1IAYTI. 



Iir.MIMlIlKY, .1 AMI-S. 



iiapcl oft 1 iour, I'nr which a in-vv 



.- l.nilt :it tin- time iif his death. 



r his Irarning, nil eloquent 



her of deep and carne-t piety. 



:i laborious student and \vrit.T. 



red his "Contributions to the 



:il Hi-tor : " in 



!'t and its Monument-: " in the 



Lurioular Confession in the Pro- 



-eopal Church;" in 1*."U. :i transla- 



! von Tsclmdi's Antiquities 



ru." II.' o, two volumes of the 



-ill Carolina," published by Mr. 



. in Fayetti-villc; and he edited tin- papers 



. lamilton. Before entering the 



;-uvd four volumes of "Reports 



reme Court of North Carolina," and 



>t all the ( 'uses I Vcided and Reported 



rth C'arolina." Jn addition to all this, 



hi- roiitrihutions to periodical literature were 



oninoos. 



IIAY'l I. a republic in the West Indies, con- 



MLT the French-speaking portion of the 



xm I'omingo. Aren, 10,081 square 



miles; population. 572,000 inhabitants. 'J'he 



capital. Port-au-Prince, has 21,000 inhabitants. 



lent of the Republic, General Nicolas 



rard, was rlrd.-d 1 K-cember 22, 1858, 



and took the oath of office January 23, 1859. 



I'.ancial condition of the Republic l favor- 



The public revenue in 18G3 ainounted 



to 1 1. '>.._'. :;oi> Hay tien dollars; the expenditures 



: giving a surplus of $6,054,615 



.' llavtieii dollars are e.]iial to one dollar 



The ' Budget" for 1864, estimated the 



r $38,710,800, and the expenditures 



;.:'.:;!. SI 1; probable surplus, $1,378,989. 



Public debt, on January 1, 18(54, amounted to 



Haytien dollars. 



HKSSK. 1. IK e-Homburg, until 1800 a 

 Umdgravate of (lei-many, -\vith an area of 135 

 square- miles, and a population, in 1864, of 

 :. By the dcatli of the childless laud- 

 gra\r, Ferdinand, on March 24, 1806, the land- 

 trravate was united with Hesse-Darmstadt. 



II. Hc-<e-Ca<-cl, until 1866 an electf)rato of 

 (in-many, with an area of 4,430 square miles, 

 and a population, in 1864, of 7-l-"i.nii:;. ,\s. in 

 the (ierman-Italiau Avar, the elector took sides 

 with Austria, the Prussian army took posses- 

 sion of the country, and l>y a royal dCTi 



niber 20, 1866, it was united with Pru<-ia. 

 rmal installation of the Prussian Govern- 

 ment took place on October 8, 1866. 



III. Hesse-Darmstadt a trrand duchy of (u-r- 

 m-my. (Jrand I>nki\ Ludwi^' ill., born June 

 9,1806; succeeded his father on June 16, 

 1848. The country is divided into three prov- 



: I'ppcr Hesse, Stackenbur::, and Rhiiu- 

 Hease In th>- German-Italian war IK->e- 

 I'annstadt took sides witli Austria, and it con- 

 rluded. on September 3d, a special treaty of 

 A ith Prussia at Berlin. I5y this treaty it 

 ceded to Prussia the landirravato of Ilesse- 

 liomhurL'. and some districts of I'pper Hesse, 

 together about 445 square miles, and 75,102 



inhabitants; while, on the other hand. [I 

 tained from I'r. : \<-\* \\ hit h ha<l 



ln-reinl'ore ln-lon^ed to II. -< ;:--. I. Na.-sau, and 

 Frankfort, together with an area of about 38 

 sijtiaru miles, and 11,314 inhabitantB. Pres- 

 ent area of the prand duchy, 2,!i".'J 

 miles; j)opiilation 816,002. Largest citv, M. ntx. 

 l-J.T'il inhabitants; capital, Darmstadt, 29,225 

 inhabitants. IK-sse-Darmstadt forms part of 

 the North Gorman Confederation, but only for 

 the province of 1'ppcr He.-se. Yearly rcceijits, 

 as estimated in the budget for the financial 

 peiiod from 18G6 to 1868, 9,497,008 florins; 

 yearly expenditures, 9,372,062 liorins; surplus, 

 124,046 liorins. Public debt (in 1865), exclusive 

 of railroad debt, 2,747,000 tiorins. The army 

 consists of 11,751 men. 



llol.LAND. (See NETHERLANDS.) 

 1 1 ( ) N DURAS. (See CEXTUAL AMERICA.) 

 HI (illI']S, ELLEN (MOTHER ANGELA), Supe- 

 rior of St. Vincent's Hospital; born near Augher, 

 County Tyrone, Ireland, about 1806; di. 

 the hospital, New York City, Septembers, 1866. 

 She was a sister of the late Archbishop IluLrhe-, 

 and came to this country with her mother in 

 1818; her father having emigrated to Penn- 

 sylvania two years previously. The family set- 

 tled at Chambersburg, and Ellen was educated 

 in a convent at Frederick, Maryland. She 

 joined the Sisterhood of Charity at the age 

 of 22 or 23, assuming the name of Angela when 

 she took the vail, and has ever since that time 

 been a prominent member of the Order, super- 

 intending various schools and charitable institu- 

 tutions, principally in the city and State of N\-w 

 York. In 1846 the Sisterhood was divided, all 

 the various houses of the congregation in New 

 York, New Jersey, and the New England States 

 being erected into a separate congregation, the 

 headquarters of which were established at 

 Mount St. Vincent's, within the present limits 

 of the Central Park. Mother Angela was 

 chosen Superior, and retained that office for 

 six years the longest period allowed by the 

 rules. For the last eleven years she had been 

 Director of the Hospital in Eleventh Street. 



She bore a striking resemblance in person to 

 her distinguished brother, of whom she was 

 always a special favorite. She was like him, 

 also, in decision and strength of character; 

 though gho also possessed a good deal of ten- 

 derness and atleetionateness of disposition. 

 During the late war she was active and untiring 

 in her aid to the Sanitary Commission, caring 

 for the sick and providing for the necessities of 

 the needy families of absent or disabled soldiers. 

 HUMPHREY, Hon. JAMES, an American 

 lawyer and member of the United States Con- 

 was born in Fail-Held, Conn., October 9, 

 1811; died in Brooklyn, N. Y.. June 17. 1866. 

 lie was a son of the late lleman Humphrey. 

 D. D., former President of Amherst College, at. 

 which institution he graduated with di-tinction 

 in 1831. After teaching two years in Plain- 

 field Academy, Conn., he studied law at New 

 Haven, and entering upon the practice of hl 



