CONTENTS.
Page
Adams, Charles, Jr. [278]
Adams, Phinehas [166]
Amory, William [151]
Balch, Charles E. [113]
Barnard, Daniel [304]
Bartlett, Charles H. [33]
Barton, Levi Winter [50]
Blair, Henry William [285]
Bracewell, John [199]
Briggs, James F. [294]
Bryant, Napoleon B. [187]
Buffum, David Hanson [276]
Carpenter, Josiah [43]
Chandler, George Byron [185]
Chandler, William E. [255]
Cheney, Gilman [215]
Cheney, Person C. [162]
Clark, Joseph Bond [179]
Clarke, John B. [311]
Clarke, William C. [261]
Cogswell, Francis [177]
Cogswell, George [204]
Cogswell, Thomas [160]
Cogswell, William [137]
Colby, Anthony [251]
Crosby, Asa and Sons [243]
Cumner, Nathaniel Wentworth [297]
Currier, Moody [35]
Daniell, Warren F. [237]
Dearborn, Cornelius Van Ness [195]
Dunlap, Archibald Harris [264]
Edgerly, Martin V. B. [130]
French, John C. [157]
George, John Hatch [98]
Gilman, Virgil C. [148]
Goodell, David H. [233]
Goodwin, Ichabod [133]
Graves, Josiah G. [235]
Griffin, Simon G. [58]
Hall, Daniel [229]
Harriman, Walter [74]
Hayes, Albert H. [202]
Head, Natt [223]
Jewell, David Lyman [63]
Kent, Henry O. [21]
Kimball, John [89]
Marsh, Charles [184]
Martin, Benjamin Franklin [269]
Maxfield, Rufus A. [289]
McDuffee, John [153]
Means, William Gordon [103]
Miner, Alonzo A. [16]
Moulton, John Carroll [114]
Murphy, Charles M. [67]
Nesmith, George W. [180]
Norcross, Amasa [37]
Parker, John M. [31]
Peabody, Charles A. [209]
Pillsbury, George Alfred [39]
Pillsbury, Oliver [191]
Pierce, Thomas P. [127]
Pike, Chester [123]
Potter, Chandler E. [302]
Prescott, Benjamin F. [281]
Richards, Dexter [271]
Riddle, William P. [307]
Rollins, Edward Ashton [143]
Rollins, Edward H. [217]
Sargent, Jonathan Everett [93]
Sawyer, Charles H. [249]
Sawyer, Jonathan [240]
Shaw, Albert M. [267]
Sherburne, Henry C. [69]
Smyth, Frederick [106]
Spalding, Edward [81]
Spalding, George Burley [291]
Stark, George [9]
Sulloway, Alvah W. [119]
Tilton, Charles Elliott [110]
Tuttle, Hiram A. [14]
Wallace, Rodney [56]
Wallingford, Zimri S. [70]
Weston, James A. [85]
Wheeler, Samuel Metcalf [79]
White, Jeremiah W. [140]
White, Nathaniel [172]
Wilder, Marshall P. [25]
Williams, Charles [47]
Geo. Stark
GEN. GEORGE STARK.
BY H. W. HERRICK.
In the remarkable development of railroad traffic in this country within the last fifty years, many prominent men of our state identified with this interest have achieved an enviable success. A leading position among these representative men will be accorded to General George Stark, who, within the last forty years, has been associated with the successful organization and management of several of the most wealthy and influential of these corporations. Beginning at an early age with some of the first of these enterprises in New England, he has been identified with their history; and he has also had, within the last five years, a controlling hand in the resuscitation and extension of the great Northern Pacific line, that will soon span the continent from the great lakes to the Pacific ocean. This successful business career has been honorably distinguished, inasmuch as it has, in all its phases, recognized the sound business principles that govern supply and demand in the legitimate carrying-trade. As the leading medium between the producer and consumer, the railroad interest thrives only with the prosperity and good will of both; and in this, its legitimate sphere, seeks neither to control production or traffic, except in those reciprocal relations which contribute to the public good.
The influences attending the early life of Gen. Stark favored the development of the qualities of character that have made his business career marked and successful. His father, Frederick G. Stark, was the son of John, the third of the children of Major-General John Stark, the hero of Bennington, the latter being, therefore, the third in ancestral order removed from the subject of this sketch. George Stark was born at Manchester, N. H., April 9, 1823, a few months after the death of his illustrious military ancestor. His father at this time occupied the old manor-house formerly owned by Judge Blodget, originator of the famous Blodget canal. This time-honored structure has been destroyed by the demand of modern improvements, and its site, at the entrance of the canal around Amoskeag Falls, is now only marked by the ruins of the sheds connected with it. The locks and canals, in connection with like works on the Merrimack river, were owned by the Union Locks and Canal Company, and Frederick G. Stark occupied the position of general superintendent and manager. He was also proprietor of a general-supply store for river-men and the population adjacent, and was, moreover, land surveyor for the neighboring country. He also held the position of general magistrate, and was, withal, the most influential man of the vicinity, leading in all commercial enterprise and traffic. He died in 1861.