. 1835, ^- 79- Children — CINCINNATI UF MAS.SACllUSKTTS. 497 ]\Iary, b. 26 Sept. 1785, d. 2 Jan. 1S54, m. 16 May, 18 ii, Capt. Archibald Robinson. Sarah, d. 1793. Margaret, d. 1793. Lucy, b. 23 April, 1791, m. 30 Jan. 1815, Capt. Wm. Henderson, of Gushing, Me., d. 19 July, 1825. Thomas, d. 1793. Sarah George, b. 4 Oct. 1794, m. Dea. James Partridge, d. 17 Dec. 1875. Thomas P., b. 13 Sept. 1796, d. unm. 10 May, 1832. Wii.UAM, b. 24 Dec. 1798, d. Dec. 1875, unm. James F., b. 23 March, 1800, d. 15 May, 1878, m. 10 Jan. 1833, Sophia Andrews of Warren, Me. Children : Lucy H., b. 6 June, 1833, m. John VV. Mathews, 25 Nov. 185 1, d. 10 Oct. 1884; Thomas S. ; Oliver A., b. 25 Sept. 1837, m. Cordelia M. Watts, 12 Jan. 1861 ; Maria A.,h. 25 March, 1842, m. Albert P. Piper, 26 Dec. 1873 ; Benjamin F., b. 22 Aug. 1S46, d. 27 April, 1 84 7. THOMAS S. VOSE. Eldest son of James F. and grandson of Capt. Thomas, whom he succ. in 1876; was b. Thomaston, Me., 12 March, 1836. He is a blacksmith, and resides in Thomaston. Unm. Sosrpl) aJDIalcs. He was of Lancaster, and was living on a government pension in 1 820; ensign in Marshall's (loth) reg. ; com. licut. 4 Oct. 1780, and was in the 6th reg. in 1783. IStrtoartr amalfecr. He was com. a licut. and paymaster in Shcpard's (4th) reg. in 1777; was retired i Jan. 1783, after serving through the entire period of the war; and d. in 1802. He m. Abigail, sister of James Lovell, who survived him. 32 498 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE He enlisted as sergt. in N. Watkins's Co. of E. Phinney's rag. in 1775; was com. ensign, 15 April, 1776; lieut. in 12th reg. 1777; capt. 15 July, 1779; in 2d reg. (Sprout's) in 1783, and served to the end of the war. He d. Windsor, Mass., in Jan. 1834. Jlojsrplj SSaai'tiiucU. He was b. Salem, Mass., 29 Jan. 1760; d. Rumford Point, Me., 5 March, 1849. After some years' service in the army, during which he took part in several battles, he was com. ensign in (Vose's ist) reg. 18 Jan. 1782. He was attached to the corps of La Fayette, and was presented with a sword by the Marquis at the close of the war. He always referred with pride to the fact that he welcomed Washington at the Theological Seminary in behalf of the people of Andover, when the President visited that town. He m. Sarah, dau. of Moses Harrington, D.D. They had — Joseph H., b. New Salem, N. H., 3 Oct. 1795, d. Hanover, Me., 2 March, 1849, m. Lydia Howard, dau. of Asa Howard of Temple, N. H. He was in the war of 181 2. MosES, b. ab. 1798, m. Mrs. . Brown, Warren, R. I. He en- listed as a private in the war of 1812, but on his arrival al Platts- burg the general commanding took him as a private waiter. He was afterward a sea-captain, and was supposed to have been murdered in New Orleans, i March, 1832. WILLIAM H. WARDWELL. Son of Joseph H. and grandson of Lieut. Joseph, whom he succ. in 1857, was b. Rumford Corner, Me., 7 March, 1820. He was educated at Rumford and at the Bethel Hill Academy, Me. He is a portrait-painter and a photographer, and resides in Boston. CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 499 He enlisted as a corporal in Fernald's Co. of E. Phinney's reg in 1775; was promoted to sergeant 17 April, 1776; was com. ensign in S. Brewer's (i2th) reg. in March, 1777; lieut. in Sprout's (12th) reg. 7 April, 1779, and served through the war, at the close of which he was in Vose's (ist) reg. JJamcs azuarrcit, Jr. He was the son of James and Mercy (Otis) Warren, of Plymouth; b. 18 Oct. 1757; d. unm. in Plymouth, Mass., 6 Aug. 1821 ; H. U. 1776. His mother was a sister of the celebrated orator James Otis, and was a talented and versatile writer ; his father was President of the Third Mass. Provincial Congress, 1775, suc- ceeding Gen. Joseph Warren, and was a member of the Navy Board; maj.-gen. of the Mass. militia; paymaster-general of the forces at Cambridge, Mass. ; Speaker of the Mass. House of Representatives ; and Presidential Elector, 1803. James, Jr., was a lieut. in the Revolutionary navy, 1776- 80; served on the frigate "Alliance;" lost a leg at the time of the engagement between the " Bon Homme Richard " and the " Serapis," in which the "Alliance" took part. After the war he was for some years postmaster at Plymouth. He was adm. to the Mass. Society of the Cincinnati in 1796. His descent from Richard'^ U'arnii of Greenwich, Eng., b. 15S0, d. 1628, who came to Plymouth in the " Mayflower," 1620, m. Mrs. Elizabeth Marsh, ne'e Juatt, was through Nathaniel ^ b. Plymouth, d. there 1667, m. Sarah Walker, Nov. 1645 ; James, ^ b. Plymouth, 7 Nov. 1665, d. there 30 May, i 715, m. Sarah, dau. of Edward Doty, June, 1687 ; James* b. Plymouth, 14 April, 1700, d. there 2 July, 1757, m. Penelope, dau. of Hon. Isaac Winslow, 30 Jan. 1724; James!' (his father), b. Plymouth, 28 Sept. (9 Oct. N. S.) 1726, d. 500 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE there 28 Nov. 1808, H. U. 1745, m. 14 Nov. 1754, Mercy Otis, dau. of Hon. James Otis of Barnstable. HENRY WARREN. Third brother of Lieut. James, whom he succ. in 1825, his two older brothers, Winslow and Charles, having died previously without issue; b. Plymouth, 21 March, 1764; d. there 6 July, 1828. He was for many years Collector for the District of Plymouth, and was eminent for his social qualities and his hospitality. He m. 8 Nov. 1791, Mary, dau. of Pelham ^\'inslow of Marshfield, and granddaughter of Gen. John Winslow, a direct descendant of Gov. Edward Winslow; she d. March, 1S58. They had seven sons and two daughters. WINSLOW WARREN, M D. Eldest son of Henry, whom he succ. in 1829; b. in Ply- mouth, 14 Jan. 1795; H. U. 1813; M.D. (University of Pennsylvania) 1817; practised medicine in Plymouth; d. there 10 June, 1870. Vice-Pres. of the Mass. Society of the Cincinnati, 1866-70. He was a fine classical scholar, a thorough student, distinguished in his profession, and warmly interested in educational and social reforms. He m. Margaret, dau. of Dr. Zaccheus Bartlett of Plymouth, 6 Jan. 1835. They had — - Mary Ann, b. 24 Nov. 1S36. Winslow, b. 20 March, 1838. Caroline Bartlett, b. 18 Dec. 1841. WINSLOW WARREN. Only son of Dr. Winslow and Margaret (Bartlett) Warren ; succ. his father in 1870; b. Plymouth, 20 March, 1838 ; H. U. 1858; LL.B. Harvard Law School, 1861; is a counsellor-at- law in Boston, and resides in Dedham, Mass. ; U. S. Commis- y.^.c CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 5OI sioner; member of the Mass. Historical Society; ASSIST. Secretary of the Mass. Society of the Cincinnati, 1877- 78, and its Treasurer from 1878 to 1887, when he was chosen Vice-President. He took a prominent part in the independent political movement of 1884, and has since been identified with the efforts for a reform of the tariff, the civil service, and the ballot. He m. 3 Jan. 1S67, Mary L., dau. of Spencer Tinkham of Boston. Children — Charles, b. 9 March, 1868. Margaret, b. 16 Dec. 1869. Mary Lincoln, b. 14 Jan. 1873. WiNSLOW, b. 1 June, 187S. Jioljn 2Marrcn. He was an ensign in Bigelow's (15th) reg. ; was com. lieut. in R. Putnam's (5th) reg. I9 May, 1782; and was living on a government pension in New York in 1820. JOHN COLLINS WARREN, M.D. Eldest son of Dr. John and Abigail (Collins) Warren, and nephew of Gen. Joseph Warren; was admitted in 1854, under the rule adopted in May of that year, having been elected an honorary member in 1847.* He was b. Boston, I Aug. 1778; d. there 4 May, 1856; H. U. 1797. He studied med- icine with his father, a distinguished practitioner, and in the hospitals of London and Paris; began practice in Boston in 1802, and became especially eminent as a surgeon. He was the first to use (in 1846) ether in surgical operations. He was assistant professor of anatomy and surgery in Harvard University in 1806-15; full professor in 1815-47, and after- ward emeritus professor; was one of the founders of the * See AliiLils of the Society, ante, p. 6t. 502 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE Mass. General Hospital in 1820, and principal surgeon in daily attendance until his death ; was also a founder of the McLean Asylum for the Insane; was President of the Mass. Medical Society in 1832-36, and later of the Boston Society of Natural History, and was a member of the principal scientific bodies in America and Europe. He devoted much of his later life to the natural sciences ; and his collection of specimens in comparative anatomy, osteology, and pale- ontology, one of the largest and most valuable private col- lections in the world, included the most perfect skeleton of a mastodon which has been discovered. He was an ardent friend of temperance, and was for many years President of the Mass. Temperance Society. He was chiefly instru- mental in founding, and was from 1828 associate editor of, the " Boston Medical and Surgical Journal," and wrote and published many treatises upon medical and other subjects. His " Life, with Autobiography and Journals," by Edward Warren, was published in two vols, in i860. His descent from John ^ Warren, who came to Charlestown in 1630, and who was probably the father of Pcier^ b. 1628, d. Bos- ton, 15 Nov. 1704, who m. I Aug. 1660, Sarah, dau. of Robert Tucker of Dorchester, was through Joseph^ b. 19 Feb. 1663, d. Roxbury, 13 July, 1729, who m. Deborah, dau. of Samuel Williams ; Joseph,^ b. 2 Feb. 1696, d. 25 Oct. 1755, who m. 29 May, 1740, Mary, dau. of Dr. Samuel Stevens, and who was the father of Gen. Joseph and Dr. John Warren. Dr. John C. m. 17 Nov. 1803, Susan Powell, dau. of Hon. Jonathan Mason, who d. 3 June, 1841. Children — John, b. 16 Sept. 1804, d. young. Susan Powell, b. 23 July, 1806, m. Charles Lyman, 4 April, 1827. Jonathan Mason. James Sullivan, b. 21 Nov. 1S12, m. 27 Aug. 1846, Elizabeth Linzee Greene. Mary Collins, b. 19 Jan. 1816, m. 26 Oct. 1842, Thomas Dwight. Emily, b. 10 May, 181S, m. 9 Oct. 1S45, William Appleton. y////J^/^ //^/^y)^/c^ CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 503 JONATHAN MASON WARREN, M.D. Son of Dr. John C, whom he succ. in 1863; b. Boston, 5 Feb. 1811 ; d. there 19 Aug. 1867. He received his med- ical degree from Harvard University in 1832; practised medicine in his native city ; was visiting surgeon of the Mass. General Hospital from 1846 until his death; and was the author of numerous monographs on special subjects, the latest of which, " Surgical Observations,, with Cases and Operations," was finely illustrated. He m. 30 April, 1839, Anna, dau. of Hon. B. VV. Crowninshield. JOHN COLLINS WARREN, M.D. Only son of Dr. J M. Warren, whom he succ. in 1871; was b. Boston, 4 May, 1842; H. U. 1863; received his medical degree from the University in 1866; appointed Instructor of Surgery, H. U. 1871 ; and is now Associate Professor of Surgery; President of the Mass. Charitable Eye and Ear Infirmary; visiting surgeon to the Mass. General Hospital since 1876; and is also a practising physician in Boston. He m. 2 7 May, 1873, Amy, dau. of G. Howland Shaw. Children — John, b. 6 Sept. 1874. Joseph, b. 16 March, 1876. WLiUism Wiatson. He was an ensign in Fellows's reg. in May-Dec. 1775; lieut. in Ward's (21st) reg., and present at the siege of Boston; afterward in Wesson's (9th) reg., of which he was com. capt. 26 July, 1779; in Greaton's (3d) reg., and captured near White Plains, N. Y., 3 Feb. 1780, by Col. Norton; in Mellen's (3d) reg. in 1783. He d. in Lincoln, Mass., in March, 18-28, x. 8^ 504 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE i[Wasou Wlattltu, He was an ensign in John Nixon's reg. in 1776; licut. in T.Nixon's (6th) reg. in 1777; com. capt. 13 April, 1780; left the army in 1783; and d. a government pensioner, 21 July, 1819. He was of Holden, Mass., and was living on a government pension in 1823, at the age of eighty; was a lieut. in Ebenezer Francis's reg. in 1776; com. capt. in Shepard's (4th) reg. i Jan. 1777; retired, i Jan. 1783. ISantrl WLtblitv, He was an ensign and afterward 2d licut. in Bailey's (2d) reg.; com. ist lieut. 30 April, 1782; in Sprout's (2dJ reg. 1783; d. Sanford, Me., I Feb. 1827. DANIEL WEBSTER, LL.D. He was admitted as an Honorary Member on 4 July, 185 i.* His father, Ebenezer (b. 1739, d. 1806), served in the old French war, under Sir Jeffrey Amherst, and in the war of the Revolution, attaining the rank of Colonel of Militia. Daniel was b. Salisbury (now Franklin), N. H., 18 Jan. 1782; d. Marshfield, Mass., 24 Oct. 1852. Lawyer, orator, statesman. IBUuiia MlsUinQton. He was an ensign, and 26 July, 1782, was com. Iicut. in Greaton's (3d) reg.; and d. ab. iSoi in Concord, Mass., leaving a widow Lucy. ELTSHA WELLINGTON. Eldest son of Lieut. Elisha, whom he succ. in 1804; b. Concord, Mass., 11 Feb. 1781 ; deceased. * Sec Ann.ils oflliL- Scrlcly. ante, p 62 CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 505 iSrnjatnin JSMtUs. He was an ensign in Vose's (ist) rcg. in 1777; was com. lieut. 4 May, 1780, served till 1783, and d. 3 June, 1828, leaving a widow Lucy, who d. Boston, 5 Feb. 1865, ae. 84. JJamcs 2MfUB. James. (afterward named James A.) Wells, son of Ashbel and Abigail (Kellog) Wells, was b. Hartford, Ct., in 1760; d. there 23 Feb. 1806. He pleaded so earnestly to join the army on the outbreak of the Revolutionary war, that although only sixteen years of age, and of a delicate constitution, his parents reluctantly consented, and he enlisted in the Mass. 4th (Shepard's) reg. at Boston in 1776. He was com. lieut. in Tupper's (nth) reg. 16 Oct. 1780; and was in H. Jack- son's (4th) reg. in 1783. Returning to Hartford, he entered into mercantile pursuits; but became embarrassed, and finally lost his capital. This family has been represented in the four general wars of our country, — the Revolution, the war of 1 81 2, the Mexican war, and the war of the Rebellion. He m. Lucy, dau. of David Bull, and had — Elizabeth, m. Rev. Christopher J. Lawton of Marion, and had five children, one of whom, Thomas Scott, served in the Mexi- can war. Charlotte, d. ab. 1870. Eleazer M. p. Mary (d. 1871), m. Henry W. Nelson of Castine, Me., and had three sons, — namely, Henry Wells, Frank Howard, who was a lieut. in the war of the Rebellion, killed at Williamsburg, Va., 6 May, 1862, and Thomas, who resides in Boston. ELEAZER MATHER PORTER WELLS, D.D. Eldest son of James, whom he succ. in 1829; b. Hartford, Ct , 4 .^ug 1793 ; d. Boston, i Dec. 1878. He served in the 506 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE Connecticut militia in the war of 1812, and was educated at Brown University, from which he was expelled in 1S19 for refusing to give information against a classmate, but after- ward received his degree. He was licensed as a Congrega- tional minister, 18 March, 1823, after studying theology at the Bangor Theological Institute ; officiated some time at Plymouth, and in 1824-26 at Calais, Me.; ordained deacon in the Protestant Episcopal Church, 7 June, 1826; priest, 21 June, 1827; officiated some months at Christ Church, Gardiner, Me. ; then took charge of the House of Reforma- tion for Juvenile Offenders at Boston, where he labored six years (27 Dec. 1827-34); founded what is now known as the Farm School on Thompson's Island in 1834, and in 1835 established a school of his own, called the School of Moral Discipline, at City Point, South Boston. Here he worked hard for some years, until his health and strength com- pletely failed him. After a year's rest his health was re- stored ; and in Dec. 1844, he took charge of the City Mission in Boston, where he continued his labors until his death. Having purchased the St. Stephen's House, adjoin- ing the St. Stephen's Church property, he added it to the Mission, 20 Jan. 1847, and gave a deed of the house and land to the Corporation. After his death the mission-house was re-named St. Stephen's House, and inscribed as a per- manent memorial of Dr. Wells ; and as a further mark of respect to his memory, the " Wells Memorial Workingmen's Club and Institute " was established, " to promote the wel- fare of working-men by furnishing reading-rooms, libra- ries, instruction, and whatever else may contribute to their physical and moral well-being." An association was in- corporated for the management of the institution, and, the necessary funds having been obtained, a suitable building was erected on Washington Street, and dedicated 22 Feb. 1883. CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 507 At the annual meeting of the Cincinnati Society in 1S79, Rev. Dr. Lothrop submitted the following declaration, which was unanimously adopted : — " That in the character and career of Rev. E. M. P. Wells, D.D., we have an example of the pure in motive, lofty in purpose, noble in action ; a man who seemed to know no law but duty, no master but conscience, no object but usefulness ; who battled with poverty in his boyhood, resisted the temptations to wealth and worldliness in his early manhood, and obeying the Divine voice within him, con- secrated himself to God and Christian humanity as a minister of the Gospel, and for long years through various fortunes and in the con- stant exercise of a self-denying love and zeal, was true to that con- secration and eminently useful in it. Manifesting ever the spirit of the patriot, the martyr, and the saint, without tinge of self-seeking, spiritual pride, or sanctimonious ostentation, he leaves a name and memory that shall live to be honored and cherished, not only by us, but by others who will be here long after we are gone." HENRY WELLS NELSON, D.D. Son of Henry W. and Mary (Wells) Nelson, and nephew of Dr. Wells, whom he succ. in 1890; was b. Boston, 17 Aug. 1839. He received his general education at Burlington Col- lege, N. J., and his theological education at the Berkeley Divinity School, Middletown, Ct ; was ordained deacon in 1862; received priest's orders in 1864; assistant at St. James Church, New London, Ct., for two years ; afterward rector of the Church of the Good Shepherd, Hartford, Ct., till 1876; since then rector of Trinity Church, Geneva, N. Y. He was a delegate to the General Conventions of 1886 and 1889; and a member of the Committee on the Hymnal. He is a member of the Standing Committee of the Diocese of west- ern New York, and Trustee of Hobart College. He received the degree of Doctor of Divinity in 1889. 50S BIOGRArmCAL NOTICES OF THE He m. 14 June, 1865, Hortense C, dau. of George Richards Lewis of New London, Ct. Children — Margaret Howard, b. 11 July, 1866. George Lewis, b. 7 Oct. 1867. pR-iNK Howard, b. 6 Sept. 1869. Mary Hortense, b. 7 Feb. 1873. Katherke Dorothe.\, b. 8 Dec. 1880. JTljomas HMcUs. He was the son of Francis Wells and Susannah Welsh (widow of Ebenezer) ; was b. Cambridge Farms, 23 May, 1754; and d. Boston, 30 Oct. 1799. He was com. 2d lieut. in Knox's artillery reg. i Jan. 1776; capt. in Crane's artillery reg. in 1778 ; and left the army in 1780, after a service of five years and three months. Became a member of the Society in 17S8. He ra. I 780, Hannah, dau. of Gov. Samuel .\dams. They had — Samuel Adajis. Elizabeth, who m. Dr. John Randall of Stowe, Mass., and had Elizabeth, Joh?i, Belinda, Maria, and Antia. Thomas, who m. (ist) Belinda, dau. of Col. Lull of Windsor, Vt. ; and (2d) 5 Aug. 1821, Anna Maria Foster of Gloucester, Mass. They had Belinda ; Thomas Foster, who m. Sarah, dau. of Joseph Morrill of Roxbury ; Samuel Adams, m. Angeline P. Bates of Springfield, Mass.; William Vincent, b. 2 Jan. 1826; Anna Maria. SAMUEL ADAMS WELLS. Eldest son of Capt. Thomas, whom he succ. in 180S; b. Boston, 1787; d. Dorchester, Mass., 12 Aug. 1840. He was a tenacious advocate of the Democratic party; was Corre- sponding Secretary of the " Republican Institution ; " delegate to the State Constitutional Convention of 1820; President of the Atlas Insurance Company, Boston. He delivered the ora- tion before the Washington Society on 4 July, 1819. He CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 5O9 collected materials for the life and works of Samuel Adams, his grandfather, and a few chapters had been printed when his death put an end to the work. The collection then passed into the hands of George Bancroft, who made use of it in his history. William V. Wells, grandson of Capt. Thomas, and great-grandson of Gov. Samuel Adams, made further use of the collection in " The Life and Public Services of Samuel Adams," published in three volumes in 1866. He m. Margaret Gale. They had — Samuel Adams. Elizabeth. Hannah. Ja^ies, a merchant in New York City. C.\tharine, who m. O'Reilly. George. James WituBon. He was from Brookline, and after the war settled in Marl- borough, Mass., where he d. 15 Oct. 1809, ae. 72. He was major and afterward lieut.-col. of Loammi Baldwin's reg. ; raised and commanded the 9th reg., of which he was com. col. I Jan. 1777; served at the siege of Boston, in the opera- tions near New York (1776), the relief of Fort Schuyler in Aug. 1777, and the battles of Trenton, Saratoga, and Mon- mouth. At the last-named engagement he was in Wayne's brigade, and was severely wounded by a cannon-ball, which peeled the muscles from his back almost from shoulder to shoulder. He had — William, who had one daughter and three sons, the eldest of whom was fames ; Stephen, b. 1775, d. Marlborough, March, 1850. He was the son of Benjamin and Elizabeth (Aspinwall) White; was b. Brookline, Mass., 27 Nov. 1758; d. Savannah, 5IO BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THK Ga., 9 Jan. 1812. Com. ensign in M. Jackson's (8th) reg. 1777; lieut. 6 March, 1778, and served until 1783. Remov- ing to Savannah, Ga., in 1785, he became Register of Pro- bate, and was for some years naval officer there. He was b. Danvers, Mass. ; d. ab. 181 7, near Waterford, O. He was lieut. of a company of minute-men at the battle of Lexington; lieut. and adj. in Hutchinson's reg. at the siege of Boston and invasion of Canada; was in Francis's reg. at Hubbardton; com. capt. in R. Putnam's (5th) reg. i Jan. 1777; was in the battles ending with Burgoyne's surrender, and subsequently in the commissary department under Col. Pickering; served to 20 Sept. 1783, when he returned to his home in Salem. On 3 Dec. 1787, he led from Salem the advance-guard of pioneers in the settlement of Marietta, O. ; afterward erected mills at Wolf Creek, and finally settled near Waterford. His son Pelatiah left Williaiii Hafficld and several daughters. Jol)n Sisaijitinfl. He was b. Lancaster, Mass., 24 Feb. 1760; d. Washington, D. C, 3 Sept. 1 8 10, and was interred in the Congressional burying-ground in that city. He belonged in 1775 to a minute-company in Billerica, a few miles north of Lexington ; and on the morning of the 19th of April marched side by side with his father (who had served in the French war of 1756-63) and an elder brother Timothy (who became a captain in the Revolutionary army) to the latter place, and shared in the running fight with the British in their re- treat from Concord. He immediately joined the army at Cambridge, was under Arnold at Lake Champlain in 1776, and with Gates's army in the campaign of 1777 against Bur- goyne, during which he was com. ensign; com. lieut in CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 5 I I Sprout's (i2th) reg. 5 July, 1779; adjutant, 17S0; and took part in the siege of Yorktown. He retired to private life at the end of the war, but re-entered the service on the in- crease of the army in 1808 as lieut.-col. 4th inf ; was com. adj. and inspector of the army, 17 July, 1809; and 31 Dec. 1809, col. of the 5th inf. He had, while adjutant, preserved the orders issued to the army; and a portion of these, en- titled " Revolutionary Orders of Gen. Washington," was pub- lished in 1844 by his son Gen. Henry Whiting. His descent from Rev. Samuel Whiting, b. Boston, Eng., 20 Nov. 1597, who came to New England, 26 May, and was pastor of the first church at Lynn, Mass., from 8 Nov. 1636, to his death 11 Dec. 1679, and his wife Elizabeth, only dau. of the Rt. Hon. Oliver St. John, was through Rev. Samuel j- b. Skirbeck, Eng., 25 March, 1633, H. U. 1653, minister of Billerica, Mass., from 11 Nov. 1663, to his death, 28 Feb. 1713, who m. 12 Nov. 1656, Dorcas, dau. of Leonard Chester; Oliver? h. 8 Nov. 1665, a magistrate and representative of Billerica, d. 22 Dec. 1736, who m. 22 Jan. i6go, Anna, dau. of Capt. Jonathan Danforth ; Samuel* b. 6 Sept. 1702, d. 4 Nov. 1772 ; Timothy^ (his father), of Lancaster, b. 24 Feb. 1732, d. 12 July, 1 799, who served in the French war, and who with his sons Timothy and John was present at the battle of Lexington. He m. I 784, Orpah Danforth of Connecticut. They had — Timothy D., b. 1785, d. 1851, s. p. (captam). Julia, b. 1787, d. 181 7, s. p. Henry, gen. U. S. A., a brave officer and an accomplished man, b. 1788, d. 16 Sept. 1851. He m. Elizabeth Macomb, and had Henry Alacomb, who ser\-ed as lieut. in the Mexican war, d. 1852 ; and William Danforth. SoPHU, d. 1853, s. p. Fabius (major U. S. .A.), d. 1842. s. p. Mama, b. 1794. Solon, b. 1797. Carolixe Lee, b. 1800, authoress, m. 1825, Prof. N. M. Hentz, d. 1856. J 512 ISIUGRAI'HICAL NOTICES UF THE WILLIAM DANFORTH WHITING. Son of Gen. Henry and grandson of Col. John, whom he succ. in 1877; was b. Boston, 27 May, 1823. He entered the U. S. navy as midshipman, i March, 1841 ; was "passed midshipman" during the Mexican war; lieut. at the opening of the war of the Rebelhon ; executive officer of the sloop- of-war " Vandaha " at the attack and capture of the forts at Port Royal, S. C, by the fleet under command of Admiral Dupont ; subsequently commanded the gunboats " W}'an- dotte " and " Ottawa," serving throughout the war on the Atlantic coast, taking an active part in the blockade of the Atlantic ports ; participating in all the operations against Charleston, in the capture of Forts Wagner and Gregg, the reduction of Fort Sumter and Fort Pulaski. After the war he commanded at different times the U. S. steamships " Savannah," " Tioga," " Saratoga," double-turreted monitor " Miantanomah," and the "Worcester," — the last-named be- ing assigned by the Government to convey for the city of Bos- ton their contributions of food to the French in 1871. He was promoted captain August, 1872, serving as fleet-captain and chief of staff of the North Atlantic squadron from 1873 to 1876; afterward as executive officer at the Naval Home, Philadelphia. In June, 1878, he was called to duty at the Navy Department, as Chief of the Bureau of Navigation, with the relative rank of commodore. He served there until October, 1881, when he was retired on account of blindness from causes incident to the service. A bill was passed through Congress without opposition promoting him to the rank of commodore on the retired list. He m. 24 July, 1848, Jane, dau. of Charles H. Stewart. Children — Jane Stewart, b. Aug. 1849. Henry, b. July, 1853. CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 513 Eliza Macomb, b. June, 1854. William Macomb, b. July, 1855. Mary Gray, b. Sept. 1858. Florence, b. Aug. 1861. Samuel mimmn, j«.za. He was b. in Boston, 12 Jan. 1754, entered the Latin School in 1762, and in 1774 graduated from the College of New Jersey (Princeton). He studied medicine under Dr. James Lloyd, and on i Jan. 1777 was com. surgeon of Col. John Greaton's reg. (3d Continental), and served through the war. He was one of the thirty-six officers, with Wash- ington at the head, who signed the original " Institution " of the Cincinnati Society (now in the possession of Hon. Hamil- ton Fish) reported by the committee of officers and adopted by the representatives of the American army at the canton- ment on Hudson River, 13 May, 1783. On 4 July, 1789, he delivered one of the six orations which have been given be- fore the Society. This oration was printed, at the request of the Society, and a copy is now among its papers. On 14 Jan. 1784, he m. Lucy Tyler, dau. of Joseph and Frances Tyler, and a granddaughter of the eccentric Judge John Tyng of Tyngsborough. Dr. Whitwell d. at Newton on 21 Nov. 1 79 1, and is buried there. His children were — John Tyng, b. 22 Nov. 1784, d. 29 March, 1837. Samuel, b. 28 July, 1786, d. 11 March, 1871. Elizabeth, b. 27 Nov. 1788, d. 6 April, 1827. FREDERICK AUGUSTUS WHITWELL. Grandson of Dr. Samuel, whom he succ. in 1889; was b. Boston, 10 March, 1820. He received his education at Charles W. Greene's school, Jamaica Plain, and at D G. Ingra- 35 514 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE ham's school in Boston. He is a merchant, and resides in Boston. His descent is from Samuel^ U'hitweil, b. at Colnbrook, Eng., in 1687, d. 3 Oct. 1722, who m. Elizabeth Archer of London, b. 1687, d. 17 Feb. 1784. They both came to America. Their son, Samuel,^ b. in England, 17 Dec. (O. S.) 1717, d. Boston, 8 June, 1801, m. 13 June, 1749, Elizabeth Kelsey, b. 5 May, 1722, d. 6 April, 1 768. Their son. Dr. Samuel^ is noticed above. His son, Samuel,^ b. at Newton, 28 July, 1786, d. at Boston, 11 March, 1 87 1, m. 26 Nov. iSio, Sophia Story, dau. of Rev. Isaac Story of Marblehead, and his wife Rebecca (Bradstreet), b. 3 March, 1787, d. at Boston, 27 Dec. 1867. Frederick Augustus m. 12 June, 1861, Mary Crowninshield, dau, of Nathaniel Silsbee. Children — Frederick Silsbee, b. 12 March, 1862. Nat.^lie Silsbee, b. 2 July, 1863. i£l)rnrjrc SHilTis.* He was b. in 1758; d. Boston, 4 Dec. 1794. He enlisted as a corporal on 12 May, 1775, in Capt. Lemuel Trescott's Co. of Col. Jona. Brewer's reg., which was in the battle of Bunker Hill. He was sergt. in Capt. Hancock's Co. of Vose's reg. from i Jan. 1777, to 31 Dec. 1779; ensign in the same regiment from i Jan. 1780; com. lieut. 11 May, 17S1, and served until the army was disbanded. He was in the Ticon- deroga expedition in 1776, the campaign against Burgoyne in 1777, the R. I. campaign in 1778, and at the siege of Yorktown. He kept a journal during the period of his ser- vice between 7 Aug. 1776, and 8 Dec. 1781, which is now in the possession of his grandson, Mr. Charles T. Wild of Chel- sea. It contains matter of some historical value. He was not in the expedition to Quebec in 1775. The journal pub- lished under his name, in the Proceedings of the Mass. His- * In his journal and on the autograph list he wrote his name " Wilds." His descendants appear to have dropped the "s." CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 515 torical Society for April, 1886, was copied, probably, from a journal kept by Ebenczer Tolmaii. EDENEZER WILD. Eldest son of Ebenezer and Abigail Wilds ; succ. his father in the Society in 18 14, and d. Chelsea, Mass., 10 July, 1869. CHARLES TIDD WILD Eldest son of Ebenezer, whom he succ. in 1871 ; b. Boston, 1818. He is a printer, and resides in Chelsea, Mass. He m. Eliza T., dan. of Isaac Averell. Children — Helen, who m. Wm. M. Jewell of Concord, Mass. Hattie H., who m. John W. Dole of Fitchburg, Mass. He was b. Sandwich, Mass., 10 Feb. 1754; d. there 1795 ; was com. 2d lieut. in Whitcomb's reg. in 1776; lieut. 12th reg. 1777; capt. 29 Sept. 1778; and was brigade major in 1783. He was an original member of the " Ohio Company." His descent from Abraham ^ Williams, a proprietor of Marlbor- ough in 1663, d. 29 Dec. 1712, who m. Joanna, dau. of William and Elizabeth Ward, was through lVillia?nj- d. 30 Aug. 1702, and wife Elizabeth; Col. Abraham,^ b. 15 April, 1695, d. 10 July, 1781, who m. (2d) 22 Dec. 1725, Elizabeth, dau. of Robert Breck, who d. 13 Jan. 1729; Rev. Abraham* (his father), b. 25 Feb. 1757, d. Fra- mingham, 8 Aug. 1784, H. U. 1744, minister of Sandwich from 1749, who m. 1751, Anna, dau. of Col. Joseph Buckminster. Abraham m. 4 Jan. 1786, Abigail, dau. of Nathaniel Freeman of Sandwich, who d. ab. 1834. Children — Anna Buckminster, m. William Cottrell of Delhi, O. Caroline, m. Cottrell, and lived in Cincinnati, O. P.4TTY, b. 1789. m. Ellis Nye of Fairfield, Me. 5l6 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE lEiJcncjec inaiillCams. He was b. Lebanon, Ct., 14 Oct 1749; d. Schoharie, N. Y., I July, 1847, 'E. 98. He entered Paterson's (afterward Vose's) reg. in April, 1775; was com. 2d heut. in Sept. 1776; 1st lieut. 25 Oct. 1777; and was acting capt. of Jere miah Miller's Co. from June, 1779, until it was disbanded in 1783. He was on duty in eleven of the thirteen States and in Canada; was at the battle of Bunker Hill, the campaign ending in Burgoyne's surrender. Valley Forge, Monmouth, and at the surrender of Cornwallis at Yorktown ; made pris- oner by the Indians in the battle of " The Cedars," 20 May, 1776, he was robbed by them of his clothing and kept in confinement ten days, when' he was exchanged. He was again captured by the enemy in 1780 near West Point. At the capture of the two British redoubts at Yorktown, he was under the immediate command of Col. Laurens, who took his men between the redoubts under a heavy fire, cutting off the retreat of the garrison. The fire of the enemy was so ill-directed that Laurens did not lose a man. Williams removed about 1808 to Canandaigua, N. Y. His descent from Robert^ Williams of Roxbury, 1637, d. i Sept. 1693, se. 86, and wife Elizabeth Stratham, who d. July, 1674, was through Deacon Samuelj^ b. Eng. ab. 1632, d. 28 Sept. 1698, who m. 2 March, 1654, Theoda, dau. of Deacon William YzxV; Park^ b. 1 1 T'lu. 1677, d. 1757, and Priscilla, who d. 1742, se. 71 ; Eben- ezer* who settled in Lebanon, Ct., and m. Mary, dau. of Andrew Veach ; Jonathan^ (his father), who m. 26 Sept. 1744, Mary Whitney. Soijn SEIi'Ufams. He was the son of John, Jr., and I{llizabeth (Cutter) Wil- liams ; b. Groton, Mass., 4 July, 1746; d. there i Jul>', 1822. He was an ensign in Prescott's reg. at Bunker Hill ; 1st lieut. CmCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 517 in 177C; com. capt. 7 July, 1777, in the 12th reg., and was in Vose's (ist) reg. from 1781 to its disbandment, 3 Nov. 1783. He m. Molly Everett, and had twelve children, five of whom d. young. JOHN WILLIAMS. Eldest son of Capt. John, whom he succ. in 1826; b. Groton, Mass., i April, 1774; d. in Dover, Mass., leaving a widow, Sally B., who was je. JJ in 1859. Josrpij WiHUamn. He was the son of Jeremiah and Catharine (Payson) Wil- liams ; b. Springfield, Mass., 24 March, 1753; d. Greenwich, Mass., 21 April, 1819. He was an ensign in Asa Whitcomb's (6th) reg. in 1776; was com. capt. in Greaton's (3d) reg. I Jan. 1777; served through the war; and during Shays's rebellion was intrusted by the Secretary of War, Gen. Knox, with the command of the U. S. arsenal at Springfield. He left no issue. His descent from Robert ^ of Roxbury was through Stephen? b. 8 Nov. 1640, d. 15 Feb. 1720, who m. Sarah, dau. of Joseph Wise ; Joseph? b. 24 Feb. 1682 ; Jeremiah? b. 5 Oct. 1718, d. 1762, who m. I 743, Catharine Payson. HENRY HOWELL WILLIAMS, JR. He was the son of Henry Howell and Sally (Williams) Williams, and grand-nephew of Capt. Joseph, whom he succ. in 1826. His mother was the dau. of Edward Payson Williams, the elder brother of Capt. Joseph. He was b. Ro.xbury, Mass., i March, 1804; d. Charleston, S. C, 22 Sept. 1868. After an apprenticeship with H. H. Tuckerman in the dry-goods business in Cornhill, Boston, he finally succ. Ezra Dyer in the same business and place. Being unsuccessful, he removed to Charleston, S C, ab. 1829. 5l8 BIOGR.\PHICAL NOTICES OF THE He m. 8 June, 1838, Anna E. Prince, who d. 26 Sept. 186S. Children — Henry Howell, b. 9 May, 1839, m. 20 Dec. 1866, Susan Jane Robinson. He was elected a member of the Society in 1873, but failed to qualify. His son Henry Howell was b. 4 Nov. 1867. Nancy Burxap, b. 30 Aug. 1840, m. 17 Jan. 1863, S. N. Brown. Gilbert Fearing, b. 10 Aug. 1842, an Episcopal clergyman. Harriet Elizabeth, b. 23 May, 1845, d. 15 April, 1847. Harriet Ardell\, b. 23 Feb. 1848. Koficrt KSlilHams. He was the son of Robert and Ann (Boylston) Williams, and was b. in Boston, July 24, 1753. He entered the I3oston Latin School in 1762; graduated at Harvard Uni\ersity in 1773, and began the study of medicine under Dr. Warren, but finding it distasteful he did not pursue it. At the begin- ning of the Revolutionary war he was Master of the Roxbury Latin School. The State of Massachusetts having been em- powered by Congress in Sept., 1776, to raise, besides her quota of fifteen battalions, three additional ones, Cols. Wni. R. Lee, Henry Jackson, and David Henley were appointed to raise and command them. These three organizations were, 9 April, 1779, incorpor- ated into one, under Col. Henry Jackson ; and Mr. Williams, who had been appointed paymaster in Lee's on 3 June, 1777, received a new appointment in Jackson's as regimental cloth.ier, 5 April, 1779; ensign and paymaster, 24 April, 1779; and 1st lieut. 12 April, 1782. At the close of the war he paid off the 4th, 9th, and i6th regiments, which had previ- ously been consolidated, and which under Col. Henrj^ Jack- son formed the last body of troops retained in service, being finally disbanded in June, 1784. Jackson's reg. was con- spicuous for its soldier-like appearance and discipline ; and CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 519 having been raised in Boston, and mostly officered by natives of that town, was called the " Boston " regiment. It took part in the battles of Monmouth and Springfield, N. J.; in Sullivan's R. I. campaign ; was with Washington in camp at Morristown during the dreadful winter of 1779, and at West Point in 1780, after the discovery of Arnold's treason. Lieut. Williams served as a volunteer under Gen. Lincoln in sup- pressing Shays's rebellion in Feb., 1787. After the termination of the war, Mr. Williams was en- gaged in mercantile business, and was part owner of the ship " Commerce." In 1791 he sailed in her to the East Indies. On the night of 10 July, 1792, the ship, while on her way from Madras to Bombay, went ashore on the Ara- bian coast, near Cape Morbat. Her company, excepting three persons who were drowned in the attempt, reached the shore in safety ; but almost immediately after landing, they were stripped and plundered by a large party of Arabs. After the Arabs left them, they picked up a few articles of clothing on the beach, but of these, too, they were robbed on the journey. Naked and destitute, they endeavored to make their way to Muscat, some 500 miles distant in a direct line. Their route lay through the burning sands of the desert, and over rocky and precipitous mountains, which afforded neither food nor water. They were exposed, naked, to a scorching sun in the daytime, and at night to cold and heavy dews, and were subject to the constant depredations of thieves and rob- bers. On the ninth day Mr. Williams, whose shoes had been taken from him the day before, gave out and was left to die, his companions covering him with branches of the prickly- thorn tree to keep off the jackals. He, however, revived sufficiently after their departure to crawl back to a pool of water they had left a few hours before, where he caught some frogs, and where he stayed several days in the greatest ex- tremity of human suffering. Then art Arab came to water 520 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE his camel, and he — partly, perhaps, through pity, but chiefly in the hope of gain — consented • to take Mr. Williams to Muscat, whence he returned home by way of Bombay and England, reaching Boston in 1794. Mr. Williams ever after- ward avoided all mention of this distressing subject, filled as it was with recollections of so painful and revolting a char- acter. Only eight of the seventeen ;,vhite men who landed on the Arabian coast survived the terrible hardships and privations of the journey. A journal of their travels and sufferings, written by Daniel Saunders, Jr., and edited by Dr. William Bentley, was published in Salem in 1794. Mr. Williams, after his return to Boston, resumed mer- cantile business, which he carried on successfully. He was a Selectman of the town from 1811 to 181 7, and was Treasurer of the Society of the Cincinnati from 1811 until his death, which occurred, 16 Nov. 1834, at his residence on Fort Hill. Mr. Williams was m. three times. On 20 May, 17S7, to Bethiah, dau. of David Pearce, by whom he had three sons and one daughter, — Robert Pearce ; George ; Charles ; Harriet. On 20 Dec. 1803, he m. Hannah, dau. of James and Eleanor (Campbell) Jameson of Maine, and had three sons and one daugh- ter, — Eleanor Jameson ; Sidney Boylston ; Horace ; George, 2d. On 29 July, 1 82 1, he m. Sarah, dau. of James Maxwell; and one son, Sidney Boylston, was b. to them, who d. in Montreal. Eleanor Jameson, now Mrs. Walter Baker, is the only surviving child. The following letter from La Fayette was addressed to Mr. Williams in reply to a communication from some of the sur- viving officers of the army, soliciting his influence in support of their just claims upon Congress : — La Grange, Nov. 24, 1S25. My dear Brothers and Companions in Arms, — It would be superfluous to tell you that your letter from Boston, 20 June, has ex- CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 52 I cited my warmest feelings, and that during my too short stay in the United States I have not lost sight of its most interesting object. But as it is probable the matter alluded to will be taken up to- wards the middle or before the end of the session, I have thought it was no impropriety on my part, and there might be motives, was it only from a sense of duty as well as of affection, to address some friends on the occasion ; namely, those you have mentioned, and also the President, whose personal sentiments on this our business I cannot question. Among the advantages I have derived from the immense bounty in my behalf of the people and their representatives in Congress, I would reckon the first of them the gratification to think it has fur- nished my dear comrades a successful argument to forward their claims. Accent the affectionate regard, love, and wishes of your old companion in arms, La Fayette. To Daniel Jackson, Francis Green, Robert Williams, Revolutionary officers, Boston. Mrs. Walter Baker has given to the Cincinnati Society the original letter from La Fayette. ROBERT PEARCE WILLIAMS. He was the eldest son of Robert, whom he succ. in 1837, and was b. Boston, 11 March, 1788; d. St. Louis, Mo., 22 April, 185 1. He began the bookselling business with his brother Charles, under the style of R. P. & C. Williams, in 1801, and continued for thirty-five years to hold an honorable place in the trade in Boston. This firm published many val- uable works, among others a fine edition of the Book of Com- mon Prayer; the works of Peter Pindar, in four volumes; and Shakspeare's works, in five volumes, handsomely printed by J. T. Buckingham. Mr. R. P. Williams removed to St. Louis after 1837, and carried on the book business there. 522 lUOGRAI'inCAL NOTICES OF THE He 111. in April, 1S14, Nancy Bliss, dau. of Ebenezer and Eleanor Whitney of Belchertown (b. 26 June, 1790). They had — Nancy, b. 27 Jan. 18 15 Eliza, b. 18 Nov. 1816, d. 7 July, 1832. Alexander, b. 24 Aug. 18 18. Harriet, b. i Nov. 1820, d. 11 Nov 1845. E.MiLV, b. 13 March, 1823. CiARissA Whitney, b. 26 Jan. 1825. Robert, b. 25 June, 1S27. Th(1iM.as Penhallow, b. 18 Oct. 1828. Mary Penhallow, b. 21 Feb. 1831. ALEXANDER WILLIAMS. Eldest son of Robert P. Williams, whom he succ. in 1862; was b. Boston, 24 Aug. 1818. In 1839 he commenced in Boston the newspaper and periodical business, then in its in- fancy, but which, stimulated b\- cheap issues of the novels of Charles Dickens, Bulvver, and others, soon attained extensive proportions, the sales of a single day being counted by thousands. This business, which is now carried on by the American News Company, has reached the enormous sum of twelve million dollars per annum. In 1868 Mr. Williams suc- ceeded E. P. Button & Co. at the " Old Corner Bookstore" in Boston (formerh- occupied b}'Ticknor & Fields), probably the oldest brick building in Boston, and one of its noted land- marks, bearing the date of 17 12. It stands on the corner of Washington and School Streets, and has long been the resort of lovers of good literature. Dickens, Thackeray, Longfellow, Hawthorne, Emerson, Holmes, Lowell, and many- other distinguished writers of the last half-centur3\ have been welcomed within its walls. Mr. Williams retired from active business as a bookseller in 1S83. He m. in Cohasset, 6 Marrh, \^44, Elizabeth Collier, b. 7 Feb. 1S22, d. 30 Sept. iSSi. Children — CIN'CINXATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 523 Robert, b. 26 May, 1846. Helen ALjlRli. Marv Lewis. Alexander. Charles Collier. Jonatf)an WLirxQ, A descendant of John Wing of Sandwich, and probably the son of Samuel and Anne (Barlow) Wing, b. Rochester, Mass., 31 July, 1731. Com. ensign, 19 Oct. 1781 ; in Vose's (ist) reg. in 1783. Joljn eitiiislott). John, eldest son of John and Eliza (Mason) Winslow, was b. Boston, 29 Sept. 1753; d. there 29 Nov. 1819. He was before the war a clerk in the hardware store of his uncle, Jonathan Mason, deacon of the Old South Church, whose place of business was on the east side of Washington Street, opposite Williams Court, and who, as the custom then was, lived over his store. John was in Boston during its occu- pation by the British troops in 1775, and wa? the one who recognized Gen. Warren's body the day after the battle of Bunker Hill. He buried the communion plate of the Old South Church in the cellar of his uncle's house to prevent it from falling into the hands of the British. Being desirous of getting away from Boston, he enlisted on a British vessel bound for Newport, R. I., at which place he deserted; was appointed by Gov. Trumbull deputy paymaster, rank of lieut., in the Northern department, and accompanied Mont- gomery to Quebec ; was com. capt. in Crane's reg. of ar- tillery, 8 June, I J/ J ; was present at White Plains, and in the battles ending with the capture of Burgoyne at Saratoga, remaining in the artillery until discharged, 5 Nov. 1778. Upon two occasions, during the retreat from Quebec and from Ticonderoga, he saved valuable public property. At 524 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE the close of the war he became his uncle's partner in the hardware business, which he afterward carried on upon his own account. In 18 10 he lost his property by an unex- pected failure. His honor and integrity, however, remained unquestioned, and the people placed him seven years suc- cessively (1812-19) in the responsible office of County Treasurer. He was captain of the Ancient and Honorable Artillery Co. in 1792 and 1798; was chosen brig.-gen. of the Boston legionary brigade in 1799; and in 1809 was chosen maj.-gen. of the first division Mass. militia, but did not accept. He was also a member of the Legislature ; was Assist. Treas. of the Society in 1 794-1 809; Treas- urer in 1 809-11. His descent from John * (brother of Gov. Edward) Winslow, b. 1597, came over in the "Fortune" in 1623, d. Boston, Oct. 1674, who m. Mary Chilton, was through yi^/iw,'' b. ab. 1627, d. Oct. 1683, and wife Elizabeth ; John," b. 22 May, 1669, d. i Jan. 1694-95, who m. Abigail Atkinson, 18 June, 1689 ; John* b. 30 Dec. 1693, d. at sea, 31 Oct. 1 731, m. 21 Sept. 1721, Sarah Yiexce ; John^ (his father), b. 5 March, 1725, d. 29 Sept. 1773, who m. 12 March, I 752, Eliza Mason. He m. 21 May, 1782, Ann Gardner (b. 26 July, 1755, d. 12 Nov. 1836). They had eight children, — six sons and two daughters. JOHN WINSLOW Eldest son of John, whom he succ. in 1822; b. Boston, 27 Feb. 1783; d. Belmont, Mass., 20 Aug. 1868. He m. 27 Oct. 1808, Sally Spear Bray (b. 3 March, 1787, d. 18 Oct. 1844). Children who left issue — John, 10 July, 1809, m. 21 Oct. 1835, Margaret Hall of Liver- pool, Eng., and h3,A John and Ann Jane. Charles Edward, 31 Jan. 1812, d. 23 IVLiy, 1837, m. 31 Jan. 1834, Mary A. Trull, and had Charles Henry. OziAS Goodwin, 30 May, 1813, d. 3 Dec. 1842, m. 15 Nov. 1838, Julia Martineau, and had Nathan Foster, b. 18 Oct. 1839. CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSE'nS. 525 CHARLES HENRY VVINSLOW. Son of Charles Edward, and grandson of John Winslow, whom he succ. in 1870; b. Boston, 11 June, 1835 ; d. Worces- ter (Insane Asylum), 16 March, 1 881. He was a carpenter residing in Belmont when the war of the Rebellion broke out, and was the first man in that town who enlisted in the Union army, having joined the Boston Light Artillery Co., Capt. Cook, 20 April, 1861. He served with it in Maryland four months. He was then engaged at the Arse- nal at Watertown until 23 Dec. 1863, when he enlisted in the iith Mass. battery, with which he served in the cam- paign of 1864-65 in Virginia, from the Wilderness to the surrender of Lee. He was promoted to corporal for gal- lant conduct in the battle at Preble House on the Weldon Railroad; was com. 2d lieut. 5th Mass. cav., 18 Nov. 1864, and was among the first to enter Richmond, 3 April, 1865. He was mustered out at Clarksville, Tex., 18 Oct. 1865. He m. 22 March, 1859, Jennie P. Dawson. Children — John Edward. Maybell Josephine, b. Belmont, 27 July, 1865. JOHN EDWARD WIXSLOW. Eldest son of Charles Henry, whom he succ. in 1889; was b. Boston, I Jan. i860. He served as a private in the U. S. army from i Feb. 1883, until 24 May, 1884, when he was app corporal; promoted to be sergt. 21 May, 1885; and 1st sergt. 7 March, 1887; received an honorable discharge at Fort Buford, Dak., on the expiration of his term of service, 30 Jan. 1888. Resides in Cambridge, Mass., and is a member of the police force of that city. He m. 25 Oct. 1881, Matilda H., dau. of Donald Charles Mac- Kinnon. Children — Charles Henry, b. 10 June, 1882. Jennie Madeline, b. 9 Dec. 1S89. 525 BIUGRAl'IIICAL NOTICES OK THE JOSHUA HUNTINGTON WOLCOTT. Grandson of Hon. Oliver Wolcott, an oric^inal member of the Ct. Society, was b. Litchfield, Ct., 29 Aug. 1804, and was admitted in 1876, under the rule of 1854. He came to Boston at the age of seventeen; and in 1830 became a member of the firm of A. & A. Lawrence & Co. This firm bore a leading part in the development of the great manufacturing and commercial interests of New England, and throughout its long and honorable career sustained a reputation for energy, sagacity, and probity which was unsurpassed. Mr. Wolcott was connected with the firm until it retired from business in 1865. During the war of the Rebellion he was Treasurer of the Mass. branch of the Sanitary Commission. He has filled many positions in trust and benevolent institutions, and in the management of manufacturing corporations and banks. He resides in Boston and Milton. His descent from Ilcniy'^ IVolcolt, b. in Tolland, Somersetshire, Eng., 1578, m. 10 Jan. 1606, Elizabeth Saunders, who came to this country in 1630, and settled first in Dorchester, Mass., removed to Windsor, Ct.. in 1635, and d. 30 May, 1655, was through Simon,'^ b. Tolland, Eng., 1625, who came to this country and joined his father in Connecticut, 1637, m. 17 Oct. 1661, Martha, sister of Sir WilUam Pitkin, d. 11 ept. 1687; Wow. Rcger^ b. Windsor, Ct., 4 Jan. 1679, m. 3 Dec. 1702, Sarah Drake, d. 17 May, 1767, Gov. of Connecticut and second in command of the expedition which re- sulted in the capture of Louisburg ; Hon. Oliver.* b. Windsor, Ct, I Dec. 1726, m. 21 Jan. 1755, Lorana Collins of Guilford, Ct., d. Litchfield. Ct., i Dec. 1797, member of the Continental Congress, signer of the Declaration, maj.-gen. of militia, Gov. of Connecticut, etc.; Hon. Frederick^ (his father), b. Litchfield, Ct., 2 Nov. 1767, d. 28 May, 1837, m. 12 Oct. 1800, Betsey, dau. of Col. Joshua Huntington. Joshua Huntington Wolcott m. (ist) 12 Nov. 1S44. Cornelia, dau. of Samuel and Eliza (Atkins) Frnthingham. Children — CINCINNATI OF MASSACHUSETTS. 527 Huntington Frothingham, b. 4 Feb. 1846; d. 10 June, 1865, from disease contracted in the army. Before he was nineteen years old he received from Gov. Andrew a commission as 2d lieut. in the 2d reg. of Mass. cavalry, and was app. aid to Gen. Gibbs. He took part in the toilsome and brilliant campaign under Sheridan which resulted in cutting off Lee's retreat from Richmond and thus compelling his surrender. Roger, b. 13 July, 1847. Cornelia F., d. 1 June, 1850. He m. (2d) 12 Nov. 185 1, Harriet Frothingham, sister of his first wife. ©tristojjfjrc saiootrtiriTiflc. He was a capt.-licut. in Wigglesworth's (13th) reg. in Sulli- van's R. I. campaign in 1778; was com. capt. same reg. 10 April, 1779, and was in Mellen's (3d) reg. in 1783. He d. in Newcastle, Me., in March, 1825. His widow Sarah was living in Jjallowell in 1871. •Samuel SJHootrluarti. He was the son of Rev. Samuel, of Weston, Mass.; was b. there 11 July, 1756; H. U. 1776. He was surgeon's mate in Shepard's (4th) reg., and was transferred to Crane's artillery, 24 May, 1782. In Feb. 1784, he settled in New- burgh, N. Y., and d. there 29 March, 1785. He m. in Feb. 1784, Martha Horton, and left a son who d. in infancy. His descent hom Richaj-d^ JF^w/r^tzn/ of Watertown, 1634, free- man 1635, b. 1589, d. 16 Feb. 1664-65, and wife Rose, who d. 1662, se. 80, was through George,"^ b. Eng. 1621, d. 31 May, 1676, and wife Mary ■,Johri,^h. 28 March, 1649, will dated 26 Feb. 1727-28, who m. (2d) Mary Bancroft of Reading; FJ>eticzer* b. 12 March, 1690- 91, who m. 26 Jan. 1716, Mindwell Stone; Rev. Samuel^ (his father), b. i Feb. 1727, H. U. 1748, d. 5 Oct. 1782. He had, be- side Surgeon Samuel and several daughters, a son Warham (1765- 1804), a merchant of Charleston, S. C. 5 28 BIOGRArHICAL NOTICES. Joljn yromaus. He was com. ensign in Sht-piird's (4th) reg. 10 Feb. 1778 ; lieut. 15 April, 1780; and was in the campaign in Rhode Island under Sullivan. He was Inspector of Customs at Newport from 1790 to his death, 12 July, 1827, se. 72. His widow Martha was living there in Nov. 1841, ae. 88. APPENDIX. APPENDIX. DR. WILLIAM EUSTIS'S STATEMENT CONCERNING THE ORIGIN OF THE CINCINNATI. A T the annual meeting of the Massachusetts Society, 4 July, 1 848, •^"^ the following letter, written by Dr. William Eustis about the year 1783, was read and ordered to be transcribed on the Record Book of the Society : — Boston (no date). Whereas the Institution of the Society of the Cincinnati, founded on Hudson River, in the State of New York, in the year of our Lord 1782, has caused much speculation and jealousy among the people of America and in the nations of Europe ; and whereas at some future day that Society may grow into greater consequence and become of more impor- tance than at present is generally imagined, — I, William Eustis of Boston, being a member of said Society, and being a member and present on the spot when the instrument of its insti- tution was formed, do think it fit to make record of the first moving in the said institution, so far as came to my own knowledge and observation. I was a surgeon in the General Hospital of the American Army, then at quarters at New Windsor and [at] West Point on Hudson's River in the year 1782. Sometime after the orders of Congress for disbanding the army were known in camp, Capt. Richmond, formerly of the American [Maryland] line, then aide-de-camp to Maj.-Gen. Gates, said, in a conversation at my quarters, that it was unhappy that such a band of friends and brothers should be separated perhaps never to meet again : and asked if there could be no plan fallen upon by which these old friends might meet again once in a number of years, and desired me to think on the subject. In a day or two he again came to my quarters and said he had thought of a plan, which was that the officers should meet m some central place of the con- 532 APPENDIX. tinent, and form some kind of society to preserve that friendship which so strongly subsisted between them. He gave me a sheet of paper con- taining several proposals for this purpose, and desired me to form an association or some writing constituting a society to prevent their friend- ship from the sudden death of a total and final separation. I took his paper of proposals and tliought on the subject. In about a week or ten days afterward I heard that such a design was executing at West Point among the officers tliere, and it was not long before the proposals came out from which were formed the articles which now make the institution of the Society of the Cincinnati ; and I do hereby record and declare that the first syllable I ever heard of any association among the officers came from Capt. Richmond, in the manner before mentioned. This evidence I have chosen to commit to writing, because it has been asserted by some that this institution originated among the general field officers in the American army, and by others that it originated in the Court of France, and has been imputed as a stroke of policy in that nation. Now, in the instance here recorded, it appears that the Society grew naturally out of the affections of the ofticer.s, from a desire to perpetuate their friendships and to commemorate their sufferings with a virtuous sympathy which Heaven could not behold with disapprobation. In the warmth of affection Capt. Richmond suggested his proposal, and before it could be reduced to system congenial feelings suggested ideas of the same kind among the other officers, and his intentions were anticipated. A meeting of the officers — that is, a proper deputation from each line of the army — were [j-zV] convened, and the institution as agreed upon by them was handed about and signed by all who chose to become parties to this institution. If, after this, the members of this Society become noble, their nobility will never be enhanced by the gratitude or generosity oi their country, but must be derived solely from their own underived naked merit. By the Congress they were styled the Patriot, and Posterity will call them the unpaid Army. William Eustis. APPENDIX, 533 STATEMENT IN RELATION TO THE ORIGINAL MEMBERS OF THE MASSACHUSETTS SOCIETY. The autograph list of original members of the Massachusetts Society, deposited in Uie safety vault of the New England Historic- Genealogical Society, contains the names of 320 officers. What purported to be a fac-simile of this list was given in the appendix to the memorial volume of 1873; but instead of photographing the names just as they appear on the original sheets, they were re- arranged for the purpose, apparently, of making a neater-looking job ; and, in consequence, a number of mistakes were made. In several instances names written " by order " were made to appear as original signatures, and in many cases the rank was changed. The names of " E. Davis" and " Eben Davis" appear in the pho- tograph list ; but on the original list it appears clearly that " E. Davis" signs "in behalf of Eben Peabody." The list of original members printed in 181 2 * contains 333 names. On comparing this list with the original autograph list, it appears that nine names on the autograph list are omitted and twenty-two new names are added. It would appear that eight of the nine officers whose names were dropped had failed to contribute their month's pay, and that the other officer whose name was dropped had been transferred to the New York Society. The twenty-two names added represented officers who had contributed a month's pay, but had neglected to sign the original articles. Although considerable care appears to have been taken in preparing this list, the names of a number of officers who had failed to make their contribution were inserted. At the meeting of the Standing Committee, 3 July, r8i6, the following vote was adopted and reported at the annual meeting of the Society on the following day : — " That the following gentlemen, who have been heretofore considered as members, and whose names are entered on the printed book (1S12), * A list was printed in 1801, but I have not lieen able to find a copy among the Society's documents or in the Boston libraries. There was a copy in the Barlow collection, sold in New York City in Feb iSgo — J. M. B. 534 APPENDIX. Iiave no credit as having paid their month's pay, and therefore are not and cannot be considered as ever having been qualified legal members ; namely, Oliver Brown, Josiah [Isaiah] Bussey, Osgood Carleton, Belcher Hancock, Bartlett Hinds, Michael Jackson [Jr.], John Johns- ton, Eben Peabody, Peleg Turner. But if either of them shall pay to the Treasurer of this Society the one month's pay which was originally contem- plated to be paid, he shall be entitled to succeed his ancestor upon such payment being made within one year after the said successor shall arrive at the age of twenty-one years."' The "Journal," showing the cash receipts and expenditures, is perhaps the best authority for a correct list of original members, as it is supposed to give the names and rank of all who contributed a month's pay, with the exact amount of the contribution. According to the letter of the Institution an officer was not considered qualified for membership until he had signed the general rules and made his contribution ; but evidently the neglect to sign the declaration was not considered as sufficient cause for dropping a name from the roll, while the neglect to make the contribution was so considered. An exception appears to have been made in the case of Luke Day and Elijah Day, who had made their contribution but had failed to sign the declaration. They took part in Shays's Rebellion, — the only two members of the Massachusetts Society who proved disloyal, — and at the meeting of the Society in July, 1787, the Treasurer was instructed to return their contribution, and it was placed on record that they " were not and never had been considered members of the Society." * An examination of the Treasurer's Journal shows that the nine men whose names are given in the report of 1816, as also the eight men whose names were dropped in the list of 1812, had not contributed a month's pay. If the Hst of 1 8 1 2 is corrected by striking from it the names of delinquents as reported in 181 6, and by adding the name of William Torrey, who contributed his month's pay but who was afterward transferred to the New York Society, it will be found to correspond exactly with the list in the Treasurer's Journal. * Capt. Matthew Parke, of the U. S. Marines, was admitted a member of the Society in 1787, and signed the articles. It subsequently appeared that he had been tried by court-martial, in 17S3, for disobedience of orders, and sentenced to forfeit his commission. After investigating the matter the Standing Com- mittee voted that Capt. Parke was disqualified from being a member His month's pay was returned, and his name was erased from the rolls. Capt. Parke acquiesced in the decision and icturnLil liis diploma. APPENDIX. 535 Of the seventeen names on the autograph list that do not appear on the Treasurer's Journal fourteen had no suocessors, and only one is now represented. The list of 1859, prepared by Col. James W. Sever, the Secretary, is, with a single exception, the same as the list of 181 2. Drake's list of original members, printed in 1872, contained all the names on the autograph list (including those dropped from the list of 1 81 2), all the names on the list of 181 2, and two that do not appear as original members on either list, — namely, Andrew Craigie (an original member of the New York Society, who had taken up his residence in this State) ; and Henry Reidel, of whom little is known. The total number given in his list is 344. In the archives of the General Society there is a parchment roll containing the names of 97 members of the Institution, which ap- pears to have been signed before the State Societies were organized. Washington's name heads the list.* It contains a number of names which appear on the autograph list of the Massachusetts Society, and also the following names which do not appear on that list but which are included in the printed list of 181 2 : — William Heath, Major-General. Benjamin Mooers, Lieut, and Adjutant. Edward Bugbee, Lieutenant. William Satterlee, Captain. It also contains the name of " Henry Riedell," Lieutenant in Gen. Armand's corps. A correct copy of the autograph list is appended, and also a list of the names added to, and the names omitted from, the list of 18 12. * The original copy of the "Institution " of the Society, reported by the com- mittee of officers and adopted by the representatives of the American army at the meeting, 13 May, 1783, is now in the possession of the Hon. Hamilton Fish, and contains thirty-six signatures, Washington's being at the head- The names of the officers on that roll who became members of the Massachusetts Soci- ety are as follows . Heath, Lincoln, Knox, Paterson, Greaton (John), Putnam, Pickering, Jackson (Henry), Shaw, Hull, Whitwell, Pettengill, Knap, Whiting, Brooks, and Maxwell. 536 THE AUTOGRAPH LIST. A. Abbot, Stephen, Captain. Abbott, Josiali, Ensign. Adams, Henry, Regimental Surgeon. Aldan, Judali, Captain. Allen, Natlianiel C, Captain. Ames, Jotliam, Lieutenant. Andrews, William, Lieutenant. Armstrong, Samuel, Lieutenant. Ashley, Moses, Major. Austin, John, Lieutenant. Bailey, Adams, Captain. Bailey, Luther, Captain. Balcom, Joseph, Lieutenant. Baldwin, Jeduthan, Colonel. Ballantine, Ebenezer, Surgeon's Mate. Ballard, William H., Major. Bancroft, James, Lieutenant. Bassett, Barachiah, Lieut. -Colonel. Baury de Bellerive, Captain. Baylies, Hodijah, Lieut.-Colonel. Benson, Joshua, Captain. Blake, Edward, Lieutenant. Blanchard, John, Captain. Blodget, Caleb, Lieutenant. Bowles, Ralph H., Lieutenant and Adjutant. Bowman, Samuel, Lieutenant. Bradford, Gamaliel, Colonel. Bradford, Gamaliel, Lieutenant. Bradford, Roliert, Captain. Bramhall, Jo.shua, Lieutenant. Brigham, Origin. Surgeon's Mate. Brooks, John, LieutenantColonel- Comniandant. Brown, Ebenezer, Lieutenant. Brown, Oliver, Captain-Lieutenant. Bullard, Asa, Lieutenant. Burbeck, Henry, Captain. Burnam, John, Major. Bussey, Isaiah, Captain- Lieutenant. C. Callender, John, Captain-Lieutenant. Carleton, iVIoses, Lieutenant. Carleton, Osgood, Lieutenant. Castaing, [Peter], Lieutenant.* Chambers, Matthew, Captain. Chapin, Samuel, Lieutenant. Clap, Caleb, Captain. Clap, Joshua, Lieutenant. Clayes, Peter, Captain. Cobb, David, Lieutenant-Colonel- Commandant. Cogswell, Amos, Captain. Cogswell, Samuel, Lieutenant. Cogswell, Thomas, Major. Condy, Thomas H., Lieutenant. Cook, David, Captain. Cooper, Ezekiel, Captain. Cooper, Samuel, Adjutant. Crane, Jolin, Colonel. Crane, John, Regimental Surgeon. Crocker, Joseph, Captain. Crowley, Florence, Lieutenant. Cushing, Nathaniel, Captain. Cushing, Thomas. Lieutenant. * Ills Christian name does not appear on the Autograph List. ArPEXDIX. 5. D. Dana, Benjamin, Lieutenant. Danfortli, Joshua, Lieutenant. Daniels, Japlieth, Captain. Darby, Samuel, Major. Davi.s, Ebenezer, Lieutenant and Brigade Quartermaster. Davis, James, Lieutenant. Davis, John, Lieutenant and Adju- tant. Dix, Nathan, Captain. Dodge, Levi, Lieutenant. Dolliver, Peter, Captain. Donnell, Nathaniel, Captain.* Drew, Seth, Major. Duffield, John, Regimental Surgeon. Eaton, Benjamin, Lieutenant. Edwards, Thomas, Lieutenant and Judge-Advocate. Egleston, Azariah, Lieutenant and Paymaster. Emerson, Nehemiah, Captain. Emery, Ephraim, Captain. Eustis, William, Hospital Surgeon. Everett, Pelatiah, Lieutenant. Eysandeau, William, Lieutenant. Felt, Jonathan, Captain. Fernald, Tobias, Lieut-Colonel. Finley, James E. B., Regimental Surgeon. Finley, Samuel, Regimental Sur- geon. Fisk, Joseph, Regimental Surgeon. Floyd, Ebenezer, Ensign. Foster, Elisha, Ensign. Foster, Thomas, Lieutenant. Fowles, John, Captain. Freeman, Constant, Captain-Lieut. Freeman, Thomas D., Lieutenant. Frink, Samuel, Ensign. Frost. Samuel, Captain. Frothingham, Benjamin, Captain. Frye, Frederick, Ensign. Fuller, John, Captain. Gardner, James, Captain. Garrett, Andrew, Lieutenant. George, John, Captain-Lieutenant. Gibbs, Caleb, Major. Gilbert, Benjamin, Lieutenant. Goodwin, F. L. B., Surgeon's Mate. Greaton, John, Brigadier-General. Greaton, John W., Ensign. Greaton, Richard H., Ensign. Green, Francis, Captain. Greenleaf, William, Lieutenant. Gridley, John, Captain-Lieutenant. H. Hall, James, Captain-Lieutenant. Hamlin, Africa, Ensign. Hancock, Belcher, Captain. Hart, John, Regimental Surgeon. Hartshorn, Thomas, Captain. Harvey, Elisha, Captain-Lieutenant. Haskell, Elnathan, Captain. Haskell, Jonathan. Lieutenant. Hastings, John, Captain. Heywood, Benjamin, Captain. Hildreth, William, Lieutenant. Hill, Jeremiah, Lieutenant. Hinds. Bartlett, Captain-Lieutenant. Hiwill, John, Lieutenant, and In- spector of Music. Hobby, John, Captain. Holbrook, David, Captain. Holden, Abel, Captain. Holden, John, Lieutenant. Holden, Levi, Lieutenant. * See note, post, p. 541. 538 APPENDIX. Holland, Ivory, Lieutenant. Holland, Park, Lieutenant. Hollister, Jesse, Captain. Romans, John, Surgeon. Hooker, Zibeon, Lieutenant. Horton, Elisha, Ensign. Houdin, M. G., Captain. Howe, Richard S., Ensign. Hull, William, Lieutenant-Colonel. Hunt, Ephraim, Lieutenant. Hunt, Thomas, Captain. Hurd, John, Ensign. L Ingersoll, George, Lieutenant. Jackson, Amasa, Ensign. Jackson, Charles, Ensign. Jackson, Daniel, Lieutenant. Jackson, Elienezer, Lieutenant. Jackson, Henry, Colonel. Jackson, Michael, Colonel. Jackson, Michael, Lieutenant. Jackson, Simon, Captain. Jackson, Thomas, Captain. Jefferds, Samuel, Lieutenant. Johnston, John, Captain. K. Killam, Joseph, Captain. King, Zebulon, Captain. Knap, Moses, Major. Knowles, Charles, Captain-Lieut. Knox, Henry, Major- General. L. Earned, Simon, Captain. Laughton, William, Surgeon's Mate. Leavenworth, Nathaniel, Surgeon's Mate. Lee, Daniel, Captain. Lee, William R , Colonel. Leland, Joseph, Lieutenant. Leonard, Jacob, Ensign. Lillie, John, Captain. Lincoln, Benjamin, Major-General. Liswell, John, Lieutenant. Lockwood, William, Chaplain. Lord, Jeremiah, Ensign. Lovell, James, Lieutenant. Lunt, Daniel, Captain. Lyman, Cornelius, Ensign. M. M'Cay, Daniel, Ensign. McKendry, William, Lieutenant. Marble, Henry, Lieutenant. Mason, David, Jr., Lieutenant. Maxwell, Hugh, Lieutenant-Colonel. Maynard, John, Lieutenant and Quartermaster. Maynard, Jonathan, Captain. Maynard, William, Captain. Means, James, Captain. Mellish, Samuel, Lieutenant. Miller, Jeremiah, Captain. Miller, Joseph, Lieutenant. I\Iills, John, Captain. Mills, William, Captain. Moor, William, Lieutenant. Moore, William, Captain. Morgan, Benjamin, Surgeon's Mate. Morton, Silas, Lieutenant. Myrick, Samuel, Lieutenant. N. Nason, Nathaniel, Lieutenant and Quartermaster. Nelson, Henry, Lieutenant. Newhall, Ezra, Lieutenant-Colonel. Newman, Samuel, Lieutenant. Nicholson, Samuel, Captain in the Navy. Ni.xon, Thomas, Colonel. North, William. Captain. APPENDIX. 539 Oliver, Alexander, , Ensign. Oliver, Robert, Major. P. Pardee, Aaron, Lieutenant. Parker, Benjamin, Lieutenant. Parker, Ellas, Lieutenant.* Paterson, John, Brigadier-General. Peabody, Ebenezer, Lieutenant Peirce, John, Captain- Lieutenant. Peirce, Silas, Captain. Perkins, William, Major. Peters, Andrew, Lieutenant-Colonel. Pettengill, Joseph, Major. Phelon, Edward, Lieutenant. Phelon, Patrick, Lieutenant. Pierce, Benjamin, Lieutenant. Pike, Benjamin, Captain. Pope, Isaac, Major. Popkin, John, Lieutenant-Colonel. Porter, Benjamin Jones, Surgeon's Mate. Pratt, Joel, Lieutenant. Pray, John, Captain. Price, William, Lieutenant. Putnam, Rufus, Brigadier-General. R. Randall, Thomas, Captain. Rawson, Jeduthan, Ensign. Remich, Timothy, Captain. Rice, Nathan, Major. Rice, Oliver, Lieutenant. Richardson, Abijah, Regimental Surgeon. Rickard, William, Lieutenant. Ripley, Hezekiah, Lieutenant. Roberts, Richard B., Captain. Rowe, John, Ensign. Sampson, Crocker, Lieutenant. Sargent, Winthrop, Captain. Savage, Henry, Lieutenant. Savage, Joseph, Captain. Sawyer, James, Ensign. Scammell, Samuel L., Ensign. Scott, James, Ensign. Selden, Charles, Lieutenant. Sever, James, Ensign. Sewall, Henry, Captain. Seward, Thomas, Captain. Shaw, Samuel, Captain. Shepard, William, Ensign. Shute, Daniel, Regimental Surgeon. Smith, Ebenezer, Captain. Smith, Ebenezer, Captain. Smith, John K., Captain. Smith, Joseph, Lieutenant. Smith, Josiah, Lieutenant. Smith, Silvanus, Captain. -Spring, Simeon, Lieutenant. Sprout, Ebenezer, Lieutenant-Colo- nel-Commandant. Stacy, William, Lieutenant-Colonel. Stafford, John R., Ensign. Stevens, William, Captain. Stocker, Ebenezer, Lieutenant. Stone, Jonathan, Captain. Stone. Nathaniel, Lieutenant. Storer, Ebenezer, Lieutenant and Paymaster. Storey, William, Captain.f Sumner, Job, Major. Swan, Caleb Ensign. Taylor, Tertius, Lieutena"t. Taylor, William, Lieutenant and Quartermaster. * The name is written "E. J. Parker," in the autograph list, t The name is spelled " -Story " on the original list ; but it was so written by Ebenezer Jackson, who signed for Capt. Storey. 540 ATPEXDIX. Thaclier, James, Regimental Sur- geon. Thacher, Nathaniel, Lieutenant. Thomas, Josepli, Captain. Tisdale, James, Captain. Torrey, William, Lieutenant and Adjutant. Torrey, William, Lieutenant. Town, Jacob, Lieutenant. Townsend, David, Hospital Sur- geon. Treadwell, William, Captain. Trescott, Lemuel, Major. Trowbridge, Luther, Lieutenant. Trotter, John, Captain. Tucker, Joseph, Lieutenant and Paymaster. Tudor, William, Lieutenant-Colonel and Judge-Advocate-General. Tupper, Anselm, Lieutenant and Adjutant. Tupper, Benjamin, Colonel. Turner, Jonathan, Captain. Turner, Marlbry, Lieutenant. Turner, Peleg, Lieutenant. Turner, Thomas, Captain. V. Vose, Elijah, Lieutenant-Colonel. Vose, Joseph, Colonel. Vose. Thomas, Captain. W. Wales, Joseph, Lieutenant. Walker, Edward, Lieutenant and Paymaster. \VaIker, Robert, Captain. Wardwell, Joseph, Lieutenant. Warren, Adriel, Lieutenant. Warren, James, Jr., Lieutenant in the Navy. Warren, John, Lieutenant. Watson, William, Captain. Wattles, Mason, Captain. Webb, George, Captain. Webber, Daniel, Lieutenant. Wellington, Elisha, Lieutenant. Wells, Benjamin, Lieutenant. Wells, James, Lieutenant. Wells, Thomas, Captain. Wesson, James, Colonel. White, Edward, Lieutenant White, Haffield, Captain. Whiting, John, Lieutenant. Whitwell, Samuel, Surgeon. Wilds, Ebenezer, Lieutenant. Williams, Abraham, Captain. Williams, Ebenezer, Lieutenant. Williams, John, Captain. Williams. Joseph, Captain. Williams, Robert, Lieutenant and Paymaster. Wing, Jonathan, Ensign. Winslow, John, Captain. Woodbridge, Christopher, Captain. Woodward, Samuel, Surgeon's Mate. Y. Yeomans, John, Lieutenant. 541 NAMES ON PRINTED LIST OF 1812, BUT NOT ON AUTOGRAPH LIST. Allen, Noah, Major. Barlow, Joel, Chaplain. Bradford, Andrew, Lieutenant. Bugbee, Edward, Lieutenant. Dean, Walter, Captain. Goodale, Nathan, Captain. Heath, William, Major-General. Holden, Aaron, Captain. Lincoln, Rufus, Captain. Mooers, Benjamin, Lieutenant. Morrill, Amos, Major. Phelon, John, Lieutenant. Prescott, Joseph, Hospital Mate. Reab,* George, Lieutenant. Rouse, Oliver, Captain. Satterlee, William. Major. Shepard, William, Colonel. Smith, Simeon, Captain. Story, John, Captain. Taylor, Othniel, Captain. Thomas, John, Regiment Surgeon. I Tliompson, Thaddeus, Surgeon. The following names are given as those of " members who joined the Society in other States and now reside in this " : — - Henry Dearborn, Colonel. Joseph Clark, Lieutenant. Andrew Craigie, Apothecary. In the list of 1859 the name of Timothy Pickering is added. * Printed " George Read " in Drake's list. Reab appears to be the correct name ; it is so written in the Journal and in all the early lists. In the official " List of the Commissioned and Staff Officers of the Massachusetts Line " it is written Rcabb. NAMES ON AUTOGRAPH LIST, BUT NOT ON PRINTED LIST OF 1S12. Pray, John. Captain. Price, William, Lieutenant. Roberts, Rich.ird B., Captain. Torrey, William, Lieutenant, f Blodget, Caleb, Lieutenant. Dolliver, Peter, Captain. Donnell, Nathaniel, Captain.* Fernald, Tobias, Lieut. -Colonel. Homans, John, Surgeon * Contributed his month's pay to the New Jersey Society in 17S4. His grand- son William Lester Donnell is now a memher of that Society. t Omitted because transferred to the New Voik Society. He contributed his montli's pay. 542 APPENDIX. OFFICERS [assatljusctfa ^ocirf^ of iljf Cincinnaii, PRESIDENTS. {:kcted. Benjamin Lincoln 1783 John Brooks 1810 David Townsend 1825 JUDAH Alden 1829 James Sever 1845 Henry Burbeck 1846 Robert Gould Shaw 1849 Charles Stewart Daveis 1853 Alfred Louis Baury 1865 James Warren Sever 1866 Henry Knox Thatcher 1871 Samuel Crocker Cobb 1880 VICE-PRESIDENTS. Henry Knox . John Paterson William Eustis David Cobb . William Tudor William Eustis David Townsend Judah Alden . Francis Green Daniel Jackson John Hart Benjamin Pierce Elected. I7S3 1785 1786 1810 1820 182I 1825 1829 1832 1834 1836 James Sever . . Henry Sewall Joseph Prescott James Lovell Charles Stewart Dave Alfred Louis Baury James Warren Sever Winslow Warren . Henry Knox Thatcher Samuel Crocker Cobb Charles Dudley Homans Winslow Warren . Elected. 1839 184s 1846 IS49 1851 1853 1865 1866 1870 I87I 1880 I8S7 APPENDIX. 543 TREASURERS. Elected. Elected. Henry Jackson . . . • 1783 David S Townsend . . 1845 John Winslow . . . . 1809 William Perkins . . . . 1847 Robert Williams . . . I81I Winslow Warren . . . . 1878 Robert Gould Shaw . . 1836 Gamaliel Bradford . . 1S87 Samuel Perkins . . . i84[ ASSISTANT TREASURERS. Benjamin Heywood John Winslow . Adams Bailey . Robert Gould Shaw Samuel Perkins David S Townsend 17S3 1794 1809 1825 183s 1841 John Pickering . John Bryant . . Henry A. Peirce Gamaliel Bradford WiUiam F. Jones . 1845 1846 1865 1877 SECRETARIES. John Brooks Thomas Edwards David Townsend John Callender . Thomas Jackson Adams Bailey . '783 1786 1807 1821 1834 1 85 1 James Warren Sever . Samuel Crocker Cobb Charles Dudley Homans Francis Winthrop Palfrey David G. Haskins, Jr. 1859 1865 1871 1880 1890 ASSISTANT SECRETARIES. Joseph Crocker .... 1794 Samuel Armstrong . . 1798 John Callender .... 1806 Adams Bailey .... 1808 John Callender .... 1809 Thomas Jackson . . . 1821 Adams Bailey .... 1S34 James Warren Sever . BenJ. Henderson Greene Leonard Crocker Bowles Winslow Warren . . David G. Haskins, Jr. John Homans, 2d . . 1851 1859 1863 1873 1878 1890 544 ACT OF INCORPORATION. PASSED MARCH I3, 1S06. Cnmmontocaltlj of Ptassadjusctts. IN THE YEAR OF OUR LORD ONE THOUSAND EIGHT HUNDRED AND SIX. An All to incorporate Benjamin Lincoln and others into a Society by the name 0/ The Society oj the Cincinnati within the State 0/ Massachusetts. W/iereas, Upon the dissolution of the American Revolutionary Army, in the year of our Lord one thousand seven hundred and eiyhty-three, Benjamin Lincoln and others, officers in the Massachusetts line of said army, did associate for the purpose of forming a fund to be forever there- after appropriated for the relief of the indigent members of said associa- tion, and the widows and orphans of said members ; and in order to se- cure the said fund, and fulfil the charitable designs of the said institution, have petitioned to be incorporated, — Sect. i. Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives in General Court assembled, and by the authority of the same, that the said Benjamin Lincoln and his associates, together with such others as may be admitted members of said association, be, and they hereby are, incorporated into a society by the name of The Massachusetts Society of the Cincinnati, with power to have a common seal; to make contracts relative to the objects of the said charitable fund ; to sue and to be sued ; to establish by-laws and orders for the regulation of said society and the preservation and application of the funds thereof, provided the same be not repugnant to the Constitution and laws of this Commonwealth ; and to take, hold, and possess any estate, real or per- sonal, by subscription, gift, grant, purchase, devise, or otherwise ; and the same to improve, lease, exchange, or sell, and convey for the sole benefit of said institution, provided the value of the real estate of said society shall never exceed twenty thousand dollars, and the annual income of the whole estate of said society shall not exxeed five thousand dollars. Sect. 2. Be it further enacted, that the said society shall meet in Boston, on the fourth day of July, annu.ally (unless the same should fall upon a Sunday, in which case the annual meeting shall always be holden on the day succeeding), for the purpose of electing by ballot from their members a president, vice-president, treasurer, secretary, and such other officers as may be necessary to manage their concerns, all which officers shall hold their said offices for one year, and until others shall be APPENDIX. 545 elected to succeed them ; and tlie officers for the time being shall publish a notification of the time and place of each annual meeting in at least two newspapers, at least fourteen days before holding the same. Upon any urgent occasion, the president or vice-president, or in their absence the secretary, may appoint a special meeting of said society to be notified in the same manner as annual meetings. Sect. 3. Be it further enacted, that the president, vice-president, and other officers of said society, chosen on the fourth day of July last, shall have the same authority to manage the concerns thereof as is hereby vested in like officers to be hereafter annually chosen ; provided, never- theless, that this act of incorporation shall be determinable at the pleasure of the legislature. 35 546 BY-LAWS AND RULES MASSACHUSETTS SOCIETY OF THE CINCINNATI. Originally adopted July 4, 181 1, and amended at the annual meetings o/"i848, 1859, 1872, 1877, 1878, 1890. I. The officers of the Society shall consist of a President, Vice-Presi- dent, Secretary, Treasurer, and an Assistant Secretary and Treasurer, each of whom shall in virtue of his office be a member of the Standing Committee of the year. II. There shall be annually elected on the 4th of July a committee consisting of twelve, in addition to the officers of the Society, whose duty it shall be to take care of the general concerns of the corporation as well as of all matters specially committed to them by the Society. They shall from the funds afford such relief to the members, or to their widows and orphans, as in their judgment shall become proper objects thereof, in such sums and at such times as they shall think best, taking care that the interest only of the general stock of the Society be appropriated for this purpose, and for that of defraying the necessary expenses of the So- ciety. They shall pay a special attention to the state of the treasury, and shall see that the Treasurer give bond for the faithful discharge of his duty; they shall, from time to time, audit his accounts, direct him in the exchange or p'jrchase of stock, and in whatever the interest and se- curity of the corporation may from time to time require. They shall keep a record of their proceedings, which shall be subject to the inspection of any member, and at the annual meeting shall be laid before the Society and read. III. The votes ior the election of the officers of the Society, and for the admission of members, shall always be by ballot or written vote, IV. Five members of the Standing Committee shall be considered as a quorum for transacting the ordinary business ; but no appropriation of money shall be made unless seven members be present. V. Every original candidate who shall be voted in shall, at the time of his admission, pay such a sum in aid of the funds as the Standing Committee shall adjudge to be reasonable APPENDIX. 547 VI. Every person who may be desirous of becoming a member of the Society, and who shall come within the terms of the original general Institution, shall make his application to the Standing Committee in writing, who shall advise thereon and report their opinion to the Society; but no one shall be permitted to be a candidate under the age of twenty- one years. VII. Each person who shall be admitted a member in right of succes- sion to a deceased member, or who shall become a member by virtue of any rule now existing or which may hereafter be established, shall make and subscribe the following declaration, in presence of the Society : provided, however, that m case the person so admitted is in active ser- vice in the army or navy of the United States, and is unable to attend the regular meeting of the Society next following his admission, he may make and subscribe the declaration before a notary-pubhc or justice of the peace, and transmit the same to the Secretary to be afifixed to the record book of the Society . — I, , having been admitted a member of the Society of Cin- cinnati within the State of Massachusetts, as the true successor of , late a menibei' of this Society, and my deceased (father or brother, as the case may be), do solemnly promise and engage that I will duly conform to all the regulations established from time to time for the gov- ernment of said Society, as far as they shall have for their basis the principles of the original Institution. In testimony whereof, I hereto subscribe my name and pledge my sacred honor. VIII. New members who shall be admitted on the claim of succession shall have a diploma or certificate, signed by the President and counter- signed by the Secretary, of the form following, viz. : — COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS. Be it known that , as the true successor of , de- ceased, is a member of the Society of the Cincinnati ; instituted by the officers of the American army at the period of its dissolution, as well to commemorate the great event which gave independence to the United States of America, as for the laudable purpose of inculcating the duty of laying down in peace arms assumed for public defence, and of uniting in acts of brotherly affection and bonds of perpetual friendship the members constituting the same. In testimony whereof, the seal of the State Society of the Cincinnati of Massachusetts is hereunto afifixed. and the hand of the President, the day of , in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and . By order , Prcside}it. , Secretary. 54S APPENDIX. IX. Any person making application to become a member of the Soci- ety in conformity with the Rule recommended at the Triennial Meeting of the General Society of the Cincinnati, held at Baltimore in May, 1S54, and adopted by this Society at their annual meeting in July following, may be admitted upon subscribing the usual declaration, and upon condi- tion of the payment of the sum of seven hundred dollars ($700) to the Treasurer of the Society as a contribution to the permanent fund, and shall thereby be entitled to all the rights and privileges of an original member. X. The succession and admission to membership of this Society shall descend to the heir male unless for satisfactory reasons another be cho- sen, in which case the membership shall extend to the life only of the person so elected ; and at his decease the then existing heir male of the original member shall be the person first to be considered on a new election. XI. A failure on the part of any eligible person to apply for admission within a reasonable time after being informed of the existence of his claim may be interpreted as a waiver tiiereof. XII. Since a waiver can in any case be regarded only as the renun- ciation of a claim, not as the transfer of a right, nont can be recognized which would impair the subsequent eligibility of a minor. XIII. Priority of claim through descendants through a female line is to be construed according to the same rules which govern priority in the male line ; namely, those of primogeniture according to the common law, so far as applicable. XIV. A Committee of Finance, to consist of three members, shall be elected by ballot annually. It shall be the duty of this Committee to advise the Treasurer and Assistant Treasurer in regard to the investment of all funds belonging to this Society ; and no investment, or change of investment, shall be made without the concurrence of this Committee. The Committee of Finance shall also further audit the accounts of the Treasurer before each annual meeting. 549 OFFICERS OF THE GENERAL SOCIETY. PR ES ID EN TS-GENERAL. 1783. George Washington of Virginia. 1800. Alexander Hamilton of New York. 1805. Charles Cotesworth Pinckney of South Carolina. 1825. Thomas Pinckney of South Carolina. 1829. Aaron Ogden of New Jersey. 1839. Morgan Lewis of New York. 1844. William Popham of New York. 1848. Henry Alexander Scammell Dearborn of Massachusetts. 1854. Hamilton Fish of New York. VICE-PRESIDENTS-GENERAL. 1784. Horatio Gates of Virginia. 1787. Thomas Mifflin of Pennsylvania. 1799. Alexander Hamilton of New York. 1800. Charles Cotesworth Pinckney of South Carolina. 1805. Henry Knox of Massachusetts. 181 1. John Brooks of Massachusetts. 1825. Aaron Ogden of New Jersey. 1829. Morgan Lewis of New York. 1839. William Shute of New Jersey. 1844. Horace Bmney of Pennsylvania 1S48. Hamilton Fish of New York. 1854. Charles Stewart Daveis of Massachusetts. 1866. James W^arren Sever of Massachusetts. 1872. James Simons of South Carolina. 1881. William Armstrong Irvine, M.D. of Pennsylvania. 1887. Robert Milligan .McLane of Maryland. SEC RE TARIES-GENERAL. 1783. Henry Knox of Massachusetts. 1799. Wilham Jackson of Pennsylvania. 1829. Alexander W. Johnston of Pennsylvania. 1857. Thomas McEuen of Pennsylvania. 1875. George Washington Harris of Pennsylvania (formerly of Maryland). 1884. Asa Bird Gardiner of Rhode Island 550 ASSISTAKT-SECRETARIES-CENERAL, 17S4. Otho Holland Williams of Maryland. 1787. George Turner of South Carolina. 1790. William McPherson of Pennsylvania. 1799. Nathan Dorsey of Pennsylvania. 1802. William Dent Beall of Maryland. 1825. John Markland of Pennsylvania. 1829. Thomas McEuen of Pennsylvania. 1857. George Washington Harris of Pennsylvania (formerly of Maryland). 1875. ■ Richard Irving Manning of Maryland (formerly of South Carolina). 1890. Thomas Pinckney Lowndes of South Carolina. TREASURERS-GENERAL. 1783. Alexander McDougall of New York. 1796. William Jackson of Pennsylvania. 1799. William McPherson of Pennsylvania. 1825. Allan McLane of Pennsylvania (formerly of Delaware). 1832. John Markland of Pennsylvania. 1838. Joseph Warren Scott of New Jersey. 1873. Tench Tilghman of Maryland. 1875. Alexander Hamilton, Jr., of New York. 1881. John Schuyler of New York. ASSrSTANT-TREASURERS-GENERAL. 1825. Alexander W. Johnston of Pennsylvania. 1829. John Markland of Pennsylvania. 1832. John Warren Scott of New Jersey. 1838. William Jackson of Pennsylvania. 1857. John H. Markland of Pennsylvania. 1863. John ]\IcDowell of New Jersey. 1872. William Berrien Dayton of New Jersey. i88r. Herman Burgin, M.D., of New Jersey. 551 RULES AND REGULATIONS OF THE GENERAL SOCIETY. 1st. When the General Society shall assemble for business, the mem- bers shall come to order by taking their seats ; and no one shall leave the room until the meeting is adjourned — without permission from the President-General or Chairman. 2d. At every General Meeting, after the credentials of the respective members shall have been read, the Secretary-General shall read the " rules and regulations for conducting the business of the General-Meet- ing," previous to any other business.* The order of business shall be to read the Journals, if any, of the preceding day ; then the despatches; then the reports of Committees, and then the Order of the day ; which being completed, other matters may be entertained. 3d. When in session members shall not speak to one another ; but rising, shall address themselves to the President-General or Chairman only. 4th. All motions, except for adjourning the meeting from day to day, or for postponing the decision of a question, shall be made in writing. 5th. No motion shall be debated, nor any question taken tliereon — unless the same be seconded. 6th. All questions shall be decided by a majority of members present, unless the vote be taken as prescribed in the Ordinance of the 7th May, 1851. t 7th. All officers shall be appointed by ballot, unless a unanimous con- sent be given to a -diva voce vote. All special committees shall be appointed by ballot, unless a majority determine otherwise. * At the Triennial meeting of the General Society held in Philadelphia on the 5th May, iS:;g, it was resolved " that such State Societies and officers of the General Society as convene in general meetings, shall be competent to transact business." By a resolve of the 14th May, 1787, the General .Society required a representation from seven State Societies in order to constitute a quorum for business. The dissolution, however, of several of the State Societies made it necessary to modify this regulation. t The ordinance adopted in 1851 provides that each representation present from a State Societ}' shall be entitled to cast five votes; and each of the officers of the General Society who shall be present shall be entitled to cast one vote ; and the majority of all the votes thus cast shall be necessary to an election. 552 APPENDIX. 8th. Upon a motion for adjournment, from day to day, the question shall be put, without debate, and shall take the place of all other questions. 9th. No member shall speak more than once, until every otlier mem- ber who chooses shall have spoken to the sime question ; nor shall any member speak oftener than twice in any case, unless for explanation, and then without argument. loth. No member shall interrupt another while speaking, unless he call him to order. nth. All motions in writing shall be open to amendment previously to putting the main question, and motions for postponing the whole or any part of a question shall be first in order. i2th. Questions of order shall be determined by the President-General or Chairman without debate ; but an appeal may be taken to the meeting, in which case they shall immediately decide, after permitting every mem- ber who chooses to speak once. 13th. In cases to which the preceding rules do not apply, the President- General or Chairman shall conduct the proceedings according to his best discretion. 14th. At every meeting of the General Society of the Cincinnati, the "principles embodied in the Original Institution of the Society shall be read as a part of the regular proceedings." APPENDIX. 553 MEMBERS OF THE AMERICAN ORDER OF THE CINCINNATI IN FRANCE. [Taken from Baron de Girardot's pamphlet, printed at Nantes, n. d.] S E. Le Chevalier de la Luzerne, Ministre Plenipotentiaire. S. E Le Seigneur Ge'rard, dernier Ministre Plenipotentiaire. Amiraiix el Commandants de la Marine. L. E. Le Comte d'Estaing. L. E. Le Comte de Grasse. L. E. Le Cointe de Barras. L. E. Le Chevalier Destouches. Marirhatix de Camp Le Comte de Rochambeau, Lieutenant-General Commandant. Le Baron de Viom^nil, Lieutenant-General. Le Chevalier de Chastellux. Le Comte de Viom^nil. Le Comte de Saint-Simon. De Choisy. De Beville. Brigadiers en AnUriipie. [Faits marechaux de camp a leur retoitr en France.] Le Comte de Custines. Le Due de Lauzun. Le Due de Laval. Le Comte d'Autichamps. Le .Marquis de Rostaing. Desaudroiiines. D'Aboville. La Vallette.* Tous servi en Anu'riqne avec le Grade de Colonel. Marquis de Saint-Maime. Comte Chretien des Deux Fonts. ' The three last named were not jnade Field Marshals on their return to France. 1 554 APPENDIX. Comte de Poudens. Vicomte d'Arrot. Vicomte de Rochambeau. Comte Guillaume des Deux Fonts. Vicomte de Noailks. Comte de Cliarlus. Comte Flechin. Robert Dillon. Ouerenet de la Combe des Ingenieurs. Comte de S^gur. Comte de Fersen. Prince de Broglie. Scheldon. Comte de Damas. Comte de Vauban. Marquis de Champcenets. Lisie des Officers dans le Cas d'etre proposls four etre admis dans V Association des Cincinnatus d'apris le R'eglcment de la Societe Generale du 15 Mai, 1784. Le Baron de I'Estrade. Le Chevalier de Lameth. M. de Tarl^. M. de Menouville. Le Baron de Saint-Simon. Le Clievalier de IMirabeau. M. de Montesquieu. Le Vicomte Dosmond. M. de Mac Mahon. Le Chevalier de Tarle. Le Comte de Loncenil. Le Comte de Chabannes. Le Baron d'Esebeck. M. d'Anselme. M. de Ricey. M. Lynch. Le Vicomte de Vaudreuil. Le Vicomte de Fleurv. Supf-limcnt de daix Officers du 15 Aoitst, \-]%\, proposie pour fOrdre Cincinnatus. Goulet de la Tour. Marquis de Montmort. APPENDIX. 555 Cafilahis et Commandants de Vaisseaux. [Resolu, dans I'Assemblee generale de la Societe de Cincinnati; du Lundi, 17 Mai, 1784.] M. de Tarl^. Le Chevalier de Lameth (Colonel par brevet). Le Comte de Sonneville (recorded Sainneville). Le Comte de la Touche (recorded la Touche-Treville). Le Comte de Kergariou (recorded Kergariou Log Maria). Le Clievalier de I'Egiiille. Le Chevalier du Quesne. Le Comte de Trevalais (recorded de la Prevalaye). Le Chevalier Maulevrier. Le Chevalier de Vallongne (recorded Vallongue). Le Comte de Capellis. Le Chevalier de la P^rouse. In addition to the foregoing, Lieut.-Col. de Bouchet was admitted by the General Society, 17 May, 1784. Le Marquis de Bouill^ was admitted 17 May, 1787. INDEX. INDEX. ABBOT, George, descendants of, 77- Abbot, Capt. Stephen, biographical no- tice, 77. Abbott, Ensign Josiah, biographical notice, 78. Adams, Henry, descendants of, 79. Adams, Surgeon Henry, biographical notice, 78. Adams, John, opposed to the Society, 17- Adams, Samuel, opposed to the Society, 17. Admission of members, action of the General Society concerning, 23-26 ; rules of State Societies, 26; action of the Mass. Society, 48, 49, 60, 63, 66, 73, 74 ; rules relating to, 546. Alden, Amherst A., biographical no- tice, 80. Alden, Hon. John, descendants of, 79. Alden, Capt. Judah, biographical no- tice, 79 ; chosen president of the Mass. Society, 59 ; resolutions on the death of, 60. Alden, Samuel, biographical notice, So. Allen, Joseph, descendants of. Si. Allen, Capt. Nathaniel Coit, biograph- ical notice, 81. Allen, Major Noah, biographical notice, Si. Ames, Lieut. Jotham, biographical no- tice, 81. Ames, William, descendants of, 82. Andrews, Lieut. William, biographical notice, 82. Armstrong, Major John, author of " Newburgh Addresses," 5. Armstrong, Lieut. Samuel, biographical notice, 82. Armstrong, Samuel (son), biographical notice of, 83. Arnold, Leonard, biographical notice, 203. Arnold, Samuel Frost, biographical notice, 202. Ashley, Major Moses, biographical no- tice, S3 Austin, Lieut. John, biographical no- tice, S3. Austin, Richard, descendants of, S;^. Austin, Thomas, biographical notice, 84. Autograph list of original members, 536. BAILEY, Capt. Adams, biograph- ical notice, 84. Bailey, Adams (son), biographical no- tice, 85 ; tribute to the memory of, 64. Bailey, Adams (grandson), biograph- ical notice, 85. Bailey, Bernard Calvin, biographical notice, 87. Bailey, Calvin, biographical notice, 87. Bailey, Capt. Luther, biographical no- tice, 86. Bailey, Samuel Donnell, biographical notice, 88. Bailey, Thomas, descendants of. 84, 87. Bailey, Walter Lang, biographical no- tice, S6. Balcom, Lieut. Joseph, biographical no- tice, 88. 56o Baldwin, Henry, descendants of, 89. Baldwin, Col. Jeduthan, biographical notice, 89. Baldwin, Luke, biographical notice, 89. Ballantine, Dr. Ebenezer, biographical notice, Sg. Ballard, Rev. Edward, D.D., biograph- ical notice, 90. Ballard, John Osgood, biographical no- tice, 90. Ballard, Major William Hudson, bio- graphical notice, 89. Bancroft, Lieut. James, biographical notice, 90. Bancroft, James (son), biographical no- tice, 91. Barlow, Joel (Chaplain), biographical notice, 91. Barlow, John, of Fairfield, Ct., 91. Bass, John, descendants of, 82. Bassett, Lt -Col. Barachiah, biograph- ical notice, 94. Bassett, Col. William, descendants of, 94- Bates, Capt. Joseph, election of, xlii. Bates, Hon. William G., his estimate of Col. William Shepard, 44S. Eaury, Rev. Alfred Louis, D.D., bio- graphical notice, 97 ; chosen Presi- dent of the Mass. Society, 65 ; reso- lutions on the death of, 65. Baury, Lieut. Frederic, biographical notice, 97. Baury, Lieut. Frederic Francis, bio- graphical notice, 99. Baury de Bellerive, Capt. Louis, bio- graphical notice, 94. Baylies, Edmund, biographical notice, 102. Baylies, Edmund Lincoln, biographical notice, 102 Baylies, Lt.-Col Hodijah, biographical notice, too. Baylies, Thomas, descendants of, 102. Bell, Charles Upham, biographical no- tice, 145 Bellerive. Siv Baury. Benson, Capt. Joshua, biographical no- tice, 103 Binney, Dr. Barnabas, referred to, 46, "03 Binney, Horace, LL.D., biographical notice, 103 ; admission at the age of si.xteen, 46. Binney, Horace, Jr., referred to, 104. Blake, Lieut. Edward, biographical no- tice, 104. Blake, Robert, biographical notice, 104. Blanchard, Capt. John, biographical notice, 104. Blodget, Lieut. Caleb, biographical no- tice, 104. Bowles, John, descendants of, 105. Bowles, Leonard Crocker, biographical notice, 106. Bowles, L. Q. C, biographical notice, 106. Bowles, Lieut. Ralph Hart, biograph- ical notice, 104. Bowles, Dr. Stephen Wallace, bio- graphical notice, 106. Bowman, Nathaniel, descendants of, 107. Bowman, Lieut. Samuel, biographical notice, 107. Bradford, Alden, LL.D., biographical notice, no. Bradford, Lieut. Andrew, biographical notice, 107, Bradford, Col. Gamaliel, biographical notice, 109. Bradford, Lieut. Gamaliel, biographical notice, 112. Bradford, Dr. Gamaliel, biographical notice, 113. Bradford, Gamaliel, biographical no- tice, 114; chosen Treasurer of the Mass. Society, 71, 72. Bradford, Laurence, biographical no- tice, III. Bradford, Capt. Robert, biographical notice, 114. Bradford, Capt. Robert Forbes, bio- graphical notice, loS. Bradford, Thomas Gamaliel, biograph- ical notice, 1 1 1. Bradford, Gov. William, descendants of, 112. Bramhall, Lieut. Joshua, biographical notice, 115. Brooks, Alexander Scammell, biograph- ical notice, 120. 56i Brooks, Lieut.-Col. John, biographical notice, 1 15-120 ; first Secretary of the Mass. Society, 37 ; chosen President of the Mass. Society, 53; address to La Fayette, 56, 57 ; resolutions on the death of, 58. Brown, Lieut. Ebenezer, biographical notice, 121. Brown, Frederick W. S. A., biograph- ical notice, 122. Brown, John, descendants of, 122. Brown, Capt. -Lieut. Oliver, biographi- cal notice, 122. Bryan, William, descendants of, 353. Bryant, Dr. Henry, biographical no- tice, 3153. Bryant, John, biographical notice, 352. Bryant, Dr. John, biographical notice, 354- Bugbee, Lieut. Edward, biographical notice, 122. Bugby, Edward, descendants of, 122. BuUard, Lieut. Asa, biographical no- tice, 123. Bullard, Benjamin, descendants of, 123. Bullard, James, biographical notice, 123. Bullock, Frederick Prescott, biograph- ical notice, 403. " Bunch of Grapes " Tavern, meetings of the Society at, 38. Burbeck, Capt. Henry, biographical notice, 124; chosen president of the Mass. Society, 60 ; last of the original members who held that ofiice, 61. Burbeck, William Henry, biographical notice, 127 Burke, ^danus, issues a pamphlet against the Society, 15, 16. Burnam, Major John, biographical no- tice, 127. Burnet, Lieut. Robert, Jr. (of New York), last survivor of the original members in this country, 27 note- Burnham, Deacon John descendants of, 128. Burnham, John W., elected a member, xlii. Bussey, Capt.-Lieut. Isaiah, biograph- ical notice, 129. By-laws and rules of the Mass. Society, 546. CALLENDER, Eliezer, descend- ants of, 130. Callender, Capt.-Lieut. John, biograph- ical notice, 129. Callender, John (nephew), biographical notice, 130. Carleton, Lieut. Moses, biographical notice, 130. Carleton, Lieut. Osgood, biographical notice, 130. Casey, Gen. Silas, biographical notice, 212. Casey, Thomas, descendants of, 215. Casey, Gen. Thomas L., biographical notice, 216. Castaing, Lieut. Peter, biographical notice, 131. Chambers, Capt. Matthew, biograph- ical notice, 131. Chapin, Deacon Samuel, descendants • of, 131. Chapin, Lieut. Samuel, biographical notice, 131. Charter of the Mass. Society, 544. Chase, Francis, biographical notice, 78. Chase, Stephen Abbot, biographical notice, 78. Chase, William, biographical notice, 78. Clap, Capt. Caleb, biographical notice, 132- Clap, Lieut. Joshua, biographical no- tice, 133. Clapp, Charles Barnard, biographical notice, 135. Clapp, Joel, D-D , biographical no- tice, 134. Clark, Capt. Joseph, biographical no- tice, 135^ Clark, Joseph Hill, biographical no- tice, 135. Clarke, Samuel C, biographical no- tice, 270. Clarke, Thomas, descendants of, 270. Clayes, Rev. Dana, biographical no- tice, 136. Clayes, John, descendants of, 136. Clayes, Capt. Peter, biographical no- tice, 136. Cobb, Austin or Augustine, descend- ants of, 140. 36 562 Cobb, Lt.-Col. David, biographical no- tice, 136. Cobb, Hon. Samuel Crocker, biograph- ical notice, 141 ; remarks at the cen- tennial celebration in New York in 1S89, 33, ^2 ': elected President of the Mass. Society, 67 ; address at the anni- versary celebration in Boston in 1S83, 68, 69 ; remarks at the annual meet- ings in 18S9 and 1S90, 72 ; remarks on the death of Rear-Admiral Thatcher, 319; remarks on the death of Wil- liam Perkins, 38S. Cogswell, Capt. Amos, biographical notice, 146. Cogswell, John, descendants of, 144. Cogswell, Lieut. Samuel, biographical notice, 147. Cogswell, Major Thomas, biographical notice, 144. Concert Hall, meetings of the Society at, 38 Condy, Lieut. Thos. Hollis, biograph- ical notice, 147. Connecticut Society, notice of, 29. Cook, Capt. Lavid, biographical no- tice, 147. Cook, Horatio Gates, biographical no- tice, 147. Cooper, Capt. Ezekiel, biographical notice, 147. Cooper, Kear-Admiral George Henry, biographical notice, 148. Cooper, Adj. Samuel, biographical notice, 148. Cooper, Gen. Samuel (son), notice of, 148. Craigie, Gen. Andrew, biographical notice, 149. Crane, Henry, descendants of, 152. Crane, Col. John, biographical nutice, 150. Crane, Dr. John, biographical notice, 152. Crane, John Huntington, biographical notice, 152. Crocker, Capt. Joseph, biographical notice, 153 Crocker, Lewis Cass, biographical no- tice, 154. Crocker, Samuel Mather (son of Capt. Joseph), biographical notice, 153. Crocker, Samuel Mather (grandson), biographical notice, 153. Crocker, William, descendants of, 153- Crowley, Lieut. Florence, biographical notice, 154. Cumins, Oliver, descendants of, 234. Cummings, Prentiss, biographical no- tice, 234. Gushing, Matthew, descendants of, 155. Gushing, Capt. Nathaniel, biographical notice, 155. Gushing, Lieut. Thomas, biographical notice, 156. DANA, Lieut. Benjamin, biograph- ical notice, 156. Dana, Benjamin (nephew), biograph- ical notice, 157. Dana, Benjamin (grand-nephew), elec- tion of, 157. Dana, Isaac, biographical notice, 157. Dana, Richard, descendants of, 156. Danforth, Lieut. Joshua, biographical notice, 157. Danforth, Rev. Joshua Noble, bio- graphical notice, 15S. Daniels, Capt. Japheth, biographical notice, 159. Darby, Major Samuel, biographical notice, 159. Daveis, Hon. Charles Stewart, bio- graphical notice, 163 ; chosen Presi- dent of the Mass. Society, 63 ; reso- lutions on the death of, 65. Daveis, Dr. John Taylor Gilnian, bio- graphical notice, 172. Davis, Rear-Admiral Charles Henry, biographical notice, 192. Davis, Commander Charles Henry (son), biographical notice, 201. Davis, Lieut. Ebenezer, biographical notice, 159. Davis, Lieut. James, biogrnphical no- tice, 173. Davis, Lieut. John, biographical no- tice, 174. Davis, Robert, descendants of, 200. 56: Davis, William (father of Lieut, Eben- ezer), 162. Davis, William P., biographical notice, 174- Day, Luke and Elijah, declaration of Standing Committee concerning, 42, 534- Dean, Capt. Walter, biographical no- tice, 174. Dearborn, Godfrey, descendants of, 175- Dearborn, Col. Henry, biographical notice, 174 ; his command in Upper Canada, 265. Dearborn, Henry A. S., biographical notice, 176 Delaware Society, notice of, 30. Dix, Capt. Nathan, biographical no- tice, 177. Dodge, Lieut. Levi, biographical no- tice, 177. Doland, John J , biographical notice, 178. DoUiver, Capt. Peter, biographical no- tice, 178. Donnell, Capt. Nathaniel, 541 note. Drew, Clement, biographical notice, 180. Drew, George Henry, biographical no- tice, 180. Drew, John, descendants of, 17S. Drew, Major Seth, biographical no- tice, 178. Drew, Seth (son), biographical notice, 179. Duffield, Dr. John, date of commission, iSo. EATON, Lieut. Benjamin, biograph- ical notice, iSi. Eaton, Charles Marvin, biographical notice, 181. Eaton, William L., election of, xlii. Edwards, Charles, biographical notice, 1S3. Edwards, John (1670), descendants of, 1S2. Edwards, John (1802), biosrraphical no- tice, 182. Edwards, Lieut. Thomas, biographical notice, 181. Egleston, Lieut. Azariah, biographical notice, 1S3. Emerson, Henry, biographical notice, 184. Emerson, Michael, descendants of, 1S4. Emerson, Nathaniel W., biographical notice, 1S4. Emerson, Capt. Nehemiah, biograph- ical notice, 184. Emery, Capt. Ephraim, biographical notice, 185. Eustis, Gen. Abraham, election of, xlii. Eustis, William, descendants of, 186. Eustis, Gov. William, biographical no- tice, 185 ; elected Vice-President of the Mass. Society, 38 ; statement in relation to the origin of the Cincinnati Society, 3, 531 ; address to President Washington, 44. Eustis, William (grand-nephew), bio- graphical notice, 1S7. Everett, Lieut. Pelatiah, biographical notice, 187. Exchange Coffee House, meetings of Society at, 38. Eysandeau, Lieut. William, army rec- ord, 188. F'ELT, Capt. Jonathan, biograph- ical notice, 188. Felt, Oliver, biographical notice, 188. Fernald, Renald, descendants of, 189. Fernald, Lieut -Col. Tobias, biograph- ical notice, 1S9. Finley, Dr. James E. B., notice of, 1 89. Finley. Dr. Samuel, notice of, 190. Fisk, David, descendants of, 190. Fisk, Dr. Joseph, biographical notice, 190. Fiske, Dr. Joseph (son), biographical notice, 190. Floyd, Ensign Ebenezer, notice of, 191. Foster, Andrew, biographical notice, 150. Foster, Ensign Elisha, date of commis- sion, 191. 564 Foster, Lieut. Thomas, biographical ■ notice, 191. Fowle, John (son of Capt. John), bio- graphical notice, 192. Fowles, Edmund, descendants of, 191. Fowles, Capt. John, biographical no- tice, 191. France, members of the Society in, 30, 31. 553- Franklm, Benjamin, ridicules the .So- ciety, 17. Freeman, Capt.-Lieut. Constant, bio- graphical notice, 192. Freeman, Samuel, descendants of, 192. Freeman, Lieut. Thomas Davis,- bio- graphical notice, 201. Frink, Ensign Samuel, biographical notice, 201. Frost, Capt. Samuel, biographical no- tice, 202. Frost, Thomas, descendants of, 202. Frothingham, Capt. Benjamin, bio- graphical notice, 203. Frothingham, Benjamin (son), bio- graphical notice, 203. Frye, Ensign Frederick, biographical notice, 204. Fuller, Capt. John, biographical notice, 204. GARDNER, Capt. James, bio- graphical notice, 204. Garrett, Lieut. Andrew, biographical notice, 205. Gates, Gen. Horatio, secret connivance with disaffected cfiScers, 5. General Society, first general meeting, 20, 21 ; action on the admission of members, 23-26 ; anniversary celebra- tion, 31-33; officers elected in 1S90, 34; officers since 17S3, 549. George, Capt.-Lieut. John, biograph- ical notice, 205. Georgia Society, notice of, 30. Gibbs, Alexander H., biographical no- tice, 207. Gibbs, Major Caleb, biographical no- tice, 207. Gilbert, Lieut. Benjamin, biographical notice, 207. Goodale, Dr. Lincoln, biographical no- tice, 211. Goodale, Capt. Nathan, biographical notice, 207. Goodale, Robert, descendants of, 210. Goodwin, Dr. Francis Le Baron, bio- graphical notice, 218. Gould, Capt. Benjamin, notice of, 218. Gould, Benjamin Apthorp, LL.D., bio. graphical notice, 21S; report on the admission of members, 73. 74. Gould, Zaccheus, descendants of, 223. Gouvion, Col., letter to Kno.\, 20. Greaton, Brig.-Gen. John, biographical notice, 223. Greaton, Ensign John W., biographical notice, 224. Greaton, Ensign Richard H., biograph- ical notice, 225. Green, Capt. Francis, biographical no- tice, 225. Green, Horace, LL.D., biographical notice, 226. Green, Dr. Samuel A., remarks on the death of Gen. Palfrey, 376. Greene, Benjamin Henderson, bio- graphical notice, 225. Greene, George Francis, biographical notice, 226. Greenleaf, Samuel, biographical notice, 22S. Greenleaf, Lieut. William, biographical notice, 227. Gridley, Capt.-Lieut. John, notice of, 22S.' HALL, George, biographic; notice, 229. Hall, George W., biographical notice, 230. Hall, Lieut. James, biographical no- tice, 228. Hall, James (grandson), biographical notice, 229. Hamlin, Ensign Africa, biographical notice, 230. Hamlin, Poladore, election of, xlii. Hancock, Capt. Belcher, biographical notice, 231. 5^5 Hancock, Henry Killam, biographical notice, 231. Hancock, Nathaniel, descendants of, 231. Hand, Gen. Edward, on committee to revise the " Institution," 6. Hart, Dr. John, biographical notice, 231- Hart, Dr. Samuel, biographical notice, 233- Hartshorn, Capt. Thomas, biograph- ical notice, 234. Harvey, Capt. -Lieut. Elisha, biograph- ical notice, 235 ; grave of, marked, 73- Haskell, Capt. Elnathan, biographical notice, 235. Haskell, Lieut. Jonathan, biographical notice, 236. Haskins, David Greene, Jr., biograph- ical notice, 172; chosen Assistant Secretary of the Mass. Society, 67 ; Secretary, 72. Hastings, Edmund T. (son), biographi- cal notice, 236. Hastings, Edmund T. (grandson), bio- graphical notice, 237. Hastings, Edmund T. (great-grandson), biographical notice, 237. Hastings, Capt. John, biographical notice, 236. Heath, William [1632], descendants of, 240 Heath, Gen. William, biographical no- tice, 237 ; appointed to distribute copies of the " Institution," 13 ; letter to Gen. Knox, renouncing the Institu- tion, 239. Heath, William Samuel, biographical notice, 241. Heywood, Capt. Benjamin, biographi- cal notice, 241 ; first Assistant Treas- urer of the Mass. Society, 37. Heywood, Dr. Benjamin F., biographi- cal notice, 242. Heywood, Deacon John, biographical notice, 242. Heywood, John Green, biographical notice, 243. Hildreth, Lieut. William, biographical notice, 243. Hill, Lieut. Jeremiah, biographical notice, 243. Hinds, Capt.Lieut. Bartlett, biographi- cal notice, 244. Hiwill, Lieut. John, biographical notice, 244. Hobby, Capt. John, biographical notice, 244. Hodge, James Thacher, biographical notice, 473. Hodge, John Russell, biographical notice, 474. Hodge, Michael, notice of, 474. Holbrook, Capt David, biographical notice, 244. Holbrook, Thomas, descendants of, 244. Holden, Capt. Aaron, biographical notice, 245. Holden, Capt. Abel, biographical notice, 345. Holden, Dr. Edgar, biographical notice, 247. Holden, Lieut. John, biographical notice, 246. Holden, Lieut. Levi, biographical notice, 247. Holland, Charles Turner, biographical notice, 250. Holland, Lieut. Ivory, biographical notice, 248. Holland, John, descendants of, 248 Holland, Lieut. Park, biographical notice, 24S. HoUister, Capt. Jesse, biographical notice, 250. Homans, Dr. Charles D., biographical notice, 253 ; chosen Vice-President of the Mass. Societ)', 67 ; resolutions on the death of, 71. Homans, Dr. John, biographical notice, 250. Homans, Dr. John (son), biographical notice, 252. Homans, Dr. John (great-grandson), biographical notice, 254; elected Assistant-Secretary of the Mass. So- ciety, 73- Hooker, Lieut. Zibeon, biographical notice, 255. Hooker, Zibeon (son), biographical notice, 255. 566 Horton, Ensign Elisha, biographical notice, 256. Houdin, Capt. Micliael G., biographical notice, 256. Howe, Ensign Richard S., biographical notice, 256. Howe, Richard S. (nephew), biographi- cal notice, 256. Howe, Thomas (brother), biographical notice, 256. Howe, Thomas (nephew), biographical notice, 256. Hull, Lieut.-Col. William, biographical notice, 257. Hunt, Enoch, descendants of, 271. Hunt, Lieut. Ephraim, biographical notice, 270. Hunt, Gen. Henry J., biographical notice, 279. Hunt, John, descendants of, 27S. Hunt, Gen. Lewis Cass, biographical notice, 271. Hunt, Capt. Thomas, biographical no- tice, 275. Hurd, John, descendants of, 2S3. Hurd, Ensign John, Jr., biographical notice, 2S3. INGEKSOLL, Lieut George, bio- graphical notice, 2S3. Ingersoll, George G., D D., Iiiographi- cal notice, 2S3. " Institution," copy of, from the official record, 7-13; proposed modification of, 21 ; original copy, 535 note. JACKSON, Lieut. Alfred Baury, bio- graphical notice. 100. Jackson, Ensign Amasa, biographical notice, 284. Jackson, Arthur H., election of, xlii. Jackson, David, descendants of, 100. J.ackson, Ensign Charles, biographical notice, 2S4. Jackson, Charles E., biographical notice, 2S4. Jackson, Lieut. Daniel, biographical notice, 2S5. Jackson, Daniel, biographical notice, 2S6. Jackson, Lieut. Ebenezer, biographical notice, 2S7. Jackson, Hon. Ebenezer (son), bio- graphical notice, 2S7. Jackson, Edward, descendants of, 284. Jackson, Edward (nephew of Col. Henry), biographical notice, 2S9. Jackson, Francis, biographical notice, 2S6. Jackson, Col. Henry, biographical no- tice, 28S ; first Treasurer of the Mass. Society, 37; testimonial to. 52; reso- lutions on the death of, 52, 53: por- trait of, presented to the Society, 54- Jackson, Col Michael, biographical notice, 29c. Jackson, Lieut Michael, Jr , biographi- cal notice, 292. Jackson, Capt. Simon, biographical notice, 292. Jackson, Ca])t. Thomas, biographical notice, 292 ; tribute to the memory of, 62. Jackson, Thomas (son), biographical notice, 293. Jay, John, opposed to the Society, 17. Jefferds, Lieut. Samuel, biographical notice, 293. Jefferson, Thomas, reference to Kno.x's wish for a badge, 3 ; assails the So- ciety, iG. Johnston, Capt John, biographical notice, 293. Jones, William Frederick, biographical notice, 362; chosen Assistant Treas- urer of the Mass. Society, 72. KEYES, Capt Alexander Brooks, biographical notice, 120. Killam, Capt. Joseph, biographical notice, 295. King, Philip, descendants of, 295 King, Capt. Zebulon, biographical notice, 295. Kirkland, Rev. John T., LL.D., his notice of Gen. Benjamin Lincoln, 339. Kirkland, Rev. Samuel, notice of, 345. Knap, Major Moses, biographical notice, 295. 567 Knapp, Gilbert Clark, biographical notice, 296. Knapp, Hiram, biographical notice, 296. Knapp, Kev. Isaac, his estimate of Col. William Shepard, 441, 443. Kiiovvles, Capt. -Lieut. Charles, bio- graphical notice, 296. Kno.x.Gen. Henry, biographical notice, 297 ; his " Rough Draft of a Society," 4, 6: deserves title of Founder of the Cincinnati, 4 ; describes the public sentiment in New England in 17S4, ig; first Vice-President of the Mass. Society, 37 ; Chairman of the Com- mittee to prepare address to the Legislature, 40. LA FAYETTE, letter to Gen. Kno.\, 19, 20; reception of, and address, 56-5S ; letter to Robert Wil- liams and others, 520. Larned, Capt. Simon, biographical notice, 321. Laughton, Dr. William, biographical notice, 322 Lawrence, Amos Adams, biographical notice, 322. Lawrence, Amory Appleton, biographi- cal notice, 327. Lawrence, John, descendants of, 326. Lawrence, Major .Samuel, notice of. 322. Lawton, Charles Otis, biographical notice, 417 Leavenworth, Dr. Nathaniel, Ijiographi- cal notice, 327. Lee, Capt. Daniel, biographical notice, 3-7- Lee, Col. William R., biographical notice, 328. Lee, Gen. William Raymond, biographi- cal notice, 328 Leland, Henry, descendants of, 329. Leland, Lieut. Joseph, biographical notice, 329. Leland, Joseph Warren, biographical notice, 32Q. L'Eiifant, Major, his design for the medal and order, 14. Leonard, Ensign Jacob, biographical notice, 330. Lewis, Lieut. Archelaus, notice of, 397. Lillie, Daniel Campbell, biographical notice, 332. Lillie, Capt. John, biographical notice, 330- Lillie, John, biographical notice, 332. Lincoln, Gen. Benjamin, biographical notice, 333 ; first President of the Mass. Society, 37. Lincoln, Benjamin (great-grandson), bio- graphical notice, 343. Lincoln, Capt. Rufus, biographical notice, 343. Lincoln, Rufus (son), biographical notice, 344. Lincoln, Theodore, biographical notice, 342. Lincoln, Thomas, descendants of, 342, 343- Liswell, Lieut. John, biographical notice, 344. Lobdell, Mrs., landlady at the " Bunch of Grapes," 43. Lockwood, Rev. William, biographical notice, 344. Lord, Ensign Jeremiah, biographical notice, 344. Lothrop, Samuel K , D.D., biographical notice, 345. Lothrop, Thornton Kirkland, biographi- cal notice, 347 Lovell, Lieut. James, biographical notice, 347. Lovell, "Master" John, reference to, 347- Lovell, Joseph Plympton, biographical notice, 350. Lovell, Gen. Mansfield, biographical notice, 348. Lovell, Capt. William, reference to, 348. Lunt, Capt. Daniel, biographical notice, 350. Luzerne, Chevalier de la, accepts mem- bership in the Society. 13, I4- Lyman, Ensign Cornelius, biographical notice, 350. Lyman. James Wilkinson, biographical notice, 351. Lyman, William, biographical notice, 351- 568 McCAY, Ensign Daniel, date of commission, 351. McDougall, Gen., Cliairman of Com- mitiee to wait on grand Committee of Congress, 4; first Treasurer-Gen- eral of the Society, 15. McKendry, George Albert, biographical notice, 352. McKendry, John, father of Lieut. Wil- liam, 351. JMcKendry, Lieut. William, biographi- cal notice, 351. Marble, Lieut. Henry, biographical notice, 352. Maryland Society, notice of, 29. Mason, Lieut. David, Jr., biographical notice, 352. Mason, James Means, biographical notice, 357. Mason, James Means (son), biographi- cal notice, 357. Massachusetts, resolves of General Court against the Society, 18; char- ter granted by, 544. Massachusetts Society, annals of, 37-74, Charter, 544; rules, 546; admission of members, 48, 49, 60, 63, 66, 73, 74 ; officers of, for :S90-iS9i, 74; officers since 17S3, 542. Maxwell, Lieut.-Col. Hugh, biographi- cal notice, 354. Maxwell, Hugh (son), biographical notice, 355. Maxwell, William Munroe, biographi- cal notice, 355 Maynard, Cornelius D., biographical notice, 357. Maynard, Lieut. John, biographical notice, 355. Maynard,John, biographical notice, 357. Maynard, Jonathan, descendants of, 356. Maynard, Capt. Jonathan, biographical notice, 356. Maynard, Capt. William, biographical notice, 356. Means, Capt. James, biographical notice, 357. Mellish, Lieut. Samuel, biographical notice, 357. Membership, action of the General Society in relation to, 23-26; rules of State Societies, 26; rules of the Mass. Society, 546. Miller, Capt. Jeremiah, biographical notice, 35S. Miller, Lieut Joseph, biographical no- tice, 358. Mills, Capt. John, biographical notice, 35S. Mills, Capt. William, biographical no- tice, 358. Mirabeau, his " Considerations on the Order of Cincinnatus," 17, i8. Monroe, Pres. James, reception of, and address, 54, 55. Mooers, Lieut. Benjamin, biographical notice, 359. Mooers, Edward, descendants of, 359. Moor, Lieut. William, biographical no- tice, 362. Moore, John W., biographical notice, 360. Moore, Joseph, descendants of, 361. Moore, Capt. William, biographical no- tice, 363. Morgan, Dr. Benjamin, biographical no- tice, 363. Morrill, Major Amos, biographical no- tice, 363. Morton, Lieut. Silas, biographical no- tice, 364. Mo.seley, Col. Ebenezer, notice of, 365. Moseley, Hon. Ebenezer, father of Ed- ward S., 366. Moseley, Edward Strong, biographical notice, 364. Moseley, John, descendants of, 366. Myrick, Lieut Samuel, biographical notice, 367. NASON, Lieut. Nathaniel, bio- graphical notice. 367. Nelson. Lieut. Henry, date of commis- sions, 367. Nelson, Rev. Henry W., biographical notice. c;o7. Newhall, Lieut Col. Ezra, biographical notice. 367. Newhall, Thomas, bin^raphical notice, 36S. New Hampshire Society, notice of, 29. 569 New Jersey Society, notice of, 28. Newman, Henry, biographical notice, 369- Newman, Henry (son), biographical notice, 369. Newman, Lieut. Samuel, biographical notice, 369. Newman, William H. H., election of, 369- New York Society, notice of, 28. Nicholson, Rear Admiral J. W. A , biographical notice, 370. Nicholson, Capt. Samuel, biographical notice, 369. Nicholson, Wm. H. D., election of, 371. Nixon, Marcellus, biographical notice, 373- Nixon, Col. Thomas, biographical no- tice, 371. Nixon, Thomas (son), biographical no- tice, 372. Nixon, Warren, biographical notice, 372- North Carolina Society, notice of, 30. North, John, de.scendants of, 374. North, Capt. William, biographical no- tice, 373. O'BRIEN, Hon. Edward K., bio- graphical notice, 206 Oliver, Ensign Alexander, biographical notice, 374. Oliver, Major Robert, biographical no- tice, 374. Officers, monthly pay of the several grades, 12 Orations delivered before the Society, July 4. 41. Original members, statement in relation to. 533- PALFREY, Gen. Francis Winthrnp, biographical notice, 375 ; chosen Secretary of the Mass. Society, 67. Palfrey, Gen. John Carver, biographi- cal notice, 37S. Pardee, I.ieut. Aaron, biogr.nphical no- tice, 379. Parke, Capt Matthew, notice of, 534. Parker, Lieut. Benjamin, biographical notice, 379. Parker, Edward, election of, xlii. Parker, Edward William, biographical notice, 381. Parker, Lieut. Elias (or E. J.), bio- graphical notice, 3S0. Parker, Hon. Isaac, biographical no- tice, 3S0. Parker, John, descendants of, 3S0. Parker House, meetings of the Society at, 38. Paterson, Gen. John, biographical no- tice, 381. Paterson, Gen. John, presides at the or- ganization of the Mass. Society, 37. Peaoody, Andrew P., D.D., memoir of Rev. S. K. Lothrop, 346. Peabody, Lieut. Ebenezer, biographi- cal notice, 3S2. Peirce, Hon. Henry A., biographical notice, 385. Peirce, Capt. -Lieut. John, biographical notice, 383. Peirce, Joseph, biographical notice, 383- Peirce, Josei-h Hardy, Jr., election of, xlii. Peirce, Capt. Silas, biographical notice, 386. Peirce, Thomas, descendants of, 3S3. Sc-^ Pierce. Pennsylvania Society, notice of, 28. Perkins, Edmund, biographical notice, 387- Perkins, John Warren, biographical notice, 389. Perkins, Samuel, biographical notice, 387- Perkins, Major William, biographical notice, 385. Perkins, William (grandson), biograph- ical notice, 388 ; thanked for services as Treasurer, 66. Perry, Andrew P., biographical notice, 230. Peters, Lieut.-Col. Andrew, biographi- cal notice, 3S9. Peters, John Lovett, biographical no- tice, 390. Peters, Lovett, biographical notice, 390. 570 Pettengill, Major Joseph, biographical notice, 390. Plielon, Lieut. Edward, biographical notice, 391. riielon, Lieut. John, biographical no- tice, 391. Phelon, Lieut. Patrick, biographical notice, 391. Pickering, John (of Ipswich), descend- ants of, 393. Pickering, Hon. John, biographical no- tice, 393. Pickering, John (son of Hon. John), biographical notice, 394. Pickering, John (grandson of Hon. John), biographical notice, 394. Pickering, Col. Timothy, biographical notice, 391. Pierce, Lieut. Benjamin, biographical notice, 394. Pierce, Col. Benjamin, biographical no- tice, 395. Pierce, Edward L., LL D., 332, 467. Pierce, Hon. Franklin, biographical notice, 395 Pierce, Henry Dearborn, biographical notice, 396 Pierce, Hon. Henry L., 332. Pierce, Hon. Josiah, biographical no- tice, 397. Pierce, Kirk Dearborn, biographical notice, 396. Pierce, " Sergeant " Thomas, descend- ants of, 395, 397. Sic- Peirce. Pike, Capt. Benjamin, biographical no- tice, 39S. Pope, Major Isaac, biographical no- tice, 39S. Pope, Isaac Hovey, biographical notice, 400. Pope, Thomas, descendants of, 399. Popkin, Lieut.-Col. John, biographical notice, 400. Popkin, Rev. John Snelling, biograph- ical notice, 401. Porter, Dr. Benjamin Jones, biograph- ical notice, 401. Pratt, Lieut. Joel, biographical notice, 402. Pratt, Joel (son), biographical notice, 402. Pray, Capt. John, biographical notice, 402. Preble, Abraham, descendants of, 4S6. Preble, William Pitt, biograi^hical no- tice, 485. Prescott. John, descendants of, 403. Prescott, Dr. Joseph, biographical no- tice, 402 ; last survivor of original members of the Mass. .Society, 27, 61. Prescott, William Hickling. admitted as an honorary member, 60 ; notice of, 404. Price, Lieut. William, biographical no- tice, 404. Putnam, John, descendants of, 408. Putnam, Brig. -Gen. Rufus, biographical notice, 404; report on his petition relative to e.st.ablishing a branch So- ciety in Ohio, 50, 51. Q UINCY, Hon. Josiah, his esti- mate of Capt. S. Shaw, 436. RANDALL, Capt. Thomas, bio- graphical notice, 40S. Rawson, Ensign Jeduthan, date of com- mission, 409. Reab, Lieut. George, biographical no- tice. 409. Reidel, Lieut. Henry, referred to, 535. Remich, Christian, descendants of, 410. Remich, Cnpt. Timothy, biographical notice, 409. Remich, Rev. Timothy, notice of, 410. Reniick, Major Otis, biographical no- tice, 410. Rhode Island Society, notice of. 27. Rice, Edmund, descendants of. 412. Rice, Major Nathan, biographical no- tice, 412. Rice, Nathan (son), biographical no- tice, 413. Rice, Dr. Nathan P., biographical no- tice, 413. Rice, Lieut. Oliver, biographical no- tice, 414. 571 Richardson, Dr. Abijah, biographical notice, 414. Richardson, George Draper, biograph- ical notice, 415. Richardson, Horace, biographical no- tice, 415. Richardson, William K., election of, 329- Richmond, Capt., suggestion for the formation of a Society, 3. Rickard, Lieut. William, biographical notice, 416. Ripley, Lieut. Hezekiah, biographical notice, 416. Ripley, Joseph Tilden, biographical no- tice, 416. Robbins, Kenelm, biographical notice, 417. Robbins, Nathan Bacon, Jr., biograph- ical notice, 417. Roberts, Capt. Richard Brooke, bio- graphical notice, 417. Ropes, John C, remarks on the death of Gen. Palfrey, 377. Rouse, Capt. Oliver, biographical no- tice, 417. Rowe, Ensign John, biographical no- tice, 418. Rules and Regulations of the General Society, 551. SAMPSON, Lieut. Crocker, bio- graphical notice, 418. Sampson, Henry, descendants of, 418. Sargent, George Washington, bio- graphical notice, 420. Sargent, Ignatius, biographical notice, 421. Sargent, William, descendants of 420 Sargent, Capt. Winthrop. biographical notice. 419 Satterlee, Benedict, notice of. 421. Satterlee, George A., referred to, 422. Satterlee, Gen. Richard S , biograph- ical notice, 422. Satterlee, Major William, biographical notice, 421, Savage, Charles Tyler, biographical notice, 423. Savage, Lieut. Henrv, date of commis- sion, 422. Savage, Capt. Joseph, biographical no- tice, 423. Savage, William Henry, biographical notice, 423. Sawyer, Paymaster George Augustus, biographical notice, 426. Sawyer, Capt. Horace Bucklin, bio- graphical notice, 425. Sawyer, Ensign James, biographical notice, 424. Sawyer, James Lucius, election of, xlii. Sawyer, Thomas, descendants of, 424. Scammell, Ensign Samuel L., biograph- ical notice, 427. Scott, Ensign James, date of commis- sion, 427. Seaver, Robert, descendants of, 428. Selden, Lieut. Charles, biographical notice, 427. .Sever, Ensign James, biographical no- tice, 427 ; chosen President of the Mass. Society, 60. Sever, James Warren, biographical no- tice, 42S ; chosen President of the Mass. Society, 65 ; resolutions on the death of, 65. Sever, Rev. Winslow Warren, bio- graphical notice, 430. Sewall, Henry, descendants of, 431. Sevvall, Capt. Henry, biographical no- tice. 430. Seward, Richard Thompson, biograph- ical notice, 432. Seward, Capt. Thomas, biographical notice, 431. Seward, Thomas (son), biographical notice, 432. Shaw, Francis George, biographical no- tice, 43S. Shaw, George Russell, biographical no- tice. 440. Shaw, Robert Gould, biographical no- tice, 436; chosen President of the Mass. Society. 61. Shaw, Capt. Samuel, biographical no- tice, 432 ; on the committee to revise the " Institution," 6. Shaw, William, biographical notice, 436. 572 Shays, Daniel, leader of the insurrec- tion, 444. Shepard, John (of Mendlesham, Eng.), descendants of, 440. Shepard, Noah, biographical notice, 449- Shepard, Col. William, biographical notice, 440. Shepard, Ensign William, biographi- cal notice, 449. Shute, Dr. Daniel, biographical notice, 450. Shute, Daniel (grandson), biographical notice, 450. Sikes, Henry Knox, biographical no- tice, 321. Smith, Alfred Ethelbert, biographical notice, 452. Smith, Rev. David, biographical notice, 451. Smith, David Marsh, notice of, 452. Smith, Capt. Ebenezer (of Lebanon, Ct.), biographical notice, 451. Smith, Capt. Ebenezer (of Woolwich, Me.), biographical notice, 453. Smith, Henry, biographical notice, 454 Smith, Capt. John Kilby, biographi- cal notice, 453. Smith, Lieut. Joseph, date of commis- sion, 455 Smith, Lieut. Josiah, biographical no- tice, 455. Smith, Capt. Silvanus, biographical no- tice, 455. Smith, Capt, Simeon, biographical no- tice, 456. Smith, William Henry, biographical notice. 454 Soren, John Johnston, biographical no- tice, 294. Soren, George Wales, election of, 294. South Carolina Society, notice of, 29. Spring, Lieut. Simeon, biographical no- tice, 456. Sproat. Henry Hamilton, biographical notice, 4i;8. Sprout, Earle. biographical notice, 458. Sprout, Lieut -Col Ebenezer, biograph- ical notice, 456. Sprout (or Sproat), Robert, descend- ants of, 457. Sprout, Thomas, biographical notice, 458. Stacy, Lieut.-Col. William, biographi- cal notice, 45S. Stafford, Ensign John R., biographical notice, 460. Standing Committee, constitution and appointment of, 41. State Societies, notices of, 27-30. Steuben, Gen , presides at the first meeting to form the Society, 6. .Stevens, Capt. William, biographical notice, 460. Stewart, Duncan, an early settler of Newbury, 163. Stocker, Lieut. Ebenezer, biographical notice, 460. Stocker, George W., biographical no- tice, 460. Stoddard, John Thomas, biographical notice, 477. Stone, Capt. Jonathan, biographical notice, 461. Stone, Lieut. Nathaniel, biographical notice, 462. Storer, Lieut. Ebenezer, biographical notice, 462. Storey, Capt. William, biographical notice, 463. -Storey, Charles William, biographical notice, 463. Story, Elisha, descendants of, 465. Story, Dr. Elisha, notice of, 465. Story, Capt. John, biographical notice, 464- Story, Capt. John Patten, biographical notice, 465 Sumner, Hon. Charles, biographical notice, 46S. Sumner, Charles P., biographical notice, 467. Sumner, Major Edwin V., biographical notice, 470. Sumner, Major Job, biographical no- tice, 466. Sumner, William descendants of. 467. Swan, Ensign Caleb, biographical no- tice, 471. Swett, Samuel, election of, xlii. 573 TAYLOR, Capt. Othniel, biograph- ical notice, 471. Taylor, Lieut. Tertius, biographical notice, 471. Taylor, Lieut. William, biographical notice, 472. Taylor, William (son), biographical no- tice, 472. Thacher, Anthony, descendants of, 473. Thacher, Charles, biographical notice, 476. Thacher, George McDonogh, biograph- ical notice, 475. Thacher, George W., biographical notice, 476. Thacher, Dr. James, biographical no- tice, 472. Thacher, Lieut. Nathaniel, biographical notice, 474. Thacher, Rev. Thomas [1620], descend- ants of, 475. Thacher, Rev. Thomas [1756], bio- graphical notice, 475. Thatcher, Rear Admiral Henry K , biographical notice, 315; chosen President of the Mass. .Society, 66 ; resolutions on the death of, 67. Thayer, Joseph Henry Jackson, bio- graphical notice, 290. Thomas, Dr. John, biographical notice, 476. Thomas, John Boies, biographical no- tice, 477. Thomas, Capt. Joseph, biographical notice, 477. Thompson, Dr. Charles H., biographi- cal notice. 47S. Thompson, Dr. Thaddeus, biographical notice, 477. Ticknor, Sergt. William, descendants of, 173. Tisdale, Capt. James, biographical notice. 478. Torrey, Lieut, and Adj. William, bio- graphical notice, 478. Torrey, William (son), biographical notice. 479. Torrey, William (grandson), biographi- cal notice, 479. Torrey, Lieut. William, biographical notice, 479. Tovvnsend, Andrew, descendants of, 481. Tovvnsend, Dr. David, biographical notice, 480; chosen President of the Mass. Society, 58. Townsend, David S, biographical no- tice, 482. Townsend, Gen. Edward D., biographi- cal notice, 482. Town, Lieut. Jacob, biographical notice, 480. Treadwell, Capt. William, biographical notice, 4S3. Trescott, Major Lemuel, biographical notice, 483. Trescott, William, descendants of, 484. Trotter, Capt. John, biographical notice, 4S4. Trowbridge, Lieut. Luther, biographi- cal notice, 484. Trowbridge, Thomas, descendants of, 4S4. Trumbull, Charles Perkins, biographical notice, 133. Trumbull, George Clapp, biographical notice, 132. Tucker, Lieut. Joseph, biographical notice, 485. Tudor, Frederic, biographical notice, 488. Tucker, Capt. Samuel, election of, xlii. Tudor, Frederic (son), biographical notice, 489. Tudor, Lieut.-Col. William, biographi- cal notice, 486. Tudor, William (son), biographic.il notice, 487. Tupper, Lieut. Anselm, biographical notice, 490. Tupper, Col. Benjamin, biographical notice, 489. Turner, George Henry, biographical notice. 491. Turner, Humphrey, descendants of. 491. Turner, John, descendants of, 492. Turner, Capt. Jonathan, biographical notice, 491. Turner, Lieut. Marlbry, biographical notice, 491. Turner, Lieut. Pcleg, biographical no- tice, 492. 574 Turner, Perez, biographical notice, 491. Turner, Capt. Thomas, biographical notice, 492. UNITED States Hotel, meetings of the Society at, 38. Upham, Joseph Badger, biographical notice, 146. T riRGINIA Society, notice of, Vose, Lieut.-Col. Elijah, biographical notice, 492. Vose, Elijah (son), biographical no- tice, 493. Vose, Francis, biographical notice, 493. Vose, Henry, biographical notice, 493. Vose, Isaac D., biographical notice, 494- Vose, Rev. James C, biographical no- tice, 495. Vose, Col. Joseph, biographical notice, 493- Vose, Robert, descendants of, 493, 495- ■ Vose, Rufus Chandler, biographical notice, 495. Vose, Capt. Thomas, biographical no- tice, 496. Vose, Thomas S., biographical notice, 497- WALES, Lieut. Joseph, biograph- ical notice, 437. Walker, Lieut. Edward, biographical notice, 497. Walker, Capt. Robert, biographical no- tice, 498. Wardwell, Lieut. Joseph, biographical notice, 498. Wardwell, William H., biographical notice, 49S. Warren, Lieut. Adriel, biographical notice, 499 Warren, Henry, biographical notice, 500. Warren, Lieut. James, Jr., biographical notice, 499. Warren, Lieut. John, biographical no- tice, 501. Warren, John (of Charlestown), de scendants of, 502. Warren, Dr. John Collins, biograph ical notice, 501 ; admitted as an hon orary member, 61. Warren, Dr. John Collins (grandson) biographical notice, 503. Warren, Dr. Jonathan Mason, bio graphical notice, 503. Warren, Richard, descendants of, 499- Warren, Dr. Winslow, biographica notice, 5C0 ; resolutions on the death of, G5. Warren, Winslow (son), biographica notice, 500; chosen Treasurer of the Mass. .Society, 67 ; chosen Vice-Pres- ident of the Mass. Society, 71. Washington, accepts Presidency of the General Society, 15; letter to Ro chambeau, 15; willing to make con cessions to the opposition, 19; dis- approves the efforts to overawe the civil authorities, 5 ; address to mem bers of convention in 17S4, 20, letter to Kno.x in 17S7, 22; address to members of the Mass. Society, 45, 46 ; action of the Mass. Society on the death of, 49. 50. Watson, Capt. William, biographica notice, 503. Wattles, Capt. Mason, biographica notice, 504. Webb, Capt. George, biographical no tice, 504 Webber, Lieut. Daniel, biographica notice, 504. Webster, Daniel, biographical notice 504 ; admitted as an honorary mem ber, 62. Webster, Ebenezer, notice of, 504. Wellington, Lieut. Elisha, biographica notice, 504 Wellmgton, Elisha (son), biographica notice, 504 Wells, Lieut. IJenjainin, biographica' notice, 505 Wells, Rev. E. M. P., biographical no tice, 505. map 271950 575 Wells, Lieut. James, biographical no- tice, 505. Wells, Samuel Adams, biographical no- tice, 50S. Wells, Capt. Thomas, biographical no- tice, 508. Wells, William V., referred to, 509. Wesson, Col. James, biographical no- tice, 509. Wetmore, George Peabody, biograph- ical notice, 450. Whitcomb, Col. Asa, notice of, 3G2. White, Lieut. Edward, biographical no- tice, 509. White, Capt. Haffield, biographical no- tice, 510. Whiting, Lieut. John, biographical no- tice, 510. Whiting, Rev. Samuel, descendants of, sy- Whiting, Commodore William D., bio- graphical notice, 512. Whitwell, Frederick Augustus, bio- graphical notice, 513. Whitwell, Samuel, descendants of, 514. Whitwell, Dr. Samuel, biographical notice, 513. Wild, Charles Tidd, biographical no- tice, 515. Wilds, Lieut. Ebenezer, biographical notice, 514. Wild, Ebenezer (son), biographical no- tice, 515. Williams, Abraham, descendants of, 5'5- Williams, Capt. Abraham, biographical notice, 515. Williams, Ale.\ander, biographical no- tice, 522. Williams, Lieut Ebenezer, biograph- ical notice, 516. Williams, Henry Howell, Jr , bio- graphical notice, 517. Williams, Capt. John, biographical no- tice, 516. Williams, John (son), biographical no- tice, 517. Williams, Capt. Joseph, biographical notice, 517. Williams, Lieut. Robert, biographical notice, 51S. Williams, Robert Pearce, biographical notice, 521. Wing, Ensign Jonathan, biographical notice, 523. Winslow, Charles Henry, biographical notice, 525. Winslow, John Edward, biographical notice, 525. Winslow, John {1597), descendants of, 524- Winslow, Capt. John, biographical no- tice, 523. Winslow, John (son), biographical no- lice, 524. Wolcott, Henry, descendants of, 526. Wolcott, Huntington Frothingham, no- tice of, 527.' Wolcott, Joshua Huntington, biograph- ical notice, 526. Wolcott, Hon. Oliver, 526. Woodbridge, Capt. Christopher, bio- graphical notice, 527. Woodward, Dr. Samuel, biographical notice, 527. YEOIMANS, Lieut. John, biograph- ical notice, 52S. University Press • .lolia Wilson and !^on, Cambridg C3 'Mt- ■0' ' V''-%/v.o %---■;/,., %'"'-;/,.„ %"-^ ^'^'^^ ^^'^"^^ :mc:'\/' .V^^'%'; -^^ V"-^' V^^^ -o %^ '"- .!'•, -^^ ^ ■-.- # c> %■ %- #^ o • ■■ % ' • i \v Qj ' . I. * \v Oj ^ , >. ^ - ^0^ '4'"'. "^ ^ .\