592 



GEORGE.) 



as $800 apiece for portraits. In 1835 he w. 



Kur<ipe for fur' nng three 



in the gal ;idmi. 



On his return he opened a studio -first in 

 M. an 1 then in New York city. He was , 

 :nber of t S .y of Design in 



1-1 : afl 1 an Hcadem S51. Among his earli- 



ng are a portrait <>f Bishop L'ngland, 



"A Bof listening to a Ghost Slor\." " \ ^ 



* i t .1 It'll** 



y istening to a os 



1 Kachel at ifi.. Well." 

 I.T of ih,. Princes." Those best known in- 

 " landing of thf Pilgrims." " Land; 







Mother's Blc*>i Samaritan," 



liiMiluis and the Egg." "Tin- Match <Jirl." "Ilai- 



uiion 

 of I.--. 

 Francis. John Morgan, journalist, iorn in 



nty, X. V.. Man-h <;. 



-. 1^'.7. He was ap- 



.-.-.1 to'the pr :.-. ami wln-n twenty 



yearsold became editor of th. \\ tlnel, 



at Palmyra. N. N". In 1M~> In- joined the editorial 

 \ " and in tin- fol- 



lowing year that of the Troy Budget." <>f which 

 he became editor and j<ir; ..\\n.-r. tie established 

 the Troy "Tim- 1. and for many years was 



its senior proprietor and editor in chief! In the 

 early Dart of his journalistic career Mr. !'; 

 was'n r. and from the organization of i he 



Republican narty he was a member of it. II 

 a member of the State constitutional conventions 

 of 186?-'(W and 1804. ami in the last-named body 

 Mimittees on Preamble and Mill of 

 Right*, on Cities, and on Civil Service. In 1^71 

 he was appoint* Mates minister to Greece, 



where he served for three years; in 1882-'84 he was 

 minister to Portugal; and in IH-S^'Ho to Anstiia- 

 Hun_ i-r an act ..f the New York Legis- 



lature of 1895 he was appointed a member 

 elect. -ident of the inror|x>ratinii of Tin 



tec* of Scenic and Historic Places and < H.. 



In mli l.curgr Ir.tnklin. i.hy>icinn. Wii in 

 . N. II . < T ; died in Minneapolis. 



Minn.. .Inly i: 1 .. l^'.'T. He was graduated at Har- 

 185JI. and at its medical school in 

 1862; entered the Nation d army as an a->i-tant 

 n. Auj. i rat appointed a surgeon 



on the staff of ' in the following 



and afterward was placed in char-e of the organiza- 

 tion of field hospitals under (Jen. Sherman. When 

 the latter was al.oiit setting out on his march to 

 . Freii'-h wax a; M in chief 



of the 1st division. 15th Army Corps, and he held 

 st throughout the march, re-i^nin^ his rom- 

 n in .June, IMI'M. and r 



itenant ciilniirl a iiidiitl, -nch 



:. M-.. to pra< me a 



m.-mln-r of the ..riirinal staff of the Marine (imeral 

 ;-"i was aprK>iiited in-tructor in 

 leciurer on dermatology in Port- 

 land ! h.-il. In H7!> he r. Min- 

 ncapoli*: in I s ***! wa- apiM.jntcd lecturer on ol 



held the . Muni.-apoli^ Ho,,,,tal 



_-o; and in 1880 bec 

 ogy in the san. ition. He was aimointed 



n l'...ard in 1^7. 



and in !!: wa^ I'r .-id.-m f t ,,>ta Acad- 



emv of M- : 



French. John Kaymoml. -dnr-ator. horn in 

 Pulaski, Oswego County. N. V.. April 



1897. He was 

 brought up on a farm, an : at Tnion 



_ in 1 S J:>. >'..n after graduation he b- 

 Professor of Mathematics in Fail.v Seminary. 

 ton, N. Y., of which he was subsequently prii. 



1S.VI. an.l in 1S55-*50 wn^ 



lmy, hurin.i; the !::-! period In- 



I laW v and I iHL r the aeademv he 



Was admitted to the liar, and for five \. 



liraclli -ed. In l^'U lie \Va- el.-eled 1': 



Nlat hematics at (ienes-e College. When that in>li- 



tllti-: . in IS71. h.' 1 . 



ii> an of t i < 



the chair of Mathematics till \\ithin a shn time 



of his death. For m-arlx three \car- he ha<i 



vice-elm lice I lor of t he II II iv el ^it \ . I . 



1. 1.. I >. ff-'lli Alleu'llellN <'..lle-e in !" 



PallertOD, Joseph Hcotl .di-T. li..rn in Chilli- 

 . nhio. iii hecenilicr. 1^:;."i: died in 



Oakland. M.I.. Mai.-h 'Jo. IV>7. He 



was graduated at < >\frd. < >ln. I.MU Seh'Kil.aixi 



till the ontl.reak of the cixil \\ 



the National army a- captain on the stall of (;,-n. 

 (JordoM (JranpT. -.-rved through the \\ar. :md at 

 its close was a l>r.-\.-t l.ri !-.i!..:itl 



:i. <!.<>. Howard. Alter Hie \\ar he iv-mncd 

 law practice in St. I.oiiix. and during I'lv-id.-nt 

 Johnson's administration \\iis postmu>t. i tlxie. 

 At Chickaman^'a he ro.le at G -iih- when 



that p-neral made a dash into the pip at the 



je with Steedman's t\\. 



reached the position on riled 



Hindman's Confederate division from p-tt in^ r into 

 (Jen. Thomax's rear, and in a furious encounter of 

 twenty minutes drove Hindman hack utterly 

 crus!, ly half of th- men who rushed with 



,-er and Fullerton up the ridp- were killed or 

 wounded. Both p-nerals escaped unhurt, tl. 

 their clothing was riddled with IMI!! 



(.eurirc. llcnr\. political . rn in 



Philadelphia, Pa,, Sept, -J. is:! ; died in New York 

 city. Oct. *J!l. ls<.7. He was the son of a pnlili-hi-r 

 Of Protestant Fpi-copal Chuivh book>, aii-i 

 eilncati-d in the puMic 



N of his native 

 city. After working in 

 a crock' 



he went tO SCa 



culiin In iy when foiir- 

 ti-en years old, and 

 'he round trip 

 frm New York to Lon- 

 don. Melbourne. Cal- 

 cutta, and lack apiin 

 York, in alx-iit 

 fourteen month<. He 

 then, at his father' 

 sire, hepin to learn the 

 printer'strade.bui soon 



.:tc discontented l.y confinement, and shipped 

 a- an ordinarv -.-aman on a . -el bound 



from Philadelphia ' In !*> IP I . 



interested in thepild discoveries a;. i-i\-r 



in British Columbia, and shipped before the 

 on a vessel bound for the Paeii. || ( - \v..rkcd 



his way to the pdd region, wa- ilisjipju.intcd in all 

 his calculation^, and worked in Victoria till he 



I enough money to pay for a 



to San Fi II- reached that city in I S .V). 



penniless, did odd job-, and. after a f--w months of 



ne poverty, made his way to Sacrai: 

 where he found employment in a prim 

 This proved so precarious that he wa g!: 

 place as weigher in a rice mill, and while th. 



tfinpted by sliirie- of great wealth in 

 gold mining, and made a fruitless journey to the 

 interior of the State. After this he went to 

 Francisco, and worked for some time as a con, 

 tor in a newspaper ofhVe. In 1860 he joined two 

 other printers, and, with a few hundred dollars 

 they had saved between them, established a piper 

 called the" Journal." His inability to obtain 





