Chapter 12 of 18 · 3995 words · ~20 min read

Part 12

=Crimmins, Hon. John D.=, 40 East 68th Street, New York City; a Life member of the Society; president-general of the organization in 1901, 1902 and 1905. 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 Governor 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. Among the offices to which he has been chosen may be mentioned: President of the Essex and Hudson Land Improvement Co.; honorary vice-president of the Trust Company of America, 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: 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 a member of the board of managers of the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals; member of the executive committee of the New York State Branch of the American National Red Cross Society; member of the board of directors of the Pennsylvania, New York and Long Island Railroad Co.; member of the board of directors of the Metropolitan Bank; 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, Capt. Martin L.=, U. S. A.; care of War Department, Washington, D. C.; a son of Hon. John D. Crimmins of New York City.

=Cronin, Capt. William=, Rutland, Vt.

=Croston, J. F.= (M. D.), 83 Emerson Street, Haverhill, Mass.

=Cummings, Matthew J.=, overseer of the poor, 616 Eddy Street, Providence, R. I.

=Cummins, Rev. John F.=, Roslindale (Boston), Mass.

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

=Curran, Philip A.=, of the Curran Dry Goods Co., Waterbury, Conn.

=Curry, Edmond J.=, 69–71 East 89th Street, New York City.

=Daly, John J.=, 1045 Longwood Avenue, Bronx, New York City; foreman, U. S. Immigration buildings, Ellis Island.

=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; served in 1900 on the commission to revise the laws of Porto Rico.

=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, John H.=, assistant cashier, Seaboard National Bank, New York City.

=Day, Joseph P.=, real estate, 31 Nassau Street, and 932 Eighth Avenue, New York City.

=Deeves, Richard=, of Richard Deeves & Son, builders, 305–309 Broadway, New York City. (Life member of the Society.)

=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.

=DeRoo, Rev. Peter=, St. Joseph’s Church, 45 Fifteenth Street, North, Portland, Ore.; author of the _History of America Before Columbus_, a most interesting and valuable work.

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

=Devlin, James H., Jr.=, lawyer, Barristers Hall, Pemberton Square, Boston, Mass.

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

=Donahue, Dan A.=, 178 Essex Street, Salem, Mass.

=Donahue, R. J.=, cashier of the National Bank of Ogdensburg, N. Y.

=Donnelly, Hon. Thomas F.=, a justice of the New York City Court, 257 Broadway, New York City.

=Donoghue, D. F.= (M. D.), 240 Maple Street, Holyoke, Mass.

=Donovan, Daniel=, 21 High Rock Street, Lynn, Mass.; an authority on heraldry, armoral 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.=, real estate, mortgages and insurance, 360 West 125th Street, New York City.

=Donovan, Dr. S. E.=, New Bedford, Mass.

=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.

=Dooley, Michael F.=, treasurer-general of the Society, Providence, R. I.

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

=Dowd, Willis B.=, lawyer, 141 Broadway, New York City; great-grandson of Cornelius Dowd who came to this country about 1750 and settled in Moore County, N. C., where he became prominent. The family has attained much distinction in North Carolina.

=Dowling, Rev. Austin=, rector of the Cathedral, Providence, R. I.

=Downing, Bernard=, secretary to the president of the Borough of Manhattan, City Hall, New York City.

=Downing, D. P.=, with National Biscuit Company, Cambridge, Mass.

=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 New York 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.) Mr. Doyle is the senior member of the real estate firm of John F. Doyle & Sons. He was born in New York City, 1837, a son of James Doyle, who participated in the Irish revolution of 1798, and who came to the United States early in 1806. This James Doyle, the immigrant, had a son who was killed in the Florida war of 1837, and a grandson who fell in 1861, fighting for the Union. John F. Doyle, the subject of this sketch and member of the Society, entered the law office of Alexander Hamilton, grandson of the first secretary of the treasury, afterwards the firm of Hamilton, Rives & Rogers, and remained with them from 1853 to 1869, in the meantime studying law and being admitted to the bar in 1862. Alexander Hamilton, Francis R. Rives, a son of William C. Rives, of Virginia, at one time minister to France and senator, and Nathan Pendleton Rogers, all of the old Revolutionary stock, were members of the firm. Mr. Doyle’s management of some Wall Street properties for them at this period became so conspicuous that he was urged by them to assume the management of their estates, which he did. Shortly afterwards followed the acquisition of the estates of such well-known people as Mrs. Harriet L. Langdon, granddaughter-in-law of the first John Jacob Astor, John Pyne March, Mrs. Morgan L. Livingston, George L. Schuyler, James M. Pendleton, A. Newbold Morris, James H. Jones, John Steward, Jr., Royal Phelps, deceased, Royal Phelps Carroll, Robert S. Minturn, estate of Gertrude L. Lowndes, deceased, William H. King, of Newport, R. I., and others too numerous to mention in detail. A feature of his career as a successful manager lies in the fact that the business associations and connections formed by him in the beginning are still held intact. Among the notable sales made by him are those from William H. Morris to John Jacob Astor in 1880, conveying 150 acres of lots in the twenty-third ward on and adjacent to Harlem River; the great sale of South Brooklyn lots at Gowanus Bay in 1884. Mr. Doyle represents today the same old and well-known families and estates represented by him so many years ago. During his career Mr. Doyle has met and done business with some of the most notable men connected with families notable in American history, such as three of the four sons of the first Alexander Hamilton, Admiral Farragut, Capt. Percival Drayton, Rawlins Lowndes, of South Carolina, William C. Rives, U. S. senator from Virginia, at one time minister to France, George L. Schuyler, grandson of Philip Schuyler and owner of the famous yacht America, Philip Schuyler, his son, Henry Grinnell of Arctic fame, Robert J. and Mortimer Livingston, Hon. John Lee Carroll, Commodore Wm. K. Vanderbilt, and scores of others equally well known, besides representing branches now of four lineal descendants of signers of the Declaration of Independence. His two sons, Col. John F. Doyle, Jr., and Alfred L. Doyle, have been with him in business for years past and all three enjoy an enviable reputation for integrity, ability and prudence in all their undertakings.

=Doyle, Col. John F., Jr.=, of John F. Doyle & Sons, 45 William Street, New York City.

=Doyle, Nathaniel=, of James Doyle & Co., flour, etc.; 50 Front Street, New York City; member of the board of managers, New York Produce Exchange; member of the New York Club, 5th Avenue and 35th Street; member Veteran Association, Seventh Regiment, N. G. S. N. Y.

=Drummond, M. J.=, of M. J. Drummond & Co., 182 Broadway, New York City. Mr. Drummond was born on February 1, 1851, in Jersey City, N. J., and was graduated from De La Salle Institute, New York City. He started in the iron pipe business in 1879, and in 1887 organized, as senior partner, the firm of M. J. Drummond & Company, which has since been incorporated and is one of the most successful iron pipe concerns in the United States. Mr. Drummond has been prominent in the charitable, social and business life of New York for a generation. He is president of M. J. Drummond & Company, of the Shawmut Clay Manufacturing Company, of the Glamorgan Iron Works, of the Nassau County Water Company, and of the Green Island Water Company. As well as being a director of this company, he is a director, of the Nassau Union Bank and a trustee and member of the Executive Board of the Emigrant Industrial Savings Bank and the Broadway Trust Company, and he holds membership in the Chamber of Commerce, the New York Athletic Club, the Hardware Club, and the Catholic Club, and was recently president of the Friendly Sons of St. Patrick.

=Duffy, P. P.=, Parsons, Labette County, Kansas.

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

=Dwyer, J. R.=, 732 Alpine Street, Los Angeles, Cal.

=Dwyer, Thomas=, builder, 601 West End Avenue, New York City. (Life member of the Society.)

=Editor of “The Rosary Magazine,”= Somerset, O. (Life member of the Society.)

=Egan, James T.=, of the law firm, Gorman, Egan & Gorman, Banigan Building, Providence, R. I.

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

=Egan, Hon. Patrick=, 18 Broadway, New York City; recently United States Minister to Chili.

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

=Elliott, Dr. George W.=, Immigration Office, Ellis Island, N. Y. He is the duly accredited representative of the Canadian Government at the port of New York, co-operating with the public health and marine hospital service of the United States in connection with the medical examination of aliens passing through the United States immigration station, Ellis Island, destined for all points in the Dominion of Canada. Doctor Elliott is a native of Ireland.

=Emmet, J. Duncan= (M. D.), 103 Madison Avenue, New York City.

=Emmet, Robert=, The Priory, Warwick, England.

=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 many years past 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.

=Falahee, John J.=, real estate, 120 West 59th Street, New York City.

=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, Most Rev. John M.= (D. D.), 452 Madison Ave., New York City.

=Farrell, James P.=, superintendent of the Brooklyn Disciplinary Training School, 18th Avenue, between 56th and 58th streets, Brooklyn, N. Y.

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

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

=Farrelly, Frank T.=, Springfield News Co., Main Street, Springfield, Mass.

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

=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.

=Finn, Rev. Thomas J.=, Box 242, Port Chester, N. Y.

=Fitzgerald, Rev. D. W.=, 9 Pleasant Street, 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 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 many years past. He is a keen and forceful writer, and is one of the ablest men in American journalism.

=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, Dorchester Centre, Mass.

=Flannery, Capt. John=, Savannah, Ga.; of the 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, in 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.

=Fox, John J.=, 1908–1910 Bathgate Avenue, New York City.

=Gaffney, Hon. T. St. John=, lawyer; member of the French Legion of Honor; 41 Riverside Drive, New York City; is now U. S. Consul-General, Dresden, Germany.

=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 of the 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.

=Garrity, P. H.=, 221 Bank Street, Waterbury, Conn.

=Garvan, Francis P.=, assistant district attorney, 23 Fifth Avenue, New York City.

=Garvan, Hon. Patrick=, 236 Farmington Avenue, Hartford, Conn.; paper and paper stock. (Life member of the Society.)

=Geoghegan, Charles A.=, 537–539 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.

=Gibbons, John T.=, merchant, corner of Poydras and South Peters streets, New Orleans, La.; brother of Cardinal Gibbons. (Life member of the Society.)

=Gillespie, George J.=, of the law firm Gillespie & O’Connor, 20–24 Vesey St., New York City; trustee, Catholic Summer School (Cliff Haven); member of the board of managers of the N. Y. Roman Catholic Orphan Asylum; vice-president of the Particular Council, Society of St. Vincent de Paul, New York City; member of the N. Y. Board of Education; recently tax commissioner of the City of New York. (Life member of the Society.)

=Gilman, John E.=, 43 Hawkins Street, Boston, Mass.; has been 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 campaigns under Generals Pope, McClellan,

Burnside, Hooker and Meade up to the battle of Gettysburg, Pa., 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 14, 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.

=Goff, Hon. John W.=, New York City.

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

=Gorman, John F.=, lawyer, Stephen Girard Building, Philadelphia, Pa.

=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.)

=Guilfoile, Francis P.=, lawyer, Waterbury, Conn.

=Griffin, John C.=, insurance, Skowhegan, Me.

=Griffin, Rt. Rev. Mgr. Thomas= (D. D.), St. John’s presbytery, 44 Temple Street, Worcester, Mass.

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

=Haigney, John=, 439 58th Street, Brooklyn, N. Y.

=Halley, Charles V.=, 1014 East 175th Street, New York City.

=Hanlon, Marcus=, P. O. Box 1920, New York City.

=Hannan, Hon. John=, mayor of Ogdensburg, N. Y.; president of the Ogdensburg Coal and Towing Co., 44 and 46 Water Street.

=Hanrahan, John D.= (M. D.), Rutland, Vt., a native of County Limerick, Ireland; was graduated in medicine from the University of the City of New York, 1867; in June, 1861, he was, on examination (not having graduated), appointed surgeon in the United States Navy, and served through the entire Civil War. The vessels on which he served did duty mostly on the rivers of Virginia and North Carolina, where he served with the army as well as the navy, thereby having the benefit and experience of both branches of the service, especially in the surgical line. In August, 1863, the vessel on which he was serving was captured at the mouth of the Rappahannock River and all on board made prisoners. They were taken overland to Richmond where they were confined in Libby Prison. At that time the Confederates were very short of surgeons and medical supplies, and he was asked if he would go over to Belle Island and attend the Union prisoners. After consulting his fellow-prisoners he consented, and for six weeks he attended the sick and wounded Union prisoners faithfully, under very great disadvantages, as the appliances were very limited. After that he was paroled. While a prisoner of war he was treated with the greatest courtesy and consideration by the medical staff and officers of the Confederacy. After the close of the war he was settled in New York City, but for nearly forty years has been a resident of Rutland, Vt. He was town and city physician of Rutland for many years. He was appointed surgeon of the Third Vermont Regiment, 1871, by Governor Stewart; was the first president of the Rutland County Medical and Surgical Society; has been a director and consulting surgeon of the Rutland (Vt.) Hospital; consulting surgeon to the Fanny Allen Hospital, Winooski, Vt.; a member of the Vermont Sanitary Association, and a member of the Vermont Society for the Prevention of Tuberculosis; president of Rutland Village two years and trustee eight years; county commissioner one year; president, United States pension examining board four years under President Cleveland, and president of the same board four years under President Harrison. He was postmaster of Rutland during the second term of President Cleveland. He has since its organization been an active member of the G. A. R.; surgeon of Roberts Post, the largest in Vermont; has served three terms as medical director of the Department; served on the staffs of three commanders-in-chief—Veasy, Palmer and Weissert; a member of Commander-in-Chief Stewart’s staff. Doctor Hanrahan is the author of several medical papers, has performed many surgical operations, and has served through several epidemics of smallpox and diphtheria. He was a delegate to the Democratic National conventions of 1884, 1888, and chairman of the Vermont delegation to the National Convention of 1892. Also a delegate to the Democratic National Convention in St. Louis, 1904, and to the Ancient Order of Hibernians convention in St. Louis, July 19, 1904.

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