PRESIDENTS-GENERAL OF THE SOCIETY.

1897. Rear-Admiral George W. Meade, U. S. N., (retired), Philadelphia, Pa. Died May 4, 1897. 1897. Hon. Edward A. Moseley, secretary of the Interstate Commerce Commission, Washington, D. C.; was elected President-General on death of Admiral Meade. 1898. Hon. Edward A. Moseley, Washington, D. C. 1899. Hon. Thomas J. Gargan, Boston, Mass.; a prominent lawyer of that city; ex-member of the Police Commission; member of the Boston Transit Commission. 1900. Hon. Thomas J. Gargan, Boston, Mass. 1901. Hon. John D. Crimmins, New York city; prominent capitalist; official in banks, trust companies, and other corporations. 1902. Hon. John D. Crimmins, New York city. 1903. Hon. William McAdoo, New York city; assistant secretary of the U. S. Navy under President Cleveland; prominent lawyer; ex-member of Congress. 1904. Hon. William McAdoo, New York city.

MEMBERSHIP ROLL
OF THE
AMERICAN-IRISH HISTORICAL SOCIETY.

[For officers of the Society see pages [5] and [6].]

Adams, Hon. Samuel, president and treasurer of the Adams Dry Goods Co., 339–355 Sixth Avenue, New York city; director, Garfield National Bank, New York; member of the New York Chamber of Commerce; an ex-senator of Colorado.

Adams, T. Albeus, president of the Gansevoort Bank, Fourteenth Street and Ninth Avenue, New York city; also president of Adams & Co; president of the Adams Bros. Co.; president of the Manhattan Refrigerating Co.; director, Mercantile National Bank.

Ahern, John, 5 Highland Street, Concord, N. H.

Aspell, John (M. D.), 139 West 77th Street, New York city; member of the Academy of Medicine; of the County Medical Association, and of the Celtic Medical Society; recently president of the latter; visiting surgeon to St. Vincent’s Hospital.

Bannin, Michael E., of Converse, Stanton & Co., dry goods commission merchants, 83 and 85 Worth Street, New York city; member of the Merchants Association, New York; director, Merchants Trust Co.; director, the Emigrant Industrial Savings Bank; director, the Catholic Summer School (Cliff Haven); member of the Merchants and Catholic clubs, New York, of the Montauk Club, Brooklyn, and of the Brooklyn Arts and Science Institute; director, the Columbian National Life Insurance Co.

Bannon, Henry G., 107 East 55th Street, New York city; president of the Irish National Club; secretary, Celtic-American Publishing Co.

Barrett, Frank B., 254 Fourth Avenue, New York city; with Pierce, Butler & Pierce Manufacturing Co.

Barrett, Michael F., of Barrett Bros., wholesale and retail dealers in teas, coffees, etc., 308 Spring Street and 574 Hudson Street, New York city.

Barry, Hon. Patrick T., 87–97 South Jefferson Street, Chicago, Ill. (Life member of the Society); advertising manager, Chicago Newspaper Union; director, First National Bank of Englewood, Ill.; director, The Chicago Citizen Company; has been a member of the State Legislature of Illinois; prominently identified with educational interests.

Barry, Rev. Michael, Oswego, N. Y.

Batters, Henry W., educator, Waterbury, Conn.

Bennett, Richard, 206–208 Broadway, New York city.

Bodfish, Rev. Joshua P. L., Canton, Mass.; formerly chancellor of the Roman Catholic archdiocese of Boston; a director of the Bunker Hill Monument Association.

Boyle, Hon. Patrick J., now serving his tenth term as mayor of Newport, R. I.

Brady, Rev. Cyrus Townsend (LL. D.), 455 East 17th Street, Flatbush, Brooklyn, N. Y.; member of the Society of Colonial Wars, of the Sons of the Revolution, of the Military Order of Foreign Wars, and of other patriotic organizations; chaplain of the First Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry, war with Spain; formerly Protestant Episcopal archdeacon of Pennsylvania; author of For Love of Country, For the Freedom of the Sea, Stephen Decatur, Commodore Paul Jones, Border Fights and Fighters, and other works.

Brady, Owen J., The H. B. Claflin Co., 224 Church Street, New York city.

Brady, Patrick, 445 Seventh Avenue, New York city.

Brandon, Edward J., city clerk, Cambridge, Mass.

Brann, Rev. Henry A. (D. D.), 141 East 43d Street, New York city (Life member of the Society).

Bree, Hon. James P., lawyer, 902 Chapel Street, New Haven, Conn.; state auditor of Connecticut; recently a senator.

Brennan, Hon. James F., lawyer, Peterborough, N. H.; a trustee of the New Hampshire State Library.

Brennan, James F., contractor, 2½ Grove Street, New Haven, Conn.

Brennan, Michael, Hotel San Remo, Central Park West, New York city.

Brennan, P. J., 788 West End Avenue, New York city.

Breslin, T. J., Fries-Breslin Co., Camden, N. J.

Britton, Thomas P., 1221 Lexington Avenue, Cleveland, Ohio.

Broderick, William J., 52 Morton Street, New York city.

Brosnahan, Rev. Timothy, rector of St. Mary’s church, Waltham, Mass.

Burke, Robert E., recently city solicitor, Newburyport, Mass.

Burr, William P., lawyer, 35 Nassau Street, New York city.

Buttimer, Thomas H., lawyer, Hingham and Boston, Mass.

Byrne, C. E., of the C. E. Byrne Piano Co., East 41st Street, New York city.

Byrne, Major John, 45 Wall Street, New York city; director, Detroit City Gas Co.; president, Shawmut Coal & Coke Co.; chairman Board of Directors, Pittsburg, Shawmut & Northern R. R. Co.; president, Kersey Mining Co.; president, Kersey R. R. Co.; chairman Board of Directors, Shawmut Mining Co.; trustee, Emigrant Industrial Savings Bank of New York city.

Byrne, Joseph M., insurance, 800 Broad Street, Newark, N. J.

Byrne, Rt. Rev. William (V. G., D. D.), rector of St. Cecilia’s church, St. Cecilia Street, Boston, Mass.

Byrns, John, 734 Lexington Avenue, New York city.

Cahill, John H., 15 Dey Street, New York city.

Cahill, M. J., dry goods merchant, Essex Street, Lawrence, Mass.

Cahill, Thomas M. (M. D.), 60 Edwards Street, New Haven, Conn.; son of the late Col. Thomas W. Cahill who commanded the Ninth Connecticut Volunteer Infantry (an Irish regiment), in the Civil War.

Calnin, James, 101–107 Lakeview Avenue, Lowell, Mass.

Campbell, James C., post-office, Cleveland, Ohio.

Cannon, Thomas H., of the law firm Cannon & Poage, Stock Exchange Building, Chicago, Ill.

Carbray, Hon. Felix, Benburb Place, Quebec, Canada; member of the Royal Irish Academy; Fellow of the Royal Society of Antiquaries, Ireland; member of the Quebec Harbor Commission and of the Quebec Board of Trade; consul for Portugal at Quebec, and dean of the Consular Corps; trustee of St. Patrick’s church, and of St. Bridget’s asylum; has represented his district in the parliament of the Province of Quebec. He was one of the pioneers in the lumber trade between the St. Lawrence and South America; has engaged in the general commission and shipping business, and has been a member of the successive firms: Carbray & Routh; Carbray, Routh & Co.; and Carbray, Son & Co.

Carmody, T. F., lawyer, Waterbury, Conn.

Carney, Michael, of M. Carney & Co., Lawrence, Mass.

Carroll, Edward, Leavenworth National Bank, Leavenworth, Kansas.

Carroll, John L., 18 State Street, Newark, N. J.

Carter, Hon. Thomas H., Helena, Mont.; recently a U. S. senator.

Casey, Stephen J., Exchange Building, 53 State Street., Boston, Mass.; Boston manager of the Empire State Surety Co.

Cassidy, John J., Inspector of Buildings, Wilmington, Del.

Cassidy, Patrick (M. D.), Norwich, Conn.; was surgeon-general on the staff of Gov. Luzon B. Morris of Connecticut, ranking as brigadier-general.

Chittick, Rev. J. J., Hyde Park, Mass.

Clancy, Laurence, dry goods merchant, West Bridge Street, Oswego, N. Y.; trustee, Oswego County Savings Bank; director, electric street railway; member, Normal school board; has repeatedly declined a nomination for mayor of Oswego.

Clare, William F., lawyer, 149 Broadway, New York city.

Clark, Rev. James F., New Bedford, Mass.

Clarke, James, of James Clarke & Co., booksellers and publishers, 3, 5 and 7 West 22d Street, New York city.

Clarke, Joseph I. C., Sunday editor New York Herald, Herald Square, New York city.

Clarke, Robert, 27 Harbor Street, Cleveland, O.

Clary, Charles H., Hallowell, Me.; a descendant of John Clary, “of Newcastle, province of New Hampshire,” who married Jane Mahoney, of Georgetown, Me., in 1750. Four children were born to them before 1760. Mr. Clary of Hallowell, Me., here mentioned, was one of the founders of the Clary Reunion Family which meets annually.

Cleary, James, 120 Liberty Street, Cleveland, O.

Coffey, John J., Neponset (Boston), Mass.; served during the Civil war in the Twenty-eighth Massachusetts Infantry (the Faugh-a-Ballagh regiment), which formed part of Meagher’s Irish Brigade, First Division, Second Corps; participated in the valorous charges of the brigade against the Confederates at Marye’s Heights; was wounded at Gettysburg and still carries the bullet in his body. His brother, Michael J., was color sergeant of the Irish flag of the regiment and carried it until he fell mortally wounded at the second battle of Bull Run.

Coffey, Rev. Michael J., East Cambridge, Mass.

Coghlan, Rev. Gerald P., 2141 North Broad Street, Philadelphia, Pa.

Cohalan, Daniel F., lawyer, 271 Broadway, New York city.

Coleman, Bernard F., 38 East 69th Street, New York city.

Coleman, James S., 38 East 69th Street, New York city; of Coleman, Breuchaud & Coleman.

Coleman, John, capitalist, Louisville, Ky.

Collins, James M., 6 Sexton Avenue, Concord, N. H.

Collins, Hon. John S., Gilsum, N. H.; manufacturer of woolens; an ex-state senator of New Hampshire.

Collins, Hon. Patrick A., mayor of Boston, Mass.; formerly a member of Congress, and later U. S. Consul General at London, England.

Collins, William D. (M. D.), Haverhill, Mass.

Conaty, Bernard, 30 Cypress Street, Providence, R. I.

Conaty, Rev. B. S., 340 Cambridge Street, Worcester, Mass.

Conaty, Rt. Rev. Thomas J. (D. D.), Bishop of the Roman Catholic diocese of Los Angeles, Cal.

Condon, Edward O’Meagher, Custom House, New Orleans, La.; connected with the office of the U. S. Supervising Architect, Washington, D. C., as an inspector of public buildings; served in the Union army during the Civil War.

Coney, Patrick H., lawyer, 316 Kansas Avenue, Topeka, Kan. He entered the Union army in 1863, at the age of 15 years, enlisting in the One Hundredth and Eleventh New York Infantry. He was detailed as dispatch bearer on Gen. McDougall’s staff, promoted as an orderly dispatch bearer on Gen. Nelson A. Miles’ staff, served in this capacity on to Appomatox and Lee’s surrender, and was transferred June 5, 1865, to Company H, Fourth New York Heavy Artillery. He served until October 5, 1865, when he was honorably discharged at Hart’s Island, N. Y. He was wounded at the battle of Peach Orchard in front of Petersburg, Va., on June 16, 1864, and rejoined his command from the hospital after sixty days’ convalescence. In addition to his law practice, he is general manager of the American Investment and Development Co., which is engaged in the promotion and development of 11,000 acres of mineral, gas, and oil lands in Benton county, Mo. Gen. Nelson A. Miles is president of the company.

Conlon, William L., Portsmouth, N. H.

Connery, William P., Wheeler and Pleasant Streets, Lynn, Mass.; recently candidate for mayor of Lynn.

Connolly, James, Coronado, Cal.

Connolly, Rev. Arthur T., Center and Creighton Streets, Roxbury (Boston), Mass.

Connor, Michael, 509 Beech Street, Manchester, N. H.

Conway, James L., 113 Worth Street, New York city.

Cooke, Rev. Michael J., Fall River, Mass. (Life member of the Society.)

Corcoran, John H., dry goods merchant, 587 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge, Mass.

Coughlin, John, 177 Water Street, Augusta, Me.

Cox, Michael F. (M. D., M. R. I. A.), 26 Merrion Square, Dublin, Ireland.

Cox, Michael H., 54 Commerce Street, Boston. Mass.

Cox, William T., 12 South Second Street, Elizabeth, N. J.; owner of Cox’s Towing Line; for three years chairman of the fire commissioners of Elizabeth; ex-chief of the Elizabeth Volunteer Fire Department.

Coyle, Rev. James, Taunton, Mass.

Coyle, Rev. John D., 79 Davenport Avenue, New Haven, Conn.

Crane, John, of Crane & MacMahon, Maritime Building, 8–10 Bridge Street, New York city; a veteran of the Civil War; member of the Military Order of the Loyal Legion.

Crimmins, Hon. John D., 40 East 68th Street, New York city; a Life member of the Society; president-general of the organization in 1901 and 1902; a member of the New York Municipal Art Commission. Mr. Crimmins served as a park commissioner of New York city from 1883 to 1888, during which time he was treasurer and president of the board. He was a member of the Board of Visitors to West Point in 1894, and presidential elector (Democratic), in 1892 and 1904. He was appointed by President Roosevelt and served as a member of the Greater New York Charter Revision Commission. In 1894, he was a member of the New York State Constitutional Convention. Mr. Crimmins is a member of the New York Chamber of Commerce, and is officially connected with many railway, realty, and banking corporations. He is president of the Essex and Hudson Land Improvement Co.; president of the Port Richmond and Bergen Point Ferry Co.; president of the Bergen Point and Staten Island Ferry Co.; vice-president of the City Trust Co. of New York; vice-president of the Title Insurance Co. of New York; vice-president of the New York Mortgage and Security Co.; director of the Fifth Avenue Bank of New York, and also a director in the following companies: New York City Railway Co., Metropolitan Securities Co., the Century Realty Co., and the Chelsea Realty Co. He is prominently identified with the charities of the Roman Catholic Church as well as with non-sectarian charities. He is chairman of the executive committee of the trustees of St. Patrick’s Cathedral; member of the board of managers of the Roman Catholic Orphan Asylum; member of the board of managers of St. Vincent’s Hospital; member of the board of trustees of St. John’s Guild, and also of the Provident Loan Society of New York. Mr. Crimmins is also a director of the City and Suburban Homes Co. of New York, which has for its object to provide model homes at reasonable cost for working people. He is a member of the following clubs: Catholic, Metropolitan, Lawyers, Democratic, Manhattan, and of the Wee Burn Golf Club, of which he was formerly president. He is likewise a member of the board of managers of the Sevilla Home for Children, a non-sectarian charity, and is also one of the managers of the Society for the Reformation of Juvenile Delinquents.

Crimmins, Lieut. Martin L., of the Nineteenth U. S. Infantry; a son of Hon. John D. Crimmins, of New York city.

Cronin, Capt. William, Rutland, Vt.

Croston, J. F. (M. D.), Emerson Street, Haverhill, Mass.

Cummings, Matthew J., Overseer of the Poor, Providence, R. I.

Cummins, Rev. John F., Rosindale (Boston), Mass.

Cunningham, James, 277 Congress Street, Portland, Me.

Curran, James, of the James Curran Manufacturing Co., 512–514 West 36th Street, New York city; a veteran of the Civil War.

Curry, Capt. P. S., contractor and builder, Lynn, Mass.; a veteran of the Civil War.

Curry, E. J., 69–71 East 89th Street, New York city.

Curtin, Jeremiah, Bristol, Vt.; author of Hero Tales of Ireland, Myths and Folk-Lore of Ireland, Myths and Folk-Tales of the Russians, Western Slavs and Magyars; translator of works of Henryk Sienkiewicz. Mr. Curtin was acting U. S. Consul-General in Russia, 1865–’66; actively connected with the Bureau of Ethnology, Smithsonian Institution, 1883–’91. He is one of the greatest of living philologists and linguists.

Daly, Hon. Joseph F. (LL. D.), Wall Street, New York city; Chief Justice of the Court of Common Pleas, New York, 1890–’96; Justice of the New York Supreme Court, 1896–’98; member of the Board of Managers, Roman Catholic Orphan Asylum; member of the Advisory Board, St. Vincent’s Hospital.

Danaher, Hon. Franklin M., Albany, N. Y.; member of the State Board of Law Examiners; many years Judge of the City Court of Albany.

Danvers, Robert E., 349–351 West 58th Street (the St. Albans), New York city; dealer in iron and steel.

Dasey, Charles V., Board of Trade Building, Broad Street, Boston, Mass.; steamship and insurance agent; general Eastern agent, Anchor Line S. S. Co., and of the Italian Royal Mail S. S. Co.; general agent, Insular Navigation Co.; general agency for ocean travel.

Davis, Dr. F. L., Biddeford, Me.

Davis, Hon. Robert T. (M. D.), Fall River, Mass. He was born in County Down, Ireland, 1823; was a member of the Massachusetts State Constitutional Convention, 1853; a state senator, 1858–1861, and member of the National Republican Convention that nominated Abraham Lincoln for president in 1860. In 1873, Dr. Davis was elected mayor of Fall River. In 1882, he was elected to Congress, and was reëlected in 1884 and 1886. He has been prominently identified with the manufacturing interests of Fall River, has been president of the Wampanoag and Stafford mills, and has also been officially connected with the Merchants’, Robeson and other mills.

Day, Joseph P., 932 Eighth Avenue, New York city.

Deeves, Richard, of Richard Deeves & Son, builders, 305–309 Broadway, New York city.

Delahanty, Dr. W. J., Trumbull Square, Worcester, Mass.

Delehanty, Hon. F. B., Judges’ Chambers, Court House, City Hall Park, New York; a Judge of the City Court.

Dempsey, George C., Lowell, Mass.

Dempsey, William P., treasurer and manager, the Dempsey Bleachery and Dye Works, Pawtucket, R. I.

Devlin, James H., 35 Parsons Street, Brighton (Boston), Mass.

Dixon, Richard, insurance, 52–54 William Street, New York city.

Donahoe, Col. John P., Wilmington, Del.

Donahue, Dan A., Essex Street, Lawrence, Mass.

Donoghoe, D. F. (M. D.), Holyoke, Mass.

Donovan, Daniel, 21 High Rock Street, Lynn, Mass.; an authority on heraldry, armorial bearings, etc., particularly as the same relate to Ireland.

Donovan, Henry F., editor and proprietor The Chicago Eagle, Teutonic Building, Chicago, Ill.; late colonel and inspector-general, Illinois National Guard.

Donovan, John W., of Larkin, Donovan & Co., real estate, mortgages, and insurance, 1228 Amsterdam Avenue, New York city.

Donovan, Col. William H., Lawrence, Mass.; commander of the Ninth Regiment, M. V. M.; served with the regiment in Cuba during the recent war with Spain.

Doogue, William, Superintendent of Public Grounds, Boston, Mass.

Dooley, Michael F., Treasurer of the Union Trust Co., Providence, R. I.

Doran, Patrick L., Salt Lake City, Utah.

Dowd, James J., insurance, High Street, Holyoke, Mass.

Dowling, Hon. M. J., Olivia, Minn.

Dowling, Rev. Austin, Warren, R. I.

Doyle, Alfred L., of John F. Doyle & Sons, real estate agents, brokers and appraisers, 45 William Street, New York city.

Doyle, James, 50 Front Street, New York city; present oldest member of the flour trade in New York; member of the N. Y. Produce Exchange from the beginning; member of the Board of Managers of the Exchange, 1897–1901. He and his son, Nathaniel, are associated in trade as James Doyle & Company.

Doyle, John F., of John F. Doyle & Sons, 45 William Street, New York city. (Life member of the Society.)

Doyle, John F., Jr., of John F. Doyle & Sons, 45 William Street, New York city.

Doyle, John M., 14 South Third Street, Philadelphia, Pa.

Doyle, Nathaniel, of James Doyle & Co., flour, etc., 50 Front Street, New York city; member of the board of managers, N. Y. Produce Exchange; secretary of the exchange; member of the New York Club, Fifth Avenue and 35th Street.

Drummond, M. J., of M. J. Drummond & Co., 182 Broadway, New York city.

Duggan, John T. (M. D.), Worcester, Mass.

Dunn, Hon. Robert C., publisher of The Union, Princeton, Minn.; candidate in 1904 for governor of Minnesota.

Dunne, F. L., 328 Washington Street, Boston, Mass.

Dyer, Dr. William H., Dover, N. H.

Editor of “The Rosary Magazine,” Somerset, O. (Life membership in the Society. See page [25] of this volume.)

Egan, James T., lawyer, Banigan Building, Providence, R. I.

Egan, Maurice Francis (LL. D., J. U. D.), Professor of English Language and Literature, Catholic University of America, Washington, D. C.

Egan, Rev. M. H., rector, Church of the Sacred Heart, Lebanon, N. H.

Egan, Hon. Patrick, 271 Broadway, New York city; recently U. S. Minister to Chile.

Ellard, George W., 180 Lisbon Street, Lewiston, Me.

Emmet, Dr. J. Duncan, 91 Madison Avenue, New York city.

Emmet, Robert, 54 West 53d Street, New York city.

Emmet, Thomas Addis (M. D., LL. D.), 89 Madison Avenue, New York city (Life member of the Society); grand nephew of the Irish patriot, Robert Emmet.

Eustace, Hon. Alexander C., of the law firm A. C. & J. P. Eustace, 334 East Water Street, Elmira, N. Y.; during the past fifteen years identified, as attorney or counsel, with many of the most important litigations before the courts in southern and western New York; was for three years, prior to 1893, president of the New York State Civil Service Commission.

Fallon, Hon. Joseph D. (LL. D.), 789 Broadway, South Boston, Mass.; justice of the South Boston Municipal Court; vice-president, Union Institution for Savings.

Fallon, Hon. Joseph P., 1900 Lexington Avenue, New York city; justice of the Ninth District Municipal Court.

Farley, Charles J., Department of Docks, New York city.

Farrell, James P., 95th Street and Shore Road, Brooklyn, N. Y.

Farrell, John F., Brander-Walsh Co., 89 Worth Street, New York city.

Farrell, John P., 230 Grove Street, New Haven, Conn.

Farrell, J. T. (M. D.), 16 Messer Street, Providence, R. I.

Farrelly, Frank T., 424 Main Street, Springfield, Mass.

Farrelly, Stephen, American News Co., New York city. (Life member of the Society.)

Fay, Martin, 55 Bainbridge Street, Roxbury (Boston), Mass.

Feeley, William J., treasurer of the W. J. Feeley Co., silversmiths and manufacturing jewelers, 185 Eddy Street, Providence, R. I.

Ferguson, Hugh, of Hugh Ferguson & Co., George Street, Charleston, S. C.

Finen, Rev. J. E., Tilton, N. H.

Finerty, Hon. John F., 69 Dearborn Street, Chicago, Ill.; editor of the Chicago Citizen; ex-member of Congress.

Finn, Rev. Thomas J., East Port Chester, Conn. (Hawthorne P. O.)

Fitzgerald, Rev. D. W., Penacook (Concord), N. H.

Fitzgerald, Hon. James, New York city; a justice of the New York Supreme Court.

Fitzpatrick, Edward, on the staff of the Louisville, Ky., Times; a resident of New Albany, Ind.; member of the committee to select books for the New Albany public library; was, from 1878 to 1885, Indiana correspondent of the Louisville Courier-Journal, reporting the legislature two terms, 1883–’85, for that paper, and at the same time was assistant to the chief clerk in the House of Representatives; was appointed a clerk in the U. S. Q. M. Depot at Jeffersonville, Ind., in 1885, but resigned to re-enter the employ of the Courier-Journal as political reporter in Louisville; was for four years on the Louisville Post; returned to the Courier-Journal; was transferred to the Times (the afternoon edition of the Courier-Journal), and has been on that paper for eleven years past. He is a keen and forceful writer, and is one of the ablest men in American journalism.

Fitzpatrick, John B., real estate, etc., 23 Court Street, Boston, Mass.; has been deputy sheriff of Suffolk county, Mass.

Fitzpatrick, Thomas B., senior member of the firm Brown, Durrell & Co., importers and manufacturers, 104 Kingston Street, Boston, Mass.; Rand McNally Building, Chicago, Ill., and 11–19 West 19th Street, New York city; president of the Union Institution for Savings, Boston, and a director in the United States Trust Co. of that city.

Fitzpatrick, Rev. William H., 2221 Dorchester Avenue, Boston, Mass.

Flanagan, Andrew J. (D. D. S.), Main Street, Springfield, Mass.

Flannery, Capt. John, Savannah, Ga.; of John Flannery & Co., cotton factors and commission merchants; was a non-commissioned officer of the Irish Jasper Greens in garrison at Fort Pulaski, 1861; was later lieutenant and captain, C. S. A., serving under Gen. Joe Johnston and General Hood; became a partner, 1865, in the cotton firm, L. J. Guilmartin & Co., having a line of steamers from Charleston, S. C., to Palatka, Fla.; bought out the business in 1877; founded the house of John Flannery & Co.; became director and president of the Southern Bank of the State of Georgia; is ex-president of the Southern Cotton Exchange; captain, 1872–’98, of the Jasper Greens.

Fogarty, James A., 264 Blatchley Avenue, New Haven, Conn.; recently a police commissioner of New Haven.

Fogarty, Jeremiah W., Registry of Deeds, Boston, Mass.

Ford, Hon. Peter J., 501 Rodney Street, Wilmington, Del.

Fox, John J., 1908–10 Bathgate Avenue, New York city.

Foy, Julius L., lawyer, Rialto Building, St. Louis, Mo.

Franklin, A. H., 56 West 33d Street, New York city.

Gaffney, Thomas St. John, lawyer; member of the French Legion of Honor; 41 Riverside Drive, New York city.

Galligan, Edward F. (M. D.), Taunton, Mass.

Gallagher Patrick, contractor and builder, 11 East 59th Street, New York city. (Life member of the Society.)

Gargan, Hon. Thomas J., of the law firm Gargan, Keating & Brackett, Pemberton Building, Boston, Mass.; Life member of the Society, and president-general of the same in 1899 and 1900; member of the Boston Transit Commission; director, United States Trust Co.; director, the Columbian National Life Insurance Co.

Garrigan, Rt. Rev. Philip J. (D. D.), bishop of the Roman Catholic diocese of Sioux City, Iowa.

Garvan, Hon. Patrick, 236 Farmington Avenue, Hartford, Conn. (Life member of the Society.)

Garvey, Patrick J., lawyer, Holyoke, Mass.

Gavin, Michael, of M. Gavin & Co., wholesale grocers and cotton factors, 232–4 Front Street, Memphis, Tenn.

Gavin, Dr. P. F., 331 Broadway, South Boston, Mass.

Geary, William M., headquarters K. of C., New Haven, Conn.

Geoghegan, Charles A., 537–9 West Broadway, New York city.

Geoghegan, Joseph, Salt Lake City, Utah (Life member of the Society); vice-president of the board of education, Salt Lake City; director of the Utah National Bank; director of the Utah Loan and Building Association; director of the Butler Liberal Manufacturing Co.; all three concerns of Salt Lake City; also director in many other corporations. He is general agent in Utah for Swift & Co., of Chicago; Borden’s Condensed Milk Co., of New York; the American Can Co., of New York, and the Pennsylvania Salt Mfg. Co., of Philadelphia. He is broker for the following: the Western Sugar Refining Co., of San Francisco, Cal.; the Utah Sugar Co., of Lehi, Utah; the Amalgamated Sugar Co., of Ogden, Utah; the Idaho Sugar Co., of Idaho Falls, Idaho, and the Fremont County Sugar Co., of Sugar City, Idaho.

Geoghegan, Joseph G., 20 East 73d Street, New York city. (Life member of the Society.)

Geoghegan, Walter F., 537–539 West Broadway, New York city.

Giblin, William, Mercantile Safe Deposit Co., 120 Broadway, New York city.

Gillespie, George J., of the law firm Gillespie & O’Connor, 56 Pine Street, New York city; trustee, Catholic Summer School (Cliff Haven); president of the Champlain Club there; member of the board of managers of the Catholic Club, New York city; member of the board of managers of the Roman Catholic Orphan Asylum; vice-president of the Particular Council, Society of St. Vincent de Paul, New York city; recently tax commissioner of the city of New York. (Life member of the Society.)

Gilman, John E., 43 Hawkins Street, Boston, Mass.; was recently appointed Adjutant-General on the staff of the national commander-in-chief, Grand Army of the Republic. In August, 1862, Mr. Gilman enlisted in Co. E, Twelfth Massachusetts Infantry (Webster Regiment), and participated in the campaigns under Generals Pope, McClellan, Burnside, Hooker and Meade up to the battle of Gettysburg, Penn., where, on July 2, 1863, his right arm was shot off near the shoulder. Securing his discharge from the army on September 28, 1863, he returned to Boston. In 1864, he entered the service of the state and served in various departments until 1883, when he was made Settlement Clerk of the Directors of Public Institutions of Boston. He was appointed Soldiers’ Relief Commissioner April 2, 1901. He has been a comrade of Posts 15, 7, and 26, G. A. R., since 1868, being commander of the latter post in 1888. He was Department Inspector of the Massachusetts G. A. R. in 1895; Junior Vice-Commander in 1896; Senior Vice-Commander in 1897; Delegate at Large in 1898; and Department Commander in 1899.

Goodwin, John, of the John Goodwin Co., dressmakers’ supplies, 70–72 West 23d Street, New York city. (Life member of the Society.)

Goff, Hon. John W., Recorder, New York city.

Gorman, Dennis J., assessors’ office, City Hall, Boston, Mass.

Gorman, William, lawyer, Stephen Girard Building, Philadelphia, Pa.; member of the Pennsylvania Bar Association, the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, the American Academy of Social and Political Science, the Alumni Association of the University of Pennsylvania, and other organizations. He is officially connected with the Commonwealth Title Insurance and Trust Co., of Philadelphia. (Life member of the Society.)

Gray, Dr. Joseph F., 10 North Hammels Avenue, Rockaway Beach, L. I., N. Y.

Griffin, Martin I. J., 2009 North 12th Street, Philadelphia, Pa.; editor and publisher American Catholic Historical Researches.

Griffin, Rev. P. J., Holyoke, Mass.

Griffin, Rt. Rev. Mgr. Thomas (D. D.), St. John’s church, Worcester, Mass.

Guiney, John, Biddeford, Me.

Haggerty, J. Henry, of the Haggerty Refining Co., oils, 50 South Street, New York city.

Haigney, John, 439 Fifty-eighth Street, Brooklyn, N. Y.

Hall, Edward A., 66 Spring Street, Springfield, Mass.; secretary and treasurer of the Automatic Postal and Commercial Service Co.; director, Springfield Coöperative Bank; vice-president, Mercy Hospital Corporation; chairman of board of directors, Connecticut Valley Historical Society; secretary, Good Shepherd Corporation; president, Central Council of the St. Vincent de Paul society of the Roman Catholic diocese of Springfield, Mass. Mr. Hall has devoted close attention to the history of the Irish element in western Massachusetts, and has written much and interestingly on the subject.

Hanlon, Marcus, P. O. Box 1920, New York city.

Hanrahan, John D. (M. D.), Rutland, Vt.; surgeon in the U. S. Navy during the Civil War; ex-postmaster of Rutland; first president of the Rutland County Medical and Surgical Society.

Harbison, Hon. Alexander, Hartford, Conn., recently mayor of Hartford.

Harrington, Rev. J. C., rector of St. Joseph’s church, Lynn, Mass.

Harrington, Rev. John M., Orono, Me.

Harrington, William, Manchester, N. H.

Harris, Charles N., 89 Madison Avenue, New York city.

Harrison, A. J., 514 East 23d Street, New York city.

Harson, M. Joseph, Catholic Club, 120 Central Park South, New York city; member of the Rhode Island Historical Society.

Hart, Frank M., 62 Ascension Street, Passaic, N. J.

Harty, Rev. John, rector of the church of the Sacred Heart, Pawtucket, R. I.

Haverty, Frank, 361 West 27th Street, New York city.

Hayes, John, Concord Street, Manchester, N. H.

Hayes, John F. (M. D.), 15 South Elm Street, Waterbury, Conn.

Hayes, Nicholas J., Fire Commissioner, 157–159 East 67th Street, New York city.

Hayes, Col. Patrick E., Pawtucket, R. I.

Hayes, Timothy J., 688 Lafayette Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y.

Healy, John F., general superintendent of the Davis Coal and Coke Co., Thomas, Tucker county, West Virginia.

Healy, Col. John G., insurance, 117 Sherman Avenue, New Haven, Conn.; a captain in the Ninth Connecticut Infantry, April, 1862, to October, 1864. Upon the consolidation of the regiment, in the latter year, into the Ninth battalion he, being the senior captain, was given command of the latter. On December 1, 1864, he was promoted lieutenant-colonel and as such commanded the battalion until the same was mustered out. Since the war he has been vice-president of the Nineteenth Army Corps Association. When Luzon B. Morris was governor of Connecticut, Col. Healy served on his staff as assistant adjutant-general. Col. Healy is a member of the Military Order of the Loyal Legion, of the Army and Navy Club of Connecticut, and of the Second Company of the Governor’s Foot Guard, New Haven.

Healy, Richard, Main Street, Worcester, Mass.

Hennessy, Dr. Daniel, Bangor, Me.

Hennessy, Michael E., on the staff of the Boston Daily Globe; a newspaper man of wide experience and exceptional ability. One of the most highly valued men on the Globe, he is regularly assigned to “cover” events of national importance and annually travels thousands of miles in the service of his paper.

Henry, Charles T., 120 Liberty Street, New York city.

Hickey, James G., manager of the United States Hotel, Boston, Mass. (Life member of the Society.)

Hickey, Michael J., manufacturer, Haverhill, Mass.

Hickey, Rev. William A., Clinton, Mass.

Hicks, Michael, 147 West 121st Street, New York city.

Hogan, John W., lawyer, Providence, R. I.; recently a candidate for Congress.

Holland, John P., 65 Nelson Place, Newark, N. J.; inventor of the submarine torpedo boat.

Horigan, Cornelius, Biddeford, Me.; has been a member of the state legislature of Maine.

Howes, Osborne, secretary and treasurer of the Board of Fire Underwriters, 55 Kilby Street, Boston, Mass. He is a descendent of David O’Killia (O’Kelly), who settled on Cape Cod as early as 1657, and who is mentioned in the old Yarmouth, Mass., records as “the Irishman.” The records show that at the close of King Philip’s War, O’Killia was assessed his proportionate part toward defraying the expenses of that struggle.

Hughes, Rev. Christopher, Fall River, Mass.

Hurley, John E., Remington Printing Co., Providence, R. I.

Jameson, W. R., 1786 Bathgate Avenue, borough of the Bronx, New York city.

Jenkinson, Richard C., 678 High Street, Newark, N. J.; of R. C. Jenkinson & Co., manufacturers of metal goods; candidate for mayor of Newark in 1901; was president of the Newark Board of Trade in 1898–’99 and 1900; has been a director in the Newark Gas Co.; was president of the New Jersey Commission to the Pan-American Exposition, and one of the vice-presidents of the Exposition, representing the state of New Jersey by appointment of Governor Voorhees.

Jennings, Michael J., 753 Third Avenue, New York city.

Johnson, James G., of James G. Johnson & Co., 649, 651, 653 and 655 Broadway, New York city.

Jordan, Michael J., lawyer, 42 Court Street, Boston, Mass.

Joyce, Bernard J., salesman, 82 Devonshire Street, Boston, Mass.

Kane, Dr. John, Lexington, Mass.

Keating, Patrick M., of the law firm Gargan, Keating & Brackett, Pemberton Building, Boston, Mass.

Keenan, John J., Public Library, Copley Square, Boston, Mass.

Kehoe, John F., 26 Broadway, New York city; officially connected with many corporations. (Life member of the Society.)

Kelly, Eugene, Temple Court Building, New York city.

Kelly, John F., 284 West Housatonic Avenue, Pittsfield, Mass.

Kelly, Michael F. (M. D.), Fall River, Mass.

Kelly, T. P., 544 West 22d Street, New York city; of T. P. Kelly & Co., manufacturers of black leads, foundry facings, supplies, etc.; mills in New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and Illinois.

Kelly, William J., 9 Dove Street, Newburyport, Mass.

Kelly, William J., insurance, Kittery, Me., and Portsmouth, N. H.

Kenedy, P. J., 3 and 5 Barclay Street, New York city.

Kennedy, Charles F., Brewer, Me.

Kennedy, Daniel, 197 Berkeley Place, Brooklyn, N. Y.

Kennedy, Roderick J., 924 Sixth Avenue, New York city.

Kenney, James W., Union Brewing Co., Roxbury (Boston), Mass.; vice-president and director, Federal Trust Co., Boston.

Kent, Daniel V., Kansas City, Mo.

Kerby, John E., architect, 452 Fifth Avenue, New York city.

Kiernan, Patrick, 265 West 43d Street, New York city.

Killoren, Hon. Andrew, Dover, N. H.; recently a senator of New Hampshire.

Kilroy, Patrick, lawyer, Main Street, Springfield, Mass.

Kilroy, Philip (M. D.), “Glen Rath,” Springfield, Mass.

Kinney, Thomas I., Whitney Avenue, New Haven, Conn.; recently candidate for mayor of New Haven.

Kinsela, John F., 509 Gorham Street, Lowell, Mass.

Kinsella, James E., 1337 St. Clair Street, Cleveland, O.

Kivel, Hon. John, Dover, N. H.

Knights of St. Patrick, San Francisco, Cal. (Life membership.)

Lally, Frank, 161 Saratoga Street, East Boston, Mass.

Lamb, Matthew B., 516 Main Street, Worcester, Mass.

Lamson, Col. Daniel S., Weston, Mass.; Lieutenant-Colonel commanding Sixteenth Regiment (Mass.), 1861; A. A. G., Norfolk, 1862; served on staff of General Hooker; is a member of the Society of Colonial Wars, Sons of the American Revolution, and Military Order of the Loyal Legion; one of his ancestors landed at Ipswich, Mass., in 1632, and received a grant of 350 acres; another ancestor, Samuel, of Reading, Mass., participated in King Philip’s War and had a son in the expedition of 1711. Another member of the family, Samuel of Weston, commanded a company at Concord, Mass., April 19, 1775, and was major and colonel of the Third Middlesex Regiment for many years, dying in 1795.

Lappin, J. J., 7 Grant Street, Portland, Me.

Lavelle, John, Inquiry Division, Post-office, Cleveland, O.

Lawler, Thomas B., 70 Fifth Avenue, New York city; with Ginn & Company, publishers; member of the American Oriental Society and of the Archæological Society of America.

Lawless, Hon. Joseph T., lawyer, Norfolk, Va.; recently Secretary of State, Virginia.

Leahy, Matthew W., 257 Franklin Street, New Haven, Conn.

Leary, William, 450 Fifth Avenue, New York city.

Lee, Hon. Thomas Z., of the law firm Barney & Lee, Industrial Trust Building, Providence, R. I.

Lenehan, John J., of the law firm Lenehan & Dowley, 165 Broadway, New York city. (Life member of the Society.)

Lenihan, Rev. B. C., Fort Dodge, Iowa.

Lenihan, Rt. Rev. M. C., bishop of the Roman Catholic diocese of Great Falls, Mont.

Leonard, Peter F., 343 Harvard Street, Cambridge, Mass.

Linehan, Hon. John C., Concord, N. H.; State Insurance Commissioner of New Hampshire; Treasurer-General of the Society; has been a member of the Council of the Governor of New Hampshire; commander of Brown Post, No. 31, G. A. R., for three years; commander of the G. A. R., Department of New Hampshire, two years; president of the N. H. Veteran Association, two years; Junior Vice Commander-in-Chief; member of Pension Committee of the National Encampment; director of the Gettysburg Battlefield Association, ten years; recently a leading candidate at Buffalo, N. Y., for National Commander-in-Chief; president, board of trustees of New Hampshire State Industrial School; recipient of an honorary degree from Dartmouth College. He is an authority on the early history of the Irish in New England, and has written many articles on the subject.

Linehan, John J., manufacturer, Springfield, Mass.

Linehan, Rev. T. P., Biddeford, Me.

Linehan, Timothy P., Wolfe Tavern, Newburyport, Mass.

Lonergan, Thomas S., Hotel Raleigh, Broadway, New York city.

Loughlin, Peter J., Court House, Chambers Street, New York city.

Lovell, David B. (M. D.), 32 Pearl Street, Worcester, Mass.

Luddy, Timothy F., Waterbury, Conn.

Lyman, William, 51 East 122d Street, New York city.

Lynch, Bernard E., lawyer, 42 Church Street, New Haven, Conn.

Lynch, Eugene, 24 India Street, Boston, Mass.

Lynch, J. H., Dyker Heights, Brooklyn, N. Y.

Lynch, John E., school principal, Worcester, Mass.

Lynch, Thomas J., lawyer, Augusta, Me.

Lynn, John, 48 Bond Street, New York city.

Lynn, Hon. Wauhope, 257 Broadway, New York city; recently a judge of one of the New York courts.

MacDonnell, John T. F., paper manufacturer, Holyoke, Mass.

Madden, Joseph, Keene, N. H.

Magenis, James P., lawyer, 62–65 Chadwick Building, Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.

Magrane, P. B., dry goods merchant, Lynn, Mass.

Magrath, P. F., 244 Front Street, Binghamton, N. Y.; with the George A. Kent Company, Binghamton, wholesale cigar manufacturers. He has been connected with this house for the past twenty-six years, for nineteen of which he has been its Eastern representative. (Life member of the Society.)

Maguire, P. J., 204 Madison Street, New York city.

Maher, Stephen J. (M. D.), 212 Orange Street, New Haven, Conn.

Mahony, William H., dry goods, 844 Eighth Avenue, New York city. (Life member of the Society.)

Malloy, Gen. A. G., El Paso, Texas; a veteran of the Mexican and Civil wars; during the latter conflict he was successively major, colonel and brigadier-general; has been collector of the port of Galveston.

Maloney, Cornelius, publisher of the Daily Democrat, Waterbury, Conn.

Maloney, Dr. Thomas E., North Main Street, Fall River, Mass.; state commissioner on veterinary medicine.

Maneely, John, 309–311 Arch Street, Philadelphia, Pa.

Marshall, Rev. George F., rector of St. Paul’s church, Milford, N. H.

Martin, Hon. John B., penal institutions commissioner, 762 Fourth Street, South Boston, Mass.

McAdoo, Hon. William, President-General of the society; police commissioner of the city of New York; ex-member of Congress; ex-assistant secretary of the navy; member of the law firm McAdoo & Crosby, 25 Broad Street, New York city.

McAleer, Dr. George, treasurer Bay State Savings Bank, Worcester, Mass.

McAlevy, John F., salesman, 26–50 North Main Street, Pawtucket, R. I.

McAuliffe, John F., care the Livermore & Knight Co., Westminster Street, Providence, R. I.

McCaffrey, Hugh, manufacturer, Fifth and Berks Streets, Philadelphia, Pa. (Life member of the Society.)

McCall, John A., president of the New York Life Insurance Co., New York city. (Life member of the Society.)

McCarrick, James W., Clyde’s Steam Lines, Norfolk, Va.

McCarthy, Charles, Jr., Portland, Me.

McCarthy, George W., of Dennett & McCarthy, dry goods, Portsmouth, N. H.

McCarthy, Patrick J., lawyer, Industrial Trust Building, Providence, R. I.; has been a member of the General Assembly of Rhode Island.

McCaughan, Rev. John P., Holyoke, Mass.

McCaughey, Bernard, of Bernard McCaughey & Co., house furnishers, 93 to 105 North Main Street, Pawtucket, R. I.

McCauley, Terence, 116 Birch Street, Cleveland, O.

McClean, Rev. Peter H., Milford, Conn.

McConway, William, The McConway & Torley Co., Pittsburg, Pa. (Life member of the Society.)

McCormick, Edward R., 15 West 38th Street, New York city.

McCoy, Rev. John J., rector of the Church of the Holy Name, Chicopee, Mass.

McCreery, Robert, room 427, Produce Exchange, New York city.

McCullough, John, 55 Maxfield Street, New Bedford, Mass.

McDonald, Mitchell C., care Navy Department, Washington, D. C.; paymaster U. S. N.

McDonnell, Robert E., lawyer, 206 Broadway, New York city.

McDonough, Hon. John J., Fall River, Mass.; justice of the second district court of Bristol county, Mass.

McEldowney, W. A., 225 Sixth Street, Ashland, N. J.

McElroy, Rev. Charles J., rector of St. Mary’s church, Derby, Conn.

McEvoy, John W., 137 Central Street, Lowell, Mass.

McGann, James E., real estate, 902 Chapel Street, New Haven, Conn.

McGauran, Michael S. (M. D.), Lawrence, Mass.

McGillicuddy, Hon. D. J., of the law firm McGillicuddy & Morey, Lewiston, Me.; ex-mayor of Lewiston.

McGinness, Col. John R., ordnance corps, U. S. A.; care War Department, Washington, D. C.

McGolrick, Rev. E. J., 84 Herbert Street, Brooklyn, N. Y.

McGolrick, Rt. Rev. James (D. D.), bishop of the Roman Catholic diocese of Duluth, Minn. (Life member of the Society.)

McGovern, Joseph P., of J. P. McGovern & Bro., fur brokers, 193 Greene Street, New York city.

McGowan, James, Wall Street, New York city. (Life member of the Society.)

McGowan, P. F., manufacturer, 224 East 12th Street, New York city; member of the board of education. (Life member of the Society.)

McGuire, Edward J., lawyer, 52 Wall Street, New York city.

McGurrin, F. E., of F. E. McGurrin & Co., investment bankers, Security Trust Building, Salt Lake City, Utah; president of the Salt Lake Security & Trust Co.

McIntyre, John F., of the law firm Cantor, Adams & McIntyre, 25 Broad Street, New York city.

McKelleget, George F., of the law firm R. J. & G. F. McKelleget, Pemberton Building, Boston, Mass.

McKelleget, Robert J., of the law firm R. J. & G. F. McKelleget, Pemberton Building, Boston, Mass.

McLaughlin, Edward A., lawyer, Tremont Building, Boston, Mass.; was for several years clerk of the Massachusetts House of Representatives.

McLaughlin, Henry V. (M. D.), Kent Street, Brookline, Mass.

McLaughlin, John, builder, 348 East 81st Street, New York city.

McLaughlin, Marcus J., 250 West 25th Street, New York city.

McLaughlin, Thomas, Hallowell, Me.

McLaughlin, Thomas F., 19 East 87th Street, New York city.

McMahon, James, 51 Chambers Street, New York city.

McMahon, Rev. John W. (D. D.), rector of St. Mary’s church, Charlestown (Boston), Mass.

McManus, Col. John, clothing merchant, 145–147 Westminster Street, Providence, R. I.; served on the staff of Governor Davis, of Rhode Island.

McManus, Gen. Thomas, 333 Main Street, Hartford, Conn.; adjutant and major of the Twenty-fifth regiment, Connecticut infantry, in the Civil War; recently quartermaster-general of Connecticut with the rank of brigadier-general.

McManus, Michael, clothing merchant, 670 Washington Street, Boston, Mass.

McManus, Rev. Michael T., rector of St. Mary’s Church of the Assumption, Brookline, Mass.

McNamee, Hon. John H. H., 51 Frost Street, Cambridge, Mass.; recently mayor of Cambridge.

McOwen, Anthony, 515 Wales Avenue, borough of the Bronx, New York city.

McPartland, John E., Park Street, New Haven, Conn.

McWalters, John P., 141 Broadway, New York city.

McQuade, E. A., 75–77 Market Street, Lowell, Mass.

McQuaid, Rev. William P., rector of St. James church, Harrison Avenue, Boston, Mass.

McSweeney, Edward F., 4 Liberty Square, Boston, Mass.

Meade, Richard W., 621 Broadway, New York city; son of the first president-general of the society.

Mellen, James H., 119 Providence Street, Worcester, Mass.; has been a member of the Massachusetts legislature.

Mellen, Dr. W. M. E., Chicopee, Mass.; ex-mayor of Chicopee.

Milholland, John E., Witherspoon Building, Philadelphia, Pa.; president of the Batcheller Pneumatic Tube Co., of Philadelphia; president of the Pneumatic Dispatch Manufacturing Co., of Pennsylvania; director in the Pearsall Pneumatic Tube and Power Co., of New York, and a director in the Pneumatic Transit Co., of New Jersey. Under him the successful pneumatic tubes of the large diameter have been constructed, and it is largely due to his energy and effort that the U. S. post-office department now considers a part of its general delivery system the pneumatic tube service. He is a member of the Transportation Club of New York, the New York Press Club, the Republican Club, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, the American Museum of Natural History, and a number of other organizations.

Molony, Henry A., of Molony & Carter, 16 New Street, Charleston, S. C.

Monaghan, Hon. James Charles, chief of the Bureau of Statistics of the U. S. Department of Commerce and Labor, Washington, D. C.; formerly U. S. consul at Mannheim and at Chemnitz; recently professor of Commerce, University of Wisconsin.

Monaghan, Rt. Rev. John J. (D. D.), bishop of the Roman Catholic diocese of Wilmington, Del.

Montfort, Richard, Louisville, Ky.; chief engineer of the Louisville & Nashville R. R.

Montgomery, Gen. Phelps, 39 Church Street, New Haven, Conn.

Moore, O’Brien, president and general manager of The Citizen Printing and Publishing Co., Tucson, Ariz. On the breaking out of the war with Spain, he entered the service as lieutenant-colonel of the Second West Virginia Infantry. After a year’s service, and peace being declared with Spain, he became lieutenant-colonel of U. S. Volunteers for the operations in the Philippines, where he served for eighteen months, until his regiment was mustered out. He then settled in Tucson, and is now head of a valuable newspaper plant, which issues a daily and a weekly. (Life member of the Society.)

Moran, Col. James, Providence, R. I.; a veteran of the Civil War. He was appointed second lieutenant in the Third regiment, Rhode Island Volunteers, by Special Orders 53, A. G. O., R. I., Aug. 27, 1861; was commissioned second lieutenant, Fifth Rhode Island Heavy Artillery, Nov. 5, 1861; mustered in, Dec. 16, 1861; in command of Company A, from Aug. 8, 1862, until Sept. 20, 1862; assumed command of Company D, Sept. 26, 1862; was commissioned captain and mustered in as such Feb. 14, 1863; on General Court Martial, July, 1863; in command of Fort Amory, at Newberne, N. C., from Sept. 1, 1863, until Oct. 15, 1863; assumed command of Post, at Hatteras Inlet, N. C., April 21, 1864; in command of Forts Foster and Parke, at Roanoke Island, from May 2, 1864, until January, 1865; mustered out Jan. 17, 1865. In May, 1873, he was commissioned colonel of the Rhode Island Guards regiment, and in June, 1887, became colonel of the Second regiment, Brigade of Rhode Island Militia.

Moran, Dr. James, 333 West 51st Street, New York city.

Morgan, John, 44 West 46th Street, New York city.

Morrissey, Very Rev. Andrew (C. S. C., LL. D.), president of the University of Notre Dame, Indiana.

Morrissy, Thomas, 48–50 West 14th Street, New York city.

Moseley, Edward A., Washington, D. C.; president-general of the Society in 1897 and 1898. He succeeded to the position, in the former year, on the death of Admiral Meade, who was the first president-general of the organization. Mr. Moseley is secretary of the U. S. Interstate Commerce Commission. He is ninth in descent from Lieut. Thaddeus Clark, who came from Ireland, and died in Portland, Me., May 16, 1690. Clark was lieutenant of a company of men engaged in the defence of Falmouth, now Portland, during the Indian War. He fell into ambuscade with his company while making a reconnoitre, and was killed with twelve of his men. Mr. Moseley is also a descendant of Deputy-Governor Cleeves (or Cleaves), a founder of Portland, formerly Falmouth, and is sixth in descent from Lieut. John Brown, of Belfast, Me., who came with his father from Londonderry, Ire., and was one of the settlers of Londonderry, N. H.; Brown was chairman of the first Board of Selectmen of Belfast, Me., chosen Nov. 11, 1773, ’74 and ’75; he removed from Londonderry, N. H. While residing there he had been a commissioned officer in the Provincial Army, and had served in the French War. Mr. Moseley is also of patriotic Revolutionary stock, and is a member of the Society of the Cincinnati.

Moynahan, Bartholomew, lawyer, 120 Broadway, New York city; official stenographer to the New York Supreme Court.

Mullen, John F., 26 Trask Street, Providence, R. I.

Murphy, D. P., Jr., 31 Barclay Street, New York city.

Murphy, Edward J., of the Edward J. Murphy Co., real estate brokers, Springfield, Mass.

Murphy, Frank J., 44 Boston Street, Salem, Mass.

Murphy, Fred C., of the Edward J. Murphy Co., Springfield, Mass.

Murphy, James R., lawyer, 27 School Street, Boston, Mass.

Murphy, Hon. John R., lawyer, Boston, Mass.

Murray, John F., captain of police, Cambridge, Mass.; residence, 9 Avon Street.

Murray, Michael J., lawyer, 27 School Street, Boston, Mass.

Murray, Thomas Hamilton, 36 Newbury Street, Boston, Mass.; Secretary-General of the Society; a newspaper man of twenty years’ experience, during which he has been editorially connected with journals in Boston and Lawrence, Mass., Providence, R. I., and Bridgeport and Meriden, Conn.; has devoted much attention to historical research, particularly in relation to the Irish element in American history, and has delivered addresses on the subject before the New England Historic, Genealogical Society; the Rhode Island Historical Society; the Phi Kappa Sigma of Brown University; the Boston Charitable Irish Society (founded 1737), and other organizations; is the author of a number of papers, pamphlets and books.

Naphen, Hon. Henry F., lawyer, 42 Court Street, Boston, Mass.; member of the Boston School Board, 1882–5; state senator, 1885–6; member of Congress, 1899–1903.

Neagle, Rev. Richard, Malden, Mass.

O’Beirne, Gen. James R., 290 Broadway, New York city. In military life he has held every commissioned rank up to brevet brigadier-general of volunteers; has also been provost marshal, District of Columbia; deputy U. S. marshal, District of Columbia; register of wills, District of Columbia; editor Sunday Gazette, Washington, D. C.; special agent U. S. Indian affairs; special agent U. S. treasury department; assistant U. S. commissioner of immigration at New York city; commissioner of charities, New York city; commander U. S. Medal of Honor Legion. In business life has been president of Yonkers Electric Light Co.; secretary of Flemington Coal and Coke Co. of West Virginia, and treasurer of Manhattan Distilling Co. In social life, president of the United Irish societies of New York city and vicinity, and member of various clubs and other organizations.

O’Brien, Hon. C. D., lawyer, Globe Building, St. Paul, Minn.; prosecuting attorney of Ramsey county, Minn., from 1874 to 1878; assistant U. S. district attorney from 1870 to 1873; mayor of St. Paul from 1883 to 1885.

O’Brien, Rev. James J., Somerville, Mass.; a son of the late Mayor Hugh O’Brien of Boston, Mass.

O’Brien, John D., Bank of Minnesota Building, St. Paul, Minn.; of the law firm Stevens, O’Brien, Cole & Albrecht.

O’Brien, Capt. Laurence, 70 Beach Street, New Haven, Conn.; a veteran of the Civil War. He enlisted in the Ninth Connecticut Infantry (an Irish regiment), Aug. 30, 1861; assisted Capt. Patrick Garvey in organizing Company B, and was commissioned first lieutenant of the company. He was made captain of Company D, Oct. 15, 1862, and participated with his regiment in all the movements of the latter. At one period during the war he was provost marshal and military judge of the Parish of St. James, Louisiana. He became identified with the Fenian movement, and in 1867 went to Ireland, like many other gallant officers, in furtherance of the cause of Irish freedom. The Croffut-Morris history of Connecticut in the Civil War speaks of Captain O’Brien as “a brave and efficient officer, and fertile in expedients.”

O’Brien, Hon. Morgan, J. (LL. D.), 42 West 44th Street, New York city; a justice of the New York Supreme Court; trustee of the New York Public Library.

O’Brien, Patrick, contractor and builder, 399 South Broadway, Lawrence, Mass.

O’Brien, Thomas, real estate and insurance, 155 Main Street, Pawtucket, R. I.; an alderman of the city of Pawtucket in 1895, 1896, 1897 and 1898; member of the General Assembly of Rhode Island in 1899–1900 and 1902.

O’Byrne, M. A., 370 West 118th Street, New York city.

O’Callaghan, P. J., Lawrence, Mass.

O’Callaghan, Rev. Denis (D. D.), rector of St. Augustine’s church, South Boston, Mass.

O’Connell, J. C. (M. D)., Medical Board, U. S. Pension office, Washington, D. C.; brother of Col. John J. O’Connell of the Thirtieth U. S. Infantry.

O’Connell, John, 302 West End Avenue, New York city.

O’Connell, John F., 306 Broadway, Providence, R. I.

O’Connell, P. A., vice-president of the Wm. Filene’s Sons Co., dry goods, 453–463 Washington Street, Boston, Mass.

O’Connor, Edward, 302 Broadway, New York city.

O’Connor, Hon. J. J., 414–416 Carroll Street, Elmira, N. Y. (Life member of the Society.)

O’Doherty, Rev. James, Haverhill, Mass. (Life member of the Society.)

O’Doherty, Hon. Matt., Louisville, Ky.; a judge of the Circuit Court.

O’Donnell, Rev. James H., Norwalk, Conn.

O’Donnell, Hon. John B., lawyer, Northampton, Mass.; ex-mayor of Northampton.

O’Donovan, Jeremiah (Rossa), editor The United Irishman, 15 Vandewater Street, New York city.

O’Dwyer, Hon. E. F., 37 West 76th Street, New York city; chief justice of the City Court of New York.

O’Farrell, P. A., Waldorf-Astoria, New York city. (Life member of the Society.)

O’Flaherty, James, advertising, 22 North William Street, New York city.

O’Flaherty, John (M. D.), Hartford, Conn. (died July 31, 1904); served during the Civil War as assistant surgeon One Hundred and Seventieth Regiment, New York Volunteers (of Corcoran’s Legion); was mustered out June 15, 1865; located in Hartford; was a member of the State, County and City medical societies, and was elected president of the last named on Jan. 4, 1904. He was one of the promoters of St. Francis’ Hospital, Hartford, took a great deal of interest in its affairs, and had been president of its staff; was also a member of the city board of health. Dr. O’Flaherty leaves a wife and three daughters,—Miss Mary P. O’Flaherty, teacher of Greek in the Holyoke, Mass., High school; Miss Anna P. O’Flaherty, a teacher at the New Park Avenue school; and Dr. Ellen P. O’Flaherty of Hartford, who had of late assisted her father in his practice. Dr. O’Flaherty was twice married, his first wife, who died in 1880, having been Miss Hannah Pembroke, a teacher in the South School District. In 1886, Dr. O’Flaherty married Mrs. Ellen Duggan of Hartford.

O’Gorman, Hon. J. A., 312 West 54th Street, New York city; a justice of the New York Supreme Court.

O’Gorman, Thomas A., The O’Gorman Co., dry goods, Providence, R. I.

O’Hagan, Thomas (Ph. D.), 151 Mutual Street, Toronto, Canada.

O’Keefe, Edmund, superintendent of buildings, New Bedford, Mass.

O’Keefe, John A., lawyer, Lynn, Mass.; formerly Principal of the Lynn High school.

O’Leary, Jeremiah, 275 Fifty-eighth Street, Brooklyn, N. Y.

O’Leary, P. J., 161 West 13th Street, New York city.

O’Loughlin, Patrick, lawyer, 23 Court Street, Boston, Mass.

O’Malley, Thomas F., lawyer, 21 Dane Street, Somerville, Mass.

O’Meara, Maurice, of the Maurice O’Meara Co., paper manufacturers, 448 Pearl Street, New York city.

O’Neil, Hon. Joseph H., president of the Federal Trust Co., Boston, Mass.; formerly a member of Congress; was later U. S. Treasurer at Boston.

O’Neil, Rev. John P., Peterborough, N. H.

O’Neill, Rev. Daniel H., 935 Main Street, Worcester, Mass.

O’Neill, Rev. D. P., Westchester, N. Y.

O’Neill, Francis Q., Charleston, S. C., of the firm Bernard O’Neill & Sons (house founded in 1845); president of the Hibernia Trust and Savings Bank, Charleston; president of the Standard Truck Package Co.; president of the Riverside Paper Box Factory; director, First National Bank; director, Equitable Fire Insurance Co.; an alderman of Charleston, and mayor pro tem. of the city; president of the Charleston Country Club; member of the Board of Trustees of the College of Charleston.

O’Neill, James L., 220 Franklin Street, Elizabeth, N. J.; connected with the Elizabeth post-office for the past fifteen years; has been president of the Young Men’s Father Mathew T. A. Society, and treasurer of St. Patrick’s Alliance, Elizabeth. He was one of the prime movers in the projection and completion of a monument to the late Mayor Mack of Elizabeth.

O’Rourke, Hon. Jeremiah, of J. O’Rourke & Sons, architects, 756 Broad Street, Newark, N. J.; U. S. Supervising Architect under President Cleveland. (Life member of the Society.)

O’Rourke, John F., consulting and contracting engineer, 26 Nassau Street, New York city.

O’Sullivan, Humphrey, treasurer of the O’Sullivan Rubber Co., Lowell, Mass.

O’Sullivan, James, president of the O’Sullivan Rubber Co., Lowell, Mass.

O’Sullivan, John, with the H. B. Claflin Co., Church Street, New York city.

O’Sullivan, Sylvester J., 66 Liberty Street, New York city, manager of the New York office of the United States Fidelity and Guaranty Co., of Baltimore, Md.

Owens, Joseph E., of the law firm Ketcham & Owens, 189 Montague Street, Brooklyn, N. Y.

Patterson, Rev. George J., rector of St. Vincent’s church, South Boston, Mass.

Perry, Dr. Charles J., World Building, New York city.

Phelan, Hon. James D., Phelan Building, San Francisco, Cal.; recently mayor of San Francisco.

Phelan, James J., 16 Exchange Place, New York city; president of the Traders’ and Travelers’ Accident Co.; treasurer of the King’s County Refrigerating Co., Astoria Cordage Co., and the Pontiac Building Co.; director in the Stuyvesant Insurance Co. When Ferdinand de Lesseps contracted to build the Panama canal, Mr. Phelan became treasurer and manager of the American Contracting and Dredging Co., in which he was associated with the late Eugene Kelly, H. B. Slaven and others. This company contracted for and built fifteen miles of the canal. In 1891, Mr. Phelan was appointed treasurer of the Department of Docks of the city of New York, which office he held for five years.

Phelan, John J., lawyer, 7 Wall Street, New York city; graduate of Manhattan College, and of the Columbia Law School; member of the Xavier Alumni Sodality, the N. Y. Catholic Club, and the Manhattan Alumni Society.

Phelps, H. Warren, the Phelps Real Estate Agency, 20 East Broad Street, and 88 Pugh Avenue, Columbus, O.; member of the Old Northwest Genealogical Society, of Columbus.

Philbin, Eugene A., of the law firm Philbin, Beekman & Menken, 111 Broadway, New York city.

Piggott, Michael, 1634 Vermont Street, Quincy, Ill.; a veteran of the Civil War. He was made second lieutenant of Company F, Western Sharpshooters, in 1861, while at Camp Benton, St. Louis, Mo.; was promoted first lieutenant, and while at Fort Donaldson, in the spring of 1862, was made captain; lost a leg at Resaca, Ga., in May, 1864; was subsequently connected with the U. S. Revenue Service; messenger in the National House of Representatives, Washington, D. C.; was made postmaster of Quincy, Ill., during President Grant’s first term, and held the position for over sixteen years; was appointed Special Indian Agent by President Harrison, and in that, as in every position held, displayed eminent ability.

Plunkett, Thomas, 257 Sixth Street, East Liverpool, O.

Power, Rev. James W., 47 East 129th Street, New York city.

Powers, Patrick H., president of the Emerson Piano Co., Boylston Street, Boston, Mass.

Prendergast, W. A., 20 Nassau Street, New York city.

Quinlan, Daniel J., 53 East 127th Street, New York city.

Quinlan, Francis J. (M. D.), 33 West 38th Street, New York city; was for a number of years surgeon in the U. S. Indian Service; recently president of the New York Celtic Medical Society.

Quinlan, Col. James, 120 Liberty Street, New York city; a veteran of the Civil War; served in the Eighty-eighth New York regiment (of Meagher’s Irish Brigade); member of the U. S. Medal of Honor Legion.

Quinn, John, lawyer, 120 Broadway, New York city.

Quinn, W. Johnson, manager of the Hotel Empire, New York city.

Quinton, Gen. William (U. S. A., retired), care of U. S. War Department, Washington, D. C.

Regan, John H., lawyer, 422 55th Street, Brooklyn, N. Y.

Regan, W. P., architect, Lawrence, Mass.

Reilly, Robert J., Cedar Street, Bangor, Me.

Richardson, Stephen J., 1785 Madison Avenue, New York city; editor The Gael.

Roche, James Jeffrey (LL. D.), editor of The Pilot, 211 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.

Rooney, John Jerome, of Rooney & Spence, customs and insurance brokers, forwarding agents, 66, 68 and 70 Beaver Street, New York city.

Rorke, James, 40 Barclay Street, New York city.

Roosevelt, Hon. Theodore, president of the United States, White House, Washington, D. C.

Ryan, Charles V., Springfield, Mass.

Ryan, Christopher S., Lexington, Mass.

Ryan, James T., 68 William Street, New York city.

Ryan, John J., 158 East 95th Street, New York city.

Ryan, Michael, 377 Broadway, New York city.

Ryan, Michael J., Waterbury, Conn.

Ryan, Most Rev. Patrick J. (D. D.), Archbishop of Philadelphia, Pa.; the Cathedral, Philadelphia.

Ryan, Nicholas W., 1444 Boston Road, borough of the Bronx, New York city.

Ryan, Richard, Rutland, Vt.

Ryan, Hon. William, of Wm. Ryan & Co., grocers, Port Chester, N. Y.

Sanders, Col. C. C., Gainesville, Ga.; president of the State Banking Co. of Gainesville; alternate commissioner to World’s Fair, Chicago, Ill., 1893; vice-president for Georgia, American Bankers’ Association. Col. Sanders is of Irish and English ancestry. On the maternal side, he is descended from Thomas and Theodosia M. Smyth who emigrated from Ireland, in 1793, landing in Charleston, S. C. They settled in Jones county, Ga. Thomas died Nov. 28, 1799. On the paternal side, Colonel Sanders is a descendant of Rev. Moses Sanders who emigrated from England, with two brothers, John and David, and arrived in Petersburg, Va., 1765. They embraced the Patriotic cause in the Revolution and were active in operations against the British. Col. Sanders, the subject of this sketch, graduated from the Georgia Military Institute, in June, 1861; entered the Confederate service; was made lieutenant-colonel of the Twenty-fourth regiment of infantry, Georgia volunteers, August, 1861; served under General Lee in the Peninsular campaign, in the seven days’ battles around Richmond, Va., and was among the bravest of the brave; commanded his regiment at Malvern Hill and at Marye’s Heights, Fredericksburg, where the Twenty-fourth was a part of the Confederate forces that received the valorous charges of Meagher’s Irish Brigade. He also commanded the regiment at the battles of Chancellorsville and Antietam, at which latter conflict he was placed in command of Wofford’s Brigade. While in this position he met a bayonet charge from the Federals by a counter bayonet charge, and in the desperate fighting that ensued, fifty-eight per cent. of Sanders’ heroic force was swept away. Colonel Sanders also led the Twenty-fourth at Cedar Creek, Chickamauga, Knoxville, the Wilderness, Spottsylvania Court House, and Sailor’s Creek. On Apr. 6, 1865, Ewell’s corps, to which Colonel Sanders’ regiment was then attached, was captured, and Colonel Sanders was sent as a prisoner of war to Washington, D. C. Writing of Meagher’s Irish Brigade, Colonel Sanders says: “I was in command of the Twenty-fourth Georgia regiment, with other troops, at the foot of Marye’s Heights, receiving the five heroic and gallant charges of the Irish Brigade, whose prodigies of valor have filled the country with admiration. I saw the devoted Irish charge up to our breastworks, to be mowed down by a line of Confederate fire that no soldiers could withstand. I saw the Irish battalions cut down like grain before the reaper, yet the survivors would magnificently close up their ranks only to have huge gaps again cut through them. When forced back they rallied and came bravely on again, only to be riddled with bullets and torn by artillery. Their fifth charge was made with greatly decimated ranks that slowly recoiled like the waves of a tempestuous sea. When twilight descended upon the scene, a spectacle was presented unequaled in warfare. At least three fourths of my command was composed of men of Irish descent and knew that the gallant dead in our front were our kindred of the land beyond the sea. When, one by one, the stars came out that night, many tears were shed by Southern Confederate eyes for the heroic Federal Irish dead.” During the war Colonel Sanders was offered the rank of brigadier-general but declined the same.

Sasseen, Robert A., 50 Pine Street, New York city; insurance investments. (Life member of the Society.)

Shahan, Very Rev. Thomas J. (S. T. D., J. U. L.), professor of Church History, Catholic University of America, Washington, D. C.

Shanahan, Very Rev. Edmund T. (Ph. D., S. T. D., J. C. L.), professor of Dogmatic Theology, Catholic University of America, Washington, D. C.

Shanley, John F., 17 Washington Street, Newark, N. J.

Shanley, Thomas J., 344 West 87th Street, New York city.

Shea, John B., 19 Maiden Lane, New York city.

Sheedy, B. D. (M. D.), 10 West 46th Street, New York city.

Sheran, Hugh F., 46 Woodbine Street, Roxbury (Boston), Mass.

Sheridan, Rev. John A., 97 South Street, Jamaica Plain (Boston), Mass.

Sherman, P. Tecumseh, of the law firm Taft & Sherman, 15 William Street, New York city; member of the Union League Club, and of the Military Order of the Loyal Legion; son of the late Gen. William T. Sherman.

Shine, Jerome, 137 West Clinton Street, Cleveland, O.

Shuman, A., merchant clothier, 440 Washington Street, Boston, Mass.

Slattery, John J., president Todd-Donigan Iron Co., Louisville, Ky.

Sligo Social Club, Roxbury (Boston), Mass. (M. J. Mulroy, secretary, 24 Faxon Street, Roxbury.)

Smith, James, 26 Broadway, New York city.

Smith, Rev. James J., 88 Central Street, Norwich, Conn.

Smith, Joseph, secretary of the Police Commission, Lowell, Mass.

Smith, Dr. Thomas B., Wyman’s Exchange, Lowell, Mass.

Smith, Thomas F., clerk of the City Court, 32 Chambers Street, New York city.

Smyth, Rev. Thomas M., East Liverpool, O.

Smyth, Philip A., 11 Pine Street, New York city.

Smyth, Rev. Hugh P., rector of St. Joseph’s church, Roxbury (Boston), Mass.

Smyth, Rev. Thomas, Springfield, Mass.

Somers, P. E., manufacturer, 17 Hermon Street, Worcester, Mass. (Life member the Society.)

Spellman, John H., 109-111 Park Row, New York city.

Spillane, J. B., managing editor Music Trade Review, Metropolitan Life Building, 1 Madison Avenue, New York city.

Steele, Hon. John H., Phenix Building, Minneapolis, Minn.

Storen, William J., 232 Calhoun Street, Charleston, S. C.

Sullivan, James E. (M. D.), Vice-President-General of the Society, Banigan Building, Providence, R. I.

Sullivan, James Mark, lawyer, Exchange Building, New Haven, Conn.

Sullivan, John B., contractor, New Bedford, Mass.

Sullivan, John J., 61-63 Faneuil Hall Market, Boston, Mass.; of Doe, Sullivan & Co.

Sullivan, Dr. M. B., Dover, N. H.; formerly a state senator.

Sullivan, M. F. (M. D.), Oak Street, Lawrence, Mass.

Sullivan, Patrick F., of Sullivan Bros., 68 Pemberton Square, Boston, Mass.

Sullivan, Hon. Richard, lawyer, Hemingway Building, Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.; an ex-senator of Massachusetts.

Sullivan, Roger G., cigar manufacturer, 803 Elm Street, Manchester, N. H.

Sullivan, Dr. T. P., 318 South Main Street, Fall River, Mass.

Sullivan, Timothy P., Concord, N. H.; furnished granite from his New Hampshire quarries for the new National Library Building, Washington, D. C.

Supple, Rev. James N., rector of St. Francis de Sales church, Charlestown, (Boston), Mass.

Sweeney, Rev. Timothy P., St. Patrick’s church, Fall River, Mass.

Sweeny, William Montgomery, 120 Franklin Street, Astoria, L. I., N. Y.

Swords, Joseph F., superintendent U. S. Reservation, Sulphur, Indian Territory. He is a descendant of Cornet George Swords, one of the A. D. 1649 officers in the service of Kings Charles I and Charles II in Ireland. Joseph F. Swords is a member of the Sons of the American Revolution. He is of the fourth American Generation from Francis Dawson Swords, graduate of Trinity College, Dublin, 1750, who was exiled from Ireland, 1760, and who served in the Patriot Army throughout the War of the Revolution.

Tack, Theodore E., 52 Broadway, New York city.

Teeling, Rt. Rev. Arthur J., rector of St. Mary’s church, Lynn, Mass.

Thompson, Frank, 1867 Seventh Avenue, New York city.

Thompson, Frank V., 116 Princeton Street, East Boston, Mass.

Thompson, James, of James Thompson & Bro., Louisville, Ky.

Thompson, Robert Ellis (Ph. D.), president Central High school, Philadelphia, Pa.; recently a professor in the University of Pennsylvania.

Tierney, Dennis H., real estate and insurance, 167 Bank Street, Waterbury, Conn.

Tierney, Edward M., Elmira, N. Y.

Tierney, Miles, 317 Riverside Drive, New York city. (Life member of the Society.)

Toale, Patrick P., Toale P. O., Aiken county, S. C.

Toland, M. A., 148 West Canton Street, Boston, Mass.

Toomey, A. J., F11 Produce Exchange, New York city.

Travers, Ambrose F., vice-president of the Travers Brothers Co., cordage, etc., 41 Worth Street, New York city.

Travers, Francis C., president of the Travers Brothers Co., 41 Worth Street, New York city.

Travers, Vincent P., treasurer of the Travers Brothers Co., 41 Worth Street, New York city.

Vail, Roger, associate editor of the Irish Standard, Minneapolis, Minn.

Ver Planck, William Gordon, 149 Broadway, New York city; of the law firm Young, Ver Planck & Prince.

Vincent, John, lawyer, 45 Cedar Street, New York city; was first assistant district attorney under the late Hon. John McKeon for two years, and on his death was appointed by the court as his successor ad interim.

Vredenburgh, Watson, Jr., civil engineer, 32 Broadway, New York city.

Waldron, E. M., builder, Newark, N. J.

Walker, William O’Brien, 90 Wall Street, New York city; a descendant of the Revolutionary O’Briens of Machias, Me.

Wallace, Rev. T. H., Lewiston, Me.

Waller, Hon. Thomas M., ex-governor of Connecticut, 15 Wall Street, New York city.

Walsh, James A., Lewiston, Me.; agent Lewiston Bleachery.

Walsh, Philip C., 260 Washington Street, Newark, N. J.; of Walsh’s Sons & Co., dealers in irons and metals.

Walsh, Philip C., Jr., 260 Washington Street, Newark, N. J.

Walsh, P. J., 503 Fifth Avenue, New York city.

Walsh, Wm. P., 247 Water Street, Augusta, Me.

Ward, Edward, Kennebunk, Me.

Ward, John T., Kennebunk, Me.

Ward, Michael J., Brookline, Mass.

Wilson, Hon. Thomas (LL. D.), general counsel for the Chicago, St. Paul, Minneapolis & Omaha Railway Co., St. Paul, Minn.; was chief justice of the Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1864-9; member of the Minnesota House of Representatives, 1880; member of the Minnesota Senate, 1883; member of Congress, 1887-9.

Woods, John J., 54 Federal Street, Newburyport, Mass.

Wright, Henry, 584 East 148th Street, New York city.

Zabriskie, George A., 123 Produce Exchange, New York city.