594 



OBITTAIMI-X IMERN AN. MILE.) 



connected with St. Joe* \-\lum in 



I'hiladelp' ^tt>, and i: for fifty 



years. I' t of the civil war she 



was an nr- .-r.-.i (*> hundr- 



soldiers on both sides. At tin- time <-f h.-r 

 she was believed to be the oldest Sister 

 in the 



QrMC I rnin('harl< 



,1. Minn.. 



22. 1897. Ii 1 HI th. I. 'holic 



:iry in Chariot. .n. th,- con\ent ,.f Si. Itoge in 



. :i!|.i till* ' ' ll< U'e HI lioin. 



St. Dominic h-n six 



old : and wa- ordaimd in K..II '. II. 



rvturn.d to tli.- t'nitcd States in 1MI. ami for sev- 

 oral rears was engaged in missionary labor in 

 tuck) an. I Tennessee, particularly in .Memphis 

 reeled the Church of SS. Peter ami Paul, 

 ' St. Agnes, and an orphan asylum. 

 :;ng the pastorate of tin- Memphis church 

 for thirteen years, he was appointed bishop of the 

 seeof St. Paul. Minn., in lKi!>. In is;:, the great 

 labor imposed on him by the vastness of his diocese 

 was r. tin- tetuOffOfl of northern Minne- 



sota as a vicariate and the appointment of the H< \ . 

 John Ireland as a coadjutor, and further relief was 



when Dakota was placed under the 

 f a vicar ajH.stolie. |ti>hopd: rated 



the silver jubilee of his episcopate in July, 1884, ami 

 the same year resigned his see. 



(in-aton \ II i/.i. paint, -r. Lorn in Manor Hamil- 

 :*: died in Paris, France, 



ter of the Rev.. I 

 Calcott Pratt : cam. rk in 1810. and inar- 



(ireatorex, an Kn-li-h musician, in 

 1849. After her marriage she >t udied i.aint ing and 

 took a oou hiiii;. She visited Kngland in 



1857, spent 1801-*62 in Paris, and visited 

 many and Italy in U At first she applied 



herself to landscape painting, hut in late years she 

 gave her entire attention to pen-and-ink work and 

 etching. Many of her iH-n-and-ink sketches ap- 

 peared in book" form with text by her sister, Mr-. 

 Matilda P. Despard, of which the beet know,, .,,. 

 ;-. \mmergau " ( Munich, i 



lings in Colorado" (New York. 

 1878): " Etchings in Nuremberg" (IN;:.); and -old 

 York, from the Mattery to Pdoomingdule " 

 (1876). She also made a large pen drawing of 

 "I Mirer's House in Nuremberg," which i- in the 

 Vatican. A series of eighteen ..f her sketches il- 

 lustrativ. Y,,rk was exhibited among the 



art < - at the Centennial Kxhil.it ion at 



Philadelphia in 1876. A mom: her best-known 

 paintings are Blooningdale" (1HPM: "Chateau of 

 Madame ( Mi ftV' Norrnand > The 



House of Louis Philippe in Bloomn 1884); 



and - Bloom ingdale Church. ""St. PauT> Church." 

 and "The North Dutch Churoh," each painted on a 

 panel taken from St. Paul's and the North Dutch 

 Churches (1876). Mrs. Oreatorex was the lir-t 

 woman that was elected an associate of th 

 tional Academy of Design (1868), and the only 

 woman that ever was admitted to the Artist's Fund 



of New York. 

 Green. Joseph P., naval officer, bom in M 



Ml: died in Brookline, Mass M Dec. 9, 

 1897. He was appointed a midshipman in the 

 United States naw Nov. i. i*:>7; was promoted 

 passed midshipman June in. IK : Heutenarp. 

 28, 1838; commander. S-pt. 1 i . Main. July 



16, 1862: comi 



miral, July i:j. 1870; and wa* n-tir.-d N 

 During his active career he was on sea service for 

 twenty years and five months and on shore or other 

 duty for seventeen years and three month*. II. 

 was attached to the ship-of-the-line " Ohio," of the 



:i. at the time of the Mexican 

 In ls.M -;; he wax on duly at the H..MOII I 



ii ordna: K! iii 



1855-'">> at the N lemT, Me \\a^ a^ain a^-- 



higm-d to ordnance duty in iMil. commanded th<- 



steam sl<> , ' < / , \: i.-mn.- 



n in isi'.-J ' .iri in tin- 



bombardn 



duty at I 1 -. and 



commamled the Southern sijuadroii of the, Atlantic 



,rceii I i.iill hemist. U.rn in Kaslon. I 1 .,.. 



::.d th.r, ,. lie was 



graduated in medicim- at the I'niv. IM!\ .-!' P.-nn- 



; reiiinied to Kaston ai, 

 gaged in pr;itxr. II*' wa- circled Profes- 



al and Applied ChemiMi\ 

 in ls:!7. and of Natural 8 



; 1. holding the la~t .-hair 



till 1M7. \\hi-n he returneil t<. Lafayett*- College. 

 Tin- Pardee Scientific Department, at Lafayette, was 

 organ i/'-d by him. and h< m till within a 



iili. Prof. (Jrcen built the as- 

 trODOmioa] "bser\at..ry ol . and pro.-ntrd 



it to the college. He "was the first President of the 



American Academy of Medicine, and Pn-ident of 

 the Pennsylvania Medical Society in IM',S. ll> 

 der.-d imj'x.rtant s.-r\ ice und. Mate ai.- 



{.oilltments. He received the decree of LL. {). 



from Washington and .lelTei>on QoOege in \^' 



(iroesheck. \\ illiam Slorumh in in 



New York city. July 'J 1. l s l">: died in Cincinnati, 

 nhio. July 7,1807. H-- \va- graduated at Miami 

 University, Oxford. (hio. in is:;:, ; -tudied law and 

 settled In Cincinnati to practice, in is:,i he wasa 

 member of the State < '. ,n-t it ul ional Convention ; in 

 A as appointed to t he com mission to cod; 



te : and ii. rat a Etepoolio- 



an lli-pp -entative in Congress and a member of the 



Committ. n I Bain. II.- waj a memU-r 



(f t he Peace Congress in 1861 r in 



lsr*J, and a delegate to the National I'liion Con- 

 vention in Philadelj.hia in ls(J(i. Hi. m ,,*\ notable 

 j.ublic service was <-(unsel f..r President Jiihii^.n in 

 the impeachment trial in 1*68. He had little >ym- 

 jiathyforthe President or his policy, but con^-nted 

 to be his counsel. I 'iiveiition of Liberal 



Hcjuililicaiis. di -at islled with the nomination of 

 Horace (Jreelev. j. ut Mr. (Jroe-beck in nomination 

 for the presidency, but the act was almost entirely 

 overlooked in the excitement of the campaign, and 

 when the electoral college met he received one \ote 

 for the vice-presidency, for which liN name had not 

 been mentioned. He' was ap pointed a d 

 the International Monetary Congress in Paris in 

 For many years the citi/ens of Cincinnati 

 have enjoyed fre'e park concerts as a result of his 

 gift of 100,000 for the purpose. 



Hale, (.cor-c Silxhec. lawyer, born ill l\ 



N. II 1826; din! in S Me.. 



July He was a son of Salrna Hale, the 



historian; was graduated at Harvard in 1844; 

 taught for some time in Richmond. Va 

 admitted to the bar in MoMm in is.Vi. lie edited 



the sixteenth, seventeenth, and eighteenth volumes 



of the " t'nite.: jest,* 1 an. I with H. Farn- 



ham Smith the nineteenth, and was associated with 

 Georr i John Codman in editing the 



ii. ami eighteenth volun 



the "Boston Law IJ. -porter." l\\^ other Ii f 

 work included " Memoir- of Joseph Park, 

 chief justice of New Hatiipsh. 

 of H. alf." of the Massachusetts Sii[ 



Coiir 1 d the historical sketch of the char- 



ifablc institutions of the city in the -Memorial 

 ry of lioston." He took an active inten-t in 

 the charitable and public institutions of the city, 



