The Board of Regents 65 



From the Western States : Benjamin Stanton, Salmon P. 

 Chase, Benjamin F. Wade, James A. Garfield, Chief Justice 

 Waite, Ezra B. Taylor, John Sherman, and Benjamin Butter- 

 worth, from Ohio ; Robert Dale Owen, Graham N. Fitch, 

 Thomas A. Hendricks, William H. English, and Schuyler 

 Colfax, from Indiana; Sidney Breese, Stephen A. Douglas, 

 Lyman Trumbull, John F. Farnsworth, Shelby M. Cullom, 

 David Davis, and Chief Justice Fuller, from Illinois; George 

 W. McCrary, Stephen F. Miller, and Nathaniel C. Deering, 

 from Iowa; Robert McClelland, Lewis Cass, David Stuart, 

 Thomas W. Ferry, and President James B. Angell, of the 

 University, from Michigan ; Gerry W. Hazleton, from Wis- 

 consin ; John J. Ingalls, from Kansas ; George Gray, from 

 Delaware; and Aaron A. Sargent and Newton Booth, from 

 California. 



As representatives from the District of Columbia, the fol- 

 lowing Mayors of Washington served from 1846 to 1871, 

 ex officio, upon the Board of Regents: 



William Winston Seaton, Walter Lenox, John W. Maury, 

 John T. Towers, William B. Magruder, Joseph G. Berret, 

 Richard Wallach, Sayles J. Bowen, and Matthew G. Emery ; 

 followed in 1872 by Henry D. Cooke, and in 1874 by Alex- 

 ander R. Shepherd, Governors of the District. 



Those who have served as citizens from the city of Wash- 

 ington have been Professor Alexander D. Bache, Superinten- 

 dent of the United States Coast Survey ; General Joseph 

 G. Totten, U. S. A. ; General Robert Delafield, U. S. A. ; 

 the Reverend Peter Parker, D. D. ; General William T. Sher- 

 man, U. S. A. ; George Bancroft ; General Montgomery C. 

 Meigs, U. S. A. ; President James C. Welling, of Columbian 

 University; ex-Senator John B. Henderson; and Gardiner 

 G. Hubbard. 



Among the Congressional Regents, those who were long- 



