LIBRARY OF THE University OF California, oiF^r oi^^ ^Accession 1.0X4.47 ■ Clevis m ^M 'f^a^mi^- Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2007 with funding from IVIicrosoft Corporation http://www.archive.org/details/exercisesatcenteOOphilrich CENTENNIAL CELEBRATION OF ffilltp^^^^tqjttatUmg EXERCISES AT THE CENTENNIAL CELEBRATION OF THE FOUNDING OF PHILLIPS EXETER ACADEMY, New Hampshire, JUNE 20 AND 21, 1883. EXETER, N. H.: WILLIAM B. MORRILL, Printer. KehJs^ILetter Press. 1884. nsiV ^l^. LNTRODUCTORY. Phillips Exeter Academy is one of the few Americnii schools which can boast of having attained the age of a century. Its founder, Hon. John Phillips, LL. D., who was himself for some years a successful teacher, had the wise foresight to launch and give direction to the school in his lifetime. During eighty-four of its hundred years, it had only two principals, the one for fift}^, the other for thirty- four years. Dr. Benjamin Abbot, the former of these, elevated the infant seminaiy to the highest rank, and won for • himself a position as an educator of youth scarcely second to that of the most eminent masters of the great public schools in England. Dr. Gideon L. Soule, his suc- cessor, had already been a professor In the Academy for sixteen j^ears, and upon being advanced to the principalship, fully maintained the authority and dignity of the office, and the well earned credit and standing of the school. Among the many brilliant names upon the roll of instruct- ors in the Academy, are those of Richaru Hildreth, for fourteen years, and Joseph G. Hoyt, for eighteen years, who gained here, as they did subsequently in other fields of effort the highest repute for learning and abiUt}'. Of the Academy to-day, it is enough to say that two of its professors, Messrs. Wentworth and Cilley, have served for a quarter of a century each, with usefulness and distinction in no way 101447 iv inferior to those of the ablest of their predecessors, and that its methods, its traditions and its prestige have been fnlly preserved, while the continualh^ increasing requirements of successive years have been abundantly met. The general catalogue of Phillips P^xeter Acadeni}' reveals some extraordinary^ facts. Beyond dispute the galax}' of great names which it contains is unequalled in the annals of any school in the countr}-, within the like period. The wide diffusion of its more than five thousand Alumni is not less remarkable. Among them are found representatives from every state and territory of our own country, and from each of the four quarters of the globe. In respect to its religious character this school is entirely free from sectarianism. The Founder provided that the Prin- cipal should be a member of a Calvinistic church, and that the Trustees and Instructors should be Protestants. Every student is required to be present at the daily devotional exercises in the Chapel, and to attend some church, regularly, on the Christian Sabbath. But no denomination controls the school, and the students, or their parents or guardians for them, have the power to choose what form of religious worship and church they will attend. The morals of all pupils are sedulously inquired into, and no boy whose influ- ence threatens to be injurious is suftered to remain in the Academy. The standard of scholarship of Exeter has always been of the highest. Students are expected to keep well up with their classes, and to do their work faithfully-, in order to retain their connection with the school. Tl^ere is no room in it for the idle or the incompetent. To have gone through the course of Exeter carries with it the assurance that the work has been thoroughly done. In the discipline of the school as much freedom is allowed the pupils as is consistent with safet3' . This course has been found most efficacious in encouraojinsj them to cultivate self- reliance, a sense of honor and true manh' qualities. As the one-lmndredtli anniversary of the foundation of Phillips Exeter Academy drew near, the friends of the insti- tution assumed, with one voice, that the interesting and important event was to be celebrated by suitable memorial exercises. Meetings of those especially interested were accordingly called, at which it was determined that the celebration should be held at the close of the summer term, on June 20 and 21, 1883. It was also decided that the exercises should consist of a Reunion of the Alumni, to be held on the evening of the former daj^ ; of an Oration and a Poem, to be delivered in the forenoon of the second day ; and of Addresses by the presiding officer and distinguished guests, after the public dinner to be served in the afternoon of the second da^'. A general Committee was appointed by the Trustees to take charge of the Centennial Observances, consisting of Messrs. Charles H. Bell and John C. Phillips of their own Board, George A. Wentworth of the Facult}-, and Prentiss Cummings of Boston, Mass., and Artemas H. Holmes of New York, N. Y., of the Alumni. Invitations were given to Hon. George Bancroft, LL. D.,- of Washington, D. C, to preside at the dinner; to Rev. Horatio Steubins, D. D., of San Francisco, California, to deliver the Oration ; to Edward Hale, A. B., of Cambridge, Massachusetts, to recite the Poem; and to the Principal, Albert C. Perkins, Ph. D., to make the Address of Wel- come to the Alumni. Each of the gentlemen named accepted the part assigned him. It is only necessaiy to add that the gathering of the Alumni was fully equal to the most sanguine expectation, that the occasion was full of enjoyment to them, and highly satisfactory to every friend of Phillips Exeter Academy. Note. It is proper to state that most of the Addresses are printed from the stenographer's report, without revision by their authors. WEDNESDAY EVENING, On the evening of A\"ednesda3', June 30, the meeting of the Ahimni was held in the Acadenw hall. Albert C. Peukins, rh. D., the Principal of the Academy, presided, and delivered the following ADDRESS OF WP:LC0ME. I do not know who it was that first took from Lucretius the phrase alma mater and applied it to a school of learning. The readiness with which men have accepted and adopted it is proof that no other name more fitting or more significant could be found. The personality of such a parent is indeed somewhat intangible. No artist can draw her lineaments or define her stature. But her character, her guiding influence, her capacity to encourage and help her children, her love and solicitude for them while they are under the roof-tree, her watchful anxiety for them when they have let go her hand and have bidden her good b3'e are all solid realities that are felt in the lives of thousands of men. Many ele- ments go to make up the qualities of our cherishing mother. All that lingers in the atmosphere and constitutes the genius loci is a part of her. The aim of the founders, the influ- ence of early instructors, the wa}' in which that influence has been perpetuated, the achievements of generations of men who were trained under her, the aroma exhaled from story and tradition, the name and fame of preacher, statesman, law3'er, teacher, historian, poet, healer, man of art, man of business, all are united in filling our conception of the traits assigned to this beloved mother. I can easil}' believe that 3^on, who come back here to-day, are glad to recognize this close and tender relationship. I can assure you that all that this relationship implies is bound up in the welcome extended to each and every one of you . Some of you were here in the early 3'ears of the century. You have heard the story of the school from the lips of men who personally- knew John Phillips ; you thus link us to the day a hundred years ago, when for Phillips Exeter Academy it was "time for school to begin." You remember Dr. Abbot in the prime of his manhood, and^'ou tire able to reproduce, as no one else can, the spirit of those days of hope and promise, as well as of fullilment. We look upon you, and with renewed sense of the truth of the words we sa}' : The glor}' of children are their fathers. Others of you, the great body of the Alumni who are now in the active business of life, bearing the brunt of affairs, were here under the instruction of Dr. Soule. Ten years ago he was here to welcome me. The shadows of advancinir years touched him gently, and brought out a sweetness, rare even in the ripest old age. A father wrapt in the interests of a son could not extend to him counsel more kind and considerate than that which I received from him. My acquaintance with him of six years enables me to imagine somewhat of the cordial paternal cheer with which he would have greeted you and bidden you to this feast, if his eye could have seen tliis day. Let the memory of him, as it abides here in freshness and beauty, be the best greeting we can give to you. A thousand busy men are living who have joined our school within the last ten years. These, ipQre than aiiybod3' and 3 cvcrybucly else, arc the school oC to-diiy. Thc}^ come from colleges, from professional schools, from the first steps of the slippery steep on which they are feeling that the work of life has full}' begun. The "shades of the prison house" have not yet wholly closed around them. We hear the ring- ing tones of their voices, the confident word of hope, and feel the rush of that enthusiasm that keeps the world forever young. Our festival would be a lonesome place without them ; and with no cold or formal words we summon them. The fathers shall see the same boys in them that were here of another generation. Perhaps too they will feel that the bond which unites us most firmly is the survival of some- thing of the boyish spirit, and that in a gathering like this we can take liberties with Shakespeare and say : "One touch of boyhood makes the whole world kin." We gladly salute those not of our household, sons of other schools, benefactors, helpers in the work of training men. The "common bond" surrounds us and includes within it all who, like our founders, have set "virtue and piety" and "sound learning" as the imperishable jewels of the soul. "There are few spectacles more striking or more affecting than that which a great historical place of education presents on a solemn public day." So said Macaulay at Glasgow when the famous University had reached the end of four cen- turies. So say we at the end of our first centur}^, ^ we have turned towards the four winds in quest of the children of the Academy, as we have seen them coming from the ends of the earth and gathering around us with their wealth of honors and precious influences, their record of the impress they have stamped upon the history of their time. But, after all that can be said, the warmest welcome you will receive must be one not uttered in words. A sentiment pervades the air ; it finds expression in the thrill that darts through the clasped hands of old friends, in the gleam that lights the faces of those \yho come home again to find that sweetness of which they have been able to sing, but not to taste, in the message which the voice of nature shall speak to them as they walk over this ground and pass beneath these trees. It was under the sway of emotions, kindled by thoughts like these, at the commemoration day of a great university, that once in his life the matchless tongue of Edmund Burke faltered and became mute. It is well that in an age like this, so busy, so practical, so secular, there remains one pious pilgrimage holding a lirm place in the affections of the best men — the pilgrimage which the scholar makes to the scene of his earl}" struggles and victories. There he finds what to him comes nearest to the fountain of perpetual youth ; there he slakes his thirst with never-failing draughts ; there he learns to adjust himself to the world around him ; there he clarifies his vision, dimmed it may be by ambition, or greed, or disappointing failure ; there, let us ever devoutly pray, he shall never cease to hear the greeting of a fond mother for her returning child. Our salutation is at the end, not of a 3'ear, but of a century. It is full of the memory of what that long period has accom- plished for the school, for the country and for the world. We expect to hear much, we ought to hear much of all this ; but still in an age of progress so wonderful, we do not feel afraid to set our growing school before the eyes of men, to point to her sons girdling the earth with sources of light, enriching literature, science, art, politics, religion, and ask What centur}^ plant has produced a fairer flower? I am now permitted to present to you one of the most highly honored of the sons of the Academy — one who was here early in the present century-, a pupil of Dr. Abbot, a life-long friend of Dr. Soule, widely known as a friend of sound and liberal learning — Professor Packard, of Bowdoin College, ADDRESS OF PROF. ALPHEUS S. PACKARD, D. D. I entered the Academy, June, 1811, having been admitted on the "Phillips Foundation." I found at Capt. Hallibur- ton's, where those on the "Foundation" boarded, among others, Jared Sparks, John Gorham Palfrey, and Charles Briggs, all on their last term in the Academy before entering Harvard. Those in this position are often called "charity students." The}" were none the worse for that, none the worse for themselves, nor for the Academy. Not one of us, I am sure, has ever been ashamed of the appellation. Could the record of the "Phillips Foundation" be examined it would, I think, afford an argument in the question recent- I3" raised regarding the value of such charities. I recall with peculiar interest the assistant^ then on his' last term of service j Nathan Lord, in subsequent years President of Dartmouth. At the opening of the next academic year, September or October, 1811, a lad was admitted on the "Foundation" to one of the places made vacant b}" the entrances to college, the son of a prominent clergyman of Massachusetts, George Bancroft. We were fellow foundationers, fellow boarders, and a part of the time classmates during that year. I had advantage of my comrade in one respect, and I acknowledge in one respect only, which, however, I have held ever since ; I was a 3'ear or more older. The record has it, that I entered at twelve, he at eleven. He entered Harvard, myself at Bowdoin. Our paths have been widely divergent. It is nearly sixtj^-seven years since we had speech of each other, and, I ma}" sa}', that among special attractions to this cele- bration has been the hope of meeting my school-mate of seventy-one years ago. I do not, I trust, violate the propriety of the occasion by referring to a scene of our academic life. Older Alumni remember the exercise in declamation Wednesday afternoons in the Academv Hall. On one of those occasions, Bancroft 6 in a dialogue personated an old man, a father, in breeches, long hose, shoes with buckles, and a bob-wig. His persona- tion was done to the life. The rruicipal, Mr. Abbot, Prof. Hildreth the assistant, and Henry AY. Fuller, had seats on the floor near the entrance. From the side benches near them, I noticed the dignified Pruicipal shaking his sides with laughter at the spectacle on the stage at the farther end of the hall, of the little old man, with emphatic pointing of his forefinger, expostulating in sharp, high-strung tones of dis- pleasure. It is a tradition, that a German master as he entered his school-room was accustomed to doff his hat, reverentialk, to his pupils. When asked the meaning of that act he replied, " because among m}' bo3's may be future syndics and burgomasters of the city ;" thus obeying the precept of Juve- nal, "Reverentia maxima debetur puero." Those who were in the small circle at Capt. Halliburton's in my day thought little of the future that awaited them ; one to hold a marked position in the ministry of a church in Baltimore, then to establish wide and lasting reputation by contributions to American histor}' in the lives of Washington and Franklin, and in volumes of the diplomatic correspondence of their country, and lastly to become Professor and then President of Harvard ; another after a ministry in a historic church of Boston, to hold a professorship in Harvard and a seat in Congress, and to win a name as the accomplished and faith- ful historian of New England ; and that Worcester boy of eleven ! whatever his promise in academic or college da3's, no»soothsayer could have predicted, nor any phantasy of his own suggested, what awaited him in coming years, of honors and responsibilities in the Cabinet at Washington, of foreign embassies at the courts of St. James and Berlin, nor of that which,. more than any position in civil hfe, will bear his name to future generations, — that a labor of fifty or more years in libraries and archives of his own and foreign lands would make him the standard historian of the United States. Let me add, that I question whether any event has touched his heart more than the invitation to preside on this occasion. While thus honored himself, he needs no assurance that tlie Alumni feel that his acceptance of the chair honors them. The ideal)}' such an occasion as tliis is naturally suggested, ' how important such an institution is to the country ! The famous schools of England, Eton, Harrow on the Hill, Charter House, Rugb}', how have they contributed to the stabilit}^ and fame of England ! Wlien the Marquis of Welles- ley was drawing near his end, in remembrance of liis school-days, he enjoined that his body should be laid in the chapel of Eton ; and his more renowned ])rother, the Iron Duke, when he revisited the same school of his early life, and w^as reminded of the achievements of his life in its prime, exclaimed, "It was at Eton that Waterloo was won ;" and in our time that same school sent to Oxford, then to Parlia- ment, and lastly to the position he now holds as one of the ablest, if not the ablest and most cultured of the prime ministei*s of England, William E. Gladstone. The names I just now mentioned on the "Phillips Founda^ tion" of my da3'j and I will add those of the twin- brothers, William Bourne Oliver and Oliver William l^oilrne Peabod}^, valued names in this town, of Jona- than ■ P. Cilshing, who afterwards left an honored remem- brance as President of Hampden Sidney College in Virginia, and I must add, that of Gideon Lane Soulc, who came on the "Foundation" a year after me, whose emi- nent service of fifty years was duly commemorated when he retired from office, — these names alone would give character and reputation to any institution. Let me remind the mem- bers of the Academy now present, that it is an inspiration to recall the remembrance of eminent men wdio have frequented the walks, and sat in the halls, under the eminent teachers of this great school. We ought to be thankful for the endowment of memory. We ma}' wish to forget many things, but who would forget 8 the precious reminiscences tiiis occasion revives? To us, who have reached ''the snow^' summits of our years," it is a compensation for some of the infirmities of advanced age, that while the present leaves dim traces on tlie memory — the past, by the constitution of our nature, is yet distinct and fresh. We can look back and down to far distant vales yet bathed in the sunlight of early da3's. I beg to add a tribute of grateful acknowledgement for what I ow^e to this venerable Institution ; to the unsurpassed dignit}', the friend- ly oversight, spirit of firm 3'et gentle command, and higli tone of scholarship, which were, and have been, maintained from its birth to its centennial dtiy. Dr. Perkins said : There is one of our sons living in a neighboring town whom I have found through an experience of man}" 3'ears, to be a most remarkable neighbor, — one who is alwa^'s seeking to do favors and never asking them. It is due to him, very largely, that we are able to look on the representations of the faces of so many of the Alumni and trustees and teachers of the school as adorn these walls ; and, if pictured lips could ever speak, I am sure they would utter his name every time he steps within this chapel. I call upon this honored benefactor to address you now — Ex- Governor Prescott. ADDRESS OF HON. BENJAMIN F. PRESCOTT. Mr. Chairman: I will not attempt to reply to your flattering introduction, because in so doing I should be obliged to refer to my own work, which might have the appearance of egotism, a quality of character which I have iilvvfi^'s supposed I did not possess. This gallery of portraits, medallions, and marble busts, with the exception of two or three, may be owing to my personal efforts. The photographs and other works of art are due to the efforts of others. My only regrets are that man}^ more are not upon the walls that rightfully belong here, and which I hope will soon adorn the collection. The group represents, so far as it goes, the faces of those who have been closely identified with the Academy. Its influence upon the pupils, I hope, is salutary. If it is, I am amply paid for my labor. But sir, I will pass this matter altogether. In order to keep within the time allotted for this occasion, I have put upon paper certain facts I wish to set forth, and which, if trusting to an ex temjyore address, I might omit. The facts and figures may be new, and perhaps of interest to the Alumni and the public who have looked forward with great interest to this memorable occasion. Mr. President : — We are coming together after an absence of man}^ years, to exchange congratulations around the shrine of this ancient, revered, and renowned institution. . We esteem it a precious privilege to be present when its record of an hundred years may be properl}' set forth in song and speech, by the eminent men who have been designated to take part in the exercises. And now at the beginning of these centennial festivities we are more than ever impressed with the magnitude of its success, and the grandeur of its history. The Founder, the distinguished patron of learning in his time, builded greater than he knew, and the result of his munificent donation here has accomplished more for the good of mankind than he ever expected or anticipated. The founding of this seminary of learning by Mr. Phillips was a bold step at the time it was done, for the Revolution was not over, and it was uncertain when peace would be declared between the colonies and Great Britain. But a good cause never waits for uncertainties. •10 This was the first charter to a literary institution granted by the state. The General Assembly was in session in this town. It was its second session. It met on the second Wednesday of March in the fifth year of the declared inde- pendence of the United States. On Tiiesda}^, April 3, 1781, the liberal charter was granted. The instrument had been well considered and matured by Mr. Pliillips and his friends. The first Constitution of the then young state was not adopt- ed until October 31, 1783. Thus the charter of this vener- able institution antedates the fundamental law of the state by more than two and one-half j'cars. The treaty of peace between the United States and Great Britain was signed November 3, 1783, hence our alma mater is older than the declared independence of the United States, and nearly ten 3'ears the^^enior of the Constitution of the Republic. The institution then is entitled to respect by age, if for nothing higher or better. Through wis6 counsels the Academy was set in motion on a broad and liberal policy, and its doors w^ere opened to the youth of the land, with no other requirements, except that they present satisfactorj* evidences of good character and minds susceptible of development. The Academy has been remarkably fortunate in its board of trust and instructors. During its long and eventful history, it has had but thirty-six trustees by election, while seven are necessary to constitute a full board. Many of this number have served from twent}'- five to forty years each. The same fact is true in reference to its principals. From 1783 to 1788 it was experimental, and was under the management of William Woodbridge. Dr. Benjamin Abbot, the Nestor of American instructors if not the world's, commenced his career as principal in 1788, and held and fully maintained that responsible position for fifty years, when, in 1838, he retired full of honor, command- ing the respect and love of all who knew him. He was dignified, courteous, watchful, and kind. Dr. Gideon L. Soule began his labors in the Acadcni}' in 1822, as an 11 and served witJi dis- tinguished ability in that chair until 1838, a period of sixteen 3'ears, when he was unanimously elected principal to succeed Dr. Abbot, and he served in that position thirt^'-five years, making fifty one 3'ears of continuous service, the combined service of the two being 101 years, and the principalship, eightj'-five years, a fact not known in the history of this or au}^ other countr\\ lie, too, retired like his predecessor, beloved by all, and commanding universal respect. At the retirement of Dr. Soule, in 1873, the present principal. Dr. Albert C. Perkins, commenced his duties as governor of the school, and took upon his shoulders the mantle that had been so gracefully worn by his ]n'edecessor. He has served a decade, having had more than a thousand pupils under his management. The school has materially increased in num- bers under his wise administration, and he, too, laj^s aside the mantle untarnished, which he received from his illustrious predecessors. Ma}- it always rest upon equally worthy shoulders. What a remakable history ! What other school in the whole world can present the record of having run a completed century with one preceptor and three principals, and under two of the latter eighty-five 3' ears ? The world may ask for a statement of our record, whether the result in the past century has been suflicient to warrant its support and patronage in the future. I have prepared a brief and incomplete summary, in no instance exceeding the figures, and in most instances falling far short of the number in each division, owing to the want of data to make a perfect exhibit. It appears that the whole number of pupils who have had their names entered upon the records is 5,278, of which number over 1,200 have been graduates of colleges, and up- wards of 100 are now in colleges, not yet graduated. From this number we have had five Ministers Plenipotentiar}^ to the courts of the most powerful and prominent nations, 12 seven Cabinet ministers in the administration of our own government, eight Senators, and twent\^ Representatives in the Congress of the United States ; twelve Governors of states, one Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court, four Chief Justices of the Supreme Courts of states, sixteen Associate Justices of the Supreme Courts of states, four Justices of the Circuit Courts of the United States. Attorne}' Generals of states, 3 ; presidents of colleges, 9 ; professors in colleges, i)2 ; clergymen, 180 ; teachers, 245 ; attorneys at law, 510 ; physicians, 2G2 ; authors, 32 ; editors, 25 ; journalists, 20 ; eminent historians, 4 ; mer- chants, 2G0 ; captains in the mercantile marine, 33; major- generals in the armj^, 3 ; rear admirals in the navy, 2 ; and scores of officers in both departments of the service. In fact there is scarcely a branch of business which is not represented by men who received their early, and in many instances only education here. If any institution can show a better record, let it do so on its hundredth anniver- sary. Some may ask for names. I will designate a few without classification. Lewis Cass, Daniel Webster, Leverett Sal- tonstall, Edward Everett, George Bancroft, Jared Sparks, John A. Dix, Joseph Stevens Buckminster, Joseph Greene Cogswell, John G. Palfrey, Gideon L. Soule, WilUam B. O. Peabod}^, Francis Bo wen, Alpheus Crosby, John P. Hale, Jeffries Wyman. In this short list we find the most accom- plished diplomats, statesmen, divines, historians, authors, teachers, scholars, and legislators this country has known, whose names and fame reach beyond the limits of the repub- lic, and are well known and honored in lands beyond the sea. Time forbids my going farther. There has been but one purpose here, and that has been to establish the pupils firmlj' in the elementary principles of the languages taught and the sciences incorporated in the curriculum. With the foundation well laid and thoroughly understood, the future development is made eas}'. Manli- 13 ness and selt'-roliance are taught and made cons[)icuous, both of which are of the utmost importance. The work here is done without ostentation or unnecessary sliow. The school has stood in the front rank of the classi- cal institutions of the country because it has been governed by one purpose, to thoroughly instruct the pupils in the branches taught. Unnecessary, unimportant and harsh rules and regulations were never adopted for the government of the boys, but the3^ were expected to maintain the dignified bearing of gentlemen, and bring honor to themselves and the school. The institution has been conservative and at the same time progressive. It has never caught up the radical notions of the day, but has stood for a full, rounded and well develop- ed education, symmetrical in every part, without cramping or narrowing one faculty for the benefit of the others. Jt is well known to the colleges and universities of the country, and its course has always received their approval and en- dorsement. In fact it has been large enough to establish a curriculum which the colleges have accepted, as it antedates most of them ; and with such eminent instructors, a course of preparator}^ studies was arranged that met the requirements of any college. I have alluded to the principals. I should be direlict to duty if I failed to mention some of those who have aided in the instruction and management of the Academy', to whom much of its prosperity and success is due. These principals have been supported b3' such distinguished schol- ars as Daniel Dana, Nicholas Emery, Samuel D. Parker, Joseph Stevens Buckminster, Ashur Ware, Francis Bowen, Ebenezer Adams, Hosea Hildreth, Alexander II. Everett, the Peabodys, Nathan Lord, James Walker, Joseph Gibson Hoyt, Paul A. Chadbourne, George A. AYentworth, Brad- bury L. Cilley. Hosea Hildreth served as instructor four- teen years, Joseph G. Hoyt eighteen, George A. Wentworth twenty-five, and Bradbury L. Cilley, twent3^-four years. u No school can iail when directed even in part by such men, and the standard of scholarship under such instruction cannot be low. It was a fortunate circumstance that the Academy was located in this town, noted for the urbanity and culture of its citizens during its entire history. The influence of the men and women here has aided much in moulding the char- acter of the boys who had the good fortune of their society. Mr. President — the past is secure, the future of the insti- tution is full of promise. Its past hundred years have been a marvelous success. It has had unbroken prosperity. It has done its full share in directing the rise and development of our common country. It has seen hundreds of colleges, and thousands of high schools and academies spring up all over the land, and many of them with princely endowments ; still its members have steadily increased. It has never been jealous of the success of others, and has endeavored to build up all educational institutions and enterprises, rather than pull down. With such a record it starts off on its second century. We cannot foretell its work in the future, but judging from the past, which is our only safe criterion, we predict for it a prosperity and influence even greater and wider than in the past. It needs larger endowments and fuller equipment to keep abreast with the demand of the age, and we trust that those who have watched its history, and known of its work, will place in the hands of the corpo- ration, which has always sacredly cared for the funds, such additional endowments as will bring corresponding prosper- ity and influence to our beloved alma mater. Dr. Perkins said : There is another institution very much like this of ours, beyond the valley of the Merdmack- You 15 know there are student contests vvliich are apt to wax tlie warmest between brothers. Sometimes our bo3's, when they come face to face with the boys of Anclover, have their interests excited a little more than the3' do at other times. It is not because they feel they are so far apart, but because the}' are so near together. We have the good fortune to have with us, this evening, the Principal of Phillips Academy' at Andover, my college friend, whom I have known since my school days, and I take great pleasure in presenting to you at this time, Dr. Bancroft. ADDRESS OF CECIL F. P. BANCROFT, Pii. D. It gives me great pleasure to take part in any cele- bration like this which commemorates the virtues and the deeds and the great worth of the Phillips family. Every student of Andover must take a profound inter- est in everything which in an^^ way contributes to the better appreciation of what that family has done for the country and for the world. Wendell Phillips, in one of his speeches, speaking of the family-, says "they have been at Andover, hence, elsewhere in America." I meet often, and alwa3's with a thrill of emotion, an esteemed friend and neighbor, Samuel Phillips, the son of Samuel Phillips, who was the son of Colonel John Phillips, who was the son of Lieutenant Governor Samuel Phillips, who was the son of the Hon. Samuel Phillips, one of the founders of the school at Andover, a brother of 3'our Dr. John Phillips, who was the joint founder with his brother at Andover and sole founder here at Exeter ; and he, in turn, was the son of the Rev. Samuel Phillips of Andover, who was the son of Mr. Samuel of Salem, who was the son of the Rev. Samuel of Rowlej', who was the son of the Rev. George of Watertown, who came to this country in 16-30 with Sir Richard Saltonstall, 16 with Simon Bnulstreet and Gov. John Wintlirop, and was the peer of these great men. The institutions at Exeter and Andovcr are the result of the sagacity and the liberality of the same persons of the same famil}' ; they were planted in the same interests ; they have labored on the same founda- tions As I said, Dr. John Phillips, some years before the planting of this school, united with his elder brother in lay- ing the foundations of the school at Andover. When Samuel Phillips died John Phillips became the president of the board of trustees. Although he gave the larger part of his fortune to this school, he was the contributor of the largest part of the quick capital of the scliool at Andover, his brother con- tributing lands and other properties for the founding of the Academy ; and in his will he left a handsome legacy which has been employed ever since, for the most part, in sustain- ing students of limited means and of great promise. The two institutions have, furthermore, been based upon the same chartered privileges, for the most part, although deriving their powers from different States. The principles enunciated in their charters are almost identical, whole paragraphs being copied from the one instrument into the other, the same idea prevailing, that learning and religion, that the teaching of young men how to live as they ought in the world, is the high end for which wealth should be employed, for which the country should aspire and through which alone the country- can live. The same persons have often served on the boards of trustees of the two schools. There has been a marked conformity in respect to instruction. Dr. Abbot was fitted for college at Andover, Dr. Soule prepared himself in part for his work here by teaching school in the Andover Academy. Dr. Perkins was prepared for college, likewise, at Andover ; and, in turn, three Principals of Phillips Andover Academy fitted for college at Exeter. There has been an interchange of teaching all along the line in other positions in the schools. There has been, further- more, a generous rivalry in the work proposed by each of the -i-fl.LlJ-' 'La^ 17 schools and ciinied Ibrward by each, each doing its own work. Only thirty miles apart, but never coming in collision, each rejoices in the prosperity of the other, each is helped b}- the prosperity of the other, so that every aid given to the school here is helpful to the school there, and every aid given to the school there is counted for a new foundation here. And I am pleased to hear that one of our own sons, one of 3'our trustees, has signalized this celebration, as he did ours five 3'ears ago, by a gift of $25,000.* But, I think, we cannot emphasize too much, on an occasion like this, the fact that the great work proposed for such a school as this goes forward upon the power of ideas rather than through the power of situation, of endowments, of those accessories which at times seem to us so dazzling and so necessary. Other schools are richer than this, other schools are older than this ; can w^e find one better than this? There are some principles which, it seems to me, account for the great prestige ar^d power of such a school as this. In the first place, it was not planned for a local interest ; it was planned for mankind. It comtemplated, not a local patronage, but it contemplated the world ; and it contemplated not ordinary boys, but, throughout its deeds of trust and its acts of incorporation and the voluminous correspondence which we have, partly in print and largely in manuscript, it will be found that the founders of this school provided for youth of excelling genius, of remarkable abili- ties, of unusual promise. They never contemplated the rank and file ; they always aspired to teach here the best minds that could be assembled, irrespective of those conditions which have prevailed elsewhere and which did prevail, perhaps, up to that very hour. The instruction here has been carried forward by the best men that could be commanded, — men the peers of the highest presidents and professors in the land, men of undoubted learning, men of undoubted zeal, *John C, X'hiUips, Esc|., of Boston, 18 men of undoubted capaeity, men of singular devotion in the work of teaching. And, again, behind it all have been those lofty views of life and of dut}', those roots of faith which have pervaded even^ endeavor on the part of those men whom we properly call the pious founders of the school ; especially these lofty views of what it is to live, of what it is to labor for others, of what it is to support the state, what public spirit means, what learning is designed to answer in all its highest and noblest uses ; so that no boy can come within the sphere of such ideas without receiving that first impulse towards generous culture, that outlook towards a future and towards others which sanctifies his every aim. These schools are sometimes called the Etons and AVin- tiiiesters and the Rugbys and the Harrows of our land. I had the privilege, a few years ago, of catching a swift glimpse of those great schools, and I was impressed with three things : first, that the (jhapel was the center of English school life ; second, that great foundations were necessary for the accomplishment of the highest ranges of educational work ; and, third, that no school can permanently prosper which does not keep in view at every point the genius of the time, the requirements of the age in which it labors. And so you will find everywhere in these great schools religious faith, you will find the evidences of princely gifts, you will find new buildings, new laboratories, new appliances of the physical sciences and the modern languages coming up as time requires, and taking their places side b}' side with the old trinity of education. Is this the Eton of America ? Oh, it will be when, in the ages, possibly the generations — if possible, let it be in the decades — to come, missions shall stand beneath these foundations, when the Principals of the Phillips Exeter Academy shall have the same consideration, enjoy the same emoluments and have the same commanding power as the Bishop of a Church, as the President of Harvard College, as the Senators whom we send to Congress, as the 19 Governors of our states. The large Ibundations must come, the great ideas must be maintained, the gifts and graces which come from the teaching of God must be present to quicken and vivify the whole. Then with men, then with money, then with all this history, with all this precious past, Miere can be no doubt that this Academy shall be, indeed, the Eton of the land. And now I come oflicially to bring 3'ou the salutations of eleven thousand pupils of 105 years, and to express the wish that this school mav flourish forever. Dr. Perkins said : There is one gentleman present with us this evening who enjoys a peculiar distinction. I think it belongs to no one else in the world. He was here, friends, a pupil under Mr. Wentworth and Mr. Cilley, and he has a son here under the same instructors. If I am wrong in the statement that this man is peculiar in that, I should like to be corrected ; otherwise I will call upon him to whom I have referred, Mr. Charles II. Pcnn^-packer. ADDRESS OF MR. CHARLES H. PENNYPACKER. 3Ir. President^ and Ladies and Gentlemen : I plead guilty to the rather embarrassing allusion made in m}^ introduction upon this occasion ; but I maj^ say in answer to it that this institution is at all times, and has been within my recollection, worthy of so atrocious a crime. I well remem- bered the circumstances under which I came to this place from the State of Pennsylvania ; I remembered distinctly the reception which I met, and, having these circumstances and that experience before my eyes and in my memory when I had a candidate to present for admission to an Academy in this country, I CQuld think of no place more fitting than ^^^e- 20 ter, New Hampshire. It was not only a place to educate the mind, not only a place for excellent mental discipline, but it also abounded in all those attributes of character which go to make up the gentleman. I remembered the teachings of Dr. Soule. Thc}^ extended beyond the recitation room. The}^ went out into the daily walks of the every-day life of the stu- dent in Exeter ; and when he left here, be it to go to Pennsyl- vania, to any Southern state or any other state, he took with him such pleasant memories that he could not but be the better for having been here. Therefore it was that I pre- sented my son to this institution, and I trust that neither the institution nor myself will ever regret the operation. M}' friends, it has been said in your hearing that Exeter has done well in the past. Her history has been made ; the record is before you. What shall we do in the present? What shall we do for the future ? That is the problem which is now presented to us upon this anniversary. It makes no difference what may have been the glories of the past hundred years ; if we do not keep abreast of the times, if we are not keenly alive to ever}' new word and every new work, we will lag in this struggle and Exeter ma}', perchance, follow the example of some other institutions. Throughout the past twent}' years, 3'ear b}" 3'ear, her Alumni have been increasing in number, and upon every glorious battle-field of our civil war, I might say, her sons have been found, either upon the one side or the other, and they battled none the less braveh' because of their experience here ; and in ever}' relation of life, no matter what it may be, whether it be the law, whether it be divinity, whether it be the medical profession or whether it be the every-day business of life, they have shown themselves worthy of this training ; and I trust, therefore, that we shall take fresh courage for the future, especiall}^ in the light of the experience that we have already heard, when the utterances of some seventy years have come down to us, when we find that good physical health has been at all times and under all circumstances upon the very best 21 understanding with scholastic training. When we remember these things, we really think there is a good chance for the boys of Exeter. Dr. Perkins said : I don't know how many of 3'ou are familiar with the town of Peterborough in New Hampshire, but I am sure it would be a pretty severe imputation on your general intelligence if I were to intimate you didn't know some of the honored sons of that town who have been here in this school. The names of the Smiths, and of the Morisons, and of the Holmeses, will occur to many of you. I now call on one of them to speak to us, the Hon. Nathaniel Holmes. ADDRESS OF HON. NATHANIEL HOLMES* It is a pleasure for me to answer for my native town, which I see by your catalogue sent four students to this Academy in the second year of its foundation and in the first year after the peace of 1783, though I see at least one here present who might more fitlj' do it. My own recollections of Exeter go back to the old Academy of fif t}' years ago ; with the new, living so far away for the most part, I have had no very near acquaintance. But m}^ two years at Phillips Exeter Academy, from 1831 to 1833, remain quite fresh among the most agreeable memories of my life. I was soon initiated and sat down to hard studj'. There was for me some novelty in the old town. One of the things that first attracted my attention was the harbor, half water, half mud-flat, and that famous single schooner moored to its solitary wharf far down the ebbino: tide. T believe I saw it 22 again this blessed day. In fact, I had first arrived here three or four weeks before the term was to begin, and, having a strong desire to see the great ocean, I took the stage along the coast to Boston and had some glimpses of it, and thence found my way home on foot to the farm in Peterborough. My father set me to hauling mill-logs until the time came to start again. I began to think I might as well have staid in Exeter. There is no need that I dwell on particulars known to man}', if not all, here present. Of course. Dr. Benjamin Abbot was the Principal and had charge of the large Latin room. I see him again upon the wall, in his picture, natural as life, sitting there among the immortal. And George J. Abbot, and for some time Henr}' French, was monitor and wielded a beneficent authority over the younger men ; and there was the Greek room under Prof. Soule ; him, too, I see again upon the opposite wall sitting familiar among the worthies of the past ; and the English room under Prof. Joseph H. Abbot. If memory serves me, some few for, whom digging at Greek roots and mathematics was rather tough work, perhaps, did sometimes have the audacity to speak of " Gid." Soule and "Joe." Abbot; but of the venerable Principal there was, I think, no abridgment of the entire reverence due to the majesty of his name and pres- ence and his gracious manner. Then there was the hall above, where the young orators began, with fear and tremb- ling, to learn the art of " winged words," and the mysterious "F. S. T." with its " Golden Branch," then (as I suppose it is still) the prime object of youthful ambition among all. An election into that fraternity was the first sign to the 3'oung hopeful that the vague wandering of his uncertain ark on a wide sea of troubles was at length nearing land. Such as had a strong predeliction for future greatness could now and then slip into the Court House, near by, and listen to the eloquence of George Sullivan, Ichabod Bartlett, the elder Atherton and Mark Farley. The still small voice of 23 the Rev. Mr. Hard spoke the words of wisdom \n the little church adjoining ; he was an elegant speaker, but his doctrine was for me, even at that da}-, a little too orthodo?^ to carrj^ my whole sympathies with him. I sometimes think that the whole of education consists in learning to read and write and cipher ; but most of us have to learn, as years advance, that, at this day of the world, to read means to know the language of all the sciences and about one-half the tongues of all the earth, living and dead ; that to write means to write books that will pay or will live —he is a rare man whose books will both pay and live — ■ and to cipher — it might dizzy the arithmetic of memory to say what, short of the entire geometry of the heavens and the earth. It is said we live in an age of transition — transition into what? into science and the unknowable? into agnosticism?^- this last seems to me to be a new classical substitute for the plain old Anglo-Saxon term " knownothingism " — into Pan- theism, perhaps, or (as Carlyle preferred to call it) Potthe- ism ; and what this may mean I never found anybody that knew or could define. For m}- part, as 3'et I see no end to knowledge or the capacity of the human mind for learning and knowing. Indeed, it is one of the wonders of our time (as it seems to me) that the most advanced science finds itself, nolens vole?is, penetrating into a purely metaphysical realm, approaching, as it were, the judicial palace of the Supreme Thought, not, indeed, by the direct high road of pure reason and the front gate, but through the by-ways and back-alle^'s, the narrow passages, " the crannies and offices of man," groping darkly for an entrance by the back door. If neither Aristotle nor Kant nor Hegel has given us a perfect theory of the universe, God, nature and man inclu- sive, wh}^ then it simply remains for somebody else to do it better. " Attempt it not ! " exclaims Thomas Carlyle. But we ma}' rest assured that there will be no ceasing of the attempt until the thing is done. For mvself I am much ^ OF THE UNIVERSITY 24 inclined to sa}', with Bacon and King Solomon of old, " That it is the wisdom of God to conceal the mysteries of the universe as in innocent pla}^ with children, and the glory of man to find them out." Dr. Perkins said : If 3'ou will look over the names on our general catalogue from 1840 to 1850, you will pause ver3' often to dwell on familiar names, — names that have become distinguished for service done in the various professions or in business. Upon a gentleman bearing one of such names I shall now call, — the Rev. Augustus Woodbury, of Provi- dence, Rhode Island. ADDRESS OF REV. AUGUSTUS WOODBURY. Gentlemen of the Alumni^ Ladies and Gentlemen : It has always been a source of regret to me that I never have had any sons to send to this Academy to follow in the foot-' steps of their father ; and the remarks of our friend from Pennsylvania have added another pang to these feelings of i'egret. When we look back upon the past and take account of what has been done, and look forward to the future with hope, believing that there are still greater things to come from this institution, it certainly seems to go without saying that we congratulate ourselves and congratulate each other that we have reached this hundredth anniversary. We are glad that we have lived to see this day. It is an occasion for recalling the associations of the past, for gathering up the scattered threads of friendships to w^eave a new bond of union ; to bid each other "God Speed" as we separate, nev- er, perhaps, to meet again on this side of the grave, remem- 25 bering our obligations to those who have so faithfulh' instructed us, and making it our ambition to be worthy of their instruction. As our venerable friend who has just taken his seat has said, and I take it is the expression of the sentiment of all of 3'ou here present, to me, at least, it is, — that among the pleasantest of the past da3's of my life were the days I spent in Exeter. We had our rivalries, our con- tests, our struggles with each other, but we had our enjoy- ments and our satisfactions. And it is a delight, now, to recall both of these, for, in these boyhood's experiences, we may well believe" that all things work together for good, if the}^ are rightly taken and rightl}^ used. The character of a school depends, of course, upon the character of its students, the character of the Alumni whom it sends forth, the charac- ter of its instructors and the character of its instruction. The students, I apprehend, will speak for themselves, as they have already spoken. It would not become me to speak of the character of the Alumni. We have had a long list of distinguished men who have received their prepara- tory training in this school ; but, of the character of the . instruction and of the character of the instructors I can well speak for a single moment. I came to Exeter about six years after Dr. Abbot had ceased to be Principal, but his venerable form was still a familiar object upon the streets. And I remember how kind and courteous he alwa3's was to the students, and how bright the day seemed to us after we had received his passing salutation. Mr. Soule was Principal. He was assisted by Messrs. Hoyt and Swan, and the obligation which I, in common with all who came under their instruction owed to those faithful men, can never be can- celled. Mr. Soule, indeed, was the object of our veneration ; Mr. Hoyt was the object of our love. I think I may safely say that I have never known any man before or since his time who was able to engage so closel}^ to himself the affections of his pupils, and any one who so fully secured their complete esteem. It was my good fortune to know 26 him quite intimately in after life, after I had left the school ; he was at my home and I was at his. And, as for the character of the instruction, it was not simply a place for preparatory training — and I think, in that regard, it was incomparable, — but it was also a place for the discipline of manners, of morals and of character. In my da}', and I think it is true of the present day, Exeter was no place for a lazy boy or a selfish boy, or a bo}' with low ambi- tions, or a boy of vulgar disposition ; and if an}- boy of that character happened to find himself here, he also found it necessary either to correct his habits or to take himself away. There was this discipline which has shown itself in the years that followed after. And I think at that time, too, — and I presume they do now, — -the instructors had a very happy method of taking the nonsense out of a boy. Boys, as you all know, and men too, for that matter, sometimes have a certain feeling of self-assurance and self-conceit ; but I think that the admonitions that were received by us at that time, — I do not intend to give myself awa^^, — the admonitions that were received by us at that time, were very effec- tual in making us at least more modest than we should have been without them. And I have often wished, when I have seen boys at public exhibitions, and even men at public exhibitions, that they might have received some such disci- pline as I received in my boyhood. And, speaking of these exhibitions, it was the custom then not to have an exhibition very often. They had not then come into vogue. Nowadays, scarcely a primary school can finish its term without having a questionable exercise of this kind ; but, in those days, public exhibitions were somewhat rare, and their rarity gave them a certain glory. It was the custom then,— it was in the old Academy, — for the young of the town to do their part in decorating the walls, and ladies it was a labor, I think, of two or three weeks. It was the duty of those boys who took part in the exhibition, to in- vite certain young ladies from the town, and to see that they 27 were escorted to the place and escorted home agani. I con- fess that it was with some misgiving as to whether it would be consistent or not with allegiance to the girls we left be- hind us, but we tried to do that dutj' as we tried to do all our other duties in the best way we could. And I have no doubt that from those happy occasions have resulted some of the unions in after life which have* been so fruitful of blessings and happiness. And, then, the Golden T^ranch, to which Judge Holmes has referred. I scarcely know what to say about that ; the contests we had there, the debates that we engaged in, the electioneering that went on, the canvassing for office that began as soon as the presiding officer's term had begun, and continued through his term in order to prepare for his successor. Now, Mr. President and gentlemen, I have known something of political canvasses in New Hampshire, when the "Independent Democrat" wiis alive and was con- testing with the "New Hampshire Patriot" for the political supremacy of this state, and I have known something of political canvassing in Massachusetts and Rhode Island, but I confess that I have never gone through a political canvass since that time which was equal to those which we had in the old room at the east end of the old Academ}'. Gover^ ernor Prescott has given us the names of a long list of those statesmen and governors, senators and representatives, (^c, and I have no doubt their success in politics has been due to their experience in the Golden Branch. I sometimes wonder whether our fellow alumnus, Gov. Butler, was not a member of the Golden Branch. On one of those particular occasions, I recollect it now, though I have not thought of the matter from that time, scarcely, till this, a very serious question w^as in dispute. It was impossible for us to settle it ; it went on for several weeks, when the thought occurred to me that possibly the member of Con- gress from the district to which I belonged might help us. And, so, in m^v boyish innocence, I sat down and wrote a 28 letter to him, staling the question and asking him to give us his counsel. He helped us very courteously indeed. He acknowledged the receipt of the note, he expressed his in- terest in the question which we were discussing, and he concluded with quoting these lines of Virgil: "Xon nostrum inter vos tantas componere lites." I should think not ! Experienced politician as he was, having long parliamentary practice in Congress, it was altogether too much for him. And I defy any man to have settled the questions which came up in those days in the Golden Branch. But I must not indulge, Mr. President. My time was limited to ten minutes, and I presume it has about expired. It has seemed to me sometimes in thinking of this institution and how much those who- have had the benefit of her instruc- tions have loved her, how she has been the object of their affections from the moment they set foot across her thresh- hold, as students and Alumni of this Academy, — it has seemed to me like the case of the old Hebrews, who, wherever they went, however far away from their native land they wandered, carried in their hearts the affec- tion for their sacred citj'. They made their annual visits for the purpose of laying on its shrine their offerings. They came back from journeyings to rebuild the temple of their adoration ; they thought of it by day, they dreamed of it by night, and when they prayed they opened their windows towards Jerusalem. The Alumni of Phillips Exeter Acade- my carr\' the institution with them wherever they may go, however far they may wander. Where'er I roam, whatever realms to see My heart untravelled fondly turns to thee. They come here to make their offerings ; and when the old Academy was burned, by their liberal contributions and willing gifts thej^ built this elegant and commodious edifice, and so they carr}' in their hearts, from the beginning4intothe 29 end, tlie interest of this sacred slirine of tlieir xoiitli. And everyone of us, I tliink, would repeat the fei-vent and impas- sioned words of the Hebrew Psalmist, "if I forget thee, oh, Alma Mater of ni}^ youth, let mN' right hand forget her cun- ning ; if I do not remember thee, let my tongue cleave to the roof of mv mouth." Dr. Perkins said : I fancy that wlien we come to examine the register that will be laid before the Alumni to-morow for their signatures, we shall find that the number of visitors heiH3 who have been in the school since 1870 will be greater than the number of all others. I shall call now upon our last speaker, who will represent these 3'ounger men, the Rev. Richard Montague, of Providence, Rhode Island. ADDRESS OF REV. RICHARD MONTAGUE. 3Ir. President : Unless my memory fails me there was, when I was here twelve years ago, a rule somewhat to this effect, the repeal of which I have never learned : That stu- dents who were living in private families must dwell in fam- ilies that are authorized to board them by the Faculty of the school ; and that if the families in which the}- were dwelling should chance, at any time, to notice that they were out af- ter ten o'clock, they should forfeit all other privileges. Having been assigned to most estimable hosts this daj^ by the authorities of this honored institution, and noticing that I am out bej'ond the regular time, and, fearing that they, perhaps, may be getting a little anxious, I think a mere word is all that a representative of the younger gradu- ates may be expected to utter. In fact I am reminded of 30 the story of the boy who with his brotlior, was expected by his pious father regiilarl}-, every morning, before he could go out to pla}', to repeat a passage of Scripture. And he was extremely anxious every morning to play, so that he managed nearly every time to repeat the required verse from Scripture. But, one morning, when he was especialW eager to get out, having overheard his brother say that "he would rather be a door keeper in the house of the Lord than to sit in the tents of wickedness forever," he simply said to his father, "so say I," and was off. After all these words of congratulation on the honorable history of our honored Academy, might it not be enough for me if I should simply add, "so say I ?" But, yet, perhaps, those of my associates who are here, if no others, would expect a single word of testimony touching what this Academy has done for us. It was m}^ privilege to be here but a year, and 3'et, in that year I think two lessons were very powerful on me. We young men are governed by our ideals, and our future and our use- fulness in the world depend npon the character of the ideals which inspire and move us. I received two ideals touching scholarship and life work in general which are summed up in two words, — thoroughness and persistence. As I look down into the faces of some of m}' honored instructors who were here then and are still working in this institution, there comes back to me most vividly the meaning of the word thoroughness. I never dared face my Greek Professor, great as was his kindness and encouraging as were his man- ner and his words, unless I had the thorough mastery of the passage of Greek in hand. And I hardly need to add that I didn't dare to 00 to the board to i)ut on a theorem in Geometry unless I knew what I was about. For myself, I am very thankful for that lesson.. It is an ideal that is worth 3'ears of striving to get. The other ideal that impressed me strongly was the neces- sity of persistence in work. I don't know of anytliing that could illustrate it better, in my recollections of my life here, 31 tiiaii tills one iustiuicc. New Eiigltind, so far tis 1 recollect, lias not been very much troubled with earthquakes ; but, in the days of the old Academy Hall, in '71, we did have a little earthquake in Exeter. We were reciting at the time to Dr. Soule, of precious memory, and suddenly there came a move- ment altogether strange and indescribable. It seemed as if the floor was going up ; it seemed as if the supporting columns in the hall were going to fall ; it seemed as though the roof would be lifted away from us, and we were, as it were, tossed in a ship by the waves. We knew not what was going to happen next. The Doctor stood it better than we did, but, at last, even he rose from his seat and looked out of the window. Then he saw that Abbot Hall was still standing and the trees were growing as the}' had been grow- ing the day before, and, resuming his seat, he said calmly, "Foster, construe that next sentence." I have ever felt since, that no matter what earthquakes of opposition might assail the purpose, or what temptation to the pleasures of case might allure, our motto should be persistent application to the work in hand. And that seems to me a lesson which it was well worth learning. I can fancy that these honored teachers who have been so influential upon the characters and lives of the hundreds of students who have gone out from this Academy, and who have gone out from this world to their better rest, may in their older days have found much pleasure by turn- ing over the old catalogues of the students whom they used to teach. It seems to me that if the aged parent can delight in recalling the careers of his children now in the prime of life and in enthusiastic work in the world, so the teacher, who has perhaps laid aside his active work and who is now in the declining years of his life, can have great pleasure in tracing the history of his successful pupils. I don't see that the Professors who are here now and who were here when 1 was, are one day older then they were twelve years ago. But, I suppose sometime, if the world 32 onh^ lasts long cnuugli, they will be ti little older, and, if they ever should be, it strikes nie that it would be an ex- ceeding great pleasure to them could they look over the record of us 3'ounger men and be able to sa}', honestly, "they have done good work in the world ;" and, if we have done good work in the world, I am sure they can each say honestly, "that work was largely done through my instruc- tion, through my inspiring influence, through the ideals that I implanted in their young minds." May every one of us younger graduates, give them the opportunity to say it truthfully. Dr. Perkins said : Now, with tiie very strongest wishes for a good bright day to-morrow, we will separate. THURSDAY FORENOON. The exercises were continued at half-past ten o'clock in the forenoon of Thursday, June 21, when the Centennial Oration and Poem were delivered in the presence of an audience that filled the great tent in the common opposite the Academy. CENTENNIAL ORATION BY REV. HORATIO STEB- BINS, D. D. Mr. Bancroft, Gentlemen of the Board of Trustees and Friends of the Academy : Wherever on the earth stand the monuments of human struggle, self-sacrifice and devotion, there it is good for the living, as they move . forward in the ever-flowing procession of generations, to pause in their march and pay venerating respect, gratitude and admiration : —a hundred years of the Academ}' justify the occasion. "We pay distinguished honors to the Founder, whose beife- factions have trirtamed the lamp of learning here and sent its mild and steady beams afar ; we cherish grateful regards for all those who have, b^^ word or deed or fostering care, strengthened the foundations of the Academe', reared its walls anew, or as masters of the mind have ministered to it^ 34 intellectual and moral life, and sent its influence abroad wide as the beams of the sun. We confess our debt to an institu- tion which has a vested earthly immortalit}- in the mind of man, and on which time and death cast no contempt ! The rise and development of institutions, of whatever name, are the rational and intelligent expression of man's individual helplessness, attesting that he has, and can have, no isolated completeness or perfection. No creature receives so great benefits from his kind as man, or is so dependent on his kind. The horse or the dog, withdrawn from his fellows of the species, shows no perceptible depreciation, and fills out the figure of his being. If brought in contact with man, the animal surpasses his companions of the tribe, and by his dependence wins a better destiny than id vouchsafed to him through communion with his own race. But man thus with- drawn is an arrested development, a frost-bitten infancy, in which even the opening buds of speech are cut down. It is, a profound saying of Spinoza that "Nothing is more useful to man than his fellow man ; no more excellent way can be desired by men for the preservation of their being, than a concord of all men in all things, such that the minds and bodies of all make up, as it were, one mind, and one body, and that all together strive to the utmost of their power to preserve their being, and all seek together the common good of all." This union and dependence of men is through identity of nature and the diffusion of that Almighty Spirit which is the inspiration of all. Human society is of the nature of an endowment, a perpetual fund, from which every man receives benefits that he cannot acquire for himself. Herein is the power of social order, civilization and history. This makes laws, manners, and religions, and that contmuity of thought and action we call the life of the race. If the animals were thus united, if they were as dependent on one another and capable of such a common bond of good, they could drive out man from the earth, and hold the world, Bqt hf^ying 35 no such dupciulence, aiul no such power of mutual help, divine order, a common mind, a public opinion are impossi- ble. The great outward social fact, expressing the unity and oneness of man's inner nature, is, that society does more for every man than he can pay for, secures to him the great privileges and immunities of existence, so that whether he will or no he has nothing that he has not received. There is no money that a man gets so much for as he does for his taxes, and when he has paid all his bills, they do not cover the full cost of all that he has had. Nor is this the result of a mutual partnership where ever}' mau pays his own share, but it is the ver}' condition and nature of man in society that bear these fruits as a tree bears apples or a vine bears grapes. There is an inherent tendenc\' of beneficence in things human, and man by the fact of his nature and his association with his fellows on the plain of that nature, receives great and enduring good, the foregleams of his destin}'. This tendency is the kej'-note of all good in the world of men and things, and all man's active beneficence and public spirit, and a hint taken from the great human theme, to augment and glorifj^ man's estate. Thus all the good that adorns the earth, the ciiarities and humanities of the human world, "out from the heart of Nature rolled." The distinguished and supreme expression of- the mutual dependence and helpfulness of men is in Education ; and perhaps the most adequate conception of human life and human society is that in which they are represented as a school. It was the vital power of that thought which made Lessing's little pamphlet. The 'Education of the Human Jiace^ one of the most fruitful seeds that was ever cast upon the furrows of the world. For this reason the founders of great schools are justly regarded as the benefactors of man- kind. Anticipating man's destiny, hastening to proclaim it, believing in their fellow men of unborn generations, having, it ma}' be, honorable desires for posthumous fame and corpo- rate immortality, or inspired with reverent passion to pro- 36 mote the great Intent, they have established perpetual fountains of living waters in the eternal heights of the mind. They have recognized the unit}^ and identity of human nature, and that, "through the ages one increasing purpose runs," and, for the promotion of that "purpose," they have set enduring privileges and opportunities, to be enjoyed with no sense of debt, but gratitude — that happy debt from which the noble mind would never be discharged, as the wise re- ceive the benefactions of the common world. The world is a school, with endowments so opulent and priviliges so great that no man can fully discharge his obligation ; and a school is a little world founded on the same plan. The historic fact illustrates the great principle, that education cherished either in great founded schools, or by illustrious public opin- ion, recognizes the essential value of man's intellectual and moral nature, and of his dependence on his fellow men for the development of that nature. Christianity was the embodi- ment of the great principle, and lent its humanizing power to promote it. Charlemagne, the genius of the middle age, conceived of education as the foster child of religion ; and the founders of the Republic identified it with the welfare of the State, whose existence was justified by its sympathy with the nature and destin}^ of man. If human (experience has taught anything, if man in action has displayed the wants and tendencies of his own being, this is manifest : that all his higher interest must be provided for, and the nobler his nature the more he wants. The sup- ply of his highest wants requires vast resources, sustained by constant care, and continually refreshed by new accessions of living power. In whatever domain the laissez faire theory may be true, it is not true when we come to man as man, in his highest relations. Man cannot be let alone or left to chance. Great provisions must be made for him : not to guard him as a child and perpetuate his feebleness, but to inspire him, as a free, self-directing, responsible being. For this, individuals, touched with exalted enthugic^sm of huma^ 37 good, while as yet an infinitely small portion of humanity discern it, establish their estates in eternal foundations, and prophetic statesmen strike the rocik of public opinion, and it pours out rivers of water ! This is our expression of that supreme bond, that binds man to man, and man to God. One of the noblest objects of human contemplation, is a man of great motives, looking upon the the world with steady, strong wisdom and pure feeling, devoted to the supreme purpose of human good. Standing in the calm inaccessible heights of moral greatness, the passions of the hour do not disturb him. The weakness, the ignorance, the foil}", the pride, the ingratitude of men, lie beneath his feet as clouds beneath some sunlit mountain glory. He believes in himself, and in the world, and in the Maker, because he walks and sees in eternal light. He has such ^ sense of the grandness of human things, that humility and gratitude move his breast. If he has great material powers, he is beset continually with the thoughtlessness of the public and the ingratitude of states. And there are those around him who speak con- temptuously of the public, and blaspheme that human socie- ty whose foundations are the ever-proceeding spirit of God. But the consummate man, of gre»t purposes of good, under- stands the prejudices and passions of the hour, and sees and feels and knows that the good he proposes is perpetual, and will stand above these at length, as the sun in his mid-day splendor stands above the morning mists that hung around his rising. Always great in his moral consciousness, he is not defeated b}^ indifference or neglect, but confident that good can never be lost, he entrusts it to his fellow men and the generations that come after him. Such a man, from the- scanty records preserved of him, was our Founder, John Phillips. Early in the history of the country, while yet this Commonwealth of New Hampshire lay upon the borders of the wilderness, amidst narrow and provincial views, hemmed in by sharp necessity to a frugality which, however friendly it might be to the severer virtues, 38 gave little opportunity to expansive S3'mpatliies, our Founder conceived a plan of enduring good on principles so vital, yet so liberal, that no collision lias arisen in a hundred years between the stipulations of his bequests and the rising intel- ligence and changing forms of the modern age ! And if no collision for a hundred years, then none forever. I am not anxious to prove him no wiser than he knew. I cheerfully accord him a place among those noble minds that have been the instruments of ideas above themselves. Tliere arc two things, however, pertaining to common sense and right reason, that a wise man of material and moral power must consider if he would do well. He must ask himself : What can I do that will supply a perpetual human want? And how can I do it so that it will be adapted, or will adapt itself to the changing circumstances of societ}' and men? Here truth culminates in paradox, and all things trul}' great and permanent are mutable. That which admits no change ma^^ exist, but it cannot be said to live. All great principles set forth in idea or purpose ever enter into new combinations and bear fresh fruits. The enlightened Founder of institu- tions must be without caprice, or whim, believing in the present order of things, but believing in it as no finalit}', and not mistaking his self-will for his last will and testament. I applaud the name and memory of our Founder, a man of simple tastes and simple habits, who, trained to theology when theology cherished that zeal which is peculiar to narrow- ness of view, was too modest to become a teacher of religion, and devoting himself to the palaver of a country trader, thus gathered an honest fortune which he set apart as the perpetual foundation of a great school, with magnanimit3', of thought and feeling, under which the Academy has been adapted to the ever wider circles of thought and intelli- gence, as naturally as corn grows or lilies bloom. I applaud him for that simplicity of mind and purpose, which, whether consciously or unconsciously, led him to establish this foun- dation not for this or for that, but for the mind and heart of 39 man ! The restriction wliicli confides the administration of the trust and the instruction of the Academy to Protestants, cannot be considered an invidious distinction against that branch of the Christian church which from high ecclesiastical motives as the custodian of truth, enrolls the modern methods of education upon its sylla])us of errors. Our school, founded on so enlightened principles, for the cultivation of those studies which were included in the general scheme of a liberal education a century ago, has expanded, under the fostering care of wise and good men in the admin- istration of its affairs, and of a line of distinguished masters and teacher, by natural impulse within, with the awakened and ever widening sympathies of learning. Although vague generalizations are to be avoided, it may be said with propriety, that the present is a period of transi- tion in education ; and there are some who say that it is more than this, a period of intellectual and moral transition, in which the general field of human life and experience is transferred from the literary to the scientific side. Without assenting to such a view as the final result of the modern spirit, the area of education has been vastly increased within the last half century, and the relative rank of the subjects of education has been modified, at least to the extent of recog- nizing individual aptitudes, and no longer requiring all to adopt the same methods as the only instruments of culture or learning. There is an opinion held by educational men, and widely diffused among those who clain to have onl}^ a common sense view of the subject, that what are called liberal studies are not well adapted to the practical duties and industries of life. The opinion has given a new impulse to what is called technical or professional education, in distinction from that general discipline, the object of which is knowledge and mental power. New subjects have been enrolled on the lists of education, and natural science, which has conquered new empires in these modern years, has opened fields of industry 40 that were unknown to former generations, and given to the common vocations of men the intellectual rank of special professions. The more man knows of the world around him the more it responds to his intelligence, and the mind in things replies to the mind in man. It is not within the scope of this occasion to discuss the relative value of studies, eitiier as a means of culture in its widest sense, or as a preparation for special vocation. It is onlj^ necessary to keep in view the distinction between liberal education and professional education. The test of the one is the discipline of the man, putting him in the widest relations with humanit}" as a general preparation for life in whatever sphere he ma}' be called to act. The test of the other is an immediate special utility. The first may not be ascetic or unpractical : the second may not be indifferent to utility of the highest kind. For all general purposes this broad distinction is sufficient to give us an idea of the place the Academ}' holds in relation to the spirit of the time. There has been a great impulse given to popular education throughout the country in the lifetime of the present genera- tion. It is forever honorable to the sagacitj' and sincerity of the founders of the Republic that they associated the common school with the welfare of the state. The civiliza- tion of our era moving westward across the continent, has borne the mighty theme aloft, like a song of victory, to the shores of the other ocean ; and it may be said with the so- briety of historj^ that the education of New England, and the civil law of New York have become the public opinion of the country. The idea of a nation of men voluntarily taxing themselves in the round sum of a hundred millions of dol- lars per annum for education, that all ma^^ have a little, inspires admiration and respect. There are those, however, who believe that the common school system of the country is a failure. I do not belong to that class. Their opinions, it seems to me, are formed on principles of touch}' aesthetics, rather than on fine intellectual and moral sympathies. The 41 common school may be mechanical, and it may be a coarse machine, and the education it gives very crude. It does not accomplish what it ought to accomplish. But in this respect it does not differ from free institutions in general, laws, man- ners and religion. The common school is no more a failure than popular liberty, constitutional law, or the Christian re- ligion are failures. It seems to be one of the unavoidable conditions of all human things that good does not do as much good as we sometimes think it ought to do. While this may seem discouraging to those inclined to take melan- choly views of human affairs, to others, cheered b}^ a mightier hope, it may suggest thftt our earthly horizons are not wide enough for the longer levers of the divine intent to swing in. The truth is, a people are educated by having the care of education,. and by being interested in it. "We do not teach an ox to browse by tying him up in the stall. Good comes only by seizing the instrumentalities through which it comes. A few years ago I was travelling in the mountains and valleys of the western coast, when I came to a place, which after the manner of new countries, was called a city, to distinguish it from the wilderness. While resting there b}^ the wayside, talking with a man who represented the local intelligence and spirit, two riders came up in half Spanish saddles, broad brimmed hats, shirt sleeves and outside boots, and their faces had a fine bronze that does not belong to academic groves. They had come in from a distance to talk with the local citizen there, about the schoolhouse and the school which they were going to estab- lish in the borders of the woods. Their business done, the intelligence and counsel which they needed got, they sprang into their saddles and were off. As they went, I remarked to the sensible man whose advice they had sought : How these men are educated by having the care of education ! The little shanty stands there, not. a poetic building, but like other simple things in human life, it cannot be seen trulj- un- less poeticall3\ There from a few homes, inspired by the 42 common affections of human nature, widely separated in a yet wild and unsubdued country, a dozen or twenty children frugally but neatly clad, find their way, plucking gentle dai- ses and flaming eschscholtzias as thej^ go, as a tribute of childhood feeling to the teacher whose gentle manners have won their love ! Those sunburnt riders understand and ap- preciate education far better than the bishops at the council of Nica?a understood and appreciated the Christian religion. There is an idea of education in the general mind of the country, crude, vague and dim it may be, like a universe 3^et in nebulous mist, but an idea that amounts almost to a religion. The public opinion whi^h provides even the most elementary education for all, however short it may come of the fulfilment of its idea, is a pledge and promise of unspeakable good. It is the acknowledgment of a great human bond arising in identity of nature and destiny. This public opinion has received a great impulse from the rapid development of the arts of life, demanding schools of special discipline and knowledge. There is an increasing conviction that let whoever will sow the seed, intelligence will reap the harvest. And there is a deeper conviction in noble minds, strong as the "ground swell" of the sea or the momentum of a planet, compared with which all other opinions arc the temporary accidents of time and circumstance, that the true ground and justification of education, is tlie man himself, his nature and being. The ultimate reason of all human disci- pline is the worth and grandeur of intellectual and moral being. On any other ground our senses are a brood of chattering apes, and the brilliant utilities of our modern civilization are a "scouring of barbarian pots and kettles." It is claimed b}' some that public education supported by the State should include the whole field of human studies from the grammar school to the university. It was a favorite idea of Channing that the public lands should be set apart for the education of the people. The public has not proved itself thus far a very safe trustee of school funds. States and \ \ o '■> " a Y OF THE UNIVERSITY cities in the Union tluit liave been endowed with more than regal splendor have squandered or lost their patrimony. The act of Congress of 1862, giving to the States a vast domain, afforded a new opportunit}' to establish what is called "the higher education" under tlie care of the State. The brilliant imagination of the illustrious founder of English polemical idealism has been fulfilled, and the name of Berkeley has been given to the site of a modern State Universit}', that fronts the western ocean. There has also been a movement in some quarters to establish a National University, to be sustained by the General Government as the crown of the public school system of the country. The general interest in education, vague, dark, groping though it may be, a wise man will interpret as the first and indispensable condition of all moral and intellectual supply, a consciousness of want. The misery of ignorance is, that it wants nothing. The man who would be a benefactor of learning, or the institution that would have an honorable rank and influence, must discern and seize this tendenc}' of the time. For all practical purposes it may be said that opinion is divided in regard to the higher education, whether it shall be entrusted to the State or to the institutions founded by private munificence. The question naturally settles itself. There is some confusion in the common mind concerning what constitutes the higher education, of which we hear so much. That education only which looks upon man imagina- tively, kindles his mental power, inspires his reason, and binds his will in the happy freedom of self-control can be called the higher education. It may not be technical or pro- fessional, but human. It may not be unpractical but it must be ideal. The truth that fronts the sun, undazzled in that insufferable light, is, that man is greater than anything he does, and treating him prosaically and practically only, is like applying the surveyor's chain to sunrise, or undertaking to find the square acres of the beauty of the world ! Rut the 44 State, as State, can regard education chiefly from the point of utilit3\ A high and noble utility it may be, but a utility that must fall short of the grandeur of intellectual and moral being. The higher education transcends state reasons. Naturally the question settles itself, and the technical or professional education falls into the hands of the common- wealth, and liberal education is committed to institutions founded, not for State but human reasons. / The spirit of the Academy then is that of wide and true sympatic with the progress of the time. As a preparatory school it anticipates the ever-enlarging area of human studies, and chooses such, as have not only utility, but fitness also for the purpose of education. Any subject worthy to be made a part of the education of the young must be such as a lad can master, and by mastering feed that hungering power of attention which constitutes the difference between a men- tal treadmill and mental activity. The subjects of science should be within the reach of thought and observation, with- out prolonged or abstruse experiment. Literature and his- tory should be presented as the temple of the world, in the vestibule of which a youth may stand with uncovered head. And Language, that "Manual of Humanity" should be adorned and enlarged, as no other study is capable of being, by comment and illustration, until the dry paradigm buds and blooms, the dwelling-place of memory and imagination. These are the views and the subjects of education which should engage the care and attention of a great founded school ; not ascetic and regardless of the useful, neither practical nor professional to the exclusion of the ideal. To this end, great funds established in former generations, and cherished and strengthened b}^ living men in succeeding time, should be administered not secretly as a private trust with which nobody has any business, but with wise regard to the right of society to know something of that in which it is most deeply interested, and which was dedicated to human good. Endowments demand perpetual vigilance not 45 only for thcii* protection, but for their use and adaptation to changing wants. Funds incapable of being adapted to the new circumstances of new generations, are a public nuisance. In a great school, a communit}^ of youth, the subject of discipline must always be one of supreme importance. It is a subject, too, which the public, and especiall3' parents, ought to understand. It is commonly supposed that a youth on leaving home for school or college encounters peculiar temptations and exposures. It may be reasonably doubted, however, whether he encounters any greater trials than he would anywhere else. ' Leaving home is a crisis alwa^'s : the momentous crisis of freedom, responsibility and self-control. Parents should understand the general fact, and lay it well to heart, that a youth carries with him the tone of thought, feeling and manners that he has imbibed in his father's house, and that school and college are entitled to some allowance on that account. The temptations of a community of studies are not more severe for youth than the tempta- tions of the general world of affairs. The guarantee of con- duct is industry, and the wisest discipline is that which encourages industry, and associates it indissolubly with all noble learning. Regulations that cannot be enforced are worse than none ; and take care lest you incur the folly of undertaking to decide when a boy becomes a young man. It is affirmed by some, that the increasing wealth of the country tends to make our great schools the resort of much idleness, extravagance and luxur}-. It is a subject about which there is doubtless much vague impression, and more vague exaggeration. But it is true that idle and expensive habits brought from home are a bad influence in a place of learning, introducing an element of difficulty into the discipline, and setting up a standard of social superiority, where the only true tests are manliness of character and an earnest mind. There can be no doubt that it is the duty of a great funded school, to crowd the vices of self-indulgent extravagance into narrow quarters, to give them no standing, and to curtail 46 llioir baleful influence by giving all its moral force iu favor of simple manners, industrious scholarship, and upright man- hood. A great funded school, established by the wise and good, while it makes no discrimination and allows no stan- dards but character and mind, should ever be the friend of the poor ; and on any other ground it has no right to be. It has been said that next to a good man in adversity, the obje((>t most pleasing to heaven is a good man successful in a great cause. That profound wisdom might be paraphrased and applied to youth in the pursuit of noble studies. If there is an object that kindles our admiration and inspires our love, it is a youth l)orn into hard necessit}', his mind warmed by the gentle heat that hatched the world, imagina- tion tinging his morning horizon, and who never dreams that he is poor so happy is he in the wealth of his unworn heart. If there is another object of intellectual and moral beaut}' that wins and fixes our admiring regards, it is a youth nurtured in affluence, surrounded by the temptations of self indulgent ease, but chastened and admonished by wise paternal counsels and example, rising above the allurements of sense, the sight of the eyes and the pride of life, and finding in industry, in intellectual labors and accomplish- ments, the field of true honor, and the moral dignit}- of self- respect I It is one glory of the Academy that it has done something to diffuse such impressions of true human worth among men. My own conviction is, that an important and indispensa- ble element in the administration of a great school, is the personal influence of masters and teachers. Presence, bear- ing, insight, character, sj'mpathy, are the invisible, indefina- ble powers of intellectual and moral guidance. A mind that has great influence, must, like the sun, send out raj's of light, and rays of heat, and there must be atmosphere to dift'use them. This light and heat and atmosphere are as essential to the intellectual and moral world, as they are to mountain, meadow or sea. The consummate master of 47 youth siii)plics in himself many of the restraints and pro- teetions of home, and his mind is lilvc a climate up(m a land- scape. The Academy has been singularl}- happy in a distinguish- ed line of Masters, and in the influence they had on the minds of succeeding generations. The late Gideon L.Soule is impressed upon my mind and memor}', as the eminent figure and representative of a great Master and Teacher of youth. When I sat in these seats', I formed a youthful opinion of him, as one of the best teachers of the Greek and Latin Classics, that American scholarship had produced. My mature judgment confirms the boyhood opinion. His gifts and acquirements as a Master, Tvere not less distin- guished, than those that belonged to him as a Teacher. Nature had endowed him with a noble frame, the most felic- itous expression of the dignit}' and courtesy that were in him. As he walked across the Campus, or stood erect, or sat in his seat in the class room, he was a model of refine- ment and of that repose that l^clongs to strength. Never have I seen a man who could so see into and see through a youth ! AYhat penetration ! What genial sagacity ! What sympathy ! What dark rebuke ! What wise reproof ! Wliat cheerful encouragement ! He multiplied his influence as in the miracle of the loaves and the fishes, and while there was enough for all, what he had left was more than he had at the beginning, for he grew wiser and better ever}' da}^ ! Coming from afar and standing here again at this distance of time I lay upon his grave this tribute of an indebted mind ! Gentlemen of the Board of Trustees : The occasion is propitious ! The sons of the Academy sent out over all the earth, return to pay revering honors ; and hovering gratitudes from afar flutter gently down to rest at her feet ! Heaven, in appointing you to this care and duty, has made you the instruments of Almighty Wisdom and Purpose to raise Human Society to moral beauty and glory ! May the purpose of Heaven be fulfilled in you, and under your care may the 48 Academy still diffuse its blessings upon the human world ! Distinguished guests and friends of learning, whose pre- sence here attests the universal s^^mpathies of the mind, will please to receive our salutations ! Mr. Bancroft: I assume not too much, but voice a senti- ment of all hearts, when in the name of this great concourse, I offer 3-0U their sincere, revering and grateful regards ! POEM BY EDWARD HALE, A. B. A happy time ! — these 3'ears that bear The nineteenth centur3' toward its close — A happy time ! and happy those Who in its blessings have their share. For when before, within our ken, Did eager progress, and research In all things new, such homage pay To all things old ? and when did men With minds more worn in reason's fra}' Find sweeter rest for all their needs In memory of their fathers' creeds ? Yes, even the aesthete's neutral soul. Which once had found in new and old Naught save a weary tale twice told, Now sees the sunflower's leaves unroll As never since the world was 3'oung, And, though faith wane in God and man. Finds lasting comfort in Queen Anne. Y^et even now I hardly hope Without offense to sing of one Whose life 'tis said is already run. Whose name her sons a few years later Will know no more as — Alma Mater. 49 As to her name, perhaps 'tis lair That one should draw the line somewhere, And Alma Mater, although not Greek, Is nearly as old, is quite antique. But she herself? Is it true as they say That like her name she has had her day ? That even when at her best estate She was ou\y a myth that is out of date ? A myth? I'll grant it — but tell me, then, What it is in the old town here That brings us back to its streets again? Are the rivers, the Fresh and the Salt, more clear Than other streams that we hold less dear ? Are the wild flowers out b}^ the Ledge more sweet, The moss more soft to the lingering feet? Are the banks of the Eddy the onlj^ spot Where the pines and the seawinds ever meet To whisper their secret and tell it not ? Is it these alone or something more That stirs our memories o'er and o'er, TJiat calls to our hearts and bids us come — Come as men to their boyhood's home — Come as brothers to meet with brother— 'i Come as sons to a foster mother? Yes, call her a myth if you must and will, But call her, if honest, a mother still ; And greet her now while yet she stands, A mother's love in her smilins; tears. Waiting to welcome with outstretched hands Her wandering sons of a hundred years. Her eyes are bright with a happy pride As she sees us coming side by side Frona farm and workshop, near and far. 50 From trade and pulpit, bench and bar ; And licr thought goes back to the tune When we were bovs who come as men. To sa}' that then in the old-time days She tanght ns well, were scant}- praise If teaching mean the steady ramming Of grammar and prosod}^, roots and rules Into the heads of would-be fools, And, just at the close of the last long year, Of liner points a judicious cramming To help one enter his college "clear." ''And didn't we do it?" Often, j^es ; And the boisterous joy in that first success Is fresh to-day. But more than that, A nobler debt we've owed to her Since first in the chapel there we sat Waiting uneasy with restless stir To have laid down the time-worn rule We thought a part of ever}' school. But after the prayer, we hear : "Young men, "The Academy has no rule until "It is broken. And now" — You know what then, And how we followed in mute surprise The lead of the master's hands and eyes As we clapped again and again once more, Until at last, with fingers sore And beating hearts, he let us go. Proudly resolving, 3-et humbly too. That as we were done by so we'd do, That trusted thus we would be true. — 'Twas our first day only ; yet even then As the bell up yonder began to ring We might have heard its legend sing : "They come as boys, but they go as men." 51 For some 'tis long ago, that day ; Yet not so long that wc need to fear That the mother will think us strangers here. Through all the years that have passed away She has followed our steps as best she might Keeping us always at least in sight ; Though in public life, perhaps, of late She has felt her zeal somewhat abate ; For things that she used to think were fixed, -^ Truth and policy, — now_^seem mixed, And are held, so far as she can see, As questions, decidedly, of degree. No, not as strangers she bids us come. Strangers? Ah, but she knows too well The tale that the missing faces tell. And the bright e3^es dim, as one by one She counts |ihose over whose work is done. Still she looks in the crowd for those With whom for more than fourscore years She shared her labors, her joys, her fears. Who won for her all else above The respect of her children, her children's love Still she looks for some younger son Whose task was ended ere well begun ; Still she looks, and not all in vain ; For Love and Memory teach her how To welcome them still with the living now. So may her children see her there A century hence, as young, as fair, And greet her then as again she stands Waiting to welcome with outstretched hands, A mother's love in her smiling tears, The sons of twice a hundred vears. THURSDAY AFTERNOON. At one o'clock i*. m., a procession, consisting of the Invit- ed Guests, Trustees, Officers, Alumni and Students of the Academ}^, was formed in Court Square under the direction of Russell Sturgis, Jr., Esq., of Boston, Chief Marshal, and marched to the second tent, where dinner was served. At the conclusion of the dinner, the Hon. George Ban- croft, President of the da}', rose and addressed the assem- bly. addiip:ss of hon. george Bancroft, ll. d. Sons of Phillips Exeter Academy: After invoking the blessing of heaven our first thought to-da}- is for our country, of which Phillips Exeter Academy is the contemporary. It was incorporated in the j-ear which saw the surrender of Cornwallis ; it was organized while the statesmen of America and England were concerting peace between the two na- tions ; it was opened during the ratification of the treaty which conducted the people of the United States to its place among the nations of the earth. Exeter Academy came into life simultaneously with our republic, and rests on the princi- 53 pie that the freedom of the people and the culture of the peo- ple must flourish together. The Founder, whose ancestors for three generations out of four had been ministers of the gospel, was himself trained to that office, but wanting power of voice, and having natural skill as a man of business, he devoted himself to secular pur- suits, yet ever with this ruling thought: "a part of my in- come is required of me for the more immediate service of God ;" and so by thrift and frugality he was able, in his own lifetime, to scatter most liberal gifts in many directions, and to found this Academy, which was of his own design as well as his own endowment, and by a two-fold title bears his name. For the place of the AcJidemy he selected Exeter, in the temperate zone of New Hampshire, and then occupied ex- clusively by a race of men who inhei*ited the right to freedom and activity of mind from the best ancestry, and retained the inexpensive habits of rural life. The Founder belonsjed to that class of Christians which has made itself famous in the world's history by its battling for civil freedom ; and by its constant zeal for public educa* tion wherever it obtained the rule, alike in Geneva and in Prussia, in Scotland and in New England. It was his will that the preceptor of the Academy should be a Calvinist, as if to inscribe on its walls that in theology the first principle is the absolute sovereignty^ of God ; that in morals the first aspiration should be for purity of will. For the instructors there was no limitation but that they should be Protestants, and in that day the people of New Englangl almost to a man were Protestants : otherwise the doors of the Academy were thrown wide open to persons -'from every quarter" of this land, and indeed of the world. The constitution of the Academy was wisely framed and partook of the best characteristics of the best English schools. As in Eton, there were scholars on the foundation around whom gathered the young volunteers ; and it is the 54 I rule that no one can harbor pupils but after approval and I under supervision. In the first five years of the school "the unwearied exer- tions" of Woodbridge, its earliest Preceptor, were baffled by his want of health. In 1788, the year in which the people of the United States adopted their Constitution, Exeter Acade- my found its great chief in Benjamin Abbot, on whom Heav- en bestowed length of days and fixedness of purpose. He found it languishing in the feebleness of childhood ; it rose at his coming into health and beaut}', and during his more than fifty years, the Academy in each year gained steadily in char- acter and in efficiency. He was a good scholar and gave thor- ough instruction in Latin and in Greek ; as a ruler of young men he was not to be surpassed. In all the long period of his service he was never known to use a word or a tone that needed to be recalled or softened. He never re- proved one scholar in the presence of another. In the time that I was under his care I cannot recall from any pupil a saying about him that was not full, of respect. To-da}^ though it is sevent}^ years since I passed from his care, my heart warms with affection as I recall his name* To Gideon Lane Soule his most able successor, all who knew him ascribe a like character. You have to-day heard his just praise from one who knew him well and spoke of him with the eloquence of united judgment and affection. ^ These two men, Abbot and Soule, filled up almost the wliole of this first century in the life of the Academy. In this age the Academy, by the progress of human culture is forced in its studies to take a wider range : the sciences knock at the door. The culture of the body is to be cared for : for why should not a scholar have health and the per- fect development of his system. Remember that Pythagoras was famed among men for his physical power ; and that the very best, most graceful and eloquent writer of prose in any language ever spoken among men, Plato, bore awa}' the prize in the athletic games of Greece. Ever after your sciiool 55 daj'S, coutiiuie to love luiture and find joy in being in her presence. Let the winds of heaven pla}- around 3'ou freely ; breathe for two or three hours a day air which you never inhale but once. In reckoning the time to which heaven lim- its 3'our life, these hours will not be counted. To-day very great numbers of us come together in this home of our early life, one m feeling ; dividing ourselves only according to our years. As we cast our eyes along the hundred arches on which stand the Exeter classes of each completed 3'ear, we turn from the last erected which rise in all their freshness and beauty to those which the waves of time have been beating into ruins. Among the many who have dropped from them before us we recall the name of Richard Hildreth the historian, son of the distinguished man who in my da}' was the ■ head of the English department of the school. John Gorham Palfrey, among most numerous competitors, has excelled everyone as the historian of New England. Jared Sparks filled a long life with most valuable contribu- tions to the history of our countr3\ Joseph Stevens Buck- minster imparted to Boston that happy impulse which bord the town onward to its great intellectual development. John P. Hale is remembered for his services in behalf of a suft'er* ing race. John A. Dix passed nearly his whole life in the public service. Edward Everett, was among his contem- poraries, swiftest in the capacity to acquire knowledge, the master of beautiful, and clear, and eloquent speech, the pure- minded patriot and statesman, the model of unshaken fidelity in friendship, a man who lived foi' others more than for him- self. The name of Lewis Cass is Written with honor in every department of the public service ; and as we turn still farther back, to an arch from which time has carried away all who stood upon it to the shores of eternity, we recall the memory of Daniel Webster, the charming companion in social life, the man who knew the way to the hearts of the farmers of New England, ever the champion of Union, one who, when he 66 uttered with impassioned earnestness his own deepest and sincerest convictions, spoke so well, that the country- names him as the greatest orator of his age. But in the presence of this crowd of aspiring 3'oang men, the past, with all its broken arches disappears from mj- eyes, and I see only the great high road of humanity on which you are travelling. Press on then to advance the welfare of 3'our country ; to feel and to act for mankind. If you come to excel in knowledge do not lie down with it on a couch to take pleasant dreams, but have the courage of 3'our opinions, and plead for truth. If you acquire wealth, remember in the employ of your wealth the great rule of life of the Founder of this Academy. If 3'ou are in public life, bend your ear and listen reverently to the counsels of lowly humanity. While your service to your fellow men must not be limited to place, remember the ever varying wants of this Academy, and with the benevolence and affection of sons, enable her to meet every new condition of her being. With these admoni- tions we, your elder brothers, cheer you on to action, happi- ness and gloryi Yet do not in reply, say to the aged, that we are passing away. To a good world belong age and 3'outh, and to us who are to go before you let your words be, "ever and forever, live joyfully and hopefully move on." President Bancroft said : Our first tribute must be . "The Memory of the Founder," and I call on the Rev. Dr. Peabodj^, ex-president of Harvard University to speak on that theme. ADDRESS OF REV. ANDREW P. PEABODY, D. D. Mr. President^ you call on me, I suppose, because in my oflicial term, with reference to the Academy, I come nearest 57 to the Founder. I have been for forty years on this board of trust, — not quite far back enough for me to have known the Founder, but I was for a year or two a co-trustee with Dr. Abbot and well remember traditions that I had from him with reference to the Founder. But you have eloquently commemorated him and have left very little for me to say. I thank you that you have made my office on this occasion so nearly a sinecure. President Bancroft : Not so ; when a man gives 3-ou a text, you should preach on it. Dr. Peabody: You remind me of my profession, and 1 will preach. Our Founder was of clerical ancestry, and cler- ical ancestry has been the ancestry of a very large propor* tion of the philanthropists, the public benefactors, the lights and guides of our 'New England community. If I were going to talk long, I could give you a good many names, and this name of Phillips, as 3'ou know, from the very first, has been illustrious. And on our present board of trust the honor of the name is perpetuated ; and perpetuated, too, in the same tone of liberal and cordial benefaction of which the founder gave the example, an example, the following of which by our Phillips is one of the prime grounds for thankfulness on this present occasion. Our Founder belonged to a class of men, not a few of whom were living in my early days, who spared that they might give. In these da3's of abounding wealth we have public benefactors, and noble public benefactors, but they, for the most part, give from the fullness, the exuberance of their wealth. I knew in my time not a few men who were rigidly and pinchingly frugal that they might have the means for large and broad munificence. All the traditions of our Founder show that he was a man of that class, a man whose domestic habits, probabl}', would have been as inexpensive as those of his comparatively poor fellow citizens ; a man who, probably, never wasted a cent or spent a cent in self-indulgence, but had all along this great plan maturing, and did not leave it to mature at his 58 death and to blossom out in Ms will, but he was a liberal giv- er in his lifetime. Taking his benefactions to our Academy, to the sister institution at Andover and to Dartmouth Col- lege, he was the greatest public benefactor, as regard pecu- niary amount, in the whole of the last century. His benefactions in his lifetime far exceeded the property that he left at his death, and with scanty provision for those whom he left behind him of his own name and kindred, almost everything tTiat remained at his death went to one or the other of these favored institutions. His forecast, his liberal- ity, his lengthened vision, the breadth of the provisions that he made for the administration of the Academy, all follow in line with his pecuniary munificence, and have led me to re- gard him, as I have no doubt he is regarded by all who hear me, as a man standing almost by himself in his time and in our New England community, a man deserving of perpetual honor, and whose name, I trust, a century hence will beheld in the same veneration and receive like eulogies to those which we pay to his memory to-da3\ I*resident Bancroft said : I know^ you want our occupations a little diversified, and so I will ask leave to read j^ou a part of a letter to a widow's son : ''I find him to be be a promising youth, and forward scholar for his age, and his age is short of ten ^xars. His talents bid fair for distinguished usefulness could he be favored with the means of obtaining an education. I am informed that he is remarkably steady in his habits, and of a studious turn of mind, and of a fair moral character." This letter was written in 1827 at Deerfield, N. H. It is addressed to the President and board of Trustees of Phillips 59 Exeter Academy, and at whose request was it made ? At the request of widow Charlotte Butler. "I have examined Benjamin Butler, her son, and find him to be a promising youth and forward scholar." Now, you see this letter was written in the year of our Lord, 1S27, so that that makes the way for the next sentiment I am going to offer you, "The Academy of the Past." And I request you, — Exeter makes nothing of turning out a Governor to a State. — I request you to listen to what may be said by the gentleman whom the great majorit^^ of the people of Massachusetts have raised to the Executive chair of that State— Benjamin Franklin Butler. ADDRESS OF HON. BENJAMIN F. BUTLER, LL. D. Mr. Fresklent, Pupils of Exeter' Academy, Ladies and Gentlemen : — The introduction given by your President has almost taken from me the power of expression. With kind- ness, with reverence, he has brought back to my mind that mother whose exertions brought me here more than half a century ago, — the first mother spending me to the second mother for that education I could not get at home. As I love and reverence her more than anything else on earth, next my love, gratitude and reverence go forth to Phillips Exeter Academj^, from which I received all of that founda- tion of education which has served me through life* So young in years that I could not call her Alma Mater, but rather, altrix, nursing mother, Exeter took me in her arms, and under the guidance of that good and great man ; — methinks in my mind's eye I see him, all that was venerable and all that was sacred to the young boy whom he took in his hand, when the kind clergyman presented me to him, and, laying his hand upon ni}' head, said, "Mj- boy, 30U can do anything that an}' man can do in this world, if you will 60 work." And that injunction I have ever remembered, and I came here, my friends, to bring back whatever I may have won by reason of the teachings of this school and to lay it at the feet of the dear Academ^^, as among the first fruits, humble and simple though they may be ; and all that I liave, and all that I ma}^ be, whatever that may be, belongs to our common mother, and I lay it upon her altar as the offering of my life. I came here also as a representative of a class for which your Founder made provision, the class of young men who have their own way to make in the world, the class of young men, nay of young boys, who, poor in everything else, were happy in an unworn heart, and felt themselves equal to the battle of the world and ready to fight it out against all odds under all circumstances and" anj' where. And you, my young friends, now with your greater advantages, with the opening of science, — for very little of scientific instruction was given to us then, — with the lightning flashing illumination upon your studies, with the steam to take you home to 3'our par-" ents at any moment, so that jou are hardly away from home while here, with all the events of the world laid every da^^ upon 3'our table for your instruction outside of your classics, what ought you not to do for yourselves and the country in the future? And with what gifts hereafter may you not come, higher, nobler, better, purer, everything that is great, to lay on the altar of 3'our dear nursing mother, Exeter Academ}^ ? I speak, I trust, with a grateful feehng that comes to each and all of her sons. If we have forgotten the benefac- tor, the Founder, it is because to all of us, the older ones as well, I trust, as the younger, the Academy has become a liv- ing, breathing thing, which we look at and remember as the nurse of our j^outh, the pride of our younger years, and the dear remembrance of our older and maturer thought, when through the lapse of time our old associates fall away one by one, till now of my class but three remain on earth to iily 61 kiiowledgo, and two of them are here. Then what is left to lis as we go down the hill of life, our work having been done for better or for worse ? When those that started with us fall away, what' is left to us but the memory of friendships? What is there else of solace ? The young world has grown up and passes bj^ us ; the old world Ijas passed from us, leaving bright memories that cluster in the heart like the rich grapes upon the fruitful vine, warmed in the sun of friend- ship. My young friends who are about to graduate from this school to go into others, in a preparatory course of edu- cation, my still younger friends who are to stay here, let me give you a thought which used to trouble me when I was here, and which undoubtedly has flitted across the mind of more than one of you. Why should I strive, what is there left for me to do ? No new worlds to discover ; no great thing to do ; all the discoveries of science are perfect- ed ; the great Newton has settled the heavens ; Hum- boldt has settled the earth ; Lavoisier and Gay Lus- sac have settled the materials of the earth in chemistry ; Homer, Milton, Virgil, have ended all that there is in poetr}^, — what is there for me to do? Now, be honest with yourselves, m}' young friends, as I am honest with you, haven't you had that thought run through j'our minds more than once? Brush it awa}- if it ever had place there. Remember that the light of science is just dawning. The best way to govern men is yet undiscovered. More than that, because more necessary, the best way to feed them is unknown. Civilization has its object in these two things : to govern and feed in the best way the largest number of men to the square acre ; and if you will find any book of philosophy, if you will find any book of political economy that will tell you that, you will have done what I have failed to do, having overlooked it perhaps in the later 3'ears of a busy life. Nay, my friends, I feel as if I were treadiug on dangerous ground here, but still I must go on : I am so unfortunate as to believe that the best way not only of gov- 62 crniiig and feeding men on earth, but of directing their conrse onward and upward to the heaven above us, is 3'et open to a little investigation. Let me say to you one word further. In my judgment, while I do not underrate classical learning, having but very little of it, and what little I have I shall not undertake to exploit here, for I have not studied a book of quotations day before yesterday in order to have some here ; and if I had, so far as the Latin tongue is con- cerned, I should not know how to pronounce it. For instance, when you and I were boys we were told that Caesar said, "Yeni, vidi, vici," and we read with admiration the orations of Cicero, but now we are told by the highest and best authoritj' that what Caesar did say was, ^'Wane, wede, witche," and that no such man as Cicero exists, and that he has left behind him one "Kikero." P^ven the dead lan- guages change. What must we expect of the living Ian. guage? Therefore, more literary culture for the scholar, for the literary man, for the author, for the poet, for the histo- rian ; nothing is so necessary ; and what sort of historians the teaching of Exeter makes, we happen to know. But to- day has come a sterner age, with its sterner duties, and here- after science and mechanical skill are to govern the world in peace or war. In war, the whole struggle now is to find out how much thickness of iron will withstand a given weight of shot ; not to find out who those brave men are that have lived since Agamemnon, — onl}^ the question of engineering. Would you not, my 3'oung friends, have been quite as willing to have been the engineer of the Brooklyn bridge, that great triumph of engineering, as to have been Sir Humphrey Davy, or even, if we may make comparisons, to have been any of the first poets of any and every age? Therefore, to practical education, such as you will get here, those that must be practical men, who are to go into the business of life, who are to govern the country, who are to make its pros- perity, its wealth, its glor^^ and its honor, will have to look. For let me tell you this truth, and ask you to take it with 63 yon, — the mechanical engineer has his hand on the throttle of the nniverse to make it proceed Iiereafter. President Bancroft said : We see how all things are con- nected, tiie Academy with the Universities, and with the Universities the schools for the professions, and with the schools for the professions, in great degree, also, the shap- ing of the Government of the country. I give you now, as a sentiment, "The Work of the Academy," And I call on my honored friend, the President of Harvard University, to speak to us on that point. ADDRESS OF PRESIDENT CHARLES W. ELIOT, LL. D. Mr. President^ Ladies and Gentlemen: — I am, I believe, the first speaker to address 3'ou who is not an Exeter bo}'. A Boston Latin school boy must needs feel diffident before those distinguished graduates of Exeter Academ}-. But I know the Academy from a different point of view from yours. I know it by a long line of excellent scholars which the Academy has sent year after year to the University. I know it by a large band of distinguished professors whom we have drawn from among Exeter boys. I know it from many of the best friends of my life, men of intellectual life, who were bred here. I know it as a national school, a school of national, and not of local, resort. I have observed that boys come to Harvard University from this institution, from all States of the Union, and I rejoice in this nationality of its repute. It is a source of strength to our country, for 64 thus are created strong, inthnato bonds of nnion. I know it is a democratic institution, where tlie rich and the poor sit opposite each other on the same benches* .But, not knowing from personal experience, I asked a distinguished graduate of the school last evening, who is prevented from being here to- (\ay, what it was that he felt ihat he owed to Exeter. He said : "I Avas a bo3\ I had lived on a farm and as a mill hand at Manchester. I went to Exeter" — he hesitated, and then broke out with a certain strong feeling which moved him. Said he, "Exeter was the dawn of the intellectual life to me." What a memorable gift ! what a sunrise was that,— 'the dawn of the intellectual life ! There is no sunrise like it, except the rise of the Sun of llighteous- ness. And he went on to sa}' : "Another thing I owe to Exeter, I got there my first lesson in man- ners." "What was it?" said I. "I was a scrubby little boy," said he, "and I met Dr. Soule in the street and he touched his hat to me, — he alwa3^s touched his hat to the boys, ^— and it set me to inquiring how such an unparalelled emergency was to be met." He soon learned to meet it and he is one of the most cultivated gentlemen and accomplished scholars of our day. Let me say a few words about the future of the school. You are met here to celebrate its past, but you mean to pre- pare for it, I have no doubt, a better future. The Academy has many needs. It needs to have its curriculum enlarged. It needs, as his Excellency the Governor of Massachusetts has well said, to have provision made for the study of science ; it needs laboratories. I have been looking about its buildings to-day. It needs better dormitories ; it needs a gymnasium ; for, let me assure you, that the intellectual and spiritual life are best built upon a sound phj^sical life. And, while I desire to express my adhesion to much that his Ex- cellency has said, let me also add that I believe that the students of this Academy should look to it for something higher than either literary or scientific training. The me- 65 chiiiiictil engineer has, indeed, his hand upon the throttle- valve of the engine of modern society, but he is not the pow- er, and the power is not in the valve. What drives the steam engine? Not the engineer, but the life-giving sun which elaborated centuries ago the coal that is put under tlie boilers. What is it that j^ou must learn here which will always be above all literature and all science, powerful though science may become? You must learn the eternal worth of character ; you must learn that the ultimate powers of the human race lie in its undying instincts and passions ; you must learn that above all material things, is man — the thoughtful, passionate and emotional being, the intellectual, and religious man. Here lies the source of the power of educated men — they have refined and strengthened their minds and their souls. And, believe me, the supreme pow- ers of this universe are not mechanical or material ; they are hope and fear and love. President Bancroft said : A good word ought to be spok- en for Exeter, — lovely spot, beautiful charming river, with tide water to bathe in, excellent streams to freeze up and skate upon in winter, good walks and drives in summer, good coasting and sleigh riding in winter. So I will give you as the next sentiment, "The Home of the Academy ;" and I ask my most valued friend Dr. Hitchcock, who knows Exeter by heart and loves it well, to say a word upon that theme. ADDRESS OF REV. ROSWELL D. HITCHCOCK, D. D. Mr. President^ Ladies and Gentlemen : I have some slight claim to be heard in response to the sentiment to which you 66 bave just listened. The claim is not of one born into the famih', but of one most kindly adopted, much more than a proselyte of the gate. Thirty-eight years ago I came here and was here for seven years. It was my good fortune to know the man, who, I supposed, was the first Principal of the Academy, Dr. Abbot, till m}^ ignorance was corrected this afternoon. He had finished his well-rounded service and was sitting on the verandah, waiting for the sun to go down. Dr. Soule was in the fulness of his strength. But Exeter had other notables, one of whom I rejoice to greet now, sitting at my left (the venerable Dr. William Perr}') ; not the *'old man eloquent," but more, immeasurably more,— the man of deeds and not words, though words were not wanting when the truth needed to be made intelligent in regard to any matter that called for the testimony of a medi- cal expert ; a man to whom many lives before me are indebted for their, lengthened da3's to behold this auspicious hour. Long may his shadow hallow this beautiful place. I am here to-day in gratitude for the man}" kindnesses which I received during these seven j-ears, — from the people of my official charge, so many of whom have passed on before me to what we call the '' land of silence ;" kindness from the people of the town, whom I carry in my grateful memory ; and, perhaps, I may be pardoned for saying grati- tude, especially, to the boys of the Academy who always treated me so kindly, and whose stout shoulders are now bearing the burdens both of church and state all the way from the Atlantic to the Pacific. The home of Phillips Exeter Academy : — Its material home needs no orator any more than Sir Christopher Wren needed a monument. Exeter has not the strength of the hills, — the strength of the hills is some way north of us, — but it has the witchery and the beauty of the plain, the beauty which pursues us along the dusty path of life, the beauty which haunts us in our dreams. Exeter is fortunate ir^ its pl|ysicq-l hon^e. It hasi, i\s we liq-ve been remii]cle4 67 here to-tlay hy the flrst great historuin ol'oiii' country and of our time, it has a home also in the history of the continent. It drew breatli with the Constitution ; it inaugurated Dr. Abbot when the government was set in operation, and its life will continue till the government and the continent and the globe shall end. There is a home of the Academy, of which we have been reminded also to-day, in the hearts of its Alumni. The President of Harvard has said many wise things but, nothing wiser, ever, in m}^ humble judgment, than this, " That when an institution ceases to beg it has ceased to grow." We applaud the scholarship of the past, but, Mr. President and gentlemen, we cannot forget that the Latin dictionary was that of Ainsworth and the Greek dictionary was that of Schrevelius with Latin definitions, and between the Ains- worth of your day and the Andrews, and the Freund and how many more I don't know, of to-day, is a vast difference ; and the difference between the Schrevelius of your day and the lexicon which has just come from the press of the Harpers measures also an immense stretch. The classical scholarship of the country is widely different at this moment from what it was. It is at once more microscopic and telescopic. We understand the Greek particles as our fathers and grandfathers did not understand them, and we understand the relations of these languages to all the lan- guages of the globe as they could not be understood by those who went before us. The past is of small account when it stops. It is only as the past moves on into the future that it has significance and worth. We praise Exeter for what it has been ; we demand of it more in the time to come, even in the knowledge of the three languages indicated in the gift of the original founder, English, Greek and Latin, — we demand of it in the future a much wider and richer curriculum. In order to do this there must be money. We can build universities, now, on the prairie. I remember the tradition very well, when the king of Prussia started his 68 University of Berlin, it was said it can have no history ; there are Heidelberg, and all the old universities ; Berlin can have no history. The answer was, "I know it has no past, but it shall have a future." We can make institutions now with the money that shall command the men. But better than wholly new institutions are old institutions with new blood put into their arteries. I remember very well, a few years ago, in conversing with Henr}^ J. Raymond, the editor of the Times J he said somewhat sadly, " The New York Herald has the advantage of me in spite of all that I can do, in its years ; it will alwa3"s be older than the Ti?nes.'' Exeter and Andover will always be older than what may be done, always ; and the best place to put money is where men began to put it the longest while ago, for the same general ends, with a wider scope of vision and with more clear and earnest purposes ; and, though I am not in conference with the Trustees of this institution and do not speak at their bidding, I should feel that I had failed in my dut}' as a preacher, bound to have some sort of respect to my text, whether it is regarded as inspired or not, if I failed to bespeak for Exeter Academy larger endowments for the time to come, that it may do a larger and a nobler work. Mr. Baiicroft said : Exeter Academy is not without its benefactors ; we hope the race of them will be continuous and marked by generosit3\ The sentiment that I give you next is in behalf of Exeter Academy, ' ' Our Benefactors ; " and I call to respond to this sentiment on the Hon. George S. Hale. ADDRESS OF HON. GEORGE S. HALE. Mr. President, and Ladies and Gentlemen: Our bene- factors, for whom you ask me to speak, were meji pf d^eds 69 rather than of words, who showed their merits in their lives and in their actions more than by any graces of speech. And I cannot but feel that I shonld better represent them by a golden silence than by the most silver speech. But I can- not deny myself the pleasure of paying to them my tribute ; I cannot deny myself the pleasure of making the acknowl- edgement which we all feel for them, if, indeed, that be necessary on this spot, on this occasion or at this time. For everything around us seems to me to speak for them and of them. That modest and unostentatious, but tasteful building, [pointing towards the Academy Hall] the product of their liberty, decorated b}^ the assiduous labors and the taste of one of them with the counterfeit presentments of their living features ; that small but useful library, for which, a few 3^ears ago, one of their number, alas, no longer living, placed in my hands a sum equal to the amount to which the salary of Benjamin Abbot was raised in the third 3'ear of his service, these constantly speak for them. But, more than anything else, those 5,000 Alumni who have risen during all these years, "rank behind rank in surges bright," and now scattered from the Atlantic to the Pacific and among the isles of the sea, have come back to us from the Gulf of California, from the mountains of Nevada, and some of whom are on this side the earth or "where half the convex world intrudes between," — all these proclaim the debt they owe to the modest but generous givers, and they do not need any words which I can add for them to-day. The catalogue is a long one — from our Founder, for whom I might add to the epitaph which has been suggested for him and say that, "Dying without issue he made posterity — he made us his foster children," and left to the succession of benefactors whom he stimulated to benevolence his example, and to his own kindred the generous spirit which in one generation after another has prompted them to hold np the lengthening chain which unites the cautious liberality of age to tlio prompt generosity of youth, and to recognize the 70 obligation which the noljiUty of descent imposed down, gentlemen, to his namesake, whose voice would more fitl}' have responded to this sentiment, if his modest3' had not been equal to his liberality. This catalogue is too long for me to characterize them in detail. We have long known that the Academy has' a history of its own, and I am grateful to the benefactor (Hon. Charles H. Bell) who has given to us an outward and visible sign of that history and done some measure of justice to these men. But our benefactions are not only in gifts. The faithful sons, now honorable men who have gone out from the Academ\', who have won their honors by her help, and have prayed towards this Mecca and returned to it, and now have laid their honors, as they have to-day, at her feet,-^historians, statesmen, teachers and divines, the wise counsellors and healers of men, — these are her benefactors. And those men, too, who have filled up the century with the service of instruction, — his Excellency will pardon me, since I am out of his jurisdiction, if I venture to differ a little from him, for, as a lawyer, he knows that he must hear the other side — 1 ask the Alumni of Phillips Exeter Academj' whose fame they would prefer to- day, whose influence they would rather have exercised, that of Benjamin Abbot or of the engineer of the Brooklyn Bridge. The first result of that great feat of engineering was the slaughter of innocent men and women. Thousands of witnesses to the glory of the teacher have lived, and among them man}' still live to-day and bear testimony to his success. I am not content to accept the triumph of the engineer, I prefer the triumph of the teacher who twined the strands of character and fixed the butresses of duty to sustain human hearts and souls on their passage through useful lives to the reward of the just. I need not add to the deserved eulogies so often bestowed on the two Principals who nearly filled the century with their labors. I cannot recapitulate the list of honored assistants. I must acknowledge the faithful services of their successor 71 (Dr. Perkins), not surpassed in zeal, assitUiity and fidelity and conscientiousness, for the last decade, lint these bene- factors are not alone. When Moses' hands were heav}', tliey took a stone and put it under him and he sat thereon and Aaron and Ilur stayed up his hands, the one on the one side and the other on the other side and his hands were steady until the going down of the sun. Among the teach- ers who haye assisted the Principals whom we praise, there are two who have shared these labors for a quarter of tiie century which we. commemorate. I have watched their service during a tenth of that century and I am happ}^ to pay to them the tribute which they deserve. To them is largely due the success of the institution. I have used Scriptural names, but names which are honored in the history of New Hampshire are as good for this purpose, and I am glad to speak of George Albert "VVentWorth and Brad- bury Longfellow Cilley, — the Aaron and the Hur who have stayed the hands of Moses during a quarter of a century ; every one of you knows their services and feels that they are our benefactors. But this is the past ; the century is ended, the century of which we are proud, the century which should continue to be, as we hold it now, our glory, but which we make our shame if we do not ourselves bear up the honor, if we do not ourselves take up the lengthening chain, if we do not our- selves show that we are worthy of the benefits that we have received. The gratitude which at this moment I feel most keenly, I confess, is the gratitude I anticipate feeling to^'ou, the gratitude for future favors, the gratitude for the gifts you are to make. "Qwi sentit commodum," if his Excellency will pardon me for a Latin quotation, ^'sentlre debet et onus^'' — "He who has shared the advantage ought also to share the burden." You and I and all the five thousand, half the host whom these owiinent Greek leaders Xenophon and Cille}' lead yearly up to the sea in j'onder halls, have shared the advant- age, and it is tlie duty of thoae of us who live to sliaro the 72 burden for the future ; to remember that the gift is a debt and that you, that ice cannot accept it without dishonor if we do not return it. Another quotation, since quotations are not inappropriate to this place, from some of the books you study : When iEneas saw the Phrygian Penates in his dream, they said to him as they left him, '^Idem venturos toUemus ad astra nej^otes,'' — "We, the same always and forever, will bear 3'our future descendants, b}^ our guidance and our help, to the stars." Be that your dut}', and be all of you benefactors of the Academ}- ! Mr. Bancroft said : Dr. Abbot always used to tell the scholars whom he saw eight or ten years after they left tlie Academy, "Oh, the Academy as it was when you were there is nothing at all to the Academy as it is now." So, then, I shall, in the spirit of Dr. Abbot offer you the next sentiment, " The Academy as It Is ;" and I ask Mr Charles G. Fall to speak to that sentiment. ADDRESS OF MR. CHARLES G. FALL. Mr. President: — " You would scarce expect one ot my ago To appear in public on this stage." But, sir, I suppose I ought not to find fault with that youth which is the sole qualification for my standing here to speak on behalf of the 3'ounger graduates. The President of Har- vard University has told us of the lesson in manners taught hy Dr. Soule. I was here, sir, under Dr. Soule, and it recalled to my mind an instance, which is one of the most marvelous I have ever seen, of the power which personal magnetism and dignity exercise over other persons. At five o'clock we boys used to kick football. During the summer montjis Dr. 73 Soule had a recitation wiiicli was finished at half-past five ; and, on one occasion, we were kicking across the path that led from the front door of the old Academy to his house, and, as he walked down the steps we forgot his presence and almost impeded his progress. As he came along the first word we heard was, " Bo3's ! " It rang like a clarion note ; it called a halt as much as if some General had ordered a " Halt ! " while his troops were running on a Imttlefield. On returning here for the first time, how the events of those daj's when we were here come back to us ! We, sir, were here, some of us, in the days of the war. We were here in 18G0 and 18G1. The present Secretary of War, whom we hoped to have had the pleasure of hearing here to- day, was here at that time, and his father was President. A nephew of Major Anderson was likewise a student, and when Lewis Cass, a graduate of the Academy, resignecl from a Cabinet which refused to reprovision I'ort Sumter, you may be sure, sir, that the guns of Sumter re-echoed among these granite hills. Those, sir, were days when Garrison and Phillips and Seward and Greelc}^ and Bryant and Chase were the leaders of public opinion ; and the boys of those days, sir, like the boys of the Revolution, were filled with patriotic ardor. How well do some of us remember forming in a procession and marching down to the old church where the girls of the village presented us with a flag and with a motto plaited in evergreen to place over the portals of the Acad- emy. I can see it now, '-Diicit Amor Patrice.'' How long it stood there till it grew faded and sunburnt, stood there like the famous' inscription of the Areopagus, "To the Unknown God." And there is another instance which occurs to me which so well illustrates the spirit of the times that I will venture to narrate it. It was a boyish freak which in the light of to-da}^ might deserve suspension, but those were other days and other times, and, according to the old adage, "circumstances alter cases." In the spring of 18G1 every village had its flag-raising. 74 On one of these occasions in one of the neighboring villages, some gra3'-haired old sinner had expressed disunion senti- ments and had insulted the flag. For this cause, in those times, sir, men were sometimes tarred and feathered. It was a graduate of this Academy who uttered those memora- ble words, "If any man haul down the American flag, shoot liim on the spot I" As soon as the stor}^ was told in the Academy, some Paul Revere, I wish I knew his name, suggested that we ought to make the old gentleman a visit. No sooner said than done ; and, at midnight, some thirty or forty boys, from thirteen to fifteen or sixteen j^ears old, started out for a six or seven miles' tramp. When we reached his house some of the leaders woke him up and told liim our errand. After a little parleying he came down stairs followed by his wife and family. We told him what we had heard, which he did not den3\ We told him what we desired, which at first he refused to do ; but, when he saw our numbers and visions of the feathers flitted through his mind, he somewhat relented. The advice of his wife, a. true daughter of New Hampshire, completed the conquest, and there, sir, in his own hallway, surrounded by his family, his idols and his household gods, we made him revoke the insult, and, kneeling down upon the folds of the dear old flag, he raised it to his lips and kissed it, not once but again and again. Then, after cautioning him against the dangers' which beset the backslider, we politely bade him good night. Surely, sir, the boys of '61 w^ere lineal descendants of the men who brewed the tea in Boston harbor. Here, sir, is the Rugby of America. The spirit of its discipline is self-control ; the essence of its instruction is self-development. While the love of knowledge is the object sought to be promoted, the perfection of its culture is manliness. Love of truth is the golden tenet of its religious creed. Not Calvin but Channing, not Edwards but Emer- son, not Swinburne but Longfellow, not Calhoun but Welister, are the apostles of our faitli. This revered home 75 of learni^ig, fellow graduates, was once our home. These classic groves once were our Academj'. Through them, in bo3iiood's days, have walked, as we all so well know, America's greatest constitutional advocate, the monarch of the American bar; one of our most polished statesmen, who was, likewise, a Secretary of State and a Foreign Minister ; one of our bravest statesmen, who was a nominee for the Presidency ; our most profound historian, the Gibbon of the nineteenth century ; and senators, soldiers, governors, ora- tors, reformers, philanthropists, cabinet members, foreign ministers, judges, lawyers, physicians, preachers, teachers, authors, editors, college presidents, merchant princes, men of science and of learning. The catalogue, we have been told, of a hundred 3'ears, contains the names of more than 5,000 graduates, the true nobility of the land, the pillars of society and the state. These men whose names are familiar to us and which we love to repeat, as the child loves to repeat its catechism, — Webster, Cass, Everett, Dix, Buckminster, Palfrey, Sparks, Walker, Fitch, Hale, Butler, Wyman, Ban* croft, — these are our elder brothers. It is fitting that on such a day as this, in the spirit of our favorite poet's deep-toned psalm of life, we drink inspiration from their noble lives. Would that the e^-e of grand John Phillips coitld to-daj^ survey this scene ; would that some other philanthropist, in emulation of his action, would enlarge the boundaries of this land of promise for their own children to survey at another centennial. Some of the distinguished speakers have brought stones to throw upon the cairns erected to the memory of Dr. Abbot and Dr. Soule. While we heartily join with them in burning frankincense upon these pious altars, the younger graduates, whom I have the honor to represent, ask you to join with us in celebrating the praises of the living. And, were it becoming at this time and in this presence, to suggest a sentiment expressive of our feelings, it would be this, "Gratitude to the living instructors of Phillips Academy." 76 The company then rose, and joined in singing, nlider the lead of Prof. Oscar Faulhaber, THE ACADEMY SONG. BY ItKV. IIENIIY WAl^], D. I), From highwa3's and bj^ways of manhood we come. And gather, lilvc children, about our old home ; We return from life's weariness, tumult and pain, Rejoiced in our hearts to be schoolboys again. The Senator comes from the hall of debate, The Governor steps from the high chair of State, The Judge leaves the bench to the law's wise delay, Rejoiced to be schoolboys again for a da3\ The Parson his pulpit has left unsupplied, The Doctor has put his old sulky aside, The Lawyer his client has turned from the door, And all are at Exeter, — schoolboys once more. Oh, glad to our eyes are these dear scenes displayed, The halls where" we studied, the fields where we played. There is change— there is change — but we will not deplore, Enough that we feel ourselves schoolboys once more. And when to the harsh scenes of life we return, Our hearts with the glow of this meeting shall burn ; Its calm light shall cheer till earth's schooltime is o'er, And prepare us in Heaven for one meeting more. THURSDAY EVENING, In the evening of Thursday a Promenade Concert was given in the great tent, by Reeves' excellent Band, of Provi- dence, Rhode Island. A large and brilliant company were present, who were highly gratified with the choice music, ami the opportunity for social intercourse. This concluded the Centennial Exercises of I880. By invitation of the Committee of Arrangements Prof. KuwAKD R. Sill contributed A HYMN OF HOPE, I'OR THE 100th ANNIVEHSAKY of PHILLIPS EXETER ACADEMY. Has, then, our boyhood .vanished, And rosy morning fled ? Are faith and ardor banished, Is daring courage dead? Still runs the olden river By meadow, hill and wood, — - Where are the hearts that ever Beat high with roj-al blood ? The golden dreams we cherished Pacing the ancient town, — Have they but bloomed and perished. And flown like thistle down ? Na\', still the air is haunted With myster}' as of old ; Each blossom is enchanted, And everj^ leaflet's fold. Not one fair hope we barkened, But still to youth returns ; Not one clear light hath darkened, — Still for some breast it burns : Thought age by age is lying Beneath the gathering mold. Life's dawn-light is undying, Its dreams grow never old. 79 A« the great faithful phmut Goes plunging on its track, Thought still shall bravely man it, And steer through storm and wrack ; While but three souls are toiling Who would give all for right, Whom gold nor fame is spoiling, Whose pra3xr is but for light ; While there are found a handful Of spirits vowed to truth, . Clear-eyed, courageous, manful. And comrades as in youth ; Out of the darkness sunward. Out of the night to da}'. While all the worlds swing onward. Life shall not lose its way. When to the man-soul lonely The loving gods came down, Earth gave the mantle onl}', Free mind the immortal crown. Wild force with cloud-wraith stature Unsealed shall tower in vain, And the fierce Afreet, Nature, Obey the sceptred brain. O lieart of man immortal. Beat on in love and cheer ! Somewhere the cloudy portal Of all thy pra^'ers shall clear. The fair earth's mighty measure Of life, untouched by rime. Through star-dust and through azure Rolls on to endless time. 80 The power that motes inherit, That bud and crystal find, Hath not forgotten spirit, Nor left the soul behind. O'er Time's dumb forces lieetin* This victory we begin. Dear eye-beams and the beatinu Of heart with* heart shall win. DR. ABBOT IN 1847. The Committee of Arrangements have received from Prof. Sylvester Waterhouse of Washington University, Missouri, the following interesting account of an interview which he had with the venerable Dr. Benjamin Abijot in 1847, with permission to publish it if they should see fit. Dr. Abbot was then about 85 years old. His venerable figure was seldom seen on the street, but his name was like a living presence. The personal qualities which, through 50 years of service, had won so wide a fame for Phillips Exeter Academy were well known to all the students. Stories of his high-bred courtesy and moral dignity of character, of his effective discipline and noble ardor in the work of instruc- tion, were among the most cherished traditions of the Academy. An earnest desire to see so distinguished a teacher induced me to call on Dr. Abbot. He received me with cordiality and expressed the gratification which the visits of students afforded him. "I have given," said he with a smile, "the best energies of my life to the education of youth, and it is but natural 81 that I should not be indifferent to the regard of young folks." Some inquiries with reference to my own objects in life served to introduce the theme which seemed to absorb all his thoughts. He explained at length his own theory of educa- tion and spoke of the progress of the Academy since it first came under his control in 1788. Alluding to the choice of a profession, he said, — *'I have always been accustomed to advise 3'oung men to take good care of their health, perfect themselves in their studies, acquire as much practical knowledge and general information as possible, and then let circumstances and the bent of their genius dictate what vocation they should follow." It was suggested that some teachers recommend an early choice of a calling and the pursuit of the special studies which tend to promote professional success. ^'No, no," he replied with great earnestness, "I do not believe that is best. I have always counseled the 3'outh under my chai-ge first to complete their general studies and then to follow the guidance of their natural tastes in the selection of a profession. A long observation of the careers- of young men confirms the wisdom of this course." A transition from this subject to the great men who had once yeen under his tuition was very natural to a teacher proud of the success of his pupils. The incidents which Dr. Abbot related about schoolboys who have since become illustrious were extremely interesting. ''Lewis Cass," he said, "was a very wild boy. One day his father, Major Cass, came to me and asked me if I would take his son. '' 'Certainly, but why do you ask? '* 'Oh ! the youngster is headstrong and hard to manage. I am an officer and can govern soldiers, but that boy is too. much for me. " 'What does he do? ^ 82 " 'Pla3-s truant, runs away from his work, steals off without 1113^ permission to go a gunning, fishing, and swimming, and is full of all kinds of pranks.' " 'Well, send him to me and I'll see what I can do with him. "The bo}^ was placed under my charge. Several months later I met his father and asked him how his son was getting along. 'Well, sir,' said he, 'if Lewis was half as afraid of the Almighty as he is of you, I "should never have an}' more trouble with him.' " In relating this, incident. Dr. Abbot fairly- shook with the laughter which the recollection of Major Cass's answer excited. It is scarcely necessary to add that controlled by the preceptor's extraordinary power of discipline, the strong motive energies which led young Cass into all sorts of boyish mischief were directed to nobler objects. The results of the wise management which quickened the ambition and roused into action the faculties of a powerful nature are recorded in American history. It was, however, intimated that at Exeter the future statesnjan evinced more talent for practi- cal affairs than for the details of scholarship. In speaking of the school-bo,y traits of Daniel Webster, Dr. Abbot mentioned an unexpected fact. He said that "Young Webster showed an insuperable aversion to decla- mation. As 'the bo}' is father to the man,' it might have been supposed that the lad who was destined to be pre- eminent in oratory would have exhibited an early fondness for declamation, but no persuasions could overcome his natural diffidence." Dr. Abbot remarked that "there was a popular misappre- hension with regard to Webster's scholarship. It was generally believed that Webster was a dull and unsuccessful pupil, but such was not the fact. His mind rarely seemed to be occupied with his studies. His large, lustrous, thoughtful ej'es were gazing about the room, or looking out 83 of the window ; but, at recitation, the pupil who appeared not to be engaged in studious preparation always acquitted himself well. He often showed a far better grasp of the subject than those who were more familiar with the minor points of scholarship." While Dr. Abbot was telling these anecdotes, his tones became more earnest and his eyes lighted up with a glow which these agreeable recollections kindled. It was quite obvious that age had not 3'et wholly quenched the fires of earlier manhood. Heartily thanking him for his courtesies and for the rare pleasure which his conversation had afforded, I bade the venerable teacher good-bye. The next time I saw him, he was lying in his coffin. An expression of sweet and childlike serenity rested upon his features, as though the divine hand had set upon his face the seal of a happy and well spent life. ^ OF THE UNWERS\TY CATALOGUE PHILLIPS EXETER ACADEMY. 1783-1883, CATALOGUE OFFICERS AND STUDENTS PHILLIPS EXETER ACADE-MY. 1783-1883. BR AfTp ' OF THE UNIVERSITY BOSTON: J. S. GUSHING & COMPANY. 1883. PHILLIPS EXETER ACADEMY. >l«=Jc "gvnsttts. 1781 HON. JOHN PHILLIPS, LL.D 1795 1781 HON. SAMUEL PHILLIPS, LL.D 1802 1781 THOMAS ODIORNE 1794 1781 HON. JOHN PICKERING, LL.D 1802 1781 REV. DAVID McCLURE 1787 1781 REV. BENJAMIN THURSTON 1801 1781 DANIEL TILTON 1783 1783 WILLIAM WOODBRIDGE, A.M., ex officio 1788 1787 HON. PAINE WINGATE, A.M 1809 1791 BENJAMIN ABBOT, A.M., ex officio 1838 1794 HON. OLIVER PEABODY, A.M 1828 1795 HON. JOHN TAYLOR GILMAN, LL.D 1827 1801 REV. JOSEPH BUCKMINSTER, D.D 1812 1802 REV. JESSE APPLETON, D.D 1803 1802 HON. JOHN PHILLIPS 1820 1809 REV. DANIEL DANA, D.D 1843 1809 HON. NATHANIEL APPLETON HAVEN 1830 1812 REV. JACOB ABBOT, A.M. 1834 1821 REV. NATHAN PARKER, D.D 1833 1828 HON. JEREMIAH SMITH, LL.D 1842 1831 SAMUEL HALE, A.M 1869 1834 SAMUEL DANA BELL, A.M 1838 1835 HON. DANIEL WEBSTER, LL.D 1852 1835 REV. CHARLES BURROUGHS, D.D 1867 1838 BENJAMIN ABBOT, LL.D 1844 1838 GIDEON LANE SOULE, A.M., ex officio 1873 1842 HON. JAMES BELL, A.B 1852 1843 REV. ANDREW PRESTON PEABODY, A.M 1844 DAVID WOOD GORHAM, A.B., M.D 1873 1853 HON. AMOS TUCK, A.M 1879 1853 FRANCIS BOWEN, A.M 1875 1868 HON. JEREMIAH SMITH, A.M 1874 1870 HON. GEORGE SILSBEE HALE, A.B 1873 ALBERT CORNELIUS PERKINS, A.M., ex officio 1883 1874 WILLIAM HENRY GORHAM, M.D 1879 1874 JOSEPH BURBEEN WALKER, A.M 1875 REV. PHILLIPS BROOKS, D.D 1880 1879 NICHOLAS EMERY SOULE, A.M., M.D 1879 HON. CHARLES HENRY BELL, A.M 1881 JOHN CHARLES PHILLIPS. A.B IV CATALOGUE. ^xj^vcsnxj^xs. 1781 THOMAS ODIORNE 1793 1793 HON. JOHN TAYLOR OILMAN, LL.D 1806 1806 HON. OLIVER PEABODY 1828 1828 HON. JEREMIAH SMITH, LL.D 1842 1842 HON. JOHN KELLY, A.M 1855 1855 JOSEPH TAYLOR OILMAN 1862 1862 S. CLARKE BUZELL 1880 1880 CHARLES BURLEY "^xlncipuXs. 1783 WILLIAM WOODBRIDGE, A.B., Preceptor 1788 1788 BENJAMIN ABBOT, LL.D 1838 1838 GIDEON LANE SOULE, LL.D 1873 1873 ALBERT CORNELIUS PERKINS, Ph.D 1883 %nstxnct0xs. 1808 EBENEZER ADAMS, A.M., Prof, Math, and Nat. Phil 1809 1811 HOSEA HILDRETH, A.M., Prof. Math, and Nat. Phil 1825 1817 REV. ISAAC HURD, A.M., Theological Instructor 1839 1822 GIDEON LANE SOULE, A.M., Prof Ant. Languages * 1838 1825 JOHN PARKER CLEAVELAND, A.B., Prof. Math, and Nat. Phil. 1826 1826 CHARLES C. P. GALE, A.B., Prof. Math, and Nat. Phil 1827 1827 JOSEPH HALE ABBOT, A.M., Prof. Math, and Nat. Phil 1833 1833 ERANCIS BOWEN, A.B., Prof Math, and Nat. Phil 1835 1835 WILLIAM HENRY SHACKFORD, A.B., Prof. Math, and Nat. Phil. 1842 1836 HENRY FRENCH, A.B., Instructor in Languages 1840 1840 NEHEMIAH CLEAVELAND, A.M., Prof. Ant. Languages 1841 1841 JOSEPH GIBSON IIOYT, A.M., Prof. Mathematics 1859 1842 RICHARD WENMAN SWAN, A.B., Prof. Ant. Languages 1851 1851 PAUL ANSEL CHADBOURNE, A.M., Prof Ant. Languages .... 1852 1852 THEODORE TEBBETS, A.B., Prof. Ant. Languages 1853 1853 HENRY STEDMAN NOURSE, A.B., Prof. Ant. Languages 1855 1855 GEORGE CARLETON SAWYER, A.B., Prof. Ant. Languages .... 1858 1858 GEORGE ALBERT WENTWORTH, A.B., Prof Mathematics .... 1859 BRADBURY LONGFELLOW CILLEY, A.B., Prof Ant. Languages 18,75 ROBERT FRANKLIN PENNELL, Prof. Latin 1882 CATALOGUE. ^ssist^nt %ustxnctoxs. 1784 JOSEPH WILLARD, A.B 1785 1785 SALMON CHASE, A.B 1786 1789 JOSEPH DANA, A.B 1789 1789 DANIEL DANA, A.B 1791 1791 JOHN PHILLIPS RIPLEY, A.B 1791 1792 RUFUS ANDERSON, A.B 1792 1792 ABIEL ABBOT, A.B 1793 1793 CHARLES COFFIN, A.B 1794 1794 JOSEPH PERKINS, A.B 1795 1795 TIMOTHY WINN, A.B 1796 1796 PETER OXENBRIDGE THACHER, A.B 1797 1797 NICHOLAS EMERY, A.B 1797 1797 GEORGE WINGATE, A.B 1797 1797 WILLIAM CRAIG, A.B 1799 1799 SAMUEL DUNN PARKER, A.B 1800 1799 HORATIO GATES BURNAP, A.B 1803 1801 JOSEPH STEVENS BUCKMINSTER, A.B 1803 1803 SAMUEL WILLARD, A.B 1804 1804 JOHN STICKNEY, A.B 1805 1804 ASHUR WARE, A.B 1805 1805 MARTIN LUTHER HURLBUT, A.B 1805 1805 NATHAN HALE, A.B : . 1807 1806 JAAZANIAH CROSBY, A.B 1807 1806 ALEXANDER HILL EVERETT, A.B 1807 1807 NATHANIEL APPLETON HAVEN, Jr., A.B 1808 1808 REUBEN WASHBURN, A.B 1809 1809 NATHANIEL WHITMAN, A.B 1810 1810 NATHAN LORD, A.B 1811 1810 JONAS WHEELER, A.B 1811 1811 HENRY HOLTON FULLER, A.B 1812 1812 HENRY WARE, A.B ' 1814 1814 JAMES WALKER, A.B 1815 1815 GEORGE GOLDTHWAITE INGERSOLL, A.B 1816 1816 WILLIAM BOURNE OLIVER PEABODY, A.B 1817 1817 OLIVER WILLIAM BOURNE PEABODY, A.B 1818 1818 GIDEON LANE SOULE, A.B 1819 1819 SAMUEL TAYLOR OILMAN, A.B. .. 1820 1820 CHARLES LANE FOLSOM, A.B 1822 1856 JACOB ABBOT CRAM 1857 1857 WILLIAM FRANCIS BENNETT JACKSON 1857 1860 ORLANDO MARCELLUS FERNALD 1861 1861 PAYSON MERRILL 1862 1870 WILLIAM PIARRINGTON PUTNAM, A.M 1871 1871 ROBERT FRANKLIN PENNELL, A.B 1875 1874 OSCAR FAULHABER, Ph.D 1875 FREDERIC TIMOTHY FULLER, A.B 1878 1878 JAMES ARTHUR TUFTS, A.B 1883 GEORGE LYMAN KITTREDGE, A.B EXPLAH'ATIOIsr. The first line of the catalogue gives the name of the student, his age at entering the school, and the name of the city or town from which he came to Exeter. The second line gives his occupation, his college, college degrees, etc., and his residence, or, when not living, the place known as having been his home. In some instances, where the occupation is in one place and the residence in another, both places are given, — the former in parentheses. But where a person, after having passed many years in one place, retires from active occupation and makes his home in another, the first place is indicated by brackets. An asterisk against a name signifies that the person is not liv- ing ; and the date of death, when known, is given at the right hand of the upper line. ABBREVIATIONS. Bost. Univ for .... Boston University. B.U " . . . . Brown University. C.U " . . . . Colby University. H.U " . . . . Harvard University. Mad. Univ " . . . . Madison University. Roch. Univ " . . . . Rochester University. Wes. Univ " . . . . Wesleyan University. Univ. Mich " . . . . University of Michigan. Univ. Vt " . . . . University of Vermont. Amh. Coll " . . . . Amherst College. Bowd. Coll " . . . . Bowdoin College. Dart. Coll " . . . . Dartmouth College. Trin. Coll " . . . . Trinity College. Will. Coll " . . . . WilHams College. Coll. of N.J " . . . . College of New Jersey. 18 8 3, "gvnsttj^s. REV. ANDREW PRESTON PEABODY, D.D., President. HON. GEORGE SILSBEE HALE, A.B. ALBERT CORNELIUS PERKINS, Ph.D., ex officio. JOSEPH BURBEEN WALKER, A.M. NICHOLAS EMERY SOULE, A.M., M.D. HON. CHARLES HENRY BELL, LL.D. JOHN CHARLES PHILLIPS, A.B. %tistxxxctovs. ALBERT C. PERKINS, Ph.D., Principal, Odlln Professor of English GEORGE A. WENT WORTH, A.M., Professor of Mathematics. BRADBURY L. CILLEY, A.M., Professor of Ancient Languages. OSCAR FAULHABER, Ph.D., Instructor in French and in German. JAMES ARTHUR TUFTS, A.B., Instructor in Latin and in English. GEORGE LYMAN KITTREDGE, A.B., Instructor. OF THE UNIVERSITY STUDEI^TS. 17 8 3. ^ *William Brooks Exeter. ^ *Mele Clap Exeter. *Peter Coffin Exeter. *John Dean Exeter 1854 Merchant. Newburyport, Mass. *Samuel L. Dexter Newburyport, Mass. 1807 (( (( *Benjarain Dow Hampton Falls. *Thomas Folsom Exeter. Portland, Me. *Natbaniel Folsom Exeter. *Benjamin Ives Gilman Exeter 1833 Merchant. Marietta, O. *Thomas Gilman Exeter. *Samuel Gilman Exeter 1796 * William Gilman Exeter. *John S. Gilman Exeter. *Daniel Gilman Exeter 1804 Merchant. Boston, Mass. *William Hale Exeter. *Samuel Hobart Exeter. *Dudley Hobart Exeter. *Parker Hopkinson Exeter. *Daniel Jones Exeter. *John Kimball Exeter 1849 Farmer. " *Eliphalet Ladd Exeter. Shipbuilder. Portsmouth. * Stephen Lamson Exeter. Hotel-keeper. " *Joseph Lamson Exeter 1831 Dart. Coll. 1790; Merchant. " *Gilman Leavitt Brentwood. *William Lyman York, Me 1822 Physician. " " *Hawley Marshall Brentwood. * Jacob Moulton Hampton. * Joseph Moulton Hampton. *George Odiorne Exeter 1846 Merchant. Boston, Mass. *John Odiorne Exeter 1824 Merchant. Boston, Mass. 2 CATALOGUE. [1783-84. *Thomas Odiorue Exeter 1851 Dart. Coll. 1791, A.M.; Manufacturer. Boston, Mass. *Ebenezer Odioriie Exeter 1817 Manufacturer. Maiden, Mass. *Benjamiii Page , Exeter. *John J. Parker Exeter. * Samuel Parker Exeter. *Joseph Parsons Rye 1813 Lumber Dealer. Washington, D.C. *John W. Parsons E,3'e. *Paul Rawlings Somersworth .... 1824 Newington. *Isaac Robbins •. . . Plymouth, Mass. Merchant. Alexandria, Va. *Epliraim Robinson Exeter 1809 Farmer and Shipbuilder. " *Joseph Sawyer Exeter. * William Sawyer Exeter. *Samuel Sherburne Portsmouth. *John Sherburne Portsmouth. *Benjamin Smith Exeter. *John Sullivan Durham 1819 H.U. 1790; Lawyer. Baton Rouge, La. *James Sullivan . . . .~ Durham 1796 H.U. 1790; Lawyer. Georgetown, S.C. *George Sullivan Durham 1838 H.U. 1790; M.C.; Lawyer. Exeter. * Nathaniel Thayer Hampton 1840 H.U. 1789; A.M.; Clergyman. Lancaster, Mass. * James Thurston Exeter 1835 Clergyman. " *William Thurston Exeter 1822 Dart. Coll. 1792; A.M.; Lawyer. Boston, Mass. *Daniel Tilton Exeter 1830 H.U. 1790; Lawyer; Judge Supr. Ct. Miss. Ter. *John S. Tilton Exeter. *Henry Tilton Exeter. *Moses Wells Hampton Falls. *Daniel Williams Exeter. Barber. " 56 1784, ♦Nathaniel Adams Exeter. *Josiah Bartlett Kingston 1838 M.D.; Physician; M.C.; Gov. N.H. *Nathaniel Boardman Exeter. *William Brewster Portsmouth. *Samuel Brooks Exeter. *Thomas Cheswell Newmarket. *Enoch Coffin Epping. ♦Nathaniel Cogswell Gilmanton 1813 Dart. Coll. 1794; A.M.; Lawyer. Mexico. *DavidCopp. Wakefield 1803 Lawyer. New Orleans, La. ♦Benjamin Dearborn Northampton. 1784-85.] CATALOGUE. 3 *Jesse Dolloff Exeter. *Benjamia Dow Epping 1835 *E-ichard Emery Exeter. Supercargo. " *George Ffrost Durham 1841 Merchant. " *Samuel Oilman Exeter. *Bartliolemew Oilman Exeter 1853 *Bartholemew Oilman, Jr Exeter 1823 Ohio. *Joseph Oilman North Yarmouth, Me. Physician. Wells, Me. * Jonathan Olover Marblehead, Mass. ♦Salmon Gray Saco, Me 1811 *John Hackett Exeter. *Temple Hovey Berwick, Me 1810 Lawyer. " " *Joshua Lane Stratham. *Woodbury Langdon Portsmouth 1822 Capitalist. " *Samuel Lee Marblehead, Mass. (( (( *Phineas Lovejoy Sanbornton. *John McClary Epsom. *John Mead Newmarket. *Thomas P. Moffat Portsmouth. ♦Robert Moffat Portsmouth. ♦Abraham Morrill Brentwood. ♦John Morison Peterborough .... 1794 (( ♦John Neal Londonderry. ♦John Odlin Exeter . .^ 1841 ♦Henry Ranlett Exeter 1807 Printer and Bookseller. " ♦James Robinson Brentwood. ♦Joseph Shepard Brentwood. ♦John Smith Exeter. ♦Samuel Smith Peterborough .... 1842 Manufacturer. " ♦John Smith Peterborough. ♦John Steele Peterborough .... 1845 Manufacturer. " ♦Joseph Swasey Exeter. ♦Samuel Thing Brentwood. ♦James Thornton Merrimack. ♦Charles Walker Concord 1834 H.U. 1789; A.M.; Lawyer. . " ♦Isaac Williams Exeter. 46 1785. ♦Ezra Bartlett Kingston 1848 Physician; Lawyer; Judge Ct. Com. Pleas. Haverhill. ♦Stephen Bruce Boston, Mass. 4 CATALOGUE. [1785-86. * Andrew Chauncy Portsmouth. *Ebenezer Clark Greenland. * Thomas Murra}^ Clark Greenland 1795 B.U. 1792. * Jeremiah Clough Canterbury. *Daniel Conner Exeter 1866 Farmer, *01iver Dodge . . '. Hampton Falls. *Benjamin Dodge Exeter 1838 *Allen Gilman Exeter 1846 Dart. Coll. 1791; A.M.; Lawyer. Bangor, Me. *Ephraim Dennet Gilman Exeter 1833 *Caleb James Exeter. *Enoch Jewett Exeter. *Caleb Johnson Hampstead 1818 (( *James Leath Tobago, W. I. *Theodore Mansfield Exeter. *Jeremiah Mead Newmarket 1839 *Phineas Richardson Exeter. *James Eundlett Exeter. Manufacturer. Portsmouth. *Joseph Safford Exeter. Chaise Maker. " *Peter Sanborn East Kingston . . . 1824 Farmer. Readfield, Me. *John Smallcorn Portsmouth. *John Toppan East Kingston . . . 1837 H.U. 1790; A.M.; Merchant. Claremont. * James Toppan East Kingston . . . 1852 Teacher. Gloucester, Mass. *Ebenezer Webster East Kingston. * William Webster Plymouth. *Samuel Williams Exeter. 27 1786. *Enoch Clark Greenland 1844 Farmer. *' *John T. Coffin Newburyport, Mass. *Jesse Conner Exeter. Farmer. Parsonsfield, Me. *Frederick French Dunstable. ♦Stephen Gilman Exeter 1849 Shipmaster. " *Samuel Hill Portsmouth 1840 * Joshua James Exeter. ♦Bartholomew Kimball Exeter. ♦Nathaniel Lakeman Exeter. Dart. Coll. 1790; M.D.; Physician. Beverly, Mass. ♦Robert Moore Brentwood 1804 Teacher. Kaymond. *John Page Chester. 1786-88.] CATALOGUE. 5 * Stephen Parsons Parsonsfield, Me. *John Usher Parsons Parsonsfield, Me. . . 1825 Dart. CoU. 1791; A.M.; Merchant. " " * Alexander Paul Tobago, W. I. *Benjamin Pickering Greenland. *Peter Shade Tobago, W.I. *Thomas Sparhawk Portsmouth. *Joshua Wiggin Exeter 1839 *John Wilson Brentwood. 19 1787. *Elisha Bean Brentwood. Business. ** *William Bell Chester 1848 Farmer. *' *Dudle3^ Folsom . . . . ' Exeter 1836 M.D. ; Physician. Gorham, Me. *Amos Gale Kingston 1824 M.D.; Physician. " *Gilman Gale Kingston. Merchant. " *Josiah Gilman Exeter. *John Taylor Gilman, Jr Exeter 1808 Dart. Coll. 1796; Merchant. Boston, Mass. *Ebenezer Gilman Exeter 1795 Wells, Me. ♦William Ladd Exeter. * William Mackay Salem, Mass. *Eliphalet Pinkham Hanover. *John Phillips Ripley Hanover 1816 Dart. Coll. 1791; Lawyer. Philadelphia, Pa. *Edward Rundlett Exeter. *Zebulon Smith Newmarket. 14 1788, *Thomas Adams Stratham. *Beujarain Beale .'.... Exeter. ♦Nicholas Emery Exeter 1841 Dart. Coll. 1795; Lawyer; Judge Supr. Ct.,Me. Portland, Me. *David Fulliugton *James McClure Exeter. ♦Joseph Simpson Stratham. ♦Joseph Smith ♦Ezra Smith Newmarket. ♦Edmund Toppan Hampton 1849 H.U. 1796; A.M.; Lawyer. ♦Titus Wells ♦Philip Wilson Martinico, W. I. ♦Nathaniel Williams Nottingham 1804 (< ♦George Winj^ate Stratham 1852 H.U. 1796; A.M.; Farmer. 6 CATALOGUE. [1789. 1789. * Nathaniel Ambrose *Israel Bartlett Nottingham 1859 Farmer. •' *Luke Bixby Charlestown, Mass. *Samuel Call Newburyport, Mass. *Benjamin Clark 1840 Dart. CoU. 1800; A.M.; Lawyer. *Benjamin Colcord Exeter. *Tristram Coffin Epping. *Nathaniel Conner Exeter 1849 Carpenter. ** * William Currier Kingston. *Joseph Dodge Exeter 1849 *Daniel Meserve Durell Durham 1851 Dart. Coll. 1794; M.C.; Lawyer; Ch. Just. Ct. Dover. Com. Pleas, N.H. *Andrew Emerson Durham 1835 Farmer. " *John Emery Exeter 1874 *Daniel Evans *Peter Folsom Gilmanton. *Peter Folsom Exeter ? 1817 Kennebunk, Me. *Thomas Folsom Exeter 1845 Innkeeper. " *Daniel French Epping ....... 1840 Lawyer. Chester. *Benjamin Gale Kingston. *Nathaniel Gould * Andrew Hilton Exeter. *Gilman Jewett Exeter. *Theophilus Jones . Exeter. *Hill Judkins Brentwood. *Thomas Kimball Exeter. *James Lane Stratham 1833 Farmer. " *Isaac Leavitt Exeter 1854 *Benjamin Leavitt Exeter. *James Leavitt Exeter. *Joseph Leavitt Stratham 1829 Bangor, Me. *Theophilus Lyford Exeter. *Phineas Merrill Stratham. *Charles Morrison Martinico, W. I. *Mark Newman Ipswich, Mass. . . . 1859 Dart. Coll. 1793; A.M.; Merchant. Andover, Mass. *John Ordway Haverhill, Mass. *Joseph C. Page Salem, Mass. * William Pidgeon Amesburj', Mass. *John Robinson 1789-90.] CATALOGUE. *Josiah Sanborn *Isaiah Sanborn Poplin. *Caleb Shaw Brentwood. *Benjamin Shepard Brentwood. Farmer. Waterville, Me. *Sarauel Smith Exeter . . . . Sadler. * Samuel Stearns Epping . . . . H.U. 1794; A.M.; D.D.; Clergyman. Bedford, Mass. ♦William Swasey Exeter. *Joseph Towle Exeter. *Josiah Wyatt Exeter. Ship Carpenter. " 1859 1854 1790. 47 ♦William Barker 22 Farmer. ♦Gabriell Bernadent ♦Joshua Blake 16 ♦Thomas Brackett Farmer. ♦John Burgin 22 Merchant. ♦David Coffin 15 ♦Amos Coffin 27 ♦Jonathan Cram 11 ♦John S. Creighton 13 ♦John Darling 12 ♦Luther Dearborn 19 ♦Jabez Dodge 12 ♦Peter Dumesnil 19 ♦William Duquery 15 ♦Alexander Favea ....... ♦John Ffrost ♦John Folsom 11 ♦Benjamin Gale 18 ♦Gabriel Joseph Genet 16 ♦Samuel Glidden 25 ♦John Hopkinson 11 ♦Ebenezer Lane 19 Farmer. ♦Dudley Leavitt 18 ♦Isaac Lord 12 ♦Stephen Mead Shoemaker. * Daniel Lane Morrill 18 Clergyman; U.S. Sen. ♦Nehemiah Ordway 19 ♦William Pickering 12 H.U. 1797; A.M.; Lawyer. ♦Isaac Pinkham ♦George Washington Prescott . Dart. Coll. 1795; A.M.; Lawyer. Stratham 1846 (( Guadaloupe, W. I. Hampton Falls. Greenland 1851 <( Pembroke 1846 Eastport, Me. Epping. Hampton. Hampton Falls. Exeter. Portsmouth. Wakefield. Exeter 1803 Guadaloupe, W.I. Guadaloupe, W. I. Guadaloupe, W.I. Durham. Exeter. Kingston. Martinico, W.I. Unity. Exeter. Stratham 1842 Pittsfield. Stratham. Washington. Exeter. Epping 1869 Haverhill, Mass. Greenland 1850 « Durham. Newcastle 1817 Portsmouth. 8 CATALOGUE. [1790-91. ♦Nathaniel Rogers 16 . * Joseph Fogg Rowe ...... 15 . Farmer. ♦Richard Tuck 10 . ♦Isaac Waldron 16 . ♦Jacob Weeks Merchant. ♦Chase Wiggiii 24 . ♦George Williams 12 . ♦William Woodbridge 10 . Merchant. Newmarket. KensingtoD 1829 East Kingston. Manchester, Mass. Barrington. Greenland 1800 Charleston, S.C. Stratham. Exeter. Salem 1832 Savannah, Ga. 38 17 91 William Balch 16 . *T1iomas Beede 19 . H.U. 1798; A.M.; Clergyman. Pierre Bergeron 20 . ♦Joshua Brackett 15 . Physician. ♦William Brown 19 . Farmer. Benjamin Dale Bryant .... 20 . ♦Joseph Young Burgin 18 . Teaclier. Samuel Burley 21 . Ichabod Canney 13 . Moses Clark 17 . David Elkins 23 . ♦Peter Lawrence Folsom .... 19 . Dart. Coll. 1796; A.M.; Merchant. James Folsom . . . ., 21 . ♦Joseph Smith Folsom 18 . Merchant. ^ David Foss 18 . David Foster 14 . Pierre G. Daroten'e Genet . . 18 . ♦John Ham 16 . Dart. Coll. 1797; A.M.; Lawyer. ♦John Hamilton 13 . H.U. 1798; A.M. Nathan Hilton 18 . Morris Hobbs 15 . Carpenter. ♦Josiah Hook 16 . ♦Moses Hook 14 . H.U. 1798. Amos Judkins . . . *. 23 . Huard Lanoiroix 20 . ♦Thomas Leavitt . 18 . Business. John Lovering 15 . George Nichols 13 . ♦John Noyes 27 . Dart. Coll. 1795; A.M.; M.C.; Merchant. Barrington. Poplin 1848 Farmington, Me. Hispauiola, W.I. Greenland 1816 Portsmouth. Hampton Falls . . . 1856 (< i( Newmarket. AUenstown 1820 Portsmouth. Ipswich, Mass. Madbury. Stratham. Gilmanton. Gilmanton 1842 Gilmanton. Newmarket 1804 Lee. Barrington. Canterbury. Martinico, W.I. Dover 1837 Gilmanton, Berwick, Me 1805 Portsmouth. Newmarket. Northampton, Mass. (( (< Salisbury, Mass. Salisbury, Mass. . . 1821 Kingston. Guadaloupe, W. E. North Hampton . . . 1800 Hampton. Exeter. Portsmouth. Atkinson 1841 Putney, Vt. 1791-92.] CATALOGUE. 9 *Nathaniel Adams Parker ... 10 Nathaniel Pease 23 Edward Philbrick 22 Orlando Sargent 22 Christopher Sargent 19 *Henry Sheafe 12 Merchant. Walter Smith 16 * Nathan Tiltoii 18 H.U. 1706; A.M.; Clergyman. '^Joseph Tilton 17 H.U. 1797; A.M.: Lawyer. John Waldron 15 Permot Wiggin 20 *Samuel Winslow 22 Farmer. ♦William Henry Young .... 19 Business. * Jonathan Young ....... 18 H.U. 1798. Portsmouth. (( Newmarket. Newmarket. Amesbury, Mass. Amesbury, Mass. Portsmouth 1854 Boston, Mass. Newmarket. East Kingston . . . . 1851 Scarborough, Me. East Kingston . . . . 1856 Exeter. Barrington. Exeter. Epping 1833 <( Gilmanton 1797 (( Barrington 1838 Acton, Me. 43 1792, Nathaniel F. Adams 12 . . . WUliam Henry Blodgett . . . 12 . . . Samuel Oilman Blodgett ... 9 . . . Charles Frederick Blodgett . . 10 . . . Thomas Boardman 22 . . . George Boyd 14 . . . Merchant. Samuel Brown 16 . . . *John Burnham 19 . . . H.U. 1798; Lawyer. *Lewis Cass 10 . . . LL.D.; Gov. Mich.; U.S. Sen.; Sec. War; Min. to France; Sec. State. * Andrew McClary Chapman . . 18 . . . *Cha'rles Coffin 13 . . . Dart. CoU. 1799; A.M.; Lawyer. *Benjamin Cram 11 . . . *Thomas Dean 10 . . . *CharlesDean 12 . . . Sadler. John H. Dearborn 10 . . . *Noah Emery 10 . . . Shipmaster. Peter Fogg 12 . . . George Folensbee 13 . . . *Samuel Folsom 10 . . . *Nathan Boardman Folsom . . 12 . .. . Merchant. Benjamin French 17 . . . Exeter. Boston, Mass. Boston, Mass. Boston, Mass. Exeter. Portsmouth. Kingston. Scarborough, Me. . . 1825 Limerick, Me. Exeter 1866 Detroit, Mich. Newmarket 1850 Wakefield. Buxton, Me 1851 Exeter 1859 Somerville, Mass. Exeter. Exeter 1829 Portland, Me. Ossipee. Exeter 1813 (( Exeter. Salisbury, Mass. Exeter. Lee 1863 Portsmouth. Epping. 10 CATALOGUE. [1792-93. John Furber 19 Nathaniel Gilmau 13 Nathaniel C. Gilman 12 *Sainuel Kinsman Gilman ... 10 *Warren Gilman 20 Daniel Gookin 21 Jonathan Longfellow ..... 27 ♦Benjamin Lovering 10 Shoemaker. Jacob Pearson 10 Josiah Robinson 22 Paul Robinson 22 Thomas Rowell 24 Joseph Sawyer 17 Jethro S. Searle 15 ♦William Smith 11 Painter. -=^-John Phillips Thurston .... 11 Dart. Coll. 1797; A.M.; Merchant. Daniel Towle 10 *Samuel Weed 17 H.U. 1800; M.D.; Physician. * Jonathan Wliittaker 21 H.U. 1797; A.M.; Clergyman. *John Wingate 11 Farmer. Northw9od. Exeter. Exeter. Exeter . . Newmarket . . . South Newmarket. Boscawen. Newmarket. Exeter. Exeter. Wakefield. Newmarket. Amesbury, Mass. Salisbury, Mass. Salisbury, Mass. Exeter 1795 1855 1855 1832 North Hampton . New York, N.Y. Exeter. Amesbury, Mass. . . 1857 Portland, Me. Bath, Me 1835 New Bedford, Mass. Stratham 1831 (( 41 1793, * William Adams 21 Dart. Coll. 1799. *Stephen Bean . 21 Dart. CoU. 1798; Merchant. Edward Colcord 19 Jacob Cram 10 Trueworthy Dearborn 20 John Dodge 20 *John Folsom 17 *Stephen Goodhue 20 Teacher. *Benjamin Hoit 18 Farmer. *Joseph Hoit 19 Farmer. * Joseph Jewett Hoit 11 Carpenter. William Hoit 10 *Joseph Hoit 20 George Jones 17 * Joshua Lane 20 H.U. 1799; Clergyman. *Jotham Lawrence ....... 16 Lawyer. ^ Washington. Gilmanton 1825 Boston, Mass. Exeter. Exeter. North Hampton. Concord. Hampton Falls. Exeter 1847 Deerfield. Ohio. Stratham 1800 <( Stratham 1849 <( Exeter 1847 (< Exeter. Epping ....... 1807 Newcastle. Stratham 1846 New York. Epping 1863 Exeter. 1793-94.] CATALOGUE. .11 Ephraim Leavitt 23 . . . Stratham. *Edward Little 20 . . . Newbury, Mass. . Dart. Coll. 1797; Lawyer. Danville, Me. John Morrill 14 . . . Salisbury, Mass. Thomas Coffin Norris ..... 17 .. . Epping. *Azor Orne 10 . . . Marblehead, Mass. << (< *Daniel Osgood 16 . . . Salisbury Dart. Coll. 1799; A.M.; Physician. Havana. *Dauiel Page 19 . . . Deerfield ... . Teacher. So. Carolina. *Enoch Greenleaf PaiTott . . . 12 . . . Greenland Merchant. Portsmouth. John Light Piper 22 . . . Stratham. Noah Robinson 17 . . . Stratham. John Rundlett 20 . . . Oilman ton. Samuel Ruudlett 14 . . . Exeter. Nathaniel Shaw 17 . . . Brentwood. Benjamin Shaw 16 . . . Brentwood. *William T. Smith 21 . . . Deerfield Farmer and Teacher. " Samuel Taylor 11 . . . Hampton. *Nathaniel tlpham 19 . . . Deerfield M.C.; Merchant. Rochester. Daniel Wedge wood 19... North Hampton. Edmund Wiggin 21 . . . Stratham. Clerk. Thomaston, Me. Jedidiah Witcher 21 . . . Bedford, Mass. Samuel Wyatt 13 . . . Exeter. Hotel Keeper. 1849 1852 1819 1828 1859 1829 37 1794 William P. Adams 9 . William Bagley 15 . Horatio Gates Balch 16 . Joseph Brown 9 . Charles S. Bryant . 21 . * Samuel Phillips Chamberlain . 9 . Lieut. U.S. Navy. *Oeorge Cliff'ord 11 . *Samuel Shepard Conner .... 9 . Yale Coll. 1806; M.C.; Lawyer. Ebenezer Currier 21 . *Jolin Dane 26 . Clergyman. *Freese Dearborn 16 . Farmer. Benjamin Dole 19 . *John S. Durell 19 . Farmer. *Rufus Emerson 14 . City Official. * Jonathan French 16 . U.U. 1798; A.M.; Clergyman. ' Exeter. Amesbury, Mass. Barrington. Exeter. Newmarket. Exeter 1822 Portsmouth. Exeter 1805 Exeter 1820 Albany, N.Y. Hampton. Francestown. Hampton 1862 Exeter. Salisbury, Mass. Dover . 1854 Scarborough, Me. . . 1859 Portland, Me. Salisbury, Mass. . . 1856 North Hampton. 12 CATALOGUE. [1794-95. *WiUiam Garland 18 . . . Rye Merchant. Portsmouth. ♦Eliphalet Giddings ...... 10 .. . Exeter. ♦Tristram Gilman 14 . . . No. Yarmouth, Me. Dart. Coll. 1800; A.M.; Lawyer. Wells, Me. Joseph Gilman 19 . . . Gilmantou. Levi Haunaford 18 . . . North Hampton. *John A. Harper 14 . . . Sanbornton .... Lawyer. Meredith Bridge. John Hill 27 . . . Nottingham. Thomas Leavitt 10 . . . Exeter. Carriagemaker. " *Jacob Maine 20 . . . Rochester H.U. 1800; M.D.; Physician. Portsmouth. Samuel Page 12 . . . Exeter. William H. Page 15 . . . Exeter. Charles Pearson 9 . . . Exeter. *James Pearson 12 . . . Exeter Samuel Safford 12 . . . Exeter. *Elisha Smith 16 . . . Beverl^^, Mass. . . Mariner. *Horatio Southgate 13 . . . Scarborough, Me. . Farmer. " " ♦Andrew Eliot Thayer ..... 10 .. . Hampton H.U. 1803; Bookseller. Nashua. WiUiam Thompson 13 . . . Newburyport, Mass *Samuel Tibbetts 14 . . . Dover H.U. 1799; Lawyer. *Samuel Russell Trevett . . . . 10 . . . Marblehead, Mass. H.U. 1804; A.M.; M.D.; Physician. *Samuel Holten Webster . . . . 11 . . . Danvers, Mass. . . Shipmaster. Staten Island, N.Y. John Weeks 15 . . . Wakefield. . 1820 . 1828 1816 1807 1820 1817 1864 1846 . 1810 . 1822 . 1812 37 1795. ♦Joseph Balch 9 . Insurance Agent. Daniel Brown 14 . * Joseph Stevens Buckminster ..11. H.U. 1800; A.M.; Clergyman. *James Burley 10 . Bank Cashier. George Clark 14 . Greenleaf Clark . 13 . Benjamin Clark 10 . *Hector Coffin 11 . Shipmaster. *Jeremiah Dean 13 . Mariner. Israel Gale 20 . Broadstreet Gilman 18 . Leonard Hall 13 . *WilliamHill 12 . Capitalist. Newburyport, Mass. 1849 Boston, Mass. Hampton Falls. Portsmouth 1812 Boston, Mass. Exeter 1850 Epping. Epping. Stratham. Newburyport, Mass. 1846 (( (( Exeter 1799 Boston, Mass. Kingston. Newmarket. Portsmouth. Portsmouth 1849 1795-96.] CATALOGUE. 13 ♦Benjamin Hoit 13 . . Manufacturer. Joseph Lackey 11 . . *Joliii Lakeman 10 . . * Joshua Brackett Laugdon . . . 10 . . John Hill March 18 . . Joseph Osgood 13 . . Chandler Peavey 23 . . John Norris Pillsbury 21 . . William Pillsbury . ' 18 . . *Moses Porter 1.4 . . Dart. Coll. 1798. John Prentiss . . 14 . . Thomas Roberts 14 . . Charles Rundlett 20 . . Nathan Sanborn ....... 18 . . *Joseph Sewall 21 . . Business. * George Meserve Sheaf e .... 11 . . H.U. 1800; A.M. Elijah Tuttle 21 . . John Weeks 21 . . *Paul Went worth 12 . . Merchant. *Charles Wentworth 12 . . Bradstreet Wiggin 19 . . Eppinj 1825 Newburyport, Mass. Exeter. Portsmouth 1810 Stratham. Newbury, Mass. Durham. Kingston. Kingston. Saco, Me 1819 Londonderry. Boston, Mass. Gilmanton. Hawke. York, Me 1859 <( (< Portsmouth 1804 (( Barrington. Chester. Dover 1855 Concord. Portsmouth. Meredith. U 1796. * James Hervey Binoham .... 15 . Dart. Coll. 1801; A.M.; Lawyer. *Benjamin Greenleaf Boardman 12 . Business. *Edward Brooks 10 . *Stewart Brown 17 . Teacher. David Coffin 14 . Joseph Conner 15 . * William Shackford Cooper . . 14 . * Joseph Warren Dow 17 . H.U. 1805; A.M.; Clergyman. *Simeon Folsom 20 . Merchant. *John Oilman 13 . Sliipmaster? , * Abraham Hilliard 18 . Dart. Coll. 1800; A.M.; Lawyer. *Silas Holman 19 . Merchant. Eliphalet Howe 18 . Robert Dal ton Jenkins .... 11 . Business. Haynes Johnson 20 . *JohnLadd 21 . Teacher and Farmer. Leominster 1859 Washington, D.C. Newburyport, Mass. << <( Medford, Mass. . . . 1817 Deerfield 1844 Montpelier, Vt. Buxton, Me. Andover. Dover 1864 Hampton Falls ... 1833 Tyringham, Mass. Newmarket 1816 Exeter. Exeter 1822 New Orleans, La. Kensington 1855 Cambridge, Mass. Portsmouth 1807 <( Epping. Newburyport, Mass. Keene. Deerfield 1817 14 CATALOGUE. [1796-97. Isaac Ladd 21 . . Cassius Lee 16 . . ♦Francis Lightfoot Lee 13 . . H.U. 1802; A.M. *Hall Jackson Locke 14 . . Teacher. *Isaac Lyman 21 . . Lawyer and Farmer. Edward Martin 14 . . *JohnMcClary 11 . . *Samuel Morrill 17 . . Apothecary. *John Nelson 18 . . Dart. Coll. 1803; A.M.; Lawyer. *John Wilkes Parsons ..... 17 . . Physician. Joseph Parsons 22 . . *Ede Robinson 23 . . Teacher. *Leverett Saltonstall 12 . . H.U. 1802; A.M.; LL.D.; M.C. *Benjamin Sanborn 22 . . Teacher. *Thomas Sheafe, Jr 12 . . Jonathan Smith 16 . . Business. William Stoeker 11 . . Augustine Washington .... 15 . . BuSirod Washington 10 . . *Daniel Webster 14 . . Dart. Coll. 1801; A.M.; LL.D.; Lawyer; M.C. U.S. Sen.; U.S. Sec. State. David White 18 . . *Benjamin Wiggin 21 . . Hotel Keeper. Samuel Wiggin 14 . . Samuel Willey 21 . . Gilmanton. Westmoreland, Va. Westmoreland, Va. . 1850 Rye 1836 Newcastle. York, Me 1824 (< (( North Yarmouth, Me. Epsom 1821 Epping . 1858 Concord. Gilmanton 1838 Haverhill. Rye 1837 (( Rye. Deerfield 1809 Haverhill, Mass. . . 1845 Salem, Mass. Deerfield 1853 <( Portsmouth 1798 Brentwood. Exeter. Newburyport, Mass. Westmoreland, Va. Westmoreland, Va. Salisbury 1852 Boston, Mass. Boston, Mass. Exeter 1835 Wakefield. Exeter. Nottingham. 40 1797, ♦Joseph Boardman 16 Business. Jonathan Brown 17 *George Washington Cass ... 12 Farmer. ♦Charles Lee Cass 10 Farmer. *Peter Chadwick 14 Clerk of Courts. * James Clark 13 Samuel Craige 20 John Craige 18 Thomas Craige 14 Levi Dearborn 12 Exeter 1857 Hampton Falls. Exeter 1873 Muskingum Co., O. Exeter . .• 1842 Ohio. Deerfield 1847 Exeter. Sanbornton 1861 (( Trecothick. Trecothick. Exeter. Rochester. 1797.] CATALOGUE. 15 Abel Fisk 13 ♦Jonathan Footman 15 *Job Foss 20 John French 22 * Joseph Hanson Gage ..... 18 Shipmaster. Nathaniel Giddings 13 *Charles Gilman 10 *Samnel Gilman 12 * Jonathan Gilman 13 Nicholas Gilman 14 * John Heath Goddard 13 * John Grant 11 * Joseph Grant ......... 10 Merchant. David Greene 18 * James Johnson 17 H.U. 1808; A.M.; Clergyman. * William Johnson 19 Business. ♦Alexander Ladd 13 Merchant. *Henry Lamson 10 *Josiah Lane 19 M.D.; Physician. *John Tillon Leavitt 21 JohnMcClure 12 *John Merrill 15 H.U. 1804; A.M.; M.D.; Physician. *Benjamin Merrill 13 H.U. 1804; A.M.; LL.D.; Lawyer. *Ezekiel Williams Morse .... 14 Woodbridge Odlin 10 *PeterOdhn 9 ♦Joseph Douglas Osborne ... 11 RufusPage 11 Samuel Page 22 John Parsons 21 *Samuel Page Peirsou 13 ♦Samuel Philbrick . 12 Bank Cashier. Richard King Porter 13 ♦Levi Prescott 15 Farmer. ♦George Rogers 18 Pelatiah Ruker 21 William Shannon 18 Moses Titcomb 13 * Samuel WalJier 18 Dart. Coll. 1802; Clergyman. Wilton. Dover. (( Barrington. Stratham. Dover 1823 Amherst. Exeter 1857 Norwich, Conn. Exeter. Exeter 1809 Maiden, Mass. North Yarmouth, Me. Portsmouth 1875 Boston, Mass. . . . 1820 Boston, Mass. . . . 1858 Stratham. Keene 1856 St. Johnsbury, Vt. Keene. ti Portsmouth 1855 <( Exeter. Stratham 1860 Franklin, Pa. Chichester 1848 (( Exeter. Conway 1855 Portland, Me. Conway 1847 Salera^, Mass. New Haven, Conn. Exeter. Exeter. Exeter 1803 Hallowell, Me. Readfield, Me. Alfred, Me. Biddeford, Me. . . . 1806 Exeter 1868 Skowhegan, Me. Biddeford, Me. Hampton Falls . . . 1850 (( (( Newmarket. Alfred, Me. Rochester. Portland, Me. Haverhill, Mass. . . 1826 Dan vers, Mass. 16 CATALOGUE. [1797-98. *Seth Shackford Walker .... 17 Land Surveyor. ♦William Walker 17 Thomas West 13 Robert Ball Willis 13 Merchant. Eleazur Young 20 . Dover 1859 Durham. . Portsmouth 1854 South Newmarket. . Haverhill, Mass. . Haverhill, Mass. Boston, Mass. . Barrington. 54 1798, Nicholas Richelieu Barbottiau . 19 William Boardman 18 Jeremiah Bradbury 16 *David Clark 16 Farmer. ♦Jonathan Cook 14 Government Service. *Jaazaniah Crosby 18 H.U. 1804; Clergyman. John Dudley 17 ♦Caleb Emery 11 M.D.; Physician. ♦Benjamin Hitchborn Fosdick . 13 ♦Henry Goddard 12 Merchant. ♦William Gordon 10 H.U. 1806; Lawyer. ♦Moses Grant 12 Merchant. Richard Hoit 15 Josiah Hook 13 John Jackson 12 *PaulJewett 18 B.U. 1802; A.M.; Clergyman. William Short Johnson .... 1 1 ♦Benjamin U. Lapish 16 ♦Moses Leavitt 13 ♦John Leavitt 13 ♦Charles Little 16 Farmer and Merchant. Jacob Longfellow 22 William Low 12 * Joseph Merrill .21 Dart. Coll. 1806; Clergyman. ♦Thomas Nasson 19 ♦Henry Nutter 12 ♦John Odiorne 14 Shipmaster. ♦William Bourne Orne 13 Shipmaster. John Paine 24 . Guadaloupe, W.I. . Newmarket. . Pepperellborough, Me. . North wood 1824 . Wiscasset, Mo. . Hebron 1864 Charlestown. . Brentwood. . Sanford, Me 1831 Eliot, Me. . Portland, Me. . Portsmouth 1871 Boston, Mass. . Amherst 1871 Charlestown. . Boston, Mass 1861 <( (( . Amesbury, Mass. . Sandown. . Portsmouth. . Rowley, Mass. . . . 1841 Salem, Mass. . Exeter. . Durham 1810 (( . Chichester 1860 (( . North Hampton . . . 1820 Cambridge, Mass. . Campton 1813 Centre Harbor. . Newmarket. . Gloucester, Mnss. . Stratham 1848 . Sanford, Me. .... 1825 . Exeter. . Salisbury, Mass. . . 1826 Boston, Mass. . Marblehead, Mass. . 1864 Brooklyn, N.Y. . Parsonsfield, Me. 1798-99.] CATALOGUE. 17 *Mark: Wentworth Peirce . . . 12 . . Merchant. *Jacob Sheafe 15 . . Merchant. *Ebenezer Smith 16 . . Merchant. William Spence 11 . . James Starr 19 . . * Woodbury Storer 14 . . Lawyer. *Seth Storer 10 . . Bowd. Coll. 1807; A.M. ; Lawyer. *John Barnard Swett 10 . . Merchant. Benjamin Thurston 13 . . *Henry Wadsworth 13 . . Elijah Wells 18 . , Edmund Stafford Young . . . IG . . Portsmouth 1846 (( Portsmouth 1848 Pottsville, Pa. Durham 1869 Portsmouth. Dunstable. Portland, Me 18G0 (( (( Pepperellborough, Me. 1876 Scarborough, Me. Exeter 1840 Philadelphia, Pa. North Hampton. Portland, Me 1803 Rumsey, Brentwood, 41 1799 * Nathaniel Carter 10 Business. *RichardCobb 11 Bowd. Coll. 1806; A.M.; Merchant. *Isaac Foster Coffin 12 Bowd. Coll. 1806; A.M.; Teacher. *John Perkins Cushing 12 Merchant. [Canton, China.] * James Greene Dana 14 Editor. Isaac Somes Davis 14 William Edwards 14 Robert Fletcher 9 *Jacob Folsom 20 Farmer. * Joseph G. Folsom 10 *Phillips Gilman 10 William Gordon 15 *Reuben H. Greene 16 Merchant and Farmer. * Augustine Heard 14 •Merchant. *Charles Hutchins 13 Merchant. Joseph Jewett 13 James Johnson 10 Moses Judkins 19 *JohnLadd 17 M.D.; Physician. * Walter Langdon 10 Capitalist. John Lapish 14 *Moses Little 17 Business. Newburyport, Mass. (( <( Portland, Me 1837 Boston, Mass. Portland, Me 1861 Jamaica Plain, Mass. Boston, Mass 1862 Watertown, Mass. Amherst 1841 Frankfort, Ky. Gloucester, Mass. Portsmouth. Amherst. Newmarket 1826 Wolfborough. Exeter 1813 Exeter 1838 Defiance, O. Newbury, Mass. Dover 1877 VVinslow, Me. Ipswich, Mass. . . . 1868 Boston, Mass. Concord 1868 (( Portland, Me. Keene. Kingston. Epping 1845 Portsmouth 1842 New York, N.Y. Durham. Newbury, Mass. . , 1802 Boston, Mass. 18 CATALOGUE. [1799. *Timothy Little 22 M.D.; Physician. *Ebenezer Little 10 Farmer. * Samuel Livermore 13 H.U. 1804; Lawyer. Thomas Manning 12 Shipmaster. ♦Isaac Mansfield 12 * Andrew McClary 12 Farmer; Capt. U.S. Army. *Robert Means 13 Bowd. Coll. 1807; A.M.; Lawyer. John Murphy Molloy 12 *Emperor Moseley 10 Supercargo. William Murray 13 John Nelson 16 *Daniel Newcomb 13 H.U. 1803; A.M.; M.D.; Physician. *Seth Newcomb . 12 H.U. 1804; A.M.; Lawyer. *Henry Stearns Newcomb ... 11 Dart. Coll. 1807; Lieut. U.S. Navy. Thomas Newman 16 *John O'Brien 13 Bowd. Coll. 1806; A.M.; Lawyer. *Moses Osgood 14 ^Amos Pettengill 18 H.U. 1805; A.M.; Clergyman. Thorndike Putnam 12 *Moses Quimby 13 Bowd. Coll. 1806; Lawyer and Farmer. *RobertReed 12 Builder. Daniel Reeves 13 Daniel Rundlett 14 *William F. Salter 12 Merchant. * Joshua SafFord 14 Government Service. Thomas Saw^'er 15 Lawyer. Thomas Shannon 15 *Samuel Sheafe 13 Merchant. *Henry Sherburne 10 Mariner. * Jacob Sheafe Smith 13 H.U. 1805; A.M. ♦Valentine Smith 25 Lawyer. James Stevens 14 *Henry Sturgis 10 Merchant. * Benjamin Titcomh 11 Bowd. CoU. 1806; Clergyman. . Windham 1849 Portland, Me. . Campton 1864 . Portsmouth 1833 New Orleans, La. . Portsmouth. <( . Marblehead, Mass. . Epsom 1811 Washington, D.C. . Amherst 1842 Lowell, Mass. . Salem, Mass. . Salem, Mass 1806 (( (( . Newbury, Mass. . Exeter. . Keene 1809 (( . Keene 1811 . Keene 1825 . Boston, Mass. . Newburyport, Mass. 1865 Brunswick, Me. . Newburv, Mass. . Salem ." 1830 (( . Haverhill, Mass. . Stroudwater, Me. . . 1859 Westbrook, Me. . Amherst 1857 Manchester. . Charleston, S.C. . Exeter. • . Portsmouth 1849 New York, N.Y. . Salem, Mass 1869 (( <( . Newburj^port, Mass. i Moultonborough. . Portsmouth 1857 (< . Portsmouth. (( . Durham 1880 Gorham, Me. . Durham 1869 . Bradford, Mass. . Boston, Mass. . . . 1819 . Portland, Me. . . . 1829 Freeport, Me. 1799-1800.] CATALOGUE. 19 . Samuel Torrey 12 . . . Boston, Mass. John Walsh 12 . . . Portsmouth. *John Chandler White 14 . . . Boston, Mass. Business. Mississippi. John Williams 15 . . . Newmarket. 1800, 1846 60 *Ephraim Abbot 20 . H.U. 1806; A.M.; Clergyman. *Charles Atkinson 15 . Joseph Bartlett 15 . *John Bliss 13 . H.U. 1808; U.S. Army. *Francis Boardman 13 . Merchant. Thomas Jones Boardman ... 13 . Business. JosiahCalef 17 . *Abiel Chandler 23 . H.U. 1806; A.M.; Merchant (Boston). Samuel Clark 12 . *Nathaniel Coffin 13 . Bookkeeper. *John Davis 21 . Editor. *Henry Dean 12 . Business. *Thomas Perkins Doubleday . . 10 . Warren Dow *Samuel Goddard 12 . Merchant. *Christopher Gore 13 . Sign Painter. *George Grant 10 . Merchant. Jonathan Greene 17 . *Nathaniel Appleton Haven . . 10 . H.U. 1807; A.M.; M.C.; Lawyer; Editor. Leonard Hunnewell 11 . * James C. Marston 12 . *Daniel Melcher 13 . Dennis O'Brien 12 . Mariner. *Henry Olcott 12 . Lieut. Marines, U.S.N. *Georg-e Olcott 14 . Yale Coll. 1805; A.M.; Bank Cashier. *Henry Osborne 11 . Chaisemaker. John Osgood 12 . John Carr Roberts Palmer . . 18 . * Jeremiah Pearson 13 . *Edmund Pearson 13 . Bank Cashier. Concord *. . 1870 Westford, Mass. Newbury, Mass. . . 1845 Lee. Haverhill 1854 Florida. Salem, Mass 1870 Newburyport, Mass. (( (( Kingston. Fryeburg, Me. . . . 1851 Walpole. Portsmouth. Newburyport, Mass. 1833 Concord. Exeter 1849 Portsmouth. Charleston, S.C. Portsmouth 1871 Boston, Mass. Boston, Mass. . . . 1849 (( (( Boston, Mass 1849 Pittsburg, Pa. Hampton Falls. Portsmouth 1826 Portland, Me. Boston, Mass. Portsmouth. Newburyport, Mass. (( (( Charlestown 1821 Gosport, Va. Charlestown 1864 (( Exeter 1836 (( Newbury, Mass. Wakefield. Newbury, Mass. Exeter 1866 Skowhegan, Me. 20 CATALOGUE. *Samiiel Huntington Porter . . 13 Printer and Editor. *John Whittingham Rogers . . 12 Merchant. *Richard Saltonstall Rogers . . 10 Merchant. *Nathaniel Leverett Rogers . . 14 Merchant. * James H. Sargent 19 *Daniel Rindge Sheafe 14 Merchant. *Francis Sheafe 12 * William Parsons Sigourney . . 11 Sherburne Sleeper 15 John Smith 13 Daniel Smith 12 Ichabod Snow 18 *Rufus Swasey 12 *Israel Thorndike 14 Merchant. *George Thorndike 12 Bowd. Coll. 1806; A.M. • Rye Savannah, Ga. . Salem, Mass. (( (( . Salem, Mass. . Salem, Mass. . York, Me. . Portsmouth . . Portsmouth . . Boston, Mass. << << . Kingston. . Exeter. . Exeter. . Moultonborough. . Exeter Boston, Mass. . Beverly, Mass. . Boston, Mass. . Beverly, Mass. . [1800-1. . 1807 . 1872 . 1873 . 1858 1854 1816 1829 1840 1867 1811 45 1801. *Theodore Chase 14 Merchant. *Henry Codman 11 H.U. 1808; A.M.; Lawyer. * Joseph Green Cogswell .... 14 H.U. 1806; A.M.; Ph.D.; LL.D.; Librarian *Josiah Quincy Guild 14 . H.U. 1807; Business. *Charles Head 11 . Merchant. *Charles Heard 14 . * James Perkins Higginson ... 10 . Merchant. *Charles Lamson 11 . John Lane 19 . Benjamin Leavitt 14 . Gilman Leavitt 13 . Jonathan Lowell 13 . * James Cushing Merrill .... 16 . , H.U. 1807; A.M.; Lawyer. * Samuel Merrill 14 . H.U. 1807; A.M.; Lawyer. Samuel Peak 17 . *Benjamin Prince 18 . Dart. Coll. 1807; A.M.; Lawyer. *Josiah Rundlett 19 . *John Salter . . .• 13 . Shii)master. . . Portsmouth 1859 Boston, Mass. . . Boston, Mass. . . . 1853 . . Ipswich, Mass. . . . I. New York, N.Y. . . Cambridge, Mass. . . Milton, Fla. . . Boston, Mass. . . . 1871 1861 1821 . . Ipswich, Mass. . . Boston, Mass. . . . 1879 . . Exeter. . . Stratham. . . Exeter. . . Brentwood. . . Amesbury, Mass. . . Haverhill, Mass. . . 1853 Boston, Mass. . . Haverhill, Mass. . . 1869 Andover, Mass. . . Newtown. . . Newburyport, Mass. Cincinnati, 0. . . Exeter 1815 1831 . . Portsmouth 1858 1801-2.] CATALOGUE. *Lucius Manliiis Sargent .... 15 . Lawyer and Author. *EbeLiezer Smith 14 . Yale Coll. 1809; Teacher. *James Perkins Sturgis .... 10 . Merchant. John Storer 16 . John Swasey 14 . *William Browne Swett ....11. Merchant. John Thompson 14 . * William Thompson 15 . Shipmaster. * Andrew Thorndike 11 . Merchant. *Joseph B. Towne 14 . Merchant. Thomas Towne 12 . Merchant. David Williams 13 . James C. Williams 10 . Daniel Woodman 19 . Boston, Mass. Durham . . . . Neshaminy, Pa. Boston, Mass. China. Wells, Me. Exeter. Exeter . . . . Boston, Mass. Durham. Portsmouth . . Beverly, Mass. Boston, Mass. Hopkinton. Hopkinton. St. Louis, Mo. Natchez, Miss. Natchez, Miss. Kingston. 21 1867 1830 1851 1837 1843 1854 32 1802, Caleb Adams 15 . *John Bishop 15 . James Blair 16 . *George William Boyd 11 . Bowd. Coll. 1810; A.M.; Merchant. WilHam Brown 13 . *Thomas Brown 13 . Shipmaster. Edward Codman 11 . *Clark Dean 10 . Business. John Gookin 14 . Charles Greene 19 . Merchant. * Joseph Hamilton 13 . *01iver Hamilton 19 . * William Stone Ingraham ... 14 . *George Jefferds 14 . Hotel Keeper. John Lee 15 . *Dudley Little 27 . Farmer. Charles Loring 15 . *Richard Lovering 11 . Shoemaker. * Augustus Magee 13 . * Joseph Bolles Manning .... 15 . H.U. 1808; A.M.; Lawyer. *Sylvester Melcher 13 . Merchant. Stratham. Medford, Mass. . . . 1830 Exeter. Portsmouth 1859 Portland, Me. Portsmouth. Portsmouth 1822 (( Boston, Mass. Exeter 1826 << North Hampton. Dover 1854 II Berwick, Me. Berwick, Me. Portland, Me 1806 Wells, Me 1823 Kennebunk, Me. Castine, Me. Hampstead 1827 ii North Yarmouth, Me. Exeter 1853 <( Boston, Mass. Gloucester, Mass. . . 1854 Ipswich, Mass. Portsmouth 1875 22 CATALOGUE. [1802-3. * James Miltimore 13 . Teacher. *Nathaniel K. G. Oliver .... 14 . H.U. 1809; A.M.; Teacher. *George Parker 10 . H.U. 1812; A.M. George Pickering 13 . * William Plnmer 13 . H.U. 1809; A.M.; M.C.; Lawyer. Winthrop Sargent 10 . * James Sheaf e 13 . H.U. 1808; A.M.; Capitalist. * Samuel Spring 10 . Yale Coll. 1811; A.M.; Clergyman. James Tash 17. Thomas Stow Thing 15 . James Weeks 13 . *John Cravath May Wiudship . 13 . H.U. 1809; Lawyer. Joseph Woodman . 18 . . Stratham 1852 Charlotte Hall, Md. . Exeter 1832 Boston, Mass. . Boston, Mass. . . . 1825 Baltimore, Md. . Danvers, Mass. . Epping 1854 (( . Gloucester, Mass. . Portsmouth 1845 (( . Newburyport, Mass. 1877 Hartford, Conn. . New Durham. . Brentwood. . Portland, Me. . Exeter 1814 Rapides, La. . Buxton, Me. 34 1803. *John Emery Abbot 10 Bowd. Coll. 1810; A.M.; Clergyman. David Andrew Baum 13 *SamuelBond 21 Merchant. ♦Jacob Tilton Chamberlain . . . 12 * Jonathan Clark 15 Business. ♦David Coffin 14 Business. *Moses Colby 20 M.D.; Physician. Thomas Prince Crafts 13 * Jonathan Peele Dabney .... 11 H.U. 1811; Clergyman. ♦Nathaniel Deering 12 H.U. 1810; A.M.; Lawyer. ♦Nicholas Bartlett Doe ..... 17 Lawyer. ♦Samuel White Duncan .... 12 H.U. 1810; A.M.; Lawyer. ♦Theodore Eames 18 Yale Coll. 1809; A.M.; Teacher. ♦Henry L. Eastham 12 Farmer. ♦Jeremiah Fellowes 12 Bowd. Coll. 1810; Lawyer. ♦Jeremiah Parsons Fogg .... 15 Lawyer. ♦Henry French 20 ♦Nathaniel Giddings 12 . . Exeter 1819 Salem, Mass. . . Demarara, W. I. . . Augusta, Me 1809 . . Exeter 1811 New Orleans, La. . . Northwood ..... 1864 Gilmanton. . . Newburyport, Mass. 1815 (( <( . . Exeter 1847 Wakefield. . . Middleborough, Mass. . . Salem, Mass 1868 Boston, Mass. . . Portland, Me 1881 (( (( . . Newmarket 1856 Saratoga, N.Y. . . Haverhill, Mass. . . 1824 (( (( . . Haverhill, Mass. . . 1846 Brooklyn, N.Y. . . Exeter 1833 (( . . Exeter 1865 (( . . Kensington 1821 Steuben ville, O. . . Portsmouth. . . Exeter. 1803-4.] CATALOGUE. ♦Charles W. Gilmaii 10 . Apothecary. Charles Gordon 14 . Business. George Grafton ......... 12 . *Wells Healey 14 . Farmer. *Timothv Hilliard 17 . H.U. 1809; A.M.; M.D. *Eliphalet Ladd 12 . Merchant. Daniel Lane 19 . ♦Joseph McLellan 14 . Postmaster. ♦Archibald McPhail 23 . Teacher. ♦Joshua Winslow Peirce .... 12 . Shipowner and Farmer. ♦Joseph Prescott ........ 17 . ♦Edmund Quincy Sheaf e .... 15 . Merchant. ♦Samuel Stevens 24 . H.U. 1809. ♦George Washington Storer . . 14 . Rear Admiral, U.S.N. ♦Weare Tappan 13 . Dart. Coll. 1811; A.M.; Lawyer. Timothy Thorndike 19 . ♦JohnTibbets 16 . Shipmaster. ♦Letsom Winship 12 . Exeter 1871 Newbury, Mass. Boston, Mass. Salem, Mass. Kensington 1857 Hampton Falls. Kensington 1847 Portsmouth 1821 Boston, Mass. Buxton, Me. Portland, Me. . . . ? 1830 Brunswick, Me. Wakefield. Portsmouth 1873 Hampton Falls . . . 1809 Portsmouth 1839 it Andover, Mass. . . . 1809 << (( Portland, Me 1864 Portsmouth. Kingston 1868 Bradford. Jaffrey. Dover 1819 (( Exeter. 36 1804 ♦Jeremiah P. Adams . . Peter Aikin ♦Amos Blanchard . . . Benjamin Cram .... Farmer. ♦Israel Woodbury Davis Merchant. George Lyman Emerson ♦Henry Folsom .... ♦George Edward Head H.U. 1812; Lawyer. Eichard Tuttle Hunt Fitz Edward Hutchins Ralph Johnson . . . John Leighton .... ♦William Augustus Leverett Merchant. ♦Theodore L^^man . . . H.U. 1810; A.M. ♦Theodore Bland Moses Business. 13 23 14 17 15 13 11 11 12 12 14 14 13 12 14 Exeter. Chester. Exeter. Hampton Falls. (( (( Beverly, Mass. (< (< York, Me. Exeter. Boston, Mass. << (( St. Croix, W. I. Boston, Mass. Freeport, Me. Durham. Portsmouth . . Boston, Mass. Boston, Mass.- Exeter 1814 1861 1820 1849 1871 24 CATALOGUE. [1804-5. *George Washington Osborne . 13 Business. George Pearce 12 John Pearson 11 Business. *Clark Gay ton Pickman .... 12 John Pratt 13 Richard W. Rogers 13 *John Rogers 17 Business. *Ichabod Rollins 14 Merchant. *Thomas Robie Sewall 12 Business. John Signorette 14 ^ Henry Smith 15 Clergyman. *George Smith 14 Carriagemaker. William Stearns 12 *Thomas Stevens 14 Lawyer. *George Langdon Storer .... 14 Josiah Thatcher 15 *George Augustus Trumbull . . 12 Business. Winthrop Watson 18 . Exeter 1869 <( . Gloucester, Mass. . Newbur^'port, Mass. Bangor, Me. . Salem, Mass 1860 Boston, Mass. . Boston, Mass. . Newmarket. . Newmarket 1837 Exeter. . Dover 1873 Portsmouth. . Boston, Mass. . . . 1864 <( (( . Guadaloupe, W. I. . Durham 1828 Camden, N.J. . Exeter 1868 . Salem, Mass. . Beverly, Mass. . . . 1868 . Portland, Me 1854 Buffalo, N.Y. . Gorham, Me. . Petersham, Mass. . . 1868 Worcester, Mass. . Newmarket. 33 1805. Samuel Avery 20 . *Horatio Bigelow 14 . H.U. 1809; A.M. *Eleazer Blanchard 22 . Student at Dart. Coll. *John Bond 15 . Lawyer. *Charles Browne 12 . H.U. 1812; A.M. John Alphonso Chandler ... 14 . * William Carroll 11 . H.U. 1813. *Isaac Chapman 14 . Bookkeeper. * William Cross 14 . Merchant. Jonathan Freeman Dana . . .12 . *Samuel Fellowes 17 . Mechanic. Joseph Greely 21 . *SamuelHale 12 . Bowd. Coll. 1814; A.M.; Manufacturer. Ebenezer Hale 18 . Benaiah Hanson 24 . Stratham. Cambridge, Mass. Louisiana. Chester Augusta, Me. . Alabama. Beverly, Mass. Monmouth, Me. Hampton . . . Beverly, Mass. Newburyport, Mass. Boston, Mass. Exeter. Exeter South Hampton. Barrington .... Portsmouth. Brattleborough, Vt. Windham, Me. 1824 1809 1829 1856 1817 1822 1825 1828 1869 1805-6.] CATALOGUE. 25 *Johii Henuiker Ingraham ... 12 . Caleb Johnson 15 . Joseph Kent 15 . Israel Lakeman 16 . *Geori^e Lamson 12 . Bowd. Coll. 1812; A.M.; Editor, Mark Lane 17 . *William Lang 14 . Farmer. *George Long 13 . Merchant. *John Manning 16 . H.U. 1810; A.M.; M.D.; Physician. *John Howard March 14 . Merchant. *James Odell 20 . M.D.; Physician. *Benjamin Pickmau 15 . Merchant. John Pierson 14 . *William Reed ? 17 . H.U. 1811. *Charles Roby 23 . B.U. 1810; A.M. * William Augustus Rogers ... 12 . H.U. 1811; A.M.; Lawyer. *Richard Rollins 17 . Merchant. *John Lane Sheafe 13 . Lawyer. William Sherburne 12 . William B. Simpson 13 . *Frederic Southgate 13 . Bowd. Coll. 1810. George Strong 13 . Joseph Weld 11 . Thomas Wiggin . ...... . . 19 . *William Young 13 . H.U. 1810. . Portland, Me 1868 . Utica, N.Y. . Chester. . Exeter. . Exeter 1826 New York, N.Y. . Stratham. . Effingham 1875 Milan. . Portsmouth 1819 Boston, Mass. . Gloucester, Mass. . . 1852 Rockport, Mass. . Greenland 1863 Paris, France. . Stratham 1822 . . Salem, Mass. . . . . 1835 Boston, Mass. . . Biddeford, Me. . . . 1828 . . Easton, Mass. . . . 1812 . . Dunstable 1826 . . Salem, Mass 1821 <( (( . . Dover 1813 if . . Portsmouth 1864 New Orleans, La. . - Portsmouth. . , North Hampton. . . Scarborough, Me. . . 1812 . . Randolph, Mass. . . Plymouth. . . Exeter. . . Newburyport, Mass. 1821 tt (( 40 1806, *Amos Atkinson 14 . Merchant. ^Jolin Lauris Blaise 18 . B.U. 1812; D.D.; Clergyman; Author. Levi Blanchard 13 . *01iver Brooks 10 . Clerk Orphans' Court. Henry Burleigh 13 . *Nathaniel Hazeltine Carter ..12. Dart. Coll. 1811; A.M.; Editor. *Samuel Luther Dana 11 . H.U. 1813; A.M.; LL.D.; M.D. *Thomas Amory Deblois .... 12 . H.U. 1813; A.M.; LL.D.; Lawyer. Newbury, Mass. . . . 1863 Boston, Mass. Northwood 1857 Orange, N.Y. Exeter. Exeter 1848 Philadelphia, Pa. Exeter. Concord 1830 New York, N.Y. Exeter 1868 Boston, Mass. . . . 1867 26 CATALOGUE. [1806. Godfrey Delorm 20 * James Henry Duncan 11 H.U. 1812; A.M.; LL.D.; M.C. *Edward Augustus Emerson . . 13 Business. *Charles Folsom 11 H.U. 1813; A.M.; Editor and Librarian. Jacob Frost 21 *Nathaniel Gilman 12 Business. * William Charles Gilman . ... 11 Manufacturer. *Nathaniel Batchelder Gordon . 15 *John T. Gordon 13 Farmer. *Ezra Haskell 24 Yale Coll. 1811; Teacher. *Edmund Kimball 13 H.U. 1814; Lawyer. ♦Samuel Ladd 13 Printer. Joshua Lane 18 Nathaniel Leavitt ....... 16 Bradstreet Gilman Leavitt . . 15 *Josiah Little 15 Bowd. Coll. 1811; A.M.; Farmer. *John Lougee 12 Cabinetmaker. John Madison 12 ♦Robert Neil 13 Accountant. Elijah F. Page 18 ♦Nathaniel Anthony Paine ... 14 Benjamin Pearce 15 *Moses Pillsbury 18 Dart. Coll. 1811; Lawyer. ♦Edward C. Piper 16 Farmer. Henry A. Ranlett 14 ♦John Rollins 13 Business. ♦Nathaniel Rundlett 12 Business. ♦Josiah Gilman Smith 13 Merchant. ♦Tristram Storer 13 Shipmaster. ♦George W. Sturgis 12 Merchant. Samuel Tenney 18 ♦Edward Thorndike 12 Merchant. ♦Charles Thorndike ,10 Merchant. ♦Elisha Fuller Wallace 14 Dart. Coll. 1811; Lawyer; U. S. Consul. Guadaloupe, W. I. Haverhill, Mass. . . 1869 (< (( York, Me. Boston, Mass. Exeter 1872 Cambridge, Mass. York, Me. Exeter 1858 Exeter 1863 Norwich, Conn. Exeter 1847 Lawrence, Mass. Exeter 1865 (( New Gloucester, Me. 1858 Dover. ' Newburyport, Mass. 1873 Wenham, Mass. Dover. Readfield, Me. Brentwood. Portsmouth. Newbury, Mass. . . 1860 Newburyport, Mass. Exeter 1866 (( Portland, Me. Portsmouth 1837 (( Hopkinton. Worcester, Mass. . . 1819 (( (( Hillsborough. Bridge water 1832 Wakefield 1881 Exeter. Newbury, Mass. . . 1833 Newburyport, Mass. Exeter 1846 (( Exeter 1877 Saco,Me 1847 Boston, Mass 1826 Bj^field, Mass. Beverly, Mass. Boston, Mass. Beverly, Mass. . . . 1833 Boston, Mass. Milford 1870 Cuba. 1806-7.] CATALOGUE. 27 ♦Richard Webster 17 . . . Rye 1856 Teacher. " Ebenezer White 12 . . . Rutland, Mass. ♦Andrew Paine Wiggin . . . . 14 . . . Stratham 1846 M.D.; Physician. Greenland. * Samuel Woodbury 21 . . . Acworth 1819 Dart. Coll. 1811; A.M.; Clergyman. Groton, Mass. 46 1807, *Henry Allen 15 Farmer. *Zachariah Allen 11 , B.U. 1813; A.M.; LL.D. ♦Abraham Andrews 20 Dart. Coll. 1811; A.M.; Teacher. ^Barnabas Batea 20 Clergyman and Editor. Peter Bazin 13 ♦Thomas Peter Bidau 15 Elias Blanchard 10 Josepli Blunt 11 Business. * Charles Briggs 17 H.U. 1815; A.M.; Clergyman. Alexander S. Cliadbourne . . . 14 Joseph Cutts 11 ♦John Davis 15 Farmer. ♦Henry Elijah Dix 14 , H.U. 1813. * Edward Everett 13 H.U. 1811; LL.D.; Ph.D.; Clergyman; H.U.; M.C.; U.S. Sen.; Gov. Mass.; State; U.S. Min. to England; Pres. H. John Gale 16 , ♦Benjamin Ives Oilman .... 12 , B.'U. 1813; A.M.; Business. John Goddard 10 ♦John Heath 14 ♦Winthrop Hilton 12 , Bowd. Coll. 1814; A.M.; Farmer. ♦Stephen Farrar Jones 21 Yale Coll. 1812; Teacher. Ephraim K. Lamson 10 Henry Marston 12 ''•^Andrew Williams Miltimore . . 15 Shipmaster. ♦Thomas Handyside Perkins, Jr. 11 Merchant. ♦William King Porter 11 Bowd. Coll. 1814; Lawyer. ♦George Prince 15 ♦William Henry Robbins .... 12 Bowd. Coll. 1814; Lawyer. Prof. Sec. Beverly, Mass. . . . 1844 Illinois. Providence, R.I. . . 1882 Winsor, Conn. . . . 1869 Boston, Mass. . . . 1853 New York, N.Y. Boston, Mass. Paris, France. Exeter. Newburyport, Mass. New York, N.Y. Halifax, Mass. . . . 1873 Roxbury, Mass. Portsmouth. Kittery, Me. Beverly, Mass. . . . 1838 Wenham, Mass. Boston, Mass. . . . . 1822 Boston, Mass. . . . . 1865 Exeter. Marietta, 0. . . . . . 1866 Monticello, 0. Charlestown, Mass . Brookline, Mass. . 1835 Deerfield .... . . 1869 New Ipswich. Beaufort, S.C. Exeter. Boston, Mass. Stratham .... . 1865 Newburyport, Mass. Boston, Mass. . . 1850 Topsham, Me. . . 1839 Turner, Me. Salem, Mass . . . . 1810 Hallowell, Me. . . . 1849 Scheraw, S.C. 28 CATALOGUE. * William Robinson 12 . Merchant. *Charles Sheafe 16 . Capitalist. *Jolin Sherburne Sleeper .... 13 . Editor. James Smith 17 . *Edwiu Smith 16 . H.U. 1811; Lawyer. *Alfred Smith 15 . Mercliant. *Tasker Hazard Swett 12 . Merchant. John Tayloe 14 . *Benjamin Ogle Tayloe .... 11 . H.U. 1815; A.M. David Tiikesbury 26 . * Augustus Thorndike 10 . H.U. 1816; A.M. * William Thorndike 12 . H.U. 1813; A.M.; Lawyer. *George W. Weeks 16 . Farmer. Warren White 16 . Samuel Wiggin ........ 17 . [1807-8. Exeter 1865 Augusta, Ga. Portsmouth 1816 (( Exeter 1878 Boston, Mass. Newmarket. Wiscasset, Me. . . . 1875 Warren, Me. Durham 1876 Exeter 1841 Boston, Mass. Richmond, Va. Richmond, Va. . . . 1868 Washington, D.C. Amesbur}', Mass. Beverly, Mass. . . . 1858 Beverly, Mass. . . . 1835 (( (( Greenland. (I Brookline, Mass. Stratham. 42 1808, John Adams 10 . Charles Wentworth Apthorp . 12 . Noah Barker 19 . Teacher. *David Barker 12 . H.U. 1815; A.M.; M.C.; Lawyer. Joseph Baxter 11 . H.U. 1815; M.D. Thomas Boardman 12 . Achille Bonhomme 14 . Americus Brown 15 . * Isaac Lyman Buckminster . . 12 . H.U. 1815; A.M. Effingham Capron 17 . Nathaniel G. Dana 11 . *John Dearborn 20 . Business. Robert Gordon 23 . *Micajah Hawkes 21 . M.D. *Charles Keating 13 . H.U. 1814. *01iver Keating 11. George Kent 12 . Dart. Coll. 1814; Lawyer. *Thomas Leavitt 14 . Hotel-keeper. Nathan Leonard 20 . Exeter. Medford, Mass. Stratham. Rochester . . . . Boston, Mass. Exeter. France. Deer Isle, Me. Portsmouth . . . Norton, Mass. Uxbridge, Mass. Exeter. North Hampton . Lynn, Mass. Bedford. Lynn, Mass. . . 1834 1825 1832 1863 Boston, Mass. . . . 1817 Cambridge, Mass. Boston, Mass. Concord. Washington, D.C. North Hampton . . . 1860 Hampton. Middleborough, Mass. 1808-9.] CATALOGUE. *Edward S. Manning 12 . Shipmaster. Benjamin Ogle 11 . *Richard Elvin Ornc 12 . Bowd. Coll. 1815; Shipmaster. * William Bourne Oliver Peahody 9 . H.U. 1816; A.M.; Clergyman and Author. * Oliver William Boiniie Peahody 9 . H.U. 181G; A.M.; Editor and Clergyman. Aaron Peabody 20 . George Washington Prescott . 20 . *Benjamin Franklin Salter ... 16 . Rowd. Coll. 1813; Merchant. * William James Seaver .... 14 . U.S. Consul. *Theodore Sheafe 13 . Merchant. *Jonathan Silsby 20 . Dart. Coll. 1814; M.D. ; Physician. *Henry Stark 12 . Business. *Riehard Steele ........ 11 . Dart. Coll. 1815; A.M.; M.D.; Physician. *William H. Tayloe 9 . Planter. * Jonas Underwood 19 . H.U. 1815; M.D.; Physician. William Willis 14 . H.U. 1813; A.M.; LL.D.; Lawyer. Portsmouth. <( Annapolis, Md. Salem, Mass 1860 <( (( Exeter 1847 Springfield. Mass. Exeter 1848 Burlington, Vt. Bridgetown, Me. Tallahassee, Fla. Salem, Mass. Portsmouth 1858 New York, N.Y. Worcester, Mass. . . 1835 St. Croix. Portsmouth 1840 II Acworth 1831 Cazenovia, N.Y. Dunbarton. Washington, D.C. Durham 1870 Newburyport, Mass. Richmond, Va. . . . 1871 Mt. Airy, Richmond Co., Va. West Nottingham . . 1850 Hingham, Mass. Portland, Me. 35 1809. *Crawford Allen 11 . . . Providence, R.I B.U. 1815; A.M.; Manufacturer. *Richard Bartlett 17 . . . Dart. Coll. 1815; Lawyer. Ebenezer Little Boyd 11 . . . *Charles Bulfinch 15 . . . *Thomas Bulfinch 13 . . . H.U. 1814; A.M.; Merchant and Author. Stephen Crooker 23 . . . *John Amory Deblois 11 . . . H.U. 1816; A.M.; Business. *John Adams Dix 11 . . . U.S. Sec. Treas.; Min. to France; Gov. N.Y.; U.S. Senator; Author and LaA\ryer. *Isaac Dodge 14 . . . *Ephraim Fellowes 13 . . . Printer. " *Nathaniel Folsom 17 . . . Portsmouth . . Shipmaster. Exeter. *Josiah Gould 16 . . . Beverly, Mass. Merchant. " " Concord .... New York, N.Y. Exeter- Boston, Mass. <( <( Boston, Mass. (< (C Halifax, N.S. Boston, Mass. Columbus, Ga. Boscawen . . . New York, N.Y. Exeter . . . . Waterville, Me. Exeter . . . . 1872 1837 1862 1867 1855 1879 1832 1849 1859 1836 30 CATALOGUE. [1809-10. ♦Joseph Chase Hilliard . . . . 21 . . . Teacher. *Joh7i Gorliam Palfrey 13 . . . H.U. 1815; A.M.; LL.D.; Prof. Sac. Lit. H.U.; M.C. ; Clergyman and Author. ♦Benjamin Philbrick 15 . . . Manufacturer. ♦George Pollard 12 . . . Shipmaster. Lucius Powers 19 . . . William Pratt 14 . . . ♦Jonathan Rollins 21 . . . Teacher and Merchant. ♦John Hale Sheal'e 15 . . . Merchant. John H. Sherburne 15 . . . *Jared Sparks 20 . . . H.U. 1815; A.M.; LL.D.; Prof. Hist. H.U.; Pres. H.U.; Clergyman and Author. ♦George Simes 11 . . . Shipmaster. ♦Ebenezer Thompson 12 . . . Farmer. Kensington 1853 (( Boston, Mass. . . . 1881 Cambridge, Mass. Exeter 1824 Huntsville, Ala. Littleton, Mass. Shapleigh, Me. Charlestown, Mass. Deerfield, Mass. . . 1840 L^nion, O. Portsmouth 1840 Portsmouth. Willington, Conn. . 1866 Cambridge, Mass. Portsmouth 1825 (( Durham 1826 <( 24 1810. 'George K. Apthorp 12 . ♦Thomas Apthorp ♦William Apthorp . 13 . 10 Jr. 12 ♦Abraham Bazin, Merchant. William C. Bowers .14 ♦William Bradford 13 H.U. 181G; Author. ♦Samuel Cartland 19 Dart. Coll. 1816; A.M.; Lawyer; Prob. Judge. William F. R. Chamberlain . . 14 . ♦Henry Cross 13 . ♦John Brazer Davis 11 . H.U. 1815; A.M.; Lawyer. ♦George Deering 12 . ♦James Ferdinand Deering ... 12 . H.U. 1820; A.M.; Merchant. ♦Elias Hasket Derby 14 . Lawyer. *John Abbot Douglass 18 . Bowd. Coll. 1814; A.M.; Clergyman. ♦Thomas Huse Everett 11 . Accountant. ♦Nicholas Gilman 10 . Business. ♦Samuel Kinsman Gilman ... 14 . Business. ♦Stephen Leavitt Gordon . ... 15 . Music Teacher. ?Quinc3', Mass. Surinam. Boston, Mass. Boston, Mass. Surinam. Boston, Mass 1821 Middletown, Conn. Wiscasset, Me. . . . 1858 Lee 1852 Exeter. Exeter. Portland, Me. Boston, Mass 1832 << (< Portland, Me. Portland, Me 1830 Salem, Mass 1840 Medfield, Mass. Portland, Me 1878 Waterford, Me. Boston, Mass 1839 Lowell, Mass. Exeter . 1840 Portland, Me. Exeter 1882 Hallowell, Me. Exeter 1843 Portsmouth. 1810-11.] CATALOGUE. 81 ^Daniel Gilman Hatch 12 . H.U. 1817; A.M.; Merchant. JohnL. Hill 12 . MarkL. Hill 11 . *SilasHolman 21 . M.D. * Horace HooJcer 16 . YaleCoU. 1815; A.M.; Clergyman. Henry Hunnewell 14 . Samuel Hunt 15 . *Josiali Stearns Hurd 14 . M.D.; Physician. William Hutchins 13 . * George Goldthwaite Ingersoll . 13 . H.U. 1815; A.M.; D.D.; Clergyman. Jeremiah Kews 20 . *John Lamson 12 . John Walley Langdon .... 14 . Joseph Osborne 21 . Daniel Porter 12 . Edward Pratt 13 . Charles Preble 13 . Isaac H. Rand 13 . Caleb Rand ..11. *John Adams Richardson ... 13 . Dart. Coll. 1819; Lawyer. * Charles Robinson 13 . H.U. 1818; A.M.; Clergyman. William Rollins 16 . Frederick Rowe 14 . Butcher. Charles Russell 14 . Thomas W. Shannon 20 . *William Smith 10 . H.U. 1817; A.M.; Lawyer. David Taylor 25 . Thomas Tyler 14 . *James Underwood 20 . Agent. *William Bicker Walter .... 14 . Bowd. Coll. 1818; A.M.; Editor and Author *Henrv Artemas Ward 15 . H.U. 1816; A.M.; M.D.; Physician. Peter Wiggin 21 . *William T. Wiggin 13 . Henry WiUard 16 . Exeter 1862 Covington, Ky. Georgetown, Me. Georgetown, Me. Bolton, Mass 1850 Windsor, Vt 1864 Hartford, Conn. Portland, Me. Charlestown, Mass. Charlestown, Mass. . 1855 <( (( Boston, Mass. Keene ........ 1863 North Hampton. Exeter. Charlestown, Mass. Salem, Mass. Conway, Mass. Charlestown, Mass. Watertown, Mass. Boston, Mass. Boston, Mass. Durham 1877 (< Exeter 1862 Groton, Mass. Barrington. Exeter. California. Boston, Mass. Dover. Exeter 1830 Plymouth. Trinidad, W. I. Nottingham 1842 Somerville, Mass. Boston, Mass 1823 (( (( Boston, Mass 1870 << (< Wakefield. Exeter 1862 Charlestown. 52 1811 George Bancroft 11 . . . Worcester, Mass. H.U. 1817; A.M.; LL.D.; Ph.D.; Sec. Navy; Washington, D.C. Min. to Eng.; Min. to Germany; Historian. *Mark. Barker 19 . . . Stratham . . . . Farmer. *' 1868 32 CATALOGUE. [1811. Charles E. Bowers 12 . Otis Billiard 25 . Isaac Butler 21 . William Channing 17 . Edwin Channing 16 . Samuel Clark 20 . * Jonathan Peter Cushing ... 18 . Dart. Coll. 1817: A.M.; PVof. & Pres. Hamn Syd. Coll. Loammi Davidson 21 . Eppes Ellery 11 . * John Dean Gardner 11 . Merchant. John Gardner 14 . *George Gilman 14 . M.D. ; Physician. *Samuel Taylor Gilman .... 10 . H.U. 1819;" Lawyer. ♦Thatcher Goddard 10 . Charles Hardy 14 . * Joseph Hatch . . . .' 12 . Shipmaster. *Richard Hildreth 21 . *Abel Fletcher Hildreth .... 18 . H.U. 1818; A.M.; Teacher. Elias Hull 12 . George Jewett 15 . H.U. 1816. Reuben B. Lowell 25 . *Gideon Colcord Lyford .... 12 . Merchant. *Samuel Tenny Moses 11 . Printer. *GeorgeOdell 18 . M.D.; Physician. Oliver William Osborne .... 12 . Business. Alpheus Spring Packard ...12. Bowd. Coll. 1816; A.M.; D.D.; Prof . Nat. & Re- vealed Religion, Bowd. Coll. Isaac Peasley 21 , * Joseph Philbrick 14 Potter. * Joseph Ray 14 , Clergyman. Samuel Edmund Sewall .... 11 Lawyer. *Lyndon Arnold Smith 16 Dart. Coll. 1817; A.M.; M.D.; Physician. * James Smith 14 , *Daniel Wiukley 11) Farmer. *WilmotWood 15 , Bowd. Coll. 1816; A.M.; Lawyer. Jonathan Woodbury 21 , Boston, Mass. Uxbridge, Mass. Pelham. New London, Conn. New London, Conn. Limington, Me. Rochester 1835 Raleigh, N.C. Dunstable. Exeter. Exeter 1869 Brooklyn, N.Y. Charlestown, Mass. York, Me 1825 Exeter 1835 Boston, Mass. . . . 1833 New York, N.Y. Brighton, Mass. Kennebunk, Me. . . 1856 (( (( Sterling, Mass. . . . 1857 Sterling, Mass. . . . 1864 Derry. Seabrook. Portland, Me. Thomaston, Me. Exeter 1880 Exeter 1842 (( Stratham 1835 Greenland. Exeter. Boston, Mass. Wiscasset, Me. Brunswick, Me. Boxford, Mass. Exeter 1875 Skowhegan, Me. Beverly, Mass. Georgia. Boston, Mass. (( (< Hopkinton 1865 Newark, N.J. Exeter. Barrington ..... 1883 Strafford. Wiscasset, Me. . . . 1865 (( (( Barrington. 37 1812.] CATALOGUE. 33 1812 *Abiel Abbot 11 Business. *Charles E. Avery ....... 18 Middlebury Coll. 1818. *George Barker 18 * Jacob Bartlett 16 Farmer. Thomas Biekford 10 Cleophas Boyd 10 Theophilus Boyd 12 Abel Brown 22 * James E. Brooks 12 Ciishiiig- Bryaot 14 *John M. Charming 16 *JohnM. Copp 17 Arthur G. Coffin 12 Francis A. Coffin 12 George Davis 12 * John Dorr 11 *Edward Dorr 11 H.U. 1819; A.M.; Merchant. *Ebenezer Ritchie Dorr .... 12 H.U. 1818; Lawyer. *James Dudley 18 Business. *Charles Octavius Emersou . . 13 H.U. 1818; A.M.; Lawyer. JohnFifield 17 Tilton French 18 George Gale 18 Peter Gellineau 17 Sylvanus Gray 12 * Joseph Healey 14 Farmer. Joseph Iloit 16 *Theodore Keating 14 H.U. 1821; A.M.; LL.B.; Lawyer. *Andrew Thorndike Leach ... 14 Shipmaster. Samuel Mead . 14 * David Lowell NicJiols 18 Dart. Coll. 181G; Clergyman. *Nathaniel Ward Osgood ... 14 Tanner. * Gardner Paine 13 Business. *Edward Bass Peabody .... 10 *Daniel IlaUPeirce 11 H.U. 1820; A.M.; M.D. *Enoch Perley 17 . Beverly, Mass. Boston, '• . Groton, Conn. Stratham . Nottingham 1849 1854 1874 1841 . Boston, Mass. . Exeter. . Exeter. . South Hampton. . P^xeter. . Nobleborough, Me. . New London, Conn . Wakefield New Orleans. . Gloucester, Mass. . Beaufort, S.C. . Gloucester, Mass. . Boston, Mass. It <( . Boston, Mass. . Boston, Mass. . Raymond . . Maiden, Mass. . York, Me. . 1832 1874 1844 1873 1868 1863 . Stratham. . East Kingston. . Kingston. . Trinidad, W. I. . Boston, Mass. . Kensinaton . . Stratham. Boston, Mass. . Beverly, Mass. . . it (< . Amesbury. . Amesbury Kingston. . Salem, Mass. . . . (( It . Worcester, Mass. . Exeter . . Portsmouth 1829 1829 1859 1829 1863 1854 1830 1877 . Boxford, Mass. . . . 1814 34 CATALOGUE. [1812-13. *Richarcl Pickering 15 H.U. 1819; Farmer. *Ebenezer 8. Piper 16 William Hice . 16 John Rollins 20 David Moore Russell 16 Fitz William Sargent 12 M.D. *01iver Sheafe 13 H.U. 1817; A.M.; Merchant. *Charles Smith 16 Farmer. Daniel R. Stanwood 10 JohnTilton 11 *Charles Walker 14 H.U. 1818; Lawyer. *Israel Whitne}^ 14 Merchant. John P. Williams 15 Teacher. Newington 1876 Stratham 1835 Levant, Me. Kittery, Me. Andover. Plymouth. Gloucester, Mass. Europe. Portsmouth 1825 Durham 1874 Meredith. Gloucester, Mass. Scarborough, Me. Concord 1843 <( Beverly, Mass. . . . 1871 (< (< Nottingham. Spottsylvania Co., Pa. 49 1813. Stephen Ames 14 Aaron Beach 18 John Bowden 23 *John Kinsley Briggs 19 M.D.; Physician. * Sidney Brooks 13 H.U. 1819; A.M.; Merchant. *Peter Chardon Brooks 14 Merchant. Alpheus Spring Chandler ... 17 M.D. *Charles William Chauncy ... 13 H.U. 1819; A.M.; M.D. Leader Dam 21 Charles Dana 15 *John Elliot 12 *Robert Treat Paine Fiske ... 14 H.U. 1818; A.M.; M.D.; Physician. *Charles Lane Folsom 14 Dart. Coll. 1820; Teacher P.E.A. George Williams Folsom ... 10 * George Gardner 12 Merchant. *John Gilchrist 21 M.D.; Physician. *Joseph Gilman 21 *Charles Gilman 19 Lawyer. *Samuel Hammond 11 Merchant. . . Charlestown. . . Whiting, Me. . . Waterborough, Me. . . Halifax, Mass. . . . 1843 Dedham, Mass. . . Boston, Mass. . . . . 1878 New York, N.Y. . . Boston, Mass. . . . . 1880 . . Elliot, Me. . . Portsmouth. .... . 1864 . . Waterborough, Me. . . Charlestown, Mass. . . Portsmouth. Kittery, Me. . . Worcester, Mass. . . 1866 Hingham, Mass. . . Exeter . 1829 . . Exeter. . . Exeter ...... . 1857 . . Goffstown. Port Hope, Canada. . . Marietta, 0. ... . 1823 Kentucky. . . Meredith . 1861 Baltimore, Md. . . Boston, Mass. . . . 1834 1813-14.] CATALOGUE. 35 John Hedge 15 . . . John Henry Hooper 10 . . . Farmer. John Hurry . 14 . . . * Henry True Kelly 19 . . . Dart. Coll. 1819; A.M.; Clergyman. *William F. Lane 17 . . . Business. Joseph Long 17 . . . *John Lovering 19 . . . Shoemaker. P^noch Martin 19 . . . *Charles Paine 14 . . . H.U. 1820; A.M.; Gov. Vermont. William B. Pearson 15 . . . *Daniel Pickering 18 . . . Business. David Riddle 15 . . . *Josiah Robinson 22 . . . Farmer. *Trueworthy Robinson 19 . . . Farmer. *Charles Robinson 20 . . . Merchant. Edward B. Russell 14 . . . *John Sevey 16 . . . *Edward Bradstreet Sewall ..11... Merchant. *Gideon Lane Soule 17 . . . Bowd. Coll. 1818; A.M. ; LL.D. ; Principal P.E.A. Francis Dana Stedman . . . . 12 . . . *Johri Sullivan 13 . . . Lawyer; Attorney-General N.H. * Albert Thorndike 13 . . . Banker. Noah Porter Wiggin 18 . . . Farmer. * James Wilson 16 . . . Middlebury Coll. 1820; M.C.; Lawyer. *Ben3amin Wilson 19... *Abner Wood 14 . . . Supercargo. '^Benjamin Woodbury 20 . . . Dart. Coll. 1817; A.M.; Clergyman. Wiscasset, Me. . . . 1830 Marblehead, Mass. Peoria, 111. Wiscasset, Me. Hampstead 1840 Chatham, N.C. Stratham 1832 Hallowell, Me. Amesbury, Mass. Exeter 1837 (( Brookfield. Williamstovvn, Vt. . 1853 Northfield, Vt. Gloucester, Mass. Greenland 1855 Wolf borough. Bedford. Exeter 1854 Exeter 1833 (( Greenland 1862 Portsmouth. Salem. Wiscasset, Me. . . . 1832 Boston, Mass. . . . 1830 New York, N.Y. Freeport, Me. . . . 1879 Exeter. Worcester, Mass. Exeter 1862 Beverly, Mass. . . . 1858 (( (< Stratham. (< Peterborough .... 1881 Keene. Brentwood. Newburyport, Mass. 1820 Gottenburg, Sweden. New London, Conn. 1845 Plain, O. 46 1814. *Charles Benjamin Abbot . . . 9 . Farmer. Joseph Adams 17 . George Bowen 11 . Henry Briggs 16 . *Joseph Burley 21 . Teacher. Charles Chamberlain 12 . Exeter Glenburn, Me. Boston, Mass. Providence, R.I. Chatham, Mass. Lee 1874 1818 Bridgetown, Me. 36 CATALOGUE. [1814. *Frederic Auoustus Cobb ... 12 H.U. 1820; A.M. *Rufus Coffin 12 *Johii Currier 13 MercliaDt. Thomas Currier 13 Portland, Me. . . Boston, Mass. Epping. Dover Carlton Dole 16 . *Retier Parker Dow 13 . Business. * Jeremiah Dow 11. Business. *Andrew I>eonard Emerson . . 12 . H.U. 1820; A.M.; LL.B.; Lawyer. Moses J. Emery 14 . Farmer. James Gerrish 22 . Hollis Gerry 22 . * Daniel Gilman 9 . Merchant. Ezra Greene 19. *Thomas W. Hale 17 . *Charles Burdett Halsev .... 12 . B.U. 1821; A.M. *Samuel Hatch 11. H.U. 1821; A.M.; M.D.; Physician. John Ilayden 13 . John Hodgdon 14 . Ivory Jefferds 15 . Payson Kendall 12 . William Frederic Lawrence . . 10 . Merchant. *Georoe Lee 17. James Lord 16 . Levi Hilton Mead IG . Farmer. John P. Mellen 15 . *Samuel Morrill 14 . Bowd. Coll. 1820; A.M.; M.D.; Physician. Ebeuezer H. Neil 16 . *Nathaniel Pearson 16 . Tanner. *JohnPedrick 10 . *John Porter 22 . H.U. 1819; A.M.; Preacher. *John H. Ropes 15 . Henry R. Sadler 16 . Charles Chauncy Sewall .... 12 . Clergyman (retired). Burley Smart 22 . M.D. ; Physician. * Jonathan Smith 16 . H.U. 1819; A.M.; Lawyer. Henry Smith 11. Dover. Alna, Me. Exeter . Exeter York, Me Haverhill, Mass. (( (( Wenham, Mass. Sterling, Mass. Exeter China. Maiden, Mass. Dover Lee. Providence, R.I. . . Exeter Hannibal, Mo. Cambridgeport, Mass, Dover. Kenuebunk, Me. Weston, Mass. Exeter. Epping. Wiscasset, Me. . . ? Effingham. North wood. Exeter. Wells, Me Boston, Mass. Newmarket. Exeter Exeter. Marblehead, Mass. 1848 1860 1834 1836 1835 1840 1855 1829 1873 Rye Roxbury, Mass. Salem, Mass. . 1825 1872 1841 1825 1820 St. Mary's, Ga. Marblehead, Mass. Medfield, Mass. Parson slield. Me. Kennebunk, Me. Peterborough . . . Bath. Providence, R.I. 1840 1814-15.] CATALOGUE. 37 *Charles Stevens ........ 15 . Merchant. James 'fappan 11 . John E. Ti-ask 13 . *Charles Walker 14 . Miller. Caleb Wiggin 17 . Farmer. . Beverly, Mass. . . . 1863 (< (< . Gloucester, Mass. . Goffstown. . Portsmouth 1856 Brooklyn, N.Y. . Stratham. <( 47 1815, *John T. Apthorp 12 *John P. Atkinson 14 Benjamin Barker 16 *Warcl Chi]:>man Brooks .... 11 H.U. 1822; A.M.; Merchant. *Lavvrence Brown . 18 Farmer. * Welcome Arnold Burges ... 13 B.U. 1820; Lawyer. Galen C. Carter 20 Middlebury Coll. 1810; A.M. *01iver W. Conner 14 Printer. * Abraham Drake Dearborn . . 13 M.D. *John Samuel Hayes Durell . . 16 Lawyer. ^Edward Henry Edes 12 Clergyman. *John Etheridge 13 * William Jewett Farlev .... 13 Bowd. Coll. 1820; A.M.; Lawyer. *Ebenezer Farley 11 Merchant. *Joseph Henry Farley 10 H.U. 1823; A.M.; Business. *George Ffrost 14 Merchant. *David AVood Gorham 15 H.U. 1821; M.D.; Physician. *Winthrop Gray 11 *Walter G. Greene 15 Merchant. William R. Greene 15 William P. Hale 13 Aipheus Hanscom 19 * Charles Harvey 14 Student. George C. Johnston 14 *Prescott Lawrence 20 M.D,; Physician. Jonas C. March 15 Elias Megregory 26 . Roxbury, Mass. . . . 1881 Melrose, Mass. . Dover 1825 (< . Rochester. . Boston, Mass 1828 Baltimore, Md. . Epping 1875 Harristown, 111. . Providence, R.I. . . 1828 <( << . Bethel, Me. . Exeter 1839 Boston^ Mass. . Exeter 1871 . Dover 1862 . Boston, Mass 1845 . Charlestown, Mass. a << . Waldoborough, Me. . 1839 Thomaston, Me. . Boston, Mass. . . . 1850 . Boston, Mass. ... 1860 (( .'( . Durham 1879 (( . Canandaigua, N.Y. . 1873 Exeter. . Medford, Mass. . . . 1830 . Dover 1875 Boston, Mass. . Providence, R.T. . Rochester. . Elliot, Me. . Northwood 1823 <( . Hillsborough. . Epping ....... 1834 . Rochester. . Newport, R.I. 38 CATALOGUE. [1815-16. George F. Mellen 11. Nathan Merrill 17 . Gilman Merrill 23 . *John MooQey 17 . Business. Moses Merrill 12 . * Woodbury Langdoii Onie ... 17 . Teacher. *Frederic French Orne 19 . Isaac H. Perkins 14 . Ebenezer Prescott 14 . Farmer. *Plumer Prescott 19 . Business. Benjamin J. Randall 19 . Alexander Rice 15 . Amos A. Richards 21 . Edward Rowe 10 . Tanner. *Edward Rundlett 10 . H.U. 1825; M.D.; Physician. *Oharles Soule 20 . Bowd. Coll. 1821; A.M.; Clergyman. *Chaiies Harrison St^dman . . 10 . M.D. *David Robinson Straw .... 20 . B.U. 1822; Lawyer. *John Thompson 14 . H.U. 1822; A.M.; Farmer. Israel Trask 18 . Isaac Trask : 11 . * Jonathan M. Tredick 12 . Enos Tnck 23 . * Augustus Willard Walker . . . 12 . Merchant. Benjamin Wheeler 13 . * Bernard Whitman 19 . Clergyman. * William Augustus Wliitwell . . 11 . H.U. 1824; A.M.; Clergyman. *Frederick Henry Whitwell . . 9 . Exeter. South Hampton. , Grafton. Durham . 1872 (( Wells, Me. Wolf borough .... 1827 Wolf borough . . . . 1822 Hanover. Raymond. Monmouth, Me. Sanboruton 1850 St. Louis. HoUis, Me. Kittery, Me. Boston, Mass. Exeter. Skowhegan, Me. Portsmouth 1874 Freeport, Me. . . . 1869 Portland, Me. Worcester, Mass. . . 1866 Newfield, Me 1876 Guilford, Me. Durham 1854 Moultonborough. Goffstown. Goffstown. Portsmouth 1874 Farmington, Me. Concord 1862 Sebec, Me. Boston, Mass. Bridgewater, Mass. . 1834 Walthara, Mass. Boston, Mass. . . . 1865' Brookline, Mass. Boston, Mass. . . . 1816 65 1816. *Nathaniel Sheafe Adams . . . 13 . . Exeter Printer. (< Benjamin Allen . . 13 . . Manchester, Mass. George Briard . . 14 . . Portsmouth. Nathan Brown . . 23 . . Strath am. Merchant. New York, N.Y. James F. Carter . . 18 . . Bethel, Me. George Chase . . 12 . . Boston, Mass. John P. Coffin . . 11 . . . Boston, Mass. Jonathan P. Darling . . . . . 14 . . Henniker. 1849 1816.] CATALOGUE. * Timothy Darling 17 H.U. i822; Clergyman. *Daniel Dearborn 12 Lawyer. *Samuel Dodge 16 H.U. 1822; A.M.; M.D.; Physician. William Dorr 13 * William Bradley Dorr 13 H.U. 1821; A.M. John Dow 17 * Alfred W. L. Elwyn 12 M.D.; Physician. *Isaac Lord Folsom 14 Insurance Agent. Ebenezer F. Gardner 14 John Taylor Gilman s .... 10 Bowd. Coll. 1826; M.D.; Pliysician. * William Dawes Hammond . . 10 H.U. 1827; A.M. *Robert Harris 14 Midshipman, U.S. Navy. *Richard Hildreth 9 H.U. 1826; Editor and Author. *George Oliver Hilton 11 Asa B. Hogins 24 *PeterHolt 15 *Jeremiah Holt 13 Aaron Beede Hoyt 14 Dart. Coll. 1822; Farmer. Amasa Jackson 11 *Robert Jenkins 11 Clerk. *Theodore Kittredge 14 M.D.; Physician. *Phineas Miller KoUock .... 12 H.U. 1823; M.D.; Physician. *Calvin B. Magoun . 18 M.D.; Physician. * William Pitt Moses 12 Business. *Ho ratio Gates Nelson 16 Business. Oliver William Osborne .... 18 Business. * Isaac Dow Parsons 17 Merchant. Jonathan Phillips 16 *John Porter 16 Charles Prescott 15 Charles Richards 13 *Henry Perkins Salter 14 Merchant. John Savage 14 * Thomas Simpson 28 Clergyman. Charles A. Swasey ...... 16 Henniker . . . . Bergen, N.Y. Concord. North wood. Wenham, Mass. Boston, Mass. Boston, Mass. , (( (( Salem. Portsmonth . . , Philadelphia, Pa. Exeter . . . . , 39 1871 1833 1875 1848 1851 Lynn, Mass. Exeter. Portland, Me. Boston, Mass 1835 West Indies. Portsmouth 1822 (( Exeter 1865 Boston, Mass. Newmarket 1866 (( Piermont. Epping 1817 Epping 1816 Sandwich. Middletown, Conn. Newburyport, Mass. 1822 Epping 1879 Waltham, Mass. Savannah, Ga 1872 (( ti East Kingston . . . 1838 Woodville, Va. Exeter 1863 (( Exeter 1831 Fayetville, N.C. Exeter. Boston, Mass. Eye 1850 Portsmouth. Lynn, Mass. Windham 1825 Newburyport, Mass. Boston, Mass. Portsmouth 1851 (( York, Me. Deerfield 1872 Wisconsin. Exeter. 40 CATALOGUE. [1816-17. . Boston, Mass 1877 *Snpply Clapp Thwing 17 Merchant. " " Frederic Thomas 11 . . . Windsor, Vt. *Nathaniel Gookin UphanKi . . 15 . . . Rochester . . Dart. Coll. 1820; A.M.; LL.D.; Lawyer: Judge Concord. Supr. Ct. N.H. Daniel Waldo 17 * Jonathan Ward 18 Dart. Coll. 1822; Clergyman. Wilson Ward 13 George M. Young 14 Suffield, Conn. Alna, Me. . . Blddeford, Me. Aina, Me. Poughkeepsie, 1869 1826 N.Y 1817 50 *Nathan Batchelder 16 . . Business. Charles Barber 21 . . *John McClintock Bartlett . . . 15 . . Bowd. Coll. 1823; Business. Christopher Bassett 13 . . Manufacturer. Andrew Watkins Bell ..... 14 . . Bookkeeper. Gardiner Greene Chandler . . 11 . . Artist. *Jonathan Chapman 10 . . H.U. 1825; A.M.; Lawyer. *Thomas Sheaf e Coffin 13 . . Shipmaster. *Elijah Colburn 22 . . M.D.; Physician. *Samuel Danibrth 13 . . * Allen Washington Dodge . . . 13 . . H.U. 182G; Treasurer. * Samuel Fox Dorr 12 . . Merchant. *Thomas Wilson Dorr 11 . . H.U. 1823; A.M.; Lawyer; Gov. R.L *William Dwight 12 . . Merchant. ♦Charles H. L. Elwyn 10 . . H.U. 182G; A.M.; Lawyer. Charles Ayidrews Farley . . . 12 . . H.U. 1827; Clergyman (retired). *Samuel Phillips Fisk 16 . . Merchant. *Daniel Gilman 12 . . Merchant. *George William Gordon . . . 15 . . Merchant; Consul Rio Janeiro. William Hale 12 . . Bowd. Coll. 1825; Merchant. *Robert Louis Harris 15 . . Mariner. William Hay ward 12 . . *Josiah Stacy Hook 15 . . Bowd. Coll. 1823; A.M.; M.D.; Physician. Epping 1834 Chelmsford, Mass. Brattleborough, Vt. . 1849 Gibraltar. Newburj'port, Mass. Salisbury. Portsmouth. Brooklyn, N.Y. Boston, Mass. Salem, Mass. Boston, Mass. . . . 1848 <( << Portsmouth 1879 <( Nottingham, West .1881 Nashua. Dorchester, Mass. . 1822 Newbury port, Mass. 1878 Wenham, Mass. Boston, Mass. . . . 1844 New York, N.Y. Providence, R.I. . . 1854 (( (( Springfield, Mass. . 1880 Boston, INIass. Portsmouth 1848 New Orleans, La. Boston, Mass. Claremont 1879 Exeter . 1840 China. Exeter 1877 Boston, Mass. Dover. (( Portsmoutli 1828 Boston, Mass. Castine, Me 1844 Adrian, Mich. 1817-18.] CATALOGUE. 41 *John C. Jenkins 17 . *Gilbert T. Jenkins 17 . *John Kelly 21 . Amh. Coll. 1825; A.M.; Lawyer. *Jolm Gale Merrill 20 . B.U. 1821; A.M.; M.D. *Samuel Moody 20 . H.U. 1823. Abraham Moore 17 . *Woodbricloe Odlin 12 . Wool Merchant *Jolm Ham Williams Pa^e ... 14 . H.U. 1826; A.M.; Lawyer.'^ * William Frederic Rowland . . 10 . Yale Coll. 182(); Farmer. *Georo:e Robert Russell .... 17 . B.U; 1821; LL.D.; Lawyer. *Francis Ormond Jonathan Smith 10 . Lawyer. Jonathan Ambrose Smith . . . 15 . M.D. ; Physician. Russell Sturgis 12 . H.U. 1823; Banker. *IIenry Parkman Sturgis .... 10 . Merchant [Manila, Philippine Islands]. *Francis B. Todd 12 . Shipmaster. Harris Turner 19 . *Benjamin Greene Wainwright . 11 . Merchant. *Eliphalet K. Webster 15 . M.D.; Physician. *01iver C. Wyman 12 . Government Service. . Canandaigua, N.Y. . 1836 . Canandaigua, N.Y. . 1832 . Plaistow 1877 Atkinson. . Nottingham. . York, Me 1874 Lisbon, Me. . Castine, Me. . Exeter. . Gilmanton 1805 New Bedford, Mass. . Exeter 1849 . Providence, R.I. . . 1866 . Exeter 1876 Portland, Me. . Deerlield. Methuen, Mass. . Boston, Mass. London, Eng. . Boston, Mass 1869 (( (( . Newbury port, Mass. 1841 (( <( . Lyme. . Boston, Mass. . . . 1875 New York, N.Y. . Hampton 1881 Boscawen. . Boston, Mass 1877 (( (( 42 1818 William Boott 13 . *Henry Brooks . 11. *Dummer Rogers Chapman . . 10 . Broker. *Horatio Gates Cilley 12 . Dart. Coll. 1826; A.M.; Lawyer. *Hampden Cutts 16 . H.U. 1823; A.M.; Lawyer. *Samuel W. Dow 14 . M.D. ; Physician. William Ffrost 15 . Business. Lyman Gilman 15 . *John Mark Gourgas 14 . H.U. 1824; A.M.; Lawyer. Samuel Greenleaf 13 . * Joseph Whipple Harris .... 14 . Lieut. U.S. Navy. *Herman Bremer Harris .... 17 . Merchant. . Boston, Mass. . Boston, Mass 1833 . Boston, Mass 1865 (( (( . Deerfield 1874 Lewiston, Me. . Portsmouth 1875 Hartland, Vt. . Dover 1837 (( . Durham. (( . York, Me. . Dorchester, Mass. . . 1862 Quincy, Mass. . Salisbury. . Portsmouth 1837 (( . Portsmouth 1852 Masilon, O. 42 CATALOGUE. [1818-19. *Edward Pratt Harris 16 . Dart. Coll. 1826; A.M.; Lawyer. *William Hatch 12 . Bowd. Coll. 1824; A.M.; M.D.; Physician. * William A. Haydeii 13 . Hiram Hayes Hobbs 17 . Bowd. CoU. 1823; Lawyer. Francis Carter Jenckes .... 15 . B.U. 1824. Francis W. Jenkins 14 . George Lunt 15 . H.U. 1824; Editor and Author. *Alfred Mason 14 . Bowd. Coll. 1825; M.D.; Physician. * James J. Mason 12 . Merchant. Samuel McCliiitock 13 . *Jolm McDonald 17 . Bowd. Coll. 1823; A.M. William P. Mellen 12 . * William Edward Payne . . . 14 . H.U. 1824; A.M. Edward W. Payne 14 . Henry Perkins 13 . * William Prentiss ....... 15 . H.U. 1825; A.M.; Teacher. *John Paul Robinson 18 . H.U. 1823; A.M.; Lawyer. James Samuel Rowe 10 . Bowd. Coll. 182G; Lawyer. Rutus Rowe 20 . Business. *Jolm Dennison Russ 17 . Yale Coll. 1823; M.D.; Physician. *John Smith . . . ' 21 . Business. * Jason Whitman 19 . H.U. 1825; A.M.; Clergyman. John Wilson 19 . Windham 1868 Avon, Mich. Exeter 1876 Bloomington, HI. Cambridgeport,Mass. 1876 Berwick, Me. South Berwick, Me. Providence, R.I. Havana. New Haven, Conn. Newburyport, Mass. Scituate, Mass. Portsmouth 1828 Boston, Mass. Portsmouth. Boston, Mass. Portsmouth. Limerick, Me 1867 Bangor, Me. Exeter. Boston, Mass 1838 Paris, France. Boston, Mass. Hanover. Medfield, Mass. . . . 1834 Maryland. Dover 1864 Lowell, Mass. Exeter. Bangor, Me. Exeter. California. Ipswich, Mass. . . . 1881 Pompton, Conn. Peterborough . . . . 1822 (( Bridgewater, Mass. . 1848 Lexington, Mass. Brentwood. 35 1819 *William Bainbridge . 12 . . Francis R. Bigelow . 13 . . *Samuel Burnham Buzell . . . . 17 . . Farmer and Teacher. *Georoe Washington Buzell . . 16 . . Farmer. *Solomon Clarke Buzell . . . . 13 . . Treasurer P.E.A. * George Chapman . 12 . . Clergyman. ♦Joseph Cloyes . 15 . . Teacher. ♦Augustus Oilman Deal . . . . 18 . . Printer. Boston, Mass 1831 Med ford, Mass. Northwood 1852 Northwood 1830 Northwood 1882 Exeter. Boston, Mass 1834 Framingham, Mass. Charlestown, Mass. Mobile, Ala. Exeter. 1819-20.] CATALOGUE. 43 *Charles C. P. Gale 20 . Yale Coll. 1826; Teacher. Joseph C. Gardner 12 . *Cliarles Gilraan 12 . B.U. 1827; Lawyer. *Edward William Hook .... 12 . H.U. 1827; M.D. Joseph Sherbouvue Jenckes . . 15 . B.U. 1824: A.M. *Jeratiimell Bowers Jenckes . . 12 . B.U. 1825. * Samuel Juukins 19 . *Timothy Wiggin Little .... 14 . Business. * George Royal Makepeace ... 13 . James Mm-dock . ....... 13 . Shipmaster (retired). *Charles Tracy Murdock . ... 12 . H.U. 1828; A.M.; LL.B.; Lawyer. Thomas J. Parsons 15 . Business. Oliver Porter 17 . Business. ♦Benjamin Ridge way 17 . John Langdon Sibley 14 . H.U. 1825; A.M.; Clergyman; Librarian Emer- itus H.U. ; Author. Josiah Smith 15 . Richard S. Stearns 16 . *Samuel Henry Tudor 15 . William E. Wells 14 . *Charles Edward Whitwell . . . 10 . 1820. Exeter 1838 Derry. Dorchester. Bangor, Me 1849 Quincy, 111. Castine, Me 1871 Providence, R.l. Fairfax, Va. Providence, R.I. . . 1848 York, Me 1826 Portland, Me. Salisbury 1863 Manchester. Cambridgeport, Mass. 1882 Waltham, Mass. Havana, W.I. Boston, Mass. Havana, W.I 1853 Cambridge, Mass. Rye. Waterford, Me. Philadelphia, Pa. Union, Me. Cambridge, Mass. St. Augustine, Flaw Salem, Mass. Hartford, Conn. . . 1844 Hartford, Conn. Boston, Mass. . . . 1879 (< (( 28 Joshua Brackett 12 * Stephen C. Brewster 16 *Alfred Chadwick 11 Business. *Edward Groves Chamberlain . 12 Business. * Joseph Longfellow Cilley ... 16 Farmer. Allen Dorr 12 *Jeremiah Dow 21 M.D.; Physician. Alfred F. Dunham 14 *William Elliot 16 Dart. Coll. 1820; Lawyer. ♦Joseph Farley 11 Francis Dennison Farley ... 11 Farmer. ♦William Henry Gardner .... 13 Hotelkeeper. . Greenland. . Buxton, Me. . Exeter 1869 St. Louis, Mo. . Exeter 1828 St. Jago de Cuba. . Nottingham 1868 Exeter. . Providence, R.I. Cumberland, R.L . Kensington 1875 Hiram, Me. . New York, N.Y. . Marblehead, Mass. . 1872 Lewiston, 111. . Ipswich, Mass. . . . 1871 . Boston, Mass. Davenport, Iowa. . Exeter 1873 Boston, Mass. 44 CATALOGUE. [1820-21. *John Thomas Goddard . . . . 14 . . . Capitalist. *John Parker Hale 14 . . . Bowd. Coll. 1827; LL.D.; Lawyer; M.C.; U.S. Sen. ; Min. to Spain. *Josiah Stover Little 19 . . . Bowd. Coll. 1825; A.M.; Lawyer. *George W. Magoim 19 . . , *George Mills 11 . . . Teacher. Josiah Preble Mood}^ 15 . . . Bowd. Coll. 1827; Farmer. *Samuel Orr 17 . . . M.D.; Physician, Oliver Peabody Pearse . . . . 12 . . . Merchant. *William Langdon Pickering . . 15 . . . Merchant. Isaac Pitman 13 . . , Business (retired). Romulus Poole 15 . . . Augustus Luther Richardson . 15 . . , Merchant. *Daniel H. Rundlett 12 . . *Charles Gilman Safford . . . . 15 . . , Dart. Coll. 1827; M.D.; Physician. * Francis George Shaw 11 . . *George Sheafe 13 . . . *John P'isher Sheafe 14 . . , Capitalist. *John Frederic Skinner . . . . 13 . . , Merchant. Charles A. Thompson 12 . . *John Rogers Thurston .... 11 . . H.U. 1829; A.M.; Lawyer. * James Thurston 13 . . H.U. 1829; A.M.; Clergyman. *Charles T. Ward 13 . . Merchant. Jonas Whitman 15 . . Charles Wirgman 10 . . *Moses Emery Woodman . . . 14 . . Bowd. Coll. 1826; Lawj-er. Portsmouth 1837 (( Rochester 1874 Dover. Newbury, Mass. . . 1862 Portland, Me. East Kingston. Deerjfield" 1827 Exeter. York, Me. Hampstead. Bridgewater, Mass. . 1878 E. Bridgewater, Mass. Portsmouth. Philadelphia, Pa. Newington. New York, N.Y. Providence, R.I. Somerville, Mass. Gloucester, Mass. Boston, Mass. Cuba. Exeter 1840 Exeter 1847 Rutland, Mass. Boston, Mass. . . . 1882 Staten Island, N.Y. Portsmouth 1825 Portsmouth 1882 New York, N.Y. Charlestown, Mass. Concord, Mass. Baltimore, JNId. Exeter 1843 Glenburn, Me. Exeter 1872 West Newton, Mass. Boston, Mass. . . . 1877 <( (( Barnstable, Mass. Baltimore, Md. Fryeburg, Me. . . . 1840 Brunswi-ck, Me. 37 1821 *George Frederic Amory . . . . 12.. . . Farmer. Samuel W. Archer 15 . . . *William K. Atkinson 14 . . . *Henry Vose Baxter 15 . . . •^Samuel Stillman Boyd . . . . 14 . . . Bowd. Coll. 182U; Lawyer; Jud. Supr. Ct.Miss. Washington Brown 13 . . . Dorchester, Mass. . 1850 Iowa. Philadelphia, Pa. Dover . 1837 Quincy, Mass. . . New Orleans, La. Portland, Me. . . . . 1867 . 1867 Natchez, Miss. Portsmouth. 1821.] CATALOGUE. 45 ♦Charles Parker Coffin 12 . . . Beaufort, S.C. . . . 1868 H.U. 1828; M.D.; Physician. Pontatoch, Mich. John Templemaii Coolidge . . 11 . . . Boston, Mass. Pres. Columbian Bank. " " Thomas Tingy Craven . . . . 13 . . . Portsmouth. Bear Admiral, U.S.N. Kittery, Me. *Alfred W. Craven 11 . . . Portsmouth 1879 Civil Engineer. New York, N.Y. *Blowers DanTorth 13 . . . Dorchester, Mass. . . 1852 Henry Dow 16 . . . Dover. Farmer. ** Frederic Henry Dow 13 . . . Roxbury, Mass. *St. John Durell 15 . . . Dover 1826 Cadet, West Point. *Charles John Fox Durell . . . 14 . . . Dover 1840 *Thomas D wight 13 . . . Springfield, Mass. . . 1876 H.U. 1827. Boston, Mass. *Francis Dwiglit 13 . . . Springfield, Mass. . . 1845 H.U. 1827; Sec. Board of Education. New York, N.Y. Alpheus Felch 16 . . . Limerick, Me. Bowd. Coll. 1827; LL.D.; U. S. Sen. 1847-53; Ann Arbor, Mich. Judge Supr. Ct. Mich. 1842^5; Gov. Mich. 1845^7; Prof. Law, Univ. Mich. *Charles Edwin Oilman . . . . 13 . . . Exeter ..,-.... 1840 Mariner. *John A. Harris 16 . . . Dorchester, Mass. . . 1882 Teacher. South Boston, Mass. *James Winthrop Harris . . . . 15 . . . Dorchester, Mass. . . 1881 Secretary. Cambridge, Mass. *George Haskell 22 . . . Waterford, Me. . . . 1876 Dart. Coll. 1827; M.D. *Samuel Foster Haven 15 . . . Dedham, Mass. . . . ^1881 Amh. Coll. 1826; A.M.; LL.D.; Lawyer. Worcester, Mass. John Hodgdon 20 . . . Weare. Bowd. Coll. 1827; Lawyer. Dubuque, Iowa. Joshua Holt 16 . . . Exeter. ♦Richard Kimball 22 . . . Dover 1881 Lawyer. " Joseph W. Munson 14 . . . Chelmsford, Mass. *George Paine 14 . . . Williamstown, Vt. . 1836 Dart. Coll. 1827; Lawyer. Masilon, O. *Ep7i7rdm Feabodj/ 14 . . . Wilton 1855 Bowd. Coll. 1827; D.D.; Clergyman. Boston, Mass. Frederic Robinson 22 . . . Exeter. John J. Sanborn 24 * . . Epsom. * James E. Sheaf e 11 . . . Portsmouth 1830 (( Alfred R. Shute 10 . . . Exeter. Forrest Shepherd 21 . . . Boscawen. Dart. Coll. 1827; Geologist. Potosi, Mo. William Smith 21 . . . Cavendish, Vt. Farmer. Proctors ville, Vt. *Charles Waldron 15 . . . Dover 1868 Merchant. " * William N. Weston 12 . . . Eastport, Me. Lawyer. " ** 37. 46 CATALOGUE. [1822. 1822, *Jolin Stevens Abbot 15 . . . Bowd. Coll. 1827: A.M.; Lawyer. Theodore Thomas Abbot . . . 23 . . . Farmer. *Lewis G. Barnes 14 . . . Merchant. *WilUara Bartol 15 . . . Merchant. ♦Robert Anthony Baxter . . . . 13 . . . Thomas Bellows 14 . . . Farmer. ♦William P. Blodgett 13 . . . Business. William Thurston Boutwell . . 19 . . . Dart. Coll. 1828; Clergyman. ♦Charles Dexter Cleveland . . . 19 . . . Dart. Coll. 1827; A.M.; LL.D.; Teacher. William Crosby 15 . . . ♦Alpheus Ci'osby 11 . . . Dart. Coll. 1827; A.M.; Prof. Lat. and Greek Dart. Coll. ; Author. Samuel F. Dearborn 12 . . . William A. Doak 15 . . . Valorous Drew 19 . . . *John Hubbard Eaton 16 . . . H.U. 1827; A.M.; Clergyman. Al^l Fletcher 20 . . . ♦Joseph Buckminster Gardner . 10 . . . Business Manager. ♦Joseph Taylor Gilman . . . . 10 . . . Merchant [Canton, China]. ♦Albert Gallatin Greene . . . . 13 . . . Bowd. Coll. 1828. ♦Alfred Greenleaf 18 . . . Teacher. ♦George Henr}- Hartwell . . . . 13 . . . Business. Johnson Hatch 12 . . . Apothecary. Horace L. Hazelton 14 . . . Lawyer. C3TU8 Holmes 21 . . . Jacob K. Kettell ....... 19 .. . Jeremiah Kimball 25 . . . Business. Gilman Kimball 17 . . . A.M.; M.D.; Prof. Surg. Med. Coll. Vt. and Berks. Med. School; Physician. * Isaac Knight 25 . . . Bowd. Coh. 1829; Clergyman. ♦William Marrett 18 . . . M.D. Jeremiah Willey Marsh . . . . 10 . . . Preacher. Temple, Me 1881 Thomaston, Me. Greenland. Lunenburg. Mass. Portsmouth 1843 New York, N.Y. Portland, Me 1840 New York, N.Y. Quincy, Mass. Providence, R.l. Walpole. Providence, R.I. . . 1873 Lynborough. Charlestown, Mass. . 1869 Philadelphia, Pa. Dover. Gilmanton 1874 Hanover. Exeter. Bath, Me. Newfield, Me. Boxford, Mass. . . . 1862 Kennebunk, Me. Exeter 1882 Boston, Mass. Exeter 1862 (< Bath, Me 1830 (( (< W. Newbury, Mass. 1872 (( (( Littleton, Mass. . . 1848 Cincinnati, O. Exeter. Jacksonville, 111. Sanbornton. Boston, Mass. Halifax, Mass. Limerick, Me. Canterbury. Concord. New Chester. Lowell, Mass. Waterford, Me. . . . 1850 Fisherville, N.H. Standish, Me 1859 Exeter. Virginia. 1822-23.] CATALOGUE. 47 *Stephen Minor 15 . Cotton Planter. *Charles Graodison Parsons . . 15 . Dart. Coll. 1829; A.M.; M.D.; Physician. * James Handyside Perkins ...12. Clergyman and Author. *David Pillsbury 20 . Dart. Coll. 1827; Lawyer. Roman L. Putnam 24 . *George Martin Richmond ... 14 . Business. Benjamin M. Saul 14 . *George Yeaton Sawyer .... 16 . Bowd. Coll. 1826; A.M.; Lawyer; Judge Supr. Ct. N.H. Luther Dearborn Saw3'er ... 19 . Bowd. Coll. 1828; Lawyer. John Sawyer 13 . *Hamilton Smith 17 . Dart. Coll. 1829; Lawyer. Moses Soule 18 . Bowd. Coll. 1829; A.M.; Teacher. *Samuel F. Stevens 11. Business. * James Sullivan 11 . Dart. Coll. 1829; Lawyer. *John Plenry Warland 15 . H.U. 1827; Editor. *David Wells 18 . M.D.; Physician. Lemuel Smith Williams .... 13 . Luther T. Wilson 20 . *Robert Wilson 10 . Amh. Coll. 1832. Natchez, Miss. . . . 1830 Vidalia, La. Rye 1844 Shongaloo, Miss. Boston, Mass. . . . 1849 Cincinnati, O. Candia 1862 Concord. Houlton, Me. Providence, R.I. . . 1866 <( (( New Orleans, La. Wakefield 1882 Nashua. Wakefield. <( Exeter. Durham 1875 Washington, D.C. Freeport, Me. Lyons, Iowa. Exeter 1854 New York, N.Y. Exeter 1878 Michigan, Cambridge, Mass. . 1872 Lowell, Mass. Deerfield 1876 Lowell, Mass. New Bedford, Mass. Fairhaven, Mass. Keene 1870 49 1823, *Ezra Abbot 17 . Bowd. Coll. 1830; Teacher. Obed E. Adams 21 . *Horace Bartol 12 . Gov't Service. * Joseph March Chadwick ... 10 . Business. LovellChilds 22 . WiUiam Conner 14 . Farmer. Ralph Cutter 13 . Merchant. *01iver C. Demerrit 21 . Carhuilder. *Francis Fiske Dorr 12 . Merchant. George Oliver Harris 13 . Bookkeeper (Boston). *Charles Hatch 11 . Wilton 1876 Owatonna, Minn. Medfield, Mass. Freeport, Me 1881 Washington, D.C. Exeter 1836 St. Louis, Mo. Newton, Mass. Exeter. Portsmouth. Brooklyn, N.Y. Madbury 1873 Lawrence, Mass. Boston, Mass 1870 New York, N.Y. Charlestown, Mass. Salem, Mass. Exeter 1825 4f^ CATALOGUE [1823-24. *Thomas Albert Haven 12 . Merchant. Thomas T. Helen 14 . *Howard Millet Henderson ... 20 . Teacher. *John Hubbard . 13 . H.U. 1820; A.M.; Lawyer. *Charles Currier Ingalls .... 15 . Dart. Coll. 1829; M.D.; Physician. John Ingalls 18 . *Haven Ladd 14 . Dart. Coll. 1829; Teacher. Henry Ladd 13 . Merchant. ^Leivis Flanders Laine 17 . Clergyman. *Alexander Hamilton Lawrence 11 . Dart. Coll. 1833; LL.B.; Lawyer. *William Bell Marsh 11 . Editor. *Alexander McCulloch 17 . Nahum Morrill 14 . Joseph Murdoch 12 . Insurance Broker. * James Cook lUchmond .... 15 . H.U. 1828; A.M.; Clergyman; Philanthropist; Author. *Thomas Andrews Richmond ..11. Lawyer. Charles Russell 22 . John L. Sherriff . 15 . * Joseph Dennie Tyler 19 . Yale Coll. 1829; KM.; Teacher. *John Adams Vinton 22 . Dart. Coll. 1828; A.M.; Clergyman. Charles March Weeks 14 . M.D.; Physician. Portsmouth 1853 Philadelphia, Pa. Washington, D.C. Dover 1841 Frankfort, Ky. Berwick, Me 1848 South Berwick, Me. Durham 1877 Andover, Mass. Durham. Andover, Mass. Portsmouth 1829 Philadelj)liia, Pa. Portsmouth. 1857 184G Loudon. Canistro, N.Y. Exeter Washington, D.C. Exeter Brooklyn, N.Y. Kennebunk, Me. Wells, Me. Havana, W. I. Boston, Mass. Providence, R. I. . . 1866 Poughkeepsie, N.Y. Providence, R.I. . . 1859 New York, N.Y. Northborough, Mass. Exeter. Brattleborough, Vt. . 1852 Staunton, Va. Boston, Mass. . (( (( Greenland. Crawford, Ga. 1877 32 1824. *Charles Abbot 15 Dart. Coll. 1833; Merchant. William Ebenezer Abbot .... 14 Bowd. Coll. 1830; Clergyman (retired). *Charles Tilden Appleton ... 15 Merchant.. William Channing Appleton ..11 H.U. 1832; LL.B.; Lawyer. Charles H. Badger 14 Elbridge Bradbury 19 Amh. Coll. 1831 ; a".M. ; Clerrryman. William S. Caldwell . . .\ . . 13 William B. Crown 21 * David Stearns D evens 14 M.D.; Clergyman; Physician. Wilton 1878 Newark, N.J. Beverly, Mass. Dorchester, Mass. Baltimore, Md. ... 1859 Boston, Mass. Baltimore, Md. Boston, Mass. Pepperell, Mass. Framingham, Mass. New Boston, Mass. Newburyport, Mass. Ipswich, Mass. East Kingston. Charlestown, Mass. . 1858 Lake Village. 1824-25.] CATALOGUE. 49 Samuel Moody Emery 20 . . . West Newbury, Mass. H.U. 1830; A.M.; Clergyman (retired). " «« Nathaniel Smith Folsom . . . 17 . . . Portsmouth. Dart. Coll. D.D. ; Prof. West. Res. Coll. 1833-3(>; Wellesley HiUs, Mass. Prof. Meadville Sem. 1849-(51; Clergyman (retired). * William Emerson Foster . . . 15 . . . Boston, Mass. . . . 184-2 H.U. 1829; A.M.; M.D.; Physician. " " *BarziUai Frost 20 . . . Effingham 1858 H.U. 1830; Clergyman. Concord, Mass. Samuel C. Oilman 24 . . . Buffalo, N.Y. Albert G. Gridley 13 ,. . . Exeter. Henry Rundlett Hall ..... 12 .. . Exeter. Gov't Service. Washington, D.C. Charles Harris ........ 14 .. . Providence, li.I. Charles Henry Holmes . . . . 14 . . . Alfred, Me. B.U. 1829. Topsfield, Mass. Samuel Jaques 13 . . . Charlestown, Mass. Real Estate Broker. Boston, Mass. *Minor Kenner 16 . . . New Orleans, La. . . 1863 Increase Sumner Kimball . . . 22 . . . Dover. Lawyer. Sanford, Me. *Oeorge D. Lamson 12 . . . Beverly, Mass. . . . 1841 Mariner. " " *William W. Orne 13 . . . Springfield, Mass. . 1852 Business. " '* Augustus John Rowe 12 . . . Exeter. *Thomas Sparhawk 17 . . . Concord 1874 Dart. Coll. 1828; M.D.; Physician. " William H. Sullivan 10 . . . Exeter. Business. St. Joseph, Minn, James Madison Tappan . . . . 13 . . . East Kingston. Farmer. " " * Abraham Rand Thompson . . 14 . . . Charlestown, Mass. . 1830 Student. Richard T. Tink 12 . . . Manchester, Mass. John Waldron 19 . . . Farmington. * Henry Augustus Walker . . . . 14 . . . Charlestown, Mass. . 1838 H.U. 18.30; Clergyman. Edward White ........ 13 .. . Haverhill, Mass. Charles William Woodman . . 14 . . . Rochester. Dart. Coll. 1829; Lawyer. Dover. 33 1825. Abiel Abbot 16 . Bowd. Coll. 1831; Teacher. Charles Aikin 23 . A.M.; Lawyer; Notary Public. *William Austin 13 . H.U. 1831; A.M.; Teacher. *Otis Baker 21 . Yale Coll. 1831. * James Benjamin 14 . H.U. 1830; Lawyer. Timothy Boutelle 14 . Lawyer. . Wilton. Owatonna, Minn. . Bedford. Wright's, Cal. . Charlestown, Mass. . 1835 Brookline, Mass. . Templeton, Mass. . . 1834 (( (( . Dunstable 1853 Boston, Mass. . Waterville, Me. 50 CATALOGUE. [1823. *Horatio Brooks 16 . Shipmaster. Robert J. Brown 13 . *Henry Phillips Chamberlain . . 13 . Merchant. *Robert Adams Coker ...... 18 . H.U. 1831; Teacher. *Ebenezer Ellingvvood Cox ...11. Mariner. Samuel Fay 19 . James P. Fogg 13 . George Albert Frost 12 . Merchant. *John W. Graves 15 . M.D.; Physician. *Charles Howe Greeuleaf ... 19 . Dart. Coll. 1832; Teacher. George Harris 13 . Charles Harris 12 . Dentist. Jonathan William Hartwell . . 14 . Nathaniel Hills 13 . Robert G. Hobbs 14 . Nathaniel H. Hubbard .... 12 . Lawyer. *Samuel Richards Hutchinson . 13 . Miner. Jeremiah Knight ...."... 18 . Thomas H. Liddle 14 . ♦Nathaniel Lord 17. *EzeMel Marsh 16 . Bowd. Coll. 1831; Clergyman. Theodore H. McCaleb .... 15 . Judge U.S. Dist. Ct. John Hopkins Mar (son .... 19 . H.U. 1831 ; A.M. ; D.D. ; Clergyman and Author. Nathan Watson Monroe .... 19 . H.U. 1830; A.M.; Clergyman. * William Saxon Morton ....16. H.U. 1831; A.M.; Lawyer. *James Pearson 14 . Merchant. Robert Smith 12 . George Washington Towle . . 15 . Clerk. *Henry Waldron 18 . Bowd. Coll. 1830; lawyer, *Nathaniel Wells 20 . Yale Coll. 1829; M.D.; Physician. ♦Nathaniel Wells 20 . Lawyer. Boston, Mass 1843 <( (( Boston, Mass. Exeter 1867 St. lago de Cuba. West Newbury, Mass. 1833 <( << (( Beverly, Mass. . . . 1837 (( <( Framiugham, Mass. Exeter. San ford. Me. Springvale, Me. Deerfield 1872 Lowell, Mass. West Newbury, Mass. 1838 Brooklyn, N.Y. Boston, Mass. Boston, Mass. Brooklyn, N.Y. Littleton, Mass. Xenia, O. Haverhill, Mass. Weston, Mass. Berwick, Me. Winterport, Me. Alstead 1869 Nevada. Providence, R.I. New Orleans, La. Kennebunk, Me. . ? 1850 California. Dan vers, Mass. . . . 1844 Ellington, Conn. Port Gibson, Miss. Louisiana. Peterborough. Boston, Mass. Cambridge, Mass. Greenfield, Mass. Milton, Mass 1871 Waterville, Me. . . . 1868 Chicago, 111. Exeter. Epping. Newcastle. Portsmouth 1876 New York, N.Y. Salisbury 1864 Mississippi. Deerfield 1878 Great Falls. 37 1826.] CATALOGUE. 51 18 2 6. *William P. Abbot . . . Merchant [Boston, Mass.]. Benjamin Dana Baxter Arthur Barley 14 Merchant. John Langdon Carlton .... 15 Dart. Coll. 1831; Lawyer. *Sullivan Caverno 19 Dart. Coll. 1831; A.M.; Lawyer. Phiueas Conner 12 Thomas Conner 14 Merchant. * George Caspar Crowninshield . 15 *James Augustus Dorr . . H.U. 1832; Lawyer. *William Henry Duncan . Dart. Coll. 1830; A.M.; Lawy^ Edward Henry Durell . . H.U. 1831; Lawyer; Judge U *Josiah Henry Folsom . . Farmer. *Moses French Hoit . . . Dart. Coll. 1835; A.M.; Lawyer, Calvin Hubbard *George W. Hutchins . . Lawyer. *William Parry Jones . . Merchant. *John Kimball Merchant. John McDuffle Knight . Ahiel Abbot Livermore . H.U.-1833; A.M.; Clergyman Theol. Sem.; Author. *Franklin McDuffie . . . Lieut. U. S. Army. Samuel H. Merrill . . . *John Murdoch Merchant. *William Murdoch .... Planter. George Henry Nichols . H.U. 1833; M";D.; Physician. *Merrill Ordway Hamilton Elliot Perkins . Lawyer. *Huntington Porter . . . H.U. 1833. Thomas Stackpole . . . John B. Stacy * Henry Stearns Winslow Marston Watson H.U. 1833; Journalist. . 18 . er. . 15 . S.Dist. Ct. 18 . 14 . 14 . 13 Pres, 13 . 18 . 17 . 14 . 17 . 14 . 15 . Meadville 17 21 13 11 . 11 22 . 19 . 13 . 19 . 13 . 14 . 13 . Dunstable ...... 1880 Keene. Quincy, Mass. California. Exeter. Chicago, HI. Bath. (( Strafford 1881 Lockport, N.Y. Newbury, Mass. Exeter. << Salem, Mass 1857 Brookline, Mass. Boston, Mass 1869 New York, N.Y. Candia 1883 Hanover. Dover. Louisiana. Exeter ....... 1870 (( Exeter 1867 Nevada, Cal. Shapleigh, Me. Bath . 1839 (( Portsmouth 1872 (( Kensington 1868 Salisbury, Mass. Rochester. Wilton. MeadviUe, Pa. Rochester 1832 Buxton, Me. Havana, W.I. ... 1871 Boston, Mass. Havana, W. I. ... 1882 (( (( Portland, Me. Boston, Mass. West Newbury, Mass. 1830 Hopkinton . Concord. Rye 1836 Rochester. Gloucester, Mass. Medford, Mass. . . . 1859 Plymouth, Mass. Washington, D.C. 52 CATALOGUE. [1826-27. Morrill Wyman . . 14 . . . Charlestown, Mass. H.U. 1833; A.M. ; M.D. ; Adj. Prof. Theory and Cambridge, Mass. Prac. H.U-. 1853-56; Physician. * Jeffries Wyman 12 . . . Charlestown, Mass. . 1874 H.U. 1833; A.M.; M.D.; Prof . Anatomy, H.U. ; Cambridge, Mass. Author. 33 1827 ♦Ezra Abbot 17 M.D.; Physician. Josiah Abbot 16 Yale Coll. 1835; A.M.; M.D.; Physician. *Ebenezer Adams 13 Dart. Coll. 1831; A.M.; Teacher, *Levi S. Bartlett 15 M.D.; Physician. * Joseph L. Beckett 13 Printer (Boston, Mass.). SethBemis 13 Manufacturer. * Alexander Ramsey Bradley i. . 17 H.U. 1831; Lawyer. Daniel Bray 13 George E. Brodhead 13 Business. John S. Brown 20 Editor. *Edmund Chadwick 11 Business [St. Louis]. Jacob Chapman 17 Dart. Coll. 1835; A.M.; Clergyman. John Copp 18 Bowd. Coll. 1832; A.M.; Teacher. * John Morrill Currier 18 Yale Coll. 1833; M.D.; Physician. *Gilman Dane 22 Union Coll. 1833: Agent. George Washington Dearborn . 1 2 Business. John Adams Dearborn .... 12 Business. John Homer Dix 14 H.U. 1833; M.D.; Oculist. Joseph W. Ellis 15 John N. Evans 17 *Edward Gray Fales 15 Bowd. Coll. 1832; LL.B.; Lawyer. Moses Hall Fitts 19 Dart. Coll. 1831; A.M.; Lawyer. *Henrv French 13 Dart, Coll. 1836; Instructor P. E. A. *Christopher Gore Greene ... 18 Timothy Gridley 13 James Hall 23 * Joseph Harrington 14 H.U. 1833; A.M.; Clergyman. Andover, Mass. . . . 1872 Canton, Mass. Framingham, Mass. Winchendon, Mass. Hanover 1837 Kingston 1865 Exeter 1882 Brentwood. Watertown, Mass. Hollis, Me 1862 Fryeburg, Me. Salem, Mass. Newmarket. New York, N.Y. New Ipswich. Kansas. Exeter 1879 (( Tam worth. Exeter. Wakefield. Amesbury, Mass. Woodville, Miss. Greenfield, Mass. (( (( Exeter. 1844 1839 Exeter. Oakland, Cal. Boston, Mass. (( (( Exeter. Louisiana. Boston, Mass 1842 Baltimore, Md. Candia. San Francisco, Cal. Kingston 1840 Exeter. Saco, Me. 1853 Exeter. Cambridge, Mags. Roxbury, Mass. . . . 1852 1827-28.] CATALOGUE. 53 John Walker Hartwell .... 14 Insurance Agent. *Silas Holmaii Hill 19 Dart. Coll. 1832; A.M.; Lawyer. * Charles Davis Jackson .... 17 Dart. Coll. 1833; D.D.; Clergyman. *Robert Tucker Kerr 16 Thomas C. Lane 17 Frederic A. Locke 17 ♦Benjamin F. Magoun 20 Richard S. Maloney 16 * Henry Brown Osgood 15 Bowd. Coll. 1832; Lawyer. * William Harrison Parsons . . . 14 Shipmaster, Benjamin Perkins 19 Farmer. John Lewis Ringe 23 . William G. Smith 20 Henry Gookin Storer 13 Bowd. Coll. 1832; A.M.; Clergyman, *George Sturgis 10 Merchant. *LIenry Tuck 29 M.D. Nathaniel Saville Tucker ... 13 H.U. 1833; A.M.; M.D.; Physician. David D. Wedgwood 15 ♦Theodore Wells 20 M.D.; Physician. John B. Weutworth 14 Business. Oramel White 20 *Asa Woodbury 16 Jeweller. Jere. Hall Woodman 15 Farmer. Littleton, Mass. Cincinnati, O, Portsmouth 1860 Washington, D.C. Salem, Mass 1871 Westchester, N,Y. New Orleans, La. HoUis, Me. Boston, Mass. East Kingston .... 1829 . Northfield. . Fryeburg, Me. ., . . 1843 Portland, Me. . Rye . . 1867 . Exeter. . Alton. . England. . Scarborough, Me. . Boston, Mass. . . . . 1857 Manila, Philippine Islands. . Kensington . . . . . 1845 . Newton, Mass. Illinois, . Exeter. . Deerfield .... . . 1862 Scarborough, Me. . Exeter. Lynn, Mass. . . Randolph, Mass. . Beverly, Mass. . . . 1844 New York, N.Y, . Rochester. Ashtabula, 0, 50 1828, *Rufus Abbot 20 . . . Yale Coll. 1833; M.D.; Physician. *George Jacob Abbot 15 . . . H.U. 1835; A.M.; U.S. Consul, Sheffield, Eng.; Prof. Latin, Meadville Theol. Sem. Charles Vose Bemis 12 . . . H.U. 1835; M.D.; Physician. Lyman Blake 18 . . . John J. Bradley ... Union Coll. 1835, *Cvrus Parker Bradley 10 . . . *^Dart. Coll. 1837, Thomas S. Bradley 17 . . . Pay ton Bradshaw 19 . . . Isaac Austin Brooks 14 . . . Wilton 1873 Pleasant Hills, Mo, Windham 1879 Meadville, Pa, Watertown, Mass. Medford, Mass. Chichester. Concord. 1838 (( Fryeburg, Me. Prince Edward's Island, Va. Chaiiestown. Cambridge. 54 CATALOGUE. [1828-29. George Chandler . 18 . . . Fryebiu'g, Me. Rufus W. ClarJc . u . . . Newbury, Mass. ClergymaD. Albany, N.Y. Elias M. Clark . 16 . . . Winthrop, Me. *Horatio Coffin . 16 . . . Portsmouth .... (I . Newbury, Mass. . . 1857 Capitalist. *Phmeas Sanborn Conner . . 15 . . . 1854 Dart. Coll. 1835; M.D.; Physicia n. Cincinnati, 0. Edwin Coolidge . 16 . . Boston, Mass. Samuel Dodge . 13 . . Portsmouth. Henry Joseph Gardner . . . 10 . . Dorchester. Gov. Mass. 1855-7; Business. Chicago, ni. James M. Goodwin .... . . 21 . . Saco, Me. EUsha Goodwin . . 18 . . Saco, Me. Samuel T. Gove . . 15 . . St. John, N.B. M.D.; Physician. St. Andrew, CD. *Albert F. Hanson . . 14 . . Dover . 1858 Merchant. Philadelphia, Pa. Henry Francis Harrington . . 14 . . . Eoxbury, Mass. H.U. 1834; Clergyman. New Bedford, Mass. James Lawrence Hartwell . . . 13 . . Littleton, Mass. Contractor. New York, N.Y. ♦Hugh Horatio Henry . . . . . 13 . . Rockingham, Vt. . . 1869 Dart. Coll. 1833. Chester. John L. Jewell . . 14 . . . Stratham. Business. (< Alexander Hamilton Ladd . . 13 . . Portsmouth. Merchant. (( ♦Nathaniel Knowles Lombard . 20 . . Boston, Mass. . . . . 1876 Merchant. Smyrna. *James Henry Mitchell . . . . . 15 . . . Bridgewater, Mass . . 1872 Merchant (Boston, Mass.). East Bridgewater, Mass. ♦Christopher Morton .... . . 14 . . . Portland, Mc. Nicholas E. Paine . . 20 . . . Newmarket. * Lucius ParTcer . . 20 . . . Southborough, Mass. 1868 H.U. 18^; Clergyman. Laramie, Neb. Grenville JParker . 15 . . Chelmsford, Mass. Lawyer. Lowell, Mass. Daniel Parker . 22 . . Billerica, Mass. ♦Charles Henry Peirce . . . . 14 . . . Cambridge, Mass. . . 1855 H.U. 1833: A.M.; M.D.; Physici an. « « Sherburne Blake Piper . . . 20 . . . Northwood. Dart. Coll. 1832; A.M.; Lawyer. Lewiston, N.Y. ♦Charles Edwin Stratton . . . 15 . . Watertown, Mass. . 1871 Merchant. Boston, Mass. Albert G. Thornton .... . 16 . . Saco, Me. * Charles Turner Torrey . . . . 14 . . . Chelsea, Mass. . . . 1846 Yale Coll. 1833; A.M.; Clergymt m. Baltimore, Md. True Tucker . 17 . . . Meredith Bridge. . . Gloucester, Mass. . ♦Noah Worcester . 15 . . 1847 40 - L82C ). James Bean . 19 . . . "Warner. . Boston, Mass. Francis Bowen . 17 . . P.U. 1833; A.M.; LL.D.; Prof. I S^at. and Mo ral Cambridge, Mass. 1829-30.] CATALOGUE. 55 ♦Joseph Boyden 17. Teacher. Benjamin Franklin Butler ...11. C.U. 1838; A.M.; LL.D.; M.C. 1867-75; Gov. Mass. 1883. Edmund Chadwick 17 . Teacher. Moses T. Chapin 15 . *Heber Chase 21 . M.D.; Physician. Alfred Conner 14 . Carpenter. Horatio Sprague Cook .... 12 . Herman Elves Davidson ... 14 . H.U. 1836; A.M.; M.D.; Physician. John Taylor Oilman Davies . . 13 . M.D.; Physician. *George Clinton Durcll 14 . *Edward Fox 14 . H.U. 1834; LL.B. ; Judge U.S. Dist. Ct. ; LaAvy William F. Gordon 18 . Business. Joshua P. Haven 11 . James B. Kelly 22 . Farmer. Charles Mason 17. H.U. 1834; A.M.; LL.B.; Lawyer. Leonard W. Merrill 15 . William Oxnard Moseley ... 14 . H.U. 1836; Clergyman. John Taylor Oilman Nicliols . 12 . H.U. 1836; Clergyman. Hezekiah O'Calloghan .... 14 . John Parsons 13 . *Benjamin Hurd Rhoades ... 17 . B.U. 1833; A.M.; Librarian. Benjamin F. Russell 14 . *Charles Woodman Scates . . . 13 . , H.U. 1838; Lawyer. William F. Tarbell 16 . John L. W. Tilton 17 . Royal Tyler 17 . H.U. 1834; A.M.; Lawyer; Probate Judge. Worcester Willey 21 . Will. CoU. 1835; A.M.; Clergyman. *William Wiswall 14 . Timothy Roberts Young .... 18 . Bowd. Coll. 1835; M.C; Lawyer. . Tamworth 1842 Alabama. , Deerfield. Lowell, Mass. . Middleton. Starkey, N.Y. . Barrington, R.I. . Hopkinton 1850 Philadelphia, Pa. . Exeter. , Dorchester, Mass. , Charlestown, Mass. Boston, Mass. , Portland, Me. (( (( . Dover 1838 , Portland, Me 1881 (( (( , Exeter. Lawrence, Mass. , Philadelphia, Pa. . Hopkinton. , Dublin. Fitchburg, Mass. Portland, Me. ,. Newburyport, Mass. (( * (( Portland, Me. Saco, Me. . St. Jago de Cuba. , Rye. Boston, Mass 1880 Newport, R.I. Newburj'port, Mass. Middleton 1873 Williamsport, Va. Cambridge, Mass. Exeter. Brattleborough, Vt. Campton. Exeter. Dover. Marshall, 111. 31 18 3 0. Harris Abbot . . . . Farmer. *John Quincy Adams Lieut. U. S. Navy. *George W. Beale . . 17 . . Wilton. 14 . . . Quincy, Mass. . . . 1853 14 . . . Quincy, Mass. . Burlington, Iowa. . . 1870 56 CATALOGUE. [1830. *John Abner Briggs 14 H.U. 1835; A.M.; M.D.; Physician. Abijali Brigham 18 Farmer. *Horace Butler 16 Dart. Coll. 1836; Lawyer; Prob. Judge. Josiah Butler 14 Broker. Edward Buxton 26 *David Joseph Clark 17 Dart. Coll. 1836; Lawyer. *Robert Augustine Cross .... 14 Printer. ♦Thomas Cutts 19 Nathaniel Gardiner Oilman . . 11 Farmer. *David Green Goodall 16 Business. * James Harrison. Gray 11 M.D. ; Physician. *Augustus C. L. Hartwell ... 14 Business. * Ephraim Nelson Hidden . ... 19 Dart. Coll. 1836; Clergyman. *Samuel Tenney Hildreth ... 13 H.U. 1837. Francis Parkman Hurd .... 10 H.U. 1839; M.D.; Farmer. *Horace Green Hutchins . . . . 18 Dart. Coll. 1835; A.M.; Lawyer. Ephraim A. Hyde 16 Austin Daniel Kilham 12 Merchant (retired). John Savillian Ladd 20 Dart. Coll. 1835; A.M.; Lawyer. *Fitz Henry Lawrence 13 Mariner. Thomas Atkins Livermore . . 17 Dentist. Nathaniel Loveriug ...... 11 Farmer. John Gilman Lovering .... 13 Business. Jarvis McDuffie . 20 Yale Coll. 1836; Farmer. William Henry McCrillis ... 16 Lawyer. *John H. Murdough 19 Clergyman. Theodore Bland Moses .... 1 3 Surveyor. *John Fitz Henry Muzzey ... 13 H.U. 1835. James William Odlin 10 *George W. Pendexter 15 Shipmaster. ^Nathaniel Gorham Phillips . . 14 John T. G. Pike 16 . Newburyport, Mass. 1845 Sudbury, Mass. South Acton, Mass. Deerfield Liberty ville, 111. Deerfield. New York, N.Y. New Boston. Stratham Manchester. Exeter Boston, Mass. Biddeford, Me. . . Exeter. 1861 1866 1861 1870 Bath 1882 Beloit, Wis. Bostou, Mass. . . . . 1853 Springfield, Mass.'. Littleton, Mass. . . . 1865 New Oi'leans, La, Tamworth 1880 Norfolk, Mass. Gloucester, Mass. . . 1839 Exeter. Wakefield, Mass. Bath 1877 Boston, Mass. Freeport, Me. Beverly, Mass. <( (( Epping. Camiiridge, Mass. Exeter. << Milford. Exeter. Newton. Exeter. Epping. Rochester. Exeter. Somersworth. Bangor, Me. Wakefield Gorham, Me. Exeter. West Roxhury, Mass. Portland, Me. . . . Exeter. (< Dover. Galveston, Texas. Andover, Mass. Hampton Falls. 1869 1846 1882 1830-31.] CATALOGUE. 57 * Joseph Hicks Richards .... 14 . M.D.; Physician. John liiley 15 . Shipmaster. Abraham Hazen Robinson . . 17 . Yale Coll. 1835 ; A.M. ; M.D. ; Physician. *Benning W. Sanborn 17 . Business. John Smith 23 . Charles William Storer .... 13 . Lawyer. * Joseph Dndley Thyng 15 . Merchant, *Benjamin A. Thompson . ... 17 . Teacher. Ebenezer Trask 20 . Erastus S. Tuttle 13 . Francis William Upham .... 13 . Bowd. Coll. 1837; LL.D.; Prof. Phil., Rutgers Author. George Brown Webster .... 16 . Fanner. Jacob 8. Wentworth 13 . Tolraan Willey 21 . Lawyer. Hollis Willey 22 . Carlos Willey 14 . John F. Winkley 15 . Theodore Chase Woodman . . 15 . Dart. Coll. 1835; Lawyer. . Nottingham 1835 Portland, Me. . Dover. New York, N.Y. . Concord. . Deerfield 1874 Concord. . Brentwood. . Newbury port, Mass. Boston, Mass. . Exeter 1881 <( . Deerfield 1837 Concord. . Gloucester, Mass. . Newmarket. . Rochester. Coll. Brunswick, N.J. . East Kingston. . Exeter. . Campton. Boston, Mass. . Epping. . Hanover. . Amesbury, Mass. . Rochester. Belfast, Me. 53 18 31 William Allen 15 . H.U. 1837; A.M.; Government Service. *Henry David Austin 13 . H.U. 1839; LL.B.; Lawyer. William Charles Balch .... 12 . R. R. Clerk. Joshua Berry 25 . Nicholas Arthur Clarke ... 17 . H.U. 1838; A.M.; Insurance Agent. *John M. Dow 16 . Broker. Ezekiel Gilman 14 . H.U. 1839. John Gilman 12 . Printer. *Seth Hayes 21 . J. M. Henderson ■Aaron Hobart 13 . Corporation Treasurer (Boston, Mass.). Nathaniel Holmes 17 . H.U. 1837; A.M.; Lawyer and Author ; Prof LaAV, H.U. 1868-72; Judge Supr. Ct. Mo. of Bridgewater, Mass. Boston, Mass. Charlestown, Mass. . 1879 Wakefield, Mass. Newburyport, Mass. Boston, Mass. Portsmouth. Exeter. Salem, Mass. Dover 1871 New York, N.Y. Deerfield. New York, N.Y. Deerfield. Farmington 1832 <( Dover. East Bridgewater, Mass. (( (( (( Peterborough. St. Louis, Mo. 58 CATALOGUE. [1831. Frederic Jones 17. H.U.1835; A.M.; M.D.; Physician. *Edward M. E. Keating .... 14 . Bowd. CoU. 1835; Lawyer. *Henry Lorenzo Low 14 . Dart. Coll. 1836; A.M.; Prof. Ancient Lang., Hobart Coll. *George Minot 14 . H.U. 1836; LL.B.; Lawyer. *Horace Morisou 21 . H.U. 1837; A.M.; Prof. Math., Univ. Maryland. James Colman Moses lo . Nathaniel Noyes 18 . Business. Edwin A. C. Page 14 . Daniel P. Pike • . . IG . Clergyman. William B. Porter 11 . William Pitt Preble 12 . Bowd. Coll. 1840; Lawyer. *George William Rice 14 . H.U. 1836; A.M.; Bank Cashier. *Nathauiel Gilman Rogers ... 13 . C.U. 1838; Teacher. *John Francis Rogers 11 . Business. * William Sherman Rowland . . 13 . Yale Coll. 1836; Lawyer. James M. Saunders 15 . *William Henry Shackford . . . 16 . H.U. 1835; A.M.; Prof. Math. P.E.A. Charles Chauncy Shackford . . 15 . H.U. 1835; A.M.; Clergyman; Prof. Rhet. and Lit., Cornell Univ. * James Foster Shores 17 . Bank Cashier. Isaac Smith Shute 13 . Merchant. *Henry Augustus Shute .... 10 . Dart. Coll. 1840. *David Scott Sloan 16 . Dart. Coll. 1836; A.M.; Teacher. John M. Story 12 . Merchant. Jere. Webster Tuck 19 . Amh. Coll. 1840; Clergyman. Samuel Parsons Tuck 19 . Farmer. Daniel A. Veasey 14 . Business. AshtonS. H. White 11 . *George Henry AVills 11 . Business. Henry L. Wiswall 13 . Government Clerk. Dublin. New Ipswich. York, Me 1837 Alton, 111. Concord 1852 Geneva, N.Y. Haverhill, Mass. . . 1858 Maiden, Mass. Peterborough . . . . 1870 Baltimore, Md. Exeter. West Newbury, Mass. Haverhill, Mass. Exeter. Kensington. Newburyport, Mass. Newburyport, Mass. Illinois. Portland, Me. Portsmouth 1881 Boston, Mass. Exeter 1847 Exeter 1870 Lowell, Mass. Windsor, Conn. . . . 1856 New York, N.Y. Portsmouth. Portsmouth 1842 Exeter. Portsmouth. Ithaca, N.Y. Portsmouth 1877 (( Exeter. (( Exeter 1841 (( Haverhill 1841 Geneva, N.Y. Newburyport, Mass. New York, N.Y. Kensington. Middletown, Conn, Kensington. <( Exeter. Indiana. Portsmouth. Newburyport, Mass. 1860 (( (( Exeter. Washington, D.C. 41 1832.] CATALOGUE. 59 1832. Ebenezer Allen 21 . . *Daiiiel Wells Alvord 15 . . Union Coll. 1838; A.M.; Lawyer. Joseph W. Batchelder 22 . . *Coffiu March Chadvvick .... 13 . . Steamer Captain. John Chad wick 10 . . Shipmaster; Business Agent (Boston, Mass.). William H. Chandler 17 . . * Jacob Morrill Currier 18 . . Edward Henry Davies .... 14 . . Bowd.Coll. 18*38; LL.B.; Lawyer. *Charles G. Dow 15 . . Clerk. James M. Elliot 12 . . Farmer. Josiah Fogg 17.. Farmer. *Albert Gassett 14 . . John Gardiner Gilman ....11.. Farmer. Edward St. L. Haven 12 . . *Charles Jarvis 11.. Univ. Vt. 1839; LL.B. Edward R. Johnston 21 . . Samuel Livermore 15 . . John Langdon Lovering . . . 12 . . Florist. WiUiara H. Low 13 . . Merchant. *Asa Mitchell 14 . . William Perry Moulton .... 11 . . Insurance Agent. Edward S. Osgood 14 . . *Samuel H. Pendexter 14 . . Banker. Matthew Pike 19 . . Farmer. John Foxr Potter 16 . . M.C. 1858-61; Lawyer. *George Augustus Richmond . . 15 . . *Edward Sullivan 12 . . Andrew W. Thompson .... 12 . . R. R. Employ. * Albert Gallatin Upham .... 13 . . Bowd. Coll. 1840; A.M.; M.D.; Physician. *John Wright Warren 21 . . M.D.; Physician. Francis Brown Webster ....16.. Dart. Coll. 1841; Manufacturer. Bernard Bemus Whittemore . . 15 . . H.U. 1839; Lawyer and Journalist. Townsend, Mass. Greenfield, Mass. . . 1871 Virginia. Loudon. Exeter ....... 1865 San Francisco, Cal. Exeter. (< Providence, R.I. Dover 1847 Pensacola. Portland, Me. (( (( Dover 1837 Chester. <( Exeter. Deerfield. Boston, Mass 1838 Exeter. (( Philadelphia, Pa. Weathersfield,Vt. . . 1862 Hillsborough. Plymouth. Exeter. (( Dover. Chicago, 111. Bridge water, Mass. . 1876 Exeter. (( Denmark, Me. Dover 1880 New York, N.Y. Hampton Falls. (( (( Augusta, Me. East Troy, Wis Providence, R.I. . . 1868 Havana. Exeter 1843 Durham. Portland, Me. Rochester 1847 Boston, Mass. Lincoln, Mass. . . . 1869 Boston, Mass. Salisbury. Bostoni^ Mass. Peterborough. Nashua. 60 CATALOGUE. [1832-34. * George A. Wood Business. Lewis Young . . 15 16 1833, 12 *Thornton Fleming Brodiiead LL.B.; Lawyer. William Clough 14 . * John Parker Conner 14 . Dart. Coll. 1840; A.M.; M.D.; Physician. James Davis 14 . Dart. Coll. 1841; Teacher. George Nehemiah p]astman . . 13 . Dart. Coll. 1839; A.M.; Lawyer. Bagley Favor 21 . Nathaniel Gordon 12 . Dart. Coll. 1841; LL.B.; Capitalist. Oliver Lethbridge Gridley . . . 15 . Merchant (retired). *Edward Wheelock Hatch ... 15 . Francis Brown Hayes 13 . H.U. 1839; A.M.; Lawyer. William Pickering Hill .... 13 . Dart. Coll. 18:59; A.M.; Editor. Richard Lovering 14 . Business. Charles H. Mitchell 14 . Business. Frederic Morrill 18 . Lawyer. William Gihnan Perry 10 . Dart. Coll. 1842; M.D.; Physician. * Edward Warren Putnam ... 13 . Dart. Coll. 1840; A.M.; Clergyman. Edward Shaw 14 . Charles Emery Soule 10 . Bo wd. Coll. 1842; A.M.; Assistant Surrogate; Lawyer. William Cutter Tenney .... 16 . H.U. 1838; Clergyman." Munroe G. I. Tukesbury ... 14 . *Charles Tompson 12 . Printer. Richard S. Varnum 16 . * James Smith Walker 12 . Lewis Warrington 14 . Paymaster, U. S. Navy. Edmnnd Burke Whitman ... 20 . H.U. 1838; A.M. 1834 ♦Nathaniel Bradley Baker ... 15 H.U. 1839; Gov. N.H.; Lawyer. David A. Barker ....... 12 Amos R. Binney 15 Newburyport, Mass. 1883 Philadelphia, Pa. Exeter. 34 Newmarket 1862 Detroit, Mich. Exeter. Exeter 1848 Astoria, N.Y. Amesbmy, Mass. if " (I Farmington. (( New Chester. Exeter. << Great Falls. Fayville, Mass. P^xeter. South Berwick, Me, Boston, Mass. Concord. « Exeter. Lynn, Mass. Portland, Me. San Francisco, Cal. Brentwood. Baltimore, Md. Exeter. <( Portsmouth 1863 North Whitefield, Me. Portland, Me. Boston, Mass. Exeter. New York. N.Y. Newmarket. Kansas City, Mo. Amesbury, Mass. South Berwick, Me. Haverhill, Mass. Peterborough . Norfolk, Va. 1875 1840 East Bridge water, Mass. Cambridge, Mass. 25 Concord 1876 Des Moines, la. Rochester. Boston, Mass. 1834. J CATALOGUE. Gl John Brooks 15 . . James Watson Brown 21 . . M.D. ; Physician (retired). Charles Burley 14 . . Florist, Augustus Burley 15 . . Business. Bradbury Poor Cilley 10 . . Dart. Coll. 1843; Lawyer. Thomas Clements ....... 20 . . Thomas Bartlett Doe 24 . . Farmer. *George O. J. Durell 24 . . M.D. ; Physician. Charles Dwinell 16 . . James E. Farnam 17 . .. *Georo-e Dennis Fowle 12 . . Business. * William Graves 16 . . * William Henderson 20 . . Farmer. * George Ilobart 14 . . Merchant. Samuel Emerson Howard . . . 14 . . Merchant. Aaron M. Hubbard 21 . . Joseph Ilurd Ladd 14 . . Merchant. * Joseph Lewis Leach 19 . . Merchant. "^Horatio Merrill 17 . . Dart. Coll. 1840; Clergyman. Nathaniel Holmes Morison . . H.U. 1839; A.M.; LL.D.; Teacher. John Leese Moses C.U. 1841; A.M.; Treasurer. *David M. Noyes George Gilman Odiorne .... M.D. ; Preacher. Joseph Osgood 18 . . Clergyman. Francis Edward Parker .... 12 . . H.U. 1841; LL.B.; Lawyer. Nathaniel G. Robinson .... 14 . . Farmer. * William Ballard Smith .... 14 . . Dart. Coll. 1840; Lawyer; Judge Circ. Ct. John Babson Lane Soule . . . 18 . . Bowd. Coll. 1840; Clergyman. *Walter Harris Tenney 14 . . Dart. Coll. 1839; Lawyer. *George Timothy Upham . . . 14 . . Merchant, *Ed ward Webster 13 . . Dart. Coll. 1841; Civil Engineer. Henry Ciimmings Whitman . . 17 . . Lawyer. John iVI. Williams 16 . . Clerk. 18 12 14 11 Boston, Mass. Framingham, Mass. Framingham Centre, Mais. Exeter. Exeter. Chicago, 111. Nottingham. Manchester. Dover. Somerswortli. Danville, Va. Lee Goshen, N.Y, Bangor, Me. Boston, Mass. Alexandria, D.C. 1853 Brentwood. Dover . . . . 1867 . 1839 E. Bridgewater, Mass. 1843 New Orleans, La. Newburvport, Mass. Brooklyn, N.Y. Acton, Me. Portsmouth. New York, N.Y. Concord. Boston, Mass. Brownlield, Me.. . . 1878 Peterborough. Baltimore, Md, Exeter. Knoxville, Tenn. Newburyport, Mass, 1839 Exeter. Jefferson City, la, Kensington. Cohasset, Mass. Portsmouth. Boston, Mass. Brentwood. (( Durham 1866 Louisville, Ky. Freeport, Me. Highland Park, 111. Concord 1844 Dunharton. Portsmouth 1857 San Francisco, Cal. Boston, Mass. . . . 1848 << <( Billerica. Cincinnati, O. Dover. Boston, Mass. 36 62 CATALOGUE. [1835. 1835. Ezra Abbot 16 Bowd. Coll. 1840; A.M.; LL.D.; Prof. New Test. Crit. H.U. ; Author. William Benjamin Bacon ... 12 . H.U. 1841; A.M.; Merchant. George Murillo Bartol 14 . B.U. 1842; Clergyman. Charles T. Bradley 17 . Merchant. Enoch Pay son Bui lard .... 15 . Merchant. ♦Gardner Elliot 22 . Easiness. ♦Nicholas Emery '. 13 . Benjamin F. Fish 17 . Business. Robert Ilsley Frothingham . . 13 . Business. ♦Augustus K. Gardner 14 . M.D.; Physician. Daniel Swan Gilchrist .... 13 . Lawyer. Charles Jervis Gilman .... 11 . M.C. 1858-9; Farmer. James W. Greene 23 . Rufus H. Hilliard 20 . Farmer. ♦Edward Frothingham Howard . 13 . Business. ♦Nathaniel Dean Hubbard ... 14 . H.U. 1840; Broker. William Augustus Kimball . . 22 . Lawyer. Timothy J. Murray 15 . Business. ♦Frederic O. Pendexter .... 16 . Merchant. Elvin J. Pike 13 . Fitz John Porter 14 . West Point, 1845; Gen. U.S.A. ♦Charles Henry Porter 18 . Yale Coll. 1839; Theol. Student. Barrett Edwards Potter .... 16 . Bowd. Coll. 1841; Banker. Daniel Fox Potter 16. Bowd. Coll. 1841; Clergyman. Edward Reed 14 . Dart. Coll. 1841; Business. ♦James Smith 19 . Yale Coll. 1840; LL.B.; Lawyer. Nicholas Emery Soule 10 . H.U. 1845; A.M.; M.D.; Teacher [Cincinnati]. Samuel Storer 15 Lawyer. Jonas M. Tebbets 16 Jackson, Me. Cambridge, Mass. . Boston, Mass. (( (( . Portland, Me. Lancaster, Mass. . Haverhill, Mass. Milwaukee, Wis. . Concord. New York, N.Y. . Exeter 1876 New York, N;Y. . Portland, Me 1840 . Thornton. Detroit, Mich. . Newburyport, Mass. New York, N.Y. . Roxbury, Mass. . . 1876 New York, N.Y. . Charlestown. Boston, Mass. . Exeter. Brunswick, Me. . Smithfield, R.I. . Kensington. Newburyport. (< Charlestown . . Boston, Mass. Shapleigh, Me. Rochester. Newmarket. 1865 1872 Dover New York, N.Y. Hampton Falls. Alexandria, D.C. Morristown, N.Y. Portland, Me 1841 (( (< Augusta, Me. (( (( Augusta, Me. Brunswick, Me. Yarmouth, Me. Boston, Mass. Peterborough .... 1846 New Orleans, La. Exeter. (( Portsmouth. San Diego, Cal. Rochester. 1835-36.] CATALOGUE. 63 *Nathaiiiel Tracy 13 Student. William Orne WJiite 14 H.U. 1840; A.M.; Clergyman. * Joseph Addison White .... 18 H.U. 1840; Teacher. Joseph Phinney Whittemore . 14 Lawyer. *Augustus Whitman 14 George Dudley Wildes 17 Clergyman (Riverdale). William Gray Wise 14 Manufacturer. Newburyport, Mass. 1843 « « Salem, Mass. Brookline, Mass. Peterborough .... 1843 Middletown, Pa. Peterborough. Detroit, Mich. Abington, Mass. . . 1880 Worcester, Mass. Newburyport, Mass. New York, N.Y. Portsmouth. Auburn, N.Y. 36 1836, *Amos Tappan Akerman . ... 15 Dart. Coll. 1842; U.S. Att. Gen. 1870-72; yer. Stephen Rowe Bellows .... 14 Lawyer. * James Blodgett 24 , H.U. 1841; Clergyman. Joseph D. L. Davis 14 David Fogg Drew 16 Dart. Coll. 1842; A.M.; M.D.; Physician. * Walter Moody Elliot 12 , Business. * John Abbot Emery 17 *Marcus Fox 16 . *Philemon Brown Francis ... 22 . Benjamin F. Gilman 22 . M.D. Moses F. Greene . 23 . Eldridge Gurney 18 . Business. Wells Healey . 16 . Farmer. Howland Holmes 21 . H.U. 1843; A.M.; M.D.; Physician. *Richard Hubbard 13 . Broker. Aaron Dean Hubbard 10 . Broker. * William Jarvis 12 . Leonard Fitz Edw. Jarvis . . 17 . Bowd. Coll. 1840 ; A.M. ; Lawyer. John Prentiss Proctor Kelly . 16 . Merchant. Samuel Kimball 20 . Teacher. Samuel Connor Lawrence . . 13 . Capitalist. James W. Locke 21 . , . . Portsmouth 1880 Law- Cartersville, Ga. . Walpole. . Westford, Mass. 1845 . . New York, N.Y. . . Milton, Mass. Lynn, Mass. . . Exeter 1873 San Francisco, Cal. . . Springfield 1842 . . Fitchburg, Mass. . . Lunenburg, Mass. . 1841 Quincy, 111. . . Boston, Mass. . . Smithfield, R.I. . . Abington, Mass. St. Joseph, Mo. . . Hampton Falls. <( (( . . East Bridge water, Mass. Lexington, Mass. . . Charlestown .... 1882 • Boston, Mass. . . Charlestown. Boston, Mass. . . Weathersfield, Vt. . 1842 . ^ . Surry, Me. Columbia, Cal. . . Exeter. (( . . Shapleigh, Me. Cane Spring Depot, Ky. . . Exeter. (( . . Roxbury, Mass. 64 CATALOGUE. [1836-37. ♦Samuel B. Locke 20 . . . Albert \Y. Lovering 11 . . . Bookseller. Samuel Adams Morison . . . . 18 . . . Business. * James Morison 18 . . . H.U. 1844; A.M.; M.D.; Physician. Nathan Andrew Moulton . . . 12 . . . Business. *John Chandler Nourse . . . . 14 . . . H.U. 1840. ♦William Nudd 18 . . . Farmer. George Osgood 18 . . . Farmer, William Plumer 12 . . . H.U. 1845; LL.B.; Business. ♦Henry Sargent 14 . . . Yale Coll. 1841; A.M.; M.D.; Physician. Samuel Smith 11 . . . Planter. Richard Wen man Swan . . . . 19 . . . H.U. 1842; A.M. ; Prof. Lang, and Lit. ; Iowa Coll George Walker 12 . . . Dart. Coll.1842; A.M.; LL.B.; U.S. Consul Gen. John S. Ware ......... 13 .. . ♦Horatio Woodman 15 . . . LL.B; Lawyer. W. Cambridge, Mass. 1838 P^xeter. New York, N.Y. Peterborough. Oaklands, Cal. Peterborough .... 1882 Quincy, Mass. Hampton Falls. Newburyport, Mass. Hallowell, Me. . . . 1844 Kensington Exeter. Kensino;ton. Epping. Lexington, Mass. Leicester, Mass. Worcester, Mass. Mississippi. 1863 1858 West Cambridge, Mass. Grinnell, Iowa. Peterborough. Paris, France. Hampton Falls. Buxton, Me 1879 Boston, Mass. 37 1837. Samuel Augustus Badger . . . 15 . . . Kittery, Me. Yale Coll. 1844; Business. Boston, Mass. ♦John Bradford Ball 16 . . . Portsmouth 1844 Clerk. Boston, Mass. Jeremy Belknap Barker . . . 20 . . . Wakefield. Lawyer. White Plain Co., Nevada. William Barker 23 . . . Ellsworth, Me. Wheelwright. River Falls, Wis. JohnB. Beale. 18 . . . Scituate, Mass. Charles Henry Bell 13 . . . Chester. Dart. Coll. 1844;LL.D.; Lawyer; U.S. Sen. 1879; Exeter. Gov. N.H. 1881-2. Abel Herbert Bellows 14 . . . Walpole. H.U. 1842; A.M.; L.L.B. Boston, Mass. Adino Nye Brackett .*.... 15 .. . Lancaster. Dart. Coil. 1844; M.D.; Physician. Negrofoot, Va. ♦Joseph Hildreth Bradley . . . 15 . . . Haverhill, Mass. . . 1882 Dart. Coll. 1844; Lawyer." Boston, Mass. ♦George Henry Bullard . . . . 13 . . . Concord. Daniel Chaplin 16... Cambridgeport, Mass. M.D. George Fdber Clark 20 . . . Dublin. Clergyman. Mendon, Mass. William Henry Cobbs 14 . . . Exeter. R.R. Clerk. North Springfield, Mo. ♦George Washinaton Copp . . 17 . . . Wakefield 1864 Bowd. Coll. 18427 1837-38.] CATALOGUE. UNIVERSITY OF 65 Stephen W. Drew 19 . *Joel S. Furber 14 . * Andrew Bowers Gale 12 . Business. William Henry Gorham .... 10 . M.D. *Charles Hammond 13 . *William Samuel Hatch .... 14 . Merchant. Henry y. Hajes 18 . Business. *Charles Edwin Kimball .... 15 . Clerk. John William Kingman . . . . 16 . H.U. 1843; Lawyer; Judge Supreme Court. Benjamin H. Merrill 14 . George Osborne Odlin .... 14 . Farmer. John Qaincy Adams Perkins . 12 . Business. Oliver James Rand 17. Treasurer. *Alfred Rodman 16 . John Eastman Sanborn .... 13 . M.D.; Physician. Augustus Lord Soule 10 . H.U. 1846; Lawyer; Judge Supreme Court Mass. 1879-81. Ebenezer Carlton Sprague . . 14 H.U. 1843; Lawyer. Samuel Stevens Thj^ng .... 16 Merchant. *Ebenezer Franklin Tucke ... 15 Dart. Coll. 1843; Lawyer. *John M. C. Veazey 14 Lawyer. John C. Wadleigh 21 *Seth Webb . 14 H.U. 1843; Lawyer. . Milton. . Exeter. . Salem, Mass. New York, N. Y. . Exeter. ti . Boston, Mass. . Diniwiddie Co., Va. . 1868 Georgetown, Ky. . Durham. Dover. . Kensington 1850 (( . Madbury. Wyoming Territory. . Alna, Me. . Exeter. Morison, HI. . Exeter. North Bend, Ind. . Exeter. Boston, Mass. . New Bedford, Mass. 1853 . Exeter. Rockport, Me. . Exeter. Boston, Buffalo, N.Y. (( (( Exeter. (( Kensington 1857 Exeter. Exeter 1880 Indiana. Meredith. Scituate, Mass. . . . 1862 36 1838. Henry H. Barstow 14 . Sherburne Pierce Blal%*3 .... 12 . Business. Ozias Goodwin Chapman ... 18 . Business. *JohnCoe 16 . Business. *CharlesD. Dudley 15 . *Caleb Ellis Farley 20 . Dart. Coll. 1843; Teacher. William Perry Fogg 12 . Merchant ; Author. William Nathaniel Folsom . . 11 . Shipmaster. . . Kingston. . . Raymond. . . Boston, Mass. Canada. . . Durham . 1879 Cambridge, Mass. . . Roxbury, Mass. . . . 1843 . . Hampton Falls . . . 1852 Seguin, Tex. . . Exeter. New York, N.Y. . . Exeter. 66 CATALOGUE. [1838-39. Ezra White Gale . . Dart. Coll, 1843; A.M.; Insurance ♦William Henry Gilman . Yale Coll. 1847; Lawyer. Samuel Hutchins Goodall Dart. Coll. 1844; Lawyer. Cbaiies Henry Gould . Business. Benjamin Emerson Hall Charles Hosea Hildreth M.D.; Physician. Joseph Chase Hilliard . Insurance Agent. Samuel Allison Holmes Lawyer. Abram Jacquith . . . Franklin Lane .... M.D.; Physician. Daniel Flagg Melclier . Business. Abner Little Merrill . H.U. 1846; M.D.; Merchant Samuel Blake Osgood . *George C. Peavey . . Lawyer. ♦Nathaniel Gilman Perry H.U. 1846. ♦Richard Saltonstall . . Real Estate Broker. ♦Charles H. Sanborn . . John Edward Shackford George Smith Shute . Govt. Clerk (Boston, Mass.) Amos Towle Teacher. ♦Joseph Hurd Walker . H.U. 1843; Civil Engineer. Joseph Burbeen Walker Yale Coll. 1844. ♦Augustus Henry Weeks Merchant. James Wilson .... ♦Augustus Wiswall . . Business. ♦Jasper Hazen York . . M.D.; Physician. William Young .... Journalist. . 14 Agent. . 12 . 15 . 13 . 18 . 12 . 17 . 15 . 22 . 15 . 14 . 12 12 22 . 11 . 14 23 13 11 . 15 . 15 . 16 . 14 19 15 . 22 . 21 Kingston. St. John, N.B. Exeter 1860 (( Bath. Boston, Mass. Exeter. New York, N.Y. Exeter. Gloucester, Mass. Kensington. Boston, Mass. Peterborough. St. Louis, Mo. Greenfield. Exeter. Baltimore, Md. Exeter. Springfield, Mass. Exeter. Boston, Mass. Epping. Strafford 1876 (( Exeter 1855 (( Salem, Mass .... 1875 Brooklyn, N.Y. Falmouth, Me. Portsmouth. Exeter. « Exeter. Mobile, Ala. Charlestown, Mass. . 1858 Boston, Mass. Concord. (( Exeter 1879 (( Rochester. Exeter 1880 Newton, Mass. Rochester 1874 Dover. Scituate, Mass. 35 1839. Francis Peabody Abbot .... 12 . Dentist. George Edward Balch .... 16 . Expert Accountant. * Daniel Webster Barber .... 16 . Clergyman. Glenburn, Me. Berlin, Prussia. Ne\vbnr3'port, Mass. New York, N.Y. Epping 1881 1839-40.] CATALOGUE. 67 Charles Henry Branscomb ..17. Dart. Coll. 1845; Business. *Charles Harod Brown 13 . Hotel Keeper. * James Jackson Cruft 12 . H.U. 1846. John L. Davis 14 . Benjamin Rice Davison . ... 14 . George Faulkner 20 . H.U. 1844; M.D.; Physician. *Robert Farris Fisk 19 . Yale Coll. 1844; A.M.; LL.B.; Business. Samuel Augustus Fisk .... 17 . Yale Coll. 1844; A.M.; M.D.; Physician. James Cooly Fletcher 16. B.U. 1846; Clergyman; Author. George Silsbee Hale 13 . H.U. 1844; LL.B.; Lawyer. Moses Wingate Hayes .... 15 . Lawyer. * Jonathan Homer Lane .... 19 . Yale Coll. 1846; A.M.; Coast Survey Official. Abram Bracket Lord 21 Rolla Oscar Page 18 H.U. 1845; Clergyman; A.M.; Prof. Math Hobart Coll. 1850-51. Horace Parker 22 Bowd. Coll. 1845; Teacher. John Jacob Pickering 16 Bank Cashier. William Lawrence Plumer . . 14 Farmer. Joseph Plummer 19 Farmer. * Jonathan Russell 14 H.U. 1846; A.M.; Merchant. *Charles Henry Boylston Snow . 17 H.U. 1844; LL.B.; Lawyer. Samuel Stanton 18 *Robert Swain 16 Edward Prentiss Tucke .... 14 H.U. 1846; Teacher. George William Tuxbury ... 16 Dart. Coll. 1845; Lawyer. John Stoughton Watson ... 13 William Webster 15 Dart. Coll. 1844; A.M.; Teacher. * Albert Gallatin Weeks .... 19 Dart. Coll. 1844; M.D.; Physician. * George Henry Williams .... 14 Levi Thayer Woodman .... 22 Newmarket. Manchester, Eng. Haverhill, Mass. (( (( Boston, Mass . . . . 1849 (( (( Kittery, Me. Boston, Mass. Billerica, Mass. Jamaica Plain, Mass. Cambridge, Mass. . 1863 (< (< Cambridge, Mass. Northampton, Mass. Indianapolis, Ind. Naples, Italy. Keene. Boston, Mass. Madbury. Providence, R. I. Hornby, N.Y. . . . 1880 Washington, D.C. Ossipee. Canton, N.Y. Brooklyn, N.Y. Kittery, Me. Eliot, Me. Portsmouth. (( Epping. (( Milton. (( Milton, Mass 1875 Manila, Phil. Islands. Fitchburg, Mass. . . 1875 (( (( Barnstead. New Bedford, Mass. 1843 Kensington. Williamsburg, S.C. Salisburj^, Mass. Boston, Mass. Cambridge, Mass. Kingston. Port Chester, N.Y. Gilford 1853 Barnstead. Roxbury, Mass. Candia. 32 1840, *George W. Badger Shipmaster. Leonidas Balch . . Clerk. 14 . . . Kittery, Me 184? 16 . . . Newburyport, Mass. 68 CATALOGUE. [1840. Ezra Barker 20 Farmer. George Albert Blake 12 Will. Coll. 1849; M.D.; Physician. John Smith Cavender 16 Business. *Hiram Chase 20 Union CoH. 1844. John Quincy Adams Clark . . 15 Fruit Grower. Joseph Manning Cleaveland . 1 6 Coll. N.J. 1846; M.D.; Supt. Insane Asylum. *George Nehemiah Cleaveland . 14 . Yale Coll. 1847; M.D.; Physician. Henry Martin Crane 11. ♦Frederic Farley 16 . James Wilson Green 21 . Seth Walker Hartwell 16 . Civil Engineer. *John Adams Hastings .... 16 . H.U. 1846: Teacher. Charles Newell Healey .... 14 . Farmer. *John Locke 17 . * Charles Lowe 11 . H.U. 1847; A.M.; Clergyman; Sec. Unit. Assoc. Henry Rowland Merrill .... 12 . Merchant. Charles William Orne 1.3 . *George Howard Pearson ... 16 . Business. William Camp Porter 18 . Eliphalet Porter Robinson . . 15 . Jacob Rogers 11 . Business. William Rogers 13 . James Henry Rundlett .... 18 . Business. George William Shackford . . 18 . Charles Gilman Smith 12 . H.U. 1847; A.M.; M.D.; Physician. * Jonathan Coolidge Stone ... 13 . H.U. 1848; M.D.; Physician. James Camp Tappan 15 . Yale Coll. 1845; Lawyer. Joseph Warren Towle 15 . H.U. 1851; Lawyer. Nathaniel Warren 23 . *Charles Henry West 12 . Business. Henry Trowbridge Wiswall . . 20 . Yale Coll. 1M7; A.M.; Lawyer. Ellsworth, Me. La Grange, Me. Raymond. AValpole. St. Louis, Mo. Chester 1845 Sanbornton. California. Exeter. Poughkeepsie, N.Y. Exeter New York, N.Y. Exeter. Chester. Littleton, Mass. Washington, D.C. Brighton, Mass. . . Erie, Pa. Hampton Falls. Stratham. W. Cambridge, Mass. Exeter Somerville, Mass. Exeter. Boston, Mass. Boston, Mass. Boston, Mass. . . . Lowell, Mass. Fredericksburg, Va. Brentwood. Exeter. Lowell, Mass. New Orleans, La. Exeter. Groveland, Mass. Barrington. Exeter. Chicago, m. Newburyport, Mass. New York, N.Y. Vicksburg, Miss. Helena, Ark. Epping. Exeter. Brookfield. Charlestown .... 1877 1841 1851 1862 1874 1870 1868 1865 Exeter. Washington, D.C. 33 1841.] CATALOGUE. 69 1841. George Bicknell Ager 15 Accountant; City Treasury. Ebenezer Bacon ..11 Merchant. * Jeremiah Olney Carr 17 B.U. 1848; Lawyer. *jSamuel Fulton Clark 23 Clergyman. Charles Edward Clark 15 Business. Henry William Cleaveland . . 13 Architect. George Washington Collamore 23 Frederic Augustus Copp ... 18 Yale Coll. 1847; A.M. Isaac llsley Cummings .... 15 H.U. 1846; A.M.; M.D. Henry Damon 16 Business. William Abbot Everett .... 13 H.U. 1849; A.M.; LL.B. * Francis Augustus Faulkner . . 16 H.U. 1846; Lawyer. William Cranch Bond Fifield . 12 M.D.; Physician. Abraham Hilliard Flanders . . 13 Union Coll. 1848; M.D.; Physician. *Ira Freeman Folsom 20 Dart. Coll. 1848; Lawyer. Josiah James Folsom 14 Farmer. Jonathan Folsom French . . .19 Charles Stephen Gale 16 Daniel Francis Grant 17 *Samuel Hale 16 ■Agriculturist, Angier March Hobbs 14 *John Samuel Hoitt 15 *Henry Whitcomb Holman ... 16 H.U. 1848; Lawyer. Peter Thacher Hunt 20 Dart. Coll. 1847. *Charles Kimball 11 John Kittredge 16 M.D.; Physician. William H. Lackey 23 Collector. * Howard Malcolm Moses .... 1 Paper Manufacturer. *Samuel Dodge Moses 14 M.D.; Physician. Thomas Kitson Perkins .... 14 Business. * Joseph Richards 22 . East Bridge water, Mass. Boston, Mass. . Boston, Mass. <( (( . Providence, R.I. . . 1856 . Peterborough . . . . 1861 Ware, Mass. . Exeter. Boston, Mass. . Exeter. San Francisco, Cal. . Boston, Mass. . Wakefield. . Portland, Me. <( (( . West Cambridge, Mass. Boston, Mass. . Beverly, Mass. Cambridge, Mass. . Keene 1879 (( . Weymouth, Mass. Boston, Mass. . Exeter. Slatersville, R.I. . Gilford 1859 (< . Exeter. . Danville. . Meredith. . Exeter. . Portsmouth 1853 RoUinsford. . Exeter. . Exeter 1852 Sacramento, Cal. . Bolton, Mass 1853 New Orleans, La. . Ashburnham, Mass. . Exeter. . Andover, Mass. Taunton, Mass. . Marblehead, Mass. (( (( . Exeter 1857 Newmarket. . Exeter 1872 KnoxviUe, Tenn. . Exeter. Newmarket. . Braintree, Mass. . . 1879 Quincy, Mass. 70 CATALOGUE. [1841-42. Robert Lambert Robinson . . . 14 ♦Albert Smith Scott 17 Lawyer. William Henry Slocum . . . . 23 . . . Merchant. Elijah Brigham Stoddard . . . 15 . . . B.U. 1847; A.M.: Lawyer. *George Dalton Thomes . . . . 22 . . . *Charles Hall Thyng 17 . . . Tailor. George Henry Torr 16 . . . George White 19 . . . Yale Coll. 1848; LL.B.; Lawyer; Probate Judge (Boston, jVIass.). Ephraim White 21 . . . *Rufus Anderson Whitman . . 21 . . . Teacher. Bernard Crosby Whitman . . . 13 . . . H.U. 1846; Lawyer; Judge Supr. Ct., Nevada, 1869-75; Ch. J. 1872-74. Samuel Wood Winter 16 . . . . . Roxbury, Mass. Peterborough . Boston, Mass. 1877 Upton, Mass. Worcester, Mass. Ossipee . 1845 Exeter 1881 Boston, Mass. Rochester. Quincy, Mass. Dedham, Mass. Rochester. New Gloucester, Me. AValtham, Mass. Virginia City, Nevada. Ossipee. 43 1842. George W. Babcock Dermatologist. Nathaniel Parsons Brown . . . 19 . . . Edidn Augustus Buck 17 . . '. Yale Coll. 'l840; Clergyman. Charles Putnam Carter . . . . 15 . . . Business. *Paul Ansel Chadbourne . . . . 18 . . . Will. Coll. 1848; A.M.; LL.D.; M.D.; Pres. Will. Coll. ; Pres. Agric. Coll., Mass. ; Author. James Luther Chamberlain . . 16 . . . Merchant. ♦Nathaniel Williams Cilley . . . 16 . . . Mechanic. John Henry Robertj at Crosby . 14 . . . Francis Curtis 15 . . . Paper Manufacturer. John Locke Doggett 17 . . . *Levi Farwell 14 . . . Watson Freeman 12 . . . Business. Ebenezer Folsom 13 . . . Business. John Bradbury Frothingham Business. Robert Henry Fuller . Surrogate Clerk. * George Lowell Gardner John Herbert *Gardner James Hoitt . Israel Small Hopkinson *John Augustine Hurd . 23 . . . Boston, Mass. <( << Stratham. Bucksport, Me. Wakefield. Franklin, Mass. SomersAvorth . . . Williarastown, Mass. 1883 . 14 . 16 11 . . 19 . . 12 . . 20 . . 17 . . Alexandria, D.C. Baltimore, Md. Nottingham 1855 (( Alexandria, D.C. Newton, Mass. Clarendon Hills, Mass. Jacksonville, Fla. Fitchburg, Mass. . . 1851 Boston, Mass. Exeter. (( Exeter. St. Louis, Mo. Cambridge, Mass. New York, N.Y. Exeter 1845 Salisbury, Mass. Exeter 1856 Limington, Me. Charlestown, Mass. . 1845 1842-43.] CATALOGUE. 71 William Frederic Lane .... 24 . Bank Cashier. Mark Smith Palmer 17 . Silas Franklin Peirce 16 . Eeal Estate Agent. John Scott Pickett 18 . M.D.; Physician. * Francis Edward Prevaux ... 20 . B.U. 184G; A.M.; Clergyman. Henry Saltonstall 14 . H.U. 1848; A.M.; Corporation Treasurer. Luther Eastman Shepard ... 21 . Dart. Coll. 1851; A.M.; Lawyer. Walter Durgin Smith 18 . James Caleb Smith 18 . Rodney Metcalf Stimson ...19. Marietta Coll. 1847; Treas. Marietta Coll. Nathan Batchelder Tilton ... 22 . Farmer. John Fogg Towle 20 . Farmer. *Elijah Munroe Tubbs 19 . John Whitman 17 . *Charles Wellington Wilder . . 14 . M.D. ; Physician. ♦Frederic William Williams . . 13 . Jeweller. * William Frederic Williams . . 12 . Mariner. Augustus Atkinson Woodbury 14 . Exeter. Pa. New Bedford, Mass. Frankfort. Me. Boston, Mass. Triana, Ala. Danville, Ala. Amesbury, Mass. . . 1860 Salem, Mass. Boston, Mass. Ra3'mond. Lowell, Mass. Newmarket. Culpepper, Va. Milford. Marietta, O. East Kingston. Lee. Exeter. Hancock 1878 Calais, Me. Leominster, Mass. . 1871 Fitchburg, Mass. Exeter. Boston, Mass. Exeter 1846 Exeter. 38 1843. Henry Quincy Adams 16 ^ Adams Ayer 20 H.U. 1848; Clergyman. Horace Clinton Bacon 19 Lawyer. Josiah Bartlett 13 Dart. Coll. 1851; Treasurer. 'James Francis Brown 23 Clergyman. John Wesley Clement 17 Business. 'George Washington Coos well . 13 H.U. 1849; Law Student. ^ Thomas Kittredge Cummins . 14 Merchant. Henry Curtis 18 James Bolivar Dunlap .... 18 Lebeus Bayley Fi field 17 Amh. Coll. 1853; A.M.; Clergyman. John Parker Gale 17 John Williams Getchell .... 11 Business. West Cambridge, Mass. Sacramento, Cal. Haverhill, Mass. . . 1882 Montreal, Canada. West Cambridge, Mass. Lawrence, Mass. Stratham. New York, N.Y. Quinc}', Mass. . . . 1853 West Cambridge, Mass. Exeter. Peterborough . . . Le Roy, N.Y. Springfield, Mass. Boston, Mass. Newton, Mass. Indianapolis, Ind. Yarmouth, N.S. Kearney June, Neb. South Hampton. Exeter. 1854 72 CATAT-OGUE. Gardiner Gilman . 14 . . . Exeter. Farmer. " Charles Henry Goodwin . . . . 14 . . Exeter. Business. Stoneham, Mass. Francis James Gould .... . 15 . . Charlestown, Mass. H.U. 1850; M.D.; Physician. Jacksonville, Fla. *Cliester Harding . 16 . . Springfield, Mass. . H.U. 1847; Lawyer. St. Louis, Mo. Horace Harding . 15 . . Springfield, Mass. H.U. 1848; State Engineer. Tuscaloosa, Ala. John Lovell Hatch . 22 . . Boston, Mass. Cornelius Henry Herman . . . 14 . . Norfolk, Va. Daniel Clark Hill . 19 . . Farmington. *Thomas Sanford Jamieson . . 15 . . Alexandria, D.C. . . Engine Builder. « ederic Benson ...11. *George William Burleigh ... 14 . Dart. Coll. 1851; LL.B.; Lawyer. George Washington Clark . . 13 . Business. Charles Gilman Conner .... 12 . H.U. 1854; Lawyer; Clerk of Courts. Daniel Hoit Durgin 19 . * Jacob Edwin Elliot 12 . Charles Franklin Folsora ... 12 . Saloon Keeper. * Walter Gassett 16 . William Pickering Healey ... 14 . Joseph Hobart 13 . Farmer. Christopher Columbus Langdell 18 . H.U. 1851; A.M.; LL.D.; Dane Prof. Law, John Edward Lockwood . ... 16 . *James Peirce 19 . Thomas Ryan 18 . Elijah Merrill Shaw 18 . Manufacturer. Nathaniel Apple ton Shute . . 12 . William True Sleejoer 23 . Univ. Vt. 1850; A.M.; Clergyman. *Howard Sleeper 13 . Journalist. George Washington Smith . . 20 . Business. *George Samuel Sullivan ... 12 . Lawyer. Richard Henry Sylvester ... 16 . Editor. * Theodore Tebhets 14 . H.U. 1851; A.M.; Clergyman. Reuben Tower 16 . *Patrick Henry Townsend ... 21 . Bowd. Coll. 1850; Lawyer. Norris James Wiggin 15 . Business. Boston, Mass. Wolf borough. Bradford, Mass. Somersworth. . Great Falls. Exeter, i Boston, Mass. Exeter. (( Tuftonborough. Exeter .... 1878 Exeter. 1853 1846 . Boston, Mass. . . Hampton Falls. . Abington, Mass. Nordhoff , Ventura Co., Cal. . New Boston. H.U. Cambridge, Mass. . Alexandria, D.C. . Dorchester, Mass. . 1853 (( (( . Amesbnry, Mass. . Kensington. Lewiston, Me. . Exeter. . Smyrna, Me. Worcester, Mass. . Roxbury, Mass. . . 1859 . Stratham. Manchester. . Exeter 1869 Boston, Mass. . Charlestown. St. Louis, Mo. . Rochester 1863 Medford, Mass. . Waterville, N.Y. (( (( . Salisbury 1864 W^ashington, D.C. . Exeter. Memphis, Tenn. 26 1846.] CATALOGUE. 75 1846. Oscar Dunreath Abbot .... 22 . . M.D.; Physician. William Fesseuden Allen . . . 14 . . Collector Gen. of Customs. Hendrick Dearborn Batchelder 18 , . Lawyer Lester Clark 15 . . John Wingate Clark 14 . . Gov't Clerk. Albe Cady Clarke 20 . . Lawyer. Thomas Currier 14 . . Farmer. *John Currier 15 . . Lawyer. Josiah Hamilton Dearborn . . 16 . . Lawyer. *Wilder Dwight 13 . . H.U. 1853; LL.B.; Lawyer. *Robert Warren Folsom .... 11 . . M.D.; Physician. James Daniel Hewitt 13 . . Trinity Coll. 1854; M.D. William Wirt Hewitt 11 . . Eobert Jamieson 13 . . Insurance Agent. John Henry Jenkins 22 . . *Charles H. Kingman 19 . . Farmer. William Henry Lemon .... 19 . . Alexander Chadbourne Low . 13 . . Merchant. James Fowler Lyman 15 . . H.U. 1850; Lawyer. John Godfrey Neil 16 . . Charles Horatio Nye 14 . . William Henry Page 19 , . M.D.; Physician. Kingman Fogg Page 14 . . Bowd. Coll. 1853; A.M.; Real Estate Agent. *John S afford Parsons 18 . . Yale Coll. 1852; A.M.; Teacher. *Ivers Carter Phillips 15 . . Business. Alexander William Purd}' . . . 18 . . George Orlando Smith .... 20 . . George Washington Smith . . 14 . . Moody Adoniram Stevens . . 19 . . Joseph Augustus Stickney . . 17 . . Bank Cashier. Russell Sturgis 15 . . Merchant (retired). Manchester. <( Bangor, Me. Honolulu, S.I. North Hampton. Haverstraw, N.Y. Hartford, Conn. " (( Stratham. Washington, D.C. Sanbornton. Boston, Mass. Dover. (( Dover 1875 Sioux City, Iowa. Effingham. Silver Lake, Kansas. Springfield, Mass. Boston, Mass. Gordon, Ga. ... 1862 1864 Boston, Mass. Boston, Mass. Alexandria, D.C. Danville, Va. New York, N.Y. Durham 1868 Madbury. West Cambridge, Mass. Dover. Memphis, Tenn. Northampton, Mass. New York, N. Y. Columbus, O. I St. Louis, INIich. New Bedford. Mass. Rochester. Los Vegas*, New Mexico. Rochester. New York, N.Y. Amesbury, Mass. . . 1862 So. Byfield, Mass. Fitchburg, Mass. . . 1877 Washington, D.C. Bradford, Mass. Gloucester, Mass. Bradford. Somersworth. (< Boston, Mass. Brookline, Mass. 76 CATALOGUE. [1846-47. Edward Wade 16 Lawyer. Henry Chadwick Whitteraore . 17 Clerk. *Horatio II. F. Whittemore . . 16 H.U. 1852: M.D. Watervliet, N.Y. Albany, N.Y. West Cambridge, Mass. Arlington, Mass. W. Cambridge, Mass. 1872 Marblehead, Mass. 34 1847 *Day Fayette Ayer 22 . William Babson 13 . Bank Cashier. Ezra Bartlett 15 . Clerk. David T. Chamberlain .... 23 . *Nathan Clifford 15 . * John Marshall Cobbs 11 . Mariner. Edward Charles Cole 19 . *Edward Joseph Conner .... 12 . West Point, 1857; Lieut. U.S. Army. John Langdon Dearborn ... 12 . H.U. 1857. William Edward Dorsheimer . 15 . Lawyer. Edward Forrest Eaton .... 16 . H.U. 1851. Joseph Low Elkins 12 . Dart. Coll. 185G; M.D.; Physician. John Bryant Emerson .... 16 . Billings Farnsworth 18 . James Buonaparte Farrinajton . 16 . Bowd. Coll. 1854; A.M.; Lawyer. * William Frederic Faulkner . . 16 . Business. John Henry French 18 . B.U. 1855; LL.B.; Lawyer. *Charles William Gale ..... 12 . Business. ♦Nicholas Oilman 13 . H.U. 1854. George Gordon 13 . Business. Joseph Gilman Gordon .... 12 . Business. Charles Wells Gray 15 . Business. Grin McCrillis Head 12 . Business. Amos Houlton 19 . James Monroe Johnson .... 19 . Elias Davis Knight 14 . James Lovell Loring 14 . *Stephen Eldridge Merrihew . . 15 . William Curtis Hills 21 . Clergyman. . Haverhill, Mass. . . 1856 . Gloucester, Mass. (( (< . Stratham. Boston, Mass. . Weathersfield, Vt. . Newfield, Me ... . 1854 . Exeter. . Rochester. . Exeter 1868 « . Exeter. Dorchester, Mass. . Buffalo, N.Y. New York, N.Y. . Newmarket. . Newmarket. <( . Chelmsford, Mass. . Buffalo, N.Y. . Rochester. San Jose, Cal. . Keene 1874 Sioux City, Iowa. . Pittsfield. Eastport, Me. . Exeter 1865 (( . Exeter 1854 . Boston, Mass. (( (( . Exeter. San Francisco, Cal. . Exeter. Boston, Mass. . Exeter. Pittsburg, Pa. . Houlton, Me. . Pittsfield. . Gloucester, Mass. . Boston, Mass. . New Bedford, Mass. . 1868 . Boston, Mass. Creston, Iowa. 1847-48.] CATALOGUE. 77 Oliver White Peabody .... 13 . Banker. William Bourne Peabody ... 13 . *Samnel Perham 17 . M.D.; Physician. *Henry Perry 15 . Student. John Rice Reynolds 13 . Charles Clifford Smith .... 18 . Washington Solomon 14 . George B. N. Tower 13 . *Hamilton Ela Towle 14 . Civil Engineer. *Edward Walden 15 . Yale Coll. 1853. William Henry Walker .... 22 . Clergyman. William Robert Ware 14 . H.U. 1852; S.B.; Architect; Prof. Arch. Inst Tech. 1867-81; Prof. Arch. Sch. Mines Columb. Coll. Marquis D. Warren 20 . Sylvester Waterhouse 16 . H.U. 1853; LL.B.; Prof. Greek, Wash. U. John Buflington Webster ... 12 . Henry Bellows Wells 13 . Business. *Ephraim Weston 23 . Farmer; Teacher. Henry King Wetherbee .... 15 . James Henry Wheeler .... 15 . M.D.; Physician. Springfield, Mass. Boston, Mass. Springfield, Mass. Boston, Mass. Chelmsford, Mass. . 1873 Exeter. Keene 1848 (< Honolulu, S.I. Bradford. Gordon, Ga. Boston, Mass. Lee . 1881 Buffalo, N.Y 1854 << (( West Cambridge, Mass. Milton, Mass. New York,.N.y. Wardsborough, Vt. Barrington. St. Louis, Mo. New Market. Exeter. Boston, Mass. Hancock 1861 <( New Market. Dover. (( 48 1848, John Henry Alley . . 15 . . . Lynn, Mass. Treasurer Electric Light Co. << i( John Perry Allison .... . . 16 . . . Peterborouirh. H.U. 1854; Lawyer. Sioux City, Iowa. Richard Avlett Barrett 15 . St Eon is T\To William Henry Bass . . . . . 16 . . . Boston, Mass. *John Gorham Bond .... . . 14 . . Boston, Mass. . George Boynton . . 17 . . Peterborough. Stephen Higginson Brooks . . 14 . . Exeter. Theodore Edson Colburn . . . 14 . . . Boston, Mass. H.U. 1854; Architect. << C( Oliver Sawyer Cressy . . . . . 13 . . Hamilton, Mass. Charles Bartlett Crockett . . . 14 . . . Boston, Mass. Business. Medford, Mass. William Pitt Drew . . 18 . . . Augusta, Me. Russell Perkins Eaton . . . . 18 . . Augusta, Me. Advertising Agent. Boston, Mass. Amasa Fogg . . 20 . . . Parsonsfield, Me John Edward Gardner . . . . 12 . . . Exeter. H.U. 185G; Merchant. <( . 1854 7^ CATALOGUE. [1848-49, Walter Scott Gove 16 . *David Leavitt Hobbs 16 . Farmer. Robert Porter Kimball ....14. *Henry Lord Page King ....17. Yale Coll. 1852; LL.B. ♦Jonathan Marston Lamprey . . 17 . George Palfrey 18 . Yale Coll. 1853; Engineer U.S. Army. William Wirt Pendergast ... 14 . Edivard James Purdy 13 . Trinity Coll. 1857; A.M.; Clergyman. Lucius Junius Reed 14 . Alphonso Allison Rice .... 17 . Civil Engineer. * James Sullivan Roby 12 . Clerk. Robert Russell 14 . George William Sawyer . ... 18 . James Nowell Smart 14 . Uriah Smith 16 . James Horace Stevens .... 19 . Lawyer. ♦Frederic Wheeler 16 . H.U. 1854 ; LL.B. ; Lawyer. . New Orleans, La. . North Hampton . 1854 . Exeter. . St.Simon'sIsland,Ga. 1862 . Hampton 1848 . New Orleans, La. . Durham. . Exeter. Winona, Minn. . Boston, Mass. . Framingham, Mass. Farmington, Van Buren Co., la. . Exeter 1870 . Biddeford, Me. . Waketield. . So. Newmarket. . Wilton. . Lawrence, Mass. Boston, Mass. . Framingham, Mass. 1857 31 1849 John William Abbot 15 Manufacturer. (Graniteville, Mass.) Frederic Lothrop Ames .... 14 H.U. 1854 ; Capitalist and Manufacturer. Joseph Addison Carter .... 13 * Jonathan Chapman 13 H.U. 1856; A.M.; Business. Elias Hutchins Cheney .... 17 Editor. William Henry Coelho .... 12 *Thomas Palfrey Cole 15 George Luna Davenport ... 15 *Payson Perrin Ellis 16 H.U. 1855; Merchant. Cornelius Fiske 19 H.U. 1853; Lawyer. * Thorn as Groom . 13 George Wells Healey 14 H.U. 1856; Business. William Elwyn Jewell .... 14 Dart. Coll. 1856; Lawyer. George Henry Johnson .... 17 Frederic Burditt Kilner .... 21 Lewis Carr Lawton 17 William Smith Leonard .... 17 Dart. Coll. 1856; M.D.; Physician. Westford, Mass. (( << North Easton, Mass. Boston, Mass. Bridgewater, Vt. Boston, Mass. . . . 1882 Cincinnati, O. Holderness. Lebanon. Montevideo, S.A. Hallowell, Me. . . ? 1867 Exeter. Boston, Mass. . . . 1863 East Indies. Lincoln, Mass. New York, N.Y. Boston, Mass. . . . 1855 Lynn, Mass. Stratham. Boston, Mass. Charlestown, Mass. Greenpoint, N.Y. Barre, Mass. Providence, R.I. Dublin. Hinsdale. 1849-50.] CATALOGUE. 79 George Putnam Moore .... 23 . . Wilbur Fiske Newhall .... 16 . . Sec. Iiivsurance Co. Jeremiah Smith 12 . . H.U. 1856; A.M.; Lawyer; Judge Supreme Court, N.H. 1867-74. George Stickney 21 . . Benjamin Saxon Story .... 16 . . David Henry Taylor 15 . . John Samuel Titeomb 15 . . Titus Salter Tredick 14 . . H.U. 1854; A.M. Warren Van Buren Tuxbury . 13 . . Merchant. Joseph Rowe Webster .... 15 . . H.U. 1854; M.D.; Physician. Manchester. Lynn, Mass. Saugus, Mass. Lee. Dover. Georgetown, Mass, New Orleans, La. Lynn, Mass. Somersworth. Portsmouth. Amesbury, Mass. New London, Conn. Milton, Mass. 27 18 50. Robert Edward Babson . . . . 12 . . . Gloucester, Mass. H.U. 1856; Teacher Eng. High S chool. Boston, Mass. Willard Flaog Bliss .... . . 20 . . . St. Louis, Mo. H.U. 1855; Teacher. a (( Edward Jackson Brown . . . 17 . . Fitehburg, Mass. H.U. 1855; Business. St. Louis, Mo. Langley Boardman Brown . . 15 . . . Kensington. Farmer. <( *James Sterrett Cenas . . . . 13 . . New Orleans, La. . . 1853 ^Sylvester W. Chadbourne . . 23 . . Kennebunk, Me. . . 1863 Teacher. Freehold, N.J. Benjamin Graves Chambers . 13 . . St. Louis, Mo. Gardiner Hubbard Clarke . . 18 . . Brookline, Mass. Albert Dickerman . 19 . . Stoughton, Mass. LL.B.; Lawyer. Boston, Mass. Daniel Appleton Dwight . . 14 . . Brookline, Mass. Business. Boston, Mass. *Howard Dwight . 13 . . Brookline, Mass. . . 1862 H.U. 1857; A.M.; Business. Memphis, Tenn. Raymond Egerton . 14 . . New Orleans, La. H.U. 1856; Lawyer. New York, N.Y. Edward Thornton Fisher . . . 13 . . . Oswes^o, N.Y. H.U. 1856; A.M.; Teacher. Brooklyn, N.Y. George Washington Gale . . 13 . . . Exeter. *John Gardner Gibson . . . . . 14 . . . Boston, Mass. . . . 1856 Charles Hammond Gibson . . 13 . . . Boston, Mass. Merchant. « « Michael Cavan Martinez . . 19 . . . St. Thomas, W.l. James Perley Page .... . 12 . . Exeter. Broker. New York, N.Y. Daniel Hussey Page .... . 16 . . Rochester. Farmer. Lindsburg, Kansas. Daniel Dearborn Parsons . . . 17 . . . Rye. Mariner. Willard Quincy Phillips . . . . 16 . . . Cambridge, Mass. H.U. 1855; A.M.; LL.B. Benjamin Franklin Prescott . 17 . . Epping. Dart. Coll. 1856; Gov. N.H. 1877 -8; Farmer (( 80 CATALOGUE. [1850-51 Charles Otis Roddin 15 . * Edward Grenville Russell ... 16 . ^ H.U. 1855; A.M.; Clergyman; Business. Allen Schenck 20 . Business. Nathaniel Stone Simpkins . . 16 . Dart. Coll. 1856; Merchant. Georo^e Washington Spofford . 18 . Business. Charles Edward Stetson .... 15 . H.U. 1854; A.M.; Teacher. George Harrison Stevens ... 19 . Farmer. *Edward Seth Tisdale 14 . Samuel Brooks Wyman .... 18 . H.U. 1856; A.M.; Lawyer. Lynn, Mass. Groton, Mass. . . . 1880 Cambridge, Mass. Manhassett, N.Y. New York, N.Y. Yarmoiithport, Mass. New York, N.Y. Peterborough. Chicago, 111. Braintree, Mass. (< <( Deerfield. (< Ellsworth, Me. ... 1861 Newburyport, Mass. Lowell, Mass. 31 18 51. Eoger Newton Allen 14. Capitalist. Stephen Barker . . : 22 . Clergyman. George Frederic Barker ~. ... 15 . Merchant. Joshua WiUiam Beede . . . . 18 . Dart. Coll. 1858; M.D.; Physician. *Daniel Reynolds Carter .... 16 . Dart. Coll. 1857; Teacher. *Ward Chadwick 20 . Lawyer. Bradbury Longfellow Cilley ..12. H.U. 1858; A.M.; Prof. Anc. Lang. P.E.A. John Theodore Clarke .... 17 . Dart. Coll. 1858; A.M.; Supt. Pub. Schools, William Travis Clarke .... 22 . Clergyman. *Samuel Rowland Crocker ... 14 . Bowd. Coll. 1855; Editor. Thomas Augustus Gushing . . 16 . Dart. Coll. 1857; Clerk. Presley Judson Edwards ... 19 . Artemas Clinton Field 24 . Clergyman. Francis Freeman Fogg .... 17 . John Henry Gale . 17. Selah Bancroft Howard .... 21 . *Henry Oxnard Hooper .... 16 . Horace Jewett 17 . Maj. U.S. Army. Chauncey Hastings Kidder . . 14 . Joseph Dana Littlefield .... 23 . M.D. ; Physician. Benjamin Smith Lyman .... 15 . H.U. 1855; Mining Engineer. *Horace Houlton Meloon ... 13 . Gov't Service. Greenfield, Mass. Boston, Mass. Boxford. Mass. Northampton, Mass. Rochester. Chicago, HI. Poplin. Auburn, Me. Wakefield 1865 West Boxford, Mass. 1862 Exeter. (( Pittsfield. Chicopee, Mass. Boston, Mass. Harlem, N.Y. Boston, Mass. . 1878 Somersworth. Washington, D.C. St. Louis, Mo. Lempster. Hinesburg, Vt. Cambridgeport, Mass. Gloucester, Mass. Winchester, Mass. Boston, Mass. South Berwick, Me. Exeter. Randolph, Mass. Youngstown, O. Northampton. Philadelphia, Pa. Exeter 1867 New Orleans, La. 1851-52.] CATALOGUE. 81 Edward Bagley Merrill . . . . 1 G Bowd. Coll. 1857; A.M.; Lawyer. Washington Hill Merritt ... 23 H.U. 1856; A.M.; Teacher. *Edward Palfrey 15 Planter. *Jolin Dexter Porter 14 Farmer. Franklin Benjamin Sanborn H.U. 1855; Journalist and Author. Henry Francis Snow .... Clergyman. Robert Kermit Stewart . . . , *Charles A. Coffin Thompson Farmer. Peter Sanborn Thompson . . 10. 19 12 16 12 William Hale Thompson ... 13 Business. *Newell Tibbets 23 Antioch Coll. 1857. Samuel Hidden Wentworth . . 16 H.U. 1858; A.M.; LL.B.; Lawyer. *Wilbur Winchester 17 Machinist. *George Lafayette Wise .... 15 Edward Woods 15 Dart. Coll. 1856; Lawyer. New Bedford, Mass. New York, N.Y. Warren, Mass. Boston, Mass. New Orleans, La. . . 1862 St. Mary's, La. New Salem, Mass. . 1867 Pennington's Pt., 111. Hampton Falls. Concord, Mass. Effingham. Cornish, Me. New York, N.Y. Durham 1868 <( Exeter. Brentwood. Durham. Chicago, m. Stewartstown .... 1859 Concord. Boston. Mass. Charlestown. Mass. . 1863 (( (( Portland, Me. ... 1854 Bath. Albany, N.Y. 37 18 52. James Burditt Barnes 16 Lawyer. William Augustus Boyd ... 11 John Kelly Cilley 12 Merchant. Francellus Gordon Dalton . . 11 Wendell Davis 16 Dart. Coll. 1857. John Edwin Dodge 15 Clerk. John Foster 19 Dart. Coll. 1858; Teacher. Francis Ormond French .... 14 H.U. 1857; LL.B.; Banker. * James Paulus French 12 Amh. Coll. 1859; A.M. William Delesdenier- Fuller . . 15 George Gorham 15 H.U. 1857; Lawyer. Edward Dromgool Grant ... 16 Yale Coll. 1858; Business. Charles Hutchins Hapgood . . 16 B.U. 1857; Business. William Franklin Hathawa}' . 16 Dart. Coll. 1858; Business. Dover. << New York, N.Y. Exeter. New York, N.Y. Exeter. Greenfield, Mass. New Bedford, Mass. Exeter. Boston, Mass. Dublin. Faribault, Minn. Washin2;ton, D.C. New York, N.Y. Exeter 1867 Calais, Me. Washington, D.C. Canandaigua, N.Y. Buffalo, N.Y. Norfolk, Va. New York, N.Y. Petersham, Mass. Chicago, 111. New Bedford, Mass. 82 CATALOGUE. [1852. Alfred Houston Haven . . . 16 . . . Portsmouth. H.U. 1858; M.D.; Physician. " Edward Livingston Hill . . 19 . . . Portsmouth. I^awyer. Peabody, Mass. Isaac Wallingford Hobbs . . 14 . . . Effingham. Dart. Coll. 1859; Farmer. Pembroke. Lewis French Hobbs . . . . 16 . . . North Hampton. Teacher. West Medford, Mass. William F. B. Jackson . . . 16 . . . Boston, Mass. Clergyman. Providence, R.I. .Tosenh Edward Janvrin . . . . 13 . . . Exeter. fj VOV/ l-Zl-A .*_JVt. TT «.*jX VA ZJ VVM-M. V A. J.1.A • • M.D.; Physician. New York, N.Y. Richard Montgomery Johnson 16 . . . Dover. Salesman. Boston, Mass. *John A. La Forest Julian . . . 15 . . . Exeter 1856 Clerk. Chicago, 111. *John Avery Parker Lothrop . . 15 . . . New Bedford, Mass. Charles King Luzenburg . . . 15 . . . New Orleans, La. Coll. N.J. 1857; A.M.; Judge Dist. Ct. (( (< Jesse Page Marshall . . . . . 23 . . . Kingston. Farmer. (( Henry Mathes . . 12 . . . Portsmouth. H.U. 1862. <( *George Mathes . . 16 . . . Portsmouth 1868 Shipmaster. (< Malcolm Mclntire . . 17 . . . Parsonsfield, Me. Bowd. Coll. 1857; Lawyer. Owensborough, Ky. *John Boardman Morse . . . . 17 . . . Dover 1868 Clerk. Chelsea, Mass. William Moulton . . 19 . . . Ossipee. *Edwin Augustus Nye . . . . . . Milo, Me 1879 Charles Pomeroy Otis . . . . . 12 . . . Rye. Yale Coll. 18G1; A.M.; Ph.D.; Prof. Mod. Lang. Boston, Mass. Inst. Tech. John McClary Perkins. . . . . 18 . . . Somersworth. Lawyer. Washington, D.C. Robert Cutts Pierce .... . . 12 . . . Greenland. Banker. Portsmouth. *Treat Wentworth Potter . . . 16 . . . Manchester 1879 Business. (( *Joseph Warren Rowe . . . . . 17 . . . Kensington. Illinois. Edmund Boivland .... . . 17 . . . Springfield, Mass. Clergyman. Cincinnati, 0. John Warren Sanborn . . . . 18 . . . East Kingston. Farmer. Kingston. *Richard Willard Sears . . . . 16 . . . Boston, Mass. . . . 1880 Business. (( (( Walter Devereux Sewall . . . 17 . . . Watertown, N.Y. Bookkeeper. (( <( William Gardner Shackford . . 12 . . . Portsmouth. Shipmaster. South Orange, N.J. John Elbridge Sinclair . . . . 14 . . . Exeter. Prof. Scientific School, Dart. Col I. 18G6-«9; Worcester, Mass. Teacher, Free Inst. Henry James Stevens . . . . . 15 . . . North Andover, Mass. H.U. 1857; Lawyer. Boston, Mass. ♦Horace Nathaniel Stevens . . . 14 . . . N. Andover, Mass. . 1876 Manufacturer. 1852-53.] CATALOGUE. 83 Benjamin Franklin Swasey . . 15 . . . Exeter. Business. " Jolni Pearse Treadwell . . . . 13 . . . Portsmouth. H.U. 1858; LL.B.; Lawyer. *JohnTredick 14 . . . Dart. Coll. 1860; M.D.; Physician. Wlieelock Graves Veaze}' . . . 17 . . . Dart. Coll. 1859; LL.B.; Lawyer; Judge Sup'r Ct., Vt. George Albert Wentworth H.U. 1858; A.M.; Prof. Matli. Jesse Alexander Wilkins Farmer, Solomon Walker Young M.D.; Physician. Boston, Mass. Wakefield ..'.... 1881 Perrymansville, Md. Exeter. Rutland, Vt. . 16 . . . Wakefield. E. A. ; Author. Exeter. . 21 . . . Middleton, Mass. Woodstock, Conn. . 16 . . . Barnstead. Pittsfield. 18 53. 51 Benjamin Barnes .... Insurance Agent. Isaac Increase Blaisdell . Dwight Bo3Tlen Frederic Bo3'den .... *Augustus Warren Chapman Univ. Mich. 1859. * Jacob Abbot Cram ... H.U. 1859; Lawyer. *James Aiken Crockett . Business. James Clarke Davis . . . H.U. 1858; Lawyer. James Samuel Dearborn Printer. Richard Draper Douglass William Bradbury Drew Charles William Eaton . Samuel Johnson Edger^y Dart. Coll. 1859; Farmer. ' Simeon Bartlett Folsom . Commercial Traveller. Walter Gale LL.B.; Lawyer. Edward John Handiboe James Alexander Hartness Dart. Coll. 1859; Broker. *Edward Autis Hayes . Charles Ela Hill . . . Charles Adams Home H.U. I860; Teacher. George Nay lor Julian . Business. *Henry Martyn Keith . Teacher. James Morrill Larrabee Farmer. Henry Knight Leaver . Grov't Service. 14 . . 21 . 15 . 14 . 15 . 17 . 16 . 15 . 17 . 16 . 19 . 22 . 16 . 19 . 17 . 20 . 17 . 14 . 16 . 12 . 23 . 19 . 14 . Dover. Portland, Me. . Jay, Me. . Boston, Mass. . Boston, Mass. . St. Joseph, Mich. . . 1864 . Hampton Falls . . . 1872 Chicago, 111. . Boston, Mass. . . . 1878 (( <( . Greenfield, Mass. Boston, Mass. . Exeter. Boston, Mass. . Plattsburg, N.Y. . Nahant, Mass. . Boston, Mass. . Pittsfield. Seneca, Kan. . Dover. . Northborough, Mass. (( <( . Boston, Mass. . Cleveland, O. . Canandaigua, N.Y. . 1863 . Newmarket. . Somersworth. Albany, N.Y. . Exeter. San Francisco, Cal. . Warren Mass. . . . 1881 Chicago, 111. . Wales, Me. Gardiner, Me. . Concord. Washington, D.C. 84 CATALOGUE. [1853-54. Nathaniel Low, jr 15 . Virgil Homer McDaniel .... 17 . *Benjamin Batchelder McNeal . 16 . Hiram Augustus Merrill ... 15 . Lawyer. James Henry Mulholland ... 18 . Lawyer. Horatio Cheever Newhall ... 16 . Lawyer. George W. C. Noble 16 . H.U. 1858; A.M.; Teacher. *Amos Masters Paul 14 . Edwin Ruthven Perkins .... 20 . Dart. Coll. 1857; Cashier. Marcus Morton Poole 17. Lawrence Vernon Poole ... 14 . *Henry Augustus Richardson .17. H.U. 1858; M.D.; Surg. U.S. Navy. Daniel Webster Sanborn ... 17 . Dart. Coll. 1860; A.M.; Teacher. Charles Haven Sawyer .... 12 . WiUiam Scrimgeour 16 . Jonathan Addison Severance . 19 . Joseph Alden Shaw 17 . H.U. 1858; A.M.; Teacher. Edward Rowland Sill 12 . Yale Coll. 1861; Prof. Eng. Lang, and Lit. Univ. Cal. * James Wesley Stephenson . . 18 . H.U. 1859; LL.B.; Lawyer. Warren Carlton Stevens ... 15 . Salesman. Edward Swett Tappan .... 15 . John Harvey Treat 14 . H.U. 1862; A.M.; Business. James Oberlin Treat 12. Dover. New Hampton. Barrington. Exeter . 1874 Watertown, N.Y. (( <( Eastport, Me. Presque Isle, Me. Galena, 111. San Francisco, Cal. Somersworth. Boston, Mass. So. Newmarket. . . 1858 Tam worth. Cleveland, O. New York, N.Y. New York, N.Y. Cambridge, Mass. . 1863 East Kingston. Philadelphia, Pa. Wakefield. Brooklyn, N.Y. Kingston. Sudbury, Mass. Worcester, Mass, Cuyahoga, O. Oakland, Cal. Cambridge, Mass. . 1867 San Francisco, Cal. North Andover, Mass. Boston, Mass. Somerville, Tenn. Pittsfield. Lawrence, Mass. Pittsfield. Melrose, Mass. 47 18 54. George Edward Henry Abbot . 1 6 H.U. I860; A.M.; Teacher. Elijah Harrison Austin .... 15 George Washington Barber Clergyman. WiUiam Butler Blake . Business. * Henry French Brown . Law Student. Philo Chase Lawyer. *William Webster Claflin M.D.; Physician. *Ellery Channing Clarke Business. . 19 . 16 . 14 . 23 . 20 . 18 Westford, Mass. Groton, Mass. Madbury. Brooklyn, N.Y. Epping. Maine. Raymond. Marshall, Mich., North Hampton . Munroe, Me. New York, N.Y. Leominster, Mass. Hudson, Mass. Westford, Mass. Manchester. 1863 1864 1854.] CATALOGUE. 85 Stephen Wells Clarke 16 . . Pittsfield. Dart. Coll. 1862; A.M.; Business. Manchester. *Edmund Henry Gushing . . . 16 . . Charlestown . ... 1869 H.U. 1859; Paymaster U. S. Navy. Samuel Page Dame 13 . . Brentwood. Bowd. Coll. 1862; A.M.; Druggist. Sharon, Pa. *George William Dewhurst . . 15 . . Exeter 1866 Business. Savannah, Ga. *Henry Weld Farrar 13 . . . Bangor, Me 1881 H.U. 1861; Editor. Chicago, 111. Daniel Brainard Fitts 17 . . . Epping. Providence, R. I. Frederic Augustus Fuller . . . 14 . . Bangor, Me. James Gilchrist 16 . . Charlestown. Broker. Boston, Mass. Charles Snelling Gill 13 . . Exeter. Merchant. Boston, Mass. Charles Glidden Haines .... 14 . . . Biddeford, Me. Bowd. Coll. 1861. « a ^Frederic Hallett 18 . . Yarmouth, Mass. . . 1861 Lawyer. James Lang Harriman .... 20 . . Dalton. M.D. ; Physician. Hudson, Mass. Jedediah Kilborn Haywood . . 19 . . . Concord. Ira Gustavus Hoitt 21 . . Lee. Dart. Coll. 1860; A.M.; Broker. San Francisco, Cal. Jesse Harrison Houghton ... 23 . . Boston, Mass. * John Simeon Chase Kelly ... 16 . . Atkinson 1861 Albert Etheridge Kennard . . 17 . . South Newmarket. William Arthur Kilbourn . . . 16 . . Groton, Mass. H.U. 1858; A.M.; Farmer. Lancaster, Mass. * Simeon Swett Leavitt .... 12 . . . Exeter. Business. Boston, Mass. Washington Marsh 14 . . Nottingham. Charles Edward Perkins . . . 15 . . Pittsfield. Farmer. Madbury. Warren Warner Porter .... 16 . . New Salem, Mass. Teacher. Bridgeport, Conn. *William James Quinn 12 . . . Newmarket 1882 Lawyer. Lawrence, Mass. Edward Mussey Rand .... 15 . . . Portland, Me. Bowd. Con. 1859; A.M.; Lawyer. u tt Wilson Ward Robinson .... 15 . . Brentwood. Frederic Atherton Ross .... 20 . . . Terre Haute, Ind. Real Estate Broker. (( (( - K *Francis Wallingford Sabine . . 16 . . Bangor, Me 1864 Bowd. Coll. 1859; A.M. Winboi'ne Adams Shaw .... 17 . . . Kensington. Clergyman. Cincinnati, 0. John Darrah Smith 15 . . . Brentwood. *Francis Bartlett Smith .... 16 . . . Portland, Me. . . . 1879 Business. <( (( Alfred Stebbins 18 . . . Vernon, Vt. Amh. Coll. 1860; Farmer. San Buenaventura, Cal. Calvin Stebbins 18 . . . So. Wilbraham, Mass. Amh. Coll. 1862; Clergyman. Detroit, Mich. Arthur Judson Swain 18 . . Leominster, Mass. Teacher. Port Austin, Mich. 86 CATALOGUE. [1854-55. *Charles Lewis Swan 14 . H.U. 1859; LL.B. Warren Lincohi Swett .... 13 . John Laning Taylor 15 . *Pearson Cogswell Tebbets . . 15 . Charles Collins Thatcher ... 20 . Broker. Jacob Hall Thompson .... 16 . Bowd. Coll. I860; A.M.; Journalist. MinotTirrell 19 . John Sheldon Treat 16 . Marble Worker. Edward Tuck 11 . Dart. Coll. 1862; Banker. Alonzo Claudius Whitridge . . 14 . Business. * Augustus Wiswall Wiggin . . 13 . Dart. Coll. 1862; M.D.; Surg. U.S. Army. John Winslow 18 . H.U. 1859; A.M.; M.D.; Physician. Charles Jones Wyeth 18 . George Sylvester York .... 19 . So. Easton, Mass. Lawrence, Mass. Owego, N.Y. Madbury .... Stockholm, N.Y. St. Louis, Mo. Portsmouth. New York, N.Y. Roxbury, Mass. Portsmouth. (( Exeter. New York, N.Y. Charleston, S.C. New York, N.Y. Wakefield .... 1865 1867 1875 Lynn, Mass. Ithaca, N.Y. Galena, 111. Exeter. 00 1856. Luther Cheney Abbot . Lawyer. George Ayer Business. Marcellus Bailey .... Lawyer. *Thomas Kelly Bolton . H.U. 1861; Lawyer. * Alfred Brewster ..... Farmer. Perley Blodgett Bryant Buel Clinton Carter . . Yale Coll. 1862; Lawyer. *Simon Leavitt Chapman Farmer. *Howard Malcolm Chase . Dart. Coll. 1862. Daniel Gilman Conner . Business. William Ellery Copeland H.U. I860; A.M.; Clergyman. Samuel Quarles Dearborn Dart. Coll. 1860; Lawyer. Frederic M. Dearborn . M.D. Sherburne Blake Eaton . Yale Coll. 1862; Lawyer. William Conner Ellis . . *Samuel Fessenden . . . Bowd. Coll. 1861. George Fuller Gill . . . Dart. Coll. 1862; M.D.; Physician. 24 25 New Salem, Mass. Richmond, Ind. Haverhill, Mass. 15 . . . Washington, D.C. 15 . . . Cleveland, 0. . . . . 1879 18 . . . Tamworth .... . 1879 18 . 15 . 19 . 15 . . . Barrington. . . Ossipee. Dover. . . North Hampton . . Minnesota. . . Stratham . 1880 . 1863 13 . 16 . 19 . 13 . . . Exeter. New York, N.Y. . . Roxbury, Mass. Omaha, Neb. . . Effingham. Effingham Falls. . . Newton, Mass. 15 . 16 . 14 . . . Lawrence, Mass. New York, N.Y. . . Thibodeaux, La. . . Portland, Me. . . . . 1862 12 . . . Exeter. St. Louis, Mo. 1855.] CATALOGUE. 87 William Henry Grant 21 . M.D.; Physician. *Gasper Spurzheim Grant ... 18 . Dart. Coll. 1861; M.D. Charles Walter Greene .... 13 . George Sears Greene 17 . George Washington Harrison . 16 . William Hawes 20 . Mayo Williamson Hazeltine . . 14 . H.U. 1862; A.M.; Editor and Author; Lawyer. Gilman Clark Hickok 16 . George Frank Hobbs 13 . AbijahHollis 18 . LL.B.; Contractor. George William Hoover .... 14 . Joseph Albert Locke 15 . Jerome Fenelon Manning ... 16 . Lawyer. John Buzzell Mathews .... 16 . Edward Paschal McKinney ..17. Yale Coll. 1861; Merchant. Henry McLaughlin 15 . Joseph William Merrill .... 12 . Business. Daniel Gage Neal 17 . Albert Lane Norris 16 . M.D. ; Physician. *Ruf us Greenleaf Norris . ... 16 . Farmer. *John Sawyer Page 15 . Hersey Goodwin Palfrey ... 16 . H.U. 1860; Civil Engineer. Retire Hathorn Parker .... 15 . Merchant. Arthur Livermore Payne ... 20 . Henry Edward Prescott .... 14 . Samuel Dalton Quarles .... 22 . Lawyer. Daniel Webster Ranlet .... 12 . Business. George Rice 17. Yale Coll. 1860; A.M.; M.D.; Physician. * Samuel Comings Richardson Teacher. * George William Robinson Rufus Price Rose .... Charles Edwin Rundlett Machinist. * Charles Christie Salter . H.U. 1861; Clergyman. * Hiram Moore Sanborn . Teacher, Noah Sanborn M.D.; Physician. Charles Edward Smith . 25 . 15 . 18 . 13 . 15 . 22 16 . 12 . Ossipee. Ossipee Center. Ossipee 1865 (( Newmarket. Bristol, R.L Westfield, Mass. Worthington, Mass. Boston, Mass. Belfast, Me. Elizabeth, N. J. Boston, Mass. Wakefield. Milton, Mass. Concord. Washington, D.C. Lawrence, Mass. Lowell, Mass. Boston, Mass. Wakefield. Binghampton, N.Y. (< (( Bangor, Me. Exeter. South Newmarket. Epping. Cambridge, Mass. Epping 1873 North Berwick, Me. . 1876 Boston, Mass. Belfast, Me. St. Louis, Mo. Exeter. Boston, Mass. Center Harbor. Chicago, 111. Ossipee. (( Exeter. Boston, Mass. Framingham, Mass. So. Framingham, Mass. Cornish, Me 1859 Petaluna, Cal. Exeter 1864 Stephentown, N.Y. Exeter. Providence, R.L Portsmouth 1870 Tamworth 1879 New York, N.Y. Tamworth. New Jersey. Durham. m c^Ai ^ALOGUE. [1855-56. Alvah Augustus Smith . . . . 23 . . Candia. Broker. Boston, Mass. George Webster Stevens . . . 18 . . . Nottingham. Charles Christopher Stuart . 18 . . . Mobile, Ala. Mercha,nt. <( (< John Sullivan 15 . . . Exeter. Apothecary. Boston, Mass. *Jeremiah Hall W. Tebbets . . 14 . . . Nashua 1880 Business. Lynn, Mass. *Charles Edwin Thurrcll . . . . 16 . . . North Berwick, Me. 1857 *George Carter Thurston . . 17 . . . Ossipee . , 1883 Supt. Street R. R. Boston, Mass. *Orestes Topliff* . 19 . . . Freedom 1864 Lawyer. 61 18 5 6. George Everett Adams , . . . 16 . . . Chicago, 111. H.U. I860; LL.B.; Lawyer. (( (( John AUyn . . 13 . . Belfast, Me. Business'. Boston, Mass. *Timothy Kneeland Ames . . 18 . . . Peterborough .... 1862 Lawyer. i; Merchant. New York, N.Y. William Augustine Oram . . . 19 . . . Hampton Falls. Clergyman. (( <( David Franklin Davis 24 . . . Nottingham. Dart. Coll. 18G2; Hotel Keeper. Waco, Texas. Clarkson Dearborn 16 , . . Seabrook. Merchant. Amesbury, Mass. Addison Leonard Demerritt . . 22 . . . Nottingham. Farmer. <( Charles Follen Folsom .... 15 . . . Meadville, Pa. H.U. 1862; A.M.; M.D.; Physician Boston, Mass. Robert Plummer Foss 22 . . Strafford. Lawyer. Harlem, Iowa. Jonathan John French .... 12 . . . Philadelphia, Pa. Samuel Harvey Gleason . . . 17 . . . Barnet, Vt. Lawyer. Sedalia, Mo. Mercer Goodrich 14 . . . Portsmouth. Business. (< Richard Lewis Gove 16 . . Seabrook. Newburyport, Mass. John Phipps Munroe Green . . 17 . . Kensington. Shoe Dealer. Haverhill, Mass. Charles Ezra Green 15 . . Cambridge, Mass. H.U. 1862; Prof. Civil Engineering, Univ. Mich. Ann Arbor, Mich. John Dean Hall 14 . . . Eddyville, Iowa. H.U. 1863; M.D.; A.M.: U. S. Army. James William Hanson .... 19 . . Lee. Arizona. Daniel Thomas V. Huntoon . 14 . . Marblehead, Mass. Canton, Mass. *James Mills Kingsbury .... 22 . . Tamworth 1863 *Harlan Page Kingsbury .... 16 . . Tamworth 1864 Otis Ly scorn Leonard 14 . . . East Marshfield, Mass. H.U. 1866; Clergyman. (t << (( James Love joy Libby 12 . . New York, N.Y. Business. (( (< Ruf US Pratt Lincoln 16 . . . Amherst, Mass. Amh. Coll. 1862; M.D.; Physician. New York, N.Y. Joshua Elbridge G. Lyford . . 16 . . . Brentwood. * Albert George Man son .... 20 . . Limington, Me. . . . 1878 Bowd. Coll. 1862; A.M.; Teacher. Cleveland, 0. *James Knowles Medbery . . . 18 . . Portsmouth 1873 Editor and Author. New York, N.Y. Payson Merrill 15 . . . Stratham. Yale Coll. 1865; LL.B.; Lawyer. New York, N.Y. George Shattuck Morison . . . 14 . . . Milton, Mass. H.U. 1863; A.M.; LL.B.; Civil Engineer. New York, N.Y. 92 CATALOGUE. [1857-58. * William Henry Morrill .... 15 . Teacher. Wareham Morse 14 . * William Francis Munroe ... 17 . M.D.; Physician. * James Woodbury Norris ... 17 . Merchant. Francis Gushing Nye 17 . H.U. 1862; Lawyer. * William Albert Odell 16 . H.U. 1864; A.M. John McCleary Parker .... 20 . Business. John William Parsons .... 16 . M.D.; iPhysician. Edward Augustus Penniman . 15 . Edward Cranch Perkins ... 13 . H.U. 1866; A.M.; Lawyer. Benjamin Judson Perkins ... 19 . Farmer. Ezra Pray 25 . M.D.; Physician. Garland Roberts 17 . Farmer. William Rotch Robeson .... 14 . H.U. 1864; A.M.; LL.B.; Lawyer. George Frank Rollins 13 . Mason. Frederic Moseley Sackett ... 17 . B.U. 1861; Manufacturer. Charles Adams Sackett .... 14 . Lawyer. Ira Otis Sawyer 19 . Shoe Manufacturer. Nathaniel Curtis Scoville ... 21 . H.U. 1864; LL.B.; Lawyer. Joseph Herbert Senter 14 . H.U. 1861; Clergyman. *Frederic William Smith .... 20 . Capt. Cavalry U.S. Army. Albert Stetson 23 . H.U. 1861; A.M.; Teacher. Chester Colton Stevens .... 22 . Charles Brigham Stoddard . . 15 . H.U. 1862; Merchant. Stephen Millet Thompson ... 19 . Real Estate Agent. John Wool Wheeler 14 . M.D.; Physician. James Willey 18 . Painter. . Exeter 1862 <( . New Haven, Conn. . Bradford, Mass . . . 1875 Boston, Mass. . Nottingham 1882 Rice, Tex. . New Bedford, Mass. New York, N.Y. . Durham 1867 . Fitzwilliam. (< . Rye. Portsmouth. . Boston, Mass. . Cincinnati, O. Boston, Mass. . Exeter. <( . Rochester. (( . Stratham. . New Bedford, Mass. Boston, Mass. . Exeter. (< . Providence, R.I. . Providence, R.I. New York, N.Y. . Haverhill, Mass. (( t( . Pitcairn, N.Y. Lee, Summit Co., Kan. . Portsmouth. Portland, Me. . Manchester, Mass. . 1869 Texas. . Kingston, Mass. Normal, 111. . Brentwood. . Plymouth, Mass. (( (( . Lee. Providence, R.L . Cleveland, O. (( <( . Exeter. Haverhill, Mass. 68 18 58, *Augustus Barker 16 . . , Albany, N.Y. William Elbridge Boardman. . 14 . . . Boston, Mass. H.U. 1865; M.D.; Physician. " " 1863 1858.] CATALOGUE. 93 Samuel Henry Bradley . . . . 15 . . . Glean, N.Y. Business. <( (< Charles Albert Bunker . . . 18 . . Barnstead. Dart. Coll. 1864; A.M.; Supt. Public Schools 5. Peacham, Vt. Elbridge Tyler Burley . . . . 16 . . . Newmarket. Lawyer. Lawrence, Mass. Henry Sanborn Gate . . . . 16 . . . Greenland. Business. Millerstown, Pa. Harrison Cole .,,... . . 17 . . . South bridge, Mass. Columbus, 0. Optician. *Henry Clinton Corey . . . . . 21 . . . Chaplin, Conn. . . . 1864 New York, N.Y. Elmer Lawrence Corthell . . 17 . . . South Abinoton, Mass. B.U. 1867; Civil Engineer. New York, N.Y. Frederic Balch Deane . . . . . 17 . . . Uxbridge, Mass. Lawyer. Marlborough, Mass. Brainerd Dearborn . . . . . 16 . . . North Hampton. M.D.: Physician. Portsmouth. Warren Everett Eaton . . . 19 . . North Reading, Mass. Master Harlow School. Boston, Mass. George Prentiss Edgerly . . 17 . . Farmington. *John Marshall Eldridge, jr . . . 19 . . Hampton, Conn. . . 1865 Journalist. Jersey City, N.J. James Henry Elliot . . . . . 15 . . . Keene. H.U. 1864; A.M.; Lawyer. New York, N.Y. *Benjamin Brown French . . 13 . . Washington, D.C. . 1881 Civil Engineer. South America. William Gerrish . . 16 . . . Chelsea, Mass. Real Estate Agent. u " LeRoy Sunderland Gove . . 20 . . . Milford. H.U. 1864; Lawyer. New York, N.Y. John Orne Green . . 17 . . . Lowell, Mass. H.U. 1863; A.M.; M.D.; Auris t. Boston, Mass. Henry Gremmels .... . . 20 . . Gottingen, German}^ Farmer. Hampton. Moses Uriah Hall . . 23 . . . Exeter. Mason. '* John Samuel Hayes . . . . . . 17 . . . Durham. Teacher. Somerville, Mass. Laban Mark Hill .... . . 19 . . Barrington. -George Irving Hoitt . . . . . 15 . . Durham. Business. Boston, Mass. Edward Robbins Howe . . . . 15 . . Detroit, Mich. H.U. 1864; A.M.; Engineer. Boston, Mass. George William Kittredge M.D. * William Newell Locke . . . . 16 . . . Dover. . . 16 . .Lee 18Gr; Henry Lunt . . 16 . . . Quincy, Mass. H.U. 1863; A.M.: Lawyer. Boston, Mass. Charles Brown Marsh . . . . . 17 . . . Waltham, Mass. Clerk. Tewksbury, Mass. William Henry Marsh . . . . . 15 . . . Waltham, Mass. George Henry Morse . . . . 21 . . Walpole, Mass. Farmer. <( (( Samuel Badger Neal . . . . . 16 . . Kittery, Me. H.U. 1864; A.M.; Clerk. Boston, Mass. Edward Gookin Parker . . . 17 . . Kittery, Me. Benjamin Sewall Pike . . . . 16 . . . Newbury port, Mass. Govt, Service. Washington, D.C. 94 CATALOGUE. [1858-59. Henry Webster Powers . Clerk. Gustavus Percival Pratt M.D.; Physician. William Scollay Prentiss Hosea Mason Quinbv . . B.U. 1865; M.D. Edwin Sanborn Reed . . ^Daniel Smyth Sayles . . John Benton Shaw . . . Telegraph Supt. Marshall Solomon Snow H.U. 1865; A.M.; Prof. Polit. Lit. and Hist Wash. Univ. Edward Lewis Sturtevant . Bowd. Coll. 1863; A.M.; M.D. John Robinson Swinerton . Hotel Keeper. Daniel Locke Tubbs . . . Ransom Tiphiania Tubbs . Charles Henry Warren . . Business. ^Thomas Jefferson Washburn Alonzo Bond Wentworth LL.B. ; Lawyer. Allen Baston Wheeler . . Mechanic. 20 . 17 . 19 . 18 . 21 . 24 . 16 . 16 . 16 . Physician. 17 . 25 . 18 . 14 . 19 . 18 . 32 . South Abington, Mass. New York, N. Y. Cohasset, Mass. (< (t Baltimore, Md. Pittsfield. Uxbridge, Mass. Burrillville,R.l. . . . 1871 Olean, N.Y. . Jamestown, N.Y. East Dennis, Mass. St. Louis, Mo. Winthrop, Me. South Framingham, Mass. Milton. Long Branch, N.J. Olean, N.Y. Olean, N.Y. New York, N.Y. Providence, R.L Bridgewater, Mass. . 1866 Somers worth. Boston, Mass. Exeter. Blackberry Station, 111. 50 1859, *Edward Stanley Abbot . George Henry Adams . . Charles Alphonso Ames . Merchant. Daniel Baker John Augustus Balestier Lawyer. Francis Barnes *Alfred William Barnes . Teacher. Sidney Kenedy Beckwith William Parmenter Bennett Will. Coll. 1862; Clergyman. Egbert Byron Bingham . Yale Coll. 1863; Clergyman. Albert Blair H.U. 1863; Lawyer. ^ * William Francis Brigham Augustus Scott Campbell Lawyer. Henry Converse Carter . John White Chadwiclc . . Clergyman. Henry Clusky Lawyer. . 17 . 17 . 20 . 17 . 17 . 18 . 20 . 17 . 22 . 21 . 18 . 20 . 16 . 18 . 18 19 Beverly, Mass. . . . 1863 Middleton, Mass. Peterborough. Denver, Col. Milton, Me. New York, N.Y. <( (< Portland, Me. Owosso, Mich. . . . 1866 Muskingum, O. Chelsea, Mich. Groton, Mass. Ames, Iowa. Scotland, Conn. Rockville, Conn. Barry, 111. Macon, Mo. Feltonville, Mass. . 1865 Annapolis, Md. Galena, 111. Chicago, 111. Flushing, N.Y. Marblehead, Mass. Brooklyn, N.Y. St. Louis, Mo. San Francisco, Cal. 1859.] CATALOGUE. 95 Henry Newton Comey .... 19 . Lucien Alfred Cox 19 . Druggist. James Love Crittenden .... 17 . George Selden CuUum .... 16 . Supt. Gas and Water Go's. Prentiss Ciimmings 18 . H.U. 1864; LL.B.; Lawyer. Jeremiah Curtin 23 . H.U. 1863. Benjamin Price Davis 15 . Merchant. *George Washington Davis . . 17 . Cyrus William Dearborn ... 14 . Moses Ayer Drew 15 . Lawyer. Edward Smith Eveleth .... 17 . M.D.; Physician. ' George Seward Ffrost .... 14 . H.U. 1865; A.M.; Lawyer. * William Abijah Flagg 20 . M.D.; Physician. Cleaveland Foote 17 . Business. Charles Fuller 16 . Bowd. Goll. 1865; A.M.; M.D.; Physician. Charles Allen Gilman 15 . * William Lawrence Gordon . . 19 . Francis Gorman 18 . H.U. 1864; A.M.; Teacher. John Fordyce Gould 18 . Samuel Lampson Gould .... 19 . M.D. Henry Clay Gowdej'^ 15 . Teacher. William Holder Gray 18 . Manufacturer. Preston Gurney 16 . B.U. 1866; Glergyman. Elijah Brown Hazen 18 . * Lewis Reyburne Hempstead . 17 . Lawyer. Geora-e Anthony Hill 17. H.U. 1865; A.M.; Asst. Prof. Math. H.U. Charles Edmund James .... 15 . Glerk U.S. Navy. Nathaniel March Jewett ... 17 . Merchant. George Clayton Latham ....17. Merchant. Edward Newbold Lawrence . . 17 . Heywood Lee 18 . Business. *Douglas Lee 14 . Robert Todd Lincoln 16 . H.U. 18»34; U.S. Sec. War; Lawyer. Henry Burnham Mead .... 18 . Yale Coll. 1866; A.M.; Clergyman. 1873 1877 1864 HoUiston, Mass. Marlborough, Mass. Providence, R.I. San Francisco, CaL Meadville, Pa. <( (( Sumner, Me. Boston, Mass. Greenfield, Wis. Brooklvn, N.Y. New York, N.Y. Canton, Mo. . . . Amesbury, Mass. Alfred, Me. (( (( Essex, Mass. Gloucester, Mass. Durham. Dover. Bloomington, 111. . Veria, 111. Springfield, Mass. New York, N.Y. Lincoln, Me. Effingham. Exeter Andersonville, Ga. Springfield, Mass. Cambridge, Mass. Wilton, Me. Albany, Me. Eutaw, Ala. Paris, Tex. Walpole, Mass. Boston, Mass. South Abington, Mass. Central Falls, R.I. Deerfield. Galena, 111 1872 (i (( Sherburne, Mass. Cambridge, Mass. Exeter. Portsmouth. Bangor, Me. Boston, Mass. Springfield, 111. <( (( Flushing, N.Y. Lenox, Mass. Philadelphia, Pa. Lenox, Mass 1864 Springfield, 111. Chicago, ni. Hingham, Mass. Stonington, Conn. 96 CATALOGUE. [1859. ♦Richard Jones Meconkey . . . 17 . . . West Chester, Pa. . 1873 ♦Charles Sewall Merrick . . . . 18 . . . Walpole, Mass. . . . 1866 Chemist; S.B. James Christie Moore . . . . . 20 . . . Topsfield, Me. Business. East Cambridge, Mass. John Cousins Mordough . . . 15 . . . Hamilton, Mass. Ralph Keniston Nichols . . . 16 . . . Portsmouth. Agent Water Co. Lower Lake, Lake Co., Cal. Joseph Franklin Noone . . . . 18 . . . Peterborough. Miller. (( Josiah Alonzo Osgood . . . . . 17 . . . Chelsea, Mass. Mechanical Engineer. Boston, Mass. Boyd Cummings Packer . . . . 16 . . . Harrisburg, Pa. Lock Haven, Pa. John Davis Parker .... . 18 . . . Salem, Mass. Business. Boston, Mass. Edward Everett Parker . . . . 17 . . . Brookline. Dart. Coll. 1869; Lawyer; Prob. Judge. Nashua. William Peters . 17 . . . Ogdensburg, N.Y. Lawyer. New York, N.Y. *Johu Thomas Pope . 17 . . . Halifax, Mass. . . . 1874 B.U. 1865; LL.B.; Lawyer. Jersey City, N.J. Seth Gurney Reed .19 . . . Baltimore, Md. John Mon at Rice . . 27 . . Northborough, Mass. Prof. Math. Naval Acad. Annapolis, Md. George H. M. Rowe .... . 18 . . Sahnon Falls. Dart. Coll. 1864; A.M.; M.D.; Physician. Boston, Mass. George Briggs Russell . . .15 . . Plymouth, Mass. Major U.S. Army. James Milton Sawin .... . 17 . . . Brookline. Teacher. Providence, R.I. Henry Chapin Sawin .... . 16 . . . Brookline. Teacher. Newton, Mass. Andrew Homer Scott .... . 18 . . . Dover, Ark. M.D.; Physician. Little Rock, Ark. Charles Jinks Simons .... . 16 . . Prome Birmah. *Job Randall Smith . 16 . . . Manchester 1863 Student, Bost. Univ. Frank Russell Stoddard . . . . 15 . . . Plymouth, Mass. H.U. 1866; A.M.; City Cashier. Boston, Mass. James Breckenridge Sumner . 16 . . . Dalton. M.D.; Physician. Bloomington, Neb. George Milmore Taylor . . . . 14 . . . Baltimore, Md. George Weeks Thompson . . . 22 . . . Barrington. John Brown Thompson . . . . 18 . . . Oldtown, Me. Frederic Henry Thompson . . 15 . . . New Salem, Mass. M.D.; Physician. Fitchburg, Mass. Charles Walter Tower . . . . 17 . . . Randolph, Mass. M.D.; Physician. Marshfield, Oregon. Henry Herbert Townsend . . . 17 . . . Milton. JayTuttle . 17 . . . Nottingham. M.D.; Physician. Portland, Oregon. * William Henry Twilight . . . . 21 . . . Exeter. Alphonzo White . 16 . . . Chelsea, Mass. Charles Edward Wiggin . . . 16 . . . Durham. Shoe Manufacturer. Haverhill, Mass. Charles Sidney Wilder . . . . 18 . . . Holliston, Mass. Business. (( u 1859-60.] CATALOGUE. 97 Joseph Henry Wilder . . . . .16 Henry Thomas Wing 17 H.U. 1864; A.M.; LL.B.; Lawyer. James Lawrence Young .... 14 Holliston, Mass. Sandwich, Mass. New York, N.Y. Lawrence, Mass. 87 18 60, Morison Alexander ... Edward Lowell Anderson Charles Alvan Beach . Frank Arthur Brackett Teacher. Albert Lawrence Brown LL.B.; Broker. * William Gerrish Brown . 19 . 17 . 16 . 18 . 13 . 19 *Clarence Colman Buck .... 22 Francis Marion Caldwell ... 23 Farmer. Leonard Hathaway Caldwell . 21 Maro Johnson Chamberlain . . 18 Miner. William Edwin Chamberlain . 19 Albro Elmore Chase 16 H.U. 1865; Editor; Prin. High Sch. Clement Cleveland 16 H.U. 1867; A.M.; M.D.; Physician. John Franklin Clifford .... 15 L'a Lathrop Davies 15 George Henry Davis 18 *George Washington Davis . . 14 Printer. William Coffin Davis 13 15 . 15 17 ^ Frank Fiske Dinsmoor . . H.U. 1867. Pierre Cheaseman Dubois . Supt. of Mines. Thomas Chandler Edwards Business. Manning Emery 15 Business. Willard Francis Esty 20 Lawyer. David Webber Farquar .... 16 Business. George Albert Fisher 20 H.U. 1865; LL.B.; Lawyer. George Augustus Flagg .... 15 H.U. 1866; A.M.; LL.B.; Manufacturer James Greely Flanders .... 15 Yale Coll. 1867; LL.B.; Lawyer. Robert Hall French 17 Orvillc Knight Gerrish .... 19 Lawyer. Derry. Cincinnati, O. Springfield, Mass. Framingham, Mass. Bristol, Conn. Exeter. Boston, Mass. Manchester 1866 Gorham, Me 1871 Golden Ridge, Me. Sherman, Me. Golden Ridge, Me. Jacksonville, Fla. Dublin. Frisco, Utah. Sacramento, Cal. Paris Hill, Me. Portland, Me. Cambridge, Mass. New York, N.Y. Portland, Me. Oldtown, Me. Portland, Me. Exeter 1881 Gloucester, Mass. Keene 1870 Fishkill Landing, N.Y. San Francisco, Cal. Keene. Chicago, 111. Portsmouth. Boston, Mass. Canton, Mass. Boston, Mass. Holliston, Mass. Boston, Mass. Dorchester, Mass. Boston, Mass. Holliston, Mass. Millbury, Mass. Milwaukee, Wis. (( (( Bedford. Sumner, Me. Portland, Me. 98 CATALOGUE. [1860. Charles Llewellyn Gibbs . . 17 . . Framingham, Mass. Le Roy Freeze Griffin . . . . 15 . . Epsom. B.U. 186G; A.M.; Prof. Lake Forest Coll. Illinois. Leverett Duncan Gunter . . 21 . . Queensbury, N.B. M.D.; Physician. Chelsea, Mass. Meldon Leroy Hanscom . . . . 17 . . Portsmouth. H.U. 1867; Merchant. Parkersburg, Oregon. Charles Hayes . . 20 . . Berwick, Me. M.D.; Physician. Providence, R.I. *Orville Pomeroy Higgins . . . 17 . . Flint, Mich 1861 *Otis Hinkley . . 23 . . New Harmony, Ind. . South Easton, Mass. William Carey Howard . . . 19 . James Otis Hoyt .... . . 17 . . . Haverhill, Mass. H.U. 1865; A.M.; LL.B.; Lawyer. New York, N.Y. Sanford Benton Hubbard . . 19 . . Shelburne. Govt. Service. Cambridge, Mass. John Webster Johnson . . . . 18 . . . Southborough, Mass. Frank William Jones . . . . 14 . . Portsmouth. Capitalist. Boston, Mass. Ludlow Ap Jones .... . . 16 . . Cincinnati, 0. H.U. 1865; A.M.; La\yj'er. 11 ct William Harding King . . . 14 . . . Springfield, Mass. Merchant. (C « William Jones Ladd . . . . . 16 . . Portsmouth. Mining Engineer. Milton, Mass. George Hobart Latham . . . . 13 . . . East Bridgewater, Mass. * Business. Memphis, Tenn. Anson Hapgood Lawrence . . 17 . . Barre, Mass. Lawyer. Chicago, 111. *John Edwards Leonard . . . . 14 . . . Fairville, Pa 1878 H.U. 1867; A.M.; M.C.; Lawj rer; Ch. Just. Louisiana. Supr. Ct. ♦Arthur Jones Loud. . . . . . . 14 . . Plymouth, Mass. . . 1872 H.U. 1867; A.M. *Henrv Clay McCreary . . . 18 . . Sacramento, Cal. . . 1869 Yale Coll. 1865; Lawyer. « li Franklin Miller . . 18 . . . Sacramento, Cal. Cashier. (( <( John Ames Mitchell . . . . . 15 . . East Bridgewater, Mass. Editor. New York, N.Y. Charles Coburn Morgan . . . 17 . . Dracut, Mass. Clinton Morrill . . 15 . . Bangor, Me. George Lyman Morse . . . . 13 . . Boston, Mass. Business. (( (< George William Neal . . . . 16 . . . Kittery, Me. H.U. 1865; A.M.; Teacher. Boston, Mass. ♦David Leighton Ordway . . 16 . . Haverhill, Mass. . . 1869 H.U. 1865; A.M.; LL.B. Calvin Page . . 15 . . . North Hampton. Portsmouth. Lawyer. *Henry Harrison Pearson . . . 20 . . . Lincoln, III 1864 Leonard Hobart Pillsbury . . 24 . . Derr3\ Merchant. " " Almon Porter . . 13 . . Haverhill, Mass. . Haverhill, Mass. Samuel Plumer Prescott . . 15 . Dart. Coll. 1867; Lawyer. Princeton, 111. George Newton Proctor . . . . 18 . . Fitchburg, Mass. Merchant. 1860-61.] CATALOGUE. 99 Henry Foster Ranney . . . Samuel Augustas Russell . Clifibrd Saville Merchant. Edwin Pliny Seaver .... H.U. 1864; A.M.; Supt. Public Andrew Coolidge Stone . . Lawyer. William Prescott Stoddard H.U. 1866; Corporation Treasurer Ezra Knight Sweetser . Samuel Swett Miner. *James Monroe Tappan John Horace Taylor . Sheep Ranching. Godfrey Siegen Thaler LL.B. Alonzo Towle M.D. ; Physician. Charles Jackson Train *Thomas Logan TuUock Paymaster U.S. Na^^. Augustus Van Wyck . Lawyer. Frank Thomas Vinal . M.D.; Physician. * Henry Ware Charles Edwin Webster . Bowd. Coll. 1866; A.M.; M.D Charles Eben Wentworth Publisher. Ruf us Lawrence AVilder . M.D. ; Physician. Joseph Woodward Wilder 22 . Schools. . 20 . . 14 . . 27 . 14 . 19 . 15 Gorham Deane Williams H.U. 1865; Lawj-er. George Washington Wilson Merchant. . 19 . 17 . 19 19 . 16 . 15 . 15 . 14 . 15 . . 14 . . 19 . Physician. ■ 15 . . 15 . . 13 . . 18 . . 16 . . Brattleborough, Vt. . New York, N.Y. . Lexington, Mass. (( (( . Northborough, Mass. Boston, Mass. . Marlborough, Mass. Lawrence, Mass. . Plymouth, Mass. (( (< . Cumberland, Me. (( (( . Exeter. Georgetown, Cal. . East Kingston . . . . Chelsea, Mass. Lamed, Kan. . Stillwater, Minn. . Freedom. 1862 . Framingham, Mass. . Portsmouth 1870 (( . Pendleton, S.C. New York, N.Y. . North Andover, Mass. Scituate, Mass. . Cambridgeport, Mass. 1862 . Portland, Me. (( <( . Portsmouth. Cambridge, Mass. . Leominster, Mass. New York, N.Y. . Leominster, Mass. <( (< . Deerfield, Mass. Greenfield, Mass. . Upper Marlborough, Md. << (( « 85 1861 Richard Franklin Alley . . . Frank Benjamin Arnold . . H.U. 1866; Merchant. George William Ayers . . . Farmer. Josiah Bartlett Batchelder . Clerk. William Henry Bennett . . . Yale Coll. 1866; LL.B.; Lawyer. *Charles Wilbert Bickford . . Wilmon Whiledin Blackmar . Lawyer. . 16 . . 17 . . . Newmarket. . . New York, N.Y. . 15 . . . Stratham. . 18 . . 17 . . 18 . . 20 . . . Exeter. Boston, Mass. . . Hampton, Conn. Stirling, ni. . . Rochester . . Boston, Mass. 1875 100 CATALOGUE. [1861. Henry Thatcher Bout well . . . 17 . . H.U. 1866; M.D.; Physician. Benjamin Franklin Brickett . . 15 . . Dart. Coll. 1867; Lawyer. ♦Joseph Emmons Briggs .... 20 . . H.U. 1866. Francis Wa3'land Butler . . . 19 . . James William Carlisle .... 17 . . Business. *Frank Augustus Carpenter . . 17 . . H.U. 1866. *Josiah Andrews Chandler . . . 15 . . Engineer. George Washington Cobb ...17.. Samuel Adams Coburn ....17.. Clerk. Nathan Cutler 16 . . Lawyer. Elbridge Gerry Cutler 14 . . H.U. 1868; M.D. ; Physician. William FrcuikKn Davis . . . 21 . . H.U. 1867; Clergyman. William Henry Dodge 14 . . Lawyer. *Lewis Francis Dupee 22 . . Teacher. John Edwin Earley 19 . . Civil Engineer. *George Frederic Emery .... 16 . . H.U. 1866; A.M.; Merchant. Charles Gershom Fall 15 . . H.U. 1868; A.M. ; Lawyer and Author. Joseph Allen Fay 17 . . M.D.; Physician. Charles C'oolidge Flagg .... 14 . . Clerk. *John Howard Folsom 13 . . Clerk. William Henry Fuller 13 . . Carlton Clark Fyler 24 . . Charles Sibley Gage 17.. H.U. 1867; Lawyer. Justin Edwards Gale 18 i . H.U. 1866; A.M.; Teacher. Edward Francis Gale 15 . . Business. Clittord Belcher Gill 16 . . Farmer. Thomas Herbert Gray 16 . . H.U. 1867; Merchant. George Wheelock Grover . . . 16 . . M.D. William Penn Hammond . . . 17 . . Amh, Coll. 1869; M.D.; Physician. William Allen Hayes 18 . . H.U. 1866; A.M.; LL.B.; Lawyer. George Franklin Hubbard. . . 16 . . M.D. Nashua. Manchester. Haverhill, Mass. Dighton, Mass. . . . 1867 Bennington. Exeter. Foxborough, Mass. . 1867 Portsmouth 1877 Belmont, Mass. Dighton, Mass. Portsmouth. Boston, Mass. Augusta, Me. New York, N.Y. Augusta, Me. Boston, Mass. Lowell, Mass. Chelsea, Mass. Hampton Falls. Dover. No. Wrentham, Mass. 1871 Walpole, Mass. El Paso, Tex. Portland, Me. ... 1873 San Francisco, Cal. Maiden, Mass. Boston, Mass. Milford, Mass. Exeter. San Francisco, Cal. Exeter Boston, Mass. Cambridge, Mass. West Killingly, Conn. Concord. New York, N.Y. Rock port, Mass. Cambridge, Mass. Exeter. Chicago, m. Exeter. Junction City, Kan. Walpole, Mass. Boston, Mass. Concord. Plympton, Mass. Boston, Mass. Washington, D.C. Boston, Mass. Winterport, Me. 1872 1861.] CATALOGUE. 101 Arthur Hunnewell H.U. 18G8; Business. Samuel Champion Hunt .... 19 Frederic Guion Ireland .... 15 H.U. 1868; LL.B.; Teacher and Author. Alfred Bray ton Irons 19 Thomas Loomis Knapp .... 18 Rens. Polytechnic Inst. 1866; Civil Engi Fruit Ranching. William Fowle Ladd 15 Merchant. Charles Edward Lane 18 Clerk. William Latimer IG Edward Hemstead Latham . . 18 Irving Leland 16 Business. James Pickering Lewis .... 19 M.D. ; Clerk P.O. Dept. *Charles Selden Mead 17 Lewis Cass Melcher 16 Business. Edwin Forrest Melcher . . . . 16 Business. George Stephen Minot .... 16 Business. James Frederic Morse .... 20 Eobert Mendom Otis 16 H.U. 1866; M.D.; Physician. Thomas Manning Page .... 1 9 Bookkeeper. Elbridge John Pattee 20 Charles Harrison Pennj'^packer 16 Lawyer. Charles Elliot Philbrook . ... 19 Charles Theodore Roberts ... 18 Lewis Calvin Sanders 14 Lawyer. James Emery Corckin Sawyer. 18 *Walter Henry Seaver 20 Student, H.U. Josiah Lafayette Seward ... 1 6 H.U. 1868; A.M.; S.T.B. ; Clergyman. Swithin Chandler Shortlidge. . 20 H.U. 1866; A.M.; Teacher. George Edward Smith 19 Broker. John Winthrop Spooner .... 15 H.U. 1867; A.M.; M.D. ; Physician. George Stackpole 19 John'Ward Taylor 21 H.U. 1866; Merchant. Daniel Gordon Thompson ... 18 Teacher. James Mason Towle 18 Byron Howard Waterman . . . 18 Leonard Wheeler 15 H.U. 1866; M.D.; Physician. 15 . . . Boston, Mass. Franklin, Mass. New York, N.Y. <( (( <( Providence, RJ. Ogdensburg, N.Y. Santa Barbara, Cal. Portsmouth. Galveston, Tex. Exeter. Boston, Mass. Columbus, O. Holliston, Mass. Boston, Mass. New Hampton. Washington, D.C. Hingham, Mass. . ". 1864 Exeter. Boston, Mass. Exeter. Boston, Mass. Reading, Mass. Boston, Mass. Hartford, Conn. Kittery, Me. Boston, Mass. St. Louis, Mo. (( (( it Port Fairfield, Me. West Chester, Pa. Philadelphia, Pa. Shelburne. Shirley, Mass. Durham. Dover. Searsport, Me. Northborough, Mass. 1867 East Sullivan. Lowell, Mass. Fairville, Pa. Media, Pa. Worcester, Mass. Boston, Mass. Dorchester, Mass. Hingham, Mass. Gorham, Me. Hebron, Me. San Francisco, Cal. Durham. Milton, Mass. Somerville, Mass. Providence, R.I. Lincoln, Mass. "Worcester. 102 CATALOGUE. [1861-62. Joseph Warren Whittier . . . 18 . . . Exeter. Henry Willey 14 . . . Goffstown. Merchant. Santa Cruz, Cal. Frank Wrioht 16 . . . Auburn, N.Y. H.U. 1866; A.M.; Business. " " 76 18 62, Frederic Morse Adams .... 21 Law Reporter. Willis Laws Ames 16 Editor. Albert Holmes Ammidown . . 16 H.U. 1868; A.M.; Lawyer. Charles Henry Arnold .... 14 Business. ThonTks Ira Atwood 14 Josiah Calef Bartlett 16 H.U. 1869; A.M.; Teacher. Franklin Bartlett 16 H.U. 1869; A.M.; Ph.D.; LL.B.; Lawyer. *Georg*G Leonard Barton .... 16 H.U. 1867; A.M.; Lawyer. Edward Sawyer Batchelder ..16 Salesman. Jeremiah Sinclair Bean .... 21 Samuel Folsom Beede 22 Teacher; Supt. Public Schools. Christopher Columbus Blake . 23 Nathaniel Briggs Borden ... 18 Corporation Treasurer. Charles Lee Follen Bridge . . 13 Business. Luke Smith Brooks 15 Farmer. John Tilton Busiel 14 H.U. 1868; Manufacturer. *Rollo Marble Cole 15 Bowd. Coll. 1867. Herbert Jonathan Cooke ... 16 Lawyer. John Sherwin Crosby 20 Lawyer. *Charles Jewett Demeritt ... 18 Business. Edwin Demeritt 16 Dart. Coll. 1869; Teacher. *Moses Beede Dillingham ... 21 Saniuel Dinsmoor 15 Business. *William Henry Dolby 24 Teacher. Horace Paul Downs 22 M.D. ; Physician. Charles Henry Dunlap .... 17 Insurance Agent. Dublin. New York, N.Y. Peterborough. Golden Dale, Wash. Ter. Southbridge, Mass. New York, N.Y. New York, N.Y. <( <( (< Hudson, N.Y. Exeter. Taunton, Mass. New Bedford, Mass. New York, N.Y. Gill, Mass 1879 Greenfield, Mass. Exeter. Boston, Mass. Rochester. Sandwich. Northfield, Minn. Dahlonega, Iowa. Fall River, Mass. <( <{ (( Hampton Falls. Boston, Mass. Stow, Mass. Maynard, Mass. Laconia. . Paris, Me 1868 Hadley, Mass. Unity, Me. St. Joseph, Mo. Durham 1881 Kansas City, Mo. Durham. Boston, Mass. W. Falmouth, Mass. 1863 Keene. (( Saco, Me 1868 Lowell, Mass. Tam worth. Washington Territory. Andover, Me. Lewiston, Me. 1862.] CATALOGUE. 103 Amos Sheldon Edwards .... 19 . M.D. ; Physician. Charles Bo wdoin Fillebrown . . 19 . Business. Arthur Irving Fiske 14 . H.U. 1869; A.M.; Teacher. Taylor Barnnm Fletcher . ... 15 . Tufts Coll. 1869; Dentist. *Williain Henry French .... 14 . H.U. 1869; M.D.; Physician. Charles Baker Godfrey .... 17 . Business. Sydney Kendall Gold 14 . H.U.'l869; A.M.; Business. Henry Hosford Hale 15 . Manufacturer. William Weaver Heaton ... 17 . Broker. William Hartwell Hildreth . . 19 . M.D.; Physician. William Henry Hoag 22 . M.D. Izaak Taylor Hoague 17 . H.U. 1867; LL.B.; Lawyer. George Albert Holt 18 . Edgar Huidekoper 17 . H.U. 1868; A.M.; Stock Farmer. Hiram Jewell 21 . Carriage Manufacturer. Daniel Parry Lippincott . ... 17 . Teacher. John Pickering Lyman .... 15 . H.U. 1868; A.M.; Business. Herschel Main 17 . Engineer, U.S. Navy. Charles Marseilles 16 . Editor. Allison Zaman Mason 22 . Business. Elisha Burr Maynard 19 . Dart. Coll. 1867; Lawyer. Henry Putnam Merrill . > . . 20 . M.D. ; Physician. Henry Mitchell 17 . Robert Sivain Morison .... 15 . H.U. 1869; A.M.; S.T.B.; Clergyman. John Henry Morse 16 . Manufacturer. Francis Appleton Morse ... 19 . Teacher. 'George Parker Nelson 13 . Factory Supt. William Morton Ogden .... 21 . M.D. ; Physician. Edward Osgood Otis 13 . H.U. 1871; M.D.; Physician. Walter Page 15 . Business. Thomas Clarkson Parrish ... 15 . Miner. Fayettevillo, N.Y. Syracuse, N.Y. Winthrop, Me. Boston, Mass. Holliston, Mass. Boston, Mass. Exeter. Portage, Wis. Laconia 1878 California. Milford, Mass. (( (( Washington, D.C. Faribault, Minn. Haverhill, Mass. Bradford, Mass. Salem, O. New York, N.Y. New Ipswich. Newton, Mass. Albany, N.Y. Deerfield Boston, Mass. Hampton, Conn. Meadville, Pa. ' (( (< Brentwood. Amesbury, Mass. Morristown, N.J. Cairo, 111. Portsmouth. Boston, Mass. Washington, D.C. Philadelphia, Pa. Kingston, N.Y. Dublin. Boston, Mass. Springfield, Mass. <( (< Andover, Me. Portland, Me. Norwich, N.Y. Milton, Mass. Peter liorough. Methuen, Mass. <( (( Dublin. West Roxbury, Mass. Peekskill, N.Y. . . . 1882 New York, N.Y. Boston, Mass. <( <( Rye. Boston, Mass. Watertown, Mass. Boston, Mass. Philadelphia, Pa. Colorado. 104 CATALOGUE. [1862. Joab Peaslee 19 . Business. *Willets Peaslee 18 . Lawyer. Albert Field Pike 16 . Jerome Bonaparte Poole ... 17 . H.U. 1867; Teacher. Joseph Wheeler Reed 18 . H.U. 1867; LL.B. William Whitlock Richards . . 16 . H.U. 1868; A.M.; Business. Nathaniel Morton S afford ... 14 . H.U. 1869; A.M.; LL.B.; Lawyer. Albert Ivory Sands 16 . James Scammon IS . B.U. 1868; LL.B.; Lawyer. Charles Franklin Smith . . John Lefavour Stanley . . , Dart. Coll. 1869; A.M.; Teacher, James Rindge Stanwood . Merchant. Charles Onslow Stearns . . H.U. 1867; Civil Engineer. Morton Burr Stelle .... Calvin Amory Stevens . . Business. Solomon Thayer Streeter . Amh. Coll. 1867; LL.B.; Lawyer Charles Howard Thyng . . R.R. Clerk (New York, N.Y.). George Thomas Tilden . . Architect. George Clark Travis ... H.U. 1869; A.M.; Lawyer. " *William Abram Van Buren Frank Alvord Warfield . . Clergyman. Thomas Fenner Wentworth Yale Coll. 1868; Lawyer. Arthur Nathaniel Whiting Business. *Henry Medill Whitman . . H.U. 1868. Channing Wood Whitman H.U. 1868; A.M.; U.S. Consul. Samuel Beede Wiggin 24 . Dentist. George Winslow Wiggin ... 21 . Lawyer. Charles Issacher Wiggin ... 15 . Clerk. Charles Dearborn Wiggin ... 21 . B.U. 1868; A.M.; M.D.; Physician. Joseph Colburn Wilson .... 17 . Bowd. Coll. 1867; Lawyer. William Seal Windle 16 . H.U. 1869; A.M.; Lawyer. Edward Leander Wood .... 16 . H.U. 1867: A.M.; Treasurer. . 17 . . 20 . . 15 . . 16 . . 14 . . 17 . . 20 . . 15 . . 17 . . 16 . . 15 . . 15 . . 16 . . 17 . . 17 . . 16 . . Plaistow. Haverhill, Mass. . Plaistow 1873 Cincinnati, O. . Boston, Mass. . East Abington, Mass. Boston, Mass. . Acton, Mass. Maynard, Mass. . New York, N.Y. . Dorchester, Mass. Boston, Mass. , Cambridge, Mass. . Stratham. Kansas City, Mo. . Exeter. , Beverly, Mass. Concord. . Portsmouth. Boston, Mass. . Concord. Boston, Mass. . Washington, D.C. . Groton, Mass. New York, N.Y. . Vernon, Vt. New York, N.Y. , Exeter. Roselle, N.J. . Boston, Mass. (( <( Holliston, Mass. (< << . New York, N.Y. . . 1863 . Holliston, Mass. Brockton, Mass. Greenland. New York, N.Y. ,,Watertown, Mass. Haydenville, Mass. , Cincinnati, 1869 Cincinnati, O. Huddersfield, Eng. Sandwich. (( Sandwich. Franklin, Mass. Durham. Boston, Mass. Meredith. Providence, R.I. Orono, Me. <( (( Fairville, Pa. West Chester, Pa. Fitchburg, Mass. Lewiston, Me. 1862-63.] George Albert Wood Musician. CATALOGUE. , . . 17 . . . Brentwood. 18 63. 105 90 William Pomeroy Alexander . 15 . H.U. 1870; Govt. Service. Charles De Lancey Alton ... 18 . Henry Green Atwater 13 . H.U. 1869; LL.B.; Lawyer. Fordyce D wight Barker .... 15 . Broker. Washington Becker 16 . Joseph Hartwell Bridge .... 16 . S.B. ; Mining Engineer. * Samuel Emmons Brotvn ... 16 . H.U. 1870; Clergyman. Charles Rufus Brown 14 . H.U. 1877; Master U.S. Navy; Clergyman. Edward Chelonday BuUard . . 19 . Paper Manufacturer. James Hardy Burgess 18 . Lawyer. Frederic Wilcox Chapin .... 13 . H.U. 1870; M.D.; Physician. *Leander Chapin 19 . James Rundlett Cheney .... 16 . Washington Choate 17 . Amh. Coll. 1870; Teacher. Arthur Dearborn Clarke . » . . 16 . Lumber Merchant. William Bullard Cutler .... 16 . M.D.; Physician. *Frank Demeritt 15 . Dart. Coll. 1870; Business. St. Clair Denny 17 . John Francis D wight 19 . H.U. 1870; Teacher. Theodore Holbrook Emerson . 15 . Philemon Eveleth 18 . Sewall Allen Faunce 22 . William Nelson Ferris .... 14 . Omar Alphonso Flint 19 . William Rice Foster 17. George Ephraim Foskett ... 16 . Samuel Ham Garvin 21 . Joseph P'arwell Gordon .... 20 . Lyman Frank Gooch 15 . Business. Friend Humphrey Gregory . . 17 . Charles Goodwin Hale .... 15 . William Gardner Hale .... 14 . H.U. 1870; Prof. Latin, Cornell Univ. John Haley 15 . Business. Springfield, Mass. Summit, N.J. Peekskill, N.Y. New York, N.Y. New York, N.Y. (( (( South Worcester, Mass. Augusta, Me. Leadville, Col. Exeter 1877 Exeter. Franklin Falls. Schuylerville, N.Y. (( (( Old town. Me. Springfield, Mass. 1865 Milford, Mass. . Stratham. Essex, Mass. Brooklyn, N.Y. Franklin. Jefferson, Tex. HoUiston, Mass. Boston, Mass. Durham 1874 Boston, Mass. Pittsburg, Pa. North Wrentham, Mass. Boston, Mass. Orland, Me. Essex, Mass. Kingston. Peekskill, N.Y. Acton, Mass. Stafford Springs, Conn. Louisville, Ky. Acton, Mass. Tyngsborough, Mass. Exeter. Boston, Mass. Beverty, Mass. Hanover Peterborough. Ithaca, N.Y. Newmarket. 106 CATALOGUE. [18G3. Joseph William Hall . . Merchant. Frederic Robert Halsey . H.U. 18G8; A.M. ; LL.B. ;' La^vye^. Frank Elisha Hatch . . . George Hill H.U. 18G9; A.M.; Lawyer. John Edwin Hill .... H.U. 1870; Merchant. John Hillis 17 . H.U. 1868; A.M.; Lawyer (Boston, Mass.). . 18 Joseph Henry Holway Henry Newell Hoxie Prin. Friends School. William Edwin Hoyt Civil Engineer. Joseph Alexander D. Hughes Arthur Clarke Huidekoper LL.B.; Treas. Glass Co. *Joseph Hayden Jewell . B.U. 1871; Med. Student, H.U George Henry Lawrence Yale Coll. 18G9; A.M.; Lawyer. Joshua Holmes Leach . . M.D.; Physician. Leverett Lyndon Leggett Lawyer. Edwin Benson Lent . . . Clerk, Pub. Works. George Langdon Lothrop Merchant. George Washington Mann Lo Palmer Moore .... Charles Adams Morrill . H.U. 18G8; A.M.; Teacher, St. Paul. William Walter Nason . . Clergyman. William Martin Newton . Frederic George Noonan Business. Charles Cushing Odlin . M.D.; Physician. Samuel Longstreth Parrish H.U. 1870; Lawyer. David Walton Perkins . Music Teacher. James Handyside Perkins H.U. 1870; LL.B.; Lawyer. Robert J. W. Phinney . Business. Bard Berge Plummer . . Farmer. David Gurney Pratt . . Business. Francis Rawle .... H.U. 18G9; LL.B.; Lawyer. Robert Hallo well Richards Prof. Mining Engineering, Inst 20 . 16 19 20 15 21 . 22 . 18 . 16 . 15 . 16 . 15 . 15 . 14 17 18 25 20 15 . 18 . 15 . 15 . 14 . 15 16 17 . 14 17 19 Tech. Dennis, Mass. Boston, Mass. New York, N.Y. Hillsborough. North Hoosick, N.Y. New York, N.Y. Stoneham, Mass. Boston, Mass. Maynard, Mass. (( II Sandwich, Mass. East Sandwich, Mass. Germantown, Pa. Portsmouth. Rochester, N.Y. Nashua. Meadville, Pa. Brentwood 1872 Milwaukee, Wis. (( (( Nashua. Keene. Zanesville, O. Cleveland, O. Peekskill, N.Y. New York, N.Y. Lexington, Mass. Boston, Mass. Hanover. Manchester. Haverhill, Mass. Concord. Exeter. New Scotland, N.Y. Rochester, N.Y. Milwaukee, Wis. Kansas City, Mo. Exeter. Melrose, Mass. Philadelphia, Pa. New York, N.Y. Milwaukee, Wis. Chicago, Dl. Cincinnati, O. (( (( Barnstable, Mass. Boston, Mass. Milton. Brighton, Mass. Boston, Mass. Williamsport, Pa. Philadelphia, Pa. Boston, Mass. 1863.] CATALOGUE. 107 Henry Bullard Richardson . . 18 . . Amh. Coll. 1869; A.M.; Prof. German, Amh Andrew Howland Russell . . . IG . Lieut. U.S. Army. Edward Russell 18 . * Joseph Leavitt Sanborn .... 19 . H.U. 1867; A.M. Hezekiah Scammon 20 . Business. Joseph L3mian Silsbee .... 14 . H.U. 1869; Architect. William Cowper Simmons ... 21 . H.U. 1868; Prof. Greek, Univ. Vermont. Thomas Hart Smith 17 . M.D. ; Physician. Elliot Smith 16 . Lawyer. Sanford Sydney Smith .... 14 . H.U. 1870; LL.B.; Lawyer. Charles Henry Smith 14 . Yale Coll. 1869; Lawyer. William Eliot Sparks 15 . H.U. 1869; A.M. Winthrop Flint Stevens .... 15 . Dart. Coll. 1869; M.D.; Physician. Thomas Strahan 17 . Business. (Boston, Mass.) Theodore Sutro 18 . H.U. 1871; Lawyer. Charles Frederic Swett .... 18 . Stephen Swift Taft 14 . H.U. 1870; Lawyer. Frederic Thompson 17 . John Todhunter 16 . H.U. 1868; LL.B.; Lawyer. Everett Albert Towue 17 . *Elijah Van Sickel Townsend . 13 . Willis Tuxbury 13 . Business. *George Albert Warren .... 14 . William James Waters .... 21 . Berlin White 17 . Arthur Dunlap Whitehouse . . 16 . Eli Whitney 16 . Yale Coll. 1869; A.M. William Scollay Whitwell . . . 17 . H.U. 1869; A.M.; M.D.; Physician. James Cornelius Wilson . ... 15 . M.D.; Physician. Douglas Dousman Wolcott . . 19 . Yale Coll. 1868. Frank Woodman 16 . H.U. 1869; A.M.; Manufacturer. Medway, Mass. Amherst, Mass. Plymouth, Mass. New York, N.Y. Hampton Falls . 1873 . Strath am. Exeter. . Northampton, Mass. Syracuse, N.Y. . North Wrentham, Mass. Burlington, Vt. . Philadelphia, Pa. (( <( . New York, N.Y. (( (< . New York, N.Y. (( (< . Newmarket. . Cambridge, Mass. Taunton, Mass. . Stoneham, Mass. <( (( . West Cambridge, Mass. Chelsea, Mass. . Baltimore, Md. New York, N.Y. . Portland, Me. . Upton, Mass. Palmer, Mass. . Conway. . Philadelphia, Pa. . New York, N.Y. . Southbridge, Mass. . Philadelphia, Pa. . Exeter. Boston, Mass. . Exeter 1879 Denver, Col. . New Bedford, Mass. . South Easton, Mass. . Rochester. . New Haven, Conn. . Jamaica Plain, Mass. San Francisco, Cal. . Philadelphia, Pa. (( « . Milwaukee, Wis. Mineral Point, Wis. Charleston, West Va. 96 108 CATALOGUE. [1864. 18 64 Edwin Augustus Alger . . . . 17 . . Lowell, Mass. LL.B.; Lawyer. Boston, Mass. * Francis Atwood . . 18 . . Franklin, Mass. . . . 1882 H.U. 1869; A.M.; M.D.; Physician. St. Paul, Minn. James Knox Averill . . . . . 17 . . Sand Lake, N.Y. LL.B. Edward Rinaldo Bacon . . . . 17 . . . Le Roy, N.Y. Lawyer. New York, N.Y. George Ashton Badger . . . . 15 . . . Boston, Mass. Bookkeeper. « n Albert Clifford Barney . . . . 16 . . . Dayton, 0. B.U. 1869. (( (( Leslie Peese Barnum . . . . . 18 . . . Adrian, Mich. James Roberts Beede . . . . 20 . . Center Sandwich. John demons Benton . . . . 14 . . . Covington, Ky. Lawyer. iP ii Leander Augustus Bevin . . . 19 . . East Hampton, Conn * William Rice Boardman . . . 16 . . . Portsmouth 1880 Lawyer. (( John Kitti'edge Brown . . . . . 21 . . . Saxonville, Mass. H.U. 1869; A.M.; Missionary. Syria. George Cole Brown . . . . . . 16 . . . Rehoboth, Mass. M.D.; Physician. li (( Walter Henderson Bryant . . 17 . . Pittsburg, Pa. Edward Fisher Chapin . . . . 18 . . . Boston, Mass. Merchant. Chicago, 111. Henry Lincoln Clapp . . . . . 25 . . . Taunton, Mass. H.U. 1870; Teacher. Boston, Mass. *Galen Alonzo Clark . . . . . . 18 . . Stow, Mass 1873 H.U. 1871. California. Francis Edmeston Cooke . . . 17 . . St. Louis, Mo. Teacher. « « Lowell Mason Cummings . . . 17 . . . Farmersville, N.Y. Lawyer. Springville, N.Y. . West Chester, Pa. Ell wood Harvey Darlington . . 19 . Carpenter. (( (( *Frank Dupont Davis . . . . . 16 . . . Cambridge, Mass. . 1879 Broker. Boston, Mass. Joseph Henry Dearborn . . . . 15 . . Deerfield. Business. Boston, Mass. Henrv James Dutton . . . . 18 . . Ellsworth, Me. Yale Coll. 1869; Lawyer. Henry Warren Eldredge . . . 19 . . . Kensington. Amh. Coll. 1871; Clergyman. Turners Falls, Mass. Benjamin Marvin Fernald . . 17 . . Exeter. H.U. 1870; T-L.B.; Lawyer. Boston, Mass. Channing Folsom .... . . . 16 . . Newmarket. Supt. Public Schools. Dover. *Thomas Brown Frost . . . . 19 . . North Hampton . . . 1867 Farmer. <( tt *Charles Brown Godfrey . . . . 16 . . . Epping 1873 Business. (( Francis Irving Gray . . . . 17 . . . Barnstable, Mass. Journalist. Boston, Mass. 1864.] CATALOGUE. 109 Henry Greenough .... Merchant. Lewis Benedict Hall . . H.U. 1809; A.M.; Lawyer. Hiram Putnam Harriman Rufus Everett Hilliard . Shoe Dealer. William Barker Hills . . H.U. 1871; M.D. ; Instructor Med Charles Emerson Hoar . . H.U. 1870; Farmer. John Osborn Hobbs .... Edward Francis Hodges . H.U. 1871; M.D.; Physician. Henry Prichard Holden . . Lawyer. Artemas Henry Holmes . . H.U. 1870; Lawyer. John Hubbard Lieut. U.S. Navy. James Lemuel LIumphrey . Merchant. Charles Grreene Jackson . Charles Warren Johnson . Edward Lyon Gardiner Felch McCandless William Spencer McLelland Eoyal Whitman Merrill . . H.U. 18G9; A.M.; Journalist. John Cooper Montgomery LL.B. Ernest Nathaniel Morison . H.U. 1870; Insurance Agent. Charles William Moseley . Broker. Charles Howard Moses . . Edward Hallam Movius . . Lawyer. James Jefferson Myers . . Thomas Nesmith H.U. 1871; Business. William Fisher Packer . . Charles Lane Palmer ... H.U. 1871; Farmer. Asa Lovejoy Peabody . . . *John Odenham Pearce . . Charles Pearce Merchant. Lewis Edward Pearce . . . Merchant. Herbert Henry Davis Pierce Robert Franklin Pennell . H.U. 1871; Prof. Latin, P.E.A. 1875-82 Thomas Matthew Porter Merchant. John Mason Williams Pratt . 16 . . . Cambridge, Mass. Philippine Island. . 16 . . . Albany, N.Y. (( (( . 18 . . . Groveland, Mass. . 21 . . . Kensington. Lynn, Mass. . 14 . . . Plaistow. School, H.U. Boston, Mass. . 14 . . . Concord, Mass. Newbury Park, Col. . 16 . . . Delevan, Wis. . 13 . . . New York, N.Y. Indianapolis, Ind. . 15 . . . Cincinnati, O. <( (( . 15 . . . New York, N.Y. . 15 . . . Exeter. . 14 . . . Springfield, Mass. . 17 . . . San Francisco, Cal. . 16 . . . Swatow, China. . 17 . . . Williamsport, Pa. . 17 . . . Pittsburg, Pa. . 17 . . . Huntsville, Ala. . 14 . . . Andover, Mass. Philadelphia, Pa. . 17 . . . Danville, Pa. . 15 . . . Baltimore, Md. . 16 . . . Newburyport, Mass. Boston, Mass. . 16 . . . Knoxville, Tenn. . 16 . . . Buffalo, N.Y. (( (( Frewsburg, N.Y. Lowell, Mass. << (( Williamsport, Pa. Cambridge, Mass. Hawley, Minn. . 24 . . . Virden, 111. . 17 . . . Maysville, Ky. . . . 187i . 21 . . 16 . . 16 . . 15 . 16 15 . 15 . 14 H.U. 1869; A.M.; S.T.B.; Clergyman. Maysville, Ky. Cincinnati, O: Maysville, Ky. Cambridge, Mass. Freeport, Me. Author. Exeter. Covington, Ky. Cincinnati, O. Taunton, Mass. Pembroke, ^ 110 CATALOGUE. [1864-65. Horace Sylvester Shapleigh . . 20 . Nathaniel Stevens Smith ... 17 . H.U. 1869; Lawyer. George Phillips Spooner ... 15 . Business. Frank Nash Stuart 17 . Postal Clerk. Emanuel Sullavon 19 . Lawyer. Frank Henry Towle ...... 15 . James Fisher Tweedy 15. Univ. Mich. 1870; Business. John Butler Tytus 15 . Paper Manufacturer. Charles Mitchell Underwood . 15 . Daniel Barker Veazey 22 . Teaclier and Aejent. William Rotch Ware 15 . H.U. 1871; Architect and Editor. Arthur Harrison Weston ... 21 . Mandell Webster Weston ... 18 . Judson Board man Wilds ... 17 . H.U. 1871; Lawyer. Walter Thaxter Winsor . ... 16 . H.U. 1870; Business. Dillwyn Wistar 19 . Conveyancer. 18 65. Wallace Conduit Barker ... 17 . *Frank James Bean 13 . Business. Horace Berry 19 . M.D.; Physician. Henry Otis Billings 18 . Charles Roberts Brickett ... 14 . H.U. 1872; Lawyer. Edward Burritt Brown ....17. Horace Brown 14 . H.U. 1872; LL.B; Lawyer. William Nelson Callender ... 22 . Frank Linus Childs 15 . B.U. 1870; A.M.; LL.B. ; Lawyer. George Enoch Cilley 14 . Business. *Benjamin Franklin Clark . . .13 . Student, Dart. Coll. Walter Clifford 16 . H.U. 1871; LL.B.; Lawyer. Charles Ross Clifton 22 . LL.B. ; Cle-rk War Dept. Virgil Roscoe Connor 18 . H.U. 1871; Business. Edwin Dillingham Crowell . . 14 . Dorrance Babcock Currier. . . 19 . Real Estate Agent. Lebanon, Me. Kingston, N.Y. New York, N.Y. Dorchester, Mass. Detroit, Mich. Springfield, 111. Omaha, Neh. New Bedford, Mass. <( (( Exeter. Milwaukee, Wis. New York, N.Y. Middle town, O. Adrian, Mich. Brentwood. Hematite, Mo. Baltimore, Md. Boston, Mass. Skowhegan, Me. Skowhegan, Me. New York, N.Y. « (( Brookline, Mass. Boston, Mass. Philadelphia, Pa. 80 Michigan City, Ind. Deerfield. Boston, Mass. Newington. Boston, Mass. Newton, Mass. Haverhill, Mass. (( (< Seaford, Del. West Newbury, Mass. Salem, Mass. Albany, N.Y. Worcester, Mass. <( (( Exeter. Boston, Mass. Stratham 1873 New Bedford, Mass. (( <( « McCleary, Pa. Washington, D.C. Fairfield, Me. (( <( East Dennis, Mass. Hanover. 1865.] CATALOGUE. HI * George Wallace Damon . . . 16 . . . No. Marshfield, Mass. 1868 Edwin Calvin Eastman .... 16 . . Exeter. Apothecary. South Berwick, Me. Winfield Scott Edgerly . . . 19 . . . Farmington. Lieut. U.S. Army. Walter Ela . 16 . . . Washington, D.C. H.U. 1871; M.D.; Physician. Cambridge, Mass. Hiohard Ela 14 . . . Washington, D.C. Cambridge, Mass. H.U. 1871; LL.B.; Business. Willinm Hpnrv Elliot . 15 . . . Keene. TT IXX.lCl'lll AAV-'IJ.I- V A^AHVyv • • • • H.U. 1872; LL.B.; Lawyer. Lewis Jonathan Elliot 15 . . Exeter. Dentist. Joseph Albert Fairbrother . . . 19 . . . St. Albans, Me. Oilman Clark Fisher .... 24 . . . Brookline. C.U. 1869; Supt. Public Schools. Weymouth, Mass. Edgar Adams Fletcher . . . 16 . . . Exeter. Teacher. Grand Rapids, Mich. Herbert Folsom 14 . . Newmarket. Farmer. Kansas. John Brown Gerrish 16 . . New Bedford, Mass. H.U. 1871; Business. New York, N.Y. Moses Brooks Gould ..... 15 . . Cincinnati, 0. Gustavus Goward 18 . . Newton, Mass. H.U. 1869; A.M.; Consular Service David Calvin Hedden * 17 . . . New Orleans, La. Merchant. (I K (( Louis Prevaux Hervey .... 17 . . Exeter. Business. Boston, Mass. *Joseph Gibson Hoyt 14 . . . Hanover 1871 Dart. Coll. 1870; Clerk. Frank Whittemore Hunt . . . 16 . . Nashua. William Marshall Janes .... 17 . . Paris, Tenn. YaleColl. 1871; Lawyer. « (( Edward Adolphus Joachimson. 17 . . Birmingham, Conn. William Neil King 16 . . . Columbus, 0. H.U. 1871; Bank Cashier. Cincinnati, 0. John Lord King 15 . . . Springfield, Mass. H.U. 1871; Lawyer. Syracuse, N.Y. *Elijah Howard Lewis 19 . . . Brooklyn, N.Y. . . . 1875 H.U. 1871.^ David Loring 15 . . . Concord, Mass. Civil En.^neer. Portland, Oregon. Francis Ogden Lyman .... 19 . . . Hilo, Hawaian Islands. H.U. 1871; LL.B.; Lawyer. Chicago, m. Tilly Lynde 15 . . . Milwaukee, Wis. Real Estate Agent. (( (( John Drake Marston 13 . . . Rye. Farmer. u James McCobb 16 . . . . Portland, Me. Business. (( (< ♦Herbert James McDonald . . . 20 . . . Boston, Mass. ... 1876 William McGregor 21 . . . Boston, Mass. George Ashbury McLaughlin . 14 . . . Newmarket. Clergyman. Haverhill, Mass. * Gordon Mitchell 23 . . . Plain ville, Conn. . . 1878 Union Coll. 1869; Clergyman. Morrisiana, N.Y. *Alfred Johnson Monroe .... 16 . . . Belfast, Me 1875 Bowd. Coll. 1871; Law Student. (( <( 112 CATALOGUE. [1865. Robert Brown Morison .... 14 . M.D.; Physician. Charles Freeman Nye 15 . H.U. 1870; Lawyer. Edward Luther Parks 15 . M.D.; Physician. Willard Silsbee Peele 17*. John Howard Phelps 14 . *Vincent Enyart Phipps .... 16 . George Arthur Poor 22 . Farmer. George Adin Pushee 14 . Tailor. Dwight Rice Putnam 17 . John Edwin Reid 20 . John Hamilton Rice IG . Business. Sylvester Warren Rice .... 22 . H.U. 1871; Lawyer. *Homer Richardson 19 . Charles Edwin Richmond ... 15 . *George Willabee Rogers ... 15 . Morgan Rotch 17. H.U. 1871; Business. Walter Rednal Ruddock ... 15 . Business. John Owen Stearns 15 . Daniel Avery Stevens 15 . Ralph Stone 16 . H.U. 1872; Lawyer. Josiah Eugene Stone 18 . George Seabury Sumner ... 15 . Business. Henry Walton Swift 15 . H.U. 1871; LL.B.; Lawyer. William Thornton 16. Salesman. Charlemagne Tower 17. H.U. 1872; Lawyer. Eugeile Tread well 14 . H.U. 1872; LL.B.; Lawyer. Samuel Epes Turner 18 . H.U. 1869; A.M.; LL.B. George Albert Tuxbury .... 15 . Business. Lucian Augustus Wait .... 19 . H.U. 1870; Assist. Prof. Math. Corn. Univ. William Brigham Walker ... 16 . Business. Raymond Lee Ward 17 . Business. Eli Washburn 17 . Eliott Butler Whiting 15 . Treasurer. *Francis Eugene Whitney ... 15 . H.U. 1872. Baltimore, Md. Champlain, N.Y. . Salem, Mass. Boston, Mass. . Boston, Mass. . Cincinnati, 1869 . Andover, Me. Oxford, Me. . Exeter. Boston, Mass. . Newtonville, Mnss. . Greenfield, 111. . Boston, Mass- es (( . Roseburg, Oregon. Portland, Oregon. . Dover ........ 1870 . Exeter. . Salem, Mass 1881 . New Bedford, Mass. (( (( (( . West Newbury, Mass. Boston, Mass. . Elizabeth, N.J. . Exeter. . Norridgewock, Me. Buffalo, N.Y. . Saxon ville, Mass. . Boston, Mass. . New Bedford, Mass. Boston, Mass. . New Bedford, Mass. Brooklyn, N.Y. . Potts ville, Pa. Philadelphia, Pa. . New York, N.Y. (( (( . Baltimore, Md. . Amesbury, Mass. Haverhill, Mass. . Highgate, Vt. Ithaca, N.Y. . Springfield, Mass. (< (< . New York, N.Y. <( (( . Middleborough, Mass. . New York, N.Y. (( (( . Stow, Mass 1873 1865-66.] CATALOGUE. lis Richard Clark Wilby 15 . Lawyer. Ellwood Wilson 16 . Lawyer. Arno Samuel Wilson 17 . Farmer. Leon Baldwin Wolfe 17 . Manufacturer. Charles Fuller Woodard. ... 17 . H.U. 1870; LL.B.; Teacher. Augustus Gustavus Wooster . 25 . *. Cincinnati, O. << (( . Philadelphia, Pa. <( (( . Kittery, Me. . Lewisburg, Pa. <( (< . Bangor, Me. <( < ( . Hancock, Me. 89 1866. Herbert Baxter Adams . . . . 16 . . . Amherst, Mass. Amh. Coll. 1872; A.M. ; Ph.D.; Fellow in Hist., Baltimore, Md. Johns Hopkins Univ. Joseph Longworth Andersor I . 15 . . . Cincinnati, 0. M.D.; Physician. <( (( John Avery . . 21 . . . Brandon, Vt. M.D.; Physician. Wallingford, Vt. John Coleman Avery . . . . . 18 . . . Cincinnati, 0. H.U. 1872. Charles Edwin Batchelder . . . 17 . . . North Hampton. H.U. 1873; Lawyer. Portsmouth. George Schuyler Bates . . . . 15 . . . New York, N.Y. H.U. 1872; LL.B.; Journalist. Boston, Mass. William Appleton Bell . . . 15 . . . Boston, Mass. H.U. 1873; M.D.; Physician. Somerville, Mass. Woodbury Blair . 15 . . . Washington, D.C. H.U. 1874; Lawyer. <( (( Nathaniel Horace Blodgett . 16 . . . Kensington. Clerk. Boston, Mass. Osborn Francis Brashear . . 15 . . . Cincinnati, O. Accountant. Minneapolis, Minn. *George Henry Bragdon . . . . 14 . . . Exeter Henry Judson Brickett . . . 16 . . . Haverhill, Mass. M.D.; Physician. Columbus, Neb. Frank Obadiah Briggs . . . . 15 . . . Hillsborough. West Point, U.S.A. William Russell Burleigh . . 15 . . . Great Falls. Lawyer. (( . . . Ansonia, Conn. 128 CATALOGUE. [1871-72. Isaiah Thomas ........ 15 Farmer. Henry Burton Thompson ... 17 Charles Henry Vinton .... 16 H.U. 1878. *Donald Reed Watson 16 *Charles Warren Weeks .... 16 Barge Christopher Weidman . 16 William Lang Wheeler .... 1^ Lawyer. John William Whidden .... 15 M.D. ; Physician. Edgar Adams Wilson 17 M.D. ; Physician. John Flack Winslow 16 H.U. 1876; Lawyer. Charles Henry Wiswell .... 19 H.U. 1877; Teacher. George Edward Woodberry ..16 H.U. 1877; Journalist; Author. Boston, Mass. Goffstown. Hillsborough, O. Boston, Mass. Windsor Hill, Conn. 1875 . Lake Village . . . Lebanon, Pa. . New York, N.Y. (( It . Lancaster. Saco, Me. . Meriden, Conn. Rockville, Conn. . Cincinnati, O. (< (( . Little Falls, N.Y. Boston, Mass. . Beverly, Mass. 1879 92 18 7 2, Harlan Page Amen . . . H.U. 1879; Teacher. Benjamin Francis Bailey Teacher. William Amos Bancroft . H.U. 1878; Lawyer. Richard Banfield .... Edmond Lincoln Baylies H.U. 1879; Lawyer. *John Anderson Blodgett M.D.; Physician. Henry Albert Brown . . M.D.; Physifcian, John Augustus Brown . H.U. 1880; Teacher. Edgar Stickney Buffum . Yale Coll. 1877; Manufacturer Melville Bull H.U. 1877 ; Farmer. John Micajah Burleigh Will. Coll. ; Lawyer. George Henry Burrill . H.U. 1879; Theological Student Harry Butler H.U. 1879; Bank Clerk. George Minot Butler . H.U. 1881; Miner. George Byron Chapman M.D.; Physician. *Edward Francis Chase Law Student. John Edwin Chesley . Agent. Alva Hector Cluck . . . 19 . . 17 . . 19 . . 16 . . 14 . . 17 . . 17 . . 15 . . 16 . . 17 . . 17 . . 15 Union Sem 14 . . 16 . . 22 . . 14 . . 18 . . 14 . . Portsmouth, O. Poughkeepsie, N.Y. . Columbia, S.C. Union, S.C. . Groton, Mass. Cambridge, Mass. . Washington, D.C. . Taunton, Mass. (( (( . Kensington 1880 Detroit, Mich. . Peabody, Mass. Reading, Mass. . Exeter. » (( . Great Falls. <( (( . Newport, R.I. <( (( . South Berwick, Me. Lafayette, Ind. . Gloversville, N.Y. New York, N.Y. . Portland, Me. <( (( . Philadelphia, Pa. Bonanza, Col. . Dover Plains, N.Y. Amenia, N.Y. . New York, N.Y. . . 1880 (( (( . Amesbury, Mass. (( (< . Niagara Falls, N.Y. 1872.] CATALOGUE. 129 Frederic Fletcher Cole . . Edward Colony Business. Samuel Wells Cummings . Henri Dnquesnet Dillaye . Lawyer. * George Lyman Dolloff . . H.U. 1879; Teacher. Herbert Hamilton Drake . H.U. 1877; Banker. William Riddle Duncklee . Business. Frank De Maurice Dunn . H.U. 1879; Teacher. Frederic Augustus Faulkner Manufacturer. John Winthrop Fiske . . . Amh. Coll. 187G; Lawyer. *Otis Ward Garland .... Student, Bowd. Coll. Edward Hale H.U. 1879; Secretary. John Butterworth Harding H.U. 1878; Clergyman. Robert Orr Harris . . . H.U. 1877; Lawyer. Melvin George Hartzell Clerk. Charles Bell Hibbard . Dart. Coll. 1876; Lawyer. Jerome Hilbourn . . . Merchant (Boston, Mass.). William Burr Hill . . . Student, Yale Coll. Hector Morrison Hitchings Lawyer. Oscar William Hodgdon . Medical Student. George Arthur Holhrook . Bowd. Coll. 1877; A.M.; Clergyman. *Isaac Tatem Hopper ... William De Greet Howard H.U. 1879; Business. Edward Wells Huntington IBu.siii6SS William De Witt Hyde . . H.U. 1879; Clergyman. Alexander Fridge Jamieson Johns Hopk. UniX^. 1879; Teacher Benjamin Newhall Johnson Lawyer (Boston, Mass.). Herbert Stanton Jordan . . M.D.; Physician. Aaron Hobart Latham . . H.U. 1877; Lawyer. Charles Samuel Mack . . . H.U. 1879. Joseph Griffiths Masten . . Student in Architecture. . 17 . 19 . 16 . 18 . 14 15 18 17 15 . . 15 14 18 14 . 16 . 17 . 15 . . Rochester, Minn. . Keene. . Boston, Mass. Rome, Italy. . Syracuse, N.Y. . Exeter 1882 . Newport, R.I. New York, N.Y. . New York, N.Y. Fredonia, N.Y. . Northbridge, Mass. . Keene. (( . Bath, Me. New York, N.Y. . Gloucester, Mass. . . 1877 . 21 . . 17 . . 17 . . 16 . . . Northampton, Mass. Cambridge, Mass. . Philadelphia, Pa. Bryn Maur, Pa. . Boston, Mass. East Bridgewater, Mass. . St. Joseph, Mo. Sabetha, Kan. . Laconia. Boston, Mass. . . Chelsea, Mass. . . New Rochelle, N.Y. . . New York, N.Y. (( li i( . . Kensington. . . Portsmouth. Belle vue, O. . . Philadelphia, Pa. . . Chicago, 111. 16 . . . Lowell, Mass. 13 . . . Southbridge, Mass. 15 . . . Alexandria, D.C. Trenton, N.J. 16 . . . Saugus, Mass. Lynn, Mass. 14 . . . Exeter. Brownfield, Me. 17 . . . East Bridgewater, Mass. Boston, Mass. 15 ... St. Louis, Mo. 19 . . . Buffalo. N.Y. 130 CATALOGUE. [1872. Frederic Tidd Merrill 15 . Frank Warren Miller 15 . Lawyer. Charles Emmett Miller ....19. Teacher. * William Edwin Moore 16 . Bookkeeper. *Hickey Hunt Morgan 14 . John James Nairn 15 . Mikkel Nielson 22 . R.R. Business. ' Edwin Jay Nelson 17 . Business. William Taylor Newton .... 22 . Corporation Cashier. Abner Merrill Osgood 20 . Boston Univ.; A.M.; S.T.B.; Teacher. Harrison Perry Page ..... 15 . Jacob Cansler Patton . H.U. 1877. George Rose Peck . . . Editor. Guy Carlton Phinney . Real Estate Agent. Earl Bill Putnam . . . H.U. 1879; Lawyer. George Randolph . . . Auditor. Frank Thomas Ransom *Edward Prescott Reed H.U. 1878. Gilman Parker Robinson Stock Raising. Herbert Judson Robinson U.S. Navy. Warren Merton Robinson ... 15 . H.U. 1878; Bookkeeper. Bronson Rumsey ....... 19 . BusinGss* Frank Thomas Rusk 19 . H.U. 1877; Principal High School. George Wilcox Salter 15 . Henry Augustus Shute .... 15 . H.U. 1879; Lawyer; Judge Police Court. James Theophilus Simpson . . 16 . Forrest Starr Smith 15 . Farmer, Willard Everett Smith .... 16 . H.U. 1879; Medical Student, H.U. Gerardus Smith . 14 . Lawyer. Edward Eppes Sparhawk ... 19 . Teacher. *Albert Eri Spaulding 19 . Teacher. James Page Stimson 14 . Lawyer. Gerrit Smith Sykes 20 . H.U. 1877; Teacher. 19 . 19 . 20 . 16 . 16 . 21 . 17 . 16 . 13 . . Haverhill. . Albany, N.Y. New York, N.Y. . St. Joseph, Mo. a a ii . Helena, Ark 1883 (( <( . New Orleans, La. . . 1880 . Washington, D.C. . Lindbergmark, Denmark. Boston, Mass. . Little Falls, N.Y. (( (C (( . Boston, Mass. . Raymond. Provincetown, Mass. . Watertown, Mass. . Morganstown, N.C. Cambridge, Mass. . Auburn, N.Y. . Wilmot, N.S. Seattle, Washington Ter. . Waterville, N.Y. Rochester, N.Y. . Nor walk, O. St. Louis, Mo. . St. Joseph, Mo. . Stow, Mass 1882 . Providence, R.I. Colorado. . Brentwood. . Taunton, Mass. Lynn, Mass. . Buffalo, N.Y. (( (( . St. Joseph, Mo. a « it . New York, N.Y. . Exeter. (C . Exeter. . Durham. . Schenectady, N.Y. . Schenectady, N.Y. . Boston, Mass. . Milford 1875 Princeville, 111. . Wiscasset, Me. Leavenworth, Kan. . Mercer, Pa. Cijicinnati, 0. 1872-73.] CATALOGUE. *George Phillips Tappan . Bookkeeper. Frederic VVinslow Taylor . . 14 . . Helena, Ark ] . . 16 . . Philadelphia, Pa. Mechanical Engineer. Germantown, Pa. William Reuben Taylor . . . 20 . . Jefferson, N.Y. H.U. 1877; Lawyer. u « Hubert Engelbert Toschemacher 16 . . San Francisco, Cal. H.U. 1878; Stock Raising. Cheyenne, Wyoming Ter. Roswell Payson Thompson . . 19 . . Exeter. Business. (( Edward Kimball Tricke}^ . . . 16 . . Belmont, Mass. R.R. Contractor. Indian Cove, P.Q. James Arthur Tufts . . . . . 16 . . Alstead. H.U. 1878; Instructor, P.E.A. Exeter. Charles Tuttle . . 18 . . Oakland, Cal. Joseph Warren Ware . . . . 22 . . Sherburne, Mass. R.R. Contractor. Memphis, Tenn. Edward Graeff West . . . . 17 . • . Exeter. H.U. 1877; M.D.; Physician. Boston, Mass. John Charles Wheeler . . . . . 13 . . . New York, N.Y. (C (( << Joseph White . . . 18 . . . Winchendon, Mass. H.U. 1877; Teacher. Cincinnati, 0. John Howard Willard . . . . . 17 . . . Boston, Mass. Farmer. Lexington, Mass. Henry Austin Wood . . . . . 16 . . . West Upton, Mass. H.U. 1878; M.D.; Physician. Boston, Mass. James Anderson Wright . . 15 . . Philadelphia, Pa. 131 H.U. 1879; Business. 96 1873 Joseph Tarbell Adams . . . . . 17 . . . Cherryfield, Me. Salesman. Portland, Me. Charles William Allen . . . . 18 . . . Flemington, N.J. M.D.; Physician. New York, N.Y. Thomas Ray Ashbrook . . . . 19 . . . St. Joseph, Mo. Clerk. ti it Edward Richardson Bacon . 16 . . Chicago, 111. H.U. 1878; Merchant. a fi Charles William Bacon . . . . 17 . . . Natick, Mass. H.U. 1879; Lawyer. Boston, Mass. Frank Woods Baker . . . . 17 . . Boston, Mass. H.U. 1881. Frederic Ogden de Billier . . 16 . . Yonkers, N.Y. H.U. 1878; Stock Raising. Cheyenne, Wyoming Ter .John Boit . 15 . . Boston, Mass. Student in Architecture. New York, N.Y. Benjamin Davis Bond . . . . 20 . . Hawaii Kohala, S.I. Nicholas Penniman Bond . . 18 . . Baltimore, Md. Lawyer. u u Hugh Lenox Bond .... . . 14 . . . Baltimore, Md. H.U. 1880; Lawyer. U ii Graham Bennett Bristol . . . . 20 . . . Brooklyn, N.Y. Edward Brooks . 16 . . . Boston, Mass. Broker's Clerk. « (( Henrv Brooks . . 16 . . . Boston, Mass. Student in Arboriculture. (( n 132 CATALOGUE. [1873 Harry Austin Buffum . Yale Coll. 1880; Manufacturer Walter Allen Burleigh . Manufacturer. ♦Francis Mieajah Burleigh Charles Ernest Byington Bank Clerk. John Daniel Canerdy . . Austin Kilham Chad wick Bank Clerk. George Locke Cheney . H.U. 1878; Lawyer. ♦William George Cochrane ♦Franklin Dyer Student, Bowd. CoU. Daniel Henry Felch . . . Bowd. Coll. 1878; Teacher. William Proctor Ferguson Bowd. Coll. 1880; Teacher. Frank Morrill Fogg . . . .Journalist. William Howard Folsom H.U. 1881; Clerk. ♦Gideon Sheldon Fuller Univ. Vt. 1879; Lawyer. Zebina Allston Gleason H.U. 1878; Surveyor. Nathaniel Gordon, jr. . Yale Coll. 1880: Bank Clerk ♦Arthur Gorham .... Thomas Bryan Gunning Dentist. George Howell Halberstadt M.D.; Physician. John Cooley Halstead . . . Edward Holland Hastings Treasurer Bijou Theatre. Henry Clinton Hay .... H.U. 1878; Theological Student, Charles Peter Hemenway . George Howard Henderson Bookkeeper. George Andrew Henderson William Bancroft Hill H.U. 1879; Lawyer. William Preston Hill Henry Hitchings . . Yale Coll. 1881; Law Student. Charles Austin Hobbs H.U. 1880; Teacher, St. Marks Walter Allston Holman . Business. Frederic Eleazer Home . Commercial Traveller. Rufus King Howell, jr. . H.U. 1880; Planter. James King Hoyt .... 15 17 16 17 18 15 Great Falls. Milton. South Berwick, Me. 16 14 17 16 20 18 15 17 18 14 15 14 17 15 16 20 16 16 17 16 15 13 16 15 17 14 14 Great Falls Exeter. 1876 Vt. 1875 Waterbury, Exeter. Lowell, Mass. Essex, Conn. New York, N.Y. Maiden, Mass. Gloucester, Mass. , Ayer, Mass. Cheney, Wash. Ter. Shapleigh, Me. Deerfield. Auhurn, Me. Exeter. Boston, Mass. North Ferrisburg, Vt. 1883 Denver, Col. Westborough, Mass. San Angelo, Tex. Exeter. New York, N.Y. Exeter 1873 New York, N.Y. (( (t Pottsville, Pa. (( (( Harrison, N.Y. Walpole. Boston, Mass. Portland, Me. Boston, Mass. Machias, Me. Portland, Me. Dover. New York, N.Y. Temple. Baltimore, Md. St. Louis, Mo. Graveseud, L.I. New York, N.Y. Exeter. Southborough, Mass. Cambridge, Mass. Boston, Mass. Dover. Boston, Mass. New Orleans, La. Bayou Sara, La. New York, N.Y. 1873.] CATALOGUE. 133 Ruf us Petibody Hubbard ... 17 M.D.; Physician. Samuel Hutchings 21 Ernest Henrv Jackson .... 15 Coll. N.J. 1880; Lawyer. William Henry Judson .... 19 M.D.; Physician. Curtis Asahel Kibling 15 Dart. Coll. 1880; Teacher. John Cone Kimball 16 Student in Archaeology. Henr}^ Wilson King 16 Lawyer. Frank Learned . 19 Manufacturer. William Pollock Learned ... 16 H.u. 1880. ^ James Lewis Manker 22 William Halleck McCord ... 18 Merchant. Francis McLennan 16 H.U. 1879;" Law Student. Ogden Mills 16 H.U. 1878; Business. Edwin Wilson Morse 18 H.U. 1878; Journalist. Samuel Newell Nelson .... 17 H.U. 1878; M.D.; Physician. Charles Stuart Nisbet 17 Lawyer. *Frederic Bennett Oakes .... 1 7 M.D. John O'Connor 20 Lawyer. Walter Henry Parker 17 Business. Charles Booth Peck ...... 16 Chester Mead Perry 18 Lawyer. John Quincy Adams Pettingill 17 Lawyer. John Quincy Pike 18 Business. Arthur Salem Plimpton .... 15 Clerk. Barrett Potter 16 Bowd. Coll. 1878; Law Student. William Carroll Price 15 Henry King Richardson .... 16 Edwards Roberts 18 R.R. Business. John Whipple Robinson ... 19 Journalist. Henry Ellis Ruggles 15 Charles Frederic Sampson ... 18 Merchant. Stewart Shillito 16 Business. . Wells, Me. Boston, Mass. . Louisville, Ky. . New York, N.Y. « tt . Mendon, Mass. Wauregan, Conn. . South Strafford, Vt. Elk Point, D.T. . Brookfield, Mass. Boston, Mass. . North Brookfield, Mass. Worcester, Mass. . Pittsfield, Mass. . Pittsfield, Mass. . Shenandoah, Page Co., Ta. . St. Joseph, Mo. Omaha, Neb. . Montreal, P.Q. <( (( . San Francisco, Cal. New York, N.Y. . Natick, Mass. New York, N.Y. . Miltbrd, Mass. Cambridge, Mass. . Avon, Livingston Co., N.Y. Amsterdam, N.Y. . South Berwick, Me. . 1877 . Indianapolis, Ind. Huron, D.T. . Exeter. St. Louis, Mo. . Bridgeport, Conn. . East Abington, Mass. Boston, Mass. . East Salisbury, Mass. . Epping. . Stockbridge, Mass. Brooklyn, N.Y. . Topsham, Me. Brunswick, Me. . St. Clair, Pa. Eddington, Pa. . Boston, Mass. . Boston, Mass. Denver, Col. . Concord. Biddeford, Me. . Upton, Mass. . North Brookfield, Mass. Worcester, Mass. . Cincinnati, O. 134 CATALOGUE. [1873-74. Joseph Theophilus Stevens . . 16 . Business. William Wallace Stickney ... 20 . Lawyer. Ambrose Talbot 13 . H.U. 1881 ; Medical Student. Edward Winslow Taylor ... 18 . M.D.; Pliysician. Arthur Moxen Teschemacher. . 15 . Stock Raising. Joseph Herbert Towle 14 . Samuel Maverick Van Wyck . 16 . Merchant. Richard Merriam Welton ... 18 . William Henry Wheeler .... 18 . Business. Isaac Spaulding Wliiting ... 14 . H.U. 1882; Law Student, H.U. James Herbert Winslow . ... 16 . Robert Winsor 14 . H.U. 1880; Bankers' Clerk. John Gerrish Wood 14 . H.U. 1881; Teacher. . West Epping. Epping. . Tj'son Furnace, Vt. Ludlow, Vt. . Everett, Mass. Boston, Mass. . Philadelphia, Pa. Germantown, Pa. . San Francisco, Cal. . Epping. Exeter. . Anderson, S.C. (( ii . Washington, D.C. . Faribault, Minn. << <( . Wilton. . Portland, Me. . Winchester, Mass. Boston, Mass. . Exeter. Philadelphia, Pa. 92 1874. Henry Fisk Adams .... M.D.: Pliysician. Charles Noah Allen .... M.D.; Physician. Alexander Bonnell Allen . Druggist. Charles William Andrews . Charles Edward Atwood . H.U. 1880; C.U. 1881; Teacher. James Woods Babcock . . H.U. 1882; Medical Student, H.U. Dana Chase Barber . . . Dart. Coll., Civil Engineer. William Ransom Barbour Yale Coll. 1880; Lawyer. Henry Taylor Barstow . H.U. 1880; Medical Student, H.U. Charles Ham matt Bartlett . Law Student, H.U. *Ellery Webster Bates . . . Chas. Frederic Tiffany Beale H.U. 1880; Lawyer. Nathaniel Maynard Brigham H.U. 1880; Govt. Service. Charles Roscoe Brooks . . . Farmer. Charles Frederic Burgess . . Publisher. Frank Oliver Carpenter . . . H.U. 1880: Law Student. 17 16 17 15 16 18 15 16 15 15 17 17 18 17 19 16 Peterborough. Boston, Mass. Burlington, Vt. Sheldon, Vt. Flemington, N.J. « (< Boston, Mass. Exeter. Chester, S.C. West Epping. New York, N.Y. Bangor, Me. New York, N.Y. Boston, Mass. Bangor, Me. HinghamCenter ,Mass. 18 76 Hudson, N.Y. (( (( Natick, Mass. Boston, Mass. Farmington. New Durham. Middleborough, Mass. Plainfield, Conn. Milford, Mass. Lexington, Mass. 1874.] CATALOGUE. 135 Edward Broadway Carter ... 16 . Student, College of N.J. Henry W. Chalfant 19 . Farmer. William Chalfant, jr 16 . Law Student. Wm. James Logan Chisbolm . 16 . Manufacturer. Edwin Franklin Cloutman ... 26 . Lawyer. Frederic Charles Cowper ... 23 . Clergyman. Dana Bradford Cram 16 . Farmer. Thomas Turpin Crittenden ..17. Charles Alfred Cross 16 . Louis Cunningham 14 . Frank Moody Curtiss 18 . • Business. George Chalmers Cutler .... 17 . Law Student. Charles Augustus Dean .... 17 . *George Spackman Downing . . 17 . Alfred Ela 16 . Manufacturer. William Fallon 15 . George Nicholas Farwell ... 16 . Bank Cashier. Charles Barrows Fletcher ... 14 . Sec. Atlas Machine Co. Jesse Fletcher 12 . Student, H.U. Frederic Gardiner 14 . H.U. 1880; Theological Student. Henry Parsons Garland .... 14 . Business. Walter Woolfolk Greene ... 17 . R.R. Clerk. Alfred Francis Greenleaf ... 13 . Hotel Clerk. Ezekiel Jas. Madison Hale . . 14 . William Dudley Hall 17 . H.U. 1880: Medical Student, H.U. Alexander Harvey 16 . H.U. 1881. Eugene Dexter Hawkins ... 14 . H.U. 1881. Frederic Hayes 14 . B.U. 1881. John Joseph Hayes 20 . Elocutionist. Cyrus Foss Hill 15 . Lucius Henry Hobbs 21 . Walter Granville Hodgdon . . 17 . Business. Caspar Hopple 18 . Frank Whitehouse Howe Business. 15 . Henderson, Md. Princeton, N.J. . Union ville, Chester Co. , Pa. (( <( (( (( . Unionville, Chester Co., Pa. West Chester, Pa. . Cleveland, O. <( (( . Farmington. Milton Mills. . Buenos Ay res, S.A. Island Pond, Vt. . Raymond. (( . San Francisco, Cal. . Lynn, Mass. . White Plains, N.Y. . Yonkers, N.Y. New York, N.Y. . Bangor, Me. (( (< . Le Roy, N.Y. . Wilmington, Del. . . 1876 . Cambridge, Mass. . San Jose, Cal. . Claremont. (( . Indianapolis, Ind. . Indianapolis, Ind. . Middletown, Conn. (( <( . Biddeford, Me. (( <( . Faribault, Minn. New York, N.Y. . Exeter. Amesbury, Mass. . Chicago, 111. . Bridgeport, Conn. . Baltimore, Md. . New York, N.Y. . Providence, R.I. (< (I . Boston, Mass. i( (( . Jamaica, L.I. . Broolvfield, Mass. . Kensington. Haverhill, IMass. . Cincinnati, O. << <( . Lowell, Mass. 136 CATALOGUE. [1874. ♦Frank Ahira Hoy t 16 Frank Colhoon Huidekoper . . 17 H.U. 1880; Civil Engineer. Homer Austin Huntington . . 17 M.D. Frederic Daniel Hussey .... 17 Medical Student, H.U. Thomas Parker Ivy 20 H.U. 1881 ; Business. William Augustus Johnson . . 16 M.D.; Physician. Emery Walter Johnson .... 16 Charles MacVeagh 14 H.U. 1881; Law Student. Thomas Mahoney 14 Walter Irving McCoy 14 H.U. 1882. John Daniel McOann 18 Clergyman. Harry Hayes Morgan 13 Sec. Legation. George Frederic Morse .... 16 Journalist. George Storer Motley 17 H.U. 1879; Business. Albert Henry Moulton . . . .16 Yale Coll. 1881 ; Real Estate Broker. William Gilman Pollock .... 25 Waldo Alton Rich 18 Bookkeeper. Christian Henry Sampson Business. . *WilUam Gorham Sawyer Wilhelm George Schaus . BusinGSS • William Abiel Scott . ..... 18 Lawyer. Charles Walter Scribner ... 16 Coll. N.J. 1880; Engineer. Henry Sayre Scribner 15 Coll. N.j! 1881; Teacher. Frederic William Sharon ... 17 H.U. 1881. Samuel Wiggins Skinner ... 16 H.U. 1880; Electrician. George Frederic Spalding ... 15 H.U. 1882; Salesman. Hay ward Stetson 17 H.U. 1879; Medical Student, H.U. Frank Benjamin Swain .... 20 Henry Hillard Taylor ..... 14 Lumher Dealer. George Eugene Titcomb .... 19 M.D.; Physician. Clarence Constant Tucker . . . 21 John Samuel Warren 15 Lawyer. Alfred Jerome Watson .... 1 6 William Livingston Watson . . 18 . 16 . 14 . 15 . Grafton 1874 . Meadville, Pa. Hofer's Gap, Va. . Amesbury, Mass. . Lowell, Mass. . Gainsville, Ala. Hogansville, Ga. . Saco, Me. Lowell, Mass. . Salem, Mass. . Harrisburg, Pa. New York, N.Y. . Wilton. . Troy, N.Y. (( (( . Milford, Mass. Millbury, Mass. . New Orleans, La. Mexico. . Clinton, Mass. (( (< . Lowell, Mass. . Kittery, Me. New Haven, Conn. ^ . Washington, Wash. Co., Pa. . Philadelphia, Pa. Portland, Me. . Dorchester, Mass. Boston, Mass. . Utica, N.Y 1876 . New York, N.Y. (( (( . Peterborough. (( . Plainfield, N.J. Jersey City, N.J. . Plainfield, N.J. Great Barrington, Mass. , San Francisco, Cal. . Cincinnati, O. . Boston, Mass. . Bangor, Me. . Brentwood. . Boston, Mass. San Bernardino, Cal. . Exeter. Concord, Mass. . Pepperell, Mass. . Granville, N.Y. New York, N.Y. . Yonkers, N.Y. . Utica, N.Y. 1874-76.] CATALOGUE. 137 Natha,niel Rowe Webster ... 15 Edward Spencer Wentwortli . 1 7 Student in Music. Frederic Weston 17 Timothy Lester Woodruff ... 16 Gloucester, Mass. Boston, Mass. Stamford, Conn. New Haven, Conn. 98 18 7 5, David Wilson Abbott 16 . Farmer. Frederic Horace Adams .... 15 . Rufus Green Angell 15 . Columbia Coll. 1881; Business. Philip Bowers Ashley 18 . Bank Clerk. Luther Atwood 15. Student, H.U. William Daniel Baker 20 . Farmer. Bruce Burley Barney 16 . Business. William Webster Bates .... 16 . Business. David Nevins Baxter 14 . Student, H.U. George Francis Blood 15 . Business. Summerfield Berry Bond ... 14 . Student. Benjamin Metcalf Borland . . 16 . H.U. 1881; R.R. Clerk. Frederic Brooks 17 . Artist. Frank Taylor Brown 14 . Ranching. Frederic Dennison Browning . 18 . Charles Renwick Breck .... 16 . Merchant. George Clifford Buell, jr. ... 16 . H.U. 1882. Frederic Dent Casey 13 . Alfred Henry Cohen ..... 17 . Lawyer. Edgar Andrew Cohen 16 . Broker. Henry Glidden Cushman ... 16 . Business. Joseph Benjamin Dimmick . . 15 . Yale Coll. 1881; Lawyer. Julian Pierce Dunn 18 . Instructor, Shaw Univ. Charles Edwin Dyer 15 . Clerk. AlfredFallon 15 . James Deering Fessenden . . . 17 . H.U. 1880: Law Student. . Exeter. Raymond. . Indianapolis, Ind. . New York, N.Y. . Dighton, Mass. Providence, R.I. . Exeter. . Plymouth. Rumney. . Toledo, O. Chicago, 111. . Cohasset, Mass. Beechwood, Mass. . Rutland, Vt. . Wilton. Nashua. . Baltimore, Md. <( (< . New Castle, Me. Boston, Mass. . Boston, Mass. Paris, France. . Framingham, Mass. Laramie, Wyoming Ter. . Perryville, R.I. . Benicia, Cal. Durango, Col. . Rochester, N.Y. . New Orleans, La. . San Francisco, Cal. . San Francisco, Cal. . Brookline, Mass. Boston, Mass. . Honesdale, Pa. (( (( . Ludlow, Vt. Raleigh, N.C. . Exeter. (( . San Jose, Cal. . Portland, Me. 138 CATALOGUE. 11871 Henry Merrill Fessenden ... 15 Real Estate and Ins. Agent. John Fowler 17 Clerk, U.S. Navy. William Ashen Fowler .... 19 Irving Randall Fuller 17 Lawyer. Robert Holmes Greene .... 14 Corporation Paymaster. William Almus Gregg 16 Business. Jacob Halstead 15 Henry Williams Harlow .... 16 H.U. 1882; Medical Student. O'Neil W. R. Hastings .... 16 William Gardner Hempstead . 1 7 Business. Albert Andrew Howai?d .... 16 H.U. 1882; Student. Thomas Marshall Huntington . 16 John Carter Ingersoll 15 Student. James Edward Keating .... 19 M.D.; Physician. Frederic Israel Kelley ..... 16 Thaddeus Davis Kenneson . . 16 H.U. 1880; Law Student, H.U. Chauncey Frederic Kerr . ... 16 Alexander Johnson Kirke ... 19 Daniel Watson Ladd, jr. ... 16 Law Student. '^Alva Watson Ladd 13 Albert French Lane 15 H.U. 1882; Law Student, H.U. Charles Gleason Long 17 Edwin Balcom Lord 22 Lawyer. Arthur Gilman Lovering ... 13 R.R. Station Master. Francis Heber Dana Mason . . IG Thomas Edward McLure ... 1 7 Lawyer. John Francis Merrill 16 Yale Coll. 1881. Charles Mason Mitchell .... 16 Daniel Webster Moriarty . . .17 Clergyman. Edward Irving Morse ..... 19 H.U. 1880; Agent Detroit Safe Co. William Francis O'Callaghan . 19 H.U. 1880; Prin. High School. Edward William Odlin .... 1 5 Business. Frederic Alonzo Parker .... 17 Teacher. Francis Stuyvesant Peabody . 16 Portland, Me. (I (( Winchester, Mass. Washington, D.C. Agawam, Mass. Faribault, Minn. Fullerton, Neb. Brunswick, Me. (( <( Wilton. Nashua. Harrison, N.J. Augusta, Me. Bethel, Me. Chicago, 111. Evanston, 111. Ilion, N.Y. Leipsic, Germany. Amesbury, Mass. Washington, D.C. Milford, Mass. Natick, Mass. Milford, Mass. South Boston, Mass. Andover, Mass. New York, N.Y. Pleasant Hill, Mo. Epping. Epping Exeter. . Amesbury, Mass. (( (( . Tam worth. Warsaw, Wis. . Exeter. Springfield, Mo. . Washington, D.C. . Chester, S.C. . Rutland, Vt. . Syracuse, N.Y. . Milford, Mass. Lander, Wyoming Ter. . Marlborough, Mass. Louisville, Ky. . Milford, Mass. Hopkinton, Mass. . Exeter. Grand Rapids, Mich. . Nashua. Keene. . Chicao'o, III. 1881 1875.] CATALOGUE. 139 Donald Gilbert Perkins . . Lawyer. Jolin Benjamin Perkins . . Edgar Perry Editor. Oscar Edward Perry . . . Manufacturer. Herbert Mills Perry .... H.U. 1880; Student, Johns Hopk Arthur Perry H.U. 1880; Bank Clerk. Ernest Henry Pillsbury . . H.U. 1880; Law Student. William Pollock Yale Coll. 1882 ; Lawyer. Walter King Purinton . . . Business. Ethan Allen Reynolds ... Lawyer. Walter Allen Rice Elocutionist. Geopge Reed Richardson . Lawyer. Henry Cooper Rollins . . . Thomas Richard Rowe . . Business. John Turner Rumsey . . . George Washington Savory Theological Student. William Eckart Sharpe . . Assist. U.S. Assayer. Amos Blanchard Shattuck U.S. Cadet. William Francis Sheehan . Bookkeeper. Oscar Edward Shraeder . . Carleton Sprague H.U. 1881; Business. Victor Hugo Stickney . . . Frederic Webster Sturdivant Dart. Coll. 1880. Frank Overton Suire . . H.U. 1880; Lawyer. Jacob Sutton Sullivant . Post Office Clerk. Allen Sullivant Leonard Herbert Swett . . Medical Student. John Glover Thomas . . . M.D. ; Physician. John Preston True .... Christopher Carpenter Viall Farmer. Paul Voorhees *John Nichols Weston . . . Robert Charles Wiggin . . Business. William Pendleton Wilson . 17 . . 20 . . 19 . 17 . 16 Univ. . 18 . 17 . 16 . 16 . 19 .18 . 16 . 18 . 19 . 16 . 19 . 15 . 15 . 17 . 16 . 16 . 20 . 21 . 17 . 16 . 13 16 27 16 22 16 14 14 15 . Norwich, Conn. . Woodbury, Conn. . Rehoboth, Mass. Attleborough, Mass. . Rehoboth, Mass. Holyoke, Mass. . Boston, Mass. Baltimore, Md. . Westerly, R.I. <( (( . Lewiston, Me. New York, N.Y. . Pittsfield, Mass. New York, N.Y. . Topsham, Me. Boston, Mass. . South Bend, Ind. Leadville, Col. . Bangor, Me. (( (( . Lowell, Mass. . Exeter. . Providence, R.I. . Chicago, HI. . Manchester. East Liverpool, O. . Indianapolis, Ind. Helena, Mont. . Manchester. West Point, N.Y. . Milford, Mass. Lynn, Mass. . Evansville, Ind. . Buffalo, N.Y. (< it . Tyson Furnace, Vt. . Cumberland, Me. . Cincinnati, O. <( << . Columbus, O. (( (( . Columbus, O. Paris, France. . Chicago, 111. <( (( . Camden, Me. "Worcester, Mass. . Bethel, Me. . Rehoboth, Mass. New York, N.Y. Stamford, Conn. Boston, Mass. (( « Baltimore, Md. 1880 140 CATALOGUE. [1875-76. Chas. Edward Lewis Wingate . 14 . Student, H.U. Arthur Woods Worthington . . 17 . Insurance Agent. William Harrison Wylie . ... 18 . Manufacturer. Alphonso Adelbert Wymau . . 13 . Student, H.U. Exeter. Buffalo, N.Y. Minneapolis, Minn. Chester, S.C. Whitinsville, Mass. West Acton, Mass. 98 1876, Robert Anderson Atherton . . 14 . Commercial Traveller. William Edgar Atwater .... 19 . Willard Shurtleff Augsbury . . 18 . Frank Bruce Bailey 18 . Arthur Eaton Baker 16 . Student, B.U. Ernest Berkele}^ Balch .... 16 . Teacher. James Merritt Bancroft .... 18 . Architect. Clarence Bancroft 17 . H.U. 1882; Student in Chemistry. *Lewis Lawrence Bartlett ... 14 . Frank Clifton Bates 17 . Merchant. Henry Bates 17 . Machinist. William Pettigrew Benedict . . 18 . Bank Clerk. Samuel Frederic Borland ... 16 . Mariner. George Clement Bright .... 13 . Edward Melancthon Brooks . . 16 . Henry Greer Bryant 16 . Coll. N.J. 1882. George Albert Burdett .... 18 . H.U. 1881; Student. Francis David Chamberlain . . 17 . Student, Yale Coll. Charles Porter Coffin 18 . *William John Curry 20 . Apothecary. John Uriah Dale 19 . Farmer. Henry De Ford 16 . Business. Oliver Dyer, jr 15 . Frank Britton Fay 17 . Student, H.U. George Walker Field 17 . Farmer. John McGaw Foster 16 . H.U. 1882. Ludlow, Vt. (( (< New York, N.Y. Antwerp, N.Y. Chicago, 111. Winchester, Mass. Plymouth. Bradford, Mass. Boston, Mass. Hoped ale, Mass. Zurich, Switzerland. Epping Great Falls. 1877 Indianapolis, Ind. (( « Portsmouth. New Castle, Me. New York, N.Y. New Orleans, La. Cleveland, O. Philadelphia, Pa. Brookline, Mass. Boston, Mass. West Chester, Pa. Batavia, N.Y. Chester, S.C 1883 North Cambridge, Mass. Weston, Mo. (( (( Baltimore, Md. West Vernon, N. J. East Calais, Vt. Ferrisburg, Vt. Burlington, Vt. Bangor, Me. 1876.] CATALOGUE. Ul Frank Newell French . Teacher. James Graham Gardiner Student, H.U. Clarence Getchell . . . Student, H.U. Edward Hooker Gilbert Yale Coll. 1881; Manufacturer Milton Gray William Morton Grinnell Lawyer. Richard Bradley Grinnell R.R. Clerk. Frederic Snmner Haines Student, H.U. Frank Holmes Hall . . . Oliver Hubbard Ham . . Machinist. Abner Clarke Harding . Lawyer. Arthur Meeks Hawkins . Student, H.U. Aubrey De Vere Hiles . Lawyer. Sherman Hoar H.U. 1882; Law Student, H.U Benjamin Blake *Holmes Student, H.U. Charles Osgood Hooker . Samuel Percy Hooker . . Bookkeeper. William Turner Howard Willard Warren Howe . Bank Clerk. Jared Slocomb Howe . . H.U. 1881; Lawyer. Seymour Isaac Hudgens Student, H.U. Henry Barton Jacobs . . , Student, H.U. Albert Emerson Joab . . Walter Stephen Johnson William Winthrop Kent . H.U. 1882; Business. Moses King H.U. 1881; Publisher. James Walter Lathrop . Business. Levi Tisdale Lincoln . . Business. William Renssalaer Lloyd Columbia Coll. 1881 ; Business Aldis Lovell George Stanle}' Lynde . David Ford Merrill, jr. . Business. John Herbert Neal . . . Machinist. . Exeter. . Croydon. . Exeter. . Ware, Mass. . Shingle Creek, N.Y. . Greenfield, Mass. Paris, France. . Greenfield, Mass. Minneapolis, Minn. . Great Falls. 16 14 16 16 21 18 16 . . . 15 . . . 15 . . . Brattleborough, Vt. 19 . . . Portsmouth. Hartford, Conn. 17 . . . Chicago, 111. Peoria, 111. 14 . . . New York, N.Y. 22 . . . Milwaukee, Wis. 16 . . . Concord, Mass. 18 . . . Bradford, Mass. 16 ... San Francisco, Cal. 15 . . . Le Roy, N.Y. 15 . . . New Orleans, La. 16 . . . Cincinnati, O. (< II 17 . . . Haverhill, Mass. 23 . . . Sandwich, 111. 18 . . . South Scituate, Mass. 19 . . . Terre Haute, Ind. 20 . . . Westborough, Mass. 16 . . . Buffalo, N.Y. <( (( 22 . . . St. Louis, Mo. Cambridge, Mass. 19 . . . Worcester, Mass. <( (( 15 . . . Barrington. Minneapolis, Minn. 16 . . . New York, N.Y. <( « 17 . . . Alstead. 14 . . . Skowhegan, Me. 17 . . . Washington, D.C. li it 16 . . . Epping. Waltham, Mass. m 142 CATALOGUE. [1876. U. Alfred Cookman Oliver .... 20 . James Gillespie Ortoii 16 . Charles Cliase Parsons . . . . 17 . Business. Marshall Bell Peaslee 14 . Business. Edmund Seahon Perin .... 16 . H.U. 1882. George William Perkins . H.U. 1882; Assist, in Biology, John E)dward Pickering . Teacher. Charles Ranlet Student, H.U. Charles Moen Rice . . . H.U. 1882; Law Student. George Morey Richardson H.U. 1882; Student. Daniel Merchant Richardson Student, H.U. John Samuel Richardson Law Student. Francis James Riley . . Student, H.U. Harry My linn Rohrer . . Lawyer. Isaac Fitz Sawyer .... Frederic Jonathan Saw3'er Business Agent. Charles Orlando Shaw . . Business. James Theophilus Simpson Teacher. Franklin Tileston Sivret . . Stock Farmer. John Morrell Smith .... Roswell Perry Smith . . . Bookkeeper. Samuel Hopkins Spalding . H.U. 1881. De Witt Charles Spencer . Walter Edward Stearns . . Joseph Dalton Thyng . . . Clerk. John Wheelock Titcomb ... 15 . Business. Herbert Osgood True 17 . Robert Scott Waddell 15 . Law Student. James Gould Warren 17 . Lieut. U.S. Engineers. Lewis Webb 14 . Edward Freeman Wells .... 15 . Marietta Coll. 1881: R.R. Business. Charles Morgan Wheeler ... 16 . Henry Charles White 20 . Schuyler Sampson White ... 15 . Student, H.U. 16 . 15 . 15 . 15 . 17 . 14 . 21 . 21 . 17 . 22 . 16 . 16 . 20 . 17 . 21 . 14 . 20 . 17 . 15 . 16 . Port Carbon, Pa. New York, N.Y. Exeter. Boston, Mass. Plaistow. Haverhill, Mass. Cincinnati, O. Topsfield, Mass. Cambridge, Mass. Newington. Holyoke, Mass. Worcester, Mass. (< (( Framingham Center, Mass. Jena, Germany. Lowell, Mass. East Baldwin, Me. New Bedford, Mass. Washington, D.C. <( (( Exeter. ^ Dover. Boston, Mass. Dexter, Me. Oregon, N.Y. Fremont. Fort Hamilton, N.Y. Mattapan, Mass. Ft. Macquirnis, Mont. Meredith Center. Exeter. Boston, Mass. Wilton. Chicago, m. Wilton. Exeter. Boston, Mass. Exeter. Rutland, Vt. Antrim. West Chester, Pa. (( (( Buffalo, N.Y. San Francisco, Cal. 'Marietta, O. St. Paul, Minn. San Francisco, Cal. Vernon, Oneida Co., N.Y. Newmarket. 1876-77.] CATALOGUE. 143 15 16 16 Henry Lampson Wiggiii . Samuel Lawrence Williams Real Estate Agent. William Howard Wilmarth Instructor, Lewis Coll. John Wilson 15 . . Coll. N.J. 1882; Teacher State Normal School. Samuel Harvey Wollerton . . . 17 . . M.D.; Physician. Willard Everett Yager .... 19 . . i^David Frederic Zerrahn .... 15 . . Wakefield. Chicago, 111. (( <( Attleborough, Mass. Northfield, Vt. Shrewsbury, N.J. Indiana, Pa. West Chester, Pa. (( (( Oneonta, Ostego Co.,N.Y. Boston, Mass 1881 100 IBTT, Harlan Page Abbott 16 Charles Francis Adams .... 15 Frank Oswald Adams 16 Business. Thomas Edwin Adams .... 15 Fred Abbott Aldrich 15 Journalist. Frank George Alger 18 Student, Oberliu Coll. John Dewitt Arnold 16 Business. Charles Henry Ashley 17 John Franklin Bailey 18 Dana Wingate Baker 16 Druggist's Clerk. Ferdinand Winthrop Batchelder 15 Walter Cabot Baylies 15 Student, H.U. Karl Albert Bean 17 Student, H.U. Flavins Josephus Berry .... 19 James Winchester Berry ... 1 7 Frederic Herbert Blondell ... 21 Bowd. Coll. 1882; Teacher. Jeromus Rapalje Bonney ... 18 John Eldon Bowman 15 Law Student. Frank Arthur Briggs 18 Gilman Abraham Brown ... 15 Clerk. Peter Burke 19 Law Student. Charles Alonzo Burns 13 John Willard Burns 17 Joseph Charles B3Ton 16 Fred Eames Carpenter .... 18 Lucien Carr, jr 16 Business. Peter Julius Casey .... .20 Law Student, H.U. . Antrim. . Hooversville, Md. . Burlington, la. . Louisville, Ky. . Flint, Mich. . Manchester. . Sacramento, Cal. (( (< . Ogdensburg, N.Y. . Boston, Mass. . Exeter. (( . Montreal, P.Q. . Taunton, Mass. . Bangor, Me. . Barrington. . Kensington. . Topsham, Me. <( (( . New York, N.Y. Paris, France. . Springfield, O. (( <( . Amesbury, Mass. . Lowell, Mass. Boston, Mass. . Milford, Mass. Dover. . Wilton. Exeter .' Gloversville, N.Y. . Keene. . Cambridge, Mass. Boston, Mass. . Cambridge, Mass. 144 CATALOGUE. [1877. William Cromwell Chase . Student. Israel Folsom Chesley . . . John Henrj^ Chesle}^ .... Frank Almander Churchill. Clerk. Bradbury Jenness Cille}' . William Coombs Codman, jr Broker. WilUam Herbert Crawford Business. Henry Laurens Dawes, jr. Student, Yale Coll. Edgar Augustus De Witt . *Prlando Dyer Zenas Hoxie Ellis Bank Teller. Henr}^ Emerson William Ke}^ Bond Emerson Broker. William Gordon Fellows . H.U. 1882. William Reynolds Fleming Apprentice, Hartford, Conn. William Ring Gray . . Edward Hurd Haley . Addison Hamlin .... Student, H.U. Charles Eugene Hamlin . Student, H.U. Frank Hamlin Student, H.U. *Francis Loring Hayford . George Francis Haynes . Hotel Clerk. Walter Edward Hayward Student, H.U. Benjamin Pike Hope . . Arthur Crockett Hull . . William Sterrett Hunnewell Business. Ernest San ford Jack . . Student, H.U. Fredric William Jenkins Govt. Service. Barrett Langdon Jenness Broker's Clerk. Frank Elwood Jennison . Student, H.U. Charles Tilton Kamm . . Frederic Milbanke Kerr . Business. Robert Bage Kerr .... Student, Yale Coll. Paul Thomas Kimball . . Stephen Strickland Kirby . 14 .17 . 16 . 17 . 17 . 17 . 17 . 14 . 20 . 19 . 17 . 15 . 16 . 16 . 15 15 20 . 14 . 15 . 14 . 17 . . 20 . . 18 . . 17 . 19 . 1.4 . 17 . 18 . 23 . 16 . 16 . 14 14 . 15 . 19 Haverford College, Pa. Salisbury, Mass. Wakefield. Exeter. Boston, Mass. Manchester. Boston, Mass. (( (( New York, N.Y. Pittsfield, Mass. Rockland, Mass. Topsham, Me. . . . 1883 Fairhaven, Vt. <( (( New York, N.Y. New York, N.Y. New York, N.Y. Harrisburg, Pa. (( (( Elizabeth, N.J. Dover. Bangor, Me. Bangor, Me. Bangor, Me. Bangor, Me 1881 New Hampton. Exeter. Attleborough, Mass. Shrewsbury, N.J. Plymouth. Exeter. Minneapolis, Minn. Portland, Me. Rochester. Washington, D.C.* Deerfield. New York, N.Y. Bangor, Me. Portland, Oregon. New York, N.Y. New York, N.Y. Eatontown, N.J. Towanda, Pa. 1877.] CATALOGUE. 145 Amos Arnold Knowlton . Student, Bowd. Coll. ♦Frank Woodbury Langdon John Washini^ton Lewis . *John Willard^Little . . . Fred Messenger Lowe . . Yale Coll. 1882; Med. Student, II William Lyman Luther . . Student, H.U. John Theodore Lyman . . Business. Patrick Henry Mack . . . Bookkeeper. Ernest Homer Mariett . . . Student, Episc. Theolog. School, Henry Wheelwright Marsh Student, H.U. Thomas Leavitt Marston . Woollen Weaver. Henry Ely McElwain . . . William Lockhart Mehle . Dennison Burnham Merrill Alfred Eugene Miles . . . H.U. 1882. William Norwood Needles, j Lawyer. Oliver Allen Olmsted . H.U. 1882. Hugh Roberts Parrish . Clerk, Pa. R.R. Enoch William Pearson Music Teacher. Benjamin Whipple Pennock Student, Amh. Coll. Albert Sanborn Perkins . Student, H.U. Robert Randolph Perkins Howard Emerson Plimpton Manufacturer. Alonzo Wilder Pollard . Student, H.U. Edward Learned Pollock Robert Camp Price . . . Law Student. Jerome Comstock Read . Nathaniel Tucker Rhodes Business. Lucian Moore Robinson . H.U. 1882; Teacher. William Alvah Rublee . Student, H.U. Philip Leon Runkle . . . Business. George Benjamin Salter . Bookkeeper. Frank Wadleigh Sargcant Insurance Clerk. .U 18 . . . Tamworth. 18 . . . Plymouth 1880 22 . . . Newton, Mass. 16 . . . Merrimac, Mass. . . 1878 18 . . . Fitchburg, Mass. No. Cambridge, Mass. 16 . . . Brockton, Mass. 16 . . . Exeter. Grinnell, la. 18 . . . Fitchburg, Mass. Lone Pine, Cal. 20 . . . St. Armand, P.Q. Cambridge, Mass. 17 . . . Tewksbury, Mass. 18 . . . North Hampton. Dover. 18 . . . Holyoke, Mass. 16 . . . New Orleans, La. 17 . . . Ottumwa, la. 17 . . . Fitchburg, Mass. (( « . West Chester, Pa. Philadelphia, Pa. . Le Roy, N.Y. . Burlington, N.J. Philadelphia, Pa. . Epping. (( . Rutland, Vt. . Exeter. . Fort Washington, N.Y. . Walpole, Mass. Waterford, N.Y. . Boston, Mass. . Pittsfield, Mass. . Cincinnati, O. <( (( . 15 . . . New York, N.Y. . 17 . . . Dorchester, Mass. Boston, Mass. . 17 . . . Hartford, Me. Philadelphia, Pa. . 16 . . . Madison, Wis. . 15 . . . New York, N.Y. (( (t . 15 . . . Burlington, la. (( (< . 17 . . . Candia. Manchester. 19 . 16 . 16 . 14 . 23 . 16 . 14 . 15 . 15 . 14 . 18 146 CATALOGUE. [1877-78, Fred Leland Sawyer .19 Student, H.U. David Whitney Scott 22 Journalist. Adrian Scharff 18 Coll. of N.J. 1881; Law Student, N.Y. Lawrence Eugene Sexton ... 18 Student. H.U. Edward Parsons Seymour ... 14 George Washington Simmons . 20 Teacher. Forrest Oilman Small 16 William Whiting Spencer ... 16 Frank Burton Stevens .... 16 Law Student. William Smith Stevens .... 13 Frank Oswin Stewart 13 Charles Augustus Strong ... 14 Student. Fred Strong Tabor . . . Physician. Eugene Thomas Student, Bowd. Coll. Beverly Bingham Tilden Wesley Tourtellotte .... Business. Wheelock Veazey Towle . Student, Dart. Coll. John Baldwin Walker . . . Student, H.U. William Bernard Waring . Edward Ingersoll Wells . . Student, H.U. John C. F. Wheelock . . . Law Student (Worcester, Mass.) Benjamin Cheney White . . John Allison White .... Student, H.U. Charles Horace Wiggin . . Charles Meigs Wilson . . . Physician. Edmund Wilson . 19 . 18 . 17 . 17 . 14 . 16 . 16 . 17 . 19 . 16 . 15 . 18 . 16 13 . Cumberland, Me. . Washington, D.C. . Exeter. . Cleveland, O. . New Ipswich. . New London, Conn. Wash. Co.. Miss. . Wilton, Me. . Chicago, 111. . Dover. (( . Charleston, S.C. . Exeter. . Rochester, N.Y. . Aurora, III. Chicago, 111. . Topsham, Me. (( (< , . New York, N.Y. (( (( . Webster, Mass. Boston, Mass. . Exeter. . Gloversville, N.Y. . Brooklyn, N.Y. . Rochester, N.Y. . Mendon, Mass. ."*Concord. . Williamsport, Pa. . Newmarket. . Philadelphia, Pa. Shrewsbury, N.J. 122 18 78, Charles Coleman Allen .... 19 Student, H.U. Ethan Allen 16 Clerk. Ernest Allis 19 Clerk. Randolph Morgan Appleton . . 16 Student, H.U. . Troy, O. . Mumford, N.Y. Buffalo, N.Y. . Milwaukee, Wis. . New York, N.Y. 1878.] CATALOGUE. 147 Bnrnside Bernard Bailey Law Student, H.U. James Eliot Baker . . Student, H.U. Sharonton Hale Baker Student, B.U. Charles Robert Bangs . Law Student. Charles Sanford Barrett Lumber Clerk. Walter Knox Barton . , Student, H.U. Walter Joseph Broadmeadow Student, Stevens Inst, of Tech. Lovine Alanson Bromley John Paschal Brooks . . Student, Dart. Coll. Isaac Bronson Burgess . Student, B.U. Orrin Henry Carpenter . Law Student. Timothy William Coakley Theological Student, Laval Univ John Codman Student, H.U. ^ George Antonio Cormack . John Thaddeus Cressey . •. Student, Dart. Coll. Osborn Marcus Curtiss . . Teacher. Marshall Henry Cushing . Student, H.U. Walter Reeves Dame . . . Student, H.U. Arthur Malcolm Dodge . . Manufacturer. Paul Abbott Dodge .... Farmer. Charles Wheelock Downing Edward Tyler Edgerly . . Student, H.U. Edwards Dudley Emerson . Student, Dart. Coll. Frank Stewart Ferguson . Lynde Raymond Ferris Student, H.U. Henry Lewis Finch . . Lumberman. Samuel Henry Friend . SusiiiBSs Franklin Kent Gifford . Student, H.U. Emlyn Metcalf Gill . . Student, H.U. John Richardson Gilpatrick Howard Robinson Goodwin Student, Bowd. Coll. William Burton Goodwin . Student, Yale Coll. . 16 . . 18 . . 16 . . 17 . . 17 . . 14 . . 15 . . 21 . . 16 . . 20 . . 17 . . 19 . Quebec. . 15 . . 15 . . 18 . . 18 . . 18 . . 17 . . 16 . . 19 . . 13 . . 14 . . 16 . . 17 . . 18 . . 17 . . 16 . . 17 . . 16 . . 15 . 14 . 14 . Montpelier, Vt. Chicago, 111. . Brookline, Mass. . Dover. . Le Roy, N.Y. ({ (( . Grafton, Vt. Burlington, Vt. . Washington, D.C. . Shrewsbury, N.J. . Pawlet, Vt. . Kittery, Me. . Hampton Falls. . Grafton, Vt. Bellows Falls, Vt. . Exeter. . Boston, Mass. . New York, N.Y. . Dover. . Rock Island, 111. . So. Hingham, Mass. . Clinton, Mass. . Hampton Falls. <( <( . Rowley, Mass. (( (( . Concord. . Ottumwa, la. . Underbill, Vt. . Gloversville, N.Y. . Brookline, Mass. . Glenn's Falls, N.Y. . Milwaukee, Wis. . Cambridge, Mass. . Orange, N.J. . Great Falls. . Augusta, Me. New York, N.Y. . Biddeford, Me. 148 CATALOGUE. [1878. Harold Graham George William Greele}^ . Business. Edward Carroll Hall . . William Maclay Hall, jr. Student, Coll. of N.J. Herbert Franklin Hanson Business. Herbert William Harwood Tom Dairy mple Hay 15 David Nicholson Haynes ... 18 Lawyer. Henry Hobart Herrick Joseph Adna Hill . . . Student, H.U. Rodney Benjamin Hoitt Business. John Francis Holland . Student, H.U. Harry Hnbbard .... Student, H.U. Heber William Hull . . Edwin Everett Jacobs . George Jenkins .... Teacher. William Scott Johnston Charles Dana Jones . . Med. Student, H.U. Homer Fay Jordan . . Lawyer. Samuel Hauser Kennett Rensselaer Lee Kirk . Pacific Express. Charles Berry Learoyd Student, Amh. Coll. Charles Lindsey .... Salesman (Boston, Mass.). Reuben Whittle Lovering Student, H.U. Frank Anthony Luques . Student, H.U. George Jeffrey Mackenzie Harry Alexander Madill . Frederick Hubbell Marvin Senior Class. David Hunter McAlpin . Student, Coll. of N.J. Harry Jackson McCoy . Student, Germany. James Henry Mcintosh . Student, H.U. William Leander McKee Business. George Nathaniel Plnmer Mead 19 Student, H.U. James Alfred Merrill 15 Student, Yale CoU. 14 18 19 14 16 18 15 . 18 . 15 . 19 . 18 . 16 . 16 . 19 . 17 . 15 . 19 . 17 . 19 . 18 . 17 . 15 . 14 . 14 . 18 . 13 . 16 . 15 . 19 . 15 . . New York, N.Y. . Winchester, Mass. . Topsham, Me. . Bedford, Pa. . Dover. Boston, Mass. . Henniker. <( . New Orleans, La. . Whitehall, N.Y. Rutland, Vt. . New York, N.Y. . Temple. . Dover. . Milford, Mass. . Troy. Boston, Mass. . Plymouth. . West Scituate, Mass. . Franklin Falls. Shirley, Mass. . Piqua, O. . Milton. . Dayton, O. Cincinnati, O. . Helena, Mont. . Cambridge, Mass. Denver, Col. . Dan vers, Mass. . Wells, Me. East Somerville, Mass. . Hillsborough Bridge. . Biddeford, Me. . Wilkesbarre, Pa. . Towanda, Pa. . New York, N.Y. . New York, N.Y. . Troy, N.Y. . Salineville, O. . Piermont, N.Y. Rome, Ga. . Everett, Mass. . Rutland, Vt. 1878.] CATALOGUE. 149 Reuben Burnham Moffat . Student, H.U. Tredwell Woodbridge Moore Henry David Nelson . . . Student, H.U. Joseph Willard Newman . Law Student. Henry Osgood Business. Charles Wolcott Parker . . Student, CoU. of N.J. George Richmond Parsons Student, H.U. Edward Eastman Pecker . Business. John Dudley Philbrick . . Student, Dart. Coll. Walter Brigham Phillips . . Student, H.U. Joseph Dexter Pierce . . . Charles Manice Pollock . . Edward Michael Raftery . Student, Holy Cross Coll. Robert Ran let George Reuben Raymond . Paran Flint Rice Law Student. Frederick Henr}^ Richardson Business. John Jones Roberts ► . . . Student, H.U. James Upson Sanders . . . Law Student, Columbia Coll. Wilbur Edgerton Sanders . School of Mines, Columbia Coll. George William Sawin . . Student, H.U. Harry Haskell Small ... Student, Trinity Coll. i^Daniel Chapman Smith . . William Christopher Smith Student, H.U. Augustus Burbank Stoughton William Lee Thurston . . Civil Engineer. George Parsons Tibbets . Student, Amh. Coll. Henry Trail Student, H.U. Charles Whitcomb Tuttle Student, Bowd. Coll. Frank Hardin Walker . . Bookkeeper. Richard Ashur Ware . . James Duncan Waring . Frederick Albert Weber . 17 14 16 . 19 . . 15 . . 15 . . 17 . . 17 . . 16 . . 14 . . 20 . . 14 . . 21 . . 15 . . 18 . . 18 . . 17 . 18 . 19 . 17 . 18 . 15 . 18 . 16 . 14 . 18 . 14 16 16 17 17 16 18 . Brooklyn, N.Y. . Baltimore, Md. . Milford, Mass. . Hillsborough Bridge. Chicago, 111. . Rochester, N.Y. Chicago, ni. . Newark, N.J. . Providence, R.I. . Boston, Mass. . Candia. . Chicago, III. . Newburg, N.Y. . Pittsfield, Mass. It (( . Milford, Mass. . Holyoke, Mass. . Boston, Mass. . Syracuse, N.Y. . Rutland, Vt. . Rochester. . Helena, Mont. . Helena, Mont. . Natick, Mass. . Waterville, Me. . Bedford, Pa 1880 . West Chatham, Mass. . Washington, D.C. . Lancaster, Mass. Tampico, Mex. . Great Falls. . Frederick, Md. . Hancock. . Exeter. Atlanta, Ga. . Washington, D.C. . Brooklyn, N.Y. . Boston, Mass. 150 CATALOGUE. [1878-79. George Albert Webster .... 16 Student, Andover, Mass. Frank Herbert Weed , .... 18 Law Student. Robert Means James Wells . . 14 Charles Brewster Wentworth . 16 Bookkeeper. Frederick Liver more Wheeler . 15 Cattle Raising. John Kimball Whiting .... 15 Franklin Wyman 17 Student, H.U. . Brooklyn, N.Y. . Sandwich. (( . Exeter. (< . Dover. (( . Boston, Mass. St. Clair, la. . Wilton. . Hillsborough Bridge. 1879, Joseph Daniel Aiken, jr. Manufacturer. George Edward Bales . Senior Class. Thomas Harris Bartlett Clerk. John M. W. Bartol . Senior Class. Louis Bell Student, Dart. Coll. Frank Everett Ben jam Senior Class. Henry de Billier . . . Banker. Walter Levi Blossom Henry 'Blanchard Bridge Conway Rathbone Brown Senior Class. Emanuel Gonzales Bullard Law Student. Harr}' Spencer Burrows . . Louis Burt Clerk. Edward Walter Byron . . . James McCormick Cameron Senior Class. Charles Carroll Royal P. T. Carroll .... Student, H.U. Albert Hopkins Chadbourne Student, Mass. Agric. Coll. Allen Howard Chamberlain Student, H.U. Kin Kwei Chin Charles Fish Clement . . . Senior Class. Charles Edward Countryman Law Student. Frank Herbert Cunningham Law Student, H.U. Charles Wan*en Currier . . 17 16 15 15 14 22 18 17 16 16 17 15 16 20 14 14 16 17 17 17 19 23 16 110 Charleston, S.C. Wilton. Portsmouth. Lancaster, Mass. Chester. Alstead. Yonkers, N.Y. New York, N.Y. Milwaukee, Wis. Marblehead, Mass. Worcester, Mass. Saratoga Springs, N.Y. Lowell, Mass. Rutland, Vt. (( (< Gloversville, N.Y. Harrisburgh, Pa. Ellicott City, Md. Howard Col!, Md. Ellicott City, Md. Williamstown, Mass. South Dover, Me. Shanghai, China. Rutland, Vt. Albany, N.Y. Boston, Mass. Canaan. 1879.] CATALOGUE. 151 Frank Kneeland Davis Manufacturer. Albert Henry Denfeld James Carey Evans . , Clerk. Rush Emery Evans . , Bank Clerk. John Purinton Fay . , Teacher. George Tennant Spink Foote Student, Roch. Univ. Herbert Darling Foster Student, Dart. Coll. Fred Fox, jr Student, Mass. Inst, of Tech Edward Clayton Frost Teacher. John Fox Hart » . . . Manufacturer. Ervin Wilbur Hodsdon John Parker Holmes , Student, H.U. James Barker Hooper . Clerk. Charles Monroe Howard Senior Class. Edward Vernam Hull . Student, H.U. Lee Hutchins Law Student, H.U. John Davis Kales . . . Med. Student. Pierce James Kent . . Senior Class. Ta Ting Kin John Kittredge .... Ranchman. Percy Cheney Laselle . Clerk (Manchester). George Hees Ledlie . . Student, H.U. Yu Kien Li Frank Kerr Marston . James Lawrence McCormick Student, Coll. of N.J. Frank Augustus McNutt . Edwin Joseph Meeks . . . Senior Class. Charles Henry Merrill . . . Senior Class. Nathaniel Marshall Nelson Senior Class. Shung Chow Niu ..... Edward Isaac Kimball Noyes Student, H.U. Albert Hilton Pike .... Middle Class. Frederic William Putnam . 16 . 19 . 16 . 17 . 18 . 17 . 16 . 17 . 19 . 22 . 16 . 19 . 17 . 19 . 19 . 16 . 15 . 16 . . North Andover, Mass. (( u a . Westborough, Mass. . Buffalo, N.Y. (< <( . Hillsborough, O. (( (( . Westborough, Mass. Upton, Mass. . Middletown, N.Y. . Winchendon, Mass. . Portland, Me. . Springvale, Me. (( « . Milton Mills. Union. . Dover. . Milford, Mass. . Griggstown, N.J. New York, N.Y. . South Newmarket. . San Francisco, Cal. . Washington, D.C. Laconia. . Chicago, 111. <( (( . Exeter. 17 '. 17 . . Shanghai, China. . North Andover, Mass Laramie City, Wy. Ter. . Goffstown. 19 . . Utica, N.Y. 16 . . 16 . . . Shanghai, China. . Clarendon, Ark. . Bel Air, Md. 16 . 14 . . . Richmond, Ind. . Mt. Vernon, N.Y. 17 . . . Exeter. 15 . . . East Kingston. 16 . . 17 . . . Shanghai, China. . Antrim. 15 . . . Epping. 17 . . . Waterville, N.Y. 152 CATALOGUE. [1879-80. Sheridan Pitt Read . . . James Patrick Redehean George Harlow Reed . . Senior Class. William Livingston Reed Planter. Benjamin Richards . . . Salesman. Frank Henry Robinson . Gustavus Adolphus Rose Banker. Thomas Parker Sanborn Student, H.U. Henry Smith, jr. ... Law Student. Julian Alva Spafford . Clerk. Walter Ames Stebbins Student, H.U. Hermon Weed Stevens Senior Class. Kwoh On Tong .... Gilbert Hubbard Turner Thomas Rice Varick . . Senior Class. Sherman Wentworth . Henry Hyde Whitman Student, Columbia Coll. Waldo Wickham Willard Senior Class. Robert Thomas Wolcott Senior Class. Tsoo Liang Wong . . . Gordon Woodbury . . Student, H.U. Uriah Burdge Woolley Druggist. John Stratton Wright . Student, H.U. 17 22 21 16 16 17 17 14 16 18 16 16 18 17 15 19 17 14 21 15 19 17 . Jersey Cit,y, N.J. . Chelsea, Mass. . Wellesley, Mass. . Lawrence, Mass. Apopka City, Fla. . East Steuben, N.Y. New York, N.Y. . Southborough, Mass. . La Porte, Ind. (( << . Concord, Mass. . Cobleskill, N.Y. Albany, N.Y. . Ludlow, Vt. New York, N.Y. . New York, N.Y. . Dover. . Canton, China. . Brooklyn, N.Y. . Manchester. . Brookfield. . Turner Centre, Me. . Chelsea, Mass. . Dover. , Shanghai, China. . New York, N.Y. . Matawan, N.J, New York, N.Y. . Duxbury, Mass. 80 188 0. Orson Adams, jr 16 . Benjamin Franklin Adler ... 17 . Clerk. Harry Allen 15 . Student. Edward Sawyer Bacon ....17. Student, Yale Coll. William Woodward Baldwin . 18 . Student, H.U. Charles Lee Barnes 19 . Clarence Augustus Barnes ... 13 . Frank Hurd Batchelder ....17. Clerk. . Jessups, Md. . Milwaukee, Wis. (( (( . Mumford, N.Y. . Dover. . Baltimore, Md. . Canton, 111. . Boston, Mass. . Boston, Mass. 1880.] CATALOGUE. 153 John Dana Bell . . . 14 . . . Manchester. Middle Class. Lewis Sherrill Bigelow . . . . 17 . . . St. Paul, Minn. Student, Yale Coll. William Henry Bowman . . . . 16 . . . Springfield, O. Middle Class. Roland William Boyden . . . . 16 . . . Beverly, Mass. Student, H.U. William Cowper Boyden . . . . 16 . . . Sheffield, 111. Student, H.U. Arthur Preston Braisted . . . . 16 . . . Toledo, 0. Bookkeeper. (( (( John Joseph Brannen . . . . . 16 . . . Milford, Mass. Student, H.U. Odie Patrick Brennan . . . . . 19 . . . Natick, Mass. Student, Columbia Coll. Walter Scott Briggs ... . . . 26 . . . Auburn, Me. William Allen Brooks, jr. . . . 15 . . . Haverhill, Mass. Senior Class. David Hanson Buffum, jr. . . . 17 . . . Great Falls. Student, Yale Coll. Judd Ellis Buley .... . . 20 . . . Waverly, N.Y. Student, H.U. Edward Fitch Bullard, jr. . . 15 . . . Saratoga Springs, N.Y. Business. Troy, N.Y. Frederick Wing Burleigh . . 17 . . . Fitchburg, Mass. Lewis Calvin Burnes . . . . . 19 . . . St. Joseph, Mo. Clerk. (( (( (( Harry Ahlborn Butler . . . . . 15 . . . Lynn, Mass. John Christie Cate .... . . 18 . . . Deerfield. Farmer. a Charles Cumston Chadboui n . 13 . . . Wilmington, N.C. Junior Class. William Perry Chadwick . . 15 . . . Exeter. Clerk. (( *Arthur Burleigh Chandler . . . 20 . . . Lebanon .... . . 1882 Law Student. (( Percy Chase . . 15 . . . Lynn, Mass. « If Student. Way land Johnson Chase . . . U . . . Exeter. Middle Class. William Nelson Chase . . . . . 14 . . . Exeter. Middle Class. Yan Kung Cheong . . 19 . . . Canton, China. Calvin Goddard Child . . . . . 18 . . . Stamford, Conn. Kimball Vosburg Clark . . . . 19 . . . Buffalo, N.Y. Student. u tt Frederick Percival Clement . . 15 . . . Rutland, Vt. Middle Class. Willis William Colburn . . . . 18 . . . Boston, Mass. Med. Student, H.U. (( (( Maurice Wurts Cooley . . . . 19 . . . East Coldenham, N.Y. Senior Class. Austin Corbin . . 16 . . . New York, N.Y. Timothy Currier Craig. . . . . 19 . . . Island Falls, Me. Senior Class. Adams Crocker . . 19 . . . Fitchburg, Mass. Student, H.U. 164 CATALOGUE. [1880, Samuel Aldrich Crozer, jr. Student, H.U. Robert Woolston Cnmmings Student, Andover, Mass. Charles Francis Adams Curi Senior Class. Henry Aaron Dexter . . Student, Germany. Fred Drew Student. Harootune Enfiejian . . . Student, H.U. Mahlon Enos Middle Class, Cornelius Conway Felton Student, H.U. Edward Fox Fessenden . Senior Class. Edward Dudley Floyd . . Student. Edward Elbridge Floyd, ji Junior Class. William Wakefield Gale . Middle Class. Albert Augustus Gleason Student, H.U. Edwin Eldon Graham . . Student, H.U. Herbert Lionel Grant . . Student, Andover, Mass. Irving Galen Greene . . Middle Class. Luther Henry Stowell Greene Senior Class. Charles Mather Harrington Student, H.U. Charles Learner Harrison . Student, H.U. James Mott Hartshorne, jr. Student, H.U. Edward James Hatch . . . Student, Scientific Department John Wheelock Hawes . . Henr}' Brady Heywood . . George P. Frost Hobson . Student, H.U. Michael Joseph Holland . . Middle Class. William Harrison Holliday Student, H.U. WilHam Herbert Hudnut . Student, Coll. of N.J. Thomas Hunt Student, H.U. John Henry Hutchings, jr. Student, Keene. Henry Belden Ketcham . . Middle Class. George Nelson Kimball . . 16 . 15 . ier 18 , . 19 . . 13 . . 27 . . 19 . . 16 . . 14 . . 14 . . 12 . . 15 . . 16 . . 16 . . 18 . . 16 . . 16 . . 18 . . 16 . . 16 . 18 . Dart. Coll. . 14 . . 15 . . 19 . . 20 . . 16 . . 15 . . 14 . . 16 . . 15 . . 22 . . Upland, Pa. . Toledo, O. . East Kingston„ . Elmira, N.Y, . Boston, Mass. . Harpoot, Armenia. . Philadelphia, N.Y. . Thurlow, Pa. . Portland, Me. . Lynn, Mass. . Brookline, Mass. . Exeter. . Milford, Mass. . Philadelphia, Pa. . Waterbury, Conn. . Shelburne. . Dover. . Orangeport, N.Y. . Cincinnati, O. . New York, T^.Y. . Lebanon. . Worcester, Mass. . Chicago, III. . Wiscasset, Me. . Milford, Mass. . St. Louis, Mo. . Orange, N.J. . New Orleans, La. . Galveston, Tex. . Dover Plains, N.Yo . Hopkinton. 1880.] CATALOGUE. 155 Ben Edward King Kirk Kinney Kwok Kwang Kwong . . . Chaiies Garland Lane . . . Salesman. Ealph Martin Lane .... Student, H.U. Stanley Mattliews Lawson . Student, Urbana Univ. John Nitsche Lewis, jr. . . James Law Mackey .... William Mariner Joseph Francis Marshall . Middle Class. Charles Williston McAlpin Middle Class. William Truman Merrill . Senior Class. George Henry Meyers . . Robert Henry Middleditch Student, N.Y. Univ. Mark Herbert Milan . . . Wallace Nutting Middle Class. John Amos Ordway, jr. . Clerk. William Hicks Osgood . Student, Andover, Mass. Chauncey Goodrich Parker Student, H.U. Chester ]?arker Business. Robert Meade Parker . . Student, Coll. of N.J. Harry Ernest Peabody . Senior Class. Edward Warren Peirce . Clerk. William Smith Pendleton Planter. Charles Henry Pennypacker Middle Class. Frank George Peters . Student, Yale Coll. John Matthews Peters . Middle Class. George Sawyer Pitcher Middle Class. William Craig Powers . Albert Richard Pritchard Senior Class. Josiah Hatch Quincy . Student, Dart. Coll. John Earle Reynolds . Middle Class. Franklin W. Richardson Horace Ramsey Rose . 16 20 17 17 14 18 18 17 18 14 18 19 19 19 18 18 15 15 18 15 15 18 16 13 19 16 16 18 16 19 16 19 17 . Chicago, 111. . Cincinnati, O. . Canton, China. . Hampton. Boston, Mass. . St. Louis, Mo. . Cincinnati, O. : New York, N.Y. . Evansville, Ind. . Milwaukee, Wis. . Haverhill, Mass. . New York, N.Y. . Sherman Mills, Me. . Passaic, N.J. . Brooklyn, N.Y. . Portsmouth, Va. . Exeter. . Boston, Mass. . Rochester, N.Y. . Newark, N.J. . South Lancaster, Mass. Boston, Mass. . Newark, N.J. . Princeton, Me. . Peabody, Mass. (( <( . Boston, Mass. St. Augustine, Fla. . West Chester, Pa. . Syracuse, N.Y. * . SjTacuse, N.Y. . Portland, Me. . Rochester, N.Y. . Rochester, N.Y. . Rumney Depot. Lancaster, Mass. . Meadville, Pa. . Milford, Mass. . Johnstown, Pa. 156 CATALOGUE. [1880-81. Frank Edward Sanborn .... 16 . Agent. Frank Josiah Sanborn 16 . Butcher. John Scammon 13 . Daniel Benjamin Sheehan ... 26 . Business. Herman Thyng Shepard .... 20 . Middle Class. John Wm. E. Shinnick .... 16 . Middle Class. Shirley Robinson Snow .... 17 . Student, H.U. Frank Henry Stanyan 18 . Senior Class. Benjamin Alexander Stribling . 17 . Frank Cole Sturtevant .... 21 . Law Student. Alfred William Taussig .... 18 . Student, H.U. Marvin Merchant Taylor ... 20 . Law Student, Boston Univ. Edward F. S. Titcomb .... 16 . Middle Class. Harry Forsayth Totman .... 14 . Student, West Newton, Mass. Frederick Beanchamp Ussher . 16 . John Brodhead Van Schaick . 15 . Student. Richard Abraham Varick ... 15 . Student in Music. Joseph Walker 15 . Middle Class. George Edwin Wallace .... 16 . Fairman Warren 17 . Solon Greeley Warren .... 15 . Middle Class. George Standish Weed .... 18 . Student, H.U. Henry Harding Wentworth . . 21 . Student, Will. Coll. James Ira Weston 15 . Clerk. Frederick ,Shattuck Wetmore . 17 . Business. George Redington Wilson ... 16 . Robert Pengilly Winters .... 22 . Clerk. William Wisner 19 . Leung Tung Wong Amory Trask Woodbury ... 18 . Business. Henry Sylvester Woodruff. . . 17 . Clerk. . Epping. (( . Exeter. . Stratham. . Milford, Mass. Boston, Mass. . West Epping. . Exeter. . Auburn, N.Y. . Milford. . San Antonio, Tex. . Keene. Lebanon. . St. Louis, Mo. . Jefferson, N.Y. . Exeter. . Fairfield, Me. . New York, N.Y. . New York, N.Y. . Manchester. . Worcester, Mass. . Rochester. . New York, N.Y. . Exeter. . Plattsburg, N.Y. . Niagara Falls, N.Y. . Exeter. . Warren, Pa. . Waddington, N.Y. . Boston, Mass. Albuquerque, New Mexico. . Cedar Rapids, la. . Shanghai, China. . Milford, Mass. Brooklyn, N.Y. 136 1881.] CATALOGUE. 157 1881 John Lincoln Ames . . . Senior Class. Paul Kimball Ames . . . Student, Yale Coll. Allen Harwood Babcock . Middle Class. Wakefield Baker .... Senior Class. James Gillespie Blaine, jr. Preparatory Class. George Pliny Buck . . . Student, Worcester, Mass. Walter Prentice Butler . Junior Class. Edward Willet Champion Student, Cornell Univ. Fessenden Nealley Chase Govt. Service. Lawrence William Churchill Student, Yale Coll. Alan Cuningham .... Junior Class. James Dennis Den^gre . Junior Class. Edward Everett Dennett Worsted Business. Paul Devereux Business. Ezra Day Dickerman . . Student. Edward Lace}- Dickerman Junior Class. James Lee Doolittle . William Franklin Draper Middle Class. Willis Reynolds Dresser Teacher. Joseph Osterman Dyer, jr. Senior Class. William James Dyer . . Junior Class. Ephraim Howard Egolf Charles Stanford Elgutter Senior Class. Horace Delano Everett Junior Class. Arthur Faulkner .... Student, H.U. Edward Grinnell Faye Jefferson Butler Fletcher Senior Class. Albert George Follett . Student, Andover, Mass. Edward Milton Foote . Student, Rochester Univ. . 18 . 19 . 16 . 15 . 12 . 17 . 18 . 18 . 17 . 19 . 19 . 13 . 23 . 17 . 13 . 15 . 14 . 15 . 21 . 17 . 15 . 18 . 20 . 21 . 18 . 15 . 15 . 16 . 15 Jefferson, Me. Bethel, Me. Oakland, Cal. San Francisco, Cal. Augusta, Me. Shrewsbury, Mass. Saratoga Springs, N.Y. Goshen, N.Y. Saco, Me. Oswego, N.Y. Smyrna, Del. New Orleans, La. Portsmouth. Fitchburg, Mass. Deposit, N.Y. (( (( Bridgeport, Conn. Bridgeport, Conn. Balston Spa, N.Y. Milford, Mass. Princeton, Me. Galveston, Tex. Plainfield, Conn. Pottstown, Pa. Omaha, Neb. Dover. Keene. New York, N.Y. Brooklyn, N.Y. Brooklyn, N.Y. Middletown, N.J. 158 CATALOGUE. [1881. Leland Amoiy Lewis Gale . . 18 . . . West Medway, Mass. Senior Class. Edgar Malcolm Garnett . . . . 17 . . . San Francisco, Cal. Senior Class. Lindley Miller Garrison . . . . 16 . . . Camden, N.J. Student, H.U. John William Gerry 21 . . . Sherman Mills, Me. Ward Master, City Hospital. Boston, Mass. George Albert Giles 15 . . . East Kingston. Student, Kingston. William Francis Gleason . . . 20 . . . Milford, Mass. Medical Student, H.U. Leon Joseph Goetter 16 . . . Montgomery, Ala. Student, New York, N.Y. *John Burnham Goldsmith . . . 17 . . . Chester 1882 George McClellan Houtz Good 18 . . . Osceola, Pa. Claude T Griffith 15 . . . Indianapolis, Ind. Student, Asbury Univ. Albert Emerson Hadlock . . . 18 . . . Milford. Middle Class. Edward Jewett Hall 17 . . . Maiden, Mass. Student, H.U. Fred Alonzo Hanson 17 . . . Dover. Middle Class. Frank Lincoln Hayes ..... 15 .. . Dover. Manufacturer. " Edward Webster Herrick . . . 16 . . . Northampton, Mass. * Junior Class. Isaac Hills, jr 17 . . . Rochester, N.Y. William Knowles Hobbs . . . . 19 . . . North Hampton. Teacher. " " Albert Fairchild Holden . . . . 13 . . . Cleveland, O. Middle Class. Charles Richardson Holmau . . 16 . . . Worcester, Mass. Middle Class. Lockwood Honors 16 . . . New York, N.Y. Junior Class. Timothy Howard 17 . . . North Brookfield, Mass. Student, Amh. Coll. Arthur Webster Howison . . . 19 . . . Milford. Student. " Henry Hubbard 16 . . . Chicago, 111. William Mann Irvine 15 . . . Bedford, Pa. Junior Class. Louis Janin, jr 15 . . . Oakland, Cal. Edward Borden Jennings . . . 16 . . . Fall River, Mass. Student, H.U. Winfield Scott Jewell 20 . . . Manchester. Clerk. *' Frank Harrison Kelley, jr. . . 18 . . . Worcester, Mass. Student, Yale Coll. Edward Russell Kellogg . . . . 17 . . . San Francisco, Cal. Student, Yale Coll. Charles Pinckney Knapp . . . 16 . . . Deposit, N.Y. Junior Class. Furman Kneeland 14 . . . Brooklyn, N.Y. Junior Class. Benjamin Carter Lockett . . . 17 . . . New York, N.Y. 1881.] Milburn Love .... Senior Class. Samuel Cony Manley Junior Class. Dana Giles Marble . Middle Class. Harry Lowell Mason Middle Class. John Francis McArdel Business. John McKinstrj^ Merriam Student, H.U. Samuel Wells Merrill . . Student. David Whipple Morison . Junior Class. William Nelson Middle Class. Luther Edgerton Newport Student. Henry AYarrington Ninde Student, H.U. " Lucien Holley Norton . . John O'Neill Junior Class. William Henry Paine . . Junior Class. Arthur Franklin Parrott . Walter Gray Parsons . . Bank Clerk. Giles Keeney Peck . . . Farmer. Frederick Wainwright PerL Student, Mass. Inst, of Tech. Charles Wheeler Pierson Student, Yale Coll. Dorman Bradstreet Pike . Student, Dart. Coll. Dwight Morgan Piatt . . Clerk. Joseph Parsons Prescott . Student. Wilder Dwight Quint . . Middle Class. William Henry Rand, jr. ■ Junior Class. Burt Henry Redfield . . . Student. Edward Everett Rice . . Business. Ellwood Jackman Ross . Senior Class. William Osgood Russell . Paper Manufacturer. Elmer Columbus Sattley . Junior Class. Edward Benjamin Schmidt John Calhoun Simonds Middle Class. CATALOGUE. UNIVERSITY 159 . 16 . 14 . 17 . 17 . 21 . 18 . 15 . 16 . 15 . 17 . 19 17 15 18 20 19 19 ins . 15 . 17 . 17 . 17 . 15 . 17 . 15 . 12 17 . 17 . 17 . 18 . 14 . 17 . Keokuk, la. . Augusta, Me. . Hampstead. . Brookline, Mass. . Plymouth, Mass. . South Framingham, Mass. . Rutland, Vt. . Minneapolis, Minn. . Nashville, Tenn. . St. Paul, Minn. U