'•v-;'-fe. '/ LIBRARY OF CONGRESS. ®|a|iE\Minp5rig|l f n. Shelf .bl.43.LV UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. TAXPAYERS OF NORWICH, POLITICAL HAND BOOK COMPILED BY D-A.2SriEL LEE 1884. f PRINTED BY THE DAY COMPANY, NEW LONDON, CONN. N=l^L^ In presenting this book to the public, I desire to return thanks to those whose generous patronage of its advertising pages has made its publication possible. It con- tains the announcements of many of the leading manufacturers and merchants of this city. The scope and purpose of the work need no explanation. It is believed that it wiU prove valuable as a work of reference on many iDoints. The political statistics will be found useful and interesting in a presidential year. 1 cannot hope that the volume will be entirely free from errors, but it has beeu prepared with care and, it is believed, will be found correct in every material point. Should a favorable reception be accorded this venture it is my intention to continue the publication, with such changes and additions as experience may suggest, annually hereafter. The Compiler. CONTENTS. Taxpayers : Page. Residents 5 Non-Eesidents 30 Pension Exempts 33 Exempt Property 34 Grand Lists since 1800 35 United States Government, Jan. 1st, 1884 36 Judiciary 38 Forty-Eighth Congress 42 Presidential Vote since^ 1862 48 S^Deakers of Congress since 1789 51 Presidents and Vice Presidents 52 Legal Holidays in various States 53 Population and Debt of 236 Cities 54 Electoral College 59 Vote of Connecticut by Towns for President, 1880, and for Governor, 1882 60 Vote of 3d Congressional District by Towns, 1882 64 Vote of the Senatorial Districts in 3d Congressional District, 1882 and 1883 65 Eepublican National Ticket and Platform, 1884 66 Democratic National Ticket and Platform, 1884 69 Advertisements ■ 75 Index to Advertisers Entered according to Act of Congress in the year 1884, by Daniel Lee, in the office of the Librarian of Congress at Washington. INDEX TO ADVERTISERS. Page. Atchison, W. T 104 Avery, Chas. S 80 Barber, J. E. & Co 97 Barnes, C.W ". 106 Boss, C. D. &Son 77,89,97 Boston Store 101 Branbacli, D. L • • ■ ■ • 99 Brewer, J. M 87,99 Brewster & Burnett 75 Brown, Robert 100 Burdick, F. L - 87 Burns, Philip 102 Burton, William 79 Capron, C. P 103 Cardwell,W. H 102 Carter, C. W 100 Chappell, A. H Cover. Chappell, E. & Co 96 Church Bros 101 Clark A- Avery 92 Connors & Eigney "• 87 Cosgrove, J. F. & Co . . 82 Conway, James 100 Cunningham, John H 84 Dawson, James Jr 80 Day Company 107 Dexter. M. D 87 Durfey, F. B 91 Fitch. E. A - 100 Galligan, John 101 Gas Company 75 Geer, S. L 95 Greeneville Hotel 93 Kelly, John H 105 Hallichiy, A. &Co 94 Harvey, I. W. & Go «« Page. Hess, Geoi'ge 102 Hislop, Porteous & Mitchell 104 Huntington, Roscoe 105 Laighton Bros 83 Lee & Osgood 85 Leyrer, Jacob 90 McChesney, Charles 103 McGrory, James 102 McJennett, J 98 McNamara Bros 89 Millea, Andrew 93 Mullen, Thomas 98 Murjihy, James 106 Murphy, J. P 93 Noss, J. Adam 82 Norwich Pottery Works 103 Noyes & Davis 105 O'Brien, Thos..^ , 78 Parker Bros 86 Perkins, John C 98 Plant, Abraham 88 Powers Bi'os 87 Prentice, A. W. it Co 96 P.allion, H. D 98 Richter, Fred 95 Eoarke, M 81 Rogers, WH 87 Sattord&Co 99 Scott, J. H 76 Shannon, J. B. & Co 106 Sibley Machine Co 88 Slocum, E. P 106 Steiner, John 103 Thayer &Thayer 87 Troland, John 75 Willard, John 95 HINTS TO PROPERTY OWNERS. The most important thing for every person owning property is to hand in a list of all, whether real or personal, to the Assessors during the month of October in each year, which must be sworn to. If this diity is neglected, the Assessors are instructed to make out a list of such pro^jerty as they have reason to believe is owned by any such person and liable to taxation, and add 10 per cent, of such valuation. If neglec- ted the following year 20 per cent, shall be added. The third year 30 per cent., and so on. The Assessors meet between October 15th, and set daily until November 1st. The Board of Relief meet on the first Monday in January and sit twenty days thereafter to listen to appeals from the doings of the Assessors. The Board have power to reduce or increase the list of any person under certain conditions. Every person in possession of property on the first day of October liable to taxation must hand in the list. Upon this list the Town tax is laid and made payable on the 2Cth of February following. The city tax is laid on same list and made payable on the 1st of October following. Although nearly a year intervenes between the time of handing in the lists and the time the city tax is payable, the person who lists the property is liable for the city tax. In other words the city tax follows the person, and not the property. School taxes, however, follows the property and not the person, consequently the purchaser of a parcel of real estate before the School tax is laid is liable for the tax. The town tax is laid at the annual town meeting, held on the first Monday in October, and payable February 20th, following. The City tax is laid at the annual city meeting the 1st Monday in June and payable October 1st, following. The School tax in the Central District is laid in July and payable October 1st, following. In the Greeneville District, the tax is payable in April. West Chelsea District in May, and the Falls District in June. Every person between the ages of 21 and 70 years shall jiay a poll tax of one dollar and no more for town and state purposes. Those paying a commiitation or military tax are not liable to pay a poll tax. One hundred dollars is added to every man's school list who pays a poll tax. Those purchasing real estate cannot be too careful in looking after back taxes. See the tax collector and inquire if the taxes are all paid before taking a deed of the property. This course saves trouble and exi^ense. The following are the names of those who pay taxes in the Town of Norwich with the amounts for which they are assessed. It also includes the non-resident taxpayers, pension exempts and exempt property : 5 Abner, Riindall J $500 Aborn, Alonzo R, 9,250 Ailiims, Paulina J 1,400 Adams, Daniel T .1,300 Adams, John T., est of 15,750 Adams A- Reynolds, 2,300 Abern, Thomas 1,(300 Aiken, William A 28,1)59 Albro, Francis D 1,430 Alexander, Charles H 1,200 Alexander, Phebe M., est 2,200 Allan, James 7,450 Allen, Amos D ....40 Allen, Charles H 4,825 Allen, Edwin 3.165 Allen, Henry 24,900 Allen, Henry A Son 2,700 Allen, James 120 Allen, J. Arthur 60 Allen, Nelson R 150 Allen Spool Printing Co 5,000 Allyn, Calvin 6,365 Alleman, John 1,000 Almy, Albert H 60 Almy, Leonard B 200 Anderson, George 330 Andrews, P. St. M 5,200 Anthony, Josejih 1,140 Appleton, Henry P 2,175 Armstrong, Horace W 1,300 Armstrong, William A 150 Armstrong, Lorenzo D 2.890 Armstrong, William H 475 Arnold Fogarty. Patrick 400 Fogel, Ferdinand 1,000 Foley, Michael, est 360 Follett & Dearden 3,750 Fontaine & Reeves 5,250 Foote, Constant H 750 Forbes, Mary 800 Ford, George L 2,740 Ford, John H 2,700 Ford, Th omas 1,000 Ford, William P 300 Foster, Joel M 1,900 Fox, Hannah 500 Fox, Sarah M 3,800 Francis, Alvah 7,415 Francis, Alvah, A- Co 2,100 Francis, John 800 Francis, John, 2d, est 2,425 Francis, Joseph 800 France, Robert A 350 Fraziei", Lewis A 900 Frazier, Mrs. Nathan S 805 Frazier, Thomas M .- 750 Frazier, William 120 Freeman, Almira and Sister 330 Freeman, Samuel H 3,550 French, Mrs. Sarah F 10,050 Frink, Soloman A. 3,175 Friswell, William 2,300 Fuller, Angeline M 9,250 Fuller, Chester 2,000 Fuller, Edward D 200 Fuller, Mrs. Eliza W 1,300 Fuller, George D., est 5,500 Fuller, Harriet L 2,300 Fuller, Joseph B. F 3,050 Fuller, Rebecca P 4,040 Fuller, Theodore 1G5 Fuller, Walter 2,450 Furlong, Moses 3,315 Fulton, William H 137 Gabriollc, Charles 3,925 Gager, Othniel 3,050 Gallagher, Patrick 150 (xallagher, William 1,100 Galligan, Patrick 450 Gallup, Charles D 1,100 Gallup, Harriet A 1,800 Gallup, Henry H 3,825 Gallup, Loren A 4,125 Gallyp, Nelson 3,000 Gallup, William A 4,625 Gamble, Mrs. James 200 Gardner, Addison T 2,405 Gardner, Amy. est .1,250 Gardner, Anson 11,000 Gardner, Emeline . .'. 1,970 Gardner, Mrs. Edwin P 2,200 Gardner, Edwin B 2,040 Gardner, Edwin L 840 Gardner, Edwin P 4,700 Gardner, Erastus H 2,075 Gardner, Frederick L 4,325 Gardner, F. L. & C. H 800 Gardner, Harriet M 3,115 Gardner, Mrs. Harriet M 5,310 Gardner, Henry R 3,690 Gardner, Louisa F 250 Gardner, Lucius L 4,640 Gardner, Sidney, est 3,630 Garrity, James 680 Gates, Annie S 2,500 Gates, C. Henry 1,875 Gates, George G 4,100 Gates, Horace S 2,800 Gavitt, Mrs. Abby 1,600 Geduldig, Gustave 2,500 Geer, Abram 800 Geer, Charles F 150 Geer, Elisha P 1,756 Geer, Ezra P 2,000 Geer, George W 13,420 Geer, George W., Jr 2,875 Geer, James L 7.000 Geer, Sidne.y L 13,725 Geer & Vergasou • 1,750 George, Mrs. Mary A 2,500 Gerber, Emil 1,000 14 (Ternhard, Adam J $1,075 Gibbs, Edward N 27,325 Gibbs, E. N. & H. E. Norton, trus- tees 6,000 Gibson, Catharine 1,400 Gibson, Owen 3,500 Gifford, Ira, est Giflford, Stephen 3,000 Gilbert, Joseph W 1,039 Gilbert, Nathan S 9,120 Gilbert, N. S. & Sons 13,575 Gilbert, S. Alpheiis 200 i Giles, Mrs. Abby A 3,500 ; Gill, Mrs. Elizabeth, est 800 ' Gilniiui, Mrs. Eliza, est 5,700 Gilinor, Ogdeu 120 Gilmartin, James 100 Gilmoiir, Bros 6,150 Gilmour, David S 300 Gilmour, Mrs. Isabella S 1.500 Gilmour, James C 600 Gilroy, Thomas 1,135 Glancey, Edward 835 Gleason, Dennis 935 Gleason, Jeremiah 100 Gleason, Thomas 1,425 Goff, Emily L 1,300 Goodrich, James T 500 Goodwin, Alice F 2,600 Goodwin & Parker 1,000 Gordon, Charles M 825 Gordon, Mrs. Samuel 220 Gordon, Thaddeus C. est :2,000 Gordon, William A 800 Gorman, George 1,720 Gorman, Richard 3,025 Gorton, Ira 4,000 Gotthelph, Moses 960 Gottlieb. Charles 310 Gongh, Hugh 3,945 Goiigh, Matthew B 2,325 Gould, Augustus 2,025 Gould, George W ... 3,075 Gould, Lyman 6,850 Gould, Webster V 1,300 Gow, Elizabeth 3,000 Grace, Lucretia H 1,920 Grady, Frank D 2,000 Gradj% Marcus F $2,400 Grafton, James 4,400 Graham, James 2,000 Grant, Charles W 110 Gray, Mary D . . . : 2,520 Greene, Gardiner 3,910 Greene, Gardiner, Jr 825 Greene, J. Lloyd, est 31,400 Greene, Paul B 3,825 Greene, P. B. & Co . . .1,540 Greene, Sarah A 480 Greene, William M 2,000 Greene, William P 38,350 Greenberg, Louis W 2,100 Greenluilgh, Eobert 5,700 Greenman. Sarah L 2,550 Greenman, AVilliain H 80 Greenwood, James 6,000 Griifin, Frank E 1,875 Griffin, Patrick 200 Grimes, William 2,500 Griswold, Henry E 1,800 Griswold, Joseph A 2,130 Gulliver, Daniel F 30,080 Guy, John H 1,300 Hagberg, Andrew 1,000 Hale, Eebecca B 1,100 Halliday, Daniel 800 Hall, Benjamin 7,450 Hall Bros 16,500 Hall, Daniel 2,620 Hall, George S,250 Hall, Henry 1,200 Hall, William 2,595 Halliday, Janet 3,328 Hallahan, Jeremiah 800 Hallahan, Mary 350 Hallahan. Patrick 1,300 Hallam. Henry W^ , est 825 Halsey, Jeremiah 18,600 Hammond, Henry K 7,500 Hanrihan, John 820 Hanrihan, Patrick 720 Handrihan, Thomas 900 Handrihan. William 900 Hanna, Eliza 1,320 15 Hanna, Jane $9()0 Hanniford, Michael 1,()(K) Hanuis, Benjamin C 840 Haider, George W 400 Harland, A.bby L 8,605 Harlaud, Edward 75 Harrigun, John 1,200 Harrigan, William 800 Harrington, Patrick 400 Harris, Frank P 125 Harris, George W 800 Harris, Sarah W 100 Hartigan, John 400 Hartigan, Mary 400 Hartigan, Richard 900 Hartley, William 7,200 Hartlej', Wm., & C. McNamara 1,800 Harvey, Mary 1,540 Harwood & Co 8,400 Haskell, Charles C 5,205 Haskell, Henry E 5,675 Hastings, Charles 1,725 Haven, Robert M., est 2,500 Hayes, John 500 Hazard, Almira J 1,420 Hazlehurst, Edward, est 360 Healey, Margaret 900 Hebard, A. Y., heirs 5,400 Hempstead, William S 5,875 Henderson, James, 1st 2,500 Henderson, James, 2d 1,055 Henderson, Joseph H 1,600 Henderson, Margaret 880 Henderson, Robert 3,200 Henderson, William 2,985 Hennesy, Martin 450 Herr, J. D 3,100 Herrick, Burrill A 3,500 Herrick, Harris E 4,000 Herrick, Robert A 5,150 Hess, George 4,015 Hewett & Setchell, 6,000 Hibbard, William H 2,348 Hickey, Catherine 800 Hickey, Daniel D 2,450 Higgins, Silas 2,000 Higgins, Werter C $4. 100 Higgins, William W 1,200 Higney, Margaret 180 Hill, Charles W 1,3(;5 Hill, Fanny, est 1,400 Hill, Hiram 3,500 Hill, Hiram C 1,800 Hill, Ira J 1,905 Hill, John L 1,250 Hill, Mary C 2,000 Hill, Mrs. Susan 1,200 Hilton it Bidwell 8,000 Hilton, C. Otis 2,000 Hinchey, Patrick, 920 Hinckley, Amos P., est 1,800 Hinckley, Betsy A 2,000 Hinckley, Eliza C 2,090 Hinckley, Joann 1,100 Hirsch & Co 3,000 Hiscox, B. H 1,000 Hislop, James 1,200 Hislop, Porteous A Mitchell 35,150 Hoar, William ...1,300 Heffernan, Julia A 1,570 Hogan, Andrew 540 Hogan, James _. .- Holbrook, Charles S 2,800 Holbrook, Supply T 320 Holden, Thomas 2,100 Holdroyd, Andrew L 2,910 Holdroyd, Job 1,200 Holland, Daniel 700 Holman, Mary 1,000 Holloway Bros 3,715 Holm, Peter 840 Holmes, Dwight R 1,600 Holmes, Emily M 500 Holmes, Henry 2,500 Holmes, Thomas A 50 Holt, Charles H 950 Holt, Daniel, est , .3,100 Holt, Martha G 1,040 Holyoke. Mary B 6,500 : Hood Fire Arms Co 21,000 16 Hooker, Jonathan W 4,550 Hoolihan, Timothy 900 Hopkins & Allen M'fg Co 52,000 Hopkins, Charles W 3,450 Hopkins, Sally C 900 Hopkins, Samuel S 3,935 Horan, Ann 700 Hourigan, Ellen, est 1,800 Hourigan, Michael 3,070 Houston, James 6,650 Hovey, James A 6,825 Hovej', Laurina B 4,239 Howe Machine Co 400 Howe, Samuel G. & William R 1,950 Howie, Susan M 2,650 Howard, Edward 120 Hubbard, A. H. & Co 99,800 Hubbard, Daniel E 2,200 Hubbard, Harriet F 2,400 Hubbard, James L 32,050 Hubbard, Mrs. Sarah L 6,530 Hubbell, A. S. & L B 2,850 Hubbell, Richard M 100 Hughes, George F 250 Hughes, Maria 1,400 Hulbert, Charles H 7,925 Hull, Charles A 500 Hull, Sarah A 6,301 Hunter, Edward 1,490 Hunter, Hugh. 725 Hunter. John A 2,175 Hunter, Joseph 880 Hunter, Stephen 360 Huntington, Amelia M., est 4,800 Huntington, Benjamin, est 2,160 Huntington, Edward A 5,927 Huntington, Edward P., est 13,825 Huntington, Mrs. E. R 11,845 Huntington, Mrs. E. R., guardian. .10,000 Huntington, H. L 600 Huntington, Hezekiah 9,175 Huntington, Jedediah 16,150 Huntington J. L. W 2,000 Huntington, J. M. & Co 25,000 Huntington. John G. & Co 29,500 Huntington, Malvina A 6,28() Huntington, Palatiah W 550 Huntington, Eoscoe 11,750 Huntington, Miss Sarah J 7,125 Hurlburt, Ruth C 800 Hurley, James and Mary . . .•. 2,700 Hutchison, William 750 Hyde, Amasa L 1,900 Hyde, Burrill W 3,350 Hyde, Eunice E 1,500 Hyde, George R 20,640 Hyde, Harlan 3,125 Hyde, Lewis A 20,250 Hyde, Lewis A., guardian 960 Hyde, Solomon 300 Hyland, Ann 800 Hynds, Bernard 450 Irons, George W 135 Jackson, Frederick S 50 Jiickson, Simon C 700 James, Charles D 5,200 James, Julia B 240 Jenkins, Margaret 965 Jennings, Mrs. C. W 3,000 Jennings, John 1,750 Jennings, Mason P 3,400 Jennings, William H 9,025 Jewett, Mrs. Eliza C 1,200 Jewett, Laban R 8,435 Jillson, George W 1,700 Jones, Caroline F 3,000 Jones, George T 1,176 Jones, J. Horace 1,210 Jones, Mrs. Lucy S 10,500 Jones, Rees D. & Son 1,200 Jones, William A 2,100 Jordan, Timothy 240 Johnson, Charles C 26,645 Johnson, Frank 33,100 Johnson, Mrs. F. A. C 3,500 Johnson, M'rs. Jane (iOO Johnson, Jerry 800 Johnson, Oliver L. Jr 50 Johnson, Maria E 24,500 Johnson, Thomas and Eliza 900 Johnson, Frank, trustee, Elizabeth D. Child, est 575 IT Jolmson, Frank, trustee, L. F. S. Foster, est 20,840 Johnson, Frank, trustee, Mary L. Drake 1,150 Johnson, Frank, trustee. Charles Farnsworth, est 3,080 Johnson, Frank, trustee, H. K. Hun- tington, est 1,775 Johnson, Frank, trustee, Zachary Huntington, est 28,319 Johnson, Frank, trustee, Josejjh Lan- man, est 5,000 Johnson, Frank, trustee, Maria L. Morgan, est 5,600 Johnson, Frank, trustee, Luther Pel- \et, est 10,500 Johnson, Frank, trustee, Maria H. Perkins, est 200 Johnson. Frank, trustee, Horace Walker, est 5,300 Johnson, Frank, and James D. Mowry, trustees of estate of David Smith, .34,830 Kampf, George 1 ,500 Kane, John 1,000 Kane, Mra. Margaret 700 Keabl es, A. R 650 Keating, Cornelins 1,000 Kearney, Lawrence, 700 Keegan, Patrick 700 Keeley, David 4,600 Keenan, Beraard 1,200 Keenan, Felix 4,000 Keenan, Patrick 775 Keep, John H 5,150 Kehr, John Adam, est 1,500 Kehr, Jacob 2,000 Kegwin, Elinor C 3,300 Kelleher, Cornelius 1,050 Kelleher, Hugh 1,200 Kelly, John H 12,150 Kellogg, John C 3,590 Kelly, Barney 1,100 Kelly, Daniel 1,025 Kelly, Henry 1,950 Kelly, John, est 600 Kelly, John, 2nd 8(10 Kelly, John 45 Kelly, John R 395 Kelly, John W 1,000 Kelly, Mrs. Mary, est ],]()() Kelly, Patrick 850 Kelly, Patrick F 900 Kelly, Richard C 2,975 Kelly, Robert 720 Kelly, Simon 1,225 Kelly, Thomas 750 Kelly, Timothy 8,700 Kemjiner, Jacob 400 Kennedy, Dennis 450 Kennedy, John 700 Kennedy, William, est 770 Kenyon, Charles H 11,200 Keppler, S. P 400 Kerlej', Catherine 330 Kerrigan, Margaret 840 Keough, John 1,400 Kieley, John 700 Kies, George A 100 Kies, George W 10,400 Kilcolmu, James, est 240 Kilrow, Mary 2,400 Kilrow, Michael 900 Kilroy, Alice 700 Kilroy, Thomas 1,750 Kilroy, William 1,100 Kimball. Amos L., est 1,640 Kimball, James 400 Kimball, John 2,000 Kind, Joseph 1,(')()0 King, Charles J 7,678 King, Edward, est 800 Kingsburj', Henry A 5.350 Kingsley, Eleazer 2,050 Kingsley, Joseph K 1.230 Kingsley, Luke 1,080 Kingsley, William L 675 Kinney, Albert W 3,075 Kinney, Ann M 1.090 Kinney, Elijah C 1.150 Kinney, Emily l.soo Kinney, George • ■ $20,575 Kinney, Harlan 95 Kinney, Martin 500 Kinney, Jacob W., est 15,250 Kinney, Mason 15,250 Kirker, Mary 900 Klien, Frederick L 1,^00 Kniglit, Mary C. S 6,895 Korn, Charles F 3,630 Konin, Aclolph 330 Ladd, N. L. M 137 Ladd, Rufus M., est 2,400 Laighton Brothers, 500 Lamb, George W 1,500 Lamb, Jefferson 3,000 Lamb, M. V. B 7,325 Lamb, Orlando J 1,425 Lambert, Peter 1,230 Landolt, Jost 1,-400 Landon, James O Lane Brothers 600 Lang, Frederick 1.500 Langeliar, Frank 3,450 Langdon, Mrs. Jane 220 Lanman, Abby T 6,750 Lanman, Mary E 500 Lanman, Peter, agent 905 Lanman, William C 18,225 Lapierre, Arnond 3,005 Lathrop, Arthi;r D 5,750 Lathrop, E. H 1,900 Lathrop, George, est 4,137 Lathrop, Jabez S 1,580 Lathrop, James 2,000 Lathrop, John A 350 Lathrop, J. L. & F. L 325 Lathrop, Mary A 3,300 Lathrop, Mary B 1,200 Lathrop, William B 8,550 Lathrop, WiUiam R 2,815 Lathrop & Carey 2,000 Latour, R. F 1,350 Lavender, Mary J $1,845 Lawrence, John P., est 1,275 Lay, Charles W 99 Leach, Emeline 7,500 Leach, James J 6,415 Leach, Laura S 2 075 Leahy, Thomas 800 Learned, Bela P 2,510 Learned, Bela P., trustee 1,000 Learned, Ebeuezer 9,075 Leary, Thomas 00 Leary, Timothy, est 600 Leary, Timothy 800 Leavens, Frances J 9,750 Leavens, Francis J 5,500 Leavens, F. J., trustee 4,000 Leavens, Josephine M 1,275 Leavens, Kirk H 7,880 Leavens, Lucy G 1,175 Leavens, Martha M 2,025 Lee, Charles, est 10,750 Lee, Ira, est 500 Lee, F. B. , est 7,500 Lee, Henry P 4,205 Lee, Lyman W 1,600 Lee, Minnie E 110 Lee & Osgood 31,000 Leffingwell, Charles H 2,700 Lemas, Antone 910 Lennon, Patrick 264 Leo, Patrick 1,300 Lester, Amos 5,135 Lester, Austin A 2,000 Lester, Daniel M 2,775 Lester, Elizabeth W 9,000 Lester & Wesley 5,000 Levaggi, Antonia 1,265 Lewis, David M., est 2,200 Lewis, Elizabeth D 2,400 Lewis, George D 1,400 Lewis, Joseph P 4,500 Lewis, John W 150 Lewis, Maxson 10,000 Lewis, Russell 2,425 19 I^eyrer, Jacob $1,12;") Lillebridge, Christopher G 1,200 Lillebridge, Daniel 2,700 Lillebridge, Daniel A- Thnvston 6,025 Madden, Hugh Lillebridge, Greene 6,075 Lillebridge, Joseph W 3,020 Lillebridge, Thomas A 2,895 Lincoln, George S. . . : 1,300 Lindsey, James, est 450 Linnehan, John 1,400 Mabrey, Mary E $500 Mack, Cornelius, est 1,200 Macomber, George 165 900 Mahoney, Mary 900 Mahoney, Patrick 1.700 Maine, Albert B 2,745 Malone, Daniel 525 Manahan, John 1,500 Mangan, John 1,680 Liunell. Edward H 185 JL-inning, WiUiam D 6.400 Linnell, Jonathan E 6,625 ^ Manwaring, John 6,345 Lippitt. Costello 2,825 Maples, Annie M 4.300 Lippitt, Costello, guardian 2,200 Maples, Charles 5,430 Lippitt, George 3,750 Maples, Charles, conservator 1,320 Lippitt, George & Co 8,175 , Maples, David L and B. W 1,900 Lippitt, Norris G 4,200 ' Maples, Leonard T 1,550 Lonergan, William 1,.320 ! Maples, Mrs. Nancy H 15,626 Looby, Michael 1,100 j Maples, Stephen L 200 Looniis, Abigail B 3,500 i Mara, Michael 700 Loomis, George, est 3,000 ; Mara, Patrick 800 Loomis, Lottie and Clara 3,850 ' Marshall, Kufus W 2,965 Losee, Elijah M 2,050 Martin, Alexander J 82 T ,, ,. ,..„,' Martin, George H 3,775 Lotter, Grace 1.300 ' ^ Lovell Brothers 2,575 Lovell, Joseph H ' ' 2,000 Lowden, Mrs. Mary 500 Martin. Peter 300 Martin, Wilham J 1,200 Mason, Andrew, est 780 Mason, Marilla H 624 Lucas, Benjamin and Solomon 2,100 Mason "William H 13,300 Lucas, Joseph H 2,570 Lucas, Noah '. 3,050 Lucas, Solomon 10,800 Luce, Mrs. John C* 2,200 Lucey, Daniel, est 1,000 Lucey, William and Amos 240 Lumis & Sutton 915 Lumsden, James 120 Lutts, Charles 1,700 Lyman, Daniel D 50 Lyman, John D 5,180 Lynch, John 500 Lynch, Michael 1,320 Lynch, Patrick 1,200 Lyons, Bridget 375 Mathews, Arthur 2,030 Mathews, Mrs. Eliza 1,100 Mathews, James 990 Mathews, William 7(10 Mathews, William J 1,200 Mathewscm, Darius R., est 17,000 Mathewson, Laura E 150 McCabe, Margaret 700 McCabe, Michael 1,200 McCal>e, Thomas 625 McCatTrey, James 975 McCaiifrey, Peter 1,200 McCidl. James 900 McCall, Mrs. Ste]ihen T 900 McChesney, Charles 9,105 McClellan, George 1,702 McCnellan, Grace 1,000 20 McCloud, John 1,400 McCloud, William 1,025 McClune, Dennis 2,640 McClure, George 1,295 McCormick, John 770 McCormick, Daniel 250 McCormick, Mary 210 McCoj', James 156 McCoy, Sarah 540 McCune, Patrick 1,700 McCurdy, Theodore F 14,350 McDermot., Michael ■ McDonald, Donald 1,300 McDonald, Thomas, est 1,200 McDougall, John 900 McFadden, Eichard 2,050 McGarrity, Thomas 720 McGarry, Thomas 900 McGee, Arthur 1,000 McGee, Mrs. Sarah A 2,500 McGinnis, John 1,200 McGinnis, Patrick 800 McGrath, John 700 McJennett, John 2,400 McKay, George 195 McKiernan, Margaret 900 McKnight, John 1,200 McLaughlin, Andrew 2,290 McLaughlin, George 800 McLaughlin, Patrick 1,300 McMahon, Edward 1,000 McMahon, John 800 McManus, Barney 330 McManus, Eliza 840 McNamara Brothers 5,075 McNamara, Cornelius 935 McNamara, C. and J. R 2,550 McNamara, John R 600 McNamara, John R., guardian 1,50.0 McNamara, Michael 500 McNamara, Michael J 800 McNamara, Patrick 1,500 McNamara & O'Hearn 950 McNamara & Pratt 8,650 McNelly, John, est 1,067 McNelly, Peter, est 1,300 McNelly, William 550 McNickle, Alexander 1,600 McNickle, John 700 McNulty, James E 1,800 McQuirk, Michael 1,525 McVicker, Daniel 1,700 McWhirr, Robert McWilliams, John 1,600 Mead, Benjamin F 1,230 Meech, Dwight T 2,090 Meech, James M 6,050 Meech, John H., est 3,000 Meech, Levi W 4,870 Meech, Lizzie 4(K) Meech, Stephen B 5,175 Meehan, Francis 700 Meehan, John, 1st. ... 1,325 Meehan, John 2,125 Meeker, Miss Henrietta 10,400 Megary, Richard P 1,250 Menck, Charles 360 Mershon, Jacob B 8,600 Messinger, Robert G 600 Metzger, Caspar 700 Metzger, Jacob 800 Millea, Andrew 800 Miller, Avery N 1,950 Miller, Mrs. Frances 1,250 Miller, Henry 2,800 Miller, John P 1,650 Mills, Robert 600 Millington, Louisa M '.8,250 Miner, Charles H 1,300 Miner, Edwin B 9,200 Miner, James P ' 1,500 Minor, Solomon C 548 Mitchell, Albert G 8,875 Mitchell Brothers 28,000 Mitchell, Frank A 6,075 Mitchell, Mrs. Henry 3.600 MitcheU, John 19,675 Mitchell, Joseph T 100 Mitchell, Mrs. Thomas 2,200 Moloney, Mrs. Julia, est 6,250 Monalier, Michael 2,500 Monroe, John C 90 Montgomery, Hugh 2,900 21 Moore, Christopher C 1,.JOO Moore, Ellen 1,')0() Moore, George H 3, 700 Moore, John M 4,1-25 Moran, Michael and Sarah E 5,734 Moran, Samuel 1,100 Morgan, Ann -. 1,C5(' Morgan, Mrs. Frane.es M 1,100 Morgan, John A 8,900 Morgan, John A , 2rl 5,000 Morgan, John C 2,075 Morgan, Mabel A., est 4,000 Morgan, Koswell, heirs '2,000 Moriarty, Daniel 1,050 Moriarty, James 3,000 Moriarty, John 720 iMoriarty, Stephen 1,500 Moi'ris, Henry 2,250 Morris, Patrick 770 Morris, Thomas 300 Morrison, J. Henry 3,000 Morrison, John H 2,150 Morse, Maria and Eunice P 900 Morse, Maurice E 300 Mossman, Mrs. E. P 11,340 Mowry, Ezra W 3,750 Mowry, James D., trustee 4,000 Mulcahey, Thomas 1,200 Mnlhollaud, John 357 ^Inller Brothers 330 Murphy, Anthony J. it Co 440 Murphj', Bridget 720 Murphy, Bridget, 2nd 2,800 Murphy, Daniel D 840 :Murphy, Dennis D 220 Muri^h}', James 3,540 Murphy, James, 2nd 900 Murphy, Jeremiah (524 Murphy, John. 1st 9G0 Murphy, John, 2ntl 400 Murphy, John P 1,195 Murphy, J. P. AT. C 1,875 Murphy, Mary 1,000 :\Iurphy, Michael, 1st 450 Murphy, Michael, 2nd 1,100 Murphy, Michael, 3rd 3,900 Murphy, Michael D 1,100 | Murphy, Kichard 1,700 j Mnrphy, Susannah 9(')0 Murphy, Wm. J. A J. \V 500 Murray, James 1,100 Murray, ^lichael . . COO Murray, Peter ... 1,200 Murray, Stuart 1,400 Murtha, Mary 2,800 Murtagh, Patrick F 1,000 Musgrove, Joseph 1 ,225 Mussell. Mary 800 Myers, Austin W 7,400 Myers, James H 720 Myers A- Bailey 15,500 Nagle, John 1,050 Neil, William 1,400 Nevin, John 2,239 Newman, Thomas 1,300 Newton, James W 200 Newton, John M 1,100 Newton, Palmer, est 0,285 Nichols, Franklin 17,250 Nichols, Frank W 1,650 Nichols, Hezekiah 4,550 Nichols, Mrs. Louisa L 2,500 Noble, David 600 Nolan, George 1,200 Nolan, James 750 Nolan, James F 400 Nolan, Keeran 535 Nolan, Mary 420 Nolan, IVIichael 1,870 Nolan, Thomas J 880 Norton, George d 1,200 Norton. Henry A 225 Norton, Henry B 3.3,950 Norton,H.B.itJ.B. Colgate, trustees 15,000 Norton, Timothy P., est 14,150 Norwich Belt Mfg. Co 13,500 Norwich Bleaching. Dyeing .V- I'rint- ing Co 310,5(Mt Norwich City Gas C 125,000 Norwich Lock Mfg. Co 38,500 Norwicli Falls Pistol Co .15,0(10 22 Norwich Plate Co 300 Norwich Savings Society 31,400 Norwich, N. L. & W. H. S. B. Co 6,000 Norwich & N. Y. Trans. Co 500,000 Norwich Water Power Co 86,800 Norwich Woolen Co 77,500 Norwich Horse. K. K. Co 660 Noss, George 1,000 Noss, J. Adam 500 Noss, William 17,275 Noyes, Mrs. B. G 2,250 Noyes, Caleb H 1,050 Noyes, Coiirtland 1,050 Noyes, Jesse D 5,000 Noyes &Davis 2,200 Oakes, Edward 82 Oatley, Thomas, est 700 Obenaur, Martin, est 2,400 Occum Comjiany 16,675 O'Brien, Clara S 150 O'Brien, E. O., est. & John Brewster. 5,000 O'Brien, Jeremiah 450 O'Brien, John J 700 O'Brien, Thomas 900 O'Brien, Thomas, 2nd 2,600 O'Connell, Ann, est 1,080 O'Connell, Bridget 1,000 O'Connell, Daniel 110 O'Connor, Patrick J 5,900 O'Donavan, James 1,650 ; Ogden, William 2,400 O'Hearn, Joanna 440 O'Keefe, Edmund 880 O'Kelly, James 1,680 O'Kelly, Timothy 120 O'Mahoney, Patrick 2,240 O'Neil, Ann 540 O'Neil, Abby ."....1,500 O'Neil, Catharine 600 O'Neil, Daniel, 1st 1,300 O'Neil, Daniel, 2nd 600 O'Neil, Jane 330 O'Neil, Patrick, 1st 82 O'Neil, Patrick, 2nd 400 O'Neil, Thomas 900 O'Neil, William 1,000 O'Eourke, Michael 700 O'Kourke, Michael, est 480 Osborne, Thomas 500 Osgood & Allen 900 Osgood, Artemas ' 3,500 Osgood, Charles, est 45,300 Osgood, Mrs. Charles 20,640 Osgood, Charles H 34,000 Osgood, C. H. & E. L 2,900 Osgood, Frederick L 20,690 Osgood, Hugh H 16,050 Osgood, William C 19,165 O'Sulhvan, Patrick 1,100 O'SuUivan, Peter 650 O'Sullivan, Eichard 840 Ossawan Mills Co 9,000 Otis, Amos T 10,550 Paddock, Lewis S 500 Page Steam Heating Co 6,400 Page, Wm. H., Wood Type Co 17,500 Page, Elmor E 2,000 Palmer, Benjamin H 9,225 Palmer, Charles H., 1st 1,970 Palmer, Charles H., 2nd 870 Palmer, Edwin 4,475 Palmer, George F 1,325 Palmer, Henry 5,675 Palmer, Henry, 2nd 3,425 Palmer, HenryE 5,875 ! Palmer, Herbert 1 1,300 Palmer, Mrs. Isabella 1,700 ' Palmer, John C 9,950 Palmer, L^^cy A 2,200 I Palmer, Kobert J 2,500 ' Palmer, William S 180 ! Palmer ct Brown 7,000 I Paracenti, John 480 I Park, Albert F 25 I Park, CyrusB 3,675 ' Park, Hattie C 1,000 I Park, JohnD 7,945 Park, JosephH 800 23 Park, Thomas 1,200 Park, Webster, est 3,G50 Park & Harris 700 Parker, Ebenezer F 3,025 Parker, Guilford 1,500 Parker, Henr.v L SjT'lO Parker, John H. , est 1,500 Parker, Kobert B 2,150 Parkhurst, Chester 770 Parkhurst, Elias 1,391 Parkinson, Rosanna, est 1,200 Parlin, Simon R 4,600 Parsons, Benjamin F 1,210 Patterson. Margaret M 1,200 Peale, Charles S 2,500 Peale, Henry, Jr 1,500 Pease, William '. .2,900 Peck, Anthony, Jr 380 Pock, Mrs. Ellen S 3,600 Peck, Ira L 3,070 Peck, John H 10,400 Peck, Seth L 3,825 Peckham, Albertaas 3,875 Peckhrim, Isaac M., est 300 Peckham, James 2,150 Peckham, Liicius 1,080 Peckham, Rest come 2,345 Pellett, Ehjah M 1,200 Pendleton, Charles M 6,567 Pendleton, Chas. M., conservator, ...1,400 Perkins, Charles H 975 Perkins, Clement L 100 Perkins, Daniel W 1,700 Perkins, Donald L. and wife 1,200 Perkins, George L 10,675 Perkins, John C .' . . .15,305 Perkins, JohnT 1,965 Perkins, John T. & Co 850 Perkins, Jonathan 3,135 .Perkins, Sarah H 575 Perkins, Thomas A 2,700 Perkins, William M 1,400 Perkins, William S. C 7,925 Perkins, Willis T> , 1,850 Perry. Elisha 150 Perry, Harriet G., est 2,500 Pettis, Jabez M 150 Pettit, Julia and Sarah Bo wen, heirs 1,400 Phillips, Dwight L 1,500 Phillips, Dwight L. Jr 50 Phillips, Henry T (iO PhiUips, John P 1,615 Phinney, Elisha , 575 Pierce, George 6,475 Pierce, Lucy A 726 Pierce, Moses 13,425 Pierce, William B 3,360 Pierson, Martin V 1,270 Pitcher, Albert 4,055 Pitcher, Albert H , 1,850 Pitcher, A. H. & H. A 5,150 Pitcher, Elijah W 3,385 Pitcher, George W 1,250 Pitcher, Henry A 150 Pitcher, Garrad G 7,340 Piatt, Mrs. Charles B 33,850 Plant, Abraham 1,500 Plaut, Isaac 1,300 Plant, Joseph 12.000 Plummer, Richard H 10,650 Ponemah Mills 968,660 Pope, Jonathan A 8,025 Popple, Charles T 75 Porteous, John 7,425 Porter, Heman B 1,950 Porter, Selden T 137 Potter, Charles H 4,600 Potter, Daniel B 420 Potter, Henry H 1,195 Potter, Henry T 9,620 Potter, John 3,600 Potter, M. A 1,000 Potter, Wm. P 4,575 Potter, Wm. P., Jr 2.000 Potter, Wm. R .1,355 Powelson, John H 2,800 Powers Brothers 247 Pratt, George H 4,100 Pratt, Mary A 3,800 Pratt, Melissa S 6(10 Pratt, Michael 1,000 Pratt, Pati*Tck 4,152 Pray, Ellen 700 24 Prentice, Amos AV 32,525 Prentice, A. W., trustee estate John Dnnham 3,300 Prentice, A. W. & Co 25,400 Prentice, Arthur C 1,200 Prentice, Cathax'ine 800 I'rentice, Harriet A., est 5,000 Prentice, Samuel 4,935 Preston Brothers 3,000 Price, Zebulon K., est 1,500 Prior, Charles K., Mrs 1,425 Proctor, Alexander. 1,600 Quinn, James 600 (^linlan, Patrick 1,100 Quirk, Ellen 250 (iuito (Corteaux), Josejih D 297 EafEerty, Ann 495 Rafferty, Patrick J 1,100 Eallion, Calista C 5,000 Eallion, Herman D 2,050 Eamage, Charles T 2,250 Eamage, John 1,100 Eandall, Lyman W., est 7,665 Eandall, Sally A 175 Eansom, Charlotte M 3,900 Eansom, George M 7,620 Eaphael, EUis 1,500 Eathbone, Abel 2,825 Eathbone, Charles A 1,000 Eathbone, Mrs. E. L 2,000 Eathbone, Jewett I) 480 Eathbone, Eussell 8,550 Eathbone, Beriah S 4,0C0 Eathbone, William A 500 Eatigan, John 2,600 Eatigan, Thomas, Jr 1,100 Rawson, Calvin G 31, 675 Eawson, Luther S 7,f)00 Eawson & Whijiple 10,000 Eawson, William F 200 Eay, Albert A 5,025 Eay, Daniel L 1,000 Eay, Edward 3,100 Eay, Frederick G 950 Eay, G. Avery Eay, Henry D 1,775 Eay, Mary H 1,500 Eay, Stepben B 2,085 Eaymond, George C 450 Eaymond, Theodore 26,400 Eaymond, William 240 Began, Cornelius, est 400 Regan, Timothy 650 Eeardon, Michael. . 3,547 Eeid, James A 700 Eeid & Hughes 18,000 Eevell, John 2,000 Revell, Robert 7,500 Eevell, Sweetman 200 Reynolds, Catharine 550 Reynolds, Chas. L. H 379 Reynolds, Edward K 1,700 Reynolds, George 2,300 Reynolds, Henry L 10,710 Reynolds, Mary A 900 Reynolds, Oliver H 16,100 Reynolds, Thomas L 3,000 Rice, Frank G 800 Rice & Rich 564 Richards, Charles L 58,035 Richmond, John B 847 ' Richmond Stove Company 78,100 i Richmond, William H. S 1,820 I Richter, Frederick 5,000 Ricker, WilHam B 2,0U0 Eidgeway, Thomas J 15,150 Eiley, Ann 750 Eing, David, est 1,600 Eing, David P 1.400 Eing, Michael B 1,600 Eiordan, Thomas 360 Eipley. Hannah G 20,945 Eipley, Hezekiah 1,650 Eiljley, James L. Mrs., est 8,645 Ripley, Jane 3,850 Rislev, Sarah E , . . 1.600 •Jd Ritchie, Jiimes '2,500 Roach, Edward fiOO Roarke, Michael 1,-100 Roath, Chas. E 1,000 Roath, Edninnd D 46,775 Roath, Edwm A 8,825 Roath, Elizabeth .1,430 Roath, H. Hobait 14,135 Roath, Jane & Mary 1,400 Roath, Lewis P 3,750 Roath, William 1,075 Robbins. Zebulon, est 27,<)3() Robbins, Zebnlon, Jr 2,000 Robinson, Ellen 440 Robinson, Frank A 1,190 Robinson, N. D. Mrs 800 Robinson, William C 1,200 Rockwell, Mary W 52,915 Rogers, Andrew 1,100 Rogers, Alfred D 1,660 Rogers, C. B. & Co. . . 112,700 Rogers, Carrie 5,465 Rogers, Charles J 200 Rogers, Elijah H 800 Rogers, Harriet F 600 Rogers, Harriet M 505 Rogers, Henry 1,400 Rogers, James D 2,870 Rogers, Joab B 2,090 Rogers, J. Frank 146 Rogers, Lewis 1,500 Rogers, Loiiis H 1,800 Rogers, Porter 2,360 Rogers, Sarah B 2,000 Rogers, Sarah E , 1,700 Rogers, WiUiam D 6,955 Rogers, William P <■ 2,042 Rohan, James ) . . . 600 Ronan, Michael 300 Rollinson, Joseph 1,704 Rose, Eleanor M 1,800 Rose, Peleg G. & Co 1,320 Rose, Renben P 1,395 Ross, William M 3,000 Rdiirke, Jnlui 10, 500 Royce, A. Irving 3,150 Rnby, David T 8,150 Ruch, Andrew 950 Rudd, Catharine W 800 I Rudd, Hezekiah F 23,450 Rood, Henry B 895 Ruggles, Henry 15,650 Ruggles, Miami 1,200 Ryan, John A 1,100 Ryan, Mary 600 Ryan, Patrick 400 Ryan, Thomas E 9,955 Ryan, T. E. & Co 660 Ryan, William 600 { Safford, Morgan 8,800 Safford, M. & Co • 2,000 Salomon, Louis 3,300 Samuel. Max 1,20(» Saundtrs, Henry J 200 Saxton, Lewis J 3,015 Sayles, Thomas D 18,275 Scholfield, John 1,500 Scott, Charles W., Jr 2,720 Scott, John H. . . 3,650 Scott, Welcome S., est 3,755 Scbville, Henry W 400 Second Congregational Church 2,300 Sears, Myron 3,600 Seidel, Henry 1,000 Seldeu, J()sei)h. ; . .5.585 Sellick, Charles A 2,200 Semple, James 1,700 I Semple, James W 880 iSeney, J. T. &T 550 Senft, Albert 1,865 Service, James 1,600 Service, John 1,500 Service, John P 2,740 Service, Peter, est ' 500 Setchell, Charles F 10,475 Setchell, George C 1,600 Savin, John F 7,775 Sevin, N. Douglass 8,000 Seymour, Matilda 900 Shahau. Potor P 1.0.-)0 26 Shailer, Francis A 4,300 | Skeesucks, E. L 700 Shanley, Mary J 1,000 j Skelly, Bridget 960 Shannon, J. B. & Co 22,700 ; Skelly, Patrick [[[[_[ 920 Shaw, John B 5^600 j Skelly, Thomas 600 Shaw, Daniel B 500 ! Skinner, Henry 1 275 Shea, Mrs. Elizabeth 170 I Slater, John F 36,675 Shea, James T 330 Slater, Mrs. M. L 22.250 Shea, Jeremiah 1,895 ' ?lo<^l™' Elisha P 2,800 Small, Nathan 5 100 Smiley, Kobert J 1 500 Smith, Mrs. Achsah D 2,800 Smith, A. F. , est 10,450 Smith, Annie E. and Abbie M 13,165 Smith, Albert D 100 Smith, Ada W 5 OOO Shea, John 2 700 Shea, Murty 1,039 Shea, Murty, Jr 90 Shea, Patrick, est 3,000 Sheehan, Michael 720 Sheehan, Patrick 1,080 Sheffield, Mrs. Julia A 1,400 i Smith, Bartlett 960 Sheffield, Sally '500 i Smith, B. C, est 2,775 Sheridan, John 900 ' ^™it^' Charles H 418 Sheridan, Mathew . 1 540 ' ^™*^' <^^*^^"^e P 1,200 Sherman, Abial B 4'600 ' f '''*^' ^'°'§'" ^ ^'^75 Sherman, AbialW ' ^'sOO I'""'' ' ^'°'^' ^^ ^'^^^. o, juu Smiti^^ Hiram 1 800 Sherman, Mrs. Betsey 1,600 i Smith, James L I'eso Sherman, Mrs. Eunice 6,560 ' Smith, Joseph A., heirs l'850 Sherman, Horace M 2,125 Smith, Joseph F. ' ■3*910 Sherman, John E 2,250 ; Smith, J. Hunt 3*860 Sherman, Kufus C 2,800 : Smith, Jeremiah '220 Sherman, Thomas S 1,525 Smith, Mrs. L. T. and Lizzie Jewett.. 3,555 Sherman, William L 3,100 , Smith, Margaret 1,400 Shetucket Company 374,450 Smith, Mary Ann 1,'400 Shew, William K 33O j Smith, Nehemiah . . . " '400 Shields,_ Wm. H 6,475 | Smith, OwenS ..,, .4,334 Sholes, Sanford H 4,425 j Smith, Palmer ' . .li'625 Shiigrue, Daniel 1,000 | Smith, Paul ' .50 Shugrue, John, 1st 800 ; Smith, Sidney C .1,100 Shugrue, John, 2d, 1,000 Smith, Sidney L . '750 Shugrue, John J 900 ; Smith, Thomas H * . .2,500 Shugrue, Boger GOO j Smith, Welcome A 4*000 Sibley, Rufus 6,500 Smith, William 2,765 Sibley Machine Co 6,200 Smith, William, 2d '915 Silvia, Frank 900 Smith, William Asa 50 Silvia, John 1,300 j Smith, William G 600 Silvia, Joseph 1,025 ! Smith, William E. 1,350 Simpson, John ■. 1,000 ' Smith & Beckwith 4,730 Silcox, Henry E 2,600 i Smith ct Gilbert 5,000 Simonds, Christopher C 600 I Snell, Enuis B 1,200 Sims, Jeremiah 1,450 ; Souter, Eobert 2',550 Singer S. M. Co 900 Spafford, George C 2*500 27 Spakling, Charles 58,125 Spalding, Ch. & F. Johnson, trustees . .5,870 Spalding, Chas. W .4,000 Spalding, Harvey 115 Spalding tt Allen 1,000 Spear, Levi, est 30,000 Si)eucer, Joseph B 4,270 Spicer, Francina 440 Sj)icer, Worthington H 1,450 Spivery, Thomas A 1,000 Spooner, Charles A., est 2,000 Sprague, Seth L 4,090 Spragne, William, est 3,125 Standish, John G 2,600 Standish, Nathan, est 4,000 Stanley, James 320 Stanton, George P 3,500 Stanton, James 800 Stanton, Jane G 150 Stanton, John 367 Stanton, John R 10,130 Stanton, Nathan L. , est 360 Stanton, Eobert P 1,800 Stanton, Turner 9,650 Stanton, William N 165 Stanton &: Tyler 1,350 Staples, Elias W 3,095 Stapleton, John, est 300 Stajileton, Mrs. Louisa 500 Stark, C. E 192 Starkweather, Jacob F , 418 Starr, Edwin J 1,000 Stanbly, John 1,850 Stead, Angel 5,800 Steadman, Joseph E 1,600 Steadman, J. W. and others 6,000 Steiner, John 27,520 Sterry, Charles 725 Starry, Edward 5,850 Sterry, Sally :M 500 Stetson, Calvin R 1,500 Stevens, Mrs. Elizabeth 350 Stevens, Henry E St. Mary's Church 2,000 St. Patrick's Church 7,000 Stewart, Catharine 750 Stoddard, Isaac N 510 Stoddard, Romain 1,350 Storer, Egbert 7,075 Story, James A, est 2,575 Story, J. Palmer 650 Story, Nathan B 384 Story, Phebe E., Mrs 3,975 Story, Samuel, heirs 1,900 Stott, John 7,750 Stott, Joseph 1,200 Strong, Asa 3,830 Stuart, Frank S 1,850 Sti;rm, Max 700 Stocker, Catharine, Mrs 250 Stockwell, Loue E 300 Sturtevant, Albert P 53,050 Stutson, William P 100 Subert, Sylvester 6,485 Sullivan, Andrew J 165 Sullivan, Daniel 740 Sullivan, Daniel, 2d 1,800 Sullivan, Daniel & Mary Kelly 1,200 Sullivan, Eugene L 200 Sullivan, Jeremiah 1,500 Sullivan, John 500 Sullivan, John and Catharine 1,350 Sullivan, John T 1,400 Sullivan, Murty 1,500 Sullivan, Owen 1,000 Sullivan, Patrick 240 Sutherland, Joseph 220 SutUffe, Mrs. J. Amelia .3,100 Swan, Lucius C 8,138 Swan, Sanford B 800 Sweeney, Patrick 1,200 Sweet, George C 1,400 Sydleman, Harriet R 2,700 Symonds, George 1,250 Taft, Erander 1,775 Tanner, Gilbert H -1,010 Tarbox, Mary E 1,300 Tarrant, Nicholas 4,125 Taylor, Cebra L., Mrs 1,150 Taylor, Ellis 2,300 Te'fft, Yillnra A 1,000 Tefft, William 2,908 28 Teimey, Allen 4,750 Thames Iron Works 25,000 Thames National Bank 7,500 Thatcher, Betsey & Frances 720 Thayer, John R 165 Theis, Susan G 330 Thomas, Amelia M 800 Thomas, Caroline L 5,545 Thomas, CaroHne L., trustee (),000 Thomas, Mrs. E. Y 2,950 Thomas, Henry, est 7,000 Thompson, Charles 2,490 Thompson, Edward E 1,015 Thresher, Mrs. Annie H 3,420 Thresher, Seneca S 3,610 Thurston, Elizabeth M 600 Thurston, Laura S 6,150 Thute, Patrick H 700 Tibbetts, Henry W 60 Tillinghast, Francis A 4,020 Tillinghast, Lewis A 165 Tilton, Benjamin 1,200 Tingley, Mrs. Sarah E 8,200 Taft, David 800 Tompkins, Benjamin W 29,835 Tompkins, Lorenzo D 204 Toomey, David 1,500 Toomey, John . , 2,700 Toomey, Patrick 600 Torbush, Henry 2,300 Torrance, Archibald 1,200 Totoket Mills 102,000 Tourtelotte, Charles P 1,000 Tourtelotte, Isaac N. , est 500 Tourtelotte, James N 2,350 Tourtelotte, Mrs. William B 500 Towne, Wilham H 1,500 Tracy, Charles M 650 Tracy, Edwin A 2,525 Tracy, Elijah 2,900 Tracy, Timothy W 950 Trafton, Charles H 500 Tread way, Frederick W 10,600 Treadway, F. W., trustee 5,270 Treadway, John F 850 Treadway, Martha 200 Tree, Daniel 800 Tree, Sarah E 900 Trihey, John, est 1,875 Trinity Church Parish 1,200 Trolund, Archibald 4,878 Troland. James l,7'*f* Troland. John 2,750 Trowbridge, Willard ; 5,380 True. William D 1,525 Trueman, John H 4,1(10 Trueman, Joseph B 15,00:) Trumbull, Mrs A. N 3,000 Trumbull, D L., est 50.) Trumbull, Jonathan 7,5S ) Tubbs, Abagail C 1 000 Tubbs, Charles W. L 2,000 Tubbs, Oliver H 30:) Tubbs, William 9.795 Tucker, Dennison B., est 4.500 Tucker, William C 290 Tufts, Charles F 995 Tufts, William F 940 Turner, Edward L 2,700 Turner, Belle B 2,300 Turner, Isaac 1,475 Turner, Maria T 13,000 Turner, Sidney 13,130 Tweedy, Mrs. Harriet N 7,800 Tweedy & Gray 3,050 Tyler, Frank and Elizabeth 6,995 Tyler, O. S., est 2,115 Uncas Hall Co 14,000 Uncas National Bank 4,000 Universalist Society 1,200 Upham, Ellen G 2,000 Underwood, Thomas H 1,100 Utley, Frank 700 Utley, John C, est 2,000 Vallett, Jeremiah 300 Van Cott, Mrs. Sarah P 1,800 Vaughn, Alfred H. 16,400 Vergason, Calvin 845 Vergason, Daniel B 455 Vergason, James H 165 29 Ver^ason, James H $ 165 Vergason, Fremont 150 Yergason, Nelsim 6,891 Vergason, William 1,175 Vickers, Laura W 2,200 Victor Heating Co 6,000 Volkmar, Justus 200 Voorhees, Ellas 650 Vonrbees, Thomas 800 Wade, Jared 96 Wade, JolinL 1,500 Wait, John T 23,000 Wait, John T. & J. Trumbull 1,500 Wait, Joseph J 315 Wakefield, Clovis W 1,500 Walker, Dennis T 2,100 Walker, Hill & Edgarton 960 Walker, James 5,000 Walker, Julia F 2,000 Wallace, Samuel K 480 Walls, Hardin 440 Walsh, John 1,900 Walsh, William 7,800 Ward, Nannie B 1,800 Ward, Nancy H. est., and Mary B 1,500 Ward, Patrick 1,600 Ward, William D 3,793 Warner, John E 300 Warren, George W 2,575 Washburn, Edward T 2,500 Wasley, Fred. K 5,150 Waterman, David H 2,335 Waters, Charlotte 1,000 Waters. George 480 Waters, Jerusha , 480 Watson, Mrs. Myra 240 Watt, James 1,050 Wattles, Oliver P 15,420 Webb, Charles 8,100 Webb, Charles, guardian 2,200 Webb, Charles, guardian 2,100 Webb, Charles, trustee 13,800 Wel)b, John B 2,700 Webb, Lillie M 2,470 Webb, Julius 32,750 Webb, Eichard H 720 Webster, (laudius B $4,650 Webster, Edward Z 5,500 Weitzel, Charles F 330' Welch, Albert E 1,290 Welch, Emma and Emily 900 Welch, Gamaliel M - 1,350 Welch, John 1,000 Welch & Moshier 1,000 Welch, William 1,000 Welden. Albert R 1,100 Welden, Patrick 1,320 Welden, Stark & Gallaher 11,550 Weller, John 2,175 Wells, David A 25,930 Wells, F. A 5,025 Wells, F. A. & Co 6,000 West, True 330 West, William 400 Weir, EHza G 2,420 Whaley Brothers — — Whaley, Charles H 480 Whaley, Frances E 2,250 Whaley, Levi G t 2,610 Whaley, Stephen F 1,775 Whaley, William E Wheeler, Avery D 3,000 ^Vheeler, Amos T 220 Wheeler, Charles H 290 Wheeler, Emma L 2,500 Wheeler, George W 1,830 Whittaker, Horace 12,015 Whittaker, John 1,200 White, John 1,400 Whiteley, Mrs. George 2,200 Whiting, Celia E 2,170 Whitney, Samuel .\ 2,625 Whittemore, M. Maturin 2,575 Wicker, Henry 360 Wightman, George P 2,390 Wightman, Wolcott C 2,200 Wilbur, Mrs. Asenath 1,100 Wilbur, Mrs. Jeremiah 320 Wilbur, John, est 1,900 Wilbur, Labra A 1,100 ^rllcox, AsherH 2,100 Wilcox, Gordon 4,500 Wilcox, Mrs. Mary 2,702 30 Wilcox, William B $8 370 Wilkinson, Jared P., est i,200 Willard, John § q25 Willey, Edward G l^goo Williams, Abby C, and Rebecca c'gOO Williams, Charles M I'soo Williams, Elisha, est I'sOO Williams, E. Winslow 46 845 WiUiams, Erasmus J 3g0 Williams, George E 1 50o Williams, Henry 2' 800 Williams, Lncretia \gQ Williams, Mflry A 2 412 Williams, Eoger S 125 Williams, William M 7 150 Willis, Calvin G l'40o WilloTighby, Archa P 7 515 Wilsky, Herman 1 04q Wilson. Andrew gOO Wilson, Thomas 2 440 Winchester, Mrs. James 1^500 Winshiij, Horace B 500 Winshiji, Joseph P 1 000 Winship, T.Y :.....'.'.'.'ll,'635 Winters, Chas. J 7 950 Winters, Swift & Co 4'70o Witter, Hattie L 'ggO Witter, William 2 950 Wolfarth, Charles j'goo Wolfarth, John Wolfe, Conrad Wolfe, Martin 4 500 Wood, Willet R., est 16,'975 Woodhull, Elizabeth B 8,000 Woodmansey, Charles S l,050 WoodruflF, James H 1 400 Woodward, Calvin H 300 Woodward, Daniel, est 5^000 Woodward, H. R 300 Woodward, Jane G 51(5 Woodward, R. G 2 625 Woodworth, Elias 3 342 Woodworth, Thomas B 8,375 Woodworth & Small 1200 Worden, Mrs. Ann 1 800 I .1,440 .1,300 Worth, J. C $ 230 Worth, J. C & Co 1^315 Worthington, Eliza i_800 Wyman, Alfred E iqq Yantic Store Co 2 625 Yantic Woolen Co m §25 Yeomans, George L 1 455 Yerrington, Ezra W 3.825 Yerrington, Stephen N 16,690 Young, A. A. & P. Johnson, trustees. .4,000 Young, Charles 36,766 Young, David 4 125 Young, Prances E . . . .-, 900 Young, Mrs. E. A 3^100 Young, George 2'500 Young, Mary E 1^500 Young, Sarah B 100 Young, WilUam B 1 525 Zimmerman, George 800 NON-EESIDENTS. Adams Express Co 1 125 Alden, James C 4 500 Alger, Marie Louise 5^500 Albertine, Mrs. Ann •. 1 625 Armstrong, Eliza, heirs 2,100 Arnold, Rouse H 459 Babcock, Clarence W 300 Bailey, Charles H 12 OOO Baurgua, Peter 1^500 Bentley, Edwin 4 500 Bentley, George R s^'goo Berry, Elmore H 1 qoo Bill, Ledyard 2,400 Billings, Samuel D 1 qoo Bingham, Ellen P 1 200 Bingham, George, heirs 400 Birkery, Cornelius gOO 31 Bishop, N. P Sl,500 Boozang, James F 900 Boone, Mary P 1,500 Bradley, Henry E • 1,200 Brewster, Albert G 1,000 BreM-ster, John 300 Brockway, E. D 3,200 Brown, John 9,500 Brown, ]\Iicbael 300 Buckholly, John B 100 Burdic'k, John 400 Bnrdick, William 3,000 Bnell, Julius 6,010 Buell, Kachel S 1,600 Burnham, Andrew C 1,500 Butler, John 1,000 Callaghan, William, heirs 12,000 Carroll, George 300 Carroll, Michael 100 Carter, Charles W 5,000 Champlin, Edmund L 3,800 Chappell, A. H 2,000 Charlton, Charles H 900 Childs, Mary E 6,000 Church, Andrew J 2,500 Clark, Joseph F. S 3,000 Clark, Susan 300 Coit, Daniel, est 9,800 Cooley, John G 1,500 Cox, George H 150 Coyle, John 1,000 Coyle, John B 4,050 Crav en, James 3,000 Dawson, James 5,175 DeBruycker, F 1,750 Denison, John L., trustee 4,500 Downer, Ellen 150 Doyle, John B 9,000 Doyle, Thomas 1,000 Driscoll, Timothy 700 Durfey, Joseph P 1,500 Durfey, Edward 2,100 Durfey, C. A 700 Edwards, Peleg $ 300 Fanning, John T 600 Farnum, Mary A., and Amelia L 7,000 Farnum, Sarah A 7,200 Farrington, Martin L 300 Fillmore, Ann \! 1,000 Fitch, William H 850 Fitch, W. H., trustee 2,800 Former, Theodore 150 Forsyth, James F., est 1,500 Fox, John, guardian 1,000 Freeman, George, heirs 600 Fuller, Henry A 8,500 Fuller, Keuben B 200 Fuller, Robert B 1,200 Gallup, David, est 3,500 Gallup, Emily C 4,500 Gallup, John M 1,800 Gardner, Elisha M 3,000 Gaylord, Charles H 24,000 Geer, Oliver J 900 Geer, Nathan 500 Gifford, Mrs. Gnrdon 1,100 Gladding, Charles F 1,400 Gillogly, Mrs. James P 800 Gleason, Harriet N l,7(Mt Goddard, Mary N 6,000 Godfrey, Jonathan .3,000 Goodrich, Emma 3,000 Goodrich, Nelson 3,300 Griswold, Abel G 1,000 Guine, Jane 100 Hammond, Haunali 5,000 Hare, -lohn T 50 Harrington, Mrs. A. L 4,000 Harvey, IritSR W 9,000 Harris, Sybil A 1,000 Hart, Leo 2,H()() Hawkins, John C 2,8U0 32 Hatch & Foote $ 500 ! Hazen, George W 2,300 Hedge, Charles D 3,000 Hewitt, John F 1,600 Hillhouse, David 1,800 Higgins, John 100 Hogan, James 300 Holmes, Joseph 3,500 Hoxie, Albert F 450 Huntington, Miss Emily 2,500 Hyde, Fred G 1,500 Jillson, Lucy M * 1,700 Johnson, William G 3,300 Jones, Patrick 1,700 Kane, James H., children of 400 Kelley, Patrick 3,400 Kibbe, John M 1,200 Kimball, Lucy M 4,000 Kimball, William, heirs 1,500 King, Felix 3,300 Kingsley, J. P 5,000 Kingsley, Milton andAValter 3,200 Kinney, Henry M 100 Kinney, Joseph 3,300 Kinney, Joseph, 2d '. 1,800 Kirker, James 5,500 Ladd, Marvin 3,300 Lamb, Winslow M 3,800 Lanman, David T., est 4,500 Lathrop, Don F. , heirs 2,200 Leach, Eunice E 1,200 Leffingwell, John 2,350 Lewis, Allen C, efet 4,500 Lord, Mrs. Simeon 450 Lucas, Samuel 1,925 Luce, Mrs. Edward. . •. 3,000 Lusk, Elizabeth 5,250 Luther. Linns A 300 Manwaring, James H 000 Mni)les, Annie H. B 11,000 Marcus, Jacob $ 400 Martin, Julia A., est 1,600 Marshall, John 700 Marx, Samuel E 700 Mayer, David 2,800 McCoy, Thos 900 Mclntyre. Mary and others 800 McDougald, Mrs. H. W 3,500 Metzger, Andrew 700 Miner, James C 1,000 Moriarty, Mary 2,850 Mosier, Mabel W 2,250 Murphy, Patrick D 1,300 Murphy, Eichard 400 Murtagh, Thomas K 800 Mycue, Joseph 500 Mycue, Peter 200 New London Northern R. R. Co 8,900 Newell, Lydia E 1,300 Noble, Charles 900 Norton, Horace W 2,000 Owens & Mercer 400 Page, John B 1.500 Palmer, Charles T 4,000 Palmer, Jonathan J 1,700 Park, Delano J. . , 1,000 Park, Thos. H., 2.200 Parker, Timothy A- Wm. B 300 Peck, John and John D. Sullivan. . . .2.200 Piatt, Julia G 800 Pitt, Eagles & Johnson 6,500 Plummer, George L 4,500 Post, John V 400 Pratt, Amasa 500 Reagan, Timothy 1,000 Reynolds, Job 4,200 Riley, Patrick 1,500 Ripley, Daniel C 2,000 Richardson, Ann M 1,700 38 Eipley, George C S-i,000 Robbins, William N 150 Robertson, John 4,500 Rogerg, Josephine 100 Rogers, Samuel L 550 Eudd, Jane L 2,000 Saunders, Horace N 200 Sawin. John W 1,100 Shay, John C 550 Sharron, Ezra 150 Smith, Mrs. Horace 2,300 Smith, William H 1,600 Spellman, Nicholas D 2,500 Spellman, William 600 Spencer, Jane L 1,500 Spencer, John J 250 Staples, Caroline T 300 Stanton, Rowland 6,000 Starkweather, H. H., heirs 3,000 Sterry. F. W 600 Sterry. J. A. & A. P. McGrath ' .6,000 Stewart. Calvin M 2,250 Stiles. Ezra 3,000 Stodder, Charles B 2,800 Sullivan, James 75 Sullivan, Jeremiah 825 Sullivan, Timothy 250 Swift, EdwinB 1,700 Talbot, AlmiraB .' 1,100 Talcott, Charles H 1,800 Tanner, Asahel 4,000 Thompson, William H 150 Thornhill, William H 200 Tiffany, Adelaide H 1,500 Tinkham, WilHam 30,000 Tyler. Huldah and Josephine 3.000 Ward, Horatio N 100 Wellington, T. W. & Co 3,000 Welles, Mrs. Gideon, and Alice N. Gil- bert 2,500 Wetmore, Thomas T 1,200 AVliite, E'izabeth M 31,250 Whittlesev, John 4.000 Whittier, R. H. and H. L.Greene. . .$3,500 Williams, Charles Augustus 10,000 Wilhams, Jerome W 4,000 Wilson, Alfred J 300 Weissard, John U 100 Wright, Jeremiah 200 Worcester Coal Co 4,000 PENSION EXEMPTS. Appleton, Henry P 1,000 Bentley, Mrs. Mary 1,000 Brown, Reuben B 1,000 Corey, Andrew E 1,000 Carleton. Charles M 1,000 Carpenter, Delano M 1,000 Caruthers, William H 3,000 Carroll, Charles H 800 Carroll, George, non-resident 1,000 Chapman, Mrs. Giles 600 Clark, Jeanette 1,000 Connors, James 1,000 Corcoran, Stephen 1,000 Denison, John J 000 Driscoll, Michael 600 Enos, John J 960 Farrell, Thos 1,000 Filburn, Mary 1,000 Gleason, Ann M 700 Hill, JohnL 1,000 Howe, S. G. & W. R 1,000 Kelly, John 1,000 Kelly, Michael . 700 Kelly, Michael 720 Keppler, Sebastian P 1,000 Kimball, James 1,000 Kinney, Albert B 480 McMahon, Gilbert 950 Moore, Michael 792 O'Kelley, John .1.000 Phinney, Elisha 1,000 Rogers, Joab B 1,000 Shaw, Daniel B 1,000 Stanley, James 1.000 Strickland. James M 1"')(i 34 Sullivan, Patrick $ 900 Wallen, George L 550 Weiler, John 330 Wilbur, John A 1,710 Williams, Calvin 900 Wilson, Joseph 360 Wise, William H 600 Woocl,IraI 900 Woodward, Calvin H 1,000 Zimmerman, George 1,000 EXEMPT PEOPEETT. New London County 30.000 New London Co. Agricultural Soc .... 8,000 New London Co. M. Ins. Co 5,850 Norwich, Town of 180,800 Norwich, City of 203,000 Norwich, First Eccles. Society of. . ..33,664 Norwich, Second Eccles. Society of .35,000 Norwich, Fourth Eccles. Society of. .15,000 Norwich, Broadway Eccles. Soc. of. 45, 000 Norwich, Park Eccles. Society of. ..100,000 Norwich, Free Academy 123,500 Norwich Central School District .... 140,000 Norwich, West Chelsea School Dist. . 55,000 Norwich, Town Street School Dist. .15,060 Norwich, Town Street School Dist. .75,000 Norwich, N. Bank 6,000 Thames Bank 15,000 Merchants N. Bank 6,000 Uncas N. Bank 8,000 Shetucket N. Bank 10,610 Second National Bank 8,900 Norwich Savings Society 7,817,930 Chelsea Savings Bank 3,433,735 Dime Savings Bank 1.258,424 Norwich Mutual Ins. Co 6,840 Norwich and Worcester K. E Co. .200,000 Central Methodist Church 15,500 East Main Street Methodist Church. .5,000 Sachem Street Methodist Church 8,000 Bean Hill Methodist Church 5,000 Greene ville Methodist Church 5,000 Mount Calvary Baptist Church 3,500 First Baptist Church 17,300 Greeneville Baptist Church, 8,000 Central Baptist Church $20,000 Christ Episcopal Church 55,000 Trinity Episcopal Church 25,000 Universalist Cburch 15,000 St. Mary's R. C. Church '.24,000 St Patrick's R. C. Church 226,000 Taftville R. C. Church 10,000 Occum R. C. Church 7,000 German Lutheran Church 6,000 African Colored Church 2,000 New London Northern R. R. Co. . . .10,000 Eliza Hiintington Memorial Home. .68,300 Otis Library Association. . 10,000 Children's Home 7,000 Sheltering Arms 4,000 Cemeteries 50,000 Total List of Residents $12,543,877 Total List of Non-Residents 613,860 $13,157,737 Total value of property $27,672,252 Total Lixt Pension Exempt Property $ 41,602 Total List Exempt Property 14,472,913 $14,514,515 ADDITIONS BY BOAED OF BELIEF. Adams, John T., est 750 Coscoran, James 150 Doolittle. Dwight 200 Dunn, William H 100 Flynn, Patrick 525 FiiUer, Theodore 750 Fuller, John 200 Gardner, Harriet M 5,000 Gordon, Charles M 150 Heebner, Henry 100 Harvey, Irving & Co 1,065 Murphy, John, Occum 100 Plunkett, Thomas 150 Whaley, Wm. E 6,750 35 GRAND LIST OF NORWICH FROM 1800 TO THE PRESENT TIME. 1800 81,797,879 1810 2,231,710 1820 2,048,366 1830 2,455,133 1835 7,551,795 1840 4,814,017 1845 3,943,623 1850 4,446,480 1851 4,889,124 1852 5,158,660 •1853 6,583,687 1854 6,913,908 1855 6,876,713 1856 7,000,653 1857 6,829,778 1858 6,884,722 1859 7,592,651 1860 8,000,521 1861 9,151,417 1862 8,926,028 1863 $ 9,816,565 1864 10,494,035 1865 10,970,435 1866 ll,877..sr,0 1867 13,143,4(;7 1868 13,210,202 1869 13,509,561 1870 14,431,194 1871 14,799,422 1872 15,544,119 1873 15,339,071 1874 15,199.672 1875 14,732,840 1876 14,602,901 1877 13,801,789 1878 13,431,430 1879 13.349,295 1880 13,160,572 1881 13,119,742 1882 13,036,973 UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT. January 1st, 1884. SALARY. President of the United iSMes— Chester A. Arthur, of New York $50,000 Fred. J. Phillips, Private Secretary. O. L. Pruden. Assistant Private Secretary. Clayton McMichael, United States Marshal, District of Columbia. Vice-President (by election as President pro tern of the Senate) — George F. Edmunds, of Vermont 8,000 DEPARTMENT OF STATE. Secretary of State — F. T. Frelinghuysen, of New Jersey $8,000 Assistant Secretary — Vacant 3,500 Second Assistant Secretary — William Hunter. . . : 3,500 Third Assistant Secretary — John Davis 3,500 Chief Clerk— Sevello A. Brown 2,500 DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY. Secretary of the Treasury — Charles J. Folger, of New York $8,00(^ Assistant Secretary — John C. New 4,500 Assistant Secretary — Henry F. French 4,500 Chief Clerk— Amos Webster 3,000 Supervising Architect — M. E. Bell 4,500 Director of the Mint— H. R. Burchard 4,500 Chief of the Bureau of Engraving and Printing — Truman M. Burrill 4,500 First Comptroller —William Lawrence 5,000 Commissioner of Customs — Henry C. Johnson 4,000 Register of the Treasiary — Blanch K. Bruce 4,000 Treasurer of the United States — A. U. Wyman fi,000 Comptroller of the Currency — John Jay Knox i . . 3,000 37 Commissioner of Internal Keveniie — Walter Evans $ G,000 Superintendent United States Coast Survey — Julius E. Hilgard 4,500 Chief of Bureau of Statistics — Joseph Nimmo, Jr. Chief of Appointment Division —J. B. Butler. General Superintendent Life-Saving Service — Sumner I. Kimball. DEPARTMENT OF WAR. Secrefary of TTx/r— Robert T. Lincoln, of Illinois S8,000 Chief Clerk— John Tweedale 2,500 Quartermaster-General — Brevet Major-General Samuel B. Holabird. Commissary-General — Brigadier-General Robert Macfeely. Surgeon-General — Vacant. Paymaster-General — Brigadier-General W. B. Rochester. Chief of Engineers — Brevet Major-General Horatio G. Wright. Chief of Ordinance — Brigadier-General Stephen V. Benet. Judge-Advocate-General — Brigadier-General D. G. Swaim. Chief of Signal Corps — Brevet Major-General William B. Hazen. HEADQUARTERS OF THE AR^IY. Lieutenant- General of the Army — P. H, Sheridan. Adjutant-General — Brigadier-General Richard C. Drum. Inspector-General — Brevet Major-General D. B. Sacket. DEPARTMENT OF THE NAVY. Secretary of the Xary — William E. Chandler, of New Hampshire $8,000 Chief Clerk— John W. Hogg 2,520 Chief of Bureau of Yards and Docks — Rear Admiral Edward T. Nichols. Chief of Bureau of Navigation — Captain John G. Walker. Chief of Bureau of Ordinance — Captain Montgomery Sicard. Chief of Bureau of Provisions and Clothing— Paymaster-Gen. Joseph A. Smith. Chief of Biireaii of Medicine and Surgery^Siirgeon-General Ph. S. Wales. Chief of Bureau of Cocstruction and Repair — Chief Constructor Theodore G. VV'ilstm. Chief of Bureau of Eciuiiiment and Recruiting— Commodore Earl English. Chief of Bureau of Steam Engineering — Vacant. Admiral of the Navy — D. D. Porter. Vice-Admiral — S. C. Rowan, Governor Naval Asylum, Philadelphia. Pay Inspector — Richard Washington. Commandant of Marine Corps — Colonel C. G. MacCawley. Superintendent of U. S. Naval Observatory — Rear Admiral R. W. Shufeldt. Chief Hydrographer — Commander J. R. Bartlett. Superintendent Naval Academy — Captain F. M. Ramsay. 38 POST-OFFICE DEPAETMENT, Poslmnster-General — W. Q. Gresham, of Indiana $8,000 Chief Clerk— Gen. H. Walker 2,200 First Assistant Postmaster-General— Frank Hatton 4,000 Second Assistant Postmaster-General— Eichard A. Elmer 4,000 Third Assistant Postmaster-General— A. D. Hazen 4,000 Superintendent of Foreign Mail Service— Vacant 3,000 Superintendent of Money Order System— Charles F. MacDouald 3,000 DEPAETMENT OF THE INTEEIOE. Secretary of the Interior— Henry M. Teller, of Colorado $8,000 Assistant Secretary— Merritt L. Joslyn 3,500 Chief Clerk— George M. Lockwood 2,750 Commissioner of Land Office— N. C. MacFarland 4,000 Commissioner of Pensions— Wm. W. Dudley 5,000 Commissioner of Patents— Benj. H. Butterworth 4,500 Indian Commissioner— Hiram Price 4,000 Superintendent of Census— C. W. Seaton 5,000 Commissioner of Education— John Eaton 3,000 DEPAETMENT OF JUSTICE. Attorney- General— B. H. Brewster, of Pennsylvania $8,000 Solicitor-General— Samuel F. Phillips 7,000 Assistant Attorney-General— Wm. A. Maury 5,000 Assistant Attorney-General— Thomas Simons 5,000 Assistant Attorney-General, Department of the Interior— Jos. K. McCammon. . . 5,000 Assistant Attorney-General, Post-Office Department— A. A. Freeman 5,000 Examiner of Claims, State Department— Henry O'Connor. Chief Clerk— Jas. Eankin Young. Solicitor of the Treasury — Kenneth Eayner. DEPAETMENT OF AQEICULTUEE. Commissioner of Agriculture— George B. Loring, of Massachusetts iii;3,000 Chief Clerk — E. A. Carman. i Botanist — Dr. George Vasey. Statistician — J. E. Dodge. j Chemist — Peter Collier. Entomologist— C. V. Eiley. I Microscopist— Thomas Taylor. JUDICIARY. SUPEEME COUET OF THE UNITED STATES. Chief Justice— MoTTison E. Waite, of Ohio $10,500 Justice Samuel F. Miller, of Iowa . . .$10,000 Justice Stephen J. Field, of Cal. . . 10,000 Justice Joseph P. Bradley, of N. J., 10,000 Justice John H. Harlan, of Ky ... 10,000 Justice Wm. B. Woods, of Georgia . .$10,000 Justice Stanley Matthews, of Ohio . 10,000 Jiastice Horace Gray, of Mass 10,000 Justice Sam'l Blatchford, of N. Y. . . 10,000 Eejiorter J. C. Bancroft Davis. Clerk J. H. McKennev. 39 CIRCUIT COURTS OF THE UNITED STATES. FlrstJudieial Circuit -Jwatice Horace Gray, of Massachusetts. Districts of Maine, New Hampshire, Massachusetts and Rhode Island. Circuit Judge — John Lowell, Boston, Mass. Salary, $0,000. Second Judicial (Vitm (7— Justice Samuel Blatchford, of New York. Districts of Vermont, Connecticut, Northern New York, Southern New York and Eastern New York. Circuit Judge — William J. Wallace, of New York. Salary, $0,000. Tlurd Judicial Circuit — Justice Josejjh P. Bradley, of New Jersey. Districts of New Jer- sey, Eastern Pennsylvania, Western Pennsylvania and Delaware. Circuit Judge— William McKennan, of Pennsylvania, Salary, $6,000. Fourth Judicial Circuit — Chief Justice Morrison R. Waite, of Ohio. Districts of Mary- land, West Virginia, Virginia, North Carolina and South Carolina. Circuit Judge — Hiagh L. Bond, of Maryland. Salary, $6,000. Fifth Judicial Circuit — Justice William B. Woods, of Georgia. Districts of Georgia, Northern Florida, Southern Florida, Northern Alabama, Southern Alabama. Alis- sissippi, Loiiisiana, Eastern Texas and Western Texas. Circuit Judge — Don A. Pardee, of Louisiana. Salary, 5)6,000. Sixth Judicial Circuit — Justice Stanley Matthews, of Ohio. Districts of Northern Ohio, Southern Ohio, Eastern ^Michigan, Western Michigan, Kentucky. Eastern Ten- nessee and Western Tennessee. Circuit Judge^John Baxter, of Knoxville. Tenn. Salary, $6,000. Seventh Judicicd Circuit — Justice John M. Harlan, of Kentucky. Districts of Indiana, Northern Illinois, Southern Illinois and Wisconsin. Circuit Judge — Thomas Drumiiiond, of Chicago, 111. Salary, $6,000. Eighth Judicial Circxdt — Justice Samuel F. Miller, of Keokuk, Iowa. Districts of ^llinn^- sota, Iowa, Eastern Missouri, Western Missouri, Kansas, Eastern Arkansas, Western Arkansas and Nebraska. Circuit Judge— Geo. W . McCrary, of Keokuk. Salary, $6,000. Ninth Judicial Circuit — Justice Stephen J. Field, of San Francisco, California. Districts of California, Oregon and Nevada. Circuit Judge — Lorenzo Sawyer, San Francisco, California. Salary, $6,000. DISTRICT JUDGES. AiABAMA(N. M. & Ss.)— John Bruce, Montgomery, Fifth Circuit, $3,500. Arkansas (E. D.)— Henry C. Caldwell, Little Rock. Eighth Circuit, $3,500. Arkansas (W. D.)— Isaac C. Parker, Fort Smith, Eighth Circuit, $3,500. California— Ogden Hoffman, San Francisco, Ninth Circuit, $5,000. CoLOReADO —Moses Hallet, Denver, Eighth Circuit, $5,000. Connecticut— Nathaniel Shipman, Hartford, Second Circuit, $3,500. Delaware— Edward C. Bradford, Wilmington, Third Circuit, $3,500. Florida (N. D.)— Thomas Settle, Jacksonville, Fifth Circuit, $3,500. Florida (S. D.)— James W. Locke, Key West, Fifth Circuit, $3,500. 40 Geokgia— Henry K. McCoy, Atlanta, Fifth Circuit, $3,500. Georgia (S. D.) — John Erskine, Savannah, $3,500. Illinois (N. D.)— Henry W. Blodgett, Chicago, Seventh Circuit, $3,500. Illinois (S. D.)— Samuel H. Treat, Springiield, Seventh Circuit, $3,500. Indiana — William S. Woods, Indianapolis, Seventh Circuit, $3,500. Iowa (N. D.)— Oliver P. Shiras, Dubuque, $3,500. Iowa (S. D.)— James M. Love, Keokuk, Eighth Circuit, $3,500. Kansas— Cassius G. Foster, Topeka, Eighth Circuit, $3,500. Kentucky — John W. Barr, Louisville, Sixth Circuit, $3,500. Louisiana (E. D.)— Edward C. Billings, New Orleans, Fifth Circuit, $4,500. Louisiana (W. D. ) — Alex. Boarman. Maine— Nathan Webb, Portland, First Circuit, $3,500. Maryland — Thos. J. Morris, Baltimore, Fourth Circuit, $4,000. Massachusetts— Thos. L. Nelson, Boston, First Circuit, $4,000. Michigan (E. D.)— Henry B. Brown, Detroit, Sixth Circuit, $3,500. Michigan (W. D.)— Solomon L. Withey, Grand Kapids, Sixth Circuit, $3,500. Minnesota — Rensselaer R. Nelson, St. Paul, Eighth Circuit, .$3,500. Mississippi (N. & S. Dist.)— Robert Andrew Hill, Oxford, Fifth Circuit, $3,500. Missouri (E. D.)— Samuel Treat, St. Louis, Eighth Circuit, $3,500. Missouri (W. D.)— Arnold' Krekel, Jefferson City, Eighth Circuit, $3,500. Nebraska— Elmer S. Dundy, Falls City, Eighth Circuit, $3,500. Nevada — Geo. M. Sabin, Carson, Ninth Circuit, $3,500. New Hampshire —Daniel Clark, Manchester, First Circuit, $3,500. New Jersey— John T. Nixon, Trenton, Third Circuit, $4,000. New York (N. D.) — Alfred C. Coxe, Syracuse, Second Circuit, $4,000. New York (S. D.)— Addison Brown, .New York City, Second Circuit, $4,000. New York (E. D.) — Charles L. Benedict, Brooklyn, Second Circuit, $4,000. North Carolina (E. D.) — Augustus S. Seymour, Elizabeth City, Fourth Circuit, $3,500. North Carolina (W. D.) — Robert P. Dick, Greensboro, Fourth Circuit, $3,500. Ohio (N. D.)— Martin Welker, Wooster, Sixth Circuit, $3,500. Ohio (S. D.)— George R. Sage, Cincinnati, Sixth CircTiit, $4,000. Oregon— Matthew P. Deady, Portland, Ninth Circuit, $3,500. Pennsylvania (E. D.)— William Butler, Philadelphia, Third Circuit, $4,000. Pennsylvania (W. D.)— Marcus W. Acheson, Pittsburg, Third Circuit, $4,000. Rhode Island— L. Barron B. Colt, Bristol, First Circuit, $3,500. South Carolina — George S. Bryan, Charleston, Fourth Circuit, $3,500. Tennessee (E. D.)— David M. Key, Chattanooga, Sixth Circuit, $3,500. Tennessee (M. D.)— David M. Key. Tennessee (W. D.)— Eli Shelby Hammond, Memphi.s, $3,500. Texas (E. D.)— Amos Morrill, Galveston, Fifth Circuit, $3,500. Texas (W. D.)— Ezekiel B. Turner, Austin, Fifth Circuit, $3,500, Texas (N. D.)— A. P. McCormick, Dallas, Fifth Circuit, $3,500. Vermont — Hoyt H. Wheeler, Jamaica, Second Circuit, $3,500. Virginia (E. D.)— Robert W. Hughes, Norfolk, Fourth Circuit, $3,500. Virginia (W. D.)— John Paul, Harrisburg, Fourth Circuit, $3,500. West Virginia — John J. Jackson, Jr., Parkersburg, Fourth Circuit, $3,500. Wisconsin (E. D.)— Charles E. Dyer, Racine, Seventh Circuit, $3,500. Wisconsin (W. D.) — Romanzo Bunn, Madison, Seventh Circuit, $3,500. 41 UNITED STATES COURT OF CLAIMS. Chief Justice Charles D. Diake. "^'acant. i Judge William A. Richardson. Judge Charles C. Nott. | Judge Glenni W. Scofield. Chief Clerk — Archibald Hopldns. Andrew Wylie, S4,000. Arthur Mc Arthur, $4,000. A. B. Wagner, $4,000. DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA. Supreme Court Chief J-ustice— D. K. Cartter, $4,500. Associate Justices: j W. S. Cox, $4,000. C. P. James, $4,000. Chief Clerk— R. J. Meigs. SUPREME COURTS IN THE TERRITORIES, New Mexico : Arizona : — eesidence. salary. Chief Justice. Chas. G. W. French .. Prescott $3,000 Associate Justices. 1. D. H. Pinney Phasnix 3,000 •2. H. W. Shelden Tucson 3,000 Dakota : CI lief Justice. Alonzo J. Edgerton . . Yankton 3,000 Associate Justices. 1. Sanford A Hudson. . Fargo 3,000 •2. Wm. E. Church. . . . Deadwood .... 3,000 3. Vacant 3,000 Idaho ; — (Jiief Justice. John T. Morgan Oxford 3,000 Associate Justices. 1. Norman Buck Lewiston 3,000 ■2. Henry E. Prickett. Boise City. .. . 3,000 Montana : (liicf Justice. Decius S. Wade Helena 3,000 .l.s'.s'oc(rt/e Justices. 1. Wm. J. Galbraith. .Virginia City. 3,000 ■i. Vacant. RESIDENCE. S.VLARY. Chief Justice. Samuel B. Axtell Santa Fe $3,000 Associate Justices. 1. Joseph Bell Albuquerque.. 3,000 2. Warren Bristol Deming 3,000 Utah: — Chief Justice. John A. Hunter Salt Lake City 3,000 Associate Justices. 1. Philip H. Emerson. Ogden 3,000 2. Stephen P. Twiss.. Beaver City. .. 3,000 Washington: — CJiief Justice. Roger S. Green Olympia As.'sociate Justices. 1. John P. Hoyt Olympia 2. Sam'l S. Wingard. Walla Walla Wyoming : — (Jliief Justice. James B. Sener Cheyenne Associate Justices. 1. Jacob B. Blair Laramie City.. 2. Samuel C. Parks. .Cheyenne 3,000 3,00(t :?.(Hio 3.0(1(1 3,000 3,000 42 FORTY-EIGHTH CONGRESS. Expires March Wi, 1885. SENATE. ALABAMTA. Term Expires. loli'n Pugli, D 1885 J©te T: Morgan, D 1889 ABKANSAS. A. H. Garland, T) 1889 X D\ Walker, D 1885 LOUISIANA. Term Expires. B.J. Jonas, D 1885 Eandall Gibson, D 1889' MAINE. Eugene Hale, R 1887 Wm. P. Frye, E 1889 MAEYLAND. James B. Groeme, T> CAIIFORNIA. J^.. T: Farley, D. .-. 1885 Jolin F. IVliller, R 1887 ' Arthur P. Gorman, D COLOKADO. i aiASSACHUSETTS. Thomas J. Bbwen, R 1889 \ Henry L. Dawes, R N'athaniel P. Hill, R 1885 ; George F. Hoar, R CONNECTICUT. ! MICHIGAN. Orrille H. Piatt, R. 1885 | Thomas W. Palmer, R. . . . Joseph R. Hawley, R 1887 ' Omar G. Conger, R , . . .1885 .1887 .1887 .1889 .1889- .1887 DELAWARE. I MINNESOTA. Thomas F. Bayard, D 1887 J. R. McMillan, R 1887 DwightM. Sabin,R 18S& Eli Saulsbiiry, D 1889 Charles W. Jones, D 1887 James Z. George, D L. Q. C. Lamar, D. . Wilkinson Call, D 1885 GEOKGIA Alfred H. Colquitt, D . . . . , 1889 Joseph E. Brown, D .1885 ILLINOIS, n. M. Cullom, R 1889 John A. Logan, R 1885 INDIANA. Daniel W. Voorhees, D 1885 Beiu Harrison, R 1887 IOWA, James F. Wilson, R 1889 Wm, B. Allison, R 1885 KANSAS. Preston B. Plumb, R 1889 John J. Ingalls, R 1885 KENTUCKY. James S. Beck, D 1889 John S. W illiams, D 1885 MISSISSIPPI. .1887 .1889 MISSOURI. Francis M. Cockrell, D 1887 George C. Vest, D 1885 NEBRASKA. C. F. Manderson, R 1889 Charles H. Van Wyck, R 1887 NEVADA. John P. Jones, R 1885 James G. Fair, D 1887 NEW HAMPSBttBE. Austin F. Pike, R 1889 Henry W. Blair, R 1885 NEW .JERSEY. J. R. McPherson, D 1889 Wm. J. SeweU, R 1887 NEW YORK. Warner Miller, R 1878 Eldridge Lapham, R 1885 43 KORTH CAROLINA. Term Krpires. Matt Eansorn, D 1889 Zebulon B. Vance, D 1885 OHIO. George H. Pendleton, D 1885 John Sherman, R 1887 OREGON. J. N. Dolph, R James H. Slater, D ,1889 .1885 PENNSYLVANIA. J. Donald Cameron, R 1885 John I. Mitchell, R 1887 RHODE ISLAND. Nelson B. Aldrieh, R 1887 Henry B. Anthony, R 1889 SOrTH CAROLINA. Matthe^y C. Butler, D 1889 Wade Hampton, D 1885 TENNESSEE. Isham G. Harris, D . H. E. Jackson, D. . . Term Expires. 1889 1887 TEXAS. Richard Coke, D Samuel B. Maxey, D 1887 TERMONT. Justin S. Morrill, R 188S George F. Edmunds, E 1887 TIKGINIA. William Mahone, Read] 1887 H. H. Riddleberger, Readj. 188St WEST VIRGINIA. John E. Kenna, D 1889 J. N. Camden, D 1887 WISCONSIN. Angus Cameron, R .1885 Philetus Sawyer, R 1887 RECAPITULATION. Democrats 36 Republicans 38 Eeadjusters 2 Total 76 FORTY-EIGHTH COXGRESS, Rtpives March Uh, 1885. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES. ALABATNIA. 1 James T. Johns. D. 2 H. A. Herbert. D. 3 W. C. Gates. D. 4 Charles M. Shelley. 5 T. Williams. D. 6 G. W. Hewett. D. 7 W. H. Forney. D. 8 LukePryor. D. D. ARKAN.SAS. Congree8ma)i^(((- Large C. E. Breckinridge. 1 P. Dunn. D. 2 James K. Jones. D. 3 John H. Rogers. D. 4 Samuel W. PeU. D. D.. u Calefoknia. Congressmen-at-Large: Chas. a. Sujvenek. . D. John R. Glascock. D. 1 W. S. Kosecrans. D. 2 J. H. Budd. D. 3 Barclay Henry. D. 4 P. B. TuUey. D. COLORADO, 1 James B. Belford. E. COJraECTICUT. 1 W. W. Eaton. D. 2 Chas. L. Mitchell. J>. 3 John T. Wait. E. 4 Ed. W. Seymour. D. DELAWAEE. 1 Chas. B. Love. D. 1 E. H. M. Davidson. D. 2 Horatio Bisbee. Jr. E. Congressman-ai-Large: Thos. Hardeman. D. 1 John C. Nicholls. D. 2 H. G. Turner. D. 3 Chas. F. Crisp.. D. 4 H. M. Buchanan. D. 5 N. J. Hammond. D. 5 J. H. Blount. D. 7 Judson C. Clements. D. 8 Seaborn Eeese. D. 9 Allen D. CancUes.. D. 1 Eansom W. Denman. E. 2 John J. Finerty. D. 3. Geo. E. Davis. E. 4 Geo. E. Adiuus. E. 5 Eeuben Ellwood. E. 6 E. E. Hitt. E. 7 T. J. Henderson. E. 8 Wm. Cullen. E. 9 L. E. Payson. E. 10 N. E. Woi-thington. D. 11 W. H. Neece. D. 12 Jas. W. Eiggs. D. 13 Wm. M. Springer. D. 14 J. H. Rowell. E. 15. J. G. Cannon. E. 16 Aaron Shaw. D. 17 Samuel W. Moulton. D 18 W. E. Morrison. D. 19 E. W. Townsend. D. 20 J. E. Thomas. E. 1 J. J. Kleiner. D. 2 Thomas E. Cobb, D. 3 S. M. Stockslager. D. 4 W. S. Holman. D. 5 C. C. Matson. D. 6 T. M. Browne. E. 7 S. J. Peele. E. 8 John E. Lamb. D. 9 Thos. B. Ward. D. 10 Thos. J. Wood. D. 11 George W. Steele. E. 12 Eobert Lowry. D. 13 W. H. Calkins. E. 1 M. A. McCoid. E. 2 Jeremiah H. Murphy. D. 3 David B. Henderson. E. 4 L. H. Weller. D. 5 Benj. T. Frederick. D. 6 J. C. Cook. D. 7 John Kasson. E. 8 W. P. Hepburn. E. 9 W. H. M. Pusey. D. 10 Adonii'am J. Holmes. E. 11 Isaac S. Struble. E. (Jbngressmen-at-Large: E. N. Morrill. E. Lewis Hanback. E. Samuel E. Peters E. Bishop W. Perkins. E. 1 John A. Anderson. E. 2 Dudley C. Haskell. E. 3 Thomas Eyan. E. KENTUCKY. 1 Oscar Turner. I. D. 2 James F. Clay. D. 3 John E. Halsell. D. 4 Thos. H. Eobertson. D. 5 Albert S. Willis. D. 6 J. G. Carlisle. D. 7 J. C. S. Blackburn. D. 8 P. B. Thompson, Jr. D. 9 W. W. Culbertson. E. 10. John D. White. E. 11 Frank Wolford. D. 45 LOtriSIANA. 1 Caselton Hunt. D. 2 John Ellis. D. 3 Tavlor Beuttie. D. 4 N. C. Blanchard. D. 5 J. F. Kins, D. G Ed. T. Le^\is. D. Congress'men-at- Large. Thos. B. Eeed. E. Nelson Dixoley. R. Chas. a. Boutelle. R. Seth D. Milliken. R. maktland 1 G. W. Covington. D 2 J. F. C. Talbot. D. 3 F. S. Hoblitzell. D. 4 J. Y. L. Findlav. D. 5 Hart. B. Holton. R. 6 Louis E. McComas. R. MASSACHUSETTS. 1 Robert T. Davis. R. 2 John D. Long. R. 3 A. A. Eannev. R. 4 P. A. Collins"; D. 5 Leopold Morse. D. G Henry B. Levering. D. 7 Eben F. Steme. R. 8 Wm. A. Russell. R. '.( Theodore Lvman. Ind. lU Wm. W. Rice. R. 11 Wm. Whiting. R. 12 Vacant. MICHIGAN. 1 Wm- C. Maybury. D. 2 N. B. Eldridge. D. . 3 Edward S. Lacev. R. 4 Geo. L. Yaple. D. 5 Julius Houseman. D. 6 Edwin B. Winans. D. 7 Ezra C. Carleton. D, 8 Roswell G. Herr. R. 9 Byron M. Cutcheon. E. 10 H. H. Hatch. R. 11 Edward Breitung. R. MINNESOTA. 1 Melville ^Tiite. R. 2 James B. Wakefield. R. 3 H. B. Strait. R. 4 W. D. Washburn. R. 5 Knute Nelson. R. MISSISSIPPI. 1 H. L. Muldrow. D. 2 Van H. Manning. D. 3 E. S. Jeffords. R. 4 H. D. Money. D. 5 O. R. Singleton. D. 6 H. 8. Van Eaton. D. 7 E. Barksdale. D. MISSOURI. 1 W. W. Hatch. D. 2 H. M. Alexander. D. 3 A. M. Dockerj'. D. 4 James N. Burnes. D. 5 Alex. Graves. D. 6 J. Cosgrove. D. 7 A. H. Bnckner. D. 8 J. J. OXeil. 1). <) J. H. McLean. R. 10 M. L. Clardv. D. 11 R. P. Bland". T>. 12 C. H Jlorgan. D. 13 R. W. Rvan. D. 14 L. H. Davis. D. NEBRASK.\. 1 A. J. Weaver. R. 2 James Laird. K. 3 E. R. Valentine. It NEV.U)A. George W. Cassidy. D. NEW HAMPSHIKK. 1 Martin A. Hayues. R. 2 Ossian Ray. R. NEW JERSEY. 1 Thomas M. Ferrell. D. 2 J. H. Brewer. R. 3 John Keiin, Jr. R. 4 Benjamin F. Hmvev. R. 5 William ^\'alter Phelps. R. 6 W. H. F. Fielder. D. 7 William McAdoo. D. NEW YORK. Cotujressman-at-Lanje^ Henry W. Sloccm. D. 1 Perry Belmont. D. 2 William E. Robinson. D. 3 Darwin R. James. R. 4 Felix Cam])bell. D. 5 Nicholas IMuller. D. (i Samuel S. Cox. D. 7 William Dorsheimer. D. 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NAMES OF THE SPEAKEKS OF THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES— 1789 TO 1881. 1st Coivjress. — Frederick Augustus Muhlenbursh, of Pennsylvania, was elected Speaker of the House of Representatives April 1, 1789, and served to March 3, 1791. 2(1 Congress. — Jonathan Trumiutll, of Oonuecticut, was elected Speaker, and served from the 24th or October, 1791, to March :^, 1793. '3d Conr/ress. — Frederick Augustus Muhlenburgh, of Pennsylvania, was elected Speaker, and served from December 2, 1793, to 3d of March, 1795. Wi and 5th Cb«7/-c.ssp,s.— Jonathan Dayton, of New Jersey, was elected Speaker, and served from' the 7th of December, 1795, to 3d of March, 1799. &h Conqress, — Theodore Sedgwick, of Massachusetts, was elected Speaker, and served from the 2d of December, 1799, to 3d of March, 18U1. 7lh, 8th and 9th Congresses. — Nathaniel Macon, of North Carolina, was elected Speaker, and served from 7th of December, 1801, to March 3, 1807. Will and 11th Congresses. — Joseph B. Varnum, of Massachnsetts, was elected Speaker, and served from October 26, 1807, to 3d of March, 1811. l'2th, IWi., IWi, loth and IGth Congresses. — Henry Clay was elected Speaker, and served from 4th of November, 1811, to 3d of March, 1821. 17//i Congress. — Philip P. Barbour, of Virginia, was elected Speaker, and served from 3d of December, 1821, to 3d of March, 1823. 18th Congress.— Hesuy Clay, of Kentucky, was elected Speaker, and served from 1st of December, 1823, to March 3, 1825. 19//( Congress.— Joss W. Taylor, of New York, was elected Speaker, and served from December 5, 1825, to March 2, 1827. 20th, 21st, 22d and 23d Congres.'ies. — Andrew Stephenson, of Virginia, was elected Speaker, and served from 3d of December, 1827, to 3d of June, 1831 ; and John Bell, of Tennessee, was on the 4th of June, 1834. elected to serve out the balance of the 23d Congress, which ended on the 3d of March, 1835. 2ith and 25th Congresses. --James K. Polk, of Tennessee, was elected Speaker, and served from the 7th of December, 1835, to March 3, 1839. 2GtIi rbH//re.<.-,'!.— Robert M. T. Hunter, of Virginia, was elected Speaker, and served from 16th December, 1839, to March 3, 1841. 27/// Cbnr/ress.— John White, of Kentuckv, was elected Speaker, and served from 31st of May, 1841, to March 3, 1843. 28//i. Congress.— Jons W. Jones, of Virginia, was elected Speaker, and served from 4th of December, 1843, to March 3, 1845. 29lh Congress.— J onyi W. Davis, of Indiana, was elected Speaker, and served from 1st of December, 1845, to March 3, 1847. 30th Congress. — Robert C. Winthrop, of Massachusetts, was elected Speaker, and served from 6th of DecemV)er, 1847, to March 3, 1849. "dlst tb/i^res.9.— Howell Cobb, of Georgia, was elected Speaker, and served from 24th of December. 1849, to March 3, 1851. 32(Z and 33(Z Congresses.— Ijm-s Boyd, of Kentucky, was elected Speaker, and served froui 4th of December, 1851, to March 3, 1855. •iUh C'o»3re.ss.— Nathaniel P. B.vnks, Jr., of Massachusetts, was elected Speaker, and served from February 2, 1857, to March 3, 1857. mth 6'o/i//re.s-.s.- -James L. Orr, of South Carolina, was elected Speaker, and served from December 7, 185G, to March 3, 1809. 52 36^/( Cbngress. — William Pendleton, of New Jersey, was elected Sneaker, February 1 1860, and served to March 3, 1861. 37tt Congress. — Galusha A. Geow, of Pennsjdvanin, was elected Speaker, Jnly 4, 1861, and served to March 3, 1863. 'iSfh, Sdth and iOth Congresses. — Schuyler Colfax, of Indiana, was elected Speaker, December 7, 1863, and served to March 3, 1869. 41s< Congress. — James G. Blaine, of Maine, was elected Si^eaker, March 4, 1869, and served to March 4, 1871. 42fZ Congress. — James G. Blaine, of Maine, was elected Sjieaker, March 4, 1871 and served to March 3, 1873. 43rf Congress. — James G. Blaine, of Maine, was elected Speaker, December 1, 1873, and served to March 3, 1875. 44//i Congress. — Michael C. Keek, of Indiana, was elected Speaker, December 6, 1875 Died August 19, 1876. 44f/( Copyress. — Samuel J. Randall, of Pennsylvania, was elected Sjjeaker, December 4, 1876, in place of Kerr, deceased. 45//i Congress. — Samuel J. Eandall, of Pennsvlvania, was elected Speaker, October 15, 1877. 46//; Congress.— Samuel J. Randall, of Penns3'lvania, was elected Speaker, March 18. 1879. 47/// Congress. — Joseph W. Keifer, of Ohio, was elected Speaker, December 5, 1881. 48//i Congress. — John G. Carlisle, of Kentucky, was elected Speaker, December 3, 1883. PRESIDENTS AND YICE-PRESIDENTS OF THE UNITED STATES. PRESIDENTS. Year of Qualification. Name. Where From. Term of Office. 1789 George "Washington John Adams ... Virginia 8 years. 4 years. 8 years. 8 yeers. 8 years. 4 years. 8 years. 4 years. 1 month. 3 years, 11 mos. 4 years. 4 months, 5 days. 3 yrs. 7ms. 26 dys. 4 years. 4 years. 4 vrs., 1 m., 10 dys. 3 yrs. 10 m. 20 dys. 8 years. 4 years. 6 months, 15 daj^s. 3 yrs., 5 m. 15 dys. 1797 1801 1809 1817 1824 1829 1837 Massachusetts Virginia Virginia Virginia Massachusetts Tennessee New York Thomas Jefferson James Madison James Monroe John Quincy Adams Andrew Jackson Martin Van Buren 1841 , Wilham Henry Harrison*. . 1841 . 1 John Tyler . Ohio Virginia 1845 ' James Knox Polk Tennessee Louisiana 1849 ! Zacharv Tavlort . . 1850 1853 1857 1861 1865 1869 Millard Fillmore Franklin Pierce ... James Buchanan Abraham LincolnJ New York New Hampshire. . . . Pennsylvania Illinois Andrew Johnson Ulysses S. Grant Rutherford B. Hayes James A. Garfieldll. ...... Chester A. Arthur Tennessee Illinois Ohio Ohio New York 1877 1881 1881 *Diecl in office, April 4, 1841, when Vice-President Tyler succeeded him. tDied in office, April 9, 1850, when Vice-President Fillmore .succeeded him. t-^s.sassiuated, April 14, 1865, when Vice-President Johnson succeeded him. ilAssassinatcd, July 2, 1881. Died Sept. 19, 1881, when Vice-President Arthur succeeded him. 53 VICE-PRESIDENTS. Year of QrALIFICATION. NAaiE. Where From. 1789 John Adams Massachusetts. 1797 1801 Thomas Jefferson Aait)U Burr Virginia. New York, 1804 George Clinton New York. 1813 Eldridge Gerrv Massachusetts 1817 Daniel D Tompkins. New York 1824 John C. Calhonn South Carolina, 1833 1837 Martin Van Biiren Richard M. Johnson John Tyler New York. Kentucky. Virginia. 1841 1842 Samuel L. Soiithard§ George M. Dallas New Jersey. Pennsylvania, 1845 1849 1851 Millard Fillmore William H. King§ New York. Alabama, 1853 1855 1857 David R. Atchison Jesse D. Bright§ John C. Breckinridge Hannibal Hamlin Missouri, Indiana. Kentucky, Maine. 1861 1805 Andrew Johnson Lafayette S. Foster. § Schuyler Colfax Tennessee. 1865 ConnecticTit. 1869 Indiana. 1873 1875 Henry Wilson|| Thomas W. Ferrv§ Massachusetts, Michigan. 1877 William A. "SVlieeler . . , Chester A. Arthurir New York, 1881 New York. 1881 1883 DavidDavisIT George F. Edmunds Elinois. Vermont. 1 *Diecl in office, Nov. 2*2, 1875. %Ex-offlcio as President jjro tern, of Senate. llSuoceeded James A. Garfield, assassinated July 2, 1881.] LEGAL HOLIDAYS IN VARIOUS STATES. July 4 [Tndepekdence Day.] and December ^!> [Christmas DaV], tofay [.\pril '^I'lJ is in Georgia. Anniversary of tlie liattle of New Orleans [January H] is in Louisiana. I^iucoln's liirthda.v [Febnuiry 12] is in Louisiana. Firemen's Anniversary [JLarch 4] is in Louisiana. Anniversary of Texan Indepentlence [March 2], and of Itattle of San .Taeinto [.\pril 2r.|, in Texas. 54 POPULATIOX AND DEBT OP CPriES OF UNITED STATES, Name of Place. Akron, Ohio Albany, N. Y Alleghany, Pa Allentown, Pa Alexandria, Ya Altoona, Pa Amsterdam, N. Y. . . Atchison, Kan Atlanta, 'Ga Attleboroiigh, Mass. Aubvirn, N. Y'^ Augusta Ga Aurora, 111 , . . Austin, Te:cag Baltimore, Md Bangor, Maine Bay Citv, Mich. . . . Belleville, 111 Biddeford, Maine . . Binghamton, N. Y. . Bloomiugton, 111. . . . Boston, Mass Bridgei^ort, Conn. . . Brockton, Mass. . . . Brooklyn, N. Y' Buffalo, N. Y Burlington, Yt. ... Burlington. Iowa. . Cambridge, Mass. . . Camden, N. J Canton, Ohio Cedar Rapids, Iowa . Charleston, S. C , . . . Chattanooga, Tenn. Chelsea, Mass. . . . . . Chester, Pa Chicago, 111 Cincinnati, Ohio. . . . Cleveland, Ohio .... Columbus, Ohio. . . . , Covington, Ky Cohoes, N. Y' Council Bluffs, Iowa Concord, N. H Chicopee, Mass Detroit, Mich Dayton, Ohio ...... Denver, Col , Des Moines, Iowa. , Dubuque, Iowa. . . . . Dover, N. H Danbury, Conn Derljy, Conn . . Dallos, Texas Davenport, Iowa. . . . Pojjulation Debt Census 1880. 1880. 16,511 $ 17,619 90,903 3,138,500 78 681 1,596,429 18,063 430,443 13,658 1,037,088 19,716 368,830 11,711 15,106 449,687 34,398 2,180,000 11.111 16,600 22,924 530,000 23,023 1,961,319 11,825 25,506 10,960 106,744 332,190 27,092.690 16,827 2,661,000 20,693 433,100 10,682 217,712 12,652 183,874 17,315 299,500 17,184 221,463 362,535 28,244,017 29,145 831,000 13,608 71,200 566,689 38,040,000 155,137 8,211,934 11,364 383.427 19,450 128,062 52,740 3,403,723 41,658 1,164,900 12,258 180,657 10,104 40,876 49.999 4,129,102 12,892 71,566 21,785 1,554,496 14,996 357,084 503,304 12,794,271 255,708 21,992,500 160,142 4,076,946 51,665 1,259,162 29,720 1,030,000 19,417 141,214 18,059 138,400 13,838 615,500 11,325 100,050 116,342 1,282,772 38,677 1,101.520 35,630 20,000 22,408 578,000 22,254 804,611 11,687 458,830 11,669 255,415 11,649 80,243 10,358 304,356 21,834 290,675 55 POPULATION AND DEBT OF CITIES OF U. S.— continted. Name of place. Population Census 1880. Evansville, Ind 29,280 Elizabeth, N. J 28,229 Erie, Pa 27,730 Elmira, N. Y East Saginaw, Mich 20,541 19,016 Easton, Pa 11,924 Eaii Chiire, Wis 10,118 Fall Kiver, Mass 49,006 Fort Wayne, Ind 26,880 Flushing, N. Y 15,919 Fond dii Lac. Wis 13,091 Fitchbiirg. Mass 12,405 Fishkill,X.Y 10,732 Grand Rapids, Mich 32,015 Galveston, Texas 22,253 Gloucester, Mass 19,329 Galesburg. Ill 11,446 Hempstead, N. Y 18,160 42,553 Hoboken, N. J 30,999 30,762 Holyoke, Mass 21,851 18,646 Havei-hill, Mass 18,475 Hamilton, Ohio 12,122 Hannibal, Mo 11,074 75,074 Jersey Citv N J 120 728 16,626 Joliet, 111 16,145 16,105 Jacksonville, 111 10,927 Jeffersonville, Ind 10,422 Jamaica, N. Y 10,089 55,813 Kingston, N. Y 18,342 Keokuk, Iowa 12,117 Kalamazoo, Mich 11,937 Louisville, Ky 123,645 Lowell, Mass 59,485 39,187 Lynn, Mass 38,284 Lancaster, Pa 25,769 Lewiston, Maine 19,083 Long Island Citv, N. Y 17,117 Lexington, Ky Leavenworth, Kan Lynchburg, Va 16,656 16,550 15,959 14,860 Leadville, Col 14,820 La Crosse, Wis Lincoln, R. I 14,505 13,705 Little Rock, Ark 13,522 13,185 13,004 Debt Debt 1880. for each person. None. $ 5,512,638 $195.28 1,201,229 43.31 270,400 13.17 611,055 32.13 219,949 18.45 101,000 9.98 3.169,765 G4.68 856,900 31.87 165,000 12,60 770,788 62.11 471,000 14.71 1,023.249 45.97 193,370 10.00 53,250 4.65 3,689,855 86.71 1,099,250 35.46 1,065,300 34.63 878,454 40.20 1,501.591 80.53 393,428 21.29 48,067 3.96 144,027 13.00 1,914,500 25.50 15,598,435 129.16 54,000 3.34 183,500 11.39 273,336 25.10 240,350 23.06 1,339,224 23,99 644.880 35.15 372,375 30.73 25,000 2.09 4,842,935 39.16 1,554,275 20.12 1,712,000 43.08 2,072.815 54.14 404. 142 18.01 1,038.102 54.39 950.000 55.50 84,316 5.06 396.573 23.96 794,837 49.80 None. 135,000 9.30 50,000 3.63 108,667 8.03 335,243 25.42 199,615 15.35 56 POPULATION AND DEBT OF CITIES OF U. S.— continued' Name of Place. Population Census 1880, Los Angelos, Cal Logansijort, Ind Lennox, N. Y Milwaukee, Wis ....... Minneapolis, Minn. . . , Momphis, Ten£f Manekester, N. H. . . . Mobile, Ala Meriden, Conn Montgomery. Ala. .... Macon, Ga Maiden. Mass Middletown. Conn . . . . Muskegon, Mich . . . . Madison, "Wis,. Marlborough, Mass. . . Newburyport, Mass. , . New York, N. Y New Orleans, La Newark, N. J . .• , New Haven, Conn. . . . New Bedford, Mass, . , Norfolk, Va.. Norwich, Conn. . , . . . Newport, Ky New Dttrgh, N. Y ...... . New Brunswick, N. J . Newton, Mass. ,...,.. New Albany, Ind Newport, R. I ..... . . . New Britain, Conn. . , . Norwalk, Conn New Lots, N. Y Nashua, N. H Norristown, Pa Northampton, Mass, . . New London, Conn. . . North Adams, Mass. . . Nashville, Tenn ..... Oakland, Cal Omaha, Neb Oswego, N. Y. , Oshkosh, Wis Orange, N. J. , Oyster Bay, N. Y Ogdensbnrg, N. Y. . . Pittsburg, Pa Providence, R. I Paterson, N. J. , Portland, Maine. . . .. Peoria, 111 Petersburg, Va Poughkeepsie, N. Y . . Pawtucket. R. I Pittstield, Mass 11,311 11,198 10,249 115,578 . 46,887. 33,593 . 32,630 31,205 18,340 16,714 12,748 . 12,017 11,731 11,262 10,325 10,126 13,537 1,206,590 216,140 136,400 62,882 26,875 21,966 21,141 20,433 18,050 17,167 16,995 16,422 15,693 13,978 13,956 13,681 13,397 13,064 12,172 10,529 10,192 43,461 34,556 30,518 21,117 15,749 13,206 11,923 10,340 156,381 104,850 50,887 33,810 29,315 21,656 20,207 19,030 13,367 2,160,289 1,137,467 None. 929,000 . 2,671,100. 788,317 567,900 743,000 , 483,523 180,000 136,768 151,951 428,706 109,425,414 9,070,032 1,359,619 1,086,000 2,187,371 1,191,256 966,618 313,400 1,618,946 993.591 358,482 116,408 494,843 522,495 458,661 81,200 537,500 496,611 267,894 1,606,200 669,126 227,578 1,264,224 130,500 253,832 135,000 14,134,296 1,359,500 4,332,154 716,500 1,136,100 1,939,198 935,000 385,341 57 POPULATION AND DEBT OF CITIES OF U. S.— continued. Name of Place Portsmou th, Va Portsmouth, Ohio Philndelphiu, Pa Quincy, 111 Quincy, Mass Rochester, N. Y Richmond, Va Reading, Pa Racine, Wis Rockford, 111 Richmond, Ind Rutland, Vt Rome, N. Y Rock Island, 111 St. Louis, Mo San Francisco, Cal Syracuse, N. Y Scranton, Pa St. Paul, Minn Springfield, Mass St. Joseph, Mo Savannah, Ga Salem, Mass Somerville, Mass Sacramento, Cal Salt Lake City, Utah.. Springfield, Ohio San Antonio, Texas Sjjringtield, 111 Sandusky, Ohio Schnectady, N. Y South Bend, Ind San Jose, Cal Steubenville, Ohio Stamford, Conn Shreveport, La Saratoga Springs, N. Y . Saugerties, N. Y Saginaw, Mich Stockton, Cal Shenandoah, Pa Troy, N. Y Toledo, Ohio Trenton, N. J Terre Haiite, Ind Taunton, Mass Topeka, Kan Utica, N. Y Virginia City, Nev Vicksl)nrg, Miss Washington, D. C Warwick, R. I Worcester, Mass Wilmington, Del Wheeling, W. V Population Debt Debt .Census 18«0. 1880. for each person. 11,388 283,014 24.85 11,314 317,809 28.09 846.984 16,251,096 19.18 27,275 1-917,K«8 70.31 10.529 65,980 62.66 89,363 5,701,686 63.80 63,803 . 4,399,021 68.93 43,280 9y;j,0(io 23.08 16,031 218.512 13.63 13,136 178,090 13.55 12,743 . 167,000.. 13.10 12,149 . 202,460 16.66 12,045 160,000 13.28 11,660 289,050 24.78 '350,222 22,847,761 65.18 232,956 3,059,285 13.12 51,791 1,351,500 26.09 45,850 325,202 7.09 41,498 1,526,715 36.74 33,340 1,1)28,000 57.82 32,484 2.445,(;00 73.74 30,681 3,425,000 11L63 27,598 1,162,487 42.08 24,985 1,596.978 63.56 21,420 861,000 40.19 20,768 67,000 3.22 20,729 58,627 2.82 20,561 155,266 7.55 19,749 778.780 39.40 • 15,838 381,215 24.07 13,675 118,000 8.60 13,279 337,600 25.30 12,567 None. 12,093 30,190 2.91 11,298 165,000 14.50 11,017 10,822 297,600 27.50 10.375 10,525 202,800 19.00 10,287 385,615 37.40 10,148 56,747 958,296 10.80 50,143 3,2:{2,(i(;0 64.46 29,910 l,i;t>4,501 55.70 26,040 267,224 10.26 21,213 449,735 21.20 15,451 333.249 21..^0 33,913 7(i(i,0()0 22.88 13,705 112,000 8.17 11,814 373.218 31.50 147,307 23,310,146 158.25 12,163 57,500 4.72 58,295 2,447,543 41.98 42.499 1 1,372,450 32.05 31,266 531,882 17.02 58 POPULATION AND DEBT OF CITIES OF U. S.-continued. Name of Place. Wilkesbarre, Pa Watervliet (W. Troy), N. Y Waterbury, Conn Williamsport, Pa , Wilmington, N. C Woonsocket, E. I Wallkill, N. Y Wobiirn, Mass Watertown, N. Y "Weymouth, Mass "Winona, Minn Waltham, Mass Yonkers, N. Y Y^oungstown, Ohio York, Pa Zanesville, Ohio Population Census 1880. 23,339 22,202 20,269 18,934 17.361 16,053 11,483 10,938 10,697 10,571 10,208 11,711 18,892 15,431 13,940 18,120 Debt Debt 1880. for each person. 95,096 4.07 361,508 17.80 651,272 34.40 539,845 31.09 230,000 14.30 626,602 57.26 407,500 38.00 64,392 6.09 183,000 17.92 477,000 40.76 ,388,000 73.47 193,406 12.50 33,000 2.38 529,097 29.91 THE ELECTORAL COLLEGE. The electoral college of 1884, according to the last census, will consist of 401 mem- bers, with 201 votes necessary to a choice of President and Vice-President. These votes are distributed among the States as follows : NEW ENGLAND STATES. Maine 6 New Hampshire 4 Vermont 4 Massachusetts 14 Rhode Island 4 Connecticut 6 Total 38 MIDDLE STATES. New York 36 New Jersey - 9 Pennsylvania 30 Delaware 3 Maryland 8 West Virginia 6 Total . .92 WESTERN AND NORTHWESTERN STATES. Ohio 23 Indiana 15 Illiiiois 22 Michigan 13 Wisconsin 11 Minnesota 7 Iowa 13 Missouri 16 Kansas , 9 Nebraska 5 Total 134 SOUTHERN AND SOUTHWESTERN STATES. Virginia 12 North Carolina H South Carolina ' 9 Georgia 12 Alabama 10 Mississippi ^ Florida '* Louisiana 8 Texas 13 Arkansas 7 Kentiicky 13 Tennessee 12 Total . .120 California . Oregon . . . Nevada. . . PACIFIC STATES. Colorado . Grand Total . Total 17 401 60 VOTE OF THE STATE BY TOWNS IN THE PEESIDENTIAL ELECTION NOV. 1880, AND FOE GOVEENOE IN NOV. 1882. HAETFOED COUNTY. « Towns. 2 S Hartford 4,502 Avon 133 Berlin 282 Bloomfiekl 140 Bristol 607 Burlington 104 Canton 315 East Granby 100 East Hartford 390 East Windsor 326 Enfield ■ 734 Farmington 342 Glastonbiary 436 Granby 20 Hartland.- 90 Manchester 709 Marlborough 43 New Britain 1,460 Newington. 98 Plainville 256 EockyHill 127 Simsbury 213 Soiithington. . . 631 South Windsor 212 Suffield 465 West Hartford . . : 261 Wethersfield 266 Windsor 285 Windsor Locks 184 13,919 Tolland 165 Andover 65 Bolton 69 Columbia 83 Coventry 236 Ellington 169 Hebron 161 Mansfield 287 Somers 183 Stafford 472 Union.......;.; 70 Vernon 835 Willington 173 o ft a a O 4,727 84 2 3,831 4,684 112 15 110 7 114 103 12 264 244 243 4 210 2 120 194 625 2 1 574 652 1 24 159 2 76 157 222 294 204 113 85 98 2 410 331 366 259 1 245 239 1 457 1 4 612 410 .263 1 318 260 401 1 8 841 359 4 25 161 3 198 146 85 1 93 89 455 2 592 455 3 55 37 43 1,326 T 2 1,213 1,425 3 101 92 62 2 178 1 222 171 1 5 130 1 1 116 94 4 202 6 8 226 185 1 5 611 16 1 547 558 11 2 244 1 2 192 194 374 1 403 329 2 . 1 144 213 1.32 139 2 236 133 291 96 1 227 265 81 1 272 190 228 12,988 OLLAND 234 County. 34 11,982 12,478 229 93 134 2 . 116 127 1 7 61 67 54 1 73 56 71 89 2 82 93 242 4 204 216 11 1S)0 1 2 174 143 4 119 143 100 181 4 230 136 7 136 158 118 476 1 366 368 12 92 1 56 63 3 472 6 6 595 565 21 79 1 143 49 3 2,968 32,44 23 2,390 2,103 61 "New Haven County. Towss. 2 =? 3 O New Haven 5,7'2'2 Beacon Falls , 44 Betbunv 35 Branford 298 Cheshire 281 Derby 1,124 East Haven 412 Guilford 377 Haniden : 311 Madison 254 Meriden 2,014 jMiddleburv 104 Milford...' 374 Naiigatiick 354 North Branford 154 North Haven 217 Oranse 392 Oxford 108 Prospect 85 Sevmonr 291 Southbury 173 Wallingford 427 Waterbury 1,981 Walcott 65 Woodbridge 117 > >' .^ a 0) a o p ci o w f^ O M ^ (-1 pH 7.917 107 8 4,803 7,871 47 9 23 64 23 118 2 33 113 423 25 1 210 373 23 232 4 212 195 17 1,218 2 1,225 1,117 3 330 7 93 116 1 V 288 2 2 310 340 1 360 13 3 225 335 I 1-2 172 194 116 1 1,689 47 10 1,585 1,837 50 M 47 70 44 467 1 2 336 427 3 7 491 8 3 349 434 95 4 117 111 83 150 5 165 131 15 312 1 320 305 154 97 137 1 41 63 36 232 1 273 200 2 7 158 133 158 614 3 333 464 2,213 8 1,746 2,045 1 20 56 65 53 73 80 45 15,714 17,895 212 53 13,095 16,898 224 153 Middlesex County. Towns. "S Middletown 1,139 1,280 Haddam 238 Chatham 233 Chester 187 Clinton 200 Cromwell 199 Durham 142 East Haddam 432 Essex 291 Killingworth 76 Middlefield 126 OldSavbrook 152 Portland 376 Saybrook 236 Westbrook 144 8 > a <£ ^ o P o 1,280 45 27 893 1,190 14 53 319 1 207 281 213 1 11 191 206 16 100 1 182 100 166 3 174 123 (i 182 4 182 160 1 129 107 101 263 6 4 322 213 22 3 216 5 25(; 227 2 121 64 107 71 lOil 61 8 137 1 130 106 1 322 1 1 352 304 3 106 3 204 96 2 94 6 117 59 5 4,171 3,719 58 C^S 3,490 3,334 36 100 62 Tott-NS. ^ 2 > ■ "S fl «s ^ O K P^ O NEW LONDON COUNTY. New London 1,003 1,103 13 52 Norwich 2,260 1.633 25 64 Bozrah 104 77 1 Colchester 296 347 17 East Lyme 224 128 Franklin 104 52 Griswold 323 195 8 3 Groton 602 520 5 6 Lebanon 280 140 9 Ledyard 152 170 2 Lisbon 68 81 Lymf 136 121 1 Montville 307 276 10 ' North Stonington 294 154 3 2 Old Lyme 121 181 2 Preston 267 343 2 Salem 75 74 3 Sprague 95 123 77 Stonington 743 612 11 16 Voluntown 170 70 3 Waterford 312 283 4 7,936 6,712 147 191 Windham Codnty. Brooklyn 225 140 5 Ashfor'd 148 160 1 Canterbury 153 161 Chaplin . . ". 98 47 Eastford 124 98 Hampton 123 71 Killinglv 723 434 2 Plainiield 373 257 1 3 Pomfref 196 95 1 Putnam 515 251 9 1 Scotland 90 68 1 Sterling 96 102 2 Thompson . 399 151 2 Windham 757 601 2 16 Woodstock 406 174 1 4,426 2,810 15 32 Faiefield County, Bridgeport 2,935 3,391 59 Danbury 1,245 1,167 7 Bethel 349 292 3 Brookfield 113 164 1 Darien 245 187 Easton 165 153 Fairfield 398 414 6 Greenwich 794 808 2 Huntington . . . ., 296 228 Monroe 156 144 5 60 o 771 949 16 71 1,691 1,614 19 34 92 69 256 304 17 184 101 2 78 42 214 184 7 2 455 459 19 19 224 120 16 123 148 1 49 84 1 110 102 2 252 226 6 211 219 2 88 152 211 335 3 63 62 5 85 130 22 548 575 6 59 140 68 1 179 212 5 0,164 6,223 93 243 186 94 7 103 138 160 113 86 56 3 120 84 1 90 62 644 343 5 311 225 10 117 78 1 359 271 t) 7 84 • 50 2 86 63 2 291 111 2 679 501 1 28 334 121 2 3 3,650 2,290 8 71 2,352 3,034 30 17 836 987 7 92 294 271 3 96 124 165 153 1 147 93 309 311 1 23 656 651 12 280 230 151 95 63 PAIETIELD COUNTY — CONTINUEr) Ne^v Canaan 319 300 New Fairfield 00 135 Newtown 2(56 532 1 Norwulk 1,588 1,271 4 Bedding.. 21-i 171 Eidgefield 313 210. Sherman 12<} 83 Stamford 1,080 1,055 12 Stratford 5:38 385 Trumbull 172 174 3 Weston 100 131 Westport 287 459 "Wilton 238 210 12,003 12,064 82 27 Litchfield County. Litchfield 341 Barkbamsted 144 Bethlehem 95 Bridgewater 56 Canaan 154 Oolebrook 102 Cornwall 202 Goshen 117 Harwinton 152 Kent 180 Morris 77 New Hartford 313 NewMilford 407 North Canaan 127 Norfolk 179 Plymouth 296 Eoxbury 107 Salisbury 311 Sharon 254 Thomaston, 399 Torrington 451 Warren . 103 Washington 188 Watertown 282 Winchester. 597 Woodbury '. 310 5,994 5,886 107 27 4,709 5,573 36 68 Counties. Hartford 13,919 12,988 234 34 11,982 12,478 229 93 New Haven 15,714 17,895 212 53 13.095 16,898 224 153 New London 7,766 6,642 144 192 (i,0^-i <'.l-"'5 ^'^ 2-i3 Fairfield 12,003 12,064 99 27 9.513 10,183 71 237 Windham 4,596 2,880 18 32 3,650 2.290 8 71 Litchfield 5,944 5,886 107 27 4,709 5,573 36 68 Middlesex 4,171 3,719 58 68 3,490 3,334 36 100 Tolland 2,968 2,344 7 23 2,390 2,103 1 69 67,081 64,418 869 456 54,853 59,014 697 1,034 Tot>d vote for President, November, 1880, 132,863 ; 39 votes returned ns scattering. Garfield's majority, 1,299. Total vote for Governor, November, 1882, 115,(538 ; 40 votea returned as scuttering. Waller's plurality, 4,161. Waller's majority, 2,390. 381 170 10 87 132 140 129 6 188 109 4 88 195 102 238 5 587 2 224 2 116 223 149 485 11 319 253 7 342 1 63 186 197 555 59 228 1 278 290 ()5 106 231 467 1 2 1,136 936 95 169 153 1 260 180 4 122 76 1 905 892 12 1 a 453 353 4 1 138 159 1 1 91 97 196 351 177 174 2 57 9,513 10,183 71 237 1 283 341 1 134 152 86 82 51 116 2 78 165 12 78 121 4 123 192 90 93 3 128 72 6 94 184 3 55 95 1 266 223 4 1 336 525 124 173 3 151 99 2 3 199 217 8 86 124 6 235 485 1 11 186 269 3 322 273 4 4 1 461 332 3 1 51 63 164 172 1 202 186 2 2 493 608 17 V 3 233 211 7 ( OFFICIAL VOTE FOR CONGRESSMEN THIRD CONGRESSIONAL DISTRrCT, NOVEMBER, 1882. NEW LONDON COTTNTT. TOWNS. Penrose. Wait. Prohibit'n Gr'nback. 883 1,504 68 314 97 37 178 435 119 146 83 103 227 212 149 322 52 128 561 68 222 904 1,784 92 247 186 83 219 471 225 124 49 108 256 219 91 215 74 87 551 140 173 75 34 2 22 15 1 1 6 3 61 18 19 Bozrah East Lyme 7 GrotoTi . , . . . 18 Ledyard Lisbon Lyme Nortb Stonington 2 Old Lyme, Preston Salem , . Sprague ... , 21 G Voluntown - 2 Total 5,908 6,298 220 93 WINDHAM COUNTY. Brooklyn . . . Ashford . . . . Canterbury . Chaplin. . . . Eastford . . Hampton . , Kilhngly... Plain field. . Pomfret , . . . Putnam . . . . Scotland . . . Sterling . . . . Thompson . Windham . . Woodstock . Total . TOWNS. New London County. Windham " 2,320 RECAPITULATION. 5,908 2,320 Total Wait's plurality, 1,654. Majority, 1,271. 8,228 1 Wait. Prohibit'n Greenb'ck 185 7 106 161 88 1 116 89 599 7 299 8 114 361 7 5 85 2 86 2 287 2 680 29 328 3 2 3,584 68 7 6,298" 3,584 9,882 220 63 283 93 7 100 Co OFFICIAL VOTE FOR SENATORS IX NEW LONDON AND WINDHAM COUNTIES IN 1882 AND 1883. NINTH SENATORIAL, DISTRICT. GrotoD New London. . . . North Stonington . Stonington Total . Stanton's (Rep.) plurality, 204. 1883. 1 1 Palmer. Stanton. 449 645 153 501 458 670 255 569 1,748 y, 204. 1,952 TENTH SENATORIAL DISTRICT. 1882. Barnes. Ayer. Ledyard i 148 122 Norwich 1,670' 1,647 Preston 315 ' 229 Total. 2,133 1,998 Barnes (Dem.) plurality, 135. 1883. ELEVENTH SENATORIAL DISTRICT. Calkins. |Crandall Bozrah Colchester. . East Lyme . Franklin . . . Griswold . . . Lebanon . . . Lisbon . . . . . Lyme Montville . . Old Lyme . . Salem Spragne . . . Voluntown . Waterf ord . WINDHAM COUNTY DISTRICTS. 66 252 159 44 135 67 74 92 177 93 48 116 102 167 Total 1,592 Crandall's (Eep.) plurality, 258. 97 210 84 74 266 241 45 114 234 128 59 108 91 99 1,850 SIXTEENTH SENATORIAL DISTRICT. 1889. Perkins. Barrows Ashf ord . . . . Eastford . . . Killingly . . . Putnam . . . . Thompson . Woodstock . 139 87 333 274 109 122 106 119 637 351 292 332 Total I 1,064 1,837 Barrows (Rep.) plurality, 773. SEVENTEENTH DISTRICT. Brooklyn . . Canterbury Chaplin. . . . Hampton . . Plainfield . . Pomfret. . . . Sterling Scotland . . . Windham . . 1883. Marlor. 1 Boss. 86 152 23 47 166 123 45 49 378 121 140 66 74 266 46 108 76 733 Total 1.069 1,630 Boss' (Rep ) plurality, 561. REPUBLICAN NATIONAL TICKET. For Pm5i(^eni— JAMES G. BLAINE, of Maine. For Vice-Premlent—iOW^ A. LOGAN, of Illinois THE PLATFORM. The Eepublicans of the United States', in National Convention assembled, renew their allegiance to the principles upon which they have triiimiihed in six successive presidential elections, and congratulate the American peoiile on the attainment of so many resiilts in legislation and administration by which the Republican party has, after saving the Union, done so much to render its institutions just, equal and benefi- cent. The safeguard of liberty, and the embodiment of the best thought and highest purposes of her citizens, the republican party gained its strength by quick, faithful response to the demands of the people for the freedom and equality of all men, for a united nation, assuring the rights of all citizens, for the elevation of labor, for an honest currency, for purity in legislation and integrity and accountability in all depart- ments of the government, and it accepts anew the duty of leading in the work of i^ro- gress and reform. "We lament the death of President Garfield, whose sound statesmanshiiJ, long con- spicuous m congress, gave promise of a strong and successful administration, a prom- ise fully realized during the short period of his service as president of the United States. His distinguished success in war and peace have endeared him to the hearts of the American people. In the administration of President Arthur we recognize a wise, conservative and patriotic policy, under which the country has been blessed with remarkable prosperity; and we believe his eminent services are entitled to and will receive the hearty approval of every citizen. It is the first duty of a good government to protect the rights and promote the interests of its own jseople. The largest diversity of industry is most productive to general prosperitj^ and of the comfort and independence of the people. We therefore demand that the imiiosition of duties on foreign imports shall be made, not for revenue only, but that in raising the requisite revenues for the government such duties shall be BO levied as to afford security to our deversified industries and protection to rights and wages to the laborers, to the end that active and intelligent labor, as well as capital, may have its just award and the laboring man bis full share in the national prosperity. Against the so-called econom- ical system of the democratic party, which would degrade our labor to G7 the foreign standard, we enter our eivrnest protest. The democratic pnrtj' hns failed completely to relieve the people of the burden of unnecessary taxation by a wise reduc- tion of the suri)lus. The republican party pledges itself to correct the inequalities of the tariff and reduce the surplus, not by the vicious and indiscriminate process of horizontal reduction, but by such methods as will relieve the taxi)ayers without injuring the laborer or great productive interests of the country. We recognize the importance of sheep husbandry in the United States, the serious depression which it is now experiencing and the danger threatening its future pros- perity, and we therefore respect the demands of the representatives of this important agricultural interest for a readjustment of the duty upon foreign wool, in order that such industrj' shall have full and adequate protection. We have always reconmended the best money known to the civilized world, and we urge that an effort be made to uni e all commercial nations in the establishment of an internaticmal standard, which shall fix for all the relative value of gold and silver coinage. The regulation of commerce with foreign nations and between the states is one of the most important prerogatives of the general government, and the republican i)arty distinctly announces its ptirpose to support such legislation as will fully and efficiently carry out the constitutional jiower of congress over inter-state commerce. The principle of the public regulation of railway corporations is a wise and salutary one for the pro- tection of all classes of the people, and we favor legislation that shall prevent unjitst discrimination and excessive charges for transportation and that shall secure to the people and to the railway alike the fair and equal protection of the laws. We favor the establishment of a national bureau of labor, the enforcement of the eight-hour law, a wise and judicious system of education by adequate appropriation from the national revenues wherever the same is needed. We believe that everywhere the protection to a citizen of American birth must be secured to citizens by American adoption, and we favor the settlement of national differences by international arbitra- tion. The republican party, having its birth in a hatred of slave labor, and in a desire that all men may be free and equal, is unalterably opposed to placing our workingmen In competition with any form of servile labor, whether at home or abroad. In this spirit we denounce the importation of contract labor, whether from Eurojie or Asia, as an offense against the spirit of American institutions; and we pledge ourselves to sus- tain the present law restricting Chinese immigration, and to provide such further legis- lation as is necessary to carrj-^ out its purjooses. The reform of the civil service, specially begun under republican administration, should be completed by the further extension of the reformed system already estab- lished by law to all the grades of service to which it is applicable. The sjiirit and purpose of the reform should be observed in all executive appointments, and all laws at variance with the objects of existing reformed legislation should be repealed to the end that the dangers to free institutions which lurk in the power of official patronage may be wisely and effectively avoided. The public lands area heritage of the people of the United States and should be re- served as far as possible for small holdings l:)y actual settlers. We are opi)osed to the acquisition of large tracts of these lands by corporations or individuals, especially where such holdings are in the hands of non-resident aliens, and we will endeavor to ob'ain such legislation as will tend to correct this evil. Wo demand of congress the speedy forfeiture of all land grants which have lapsed by reason of non-compliance 68 with acts by corporations in all cases where there has been no attempt in good faith to perform the condition of such grants. The grateful thanks of the American jjeople are due the republican sailors and soldiers of the late war, and the republican party stands pledged to give suitable pen- sions for all who were disabled, and for widows and orphans of those who died in the war. The rejjublican party also pledges itself to the repeal of limitation, contained in the arrears act of 1879, so that all invalid soldier» shall share alike and their pensions shall begin with the date of the applications. The republican party favors a policy which shall keep us from entangling alliances with foreign nations, and which shall give the right to expect that foreign nations shall refrain from meddling in American affairs. The policy Avhich seeks peace can trade with all powers, but especially with those of the western hemisphere. We demand the restoration of our navy to its old-time strength and efficiency, that it may in any sea protect the rights of American citizens and the interests of American commerce, and we call upon congress to remove the burdens lander which American shijjping has been depressed, so that it may again be true that we have a commerce which leaves no sea unexplored and a navy which takes no law for superior force. Besolved, That appointments by the President to offices in the territories should be made from the bona tide citizens and residents of the territories wherein they are to serve. Besolved, That it is the duty of Congress to enact such laws as shall promptly and effectiaally suppress the system of polygamy within our territory and chvorce the polit- ical from the ecclesiastical pow^r of the so-called Mormon church and that the law so enacted should be rigidly enforced by the civil aiathorities, if possible, and by the mili- tary if need be. The j)eople of the United States in their original capacity, constitute a nation, and not a mere confederacy of states. The national government is supreme within the sphere of its national duty, but the states have reserved rights which should be faith- fully maintained, each should be guarded with zealous care so that the harmony of our system of government may be preserved and the Union kept inviolate. The perijetuity of our institution rests upon the maintenance of a free ballot, an honest count and a correct return. We denounce the fraud and violence practiced by the democracy in southern states, by which the will of the voters is defeated, as dangerous to the preservation of free instittitions and we solemnly arraign the democratic party as being the guilty recipients of the fruits of such fraud and violence. We extend to the republicans of the south, regardless of their form of party affiliation our cordial sympathy and pledge them our most earnest efforts to promote the passage of such legislation as will secure to every citizen of whatever race and color the full and complete recognition, possession and exercise of all civil and political rights. DEMOCRATIC NATIONAL TICKET. For President— (}^0\EK CLEVELAND, of New York. For Vice-President— TllOUA.^ A. HENDRICKS, of Indiana. DEMOCRATIC PLATFORM ADOPTED BY THE CHICAGO CONVENTION. The democratic party of the Union, through its representatives in national conven- tion assembled, recognizes that as the nation grows older, new issues are born of time and progress, and old issues j^erish. But the fundamental principles of the democracj', approved by the united voice of the people, remain, and will ever remain, as the best and only security for the continuance of free government. The preservation of per- sonal rights, the equality of all citizens before the law, the reserved rights of the states and the supremacy of the federal government within the limits of the constitution, will ever form the true basis of our liberties and can never be surrendered without destroj'- ing that balance of rights and powers which enables a continent to be developed in peace, and social order to be maintained by means of local self-government. But it is indispensable for the practical aiiplication and enforcement of these fundamental prin- ciples that the government should not always be controlled by one political party. Frequent change of administration is as necessary as r.onstant recurrence to the pop- ular will. Otherwise abuses grow, and the government, instead of being carried on for the general welfare, becomes an instrumentality for ..imposing heavy burdens on the many who are governed for the benefit of the few who govern. Public servants thus become arbitrary rulers. This is now the condition of the country; hence, a change is demanded. The republican party, so far as principle is concerned, is a reminiscence; in practice it is an organization for enriching those who control its machinery. The frauds and jobbery which have been brought to light in every department of the government are sufficient to have called for reform within the republican party; yet those in authority, made reckless by the long possession of power, have succumbed to its corrupting influ- ence, and have placed in nomination a ticket against which the independent poi ti(.n .>f the i>arty are in open revolt. Therefore, a change is demanded. 70 Such a change was alike necessarj' in 1876, but the will of the peoiile was then defeated by a fraud which can never be forgotten nor condoned. Again, in 1880, the change demanded by the people was defeated by the lavish use of money, contributed by unscrupulous contractors and shameless jobbers who had bargained tor unlawful profits or for high office. The republican party, during its legal, its stolen and its bought tenures of power, has steadily decayed in moral character and jjolitical capacity. Its platform i^romises are now a list of its past failures. It demands the restoration of our navy; it has sqi;an- dered hundreds of millions to create a navy that does not exist. It calls upon congress to remove the biirden under which American shipping has been deprei5sed; it imposes and has continued these burdens. It professes the jDolicy of reserving the i^ublic lands for small holdings by actual settlers; it has given away the people's heritage till now a a few railroads and non-resident aliens, individual and corporate, possess a larger area than that of all our farms between the two seas. It professes a jjreference for free institutions ; it organized and tried to legalize a control of state elections by federal troops. It professes a desire to elevate labor; it has subjected American workingmen to the competition of convict and imported contract labor. It professes gratitude to all those who were disabled or died in the war, leaving widows and orj^hans; it left to a democratic house of representatives the first effort to equalize both bounties and pen- sions. It professes a pledge to correct the ii-regularities of our tariff; it created and has continued them. It» own tariff commission confessed the need of more than 20 per cent, reduction; its congress gave a reduction of less than 4 per cent. It professes the pro- tection of American maniifact-ures; it has subjected them to an increasing flood of manufactured goods and a hoi^eless competition with manufacturing nations, not one of which taxes raw materials. It professes to i^rotect all American industries; it has impoverished many to subsidize a few. It professes the protection of American labor; it has depleted the returns of American agriculture — an industry followed by half our people. It j)rof esses the equality of all men before the law; attempting to fix the status of colored citizens, the acts of its congress were overset by the decision of its courts. It "accepts anew the duty of leading in the work of progress and reform;" its caught criminals are permitted to escape through contrived delays or actual connivance in the prosecution. Honeycombed with corruption, outbreaking exposures no longer shock its moral sense. Its honest members, its indeiiendent journals, no longer maintain a successful contest for authority in its counsels or a veto upon bad nominations. That change is necessary, is proved by an existing surplus of more than $100,000,000, which has yearly been collected from a suffering people. Unnecessary taxation is un- just taxation. We denounce the rei^ublican party for having failed to relieve the people from crushing war taxes which have i^aralyzed business, crippled industry and deprived labor of employment and of just reward. The democracy pledges itself to purify the administration from corruption, to restore economy, to revive respect for law, and to reduce taxation to the lowest limit consistent with due regard to the jjreservation of the faith of the nation to its creditors and pen- sioners. Knowing full well, however, that legislation affecting the occupations of the people should be cautious and conservative in method, not in advance of public oi^inion, but responsive to its demands, the democratic party is pledged to revise the tariff in a spirit of fairness to all interests. But in milking a reduction in taxes it is not proposed to injure anj' domestic industries but rather to promote their healthy growth. From the formation of this government the taxes collected at the custom house have been the chief source of federal revenue ; 71 such thej' must continue to be. Moreover manj' industries Lave come to relj' upon legislation for successful continuance, so that any change of law mus be at every step regardful of the labor and capital thiis involved. The progress of reform must be sub- ject in the execution to this plain dictate or justice. All taxation shall be limited to the requirements of economical government. The necessarj' reduction in taxation can and must be effected without depriving American lal)()r of the ability to compete siiccess- fully with foreign labor, and without imposing lower rates of duty than will be ample to cover any increased cost of production which may exist in consequence of the higher rate of wages prevailing in this country. Sufficient revenue to pay all the expen- ses of the federal government economically administered, including pensions, the interest and principal of the public debt, can be got under our present system of taxa- tion from custom house taxes on fewer imported articles, bearing heaviest on articles of Inxury, and bearing heavier on articles of necessity. We therefore denounce the abuses of the existing tariff; and, subject to the preceding limitations, we demand that the federal taxation shall be exclusively for public purposes, and shall not exceed the needs of the government economicallj' administered. The system of direct taxation, known as the "internal revenue," is a war tax, and so long as the law continues the money derived therefrom should be sacredly d.'voted to the relief of the people from the remaining burdens of the war, and be made a fund to defraj' the expense of the care and comfort of worthy soldiers disabled in the line of duty in the wars of the republic, and for the payment of such pensions as congress may from time to time grant to such soldiers, a like fund for the sailors having been already provided, and any siirplus should be paid into the treasury. We favor an American continental policy based upon more intimate commercial and political relations with the fifteen sister republics of North, Central and South Amer- ica, but entangling alliance with none. We believe in honest money, the gold and silver coinage of the constitution, and a circulating mediiim convertible into such money without loss. Asserting the equality of all men before the law, we hold that it is the duty of the government, in its dealings with the people, to mete out equal and exact justice to all citizens,— of whatever nativity, race, color, or persuasion, religious or political. We believe in a free ballot and a fair count, and we recall to the memory of the peo- ple the noble struggle of the democrats in the Forty-fifth and Forty-sixth congresses by which a recent republican opposition was compelled to assent to legislation making everywhere illegal the presence of troops at the polls, as the couclusive proof that a democratic administration M'ill preserve liberty with order. The selection of federal officers for the territories should be restricted to citizens pre- viously resident therein. We oppose sumptuary laws which vex the citizen and interfere with individual lib- erty; we favor honest civil service reforms and the compensation of all United States officers by fixed salaries; the separation of church and state, and the dififusion of free education by common schools, so that every child in the land may be taught the rights and duties of citizenship. While we favor all legislation which will tend to the equitable arts of the rity at reasouahle prices. Abo, manufacturer of IDra^in and Sewer IPipe, from ])est material and warranted of a superior quality. 10 12 15 DRAIN PIPE. 3 inch l)ore per foot - 8 cents. " - - 10 " 12 1-2 " - - 15 cents 20 " " - - 30 " 35 " P. round with flat bottom, 45 bio i .-~>. ' Y. and T. Branches. 8x8 inch - - each , 90 cent,; 6x6 " 65 " 5x5 " - - " 55 " 4x4 " - - " 45 " 3x3 '• - - 35 •' ELBOWS. 3 inch - - - cad , 20 cents 4 " ..." 25 " 5 " - - " 30 •• 6 " - - - " 35 •' 8 " - - " •i('c< tn ('(intriictiirs and lar'^e 45 " •oiisinnt'rs. 80 JAMES DAWSON, Jr., WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN 43 East Main Street, Norwich, Conn. C S. -A.^VE3I^"2" DEALER IN Beef, Fork, Lamb, Mutton, VEAL, POULTRY, &e. 59 FRANKLIN SQUARE, NORWICH, CONN. 81 M A 9Si a Qffleay ^3 FraoMto Street, NORWICH, CONN Marble and Grranite Monuments, Headstones, P©iTi AND €UElDfe Cut to Order and Shipped to any part of tlie United States. A large and varied collection of Designs always on hand and made to order. J^^ Remember that no Granite can be properly polished by hand. Steam power alone can do it. My facilities are such as to enable me to execute work rapidly and therefore cheaply. An examination of my finished work on hand is earnestly solicited. 82 B©©Ti-AMD iHOEil We are fully prepared to show the largest and best line of BOOTS and SHOES that was ever shown in this City. We have a complete assortment of GENT'S HAND SEWED GOODS, fn all the styles and shapes that the market affords. Also low and medium price goods to suit all tastes. Our fine line of Ladies, Misses and Children's low and medium price goods can't be beat. All are invited to examine and will be surprised at the large and varied stock we keep. With our advantages of buying for three stores WE STILL HOLD THE PORT, AND ARE THE PIONEERS OF LOW PRICES. Call and ex- auiine our goods and be convinced. JAMES F. COSCROVE & CO., 77 Main Street, Norwich, Conn. Es-tELlolislieci ISSS. NOSS' No's 52, 54 and 56 Water Street. MEALS at all hours on the European plan. FRESH LUNCH of all kinds too numerous to mention, 5 and 10 cents. CLAM CHOWDER 1^ cents a plate and 25 cents per quart. STONY CREEK OYSTERS received daily and served in any style. BASS NO. 1 BURTON ALE and GUINNESS' LONDON STOUT on draught and bottled for family use. BELINER WEISS BEER, WiUiams))urgh Limited Brewing Go's LAGER BEER, drawn fi-om the wood. Choicest Wines, Liquors and Segars. Sole Agent for CELERY ROCK and RYE. J. ADAM NOSS, Proprietor. 83 yjLVk^^ PHOTOGRAPHIC AND ART GrALLERX, OVER CHELSEA BANK, PHOTOGRAPHS TAKEN IN THE HIGHEST STYLE OF THE ART BY THE INSTANTANEOUS PROCESS EXCLUSIVELY, AND PORTRAITS FINISHED IN OIL OR CRAYON. 84 JOHN H. CUNNINGHAM, DEALER IN JM mmmm ^ty anb ^anc^ (^oob^^ YANKEE NOTIONS, &C. No. 103 Yantic St. NORWICH FALLS. 85 T^Hj^ ^9 Wholesale and Retail 148, 148 & 160 MAIi¥ y'l'iU'Lhri'; 66 & 68 WATER STREET, NORWICH, CONN DEALERS IN Kerosene Oil Chemicals. Acids. PAINTS, OILS, VARNISHES, WINDOW GLASS, BRUSHES, Popular Patent Medicines and 3IiiK'raI Sprin;,' Wiil< is. 86 HENKY L. PABKEB. JOHN F. PABKER. PARKER BROTHERS, w^vftAwO Mm Eooiu No. 3 Chelsea Saving:s Bank Building, Connected. Telephone Exchange . COMPANIES REPRESENTED HAETFORD Haetfoed, Conn Assets, $4,337,280.00 CONNECTICUT " " 1,781,626.00 NORTH BRITISH & MERCANTILE, England " 3.265,874.00 QUEEN " " 1,753,207.00 PHOENIX " . " 1,352,946.00 IMPERIAL " " 1,229,323.00 NORTHERN .' " " 1,221,601.00 NORWICH UNION " " 1,010,607.00 FIRE ASSOCIATION Philadelphia " 4,327,360.00 AMERICAN " " 1,712,532.00 UNION " " 884,298.00 GERMANIA New York " 2,562,136.00 NEW YORK BOWERY " " 912,877.00 BRITISH AMERICA Toronto " 823,578.00 MIDDLESEX MUTUAL Middlbtown, Conn " 428,397.00 NEW LONDON CO. MUTUAL. . . .Norwich, Conn " 78,200.00 81 F. L. BUR DICK, POWERS BROTHERS, DEALERS IN ARCHITKCT I ^^^^> Oysters, Fruits and Vegetsibles. No. 198 Main Street, Norwich, Conn, THAYER & THAYER, Counsellors at LaAv, Uneas Bank Building, NORWICH, CONN. M. D. DEXTER, DEAXiEE IN ALL KINDS OF ff@8h %ui Salt Meats. All orders pi-omptly attended to and patronage solicited. Market in UNION HALL BUILDING, ItileLiia St,.. ca-r*eeneville. 41 I^A-IlSr STR/EET, Opposite Steiner's Hall, Norwich. WALTER II. ROGERS, Wii© f fame Maaufector^, 78 Franklin St., Norwich. ,^^~Best work at lowest prices tSS^ J. M. BREWER, Druggist X Pharmacist, FR/A-lSnCLiINr STR.E-ET, NORWICH, CONN. CONNORS i£ RIGNSir, DEALERS IN Ales, Wines, Liquors and Ci*>'ars, AND BOTTLEBS OF Schafer's Weiser Beer, Ale, Porter and Cider. The saloon and family trade supplied at regular prices, (iroodw delivered to any part of the city without extra cliarire. 1^J^Z1Tor'wioli, Conn. IRVING HARVEY & CO., Soda Water Manufacturers and Bottlers Oeo. Eliret's ajad F. H. Best's cji LAeiE. Ou.r Sodas are tli© eqvial of* any nnad© in tli© "\A7"orlci 62 Franklin Street, Norwich, Conn. 81) ^•«. 1 1 1 ^^ Q The e^cellmce of the BOSS Biscuits Ikis led to their choice by the public as the best in tJie marliei. i'S i -1 McNAMARA BROS., DEALERS IN Choice Family Cfocefies and Pfovisions. BEST BRANDS OF FLOUR, CHOICE TEAS, COFFEES AND SPICES. FINEST AND CHOICEST BRANDS OF FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC LIQUORS. Nfa* 4 WtmmMln Square?, 3srorfv;riOK[ , oonsrnsr. 90 BAIERY. JACOB LKYRKR^ Agent. BREAD, PIES, PASTRY, CARES, AC. 5 lb Loaves of French Home Made Bread for 25 cents Ice Cream of All Kinds. All orders jiromptly attended to, and delivered, if desired. Satisfaction gniiranteed in all cases. 91 F. B. DURFSY, GontractorandGrainDealer Crreenville, Gonn> All kinds of Stone Work, Heavy Masonry AND CRADI NC Contracted for and performed promptly, and on reasonable terms. DEALEK IN GRAIN, FEED & BALED HAY. ORDEKS PROMPTLY FILLED AT THE GRIST MILL Foot of Twelfth Street, GmMiville, Conn. 92 THE AVERY LOW PRESSURE STEAM HEATINC APPARATUS (Patented Apeil 23, 1878.) For economy, efficiency and ease of management it is unequalled by any Steam Heater in use. This Heater is made in sections, and each one of the sections can be readily replaced by new ones with little expense, without injuring the Heater. It has a greater heating surface than any other Heater of the same capacity and requires less fuel. Manufactured by REAR OF 5 & 7 WATER STREET, NORWICH, COM. ANSEL CLARK. JOHN P. AVERY. 93 JOHN! P, MUEPH¥, DEALER IN FINE Groceries and Provisions, WATER STREET, NORWICH, CONN. fi^" Agent for the National Line of Steamers sailing- to and from New '^"•irk, Queenstown and Liverpool. The steamers of this line ineliule the largest and fastest steamship afloat, the AMERICA, whicli made the trip across in (i days and 15 hours. Creeneville Hotel, THOMAS CUNNINGHAM, Proprietor. HAS THE LARGEST AND BEST STOCK OF To to© fou.n©l. Partori, Choice Wines, Liquors and Cigars, 49 MAIN STREET, ... NORWICH, CONN. -DEALER IN- Clxoice Gr-roceries, &f da mi Ikif, Tiis, 0@ff©©i, mi f if© Spkii. Vegetables in their Season, sold Cheap for Cash. Farmer's Produce taken in exchange for Groceries. Boswell Avenue, corner Lake Street, - - - Norwich, Conn. JAMES IVEcGRORlT, BIMIardi mmA iampla E®@m, Choice Wines, Liquors and Cigars. Corner Main and Union Streets, - - Norwicli, Conn. 103 GLAREI^GE P. GAPROItf^ -DEALER IN- Stoves aod Tin Ware, Tin Roofing, a^nci Grenera.1 J"ot)t)ing. Best Goods at Reasonable Prices. Delivered to auy part of the Town. ISrO TR,OXJBLiEI TO SKO'W O-OODS. TOWN STREET, - - - NORWICH TOWN. GHARI^SS McGHESl^TESY^ Hack^ Livery and Boar (ling Stable, Batln, Corner^ of" Otiestnuit Street N"orwiGii. First-Class Teams at Reasonable Rates. Particular atten- tion paid to Funerals. Hearses and Carriages furnished at short notice and at Reasonable Rates. Orders for Carriages and Hacks for any train or at any hour of tlie night, by mail or telegraph, attended to. —AGENT FOR THE— North German Lloyd of Bremen, AND THE Hamburg Steamship Line of Hamburg. Passage tickets to and from Europe at the most reasonable rates. Also Drafts and Money Orders payable in any town or city of Etirope. OFFICE, No. 9 MARKET STREET, NORWICH, CONN. Morwlcto Potter J Worfes, NO. 7 COVE STREET, NORWICH, CONN., B. O. 0£iA.CB, Proprietor. MANUFACTURER AND WHOLESALE DEAI,ER IN Stone, Earthern, Chemical, Yellow, Rockingham and Glass Ware, Also Plain, Fancy and Ornamental Flower Pots, Antique Vases, Umbrella Stands, Jewellers' Dip Baskets, Coloring Pots, &c., &c. 104 WALTER ATCHISON, PICTURE FRiE iiFACTORY 161 Main Street, Norwich, Conn. ^^ HEADQUARTERS FOR ALL NOVELTIES. Jewelry, Pictures, Toys, Glass Ware AND A THOUSAND DIFFERENT ARTICLES. Special attention given to making Picture Frames to order. HISlOP, PORTEOIIS & MITCHEIL, WHOLESALS AND KBTAIL DEAX,EE IN AMERICAN, BRITISH, FRENCH AND GERMAN DRY& FANCY GOODS, 168 <£ 170 Main Street, NORWICH, CONN. Wholesale Entrance, 50 and 54 Water Street. BK,A.lsrCKC HOXJSBS : 60 STATE STREET, NEW LONDON, CONN. 91 GENESEE STREET, AUBURN, N. Y. STRICTLY ONE PRICE. 105 NOTES & DAVIS, %Vhoksde S ^etitil ^enhr^s in ^aaks d ^tutianerg. LARGE STOCK OF vfiool ^^U'fvhUed' ft tiff ive^ rS^u(/a^0' on- cMxmd at 107 MSiin Street, . - Norwich, Conn, Roscoe Huntington^ LIGHT X HEAVY TEAMING, WHARFAGE X STORAGE DEALEE IN BALED HAY AND STRAW. 9 Gomxnerce Street^ Norwich^ Gonn. Wholesale and Retail Dealer in f tatl)tr, %\]U ^intrings, §00te, Shoes ^ ^lubbers. E. C. BURT'S LADIES' GOODS A SPECIALTY. »c 8 J'iKAMMiLXK 3QITABII9 NORWICH. CONN. 106 J. B. SHANNON & CO., "WHOLESAJLE AND RETAIL DEALEES IN CHOICE Foreign and Domestic Liquors, Wines, &;0. Agents for the Famous Hermitage and Old Crow Distilleries, Bay State and Frank Jones' Ale. ALSO MAKUFACTUEER OP FINE BEANDS OF CICARS,SODA WATER, GINGER ALE, At 38 and 40 Water Street, Norwich, Conn. C. W. BARNES, -DEALEE IN- Groceries, Provisions, Flour, Teas, Coffees and Pure Spices, Grain, Feed and Meal. MAIN STREET, PRESTON, - - - Bridge District. OTRABANDO ROAD, - - NORWICH TOWN, — DEALEE IN — Groceries and Provisions, Flour, Teas and Coffees, Boots and Shoes, Dry Goods and Yankee Notions. Ales, Wines and Liquors. Goods delivered to all parts of the Town. 107 Leading Morning Paper of Eastern Connecticut. S UBSCRIPTIOJV RA TES : One Year, - $5.00. Six Months, - $2.50. Tfiree Months, - $1.25. One Month, - $0.42. ^^ Published Every Thursclay. Only 50 Cents a Year. lillllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllhlllllN^ -<^^ Is Fully Equipped. At Reasonable Prices. THE BAT C'DM'PANT, New London, Conn. Miiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiy^^ TAXPAYERS OF NORWICH, POLITICAL HAND BOOK COMPILED BT D.^2SriEL LEE 1884. PRINTED BY THE DAY COMPANY, NEW LONDON, CONN. PIANOS Steinway & Sons, Chickerins & Sons, Haines Bros., Cabler and Fischer. o:E^c>.^^nNrs. Mason & Hamlin, Smith American Co., and Slioninger, Are f blind at NORWICH in the Mrarerooms of jfti. JljI. IjJLjLjnLjL Jt JuJuJu, 125 MAIN STREET. THE BEST STOCK, THE BEST INSTKUMENTS AND THE LOWEST PRICES. Also at 61 STATE STREET, NEW LONDON, CONN. 014 076 167 9 »! • ■» ^