Part 13
=Harrington, Rev. J. C.=, rector of St. Joseph’s Church, Lynn, Mass.
=Harrington, Rev. John M.=, Orono, Me.
=Harris, Hon. Charles N.=, a New York City magistrate.
=Harson, M. Joseph=, Catholic Club, 120 Central Park South, New York City.
=Hayes, John F.= (M. D.), 15 South Elm Street, Waterbury, Conn.
=Hayes, Hon. Nicholas J.=, sheriff, County of New York, 299 Broadway, New York City.
=Hayes, Col. Patrick E.=, Pawtucket, R. I.
=Healy, David=, 70 Jane Street, New York City; U. S. Immigration service.
=Healy, John F.=, general superintendent of the Davis Coal and Coke Co., Thomas, Tucker County, W. Va.
=Healy, Richard=, cloaks, suits, furs, etc., 512 Main Street, Worcester, Mass.
=Hennessy, Michael E.=, on the staff of the _Daily Globe_, Boston, Mass.; a newspaper man of wide experience and exceptional ability.
=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, John J.=, plumbing contractor, 8 East 129th Street, New York City.
=Hickey, Rev. William A.=, Clinton, Mass.
=Higgins, James J.=, 85 Court Street, Elizabeth, N. J.
=Hoban, Rt. Rev. M. J.= (D. D.), Scranton, Pa., bishop of the Roman Catholic diocese of Scranton.
=Hoey, James J.=, real estate, insurance, etc., 879 Tenth Avenue, New York City.
=Hogan, John W.=, lawyer, 4 Weybosset Street, Providence, R. I.; recently a candidate for Congress.
=Holland, John P.=, 95 Nelson Place, Newark, N. J.; inventor of the submarine torpedo boat.
=Horigan, Hon. Cornelius=, 229 and 231 Main Street, Biddeford, Me.; is treasurer of the Andrews & Horigan Co.; a member of the state Legislature of Maine.
=Hughes, Rev. Christopher=, Fall River, Mass.
=Hurley, James H.=, Union Trust Co. Building, Providence, R. I.; manager of the real estate department, G. L. & H. J. Gross.
=Hurley, John E.=, 63 Washington Street, Providence, R. I.; vice-president and superintendent of the Remington Printing Co.; president, in 1904, of the Rhode Island Master Printers’ Association.
=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.=, Hanley Brewing Co., Providence, R. I.
=Joyce, Harry L.=, 151 West 61st Street, New York City.
=Joyce, John Jay=, 47 Macdougal Street, New York City.
=Kane, John H.= (M. D.), Lexington, Mass.
=Keane, Most Rev. John J.= (D. D.), Dubuque, Ia.; archbishop of the Roman Catholic archdiocese of Dubuque.
=Kearney, James=, lawyer, 220 Broadway, New York City.
=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=, Templecourt Building, New York City.
=Kelly, John Forrest= (Ph. D.), Pittsfield, Mass.; born near Carrick-on-Suir, Ireland. He was educated in Stevens Institute of Technology, Hoboken, N. J., received the degree of B. L. in 1878 and that of Ph. D. in 1881. His first occupation was as assistant to Thomas A. Edison, in Menlo Park laboratory, his work then principally relating to the chemistry of rare earths. Late in 1879 Mr. Kelly became electrical engineer of the New York branch of the Western Electric Company. This was the time when the telephone was being generally introduced, and when dynamos were being first applied to telegraphic purposes. In the construction and installment of instruments for telegraphy and telephones and of such measuring instruments as were then known, Mr. Kelly received a thorough training. In 1882 he became laboratory assistant to Edward Weston, then chief electrician of the United States Electric Lighting Company, and, with the exception of a year which he spent in connection with the Remingtons, Mr. Kelly continued his association with Mr. Weston until July, 1886. Some of the most important work, such as the research which ended in the discovery of high resistance alloys of very low or even negative temperature co-efficients, were substantially carried out by Mr. Kelly under general directions from Mr. Weston, whom Mr. Kelly succeeded as chief electrician of the United States Electric Lighting Company, which, in 1889, passed to the Westinghouse interests; but Mr. Kelly retained his position as chief electrician until January, 1892, when he resigned to join William Stanley in experimental work. The work done by Mr. Kelly, in this connection, gave a great impetus to the alternating current business. Mr. Kelly’s inventive work is partially represented by eighty patents. The art of building transformers and generators of alternating currents was revolutionized, and Mr. Kelly and his colleagues were the first to put polyphase motors into actual commercial service. That success naturally led to long-distance transmission work, and the first long-distance transmission plants in California (indeed the first in the world), were undertaken on Mr. Kelly’s recommendation and advice. He was the first to make a hysteretically stable steel, a matter of vastly more importance than the comparatively spectacular transmission work. Mr. Kelly at present occupies the position of president of the John F. Kelly Engineering Company, president of the Cokel Company and president of the Telelectric Company, as well as president of the Conchas River Power Company and director of the Southwestern Exploration Company. The Cokel Company is organized to exploit the invention of Mr. E. W. Cooke, by means of which foodstuffs may be perfectly dehydrated, losing on the average ninety per cent in weight. Foods dehydrated by this process, although free from all chemical preservatives, are entirely stable, and yet preserve their pristine freshness through extremes of temperature, and when served are indistinguishable from fresh foods of the ordinary type. The Telelectric Company is organized for the manufacture of electric piano players, which are either entirely automatic or entirely controllable at will. Mr. Kelly was married to Miss Helen Fischer, in New York City, in 1892, and they have two children—Eoghan and Domnall. Mr. Kelly is a thorough and unswerving Irish Nationalist, and his splendid generosity to the cause is well known.
=Kelly, Michael F.= (M. D.), Fall River, Mass.
=Kelly, P. J.=, vice-president of the Hens-Kelly Co., Main Street, West Mohawk Street, and Pearl Street, Buffalo, N. Y.
=Kelly, T. P.=, 544 West 22d Street, New York City; of T. P. Kelly & Co., manufacturers of black leads, foundry facings, supplies, etc.
=Kelly, William J.=, 9 Dove Street, Newburyport, Mass.
=Kelly, William J.=, insurance, 3 Market Square, Portsmouth, N. H.
=Kenah, John F.=, city clerk, Elizabeth, N. J.
=Kennedy, Charles F.=, Brewer, Me.
=Kennedy, Daniel=, of the Kennedy Valve Manufacturing Co., Coxsackie, N. Y.
=Kenney, James W.=, Park Brewery, Terrace Street, Roxbury (Boston), Mass.; vice-president and director, Federal Trust Co., Boston.
=Kenney, Thomas=, 143 Summer Street, Worcester, Mass.
=Kenney, Thomas F.= (M. D.), Vienna, Austria.
=Kenny, W. J. K.=, 44 Broad Street, New York City.
=Kerby, John E.=, architect, 481 Fifth Avenue, New York City.
=Kiernan, Patrick=, 265 West 43d Street, New York City.
=Kilmartin, Thomas J.= (M. D.), Waterbury, Conn.
=Kilroy, Philip= (M. D.), Springfield, Mass.
=Kinsela, John F.=, 509 Gorham Street, Lowell, Mass.
=Knights of St. Patrick=, San Francisco, Cal. (Life membership.) Care of John Mulhern, 25th and Hampshire streets, San Francisco.
=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.
=Lannon, Joseph F.=, of Jos. F. Lannon & Co., general merchandise, 68 Main Street, Susquehanna, Pa.
=Lavelle, John=, Inquiry Division, Post Office, Cleveland, O.
=Lawler, Joseph A.=, 308 West 14th Street, New York City.
=Lawler, Thomas B.=, 70 Fifth Avenue, New York City; of 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; now a colonel on the staff of the governor of Virginia.
=Lawlor, P. J.=, 417 East Main Street, Waterbury, Conn.
=Lawlor, Thomas F.=, lawyer, 65 Bank Street, Waterbury, Conn.
=Leahy, Matthew W.=, 257 Franklin Street, New Haven, Conn.
=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, 71 Nassau Street, New York City. (Life member of the Society.)
=Lenehan, Rev. B. C.= (V. G.), Fort Dodge, Iowa.
=Lenihan, Rt. Rev. M. C.=, bishop of the Roman Catholic diocese of Great Falls, Mont.
=Lennox, George W.=, manufacturer, Haverhill, Mass.
=Leonard, Peter F.=, 343 Harvard Street, Cambridge, Mass.
=Linehan, John J.=, Linehan Corset Co., Worcester, Mass.
=Linehan, Rev. T. P.=, Biddeford, Me.
=Lonergan, Thomas S.=, journalist, 658 East 149th Street, New York City.
=Loughlin, Peter J.=, 150 Nassau Street, New York City.
=Lovell, David B.= (M. D.), 32 Pearl Street, Worcester, Mass.
=Luddy, Timothy F.=, Waterbury, Conn.
=Lynch, Eugene=, 24 India Street, Boston, Mass.
=Lynch, J. H.=, 812 Eighth Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y.
=Lynch, John E.=, school principal, Worcester, Mass.
=Lynch, Thomas J.=, lawyer, Augusta, Me.; was city clerk of Augusta, 1884 and 1885; postmaster of Augusta from 1894 to 1898; and trustee of the Public Library; one of the water commissioners; a director of the Granite National Bank; trustee of the Kennebec Savings Bank; trustee of the Augusta Trust Company; president of the Augusta Loan & Building Association; director of the Augusta, Winthrop & Gardiner Railway; director of the Augusta Real Estate Association; and trustee of many estates.
=Lynn, John=, 48 Bond Street, New York City.
=Lynn, Hon. Wauhope=, a justice of the Municipal Court of the city of New York, 128 Prince Street, New York City.
=Lyon, James B.=, president of the J. B. Lyon Company, printers, publishers, and book manufacturers, Albany, N. Y.
=MacDonnell, John T. F.=, paper manufacturer, Holyoke, Mass.
=MacDwyer, Patrick S.=, 248 East 23d Street, New York City.
=McAdoo, Hon. William=, 30 Broad Street, New York City, recently police commissioner of the City of New York; ex-member of Congress; ex-assistant secretary of the navy.
=McAleenan, Arthur=, 131 West 69th Street, New York City.
=McAleer, George= (M. D.), Worcester, Mass.
=McAlevy, John F.=, salesman, 26–50 North Main Street, Pawtucket, R. I.
=McBride, D. H.=, 10 Barclay Street, New York City.
=McCaffrey, Hugh=, manufacturer, Fifth and Berks streets, Philadelphia, Pa. (Life member of the Society.)
=McCanna, Francis I.=, lawyer, Industrial Trust Building, Providence, R. I.
=McCarrick, James W.=, general southern agent, Clyde Steamship Co., Norfolk, Va. Mr. McCarrick is a veteran of the Civil War. He was transferred, 1861, from Twelfth Virginia Regiment to North Carolina gunboat _Winslow_, and appointed master’s mate. Transferred to Confederate navy with that steamer, and ordered to Confederate steamer _Seabird_, at Norfolk navy yard. Attached to _Seabird_ until latter was sunk. Taken prisoner, Elizabeth City, N. C. Paroled February, 1862. Exchanged for officer of similar rank captured from United States ship _Congress_. Promoted to master and ordered to navy yard, Selma, Ala. Served later on Confederate steamships _Tuscaloosa_, _Baltic_ and _Tennessee_ at Mobile, and in Mobile Bay, and on steamer _Macon_, at Savannah, and on Savannah River. Detailed to command water battery at Shell Bluff, below Augusta, after surrender of Savannah. Paroled from steamship _Macon_ at Augusta, Ga., after Johnson’s surrender. Mr. McCarrick is president of the Virginia State Board of Pilot Commissioners; president of the Board of Trade of Norfolk, Va.; first vice-president of the Virginia Navigation Co.; commissioner representing the state of Virginia in the management of the Jamestown Exposition held in 1907; and was president of the Suburban & City Railway and chairman of the executive committee of the Norfolk Street Railway until these two properties were consolidated and sold to outside parties.
=McCarthy, Charles, Jr.=, Portland, Me.
=McCarthy, George W.=, of Dennett & McCarthy, dry goods, Portsmouth, N. H.
=McCarthy, M. R. F.=, 82 Court Street, Binghamton, N. Y.; a commissioner of the department of Public Instruction.
=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.=, St. Paul’s Church, Warren, Mass.
=McCaughey, Bernard=, of Bernard McCaughey & Co., house furnishers, Pawtucket, R. I.
=McClean, Rev. Peter H.=, Milford, Conn.
=McCloud, William J.=, contractor, Jefferson Avenue, Elizabeth, N. J.
=McClure, David=, lawyer, 22 William Street, New York City. Mr. McClure was admitted to the bar in December, 1869, in New York City, where he has since resided. His practice has brought him very prominently before the courts and public during the last thirty-six years as counsel in cases which have attracted much attention. He has been counsel in many contested will cases, including those of Merril, Schuyler Skatts, Charles B. Beck and Mary Johnson. In the Livingston, De Meli and General Burnside litigation he was also prominent. He has been connected with many large corporation foreclosure suits, including those of the Denver Water Company, the New York & Northern Railroad Company, Omaha Water Company, the Toledo, Ann Arbor & Northern Michigan, the Northern Pacific, the New York, Lake Erie & Western, the Oregon Railway & Navigation Company, the Oregon Improvement Company, the Chicago & Northern Pacific Company, the Bankers and Merchants’ Telegraph Company, and the Memphis & Charleston Railroad Company. He is regarded as one of the most successful trial lawyers at the bar in New York. Mr. McClure for more than a quarter of a century has been counsel for the Farmers Loan & Trust Company, the oldest and largest trust company in the United States, organized in 1821; and for many years of the Consolidated Gas Company, one of the largest public service corporations in the country. He is also counsel for the West Side Savings Bank, several fire insurance companies and other banks. He was one of the counsel for the Mutual Life Insurance Company during the presidency of F. S. Winston. For years he was a director in the Lawyers Surety Company, and he is on the board of the Title Insurance Company of New York. He was a prominent and active member of the State Constitution Convention of 1894, in which body he introduced and carried through the amendment providing for protection of the forests of New York. He years ago declined elevation to the bench of the Court of Appeals, the highest court in the state of New York, and several times to other positions; also appointment to the offices of corporation counsel of the city of New York, and district attorney of the United States. Mr. McClure was appointed, in 1893, receiver of the National Bank of Deposit, in the city of New York, and in spite of the stringent financial condition which prevailed during the summer of that year, dividends aggregating seventy-five per cent were paid within three months. The entire indebtedness, principal and interest, was paid and the receivership closed out within one year. In 1892 he was a delegate from the state of New York to the National Democratic Convention which, at Chicago, nominated Grover Cleveland as candidate for the office of president of the United States, and during the campaign of that year he was much discussed by the press of New York as the probable nominee of his party for the office of mayor of the city. In that year he was designated by the General Term of the Supreme Court, chairman of the first commission appointed to determine whether a subway passing under Broadway and other streets through the city should be constructed, his associates being Robert Maclay, president of the Knickerbocker Trust Company, and Benjamin Perkins. Prior to the adoption by the United States government of the Panama Canal project, and during the presidency of Mr. McKinley, one of the largest, if not the largest, syndicates of moneyed men ever gathered together obtained a concession from the government of Nicaragua for the construction of a canal known as the Nicaragua Canal. This syndicate, which proposed to build the canal without government aid, was composed of the Messrs. Vanderbilt, Astor, Rockefeller, Mills, Stillman, Grace, Crimmins, and others of equal standing, and was represented before the committee of Congress upon the question of recognition and protection, by Mr. McClure as its counsel, he having organized the corporation under which it was proposed to operate. Mr. McClure is a member of the Manhattan, New York Athletic and other clubs, and the Bar Association; of which he has been a member of the judiciary and other committees. He has also been honored with the presidency of the Metropolitan Surety Company.
=McConway, William=, of the McConway & Torley Co., Pittsburg, Pa. (Life member of the Society.)
=McCormick, Edward R.=, 15 West 38th Street, New York City.
=McCormick, James W.=, of the Judkins & McCormick Co., importers of millinery goods, 10–16 West 20th Street, New York City; residence, 79 New England Avenue, Summit, N. J.
=McCoy, Rev. John J.= (LL. D.), rector, St. Ann’s Church, Worcester, Mass.
=McCready, Rt. Rev. Mgr. Charles=, 329 West 42d Street, New York City.
=McCreery, Robert=, room 427, Produce Exchange, New York City.
=McCullough, John=, 55 Maxfield Street, New Bedford, Mass.
=McDonald, Capt. Mitchell C.=, a pay director in the navy; is at present stationed at the Naval Home, Philadelphia, Pa.
=McDonnell, Robert E.=, lawyer, 38 Park Row, New York City.
=McDonough, Hon. John J.=, Fall River, Mass.; justice of the second district court of Bristol County, Mass.
=McElroy, Rev. Charles J.=, rector, St. Augustine’s Church, Bridgeport, Conn.
=McGann, James E.=, real estate, 902 Chapel Street, New Haven, Conn.
=McGann, Col. James H.=, Providence, R. I.
=McGauran, Michael S.= (M. D.), 258 Broadway, Lawrence, Mass.
=McGillicuddy, Hon. D. J.=, of the law firm McGillicuddy & Morey, Lewiston, Me.; ex-mayor of Lewiston.
=McGinn, P. F.=, 79 Friendship Street, Providence, R. I.
=McGinness, Brig.-Gen. John R.= (U. S. A.), retired, Virginia Club, Norfolk, Va.; born in Ireland; cadet at United States Military Academy, July 1, 1859; first lieutenant of ordnance, June 11, 1863; captain, February 10, 1869; major, June 1, 1881; lieutenant-colonel, July 7, 1898; colonel, June 14, 1892; retired with the rank of brigadier-general, September 17, 1904.
=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, James=, 6 Wall Street, New York City; of Benedict, Drysdale & Co. (Life member of the Society.)
=McGovern, Joseph P.=, of J. P. McGovern & Bro., fur brokers, 7 and 9 Waverly Place, New York City.
=McGowan, Rear-Admiral John=, U. S. N. (retired), 1739 N Street, N. W., Washington, D. C. (Life member of the Society.) He was born at Port Penn, Del., August 4, 1843. He is the son of John and Catherine (Caldwell) McGowan. He was educated in the public schools of Philadelphia, Pa., 1848–’53, and in private schools in Elizabeth, N. J., 1854–’59. Entering the navy, he was appointed
## acting master’s mate, March 8, 1862; was promoted to acting master