Chapter 14 of 16 · 3997 words · ~20 min read

Part 14

=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 November 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 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.=, Lincoln Hotel, Ballston Spa, N. Y.

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

=Murphy, James=, 42 Westminster Street, Providence, R. I.

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

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

=Murray, Hon. Lawrence O.= (LL. D.), assistant secretary, U. S. Department of Commerce and Labor, Washington, D. C. He is a lawyer by profession. He first went to Washington as secretary to William Edmund Curtis, assistant secretary of the treasury. Subsequently, he held other positions in the treasury, including that of chief of division, and, from September 1, 1898, to June 27, 1899, that of deputy comptroller of the currency. He left the government employment to become the trust officer of the American Trust Company, continuing in that place for three years. He then went to Chicago as secretary of the Central Trust Company of Illinois and served there for two years before becoming assistant secretary of commerce and labor.

=Murray, Patrick=, insurance, 318 West 52d Street, New York City.

=Murray, Thomas Hamilton=, 36 Newbury Street, Boston, Mass.; secretary-general of the Society; a newspaper man of many 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.

=Neagle, Rev. Richard=, Malden, Mass.

=Noonan, Daniel A.=, 725 Broadway, New York City.

=O’Brien, Hon. C. D.=, lawyer, Globe Building, St. Paul, Minn.; prosecuting attorney of Ramsey County, Minn., from 1874–’78; assistant U. S. district attorney from 1870–’73; mayor of St. Paul from 1883–’85.

=O’Brien, Dennis F.=, of the law firm Sheahan & O’Brien, Banigan Building, Providence, R. I.

=O’Brien, Rev. James J.=, 185 Summer Street, 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, Hon. Morgan J.= (LL. D.), 729 Park Avenue, New York City; a justice of the New York Supreme Court; trustee of the New York Public Library.

=O’Brien, Patrick=, of Driscoll & O’Brien, contractors, 399 South Broadway, Lawrence, Mass.

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

=O’Callaghan, Rt. Rev. Mgr. Denis= (D. D.), rector of St. Augustine’s Church, South Boston, Mass.

=O’Connell, Rt. Rev. Mgr. Denis Joseph= (S. T. D.), rector of the Catholic University, Washington, D. C.

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

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

=O’Connell, Joseph F.=, lawyer, 53 State Street, Boston, Mass.

=O’Connell, P. A.=, of the James A. Houston Co., 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’Connor, J. L.=, Ogdensburg, N. Y.

=O’Connor, M. P.=, Binghamton, N. Y. (Life member of the Society.)

=O’Connor, Thomas=, 920 East 156th Street, New York City.

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

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

=O’Donovan, Jeremiah (Rossa)=, New York City.

=O’Donnell, Rev. James H.=, rector, St. Mary’s Church, Norwalk, Conn.

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

=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’Gorman, Hon. J. A.=, 318 West 108th Street, New York City; a justice of the New York Supreme Court.

=O’Gorman, Thomas A.=, the O’Gorman Co., Providence, R. I.

=O’Hagan, W. J.=, of W. J. O’Hagan & Son, colonial antiques, Charleston, S. C.

=O’Herin, William=, Parsons, Labette County, Kan.; superintendent of machinery and equipment, Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railway. (Life member of the Society.)

=O’Keefe, Edmund=, 174 Middle Street, New Bedford, Mass.

=O’Keefe, J. A.= (M. D.), Broadway, Providence, R. I., lieutenant-colonel, Second Regiment, B. R. I. M.

=O’Keefe, John A.=, 25 Exchange Street, Lynn, Mass.; a native of Rockport, Mass.; was graduated from Harvard College, class of 1880; member of the Phi Beta Kappa; taught school in Housatonic, Mass.; was elected sub-master of the Lynn (Mass.) High School in 1881 and headmaster of the same in 1885; became a member of the teaching staff of the English High School, Boston, Mass.; studied law; was admitted to the bar of Essex County, Mass., and has since practiced law in Lynn. In 1897 he was the Democratic candidate for attorney-general of Massachusetts. Member of the Lynn Board of Associated Charities; member of the New England Association of Colleges and Preparatory Schools; of the Essex Institute, and of the executive board of the Civic League of Lynn. Among Mr. O’Keefe’s classmates at Harvard were: Hon. Theodore Roosevelt, president of the United States; Hon. William S. Andrews, justice of the New York Supreme Court; Robert Bacon, partner of J. P. Morgan; Harold N. Fowler, professor of Latin; Hon. Josiah Quincy, mayor of Boston, Mass.; Albert Bushnell Hart, historian and professor, and many other people of note.

=O’Leary, Jeremiah=, 275 58th Street, Brooklyn, N. Y.

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

=O’Loughlin, Patrick=, lawyer, 18 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.

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

=O’Neil, Frank S.=, lawyer, O’Neil Building, Binghamton, N. Y.

=O’Neil, Hon. George F.=, capitalist, Binghamton, N. Y. (Life member of the Society.)

=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, Eugene M.=, Pittsburg, Pa. (Life member of the Society.)

=O’Neill, James L.=, 220 Franklin Street, Elizabeth, N. J.; connected with the Elizabeth post-office for many years past; he 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’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.

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

=Phelan, James J.=, 16 Exchange Place, New York City; treasurer of the King’s County Refrigerating Co.; director in the Stuyvesant Insurance Co.; director in the Cosmopolitan Fire 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, George Bliss, 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.

=Phelan, Rev. J.=, Marcus, Ia.

=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.

=Pigott, William=, iron and steel, Alaska Building, Seattle, Wash. (Life member of the Society.)

=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., 120 Boylston Street, Boston, Mass.

=Prendergast, W. A.=, 20 Nassau Street, New York City.

=Quinlan, Francis J.= (M. D., LL. 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; president of the County Medical Association of New York; member of the State Medical Association, of the American Medical Association, and of the Academy of Medicine. Besides holding these positions of honor and responsibility, he is visiting surgeon to St. Vincent’s Hospital, New York City, to the New York City Hospital, to the Foundling Hospital and St. Joseph’s Hospital, Yonkers, N. Y. He is professor of Laryngology and Rhinology in New York Polyclinic and Laryngologist and Otologist to St. John’s Hospital, Long Island City.

=Quinlan, John J.=, secretary, McNab & Harlin Mfg. Co., 50–56 John Street, New York City.

=Quinn, John=, lawyer, 120 Broadway, New York City.

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

=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.

=Roach, James F.=, 5822 Fifth Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y.

=Rogan, John H.=, lawyer, 145 Nassau Street, New York City.

=Rohan, John D.=, 49 Wall Street, New York City.

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

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

=Rorke, James=, 40 Barclay Street, New York City.

=Ryan, Charles V.=, Springfield, Mass.

=Ryan, Christopher S.=, Lexington, Mass.

=Ryan, James T.=, 68 William Street, New York City.

=Ryan, John J.=, 171 East 94th Street, New York City.

=Ryan, Michael=, 377 Broadway, New York City.

=Ryan, Michael J.=, Waterbury, Conn.

=Ryan, Nicholas W.=, 1444 Boston Road, Borough of the Bronx, New York City.

=Ryan, Hon. Patrick J.=, mayor-elect of Elizabeth, N. J.; is of the firm P. J. & W. H. Ryan, real estate and fire insurance, 205 Broad Street, Elizabeth.

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

=Ryan, Richard=, Rutland, Vt.

=Ryan, Timothy M.= (M. D.), Torrington, Conn.

=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. Colonel 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 November 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. Colonel 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 April 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.)

=Scott, Joseph=, lawyer, Bradbury Building, Los Angeles, Cal.

=Shahan, Very Rev. Thomas J.= (S. T. D., J. U. L.), professor of church history, Catholic University, Washington, D. C.; S. T. D., Propaganda, Rome, 1882; J. U. L., Roman Seminary, 1889.

=Shanahan, Very Rev. Edmund T.= (Ph. D., S. T. D., J. C. L.), professor of dogmatic theology, Catholic University, Washington, D. C.; A. B., Boston College, 1888; S. T. D., Propaganda, Rome, 1893; J. C. L., Roman Seminary, Rome, 1895; Ph. D., Roman Academy, 1895. Instructor in philosophy and dogmatic theology, American College, Rome, 1894–’95; lecturer in philosophy, University of Pennsylvania, 1898–’99; associate professor of philosophy, the Catholic University of America, 1895–1901.

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

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

=Shea, Daniel W.= (Ph. D.), professor of physics, Catholic University, Washington, D. C.; A. B., Harvard University, 1886; A. M., Harvard University, 1888; Ph. D., Berlin, 1892. Assistant in physics, Harvard University, 1889 and 1892; assistant professor of physics in the University of Illinois, 1892–’93; professor of physics in the University of Illinois, 1893–’95.

=Shea, John B.=, 19 Maiden Lane, New York City.

=Sheedy, Bryan DeF.= (M. D.), 162 West 73d Street, New York City.

=Sheran, Hugh F.=, 46 Woodbine Street, Roxbury (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.

=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.)

=Sloane, Charles W.=, lawyer, 54 William Street, New York City.

=Smith, Hon. Andrew C.= (M. D.), Dekum Building, Portland, Oregon; president of the State Board of Health; president of the Hibernia Savings Bank; member of the state Senate from 1900 to 1904; has served on the staff of St. Vincent’s Hospital for fourteen years; has been president of the State and City Medical societies; represented Oregon for two years in the House of Delegates of the American Medical Association.

=Smith, James=, 26 Broadway, New York City.

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

=Smith, Joseph=, Lowell, Mass.

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

=Smyth, Rev. Hugh P.=, rector of St. John’s Church, Lawrence Avenue, Roxbury (Boston), Mass.

=Smyth, Rev. Thomas=, Springfield, Mass.

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

=Somers, P. E.=, manufacturer of tacks and nails, Worcester, Mass. (Life member of the Society.)

=Spellacy, Thomas J.=, lawyer, 26 State Street, Hartford, Conn.

=Spillane, J. B.=, managing editor _Music Trade Review_, Metropolitan Life Building, 1 Madison Avenue, New York City.

=Stang, Rt. Rev. William= (D. D.), Fall River, Mass., bishop of the Roman Catholic diocese of Fall River.

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

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

=Sullivan, James E.= (M. D.), Providence, R. I.; was graduated from Bellevue Hospital Medical College, New York, 1879; also studied medicine in Dublin, London and Paris; was city physician of Fall River, Mass., for seven years; married, in 1885, Alice, daughter of the late Joseph Banigan of Providence; retired from practice in 1891; member of the Rhode Island, Massachusetts and Providence Medical societies; vice-president of the University Club, Providence; a director of the Rhode Island Hospital Trust Co.; president and treasurer of the Sullivan Investment Co., Providence.

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

=Sullivan, John J.=, 61–63 Quincy Market, Boston, Mass.; of Doe, Sullivan & Co.

=Sullivan, John J.=, lawyer, 203 Broadway, New York City.

=Sullivan, M. B.= (M. D.), Dover, N. H., formerly a state senator.

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

=Sullivan, Michael X.= (Ph. D.), instructor, Brown University, Providence, R. I.

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

=Sullivan, T. P.= (M. D.), 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.

=Sullivan, William B.=, lawyer, Tremont Building, Boston, Mass.

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

=Sweeney, John F.=, the Sweeney Co., 256 Main Street, Buffalo, N. Y. (Life member of the Society.)

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

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

=Swords, Joseph F.=, superintendent, Platt National Park, 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.

=Taggart, Hon. Thomas=, Indianapolis, Ind.; proprietor of the Grand Hotel there; was elected auditor of Marion County, 1886; re-elected, 1890; has been mayor of Indianapolis; chairman of the Democratic state committee, 1892 and 1894; district chairman of the Seventh Congressional District; member from Indiana of the Democratic national committee. Is a native of Ireland.

=Teeling, Rt. Rev. Arthur J.= (D. D.), rector of St. Mary’s Church, Lynn, Mass.

=Thompson, Frank=, 257 West 129th Street, New York City.

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

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

=Tierney, Dennis H.=, real estate and insurance, Tierney’s Block, Bank Street, Waterbury, Conn.

=Tierney, Edward M.=, Hotel Marlborough, Broadway, New York City.

=Tierney, Henry S.=, Torrington, Conn.

=Tierney, Myles=, 317 Riverside Drive, New York City. (Life member of the Society.) President, Hudson Trust Co., Hoboken, N. J.

=Toale, Patrick P.=, Toale P. O., Aiken County, S. C.

=Travers, Vincent P.=, of the Travers Brothers Co., 41 Worth Street, New York City.

=Tully, Hon. William J.=, Corning, N. Y.; a state senator.

=Twohy, George J.=, trust officer, the Citizens’ Bank of Norfolk, Va.

=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.=, of E. M. Waldron & Co., building contractors, 84 South Sixth Street, 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.=, New London, Conn.; lawyer; member of the Connecticut Legislature, 1867, 1868, 1872, 1876; (speaker, 1876); secretary of state of Connecticut, 1870; mayor of New London, 1873; state’s attorney, 1876–’83; governor of Connecticut, 1882–’84; United States consul-general to London, England, 1885–’89; commissioner to World’s Columbian Exposition.

=Walsh, Frank=, secretary and credit manager, Wilkinson, Gaddis & Co., wholesale grocers, 866–868 Broad Street, Newark, N. J.

=Walsh, P. J.=, 503 Fifth Avenue, New York City.

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

=Ward, Edward=, of Ward Bros., contractors, Kennebunk, Me.