576 



olinTAUIES, AMERICAN. (HOAR H- M MM .v 



liavin* acnulrwl compete ">vest- 



Zntof wa*<. he made all mWt-1 prvparale 

 eatons*v and ini|riaiii *rrh'olo|fU'al ur 







I'. 



of ancient earthwork! in 

 the services of a surveyor 

 i 







IffjMt prehistoric mounos north of the 

 JSvaCof the Great Lakes. In 1889 he ws* 

 U commissioner in chsrgr 



of the Mississippi, in 



aMudy of the 

 , contrtliiitin/ voluini 

 tat* i 



Numerous articles were published in ..-ientiti- 

 JisunsU uMialiy over the name of his employee who 



s ^to*. B S33?'" <1 !-? *-"*** 



in chaiyv of a 

 MiaaWppi. ... 



tflal* Historic*! Society, and took upa 

 Baaabli amxianta of discovery, con 



\ I! :-., -V. 



editoruU preparation of the Lewis and 

 l-Urk cxploradon- Muwoun and d-,wn the 



Colombia to the Padio eeaboard, reproduced in 4 



all the material portion of the work itassod 

 the critical eye of Mr. Hill, and he contnlite<l 

 inlsjnlimiai notes thent II. was slso associated 

 wWi tas expedition of 18*tL which discovered numer- 

 oos ancient village sites snd mounds in the head-water 

 drains** basin ofthe Mississippi snd at Leech 

 At the time of his death he was nrcpsring a \v 

 UM route of DC Soto snd his followers, Iron, r l-.ri.la 

 to the country west of the Mississippi ; a work 

 the srdusology of the Northwest, tor which he had 

 secomulated the result- 



labor at his individual cost, fc.nounting to atxnit *!'.-. 

 000; an elaborate paper on the international boundary 

 Has between La. - and the Lake of tin- 



Woods: an alls*: and various other uncompleted 

 manuscript*. The results of these scientific lal.or-. 

 far a they have come to light, have pas>. 



.- .. ..:. . .-. ' .. :.. ". -".. 

 lion snd distribution to legal heirs who reside abroad. 

 cost of publishing the rvxults of the labors 

 saajursinit wilf probably exceed $45," 





of this life work is left in jeop- 

 _ ly sines no portion of the work is com- 

 pleted: He had remained single, snd wss stricken 

 wttb his last illness on prior to the date 



set for his marriage. 



Boar. Ebsmeav ftookwood. jun-t. lorn in < .n -.rl. 

 Feb. SI. 1816: -. He 



son of Ssmuel Hnsr and a brother of United 

 flsnatiii George F. HOST; wss graduated at 

 Harvard in 18S&. and wan adn bar in 1840. 



In 1S44 he wss elected to the State Senate as an Anti- 

 slavery Whig, snd in 1848 he became one of a nota- 

 . . ,.- .- 



associstKio with the Free-soil movement In 

 asMsss of hb father^ ex | 



whither be hsd been sent by : 



astliBsitts to tost the constitutional it v of enactment^ 

 by the Lsgiatators of South c a r.lina authorizing the 

 VmprUootoent of free colored people who -I, 

 UM (Mate, the son wrote the call for a meeting of all 

 vbo were opposed to Csss snd Taylor as presidential 

 * ,to which Charles i* 



Frsncis Adams, John A. Andrew, snd Sto- 

 ;lips responded. At this meeting, in 

 r. Msm, Jons , 1848, the name of S:. 



' at the head of the electoral ticket of 

 party, which subsequently met in 

 in Buffalo, N Y. and nominated 

 In 1 *49-'M M r. Hoar was a judge 



. taoo Pies*, and in 1859-'69 he was 



*Mf<* Ihe ftQprtM Court of th. 



**. h bsssjas Attorney-General of the United 

 Mas. bat be resigned in Jons, 1870. for reasons that 

 * -l *. " tt( f J"* PW*c, wl oon afterward he was 

 1 fcr AtsoriM, jMios of the United States 

 3m ttwt* rejected by the tfeoato. The 



testiie4 to Judge Hosrt . 

 by appointtac htm s member of ti 



rUsr wss placed sj 

 UM tKwiWsoU 



: ;^\ 



'imiuiiwion that frainod the Trt- :.- 



ington in 1-71. .ludir. -I :i ti-nii 



grow in 187*-75.atul in the last y. 



for th. I nitod 8uu Senate, "hen II.: 

 * .1- Chosen. 



Holland, George W.. clergy nian ami -. 

 He, V ii.. July K 1WW; died . 



College, Salem. Vji.. in l>'>7; wa* tutor 



, , ill!. ,1 ill the the. 



' 



HCSHtoti in Union S. ninarv. N u ^-rk. In 

 wai* Iicencd and at once bo 



\ 

 . 



I:. i ' .. .< j.rin. ,|-al 



i'lthr ;i.-;i'i inir .li j-urt luriit of Koullok" ' 



!l l.r.-allic |'!l-t'.r "t till- li<M-l, 



i>h. \vhii-li h- .-rrvnl until 1 - , 

 all a.- l'ii>t"r il' 



[n the foUon a uccitcd 1 1 . 



l.aiit'i... jr College, ami in 



nt <>t' th<- inntitution. 



HoughtoD, Henry Oscar, pul'li-lii-r, tini in 



\ education wji- 



MUM .11 .scli.H.U an. I at I: 



native State, and at'ti r .-.nn- timr ^p. nt inti 

 -.!' tin- " Free Press" 

 Burlington, In- cnn-n-<l tin- 

 I'nivcrMty of Vrrnmnt. 

 ...Ih-ir,. lii- 



was fiiipl<'\f<l fr a !; 

 report* T -n tin- l'.o>tc.n 

 "Traveler" and in 184 

 entablbihcd apxintiogolttoe 



in Caiiibri.L'i-. tin- M. 

 >ir to which i> the j.r 

 K'ivrrsidi- l'r.. In 

 In- i-ntt-ntd ni>n- li.-tiin-tly 

 UJKHI his i-uret-r a> j.uli 

 U.-lu-r liy cstuhli.-hin- in 



York thr hoi. 

 Hurd tV: lloui/liton. an<l 

 tin- inihlishinir <lrj>artni-nt 

 of the husincss ci.ntinin-l 

 under that iinnrint until 1^7 S . In tin- latter y< 



tinn .f llouirliton, Osgood &C".. 

 was establbhed. the successor to th:> 



ton ulid .;r 



it.-i-lf tin- MiiH--ssor to tin- murv tmti-d ho:, 

 A- Fii-lds. In ls^) tin- Hnn name Wean 

 Milllin tV Co., which it 

 tirin |>oss088ed not <>nly th. . 

 lihrary Inheritances of the h 

 ami its predecessors to 1828. tl.< \,ar w 

 pabUahiitf IIOUHO of the line was estal 

 llou^hton's success was' the direct r. -u/ 

 tinned i-llort and native talent. He wu> u 

 8ympathie> and far r. a'-hiinr plan*, and di.; 

 toward establ'mhinLr a hiirh .-tan. lard in : 



Horenden.Thonuu.ani.st. l>rn in hnninanwa; 

 tv Cork, Ireland, Dec, 28, 1840 ; died ne:,- 



>,-h....l of De.-i L 'n ; removed 



in 1868, became a student at tin- National Acad^H 

 of Dcsitrn, and lutd a htudio in Philudel] 

 1868 till 1^74. In the 

 under Cabanel, retun, 

 A year later he was elected an assoc-i: 

 tional Am-.- 



delphia Society of Artist-; and ii 

 Y-.rk Ktchinir Clnh. i killod^B 



while making a vain attempt to rcjf-uc a 

 little jrirl ata trrade crr-'Mi_'. Hi- n,'-t notal-1-- faint 

 intrs are: "The Two Lilies" (1- 

 .. uninnin^" and u Pleasair 



-. the Paris .>al-n, 

 1876); "Thinking of Somebody" and 



