634 



OBIT; AMKHICAX. .TMM:-\\ ALR.) 



aid of Religious Liberty " : it was pastor 



of the Congrej: .un-h in llolh-t.-n. Mass.; 



iind in 1868-'78of the Second Chun-h in Chicopee, 

 Haas. Dr. Tucker was a founder of the "Boston 



w."imd its editor in isr.: f the 



rs of the " Bos \i 



Ho re- 



i the degree of 1>. 1>. fn.m Iowa Coll. 



hide "The Sinless One" 



(1855) and -ChrUV Infant Kinplon 



I tier U illi.im s,.y IMOIII 



1U Harf. : 4, 2. 1M<>; died III A inherit, 



Mass He was graduated at Am- 



ge in 1880, and was Professor of < 

 there from 1848 to 1808. when he resigned. II.- 

 :ig* inrludr: "The (iermania and Agrirola of 



>N with Notes for Colleges" (New V 



Colleges'* 



r for Colleges'* (1856); "Memoir of 

 llenrv Lobdell" (Boston. 1K3J); "Plato's 



N 

 Theology of the Greek Poets " (Boston, ; 



i : . : \n :.. rsl allege during it- |-'ir-t Half 



lield. M. 



ncwthenes, De Corona." edited (Boston. : 

 :iers Iliad, Books. XV I XXIV, 



-. hiinid olsej rn in Lib- 



:.-d in Wa.-hington, 



\Vhile an infant he was 



by his parent- to their home in Indiana. He 



was graduated at Indiana Asbury mow De I'auw) 



University in 1840; was admitted to the bar and 



began practice in 

 Covin^toii. Ind.. in 

 1851 : and was de- 

 candidate for ' 



in ISofJ. In 

 V.I he was Uni- 

 ted Mates di-lricl 

 attorney for Indiana ; 

 Bl-Waod 1869- 

 '?:; \va- a li.-presen- 

 tati\e iii ' 

 and in 1ft 



r from Indi- 

 ana. Because of his 



tall, erect figure he 



was called th- 

 sycaniore of the Wabash." < n enterini; the Senate 

 he was immediately appointed .mittecon 



Finance, with which he served till the dose of his 

 last term. He was also a member of the Commit- 

 tees on Immigration. Library, and International re- 

 positions (select). His maiden speech in the Senate 

 was an argument in favor of the free coinage of sil- 

 id the preservation <-f the greenback currency 

 as full legal-tender money. In 1893, howev. 

 voted to repeal the silver-purchase clause of the 

 . although he retained the 

 naoship of the Finance Committee till Decem- 

 ber. \*'.t\ nominally, he was displaced as the 1 

 "f the n..i ,\ S-nator .lones, of Arkansas, 



early in 1**14. -r V(x)rhees more than to 



any one ds<- is due the erect ion of the build r 

 whi. .-ressional Library is now installed. 



In IHHO. in a SJH--< ), ,, n the condition and necessities 

 of the library, he prepared the way for the appoint- 

 ment of the joint sdeot eomn, addi- 

 tional accommodations, and f . n years he 

 was chairman of it. In January. 181)7, he wa 

 feated for re-election to 1 

 Fairbanks. Republican. 



Wales, Leonard Kiwnc. jurist, born in Wil- 

 mington. Del., Nov. 2fi. 1*2:5: died th- 

 1897. He was graduated at Vale College in 1845, 



and was admitted t.. the bar in I 

 years he was associate < 



>! the \\'hi- party in 1 >d- 



aware. In 1849 he was app< mi.-d clerk ..f the 

 I'nited States c.-mt for the dMrid of Del;,, 

 and in is."i:t mid 1864 was elected <-ity solicitor. In 



'I in the I 



and in IHKiwas appointed a ("iinm--ii,rr of ,-n- 

 rollment to -uperinlcnd the draft ..f j r\^. While 

 serving in the la-t-namcd oilier hr became, in Oc- 

 tober, 1864, associate judge of the State coorl 

 Newcastle* Eeld th,- POM till March. 



l^sj. \\hrn he \\as appointi-d jud^e of the I'nited 



States district ooorj forthcdiMi \vare. 



.ilK. i I i.incjs \m.|..i Domist, bom in 



Boston. Mass., .Inly ft, 1840; died there. .Ian. :.. 



II. wai a MO Of AmaSS \\'alkrr. autl. 



"Tli. f Wealth." He was gradual. ! at 



Amher-t in l>>. r- 



pore sneaking, and 



studied law. He ^pjj^pjpjpjpjpjpjpjpjpjpjpjpjgjpjpj| 



L6th 

 Massaohnsel 



major A u^'. 1. Mil, 

 and was made as- 

 M-tant adjutant 

 J of the liri- 

 .U'ade umli : 

 Darius N. Conch. 

 Sept. 14.lM51.with 

 I In- rank - 

 tain. <n Aii. 11, 

 1862, he \\a- pro- 

 moted adjutant 



Couch's <i; 



with the rank of 



major, and he was 



made colonel on 



the stuff of the 'Jd Army Col 



II. . -ontiniu-d with that corps as adjuta: 



>erving successively under (i.-n. < 



ten. C.en. Andrew A. Humphrey*, ami 

 Winfield S. Hancock until he wa> captured at 



IS*! Station. Aug. 26, 18(54. He \va> sent to 



Libby Prison, but was soon paroled, and aft 



in^ exchanged rejoined the army early in 

 Hi.- health was impaired by hi- imprisoninen 1 . 

 he rcsi^n.-d .Ian. 12. I-^'M. He received ih- i 



of br oeral of volunteers, March i:'.. 



at the special reijueM of(irn. llalic,ck. Hi 

 associate- spoke of him as "a man who compre- 

 hended a po-ition at once and saw the Mr- 

 and wenknos of a line of battle ..r of the p< 

 of the enemy." lie taiiirhl Latin and (Jreek in 



Willi-ton Academy in ! rhenoe in 1868 



. ed to the "place of assi-taiit editor of the 

 Springfield " Kejuiblican." s<-ryin^ a> chief rdito ri- 

 al writer. On the recommendation of 

 Wells, special Commissioner of i he Ke\enuc in the 

 I'nited .- nt. he was ap- 



pointrd liis deputy .Ian. and was made 



chief of the Bureau of g which pl.i 



held until hi- appointment in J*?<i to the -u; 

 tendency ,f the ninth ceii-us \\hi-h he held until 

 April 1." 1- while, jn Novernb. ; 



was appointed C,,mmi ionrr of Indian Alfair- in 

 the hepartment of the Interior, and he held this 

 until 1*7:5. In I*-;:; he was called to the 

 chair of Political Kconomy in ShetVield Scientific 

 Scho>l, Vale Cniversity. which he held until his 

 elect: : to the presidency of the Maachu- 



settS Institute ( ,f Technology, in 1',.,-ton. where he 

 then continued until hi- death. From May 

 vein! ehief of the Bureau of A 



at the Centennial ExjK>sition held in Philadelphia, 



