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TEMPLE PLACE 
HISTORICAL SOCIETY 
(Continued from Page 1, 3d Col.) 
Indian chief Masconomo. 
Librarian Joseph A. Torrey read 
a paper on the late Hon. Henry 
Clay Leach, paying a grand tribute 
to that man. The paper will be 
preserved on the records of the so- 
ciety as a memorial to his life and 
chararcter. The sketch follows: 
A Model Citizen. 
By Jr L Orrey. 
Henry Clay Leach was born at 
Manchester, Oct. oth, 1832. He died 
at Salem, April 17, 1906. He was 
a son of Benjamin and Lucy Story 
(Allen) , Leach. 
At the age of fifteen he graduated 
at the high school of his native 
town, and found employment in 
Boston in the furniture house of Al- 
len and Beal. While in the city he 
was a member of a large Bible class 
in the Rowe Street Baptist church, 
under the pastorate of Rev. Baron 
Stow, D. D. The .class included 
several of his townsmen, Lewis N.: 
Tappan, George C. Leach, Ariel P. 
Crowell, D. W. Lee and Samuel A. 
Parsons. They subsequently, with 
other young men of the same class, 
who were serving business appren- 
ticeship, united with the church. 
Nearly all of this noted class 
reached eminence in the social and 
business world. Two of them be- 
came Presidents of the Boston Y. 
M. C. A., and another the Treas- 
urer. The late Joseph C. Stevens, 
a well-known summer resident of 
Manchester, was a member of this 
class. 
Mr. Leach’s church association 
inspired him to improve his educa- 
tion with a view to the ministry. 
After five years of clerkship in Bos- 
ton, he entered the academy at Suf- 
field, Conn. At the end of a three 
years’ course, however, he was per- 
suaded to join his elder brother, 
John, who was in business in St. 
Louis. Two years later John died, 
and Henry embarked in business for 
himself, dealing in steamboat sup- 
plies, till his plans were broken up 
by the outbreak of the war. 
‘In going West, Mr. Leach took 
with him his Puritan principles, his 
New England habits and his Bible. 
He was active in the church, and 
Superintendent of the Sunday 
school. He was in the vortex where 
the West and the South met and 
clashed with the North. He was in 
slave territory, where sectional feel- 
ing ran high and on the verge of ex- 
plosion in the impending sectional 
Boston 
Newport 
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wat. The condition of public feel- 
ing at that time and place is ad- 
mirably depicted in Winston 
Churchill’s story entitled “The Cri- 
sis.’ He was active and fearless in 
the Union cause, and joined the 
Union league, till with loss of busi- 
ness and failure in health, he was 
obliged to return to the East. Here 
he remained for a year and a half, 
until 1863, when he joined his friend 
and townsman, Lewis N. Tappan, 
at Denver, in the business of hard- 
ware and mining supplies. In Den- 
ver he was one of the founders of 
the First Baptist church, and_ its 
first Clerk and Treasurer, and Sun- 
day School Superintendent. He 
took an active part in the stirring 
events of the period. Society was 
in a formative state. The Northern 
and Southern elements struggled 
for ascendency. 
His sturdy character found recog- 
nition in political life. He was 
elected to the Territorial senate of 
Colorado, and chosen President of 
the same. In this connection he 
was entrusted with an important 
mission. An effort was being made 
to have the Territory admitted to 
the Union as a state. This move- 
ment, headed by bad men, and un- 
Continued on next page 
