CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY THE THIRD SESSION - £1 ik Ig iit Li THE FORTY-FIRST CONGRESS 4 ah % OF THE $e 3 1 A iA ae Ve | F Ln) UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. AR Bi nN a SLI a COMPILED FOR THE USE OF CONGRESS \ I, i il ¢ ¥4 By BEN: PERLEY POORE, BA CLERK OF PRINTING RECORDS. { } it: ) A 1 . ¥ ) FIRST EDITION. 2 WASHINGTON. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE. 1870. ENTERED ACCORDING TO ACT OF CONGRESS, IN THE YEAR 1870, By BEN: PERLEY FOORE, IN THE OFFICE OF THE LIBRARIAN OF CONGRESS, AT WASHINGTON, This copyright has been secured, by direction of the Joint Committee on Public Printing, to prevent the issue of pirated editions (incorrect or imperfect) for sale. The newspaper press is welcome to copy so much of the Directory as may be desirable, but any one who may republish the work for sale will be liable to prosecu-tion for infringement of the copyright. Copies of this and of subsequent editions can be ordered at the Public Printing Office on payment of the cost of printing. The second edition of the Directory for the present session will be issued early in January, and the compiler hopes that he may be able to make it correct. He is directed by the Joint Committee on Public Printing to request the members of Congress to revise their statistical sketches and to strike out all biographical matter. The information desired is only what is strictly in answer to the following questions: The Senator or Repregentative’s full name ; home post office address; place and time of birth ; early education; collegiate education, if any, with date of graduating ; professional studies; profession or business; all public offices held, with dates; vote on last election to Congress; the name of opponent and the vote given him; and the polities of each. Members of Congress will add their residences in Washington, giving the number and the avenue or street, (each house in the city now having a number, which is more explicit than vague directions,) and will also add or correct the customary references denoting what ladies of their families will be in Washington. The * designates those whose wives accompany them; the § designates those whose daughters accompany them ; the || designates those having other ladies with them. Senators and Representatives will receive their quotas of this edition, in-December, at the folding-rooms of the Senate and of the House. [ZZ Members-elect of the forty-second Congress will confer a favor by furnishing their statistical sketches at an early day-BEN: PERLEY POORE, Clerk of Printing Records. TABLE OF CONTENTS. a3 3 ~} 3 St CO bm SOS © Senators and Representatives, by States, alphabetically arranged Territorial Delegates Standing Committees of the Senate Select and Joint Committees of the Benale .oo.mo oJ oo.eeoo iL iS Standing Committees of the House Select and Standing Committees of the House Officers of the Senate and Senate Committee Clerks Officers of the House and House Committee Clerks Congressional Globe Reporters in the Senate and House. Library of Congress... ... Government Printing Office. Public Buildings and Grounds The Capitol Police Architect of the Capitol Plan of the Capitol Plans of the north and south wings of the basement story Plans of the north and south wings of the principal story Plans of the north and south wings of the attic story The Executive Mansion. The Department of State The Treasury Department The War Department The Navy Department The Interior Department Post Office Department. Department of Justice. Department of Agriculture. De- partment of Education The Supreme Court. The Court of Claims............ SA a3 =F Foreien Lesations in the TInilod)Bialen -. . .c cv cov rrarns amin wn sus mun homens sesiman 86-88 Mexican Joint Commission United States Legations abroad Consulates, Consulates General, and Commercial Agencies Treaty Judges and Arbitrators. Consular Clerks. Libraries The Corporation of Washington Supreme Court of the District of Columbia. Metropolitan Police Churches and their Pastors in Washington and Georgetown The Smithsonian Institution Washington City Post Office Travel Time-table City Directory The forty-second Congress, Senators and Representatives elect...................112-117 Plan of the Senate Chamber Directory of the Senate Chamber Plan of the House of Representatives Directory of the House of Representatives Senators and their residences at home and in Washington Representatives and their residences at home and in Washington 123-125 Delegates and their residences at home and in Washington 126 Representatives of the Press—their offices and their residences CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY. MEMBERS OF THE FORTY-FIRST CONGRESS, WITH THE CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICTS, HOME POST OFFICES, AND BIOGRAPHIC STATISTICS. ALABAMA. SENATORS. WILLARD WARNER, of Montgomery, was born in Granville, Ohio, September 4, 1826; graduated at Marietta College, Ohio, in 1845; entered the Union army as major of the 76th Ohio volunteer infantry in 1861; was promoted to lieutenant colonel of the same regiment in 1863; served on General W. T. Sherman’s staff as assistant inspector general during the Atlanta campaign, and until October 20, 1864; was appointed colonel of the 180th Ohio volunteer infantry in October, 1864; was brevetted brigadier and major general for gallant and meritorious services; was mustered out in July, 1865; was elected to and served two years in the Ohio senate ; was elected United States senator from Alabama as a republican, and took his seat July 25, 1868. His term of office will expire March 3, 1871. GEORGE FE. SPENCER, of Decatur, Alabama, was born in Jefferson county, New York, November 1, 1836; was educated at Montreal College, Canada; was admitted to the bar in Towa in 1857; was secretary of the Iowa senate of 1856; entered the army as captain, assistant adjutant general of volunteers, in 1862; recruited and raised the 1st Alabama cavalry, United States volunteers, in 1863; commanded a brigade of cavalry on Sherman’s grand march; was brevetted brigadier general for ‘‘ gallantry on the field ;” resigned position in the army July 4, 1865; in May, 1867, was appointed register in bankruptcy for the fourth district of Alabama; July 21, 1868, was elected to the United States Senate as a republican, and took his seat July 25, 1868. His term of office will expire March 3, 1873. REPRESENTATIVES. First District.—Baldwin, Clarke, Conecub, Covington, Dallas, Mobile, Monroe, Wash ington, and Wilcox counties. ALFRED E. Buck, of Mobile, was born at Foxcroft, Maine, February 7, 1832; received a common-school and academic education in his native town, and graduated at Waterville, College, Maine, in August, 1869; was principal of the high school at Lewiston, Maine, at the commencement of the rebellion; entered the Union army in 1861 as captain of company C, thirteenth Maine infantry; was appointed lieutenant colonel of the ninety-first United States Colored Troops in August, 1863; was transferred and made lieutenant colonel of the fifty-first United States Colored Troops in October, 1864 ; was brevetted colonel of volunteers for gallant conduct at the siege of ort Blakely, Alabama, April, 1865; was mustered out of service at Baton Rouge, Louisiana, June, 1866; was a member of the constitutional convention of Alabama in 1867 ; was appointed by General Pope clerk of the circuit court of Mobile county, Alabama, in 1867, and was elected 'to the same office in 1868; was chosen presidential elector in 1368, and was elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 14,191 votes, against 12,080 for Mann, democrat. Second District.Barbour, Bullock, Butler, Coffee, Crenshaw, Dale, Geneva, — Henry, Lowndes, Montgomery, and Pike counties. CHARLES W. BUCKLEY, of Montgomery, was born in Otsego county, New York, Feb-ruary 18, 1835; graduated at Beloit College, Wisconsin, in 1860, and at the Union Theo- a CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY. logical Seminary in New York city in 1863; entered the Union army February 9, 1864, and was mustered out January 11, 1866; was the Alabama State superintendent of education for the Bureau of Refugees and Freedmen in 1866 and 1867 ; was a member of the conven-tion which framed the present constitution of Alabama in 1867 ; was elected to the fortieth Congress as a republican, and took his seat on the re-admission of the State, July 21, 1868, and was re-elected to the forty-first' Congress, receiving 14,933 votes, against 10,786 votes for Wortley, democrat. Re-elected. Third District. —Chambers, Clay, Coosa, Elmore, Lee, Macon, Randolph, Russell, Talla-dega, and Tallapoosa counties. RoBERT S. HEFLIN, of Opelika, was born near Madison, Georgia, April 15, 1815; received an academic education: volunteered and served in the Creek war in 1836; was elected clerk of the superior court of Fayette county, Georgia, in 1836 for two years, and re-elected in 1838; studied law and was admitted to the bar in 1840; was a member of the State senate of Georgia in 1840 and 1841; removed to Randolph county, Georgia, in 1844 ; was a member of the house of representatives of Georgia, in 1849, and of the senate in 1360 ; was an uncompromising Union man during the war of the rebellion, and in August, 1864, was compelled to leave his home to save his life, passing through the lines to the Union ariny at Rome, Georgia, and accompanying General Sherman’s command to Savannah ; was appointed judge of probate in 1865 by Provisional Governor Parsons, and was subsequently elected to that office, which he held until the State was admitted into the Union; was republican elector from the third congressional district and voted for Grant and Colfax; and was elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 9,895 votes, against 9,652 or Parkenson, democrat. Fourth District.—Autauga, Bibb, Choctaw, Greene, Hale, Jones, Marengo, Perry, Pick-ens, Shelley, Sumter, and Tuscaloosa counties. CARLES HAYS, of Eutaw, was born in Greene county, Alabama February 2, 1834 ; was educated at the University of Georgia, and matriculated at the University of Virginia, in May, 1864 ; has devoted himself entirely to agricultural pursuits, and is one of the largest planters in Alabama; was elected to the constitutional convention of Alabama in 1867, and was one of the framers of the present constitution of that State; was elected to the State senate of Alabama in 1868, and while a member was elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 17,243 votes, against 5,228 votes for Read, democrat. Re-elected. Fifth District.—Baine, Calhoun, Cherokee, Cleburne, De Kalb, Jackson, Madison, Mar-shall, and St. Clair counties. PETER M. Dox, of Huntsville, was born at Geneva, Ontario county, New York, September 11, 1813; was educated at the Geneva Academy, and at Hobart College, Geneva, from which he graduated in August, 1833; studied and practiced law ; was elected a mem-ber of the legislature of New York from Ontario county in 1841-42 ; was judge of the Onta-rio county courts; removed to Madison county, Alabama, in 1855, and has been engaged in agricultural pursuits there; was unanimously elected-in 1865, as a Union man, to repre-sent Madison county in the convention called for the revision of the State constitution, and took an active part in the restoration of the State to its place in the Union; was elected to the forty-first Congress as a union democrat, receiving 6,047 votes, against 4, 933 votes for Haralson, republican. Re-elecled. Sixth District.—Blount, Colbert, Franklin, Jefferson, Lauderdale, Lawrence, Limestone, Marion, Morgan, Walker, and Winston counties. WinLiaM C. SHERROD, of Courtland, was born at Courtland, Alabama, August 17, 1835; prepared for college at Edgefield, North Carolina; was educated at Chapel Hill College, North Carolina; is a cotton planter; was a member of the national democratic convention held at Charleston in 1860; served in the State legislature of Alabama in 1859-60; was an officer in the confederate army during the war; and was elected to the forty-first Congress as a democrat, receiving 4,932 votes, against 2,836 votes for Hinds, republican, ARKANSAS. SENATORS. ALEXANDER McDoNALD, of Little Rock, was born in Clinton county, Pennsylvania, April 10, 1832; was educated at the Lewisburg University; removed to Kausas in 1857 ; engaged in mercantile pursuits; took a leading part in raising and equipping Union troops SENATORS AND REPRESENTATIVES. during the war for the suppression of the rebellion; established himself in Arkansas as a merchant in 1863; was the founder, and first president, of the national bank at Fort Smith, and afterwards of the Merchants’ National Bank at Little Rock; was the first signer of the call for the State convention under the reconstruction acts, and was elected a member of that convention ; was elected to the United States Senate as a republican, and took his seat June 23, 1868. His term of office will expire March 3, 1871. Benyamin F. RICE, of Little Rock, was born at East Otto, Cattaraugus county, New York, May 28, 1823; received an academic education; studied and practiced law ; was a member of the Kentucky legislature in 1855-’56; was elected presidential elector in 1856 for the sixth congressional district of Kentucky; removed to Minnesota in 1860; entered the Union army as a private in 1861; was promoted to captain in the 3d Minnesota infantry vol-unteers, and served three years; settled at Little Rock in 1864; practiced law until 1868 ; took a leading part in organizing the republican party in the State of Arkansas in the early part of 1867; was chairman of the State central committee, and conducted a successful can-vags in three successive elections: was elected to the United States Senate as a republican, and took his seat June 3, 1868. His term of service will expire March 3, 1873. REPRESENTATIVES. First District.-—Arkansas, Conway, Craighead, Cross, Crittenden, Desha, Fulton, Greene. Independence, Izard, Jackson, Lawrence, Monroe, Mississippi, Poinsett, Phillips, Prairie, Randolph, Searcy, Sharpe, St. Francis, Van Buren, Woodruff, and White counties. Logan H. Roots, of Duvall’s Bluff, was born in Perry county, Illinois, March 26, 1841 ; he was prineipal of the high school in the city of Duquoin, in his native county, the winter previous to reaching his majority, and graduated with the first honors of his class at the [llinois State Normal University in 1862; he at once thereafter took an active part in recruit-ing and organizing the 81st Illinois volunteers, in which regiment he himself enlisted; was soon commissioned and served until promoted by an appointment as a staff officer of United States volunteers, under which he was chief depot commissary for the combined armies commanded by General Sherman on the ‘‘ march to the sea;” he served in other responsible positions until the close of the war in 1865, then settled in Arkansas and engaged in cotton planting and trading; upon the passage of the reconstruction acts in 1867, he took a bold and prominent position in favor of the reconstruction of the State; he was elected to the fortieth Congress, and was the youngest member of that body; and he was elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 7,151 votes, against 6,684 votes for Cameron, democrat. Second District.—Ashley, Bradley, Calhoun, Chicot, Columbia, Dallas, Drew, Hemp-stead, Hot Springs, Jefferson, Ouachita, Saline, and Union counties. ANTHONY A. C. ROGERS, of Pine Bluff, Arkansas, was born in Sumner county, Ten-nessee, February 14, 1821; received a limited education in a country school until he was fifteen years old, when he was employed as clerk in a dry goods store until the age of twenty-two, since which time he has been largely engaged in mercantile pursuits, being one of the most prosperous merchants in the southwest; he emigrated to Arkansas in 1854, and in 1861 was the candidate of the Union men for delegate to the State convention, where he earnestly opposed secession; he was arrested for his loyalty to the general government, imprisoned, and forced to give bonds to answer the charge of ‘‘ treason against the confed-erate government ;”’ he was elected to the thirty-eighth Congress in 1864 by the loyal men of his distriet, was not permitted to take his seat, his State not having been legally reconstructed, and he was elected to the forty-first Congress as the ‘‘people’s candidate.” (although he had been for years identified with the republican party,) receiving 6,518 votes, against 5,332 votes for Elliot, republican. Third District.— Benton, Boone, Carroll, Clark, Crawford, Franklin, Johnson, Little River, Madison, Marion, Montgomery, Newton, Perry, Pike, Polk, Pope, Pulaski, Scott, Sebastian, Sevier, Washington, and Yell counties. THOMAS BoLEs, of Dardanelle, was born in Johnson county, Arkansas, July 16, 1837; raised on a farm; received a limited common-school education; was deputy clerk of the cir-cuit court of Yell county in 1859-60, during which time he studied law, and was admitted to the bar in September, 1860; served inthe Union army as captain during the war for the suppression of the rebellion; was elected, in June, 1865, circuit judge of the fourth judicial circuit of Arkansas, and resigned April 20, 1868, when elected to Congress; was elected to the fortieth Congress, and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 9,547 votes, against 5,580 votes for Nash, democrat. Re-elected. 8 : CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY. CALIFORNIA. SENATORS. CORNELIUS COLE, of San Francisco, was born at Lodi, New York, September 17, 1822; graduated at the Wesleyan University, Connecticut: studied law, and was admitted to the bar; went to California in 1849, and after working a year in the gold mines, commenced practice; was district attorney of Sacramento City and county from 1859 to 1862; was a member of the national republican committee from 1856 to 1860 ; was a representative in the thirty-eighth Congress; was elected to the United States Senate as a Union republican to succeed James A. McDougall, democrat, and took his seat March 4, 1867. His term of service will expire March 3, 1873. EUGENE CASSERLY was born in Ireland in 1823; came with his parents in 1827 to New York city, where he resided until 1850; received there a classical and general education; was connected with the press for about five years; was admitted to the highest courts of New York in 1845; practiced law in New York city until 1850, and was corporation attorney there in 1846-'47; went to California in 1850, and has since resided in San Francisco; in 1850-’51 he published a daily paper there, and was State printer for one year, in 1851-52 ; practiced law from 1851 until November, 1868; was elected to the United States Senate as a democrat, to succeed John Conness, republican, and took his seat March 4, 1869. His term of service will expire March 3, 1875. REPRESENTATIVES. Furst District.—DBuena Vista, Fresno, Los Angeles, Mariposa, Merced, Kern, Monterey, San Mateo, San Luis Obispo, San Francisco, San Diego, San Bernardino, Santa Barbara, Santa Clara, Santa Cruz, Stanislaus, and Tulare counties. SAMUEL B. AXTELL, of San Francisco, was born in Franklin county, Ohio, October 14, 1819; was a student at the Western Reserve College, Ohio; studied and practiced law; was elected to the fortieth Congress, and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a democrat, receiving 23,632 votes, against 20,081 votes for Pixley, republican. Second District.—Alameda, Alpine, Amador, Calaveras, Contra Costa, El Dorado, Mono, Nevada, Placer, Sacramento, San Joaquin, and Tuolumne counties. AARON A. SARGENT was born in Newburyport, Massachusetts, September 28, 1827; a printer and editor in early life; emigrated to California in 1849; studied law and came to the bar in 1854 ; was district attorney of Nevada county, California, in 1855 and 1856 ; received the degree of M. A. from the College of California, in 1865; was elected to the thirty-seventh Congress; and was elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 18,264 votes, against 15,124 votes for Coffroth, democrat. Third District.—Butte, Colusa, Del® Norte, Humboldt, Klamath, Lake, Lassen, Marin, Mendocino, Napa, Pluma, Shasta, Sierra, Siskiyou, Solano, Sonoma, Sutter, Tehama, Trinity, Yolo, and Yuba counties. JAMES A. JouNsoN, of Downieville, was born: at Spartanburg, South Carolina, May 16, 1829 ; received a common-school education; studied medicine and law; removed to Cali-fornia, where he is now a practicing lawyer; was a member of the legislature of California in 1858-59 and 1859-'60; was elected to the fortieth Congress, and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a democrat, receiving 15,778 votes, against 15,496 votes for Hartson, republican. CORNECTICUT. SENATORS. ORRIS S. FERRY, of Norwalk, was born at Bethel, Connecticut, August 15, 1823; graduated at Yale College; studied and practiced law ; was appointed judge of probate in 1849; was a member of the senate in the State legislature in 1855 and 1856; was State's attorney from 1856 until 1859; was a member of the House of Representatives in the thirty-sixth Congress: was a colonel and brigadier general of volunteers in the Union army; was elected to the United States Senate as a republican to succeed Lafayette S. Foster, Union republican, and took his seat March 4, 1867. His term of service will expire March 3, 1873. SENATORS AND REPRESENTATIVES. WILLIAM A. BUCKINGHAM, of Norwich, was born in Lebanon, Connecticut, May 28, 1804 ; educated principally in the public schools; was trained a farmer ; entered a store at twenty ; was engaged in mercantile business twenty-one years, and then in manufacturing ; was elected mayor of the city of Norwich in 1849, 1850, 1856, and 1857 ; was presidential elector in 1856 ; was governor of Connecticut from 1358 to 1866 ; was elected to the United States Senate as a republican, to succeed James Dixon, democrat, and took his seat March 4, 1869. His term of office will expire March 3, 1575. REPRESENTATIVES. First District.—Hartford and Tolland counties. JULIus L. STRONG, of Hartford, was born in Bolton, Connecticut, November 8, 18283; entered Union College, but left in his senior year and entered the National Law School at Ballston Spa; studied law, was admitted to the bar in 1853, and has practiced since at Hartford; was a member of the legislature of Connecticut in 1852 and 1853, and was elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 11,620 votes, against 10,885 for Dixon, democrat. Second District.—Middlesex and New Haven counties. STEPHEN W. KELLOGG, of Waterbury, was born at Shelburne, Massachusetts, April 5, 1822; graduated at Yale College in 1846; was judge of the New Haven county court in 1854 ; studied law, was admitted to the bar, and has since practiced at Waterbury; was clerk of the State senate of Connecticut in 1851; was a member of the State senate in 1853, and of the State house of representatives in 1856; was judge of the New Haven county court in 1854 ; was elected judge of probate in 1854, and held the office six years; was a delegate 'to the national republican conventions of 1860 and 1868; and was elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 13,012 votes, against 12,678 votes for Bab-cock, democrat. Third District.—New London and Windham counties. : HENRY H. STARKWEATHER, of Norwich, was born in Preston, Connecticut, April 29, 1826 ; was educated principally in the public schools; followed farming and teaching school until twenty-four years of age; studied law, was admitted to the bar and practiced; was a member of the Connecticut legislature in 1856; was a delegate to the national republican conventions of 1860 and of 1368, and is now a member of the republican national com-mittee. In 1861 he was appointed postmaster at Norwich by President Lincoln, and in 1865 he was re-appointed by President Johnson, but after the latter made his speech of Feb-ruary 22, 1366, he sent in his resignation. He was elected to the fortieth Congress, and was re-clected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 9,122 votes, against 6,853 votes for Converse, democrat. Fourth District.—Fairfield and Litchfield counties. WiLLiam H. BARNUM, of Lime Rock, was born September 17, 1818; received a publie-school education; engaged in the manufacture of iron; was a member of the State legisla-ture in 1851-'52; was elected to the fortieth Congress. and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a democrat, receiving 13,075 votes, against 11,915 for Beardsley, republican. DELAWARE. SENATORS. WILLARD SAULSBURY, of Georgetown, was born in Kent county, Delaware, June 2, 1820; was educated at Delaware College, Delaware, and at Dickinson College, Pennsyl-vania; studied law and was admitted to the bar in April, 1845; was attorney general of Delaware from March, 18570, to March, 1855; was elected to the United States Senate as a democrat to succeed Martin W. Bates, and took his seat in 1859, and was re-elected in 1865. His term of service will expire March 3, 1871. TrOoMAS FRANCIS BAYARD, of Wilmington, was born at Wilmington, Delaware, October 20, 1828; was chiefly educated at the Flushing School, established by Rev. Dr. F. L. Hawks, and although his early training was for a mercantile life, he studied and adopted the profession of law; he came to the bar in 1851, and, excepting the years 1855 and 1856, when he resided in Philadelphia, he has always practiced in his native city ; in 1853 he was appointed United States district attorney for Delaware, but resigned in 1854; was elected to the United States Senate as a democrat to succeed James A. Bayard, (his father,) who had been appointed to fill the vacancy occasioned by the death of George Read Riddle, and took his seat March 4, 1869. His term of service will expire March 3, 1875. REPRESENTATIVE. The State at large.—BENJAMIN T. Bicas, of Summit Bridge, was born at Summit Bridge Delaware, October 1, 1821; spent his youth upon a farm ; attended the Pennington Semi-vary for two years, and afterwards taught school for a shor time! was subsequently a stu- CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY. dent in the Wesleyan University of Connecticut, but left it on account of his health ; in 1847 he turned his whole attention to farming; was a member of the State constitutional conven-~ tion of 1853; he subsequently took an interest in railroad operations, and was elected direc-tor in the Keut and Queen Anne’s Railroad Company ; was a candidate for Congress in 1869 in opposition to Judge Fisher, and was defeated by 247 votes: and was elected to the forty-first Gong as a democrat, receiving 10,961 votes, against 7,636 votes for Torbert, republican. Re-elected. FLORIDA. SENATORS. Taomas W. OSBORN, of Pensacola, was born at Scotch Plains, New Jersey, March 9, 1836; removed with his parents to Wilna, New York, in 1842; graduated from Madison University in 1860 ; studied law in Watertown, New York, and as soon as admitted to the bar, in 1861, he entered the Union army; first commissioned as captain in the Ist New York artillery, he afterwards served successively as chief of artillery of the second division, third army corps, as chief of artillery to the third, eleventh, and fourth army corps, and as chief of artillery of the army of the Tennessee; was assistant commissioner of the Bureau of Refu- gees and Freedmen for Florida, with the rank of colonel, from June, 1865, to August, 1866 ; racticed law in Tallahassee, and held the office of register in bankruptey ; was a member of the constitutional convention of Florida under the reconstruction acts ; removed from Talla- hassee to Pensacola, was elected to the United States Senate as a republican, receiving 51 votes, against 18 votes for William Marvin, democrat, and took his seat June 350, 1868. His term of service will expire March 3, 1873. ABIIAH GILBERT, of St. Augustine, was born at Gilbertsville, Otsego county, New York, being the eldest of a family of eighteen children ; was a student at Hamilton College, New York, but ill-health preventing his engaging in professional pursuits, he became quite exteu-sively engaged in mercantile operations in New York city and other places in different States of the Union; he was an old-line whig, and since the inception of the republican party its ardent supporter; having retired from active business pursuits, and removed to Florida for the health of his family, he was elected to the United States Senate as a republican by more than a full party vote, in place of A. S. Welch, republican, and took his seat March 4, 1869. His term of service will expire March 3, 1875. REPRESENTATIVE. The State at large. —CHARLES M. HAMILTON, of Jacksonville, was born in Clinton county, Pennsylvania, November 1, 1840; received an academic education; studied law; entered the Union army as a private in 1861, participated in 16 battles, and was wounded at Gaines’s Mill, at Antietam, and at Fredericksburg, in which engagement he was severely wounded through the knee, disabling him, while charging in front of his regiment with the colors in his hands, snatched from the grasp of the falling sergeant, and though taken prisoner the moment he fell, he laid on the battle-field five days and nights, when he was conveyed to Libby prison, where he remained forty days; was transferred by promotion, in con-sideration of his gallant record, to a lieutenancy in the Veteran Reserve Corps in October, 1863; was detailed as judge advocate and aid-de-camp on the staff of the military governor of Washington, D. C., and served in that capacity until 1865; was ap-pointed assistant commissioner of the Bureau of Freedmen and Refugees; commenced the practice of law in 1868; was elected to the fortieth Congress, and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 7,863 votes, against 3,846 votes for Barnes, democrat, and 831 votes for Sanders, independent. GEORGIA. SENATORS. REPRESENTATIVES. First District.—Appling, Berrien, Brooks, Bryan, Bullock, Chatham, Camden, Charlton, Clinch, Coffee, Colquitt, Echols, Effingham, Emanuel, Glynn, Irwin, Johnson, Laurens, Liberty, Lowndes, Montgomery, McIntosh, Pierce, Scriven, Thomas, Tatnall, Telfair, Ware, and Wayne counties. Second District.—Baker, Chattahoochee, Calhoun, Clay, Decatur, Dooly, Dougherty, Early, Houston, Lee, Macon, Marion, Miller, Pulaski, Randolph, Sumter, Stewart, Terrell, Web-ster, and Wilcox counties. : Third District.—Campbell, Carroll, Clayton, Coweta, Fayette, Harris, Haralson, Heard, Meriwether, Muscogee, Paulding, Schley, Talbot, Taylor, and Troup counties. Fourth District.—Butts, Baldwin, Henry, Jones, Jasper, Monroe, Newton, Pike, Putnam, Spalding, Upson, Twiggs, and Wilkinson counties. LL y 2 SENATORS AND REPRESENTATIVES. C1 Fufth District.— Washington, Jefferson, Burke, Richmond, Glascock, Hancock, Warren, Columbia, Lincoln, Wilkes, Taliaferro, Greene, Morgan, Elbert, and Oglethorpe counties. Sizth District.—Banks, Clarke, Dawson, Fannin, Forsyth, Franklin, Gilmer, Gwinnett, Habersham, Hall, Hart, Jackson, Lumpkin, Madison, Milton, Pickens, Rabun, Towns, Union, Walton, and White counties. Seventh District.—Barton, Catoosa, Chatooga, Cherokee, Cobb, Dade, De Kalb, Floyd Fulton, Gordon, Murray, Polk, Walker, and Whitefield counties. TLLINOIS. SENATORS. LyvAaN TRUMBULL, of Chicago, was born at Colchester, Connecticut, October 12, 1813; studied law, and was admitted to the bar in Georgia; commenced practice in Illinois; was a member of the legislature of Illinois in 1840; was secretary of state of Illinois in 1841 and 1842; was justice of the supreme court of Illinois from 1848 to 1853; was elected a repre-sentative to the thirty-fourth Congress, but before taking his seat was chosen to the United States Senate as a republican to succeed James Shields, democrat, and took his seat in 1855; was re-elected in 1861, and again re-elected in 1867. His term of service will expire March 3, 1873. Ricnanp YATES, of Jacksonville, was born at Warsaw, Kentucky, January 18, 1818; graduated at Illinois College ; studied and practiced law ; was a representative in the legis-lature of Illinois in 1842, 1843, 1844, 3845, 1848, and 1849; was a representative in the thirty-second and thirty-third Congresses ; was governor of Illinois from 1861 to 1865; was elected to the United States Senate as a Union republican to succeed W. A. Richardson, democrat, and took his seat March 4, 1865. His term of service will expire March 3, 1871. REPRESENTATIVES. First District.—Cook county. NorMAN B. Jupp, of Chicago, was born at Rome, New York, January 10, 1815; studied law there and was admitted to the bar; removed to Chicago in 1836, and commenced the practice of his profession; held several municipal offices ; was a member of the State senate of Illinois for sixteen consecutive years, his first term commencing in 1844, and last ending in 1860; was minister plenipotentiary to Prussia from 1361 until 1865; was elected to the fortieth Congress, and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 27,414 votes, against 19,233 votes for Wallace, democrat. Second District.—Boone, De Kalb, Kane, Lake, McHenry, and Winnebago counties. JouN F. FARNSWORTH, of St. Charles, was born at Eaton, Canada East, March 27, 1820; received an academic education; studied and practiced law; was colonel of cavalry and brigadier general in the Union army; was elected to the thirty-fifth, thirty-sixth, thirty-eighth, thirty-ninth, and fortieth Congresses, and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 20,725 votes, against 6,307 votes for Herrington, democrat. Re-elected. Third District.—Carroll, Joe Daviess, Lee, Ogle, Stephenson, and Whiteside counties. Horatio C. BURCHARD, of Freeport, was born at Marshall, Oneida county, New York, September 22, 1825; graduated at Hamilton College, New York, 1850; studied and prac-ticed law ; was school commissioner of Stephenson county, Illinois, from 1357 to 1860 ; was a member of the legislature of the State of Illinois in 1863, 1864, 1865, and 1866; was elected as a republican to the forty-first Congress, to fill the vacancy occasioned by the resignation of Hon E. B. Washburne, receiving 6,217 votes, against 1,845 votes for Eustace, indepen-dent. Re-elected. Fourth District.—Adams, Hancock, Henderson, Mercer, Rock Island, and Warren counties. JonN B. HAWLEY, of Rock Island, was born in Fairfield county, Connecticut, Feb-ruary 9, 1831; went to Illinois with his parents when quite young: studied law, and on coming to the bar in 1852, settled at Rock Island; in 1856 he was elected State’s attorney, serving four years; in 1861 he entered the Union army as captain, and took an active part in the battles of Forts Henry and Donelson, receiving injuries in the last engagement which made it necessary for him to retire from military duty in 1862; in 1865 he was appointed by President Lincoln postmaster of Rock Island, and removed the year following by President Johnson; and was elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 17,269 votes, against 15,547 votes for Singleton, democrat. Re-elected. Fifth District.—Bureau, Henry, nox, Marshall, Peoria, Putnam, and Stark counties. EBox C. INGERSOLL, of Peoria, was born in Oneida county, New York, December 12, 1831 ; completed his education at Paducah, Kentucky ; studied and practiced law ; was a member CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY. of the State legislature of Illinois in 1856; was elected in 1864 to fill the unexpired term of Owen Lovejoy in the thirty-eighth Congress; was elected to the thirty-ninth and fortieth Congresses; and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a Union republican, receiving 20,991 votes, against 13,626 votes for Niglas, democrat. Sixth District. —Dupage, Grundy, Kankakee, Kendall, Lasalle, and Will counties Burton C. Cook, of Ottawa, was born in Monroe county, New York, May 11, 1819; was educated at the Collegiate Institute, Rochester; studied law ; removed to Ottawa county, Illinois, in 1835; commenced the practice of law in 1840; was elected, in 1846, by the legis-lature, State’s attorney for the ninth judicial district for two years, and was re-elected by the people in 1848 for four years; was a member of the State senate of Illinois from 1852 to 1860; was a member of the peace conference which met at Washington in 1861; was elected to the thirty-ninth and fortieth Congresses; and was re elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 19,607 votes, against 11,946 votes for Gray, democrat. Re-elected. Seventh District. —Champaign, Coles, Cumberland, Douglas, Edgar, Ford, Iroquois, Macon, Moultrie, Piatt, and Vermillion counties. JESSE H. MOORE, of Decatur, was born near Lebanon, St. Clair county, Iliinois, April 22, 1817; graduated at McKendree College, Lebanon, Illinois, in 1842; entered upon the . profession of teaching, which he pursued for thirteen years, during which time he was at the head of three literary institutions in the West, distinguishing himself in each position as an efficient and popular instructor; he also studied law and was admitted to the bar but never practiced ; in 1862 he raised the 115th Illinois volunteer infantry, of which he was commis-sioned colonel, and at the head of which he took the field ; during the last year of the war he commanded the 2d brigade, 1st-division, 4th army corps of the department of the Cumber land, and in April, 1865, he received the brevet of brigadier general; he has been an ordained minister of the Methodist Episcopal church since 1849, and he was presiding elder of the Decatur district, Illinois conference, in 1368, when he was elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 22,321 votes, against 17,171 votes for Brewer, democrat, Re-elected. Eighth District.—De Witt, Logan, Livingston, McLean, Sangamon, Tazewell, and Wood-ford counties. SELBY M. CuLLoM, of Springfield, was born in Wayne county, Kentucky, November 22, 1829; studied and practiced law; was a member of the legislature of the State of Illinois in 1856 and in 1860, serving the last term as speaker of the house; was a member of a United States military commission in 1862 ; was elected to the thirty-ninth and fortieth Con-gresses ; and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a Union republican, receiving 22,193 votes, against 19,309 votes for Edwards, democrat. Ninth District.——Brown, Cass, Fulton, Mason, McDonough, Menard, Pike, and Schuyler counties. THOMPSON W. MCNEELY, of Petersburg, was born at Jacksenville, October 5, 1835; graduated at the Lombard University, Galesburg, in 1856; studied law and came to the bar in 1857; graduated at the Law University of Louisville, Kentucky, in 1859; was a member of the constitutional convention of Illinois in 1862; and was elected to the forty-first Con-gress as a democrat, receiving 17,877 votes, against 15,279 votes for Ross, rep. Re-elected. Tenth District.—Bond, Calhoun, Christian, Greene, Jersey, Macoupin, Montgomery, Mox-gan, Scott, and Shelby counties. ALBERT G. BURR, of Carrollton, was born in Genessee county, New York, November 8, 1828; received a good English education; studied and practiced law; was a member of the State legislature of Illinois in 1861, 1862, 1863, and 1864 ; was a member of the State consti-stitutional convention; was elected to the fortieth Congress; and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a democrat, receiving 21,420 votes, against 17,397 votes for Turner, republican. Eleventh District.—Clark, Clay, Crawford, Effingham, Fayette, Franklin, Hamilton, Jas-per, Jefferson, Lawrence, Marion, Richland, and Wayne counties. SAMUEL S. MARSHALL, of McLeansboro, was born in Gallatin county, Iilinois, in 1824 ; studied and practiced law; was a member of the legislature of the State of Illinois in 1847 ; was State’s attorney in 1847 and 1848; was a judge of the circuit court from 1851 to 1854, and again from 1861 to 1864 ; was delegate from the State at large to the Charleston and Bal-timore conventions of 1860, the Chicago convention of 1364, and the National Union con-vention at Philadelphia in 1866; received the vote of the democratic party of Illinois in 1861 for United States senator, and in 1867 of the democratic members of the House of Repre-sentatives of the fortieth Congress for Speaker thereof; was elected to the thirty-fourth, thirty-fifth, thirty-ninth, and fortieth Congresses ; and was re-elected to the forty-first Con-gress as a democrat, receiving 20,475 votes, against 16,642 votes for Martin, rep. Re-elected. 2 \ = 1 id SENATORS "AND REPRESENTATIVES. 13 Twelfth District.—Clinton, Madison, Monroe, Randolph, St. Clair, and Washington counties. JouN B. HAY, of Belleville, was born at Belleville, Illinois, January 8, 1834; received a common-school education; worked on a farm, and in his sixteenth year became a printer ; he subsequently studied law and devoted himself to the profession; was for eight years State’s attorney for the 24th judicial district of Illinois; served in the Union army during the war for the suppression of the rebellion; and was elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 14,980 votes, against 13,338 votes for Snyder, democrat. Re-elected. Thirteenth District.—Alexander, Edwards, Gallatin, Hardin, Jackson, Johnson, Massac, Pope, Perry, Pulaski, Saline, Union, Wabash, White, and Williamson counties. JonN M. CREBS, of Carmi, was born at Middleburg, Loudon county, Virginia, April 9, 1830 ; went with his parents to Illinois in 1837; received a common-school education, and during his minority worked upon a farm; at the age of twenty-one he commenced the study of law ; was admitted to the bar in 1852, and settled in White county, Illinois, where he practiced the profession ; in 1862 he entered the Union army as lieutenant colonel ; participated in all the Mississippi movements until the capture of Vicksburg, and was also in the Arkansas cam- paign, commanding a brigade of cavalry in the department of the Gulf; after the war he returned to his profession, and was elected to the forty-first Congress as a democrat, receiving 14,764 votes, against 14,261 votes for Raum, republican. Re-elected. State at large. —JOHN A. LoGaN, of Carbondale, was born in Jackson county, Illinois, where he received a common-school education, and subsequently graduated at the Louisville University ; enlisted as private in the Illinois volunteers and became quartermaster in the war with Mexico; was elected clerk of the Jackson county court in 1849; studied and practiced law ; was elected to the legislature of Illinois in 1852, 1853, 1856, and 1857 ; was prosecuting attorney from 1853 to 1857 ; was a presidential elector in 1856; was elected to the thirty-sixth and thirty-seventh Congresses; resigned and entered the Union army as colonel, and reaching the rank of major general in the war for the suppression of the rebel- lion; was appointed minister to Mexico in 1865, but declined; was elected to the fortieth Congress, and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican. Re-elected. INDIANA. SENATORS. OLIVER P. MORTON, of Indianapolis, was born in Wayne county, Indiana, August 4, 1823; graduated at the Miami University ; studied and practiced law; was elected circuit judge of the fifth judicial circuit of Indiana in 1852; was elected lieutenant governor of Indiana in 1860, and became governor in 1861, when Governor Lane was elected to the ° Senate of the United States; was elected governor in 1864 ; was elected to the United States Senate as a Union republican, to succeed Henry S. Lane, Union republican, and took his seat March 4, 1867. His term of office will expire March 3, 1873. DANIEL D. PRATT, of Logansport, was born at Palermo, Maine, October 26, 1813; was taken to the State of New York by his parents when a lad ; entered Hamilton College and graduated in 1831; removed to Indiana in 1832; taught school; went to Indianapolis in 1834, wrote in the office of the secretary of state and studied law in the mean time; settled at Logansport in 1836, and commenced practice; was a member of the legislature of Indiana in 1851 and 1853; was elected a representative to the forty-first Congress in 1868 by a majority of 2,287, and, before taking his seat, was elected to the United States Senate as a republican, to succeed Thomas A. Hendricks, democrat. His term of office will expire March 3, 1875. REPRESENTATIVES. First District.—Daviess, Gibson, Knox, Perry, Pike, Posey, Spencer, Vanderburg, and Warrick counties. k WiLrLiam E. NIBLACK, of Vincennes, was born in Dubois county, Indiana, May 19, 1822; was educated at the Indiana University at Bloomington ; is by profession a practicing law-yer; was a member of the Indiana house of representatives in 1849, and again in 1863, and of the Indiana senate from 1850 to 1852; was appointed circuit judge in January, 1854, and elected his own successor in the October following for six years, but resigned in October, 1857, after having been elected to the thirty-fifth Congress in place of James Lockhart, deceased ; was elected to the thirty-sixth, thirty-ninth, and fortieth Congresses; and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a democrat, receiving 18,116 votes, against 16,631 for Veatch, republican. Re-elected. Second District.—Clark, Crawford, Dubois, Floyd, Harrison, Jackson, Martin, Orange,Scott, and Washington counties. MicHAEL C. KERR, of New Albany, was born at Titusville, Pennsylvania, March 15,1827; received an academic education; graduated with the degree of Bachelor of Laws atthe Louisville University in 1851 ; commenced the practice of law in 1852, in New Albany ; was elected city attorney in 1854, and prosecuting attorney of Floyd county in 1855; was a member of the State legislature in 1856 and 1857; was elected reporter to the supreme court CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY. of Indiana in 1862, and edited five volumes of reports ; was elected to the thirty-ninth and fortieth Congresses; and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a democrat, receiving 18,779 votes, against 12,343 votes for Gresham, republican. Re-elected. Third District.—Bartholomew, Dearborn, Decatur, Jefferson, Jennings, Ohio, Ripley, and Switzerland counties. WiLLiam S. HoLmaN, of Aurora, was born at a pioneer homestead called Veraestau, in Dearborn county, Indiana, September 6, 1822; received a common-school education and studied at Franklin College, Indiana, for two years; studied and practiced law; was judge of the court of probate from 1843 to 1846; was prosecuting attorney from 1847 to [849; was a member of the constitutional convention of Indiana in 1850; was a member of the legislature of Indiana in 1851; was a judge of the court of common pleas from 1852 to 1856 ; was elected to the thirty-sixth, thirty-seventh, thirty-eighth, and fortieth Congresses; and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a democrat, receiving 15,665 votes, against 14,903 votes for Lamb, republican. Re-clected. Fourth District. —Fayette, Franklin, Hancock, Rush, Shelby, Union, and Wayne counties. GEORGE W. JULIAN, of Centreville, was born near Centreville, Indiana, May 5, 1817; received a common-school education, and was a teacher more than three years; studied law and practiced it nearly twenty years; was a member of the State legislature of Indiana in 1845; was a candidate for Vice-President on the free-soil ticket with John P. Hale in 1852; was a delegate to the first national republican convention, held at Pittsburg in February, 1856, where he served as a vice-president and as chairman of the committee on organization ; was elected to the thirty-first, thirty-seventh, thirty-eighth, thirty-ninth, and fortieth Con-gresses ; and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress, from his new district, given above, as a republican, receiving 13,413 votes, against 13,207 votes for Reid, democrat. Fifth District.—Brown, Hendricks, Johnson, Marion, Morgan, and Putnam counties. JouN CoOBURN, of Indianapolis, was born at Indianapolis, Indiana, October 27, 1825; graduated at Wabash College; studied and practiced law ; was a member of the State legis-lature of Indiana in 1850 and 1851; was judge of the court of common pleas from 1859 to 1861; served in the Union army as colonel and brigadier general during the war for the sup-pression of the rebellion; was appointed and confirmed as the first secretary of Montana Territory in March, 1865, but resigned at once; was elected judge of the fifth judicial cir-cuit of Indiana, in October 1865, and resigned in 1866; was elected to the fortieth Congress ; and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 15,715 votes, against 14,683 votes for Knightly, democrat. Re-elected. Sixth District.—Clay, Greene, Lawrence, Munroe, Owen, Parke, Sullivan, Vermillion, and Vigo counties. DANIEL W. VOORHEES, of Terre Haute, was born in Fountain county, Indiana, Septem-ber 26, 1828; graduated at the Indiana Asbury University in 1849; studied law, and com-menced its practice in 1851; was appointed United States district attorney for Indiana in 1858, and held the office for three years; was elected to the thirty-seventh, thirty-eighth, and thirty-ninth Congresses, but his seat in the latter was successfully contested ; and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a democrat, receiving 16,582 votes, against 16,454 votes for Carter, republican. Re-elected. Seventh District.—Benton, Boone, Carroll, Clinton, Fountain, Montgomery, Tippecanoe, and Warren counties. GODLOVE S. ORTH, of Lafayette, was born near Lebanon, Pennsylvania, April 22, 1817: was educated at Gettysburg College, Pennsylvania; studied law and commenced practice in Indiana; was a member of the State senate of Indiana in 1843, 1844, 1845, 1846, 1847, and 1848, serving one year as president of that body; was a presidential elector in 1843; was a member of the peace conference in 1861; served as captain of a company of volun-teers during the war for the suppression of the rebellion; was elected to the thirty-eighth, thirty-ninth, and fortieth Congresses; and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 16,117 votes, against 15,660 for Manson, democrat. Eighth District.—Cass, Grant, Hamilton, Howard, Madison, Miami, Tipton, and Wabash counties. JAMES N. TYNER, of Peru, was born at Brookville, Indiana, January 17, 1826; received an academic education; studied and practiced law; was secretary of the Indiana senate four consecutive sessions, commencing in 1857 ; was a presidential elector in 1860; was special agent of the Post Office Department from 1861 to 1866; was elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, at a special election, occasioned by the election of Hon. D. D. Pratt to the United States Senate, receiving 11,553 votes, against 7,277 for Hall, democrat. Re-elected. Ninth District.—Adams, Allen, Blackford, Delaware, Henry, Jay, Randolph, and Wells counties. Joux P. C. SHANKS, of Jay Court House, was born at Martinsburg, Virginia, June 17, 1826; received an academic education ; studied law and commenced its practice in Indiana ; Set \ a SENATORS AND REPRESENTATIVES. 15 was a member of the legislature of Indiana in 1854; served in the Union army on General Frémont’s staff ; raised the seventh regiment Indiana volunteer cavalry, and commanded it until placed in command of a brigade of cavalry; was brevetted major general February 14, 1865, and mustered out of service September 22, 1865; was elected to the thirty-seventh and the fortieth Congresses, and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 15,597 votes, against 14,656 for Lowry, democrat. Re-elected. Tenth District.—DeKalb, Elkhart, Huntington, Kosciusko, Lagrange, Noble, Steuben, and Whitley counties. WiLLiam WiLLiams, of Warsaw, was born at Carlisle, Pennsylvania, May 11, 1821; received a common-school education; studied law and commenced its practice in Indiana; was treasurer of Kosciusko county in 1850; was director of the Northern Indiana State prison in (860; was commissioned by the governor commandant of Camp Allen, with the rank of colonel, in 1862; was commissioned by the President an additional paymaster in the United States army in 1864; was elected to the fortieth Congress; and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 16,551 votes, against 14 228 votes for Ellerson, democrat. Re-elected. Eleventh District.—EFulton, Jasper, Lake, Laporte, Marshall, Newton, Porter, Pulaski Starke, St. Joseph, and White counties. JASPER PACKARD, of Laporte, was born in Mahoning (formerly Trambull) county, Ohio, February 1, 1832; removed with his father to Indiana in 1835; was brought up on a farm ; was a student at Oberlin College, and afterwards at the University of Michigan, where he graduated in 1855; taught school; settled at Laporte and edited the *‘ Union ;”’ studied law, and was admitted to the bar in 1361; entered the Union army at the commencement of the war for the suppression of the rebellion as a private; served as a lieutenant in the Vicksburg campaign, and during the assault on that place was wounded in the face ; was commissioned captain, and was in the march from Memphis to Chattanooga ; received two promotions dur-ing the Atlanta compaign, and in 1865 was appointed a brigadier general by brevet for meritorious services; on being mustered out of service, in 1866, he was chosen auditor of Laporte, county, holding the office until 1868, when he was elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 15,489 votes, against 14,268 votes for Farrand, dem. Re-elected. TO WA. SENATORS. James HARLAN, of Mount Pleasant, was born in Clarke county, Illinois, August 26, 1820 ; graduated at the Asbury University, Indiana; studied law ; was the Iowa State superintend-ent of public instruction in 1847; was president of the Wesleyan University, Iowa, in 1848 ; was elected to the United States Senate as a whig in January, 1855, and, his seat having been declared vacant on the ground of an informality in his election, he was again elected in 1856 for the remainder of the term ; he was re-elected in 1860; in 1865 he entered the cabinet as Secretary of the Interior, and resigned in September, 1866, having been re-elected to the United States Senate as a republican, to succeed 8. J. Kirkwood, republican; he took his seat March 4, 1867. His term of office will expire March 3, 1873. JAMES B. HOWELL, of Keokuk, Towa, was born in New Jersey, July 4, 1816; removed to Newark, Licking county, Ohio, in 1819; graduated at Miami University, Ohio, in 1837; studied law with Judge Hocking H. Hunter, of Lancaster, and was admitted to the bar in 1839; moved to Iowa in 1841 and settled at Keosauqua, where he practiced law for several years; in 1845 he purchased the whig paper and has ever since been engaged in the news-paper business, removing to Keokuk in 1249, where, in 1854, he started the *¢ Daily Whig,” afterwards changing the name to the ‘Daily Gate City; he took a prominent part in or ganizing the republican party in Towa in 1855’-56 ; was a delegate to the Frémont convention in 1856, and has since taken an active and leading part in the politics of Iowa; was elected to the United States Senate as a republican to fill the vacancy occasioned by the resignation of James W. Grimes, and took his seat January 26, 1870. His term of service will expire March 3, 1871. REPRESENTATIVES. _ Furst District. —Davis, Des Moines, Henry, Jefferson, Lee, Louisa, Van Buren, and Wash-ington counties. GEORGE W. MCCRARY, of Keokuk, was born near Evansville, Indiana, August 29, 1835 ; removed with his parents to Wisconsin in 1836; was educated in the public school and academy ; studied law and was admitted to the bar at Keokuk, Towa, in 1856 ; in 1857 he was elected to the State legislature ; in 1861 he was elected to the State senate for four years, CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY. and after devoting all his time to the practice of his profession until 1868, he was then elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 17,718 votes, against 12,705 votes for Claggett, democrat. Re-elected. Second District.—Cedar, Clinton, Jackson, Jones, Linn, Muscatine, and Scott counties. WiLriam P. Wovrr, of Tipton, was born in Stark county, Ohio, December 1, 1833; was brought up on a farm, receiving a common-school education ; studied law ; removed to Jowa in 1856; was admitted to the bar in 1859 and practised law ; was superintendent of common-schools; was a member of the State house of representatives in 1863 and 1864; entered the Union Army as captain in the Forty-sixth regiment of Towa Infantry, but was severely wounded at Collierville, Tennessee, and had to resign ; was re-elected to the State house of representatives; was assistant assesssor of internal revenue in 1865; was elected to the State senate in 1867 ; and was elected to the forty-first Congress, (to fill the vacancy occasioned by the death of J. W. Smith,) as a republican, receiving a majority of over 5,000 over Preston, democrat. Third District.—Allamakee, Bremer, Buchanan, Chickasaw, Clayton, Delaware, Dubuque, Fayette, Floyd, Howard, Mitchell, and Winneshiek counties. WiLLiaM B. ALLISON, of Dubuque, was born at Perry, Ohio, March 2, 1829; was edu-cated at the Western Reserve College, Ohio ; studied law and practiced in Ohio until he removed to Iowa, in 1857 ; served on the staff of the governor of Towa and aided in organ-izing volunteers in the beginning of the war for the suppression of the rebellion : was elected a representative in the thirty-eighth and thirty-ninth and fortieth Congresses, and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 20,119 votes, against 14,120 votes for Mills, democrat, and 149 votes for Thomas. Fourth District.—Appanoose, Benton, Iowa, Jasper, Johuson, Keokulk, Marion, Mahaska, Monroe, Poweshiek, Tama, and Wapello counties. WILLIAM LOUGHRIDGE, of Oskaloosa, was born at Youngstown, Ohio, July 11, 1827 received a common-school education; studied law and commenced practice at Mansfield, Ohio ; removed to Iowa in 1852; was a member of the State senate of Iowa in 1857, 1858, 1859, and 1860; was elected judge of the sixth judicial circuit of Iowa in 1861, which posi-tion he held until January, 1867; was elected to the fortieth Congress, and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 24,057 votes against 16,531 votes for Irish, democrat. : Fifth District.—Adair, Adams, Audubon, Cass, Clark, Dallas, Decatur, Frémont, Guthrie, ‘Harrison, Lucas, Madison, Mills, Montgomery, Page, Polk, Pottawatomie, Ringgold, Shelby, Taylor, Union, Warren, and Wayne counties. : FRANK W. PALMER, of Des Moines, was born at Manchester, Indiana, October 11, 1827 ; received a common-school education; was apprenticed to the art of printing in Jamestown, New York; became joint proprietor and editor of the ‘‘Jamestown Journal” in 1848: in 1853 and in 1854 was elected a member of the legislature of New York; in 1858 he removed to Dubuque, Iowa, and became editor and one of the proprietors of the ‘Dubuque Daily Times; in 1860 he was elected State printer of Iowa, and was re-elected in 1862, 1864, and 1866; was editor and proprietor of the ‘‘ Iowa State Register” from May, 1861, to Decem-ber, 1866, and editor-in-chief from December, 1866, to June, 1868; and was elected a repre-sentative in the forty-first Congress, as a republican, receiving 20,409 votes, against 13,402 votes for P. Gad Bryan, democrat. Re-elected. Sixth District.—Black Hawk, Boone, Buena Vista, Butler, Calhoun, Carroll, Cerro Gordo, Cherokee,Crawford, Dickinson, Emmett, Franklin, Green, Grundy, Hamilton, Hancock, Clay, Hardin, Humboldt, Ida, Kossuth, Linn, Marshall, Monona, O’Brien, Palo Alto, Plymouth, Pocahontas, Sac, Story, Webster, Worth, Woodbury, Wright, and Winnebago counties. CHARLES PoMEROY, of Fort Dodge, was born at Meriden, Connecticut, September 3, 1825; received an academic education; studied and practiced law, but is a farmer; settled in Towa in 1855, and was a presidential elector from that State on the Lincoln ticket in 1860 ; was appointed receiver in the United States land office, at Fort Dodge, in 1861 ; and was elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 16,775 votes, against 6,257 votes for Rossell, democrat. HKANSAS. SENATORS. SAMUEL C. POMEROY, of Atchison, was born in Southampton, Massachusetts, January 3, 1216; was educated at Amherst College, Massachusetts; went to New York, where he resided for some years, and returned to Massachusetts, where he held several local offices; was a member of the legislature of Massachusetts in 1852; was an organizer and the chief financial agent of the New England Emigrant Aid Society; went to Kansas and was iden-tified with its organization; was elected to the United States Senate as a republican, and took his seat July 4, 1861, and was re-elected in 1867. His term of service will expire March 3, 1873. SENATORS AND REPRESENTATIVES, 17 ¥ ll EDMUND G. Ross, of Lawrence, was born in Ashland, Ohio, December 7, 1826; learned the art of printing at Huron, Ohio, and, after having been foreman of the Milwaukee Senti-nel, went to Kansas at the commencement of the troubles there, and became editor of the Kansas Tribune, at that time the only free-State paper in the Territory, all others having been destroyed; was a member of the constitutional convention of 1859, which framed the present constitution of the State; entered the Union army as a private soldier, and was pro-moted to the rank of major in the war for the suppression of the rebellion; was appointed to the United States Senate as a republican, to fill the vacancy occasioned by the death of James H. Lane, deceased, and took his seat July 25, 1866, and was elected in January, 1867. His term of service will expire March 3, 1871. REPRESENTATIVE. State at large. —SIDNEY CLARKE, of Lawrence, was born at Southbridge, Massachusetts, October 16, 1831; received a public-school education; selected the editorial profession, and published the Southbridge Press; went to Kansas and was a member of the legislature of that State in 1862; served as captain and assistant provost marshal general in the war for the suppression of the rebellion; was elected to the thirty-ninth and fortieth Congresses; and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 29,324 votes, against 13,969 votes for Blair, democrat. KENTUCKY. SENATORS. GARRETT DAVIS, of Paris, was born at Mount Sterling, Kentucky, September 10, 1801 ; received an academic education; studied and practiced law; was a member of the State legislature of Kentucky in 1833, 1834, and 1835; was a member of the constitutional con-vention of Kentucky in 1849; was a representative in the twenty-sixth, twenty-seventh, twenty-eighth, and twenty-ninth Congresses; was elected to the United States Senate as an old-line whig, opposed to secession, to succeed John C. Breckinridge, democrat, and took his seat in the Senate December 3, 1861, and was re-elected in 1867. His term of service will expire. March 3, 1873. TaoMAs C. MCCREERY, of Owensboro,was born in Kentucky in 1817 ; studied law, but instead of practicing the profession, turned his attention to agricultural pursuits; was a presidential elector in 1852; was a member of the Board of Visitors to the Military Academy at West Point in 1858; was elected in 1868 to the United States Senate as a democrat, in the place of James Guthrie, democrat, resigned, and took his seat February 27, 1868. His term of service will expire March 3, 1871. REPRESENTATIVES. First District.—Ballard, Caldwell, Callaway, Crittenden, Fulton, Graves, Hickman, Liv-ingston, Lyon, Marshall, McCracken, Trigg, Union, and Webster counties. LAWRENCE 8. TRIMBLE, of Paducah, was born in Fleming county, Kentucky, August 26, 1825; received an academic education: studied and practiced law ; was a member of the State legislature of Kentucky in 1851 and 1852 ; was judge of the equity and criminal court of the first judicial circuit of Kentucky from 1856 to 1360; was president of the New Orleans and Ohio Railroad Company from 1853 to June, 1856; was elected to the thirty-ninthand fortieth Congresses; and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a democrat, receiving 13,608 votes, against 1,731 votes for Marshall, republican, and 293 scattering. Second District.—Butler, Breckinridge, Christian, Daviess, Edmonson, Grayson, Hancock, Henderson, Hopkins, Mubhlenburg, McLean, and Ohio counties. WiLLiaM N. SWEENEY, of Owensboro, was born at Liberty, Kentucky, May 5, 1832; studied and practiced law; was commonwealth attorney for Daviess county from 1854 to1858; was presidential elector in 1860; and was elected to the forty-first Congress as ademocrat, receiving 12,786 votes, against 3,538 votes for Langley, republican. Third District.—Allen, Barren, Clinton, Cumberland, Hart, Logan, Metcalfe, Monroe, Russell, Simpson, Todd, and Warren counties. JosepH H. LEWIS, of Glasgow, was born in Barren County, Kentucky, October 29, 1824 ;graduated in 1843 at Centre College, Danville, Kentucky ; studied and practiced law ; was a member of the house of representatives of Kentucky in 1850-51, 1851-'52, 1852 -’53, and 1869-70, and was elected to the forty-first Congress in place of J. S. Golladay, resigned, in April, 1870, as a democrat, defeating Lowry, republican. Re-elected. : Fourth District.—Adair, Anderson, Bullitt, Casey, Green, Hardin, La Rue, Marion, Meade, Nelson, Shelby, Spencer, Taylor, and Washington counties. J. PROCTOR KNOTT, of Lebanon, was elected to the fortieth Congress, and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a democrat, receiving 13,166 votes, against 1,811 votes for Hays, republican. 2 CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY. Fifth District.—City of Louisville, Henry, Jefferson, and Oldham counties. Bovyp WINCHESTER, of Louisville, was born in the parish of Ascension, Louisiana, September 23, 1836; educated at Centre College, Danville, Kentucky, and at the Univer-sity of Virginia, at Charlottesville; graduated at the Law University of Louisville, Ken-tucky, in 1857, and entered upon the practice; was elected to the State senate of Kentucky in August, 1867; was nominated district elector on the Seymour presidential ticket in 1868; and was elected to the forty-first Congress as a democrat, receiving 15,108 votes, against 1,515 votes for English, republican. Re-elected. Siath District.—DBracken, Boone, Campbell, Carroll, Grant, Gallatin, Harrison, Kenton, Pendleton, and Trimble counties. THOMAS LAURENS JONES, of Newport, was born on his father’s estate, ‘ White Oak,” in Rutherford county, North Carolina, January 21, 1819; was reared and educated in the village of Spartanburg, South Carolina; graduated at Princeton College, New Jersey, in 1840, and at the Harvard Law School, Massachusetts, in 1843; practiced law ; was a mem ber of the general assembly of Kentucky in 1853-54 ; was a delegate to several State and national conventions; was elected to the fortieth Congress, and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a democrat, receiving 14,082 votes, against 6,120 votes for Root, republican. Seventh District.— Bourbon, Boyle, Clarke, Fayette, Franklin, Jessamine, Lincoln, Mercer, Nicholas, Scott, and Woodford counties. JAMES B. BECK, of Lexington, was elected to the fortieth Congress, and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a demoerat, receiving 13,019 votes, against 2,373 votes for Eginton, republican. Re-elected. Eighth District.—Breathitt, Clay, Estell, Garrard, Harlan, Jackson, Knox, Laurel, Letcher, Madison, Owsley, Perry, Pulaski, Rockeastle, Wayne, Whitley, and Wolfe counties. GEORGE M. ApaMS, of Barbourville, was born in Knox county, Kentucky, December 20, 1837; was educated at Centre College, Danville, Kentucky; studied law; was clerk of the circuit court of Knox county from 1859 to 1861; he raised a, company in August, 1861, and entered the Union army as captain in the seventh Kentucky volunteers; in August, 1861, he was appointed additional paymaster of volunteers, and served in that capacity until the close of the war; was elected to the fortieth Congress, and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a democrat, receiving 10,323 votes, against 9,861 votes for Barnes. Re-elected. Ninth District.—Bath, Boyd, Carter, Fleming, Floyd, Greenup, Johnson, Lawrence, Lewis, Mason, Magoffin, Montgomery, Morgan, Pike, Powell, and Rowan counties. JouN M. RicE, of Louisa, was born in Floyd county, Kentucky; was a member of the legislature of Kentucky in 1859-60 and 1867-"68; and was elected to the forty-first Congress as a democrat, receiving 10,510 votes, against 6,652 votes for Zeigler. Re-¢lected. LOUISIANA. SENATORS. JonN S. HARRIS, of Vidalia, Concordia parish, Louisiana, was born at Truxton, Cortland county, New York, December 18, 1825; received an academic education; removed to Mil-waukee, Wisconsin, in 1846, where he followed commercial and financial pursuits until 1863, when he removed to Concordia parish, Louisiana, and engaged in the cultivation of cotton; he was unanimously elected to the constitutional convention of that State in 1867, and to the State senate in April, 1868; he was elected to the United States Senate in July, 1868, as a republican, and took his seat on the 17th of the same month. He succeeds Judah P. Benjamin, and his term of office will expire March 4, 1871. WM. Pitt KELLOGG, of New Orleans, was born December 8, 1830, in Vermont; was edu-cated at Norwich University ; removed to Illinois in 1848; studied law at Peoria, Illinois, end was admitted to the bar in 1853, commencing practice in Fulton county ; in 1860 served as presidential elector on the Lincoln ticket; was appointed chief justice of Nebraska by Mr. Lincoln in 1861; resigned same year and accepted the colonelcy of the seventh Illinois cavalry ; served under General Pope in Missouri, and commanded General Granger's cavalry brigade until the evacuation of Corinth; was, in April, 1865, appointed collector of the port of New Orleans, his commission being signed by Mr. Lincoln on the afternoon of the evening on which he was assassinated; was elected to the United States Senate in July, 1868, as a republican, receiving a majority of thirty-five on joint ballot, and took his seat on the 17th of the same month. His term expires March 4, 1873. REPRESENTATIVES. First District.—All that portion of the parish of Orleans on the right bank of the Missis-sippi river, and so much of said parish on the left bank of said river as is below and east SENATORS AND REPRESENTATIVES. 19 of Canal street, in the city of New Orleans, comprising the 4th, 5th, 6th, 7th, 8th, and 9th representative districts of the parish of Orleans, and parishes of St. Bernard, Plaquemines, St. Tammany, Washington, St. Helena, and Livingston. J. H. SYPHER, of New Orleans, was born in Pennsylvania, July 22, 1837; received a collegiate education, and graduated at Alfred University, New York, in 1858; entered the Union army in the war for the suppression of the rebellion, as a private in the First Ohio light artillery, April 18, 1861, and rose through all the grades to that of brigadier-general, which he held when mustered out of service at the close of the war, November 25, 1365; located in Louisiana as a planter, in January, 1866; was elected to the fortieth Con-gress, and claimed that he was legally re-elected to the forty-first Congress, but the House declared the election null, owing to violence and fraud, and another election was held, when he was re-elected, as a republican, by 5,400 majority over St. Martin, democrat. Re-elected. Second District.—All that portion of the parish of Orleans on the left bank of the Missis-sippi river above and westof Canal street, in the city of New Orleans, comprising the Ist, 2d, 3d, and 10th representative districts of the parish of Orleans, and the parishes of Jeffer-son, St. Charles, St. John the Baptist, St. James, Lafourche, and Terrebonne. : LioNEL A. SHELDON, of New Orleans, was born in Otsego county, New York, August 30, 1831; was taken by his parents, when he was four years of age, to Ohio, where he was raised on a farm, attending the district school during the winter months, and at times, when he became older, teaching school himself; graduated at Oberlin College, Ohio: studied law at Elyria, Ohio, and Poughkeepsie, New York; was admitted to the bar in 1853, and com-menced practice at Elyria ; was elected judge of probate and served one term but declined a nomination ; was a delegate to the republican convention at Philadelphia in 1856, and voted there for the nomination of John C. Frémont; was commissioned brigadier general of militia by Governor Chase, and took an active part in raising volunteers at the beginning of the war; entered the Union army in August, 1861, as captain of cavalry ; was soon after chosen major of the Second Ohio cavalry, and subsequently became, by transfer, lieutenant colonel of the 42d Ohio infantry, which regiment he afterwards commanded; he served in West Virginia, Kentucky, and East Tennessee, and in November, 1862, when his regiment had been placed under General Sherman at Memphis, he was placed in command of a brigade, which participated prominently in the battles of Chickasaw Bayou and Arkansas Post; in 1863 he was placed in command of the second brigade of the ninth division of the thirteenth army corps, which was the first to land on the east side of the Mississippi, and which was engaged in the battle of Port Gibson, (where he was wounded,) and the battles which re-sulted in the capture of Vicksburg, and subsequent skirmishes; after the war he settled in New Orleans, where he engaged in the practice of his profession, and he was elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 8,751 votes, against 6,963 votes for Hunt, democrat. Re-elected. Third District,.—The parishes of St. Mary, St. Martin, Assumption, Ascension, Vermil-lion, Calcasieu, Lafayette, St. Landry, Iberville, East Feliciana, East Baton Rouge, Cam-eron, and West Baton Rouge. C. B. DARRALL, of Brashear, was born in Somerset county Pennsylvania, June 24, 1842; received a common school education ; studied medicine and graduated at the Albany Medi-cal College ; entered the Union army as assistant surgeonof the Eighty-sixth New York volunteers, was promoted to be surgeon, and served throughout the war; settled in Louis-iana at the close of the war, and engaged in mercantile pursuits; was elected to the State Senate of Lousiana in 1860, and was elected to the forty-tirst Congress, as a republican, re-ceiving votes, against —— for Bailey, democrat. Re-elected. Fourth District. —The parishes of West Feliciana, Pointé Coupee, Avoyelles, Rapides, Sabine, Natchitoches, De Soto, Caddo, Bossier, and Winn. ; JOSEPH PARKINSON NEWSHAM, of St. Francisville, Louisiana, was born in Monroe county, Illinois, in 1839; educated himself; was a clerk in a store for two years; studied law, and was admitted to the bar by the supreme courts of the States of Iilinois and Missouri in 1860; practiced law at the St. Louis bar; entered the Union army on the staff of General Frémont; was afterwards on that of General Smith during his entire campaign from Paducah, Kentucky, to Shiloh; was adjutant of the 32d Missouri volunteer infantry, and resigned July 4, 1864; removed the same year to Louisiana and took an active part in reconstruction ; was appointed by Governor Hahn clerk of the fourth district court for Ascension parish; was admitted to the bar of Louisiana in 1865; was a member of the reconstruction convention of 1867 and 1868; founded, published, and edited the ¢‘ Feliciana Republican,” which was the first republican newspaper ever published in that section of the State; was elected to the fortieth Congress and was a candidate for re-election to the forty-first Congress as a republican. Michael Ryan, democrat, obtained the seat, but it was de-cided that he had only obtained it by fraud and intimidation, and the House declared Mr. Newsham entitled to it by a vote of 95 to 75 on the 25th of May, 1870, when he was sworn in. Fifth District.—The parishes of Claiborne, Bienville, Jackson, Union, Morehouse, Carroll, Ouachita, Madison, Caldwell, Franklin, Tensas, Catahoula, and Concordia. / 20 ; CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY. FRANK MOREY, of Monroe, was born in Boston, Massachusetts —, 1840; was edu-cated in the Boston public schools ; removed to Illinois in 1857, engaged in agricultural and mercantile pursuits, and read law ; engaged in land speculations in Kansas and Nebraska in 1860 and 1861 ; entered the Union army as sergeant of the Thirty-third Illinois infantry; served in the western army, and took part in all of the battles preceding the siege of Vicks: burg in which the thirteenth corps was engaged ; was transferred to the Department of the Gulf; served principally on staff duty; orgauized the Freedmen’s Bureau in Northeast Louisiana ; was mustered out of service, with his regiment, December 31, 1865, with the rank of captain ; settled in Louisiana, and engaged in cotton-planting and the insurance business ; was assistant assessor of internal revenue; was a member of the general assem-bly of Louisiana in 1868; was appointed a commissioner to revise the statutes and codes of the State ; is editor and publisher of the Monroe * Louisiana Intelligencer;” was a candi-date for the forty-first Congress in 1868, but violence having prevented a fair election, Con-gress referred the contestants back to the people, when he was elected as a republican, re-ceiving votes against —--votes for , democrat. Re-elected, MAINE. SENATORS. HANNIBAL HAMLIN, of Bangor, was born at Paris, Maine, August 27, 1809 ; was prepared for a collegiate education, but was obliged by the death of his father to take charge of his home-farm until he was of age; was a year in a printing office as a compositor ; studied law, and was admitted to the bar in 1833, continuing in active practice until 1848; was a member of the legislature of Maine in 1836, 1837, 1838, 1839, 1840, and 1847, presiding as speaker of the house in 1837, 1839, and 1840; was a representative from Maine in the twenty-eighth and twenty-ninth Congresses; was governor of the State of Maine in 1857; was elected Vice-President of the United States on the ticket with Abraham Lincoln in 1860; was appointed collector of the port of Boston in 1865, but resigned in 1866; was elected to the United States Senate in 1348, for four years, to fill a vacaney occasioned by the death of John Fairfield ; was re-elected in 1851, but resigned in 1857 to act as governor; was re-elected in 1857, and served until January, 1861; presided over the Senate as Vice-President from 1861 to 1865; was re-elected as a republican, and took his seat March 4, 1869. His term of service will expire March 3, 1875. Lor M. MORRILL, of Augusta, was born at Belgrade, Maine, May 3, 1815; was a stu-dent at Waterville College, Maine ; studied and practiced law ; was a member of the State legislature in 1854 and 1856, presiding over the senate the last year; was governor of Maine in 1858, 1859, and 1860; was elected to the United States Senate as a republican to fill the vacancy created by the election of Hannibal Hamlin to the Vice-Presidency, and took his seat January 17, 1861; was re-elected in 1863; and was appointed in December, 1869, and afterwards elected by the legislature, to fill the vacancy occasioned by the death of William . Pitt Fessenden. His term of service will expire March 3, 1871. REPRESENTATIVES. First District.—Cumberland and York counties. JouN LyNcH, of Portland, was born at Portland, Maine, February 18, 1825; received a public-school education; was engaged in mercantile pursuits ; was a member of the State legislature of Maine in 1862 and 1264 ; was elected to the thirty-ninth and fortieth Congresses, and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 16,718 votes, against 14,579 votes for Shaw, democrat. Re-elected. ; Second District.— Androscoggin, Franklin, Oxford, and Sagadahoc counties. SAMUEL P. MORRILL, of Farmington, was born at Chesterville, Franklin county, Maine, February 11, 1816; received an academic education, and adopted the profession of a clergy-man ; in 1857 he was elected, for five years, register of deeds for Franklin county, and was re-elected to the same office in 1867 ; was elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 14,231 votes, against 9,653 votes for Grarcelon, democrat. Third District. —Kennebee, Lincoln, Somerset, and half of Knox, counties. JAMES G. BLAINE, of Augusta, [Speaker of the House, ] was born in Washington county, Pennsylvania, January 31, 1830; graduated at Washington College, Pennsylvania; adopted the editorial profession and went to Maine, where he edited the Portland Advertiser and the Kennebec Journal; was a member of the Maine legislature in 1859, 1860, 1861, and 1862, serving the last two years as speaker of the house; was elected to the thirty-eighth, thirty-ninth, and fortieth Congresses, and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a Union republican, receiving 16,127 votes, against 12,881 for Farley, democrat. Re-elected. Fourth District.— Aroostook, Penobscot, and Piscataquis counties. JOHN A. PETERS, of Bangor, was born at Ellsworth, Maine, October 9, 1822; graduated at Yale College ; studied law at the Cambridge Law School ; practiced law ; was a member SENATORS AND REPRESENTATIVES. 2% of the legislature of Maine in 1862, 1863, and 1864; was elected attorney general of the State in 1864, 1865, and 1366; was elected to the fortieth Congress,and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 13,337 votes, against 8,373 for Ladd, democrat. Re-elected. : Fifth District. —Hancock, Waldo, and Washington counties, and Appleton, Camden, Hope, Rockland, South Thomaston, and Islesboro in Knox county. EvceNe HALE, of Ellsworth, was born at Turner, Oxford county, Maine, June 9, 1836; studied law; was admitted to the bar in 1857 and commenced practice; was for nine suc-cessive years county attorney for Hancock county ; was a member of the legislature of Maine in 1867 and 1868; and was elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 14,363 votes, against 11,677 votes for Wiswell, democrat. Re-elected. MARYLAND. SENATORS. GEORGE VICKERS, of Chestertown, was born in Chestertown, Kent county, Maryland, November 19, 1801; received an academic education; became a clerk in the county clerk’s office; studied law and was admitted to the bar in 1832; was elected in 1836 to the electoral college of Maryland; was delegate to the Whig National Convention which assembled in Baltimore in 1852; declined the appointment of judge respectively tendered by Governors Hicks and Bradford; was appointed by the former major general of militia in 1861; was a presidential elector on the McClellan ticket in 1864; was a member of the State senate of Maryland in 1866 and 1867 ; was one of the vice-presidents of the Union convention held in Philadelphia in 1866; was elected to the United States Senate as a conservative democrat to fill the vacancy created by the rejection of Philip Fraucis Thomas, and took his seat March 9, 1868. His term of service will expire March 3, 1573. WiLLiam T. HAMILTON, of Hagerstown, was born in Washington county, Maryland ; received a good education; studied and practiced law; was a representative in Congress from Maryland from 1849 to 1855; was elected to the United States Senate as a democrat, in place of W. P. Whyte, who had been appointed in piace of Reverdy Johnson, resigned, and took his seat March 4, 1869. His term of office will expire March 3, 1875. REPRESENTATIVES. First District.— Caroline, Cecil, Dorchester, Kent, Queen Anne, Somerset, Talbot, and Worcester counties. ; SAMUEL HAMBLETON, of Easton, was born in Talbot county, Maryland, in 1812; was educated at the county academy ; studied law, and was admitted to practice in 1833; was a member of the State house of delegates in 1834, 1835, and 1853; was a member of the State senate from 1844 to 1850 ; was an elector of President and Vice-president in 1844 ; was the president of the Chesapeake and Ohio canal in 1353 and 1854, and was elected to the forty-first Congress as a democrat, receiving 12,703 votes, against 4,606 votes for Torbert, republican. Re-elected. Second District.—Harford county, and the 5th, 6th, 7th, 9th, 10th, 11th, and 12th districts of Baltimore county, and the 1st, 2d, 3d, 4th, 5th, 6th, and 7th wards of the city of Baltimore. STEVENSON ARCHER, of Belair, was born in Harford county, Maryland, February 28, 1827; graduated at Princeton College ; studied and practiced law; was a member of the legislature of Maryland in 1854; was elected to the fortieth Congress; and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a democrat, receiving —-votes, against —-votes for Ensor, republican. Re-elected. Third District.—S8th, 9th, 10th, 11th, 12th, 13th, 14th, 15th, 16th, 17th, 18th, 19th, and 20th wards in the city of Baltimore. THOMAS SWANN, of Baltimore, was bern at Alexandria, Virginia; educated at Colum ,bian College and the University of Virgiria; studied law with his father at Washington, and was appointed secretary of the Neapolitar commission; in 1834 he settled in Baltimore, and two years afterwards was chosen a director of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Company ; in 1847 he was chosen its president, which he resigned in 1853; was also president of the Northwestern Virginia Railroad Company; after a sojourn in Europe, he was, in 1856, elected mayor of Baltimore, and re-elected in 1858; in 1364 he was elected governor of Maryland ; in 1866 he was elected a United States senator, but declined to leave the execu- tive chair; and he was elected to the forty-first Congress as a democrat, receiving 13,056 votes, against 5,667 votes for King, republican. Re-elected. Fourth District.—Alleghany, Carroll, Frederick, and Washington counties. PaTrIcK HAMILL, of Oakland, was born in the Gieen Glades, Alleghany county, Mary-land, April 28, 1817; was educated at the private schools of the country; was appointed collector of taxes in 1841 and 1842; was a member of the house of delegates of the State of Maryland in 1843 and 1844; was appointed and served for three years as judge of the orphans’ court of Alleghany county, and was then elected and served for four years more ; 29 CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY. declined a nomination to the State convention in 1852; engaged in farming and mercan-tile pursuits; was re-elected in 1867 chief judge of the orphans’ court of Allegany county, and was elected to the forty-first Congress as a democrat, receiving 12,239 votes, agdinst 11,653 votes for Weisel, republican. ! Fifth District.—Anne Arundel, Calvert, Charles, Howard, Montgomery, Prince George, St. Mary’s, and part of Baltimore counties. FREDERICK STONE, of Port Tobacco, was born in Charles county, Maryland, February < 7, 1820; was educated at St. John’s College, Annapolis; studied and practiced law; was appointed by the legislature one of the commissioners to simplify and abridge the rules of pleading, practice, and conveyancing in the State courts in 1852; was a member of the State legislature in 1864 and 1865; was elected to the fortieth Congress; and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a democrat, receiving 10,928 votes, against 2,544 votes for Albert, republican. MASSACHUSETTS. SENATORS. CHARLES SUMNER, of Boston, was born at Boston, Massachusetts, January 6, 1811; gradu-ated at Harvard College and afterwards at the Cambridge Law School ; travelled in Europe; was the reporter of the United States circuit court for the first circuit; lectured at the Cam-bridge Law School, especially on the ‘law of nations’ and the ‘‘ Constitution ;’ edited the “American Jurist’ and several legal works, including three volumes of reports of decisions in the United States circuit court; was elected to the United States Senate as a freesoiler to succeed Daniel Webster, whig, and took his seat December 1, 1851 ; was re-elected in 1857, again re-elected in 1863, and again re-elected in 1869. His term of service will expire March 3, 1875. HENRY WILSON, of Natick, was born at Farmington, New Hampshire, February 16, 1812; was self-educated ; learned the shoemaker’s trade, and became a wholesale shoe-dealer; owned and edited the ‘* Boston Republican; was a member of the State legislature of Massachusetts -in 1841, 1342, 1844, 1845, 1846, 1250, 1851, and 1852, presiding over the senate the last two years; was a member of the State constitutional convention of 1853; having been for ten years an active officer of the uniformed State militia of Massachusetts, he raised a regiment of volunteers in 1861, serving as its colonel, and afterwards as a member of General McClel-lan’s staff until obliged to resume his congressional duties; was elected to the United States Senate as a republican to succeed Edward Everett, whig, who had resigned, and took his seat January 31, 1855; was re-elected in 1859, and again re-elected in 1865. His term of service will expire March 3, 1871. : REPRESENTATIVES. First District.— Barnstable, Dukes county, and Nantucket, and parts of Bristol and Ply mouth counties. JAMES BUFFINTON, of Fall River, was born in Fall River, Massachusetts, March 16, 1517 ; was educated at the Friends’ College, Providence; served for a time in a factory at Fall River; studied medicine, but never practiced ; went on a whaling voyage; became engaged in mercantile pursuits; was mayor of the city of Fall River in 1854 and 1855; was active in raising troops for the Union army in 1861, and served for a time as private in a regiment from his city; was appointed, in 1867, collector of internal revenue; was elected to the thirty-fourth, thirty-fifth, thirty-sixth, and thirty-seventh Congresses, and was elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 12,975 votes, against 3,486 for Cobb, democrat, and 64 scattering. Re-elected. Second District.—Parts of the counties of Bristol, Norfolk, and Plymouth. OAKES AMES, of North Easton, was born at Easton, Massachusetts, January 10, 1804 ; received a public-school education ; was engaged in manufacturing, and largely engaged in railroads; was elected a member of the executive council of Massachusetts in 1860 and 1861 ; was elected to the thirty-eighth, thirty-ninth, and fortieth Congresses, and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 14,498 votes, against 5,698 for Avery, democrat. Re-elected. Third District.—5th, 7th, 8th, 10th, 11th, 12th, 13th, 14th, and 15th wards in the city of Boston, and Brookline. GINERY TWICHELL, of Brookline, was born at Athol, Massachusetts, August 26, 1811; received a public-school education; became interested in stage-coaches and in carrying the mails in 1830; was afterwards an officer of the Boston and Worcester railroad, and was chosen its superintendent in 1848, and its president in 1857; was elected to the fortieth Congress, and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 9,074 votes, over 6,892 votes for Bailey, democrat, and 19 scattering. Re-elected. Fourth District.—Suffolk, 1st, 2d, 3d, 4th, 6th, and 9th wards in the city of Boston, Cam-bridge, and Chelsea. SAMUEL HOOPER, of Boston, was born at Marblehead, Massachusetts, February 3, 1808; SENATORS AND REPRESENTATIVES. 23 received an academic education; was interested in mercantile pursuits, especially the China trade ; was a member of the house of representatives of Massachusetts in 1851, 1852, and 1853, declining a re-election ; was a member of the State senate in 1857, declining a renom-ination on account of business engagements ; was elected,to the thirty-seventh Congress to fill the vacancy occasioned by the resignation of William Appleton; was re-elected to the thirty-eighth, thirty-ninth, and fortieth Congresses, and was re-elected to the forty-first Con-gress as a republican, receiving 11,328 votes, against 8,592 votes for Harvey, democrat, and scattering. Re-elected. Fifth District.—Nearly all of Essex county. Bexsamin F. BUTLER, of Lowell, was born at Deerfield, New Hampshire, November 5, 1815; graduated at Waterville College, Maine ; studied law and commenced its practice in Lowell, Massachusetts; was a-member of the State house of representatives in 1853, and of the convention of the same year to revise the constitution of Massachusetts; was a member of the State senate of Massachusetts in 18359; entered the Union army in 1861 as brigadier general; was soon promoted to the rank of major general, and served through the war for the suppression of the rebellion; was elected to the fortieth Congress, and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 13,109 votes, against 1,811 votes for Dana, opposition candidate, 5,061 votes for Lord, democrat, and 33 scattering. Re-elected. Sixth District.—Parts of Essex and Middlesex counties. NATHANIEL P. BANKS, of Waltham, was born at Waltham, Massachusetts, January 30, 1816; received a public-school education ; was a factory operative; became a newspaper edi-tor and afterwards studied law ; was a member of the Massachusetts legislature in 1849, 1850, 1851, and 1852, and was two years speaker of the house; was elected to the State senate in 1851, but, being a member of the house, declined ; was a member of the constitutional con-vention of Massachusetts in 1853, and was chosen its president ; held the office of governor of Massachusetts in 1858, 1859, and 1860 ; entered the Union army in 1861 as major general of volunteers and served throughout the war for the suppression of the rebellion; was elected to the thirty-third and thirty-fourth Congresses, serving during the latter as Speaker of the House ; was re-elected to the thirty-fifth Congress, and resigned his seat January 1, 1858, to fill the office of governor; was elected to the thirty-ninth Congress for the unexpired term of D. W. Gooch, resigned; was elected to the fortieth Congress, and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 13,933 votes, against 7,187 votes for Prince, democrat, and 25 scattering. Re-elected. Seventh District.—Parts of Middlesex and Norfolk counties. GEORGE M. BROOKS, of Concord, was born at Concord, Massachusetts, July 26, 1824; graduated at Harvard College in 1844 ; studiéd and practiced law ; was a member of the Massachusetts house of representatives in 1858, of the Massachusetts State senate in 1859, and of the joint committee of the senate and house chosen in 1859 to revise the statutes of Massachusetts ; was elected to the forty-first Congress in November, 1869, (to fill the vacaney occasioned by the appointment of Hon. George S. Boutwell to the office of Secre-tary of the Treasury, ) as a republican, receiving 8,809 votes, against 4,284 votes for Salton-stall, democrat. Re-elected. Eighth District.—The city of Worcester and parts of Worcester and Norfolk counties. GEORGE F. HoAR, of Worcester, was born at Concord, Massachusetts, August 29, 1826: studied in early youth at Concord Academy ; graduated at Harvard College in 1846 ; studied law, and graduated at the Dane Law School, Harvard University ; settled at Worcester, where he practiced ; was a member of the State house of representatives in 1852, and of the State senate in 1857 ; was elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 14,307 votes, against 4,974 votes for Stevens, democrat. Re-elected. Ninth District. —Franklin, Hampshire, and northern part of Worcester, counties. WILLIAM B. WASHBURN, of Greenfield, was born at Winchendon, Massachusetts, Janu-ary 31, 1820; graduated at Yale College ; has been a manufacturer and interested in bank-ing; was a member of the State senate of Massachusetts in 1850; was a member of the house of representatives of Massachusetts in 1854; was elected to the thirty-eighth, thirty-ninth, and fortieth Congresses, and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 16,985 votes, against 1,814 votes for Heywood, democrat. Re-elected. Tenth District.—Berkshire and Hampden counties. HENRY L. DAWES, of Pittsfield, was born at Cummington, Massachusetts, October 30, 1816; graduated at Yale College ; was a school-teacher and edited the ¢‘ Greenville Gazette *’ and ‘‘Adams Transeript;”’ studied and practiced law ; was a member of the house of repre-sentatives of Massachusetts in 1848, 1849, and 1852; was a member of the senate of Mas-sachusetts in 1850; was a member of the State constitutional convention of Massachusetts in 1853; was district attorney for the western district of Massachusetts from 1853 until 1857; was elected to the thirty-fifth, thirty-sixth, thirty-seventh, thirty-eighth, thirty-ninth, and for-tieth Congresses, and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 12,260 votes, against 7,490 votes for Chapin, democrat. Re-elected. CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY. MICHIGAN. SENATORS. ZACHARIAH CHANDLER, of Detroit, was born at Bedford, New Hampshire, December 10 1813; received an academic education; removed to Michigan and engaged in mercantile pursuits ; was mayor of Detroit in 1851 ; was elected to the United States Senate as a repub-lican to succeed Lewis Cass, democrat, -and took his seat March 4, 1857 ; was re-elected in 1863, and was again re-elected in 1869. His term of service will expire March 3, 1875. JacoB M. HowARD, of Detroit, was born at Shaftsbury, Vermont, July 10, 1805; grad-uated at Williams College, Massachusetts; studied law in Massachusetts, and commenced its practice in Michigan; was a member of the State legislature of Michigan in 1838; pub-lished a translation from the French of the secret memoirs of the Empress Josephine in 1847; drew up the platform of the first convention ever held of the republican party in 1854, and christened that party; was elected attorney general of Michigan in 1854, 1856, and 1858, serving in all six years; was a representative in the twenty-seventh Congress; was elected to the United States Senate as a republican to fill the vacancy caused by the decease of K. S. Bingham, and took his seat January 17, 1862, and was re-elected in 1865. His term of service will expire March 3, 1871. : REPRESENTATIVES. First District.—Hillsdale, Lenawee, Monroe, and Wayne counties. FERNANDO C. BEAMAN, of Adrian, was born at Chester, Vermont, June 28, 1814; re-ceived an academic education ; studied and practiced law ; was prosecuting attorney for Lenawee county six years; was judge of probate four years; was presidential elector in 1856 ; was elected to the thirty-seventh, thirty-eighth, thirty-ninth, and fortieth Congresses, and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 22,197 votes, against 20,595 votes for Mills, democrat. : Second District.—Allegan, Berrien, Branch, Cass, Kalamazoo, St. Joseph, and Van Buren counties. | WiLLIAM L. STOUGHTON, of Sturgis, was born in New York, March 20, 1827 ; received an academic education; studied law and was admitted to the bar in 1851; was prosecuting attorney in 1855, 1856, 1857, 1858, and 1859 ; was appointed by President Lincoln United States district attorney for the district of Michigan, in March, 1861, and resigned the same year in order to enter the Union army; served during the war as a colonel and brigadier general, and was promoted to the rank of major general by brevet for gallant and meritorious services ; was elected attorney general for the State of Michigan for 1867 and 1863; was elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 25,196 votes, against 17,396 votes for Chamberlain, democrat. Re-elected. Third District.—Calbhoun, Eaton, Ingham, Jackson, and Washtenaw counties. AUSTIN BLAIR, of Jackson, was born at Caroline, New York, February 8, 1818; grad- vated at Union College, New York; studied law, and on removing to Michigan commenced its practice; was county clerk of Eaton county and prosecuting attorney of Jackson county ; was a member of the legislature of the State of Michigan; was governor of Michigan from 1361 to 1865; was elected to the fortieth Congress, and was re-elected to the forty-first Con-gress as a republican, receiving 19, 268 votes, against 12,268 votes for Crane. Re-elected. Fourth District.— Antrim, Barry, Benzie, Delta, Emmet, Grand Traverse, Ionia, Kalcaska, Kent, Lake, Leelanaw, Mackinaw, Manistee, Manitou, Mason, Mecosta, Missaukee, Mont-calm, Muskegon, Newaygo, Oceana, Osceola, Ottawa, Sheboygan, and Wexford counties. THoMAs W. FERRY, of Grand Haven, was born at Mackinaw, Michigan, June 1, 1827 ; received a public-school education ; has been engaged in business pursuits; was a member \ of the house of representatives of Michigan in 1850; was a member of the State senate in 1856; was vice-president for. Michigan in the Chicago republican eonvention of 1860; was appointed in 1864 to represent Michigan on the board of managers of the Gettysburg Soldiers’ National Cemetery, and was reappointed in 1867; was elected to the thirty-ninth and for-tieth Congresses, and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 23,043 votes, against 13,714 votes for Mason, democrat. Re-elected. Fifth District.—Lapeer, Livingston, Macomb, Oakland, Sanilac, and St. Clair counties. | OMAR D. CONGER, of Port Huron, was born in 1818, at Cooperstown, New York ; removed with his father, Rev. E. Conger, to Huron county, Ohio, in 1824; pursued his academic studies at Huron Institute, Milan, Ohio, and graduated in 1842 at Western Reserve College ; was employed in the geological survey and mineral explorations of the Lake Superior cop-per and iron regions in 1845-'46-'47, and in 1848 engaged in the practice of law at Port Huron, Michigan, where he has since resided; was elected judge of the St. Clair county court in 1850, and senator in the Michigan legislature for the biennial terms of 1855, 1857, and 1859, and was elected president pro iem. of the senate in 1259 ; was elected in 1856 a member of the constitutional convention of Michigan, and was elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 16,347 votes, against 14,623 votes for Stout, democrat. Re-elected. SENATORS AND REPRESENTATIVES. 25 X Sixth District.Alcona, Alpena, Bay, Chippewa, Clair, Clinton, Crawford, — Genesee, Gladwin, Gratiot, Houghton, Huron, Iosco, Isabella, Keweenaw, Marquette, Menomonee, Midland, Montmorenci, Ogenaw, Otsego, Ontonagon, Presque Isle, Roscommon, Saginaw, Schooleraft, Shiawassee, and Tuscola counties. J RANDOLPH STRICKLAND, of St. John’s, was born at Danville, Steuben county, New York, February 4, 1823; received a common-school education ; engaged in teaching; removed to Michigan in 1844; studied law ; was admitted to the bar in 1849, and immediately com-menced practice; was elected prosecuting attorney in Clinton county in 1852, 1854, 1356, 1858, and 1862; was a member of the State senate in 1861 and 1862; was provost marshal from April 24, 1863, until October 15, 1865; was a member of the State central republican committee in 1867 and 1868; was a delegate to national conventions in 1856 and 1268; and was elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 20,115 votes, against 16,720 «for Newton, democrat. MINNESOTA. SENATORS. ALEXANDER RAMSEY, of St. Paul, was born near Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, September 8, 1815; studied at Lafayette College, Easton, Pennsylvania; was clerk in the register’s office of Dauphin County, Pennsylvania, in 1838; was secretary of the electoral college of Pennsylvania in 1840 ; was clerk of the State house of representatives in 1841; was a repre-sentative from Pennsylvania in the twenty-eighth and twenty-ninth Congresses ; was appointed territorial governor of Minnesota in 1849, holding office until 1853; was mayor of St. Paul, Minnesota, in 1855; was elected governor of the State of Minnesota in 1859, and was re-elected in 1861; he was elected to the United States Senate as a republican to succeed Henry M. Rice, democrat, took his seat March 4, 1863, and was re-elected in 1869. His term of service will expire March 3, 1875. WiLLiam WiNpoM, of Winona, was born in Belmont county, Ohio, May 10, 1827 ; re-ceived an academic education ; studied law and commenced practice; was elected prose-cuting attorney for Knox county, Ohio, in 1852 ; removed to Minnesota in 1856 ; was elected a member of the House of Representatives in the thirty-sixth, thirty-seventh, thirty-eighth, thirty-ninth and fortieth Congresses; was appointed to the United States Senate as a repub-lican in the place of Daniel S. Norton, deceased, and took his seat December 5, 1870. His term of service will expire March 3, 1871. REPRESENTATIVES. First District.—Brown, Blue Earth, Cottonwood, Dodge, Faribault, Fillmore, Freeborn, Houston, Jackson, Le Sueur, Martin, Mower, Nicollett, Olmstead, Renville, Rice, Scott, Sibley, Steele, Waseca, and Winona counties. MoRrTON S. WILKINSON, of Mankato, was born at Skaneateles, New York, January 22, A819; receiveda public-school education ; studied and practiced law; removed to Minnesota in 1847; was elected a member of the first territorial legislature in 1349; was appointed one of a board of commissioners to prepare a code of laws for the Territory ; was elected to the Senate of the United States in 1859 as a republican, to succeed James Shields, democrat ; served in the Senate until 1865; was elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 23,724 votes, against 14,646 votes for Batchelder, democrat. Second District.—Anoka, Benton, Carver, Chisago, Crow Wing, Dakota, Goodhue, Hen-nepin, Isanti, Manomin, McLeod, Meeker, Mille Lac, Morrison, Pine, Ramsay, Sherburne, Stearns, St. Louis, Wabashaw, Washington, and Wright counties. : EvGeNE M. WiLsoN, of Minneapolis, was born in Morgan county, Virginia, December 25, 1833; graduated at Jefferson College in 1852; studied law ; removed to Minnesota in 1855; was United States district attorney for the district of Minnesota from 1857 to 1861 ; served in the war for the suppression of the rebellion as captain in the 1st Minnesota cavalry ; was elected to the forty-first Congress as a_democrat, receiving 13,506 votes, against 11,229 votes for Donnelly and 8,595 votes for Andrews, both republicans. MISSISSIPPI. SENATORS. Hiram R. REVELS, of Natchez, was born in Fayetteville, North Carolina, September 1, 1822; desiring to obtain an education, which was denied in his native State to those of Afri-can descent, he removed to Indiana; spent some time at the Quaker Seminary in Union county ; entered the Methodist ministry ; afterwards received further instructions at the Clarke County Seminary, when he became preacher, teacher, and lecturer among his people in the States of Indiana, Illinois, Ohio, and Missouri; at the breaking out of the war he was min-istering at Baltimore; he assisted in the organization of the first two colored regiments in Maryland and Missouri; during a portion of 1863 and 1864 he taught school in St. Louis, REPRESENTATIVES. SENATORS AND REPRESENTATIVES. 27 ments on the second Yazoo expedition, he defeated the rebel assault at Yazoo City, March 5, 1864, after which he was ordered, as brigadier general, to enroll and equip four regiments of enrolled militia; at the close of the war, after having been continuously in the State since 1862; he settled at Vicksburg, where he resumed the practice of his profession, and also en-gaged in planting in Madison county ; was appointed register in bankruptcy in 1867; was a member of the constitutional convention of Mississippi; was elected to the fortieth Con-gress, but the State was refused admission ; and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 25,032 votes against 9,811 votes for Fisk, conservative. Re-elecetd. Fifth District.—Adams, Amite, Claiborne, Copiah, Covington, Davis, Franklin, Greene, Hancock, Harrison, Jackson, Jefferson, Lawrence, Marion, Perry, Pike, Simpson, Wayne, and Wilkinson counties. LEGRAND W. PERCE, of Natchez, was born at Buffalo, New York, June 19, 1836; re-ceived an academic education; studied law at the Albany Law University in 1856-'57 ; practiced law ; entered the volunteer service in April, 1861 ; was appointed second lieutenant of the 6h Michigan volunteers in August, 1861, and captain in June, 1862; was brevetted major at Port Hudson in May, 1863; was appointed captain of United States volunteers in August, 1863, and was brevetted lieutenant colonel and colonel in 1865; settled in Missis-sippi, and was elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 16,475 votes, against 8,080 for Brown, democrat. MISSOURI. SENATORS. CHARLES D. DRAKE, of St. Louis, was born at Cincinnati, Ohio, April 11, 1811; received an academic education; in 1827 entered the navy as a midshipman, and continued in it till 1830 ; was admitted to the bar in Cincinnati in 1833; went to St. Louis in 1834; was the originator in 1833 of the St. Louis Law Library; was a member of the State house of rep-resentatives of Missouri in 1859-60; was a member in 1863 of the State convention of Mis-souri which had been constituted in 1861; was presidential elector in 1864 ; was a member and vice-president in 1865 of the Missouri constitutional convention which was elected in November, 1864, and which framed the present constitution of that State; was elected to the United States Senate as a republican to succeed B. Gratz Brown, and took his seat in 1367. His term of service will expire March 3, 1873. CARL SCHURZ, of St. Louis, was born at Liblar, near Cologne, Germany, March 2, 1829; was educated at the collegiate institution at Cologne, and afterwards at the University of Bonn; was editor of a paper identified with the revolution of 1848; took part in the defence of Rastadt, after which he fled to Switzerland; subsequently resided in Paris and London, where he was a teacher and correspondent for three years; emigrated to this country in 1852; was a delegate to the Chicago convention of 1860, taking a leading part in its proceedings; was selected by President Lincoln in 1861 as minister to Spain, which position he soon resigned; was appointed a brigadier general of volunteers, and was present at the second battle of Bull Run, at the battles of Chancellorsville, Gettysburg, and Chattanooga; after the war he was appointed a commissioner to visit the southern States and report upon the affairs of the Freedmen’s Bureau; in 1865 and 1866 he was a Washington correspondent for the New York Tribune; was subsequently connected with the press of Detroit and St. Louis; was a delegate to the Chicago convention of 1868; and was elected to the United States Senate as a republican, to succeed John B. Henderson, and took his seat March 4, 1869. His term of service will expire March 3, 1875. REPRESENTATIVES. Furst District. —5th, 6th, 7th, 8th, 9th, 10th, 11th, and 12th wards in the city of St. Louis, and parts of St. Louis and Central and the whole of St. Ferdinand townships. ERASTUS WELLS, of St. Louis, was born in Jefferson county, New York, December 2, 1823; received a public-school education; at the age of nineteen, being compelled to rely on his own exertions, he went to St. Louis; he established the first omnibus line in that city, and subsequently inaugurated the first street railroad company; for fifteen years he has been a member of the city council; he is president of the Missouri Railroad Company, also of the Accommodation Bank, and a director in several incorporated companies ; was elected to the for-ty-first Congress as a democrat, receiving 9,734 votes, against 9,553 votes for Pile. Re-elected. Second District.—1st, 2d, 3d, and 4th wards of St. Louis, the south part of St. Louis seanly, and Crawford, Franklin, Gasconade, Jefferson, Maries, Osage, Phelps, and Pulaski counties. GUSTAVUS A. FINKELNBURG, of St. Louis, was born near Cologne, Prussia, April 6, 1837 ; received an academic education at St. Charles College, Missouri; graduated in the law department of Ohio University at Cincinnati: was admitted to the bar at St. Louis in 1860 ; served in the Union army for the suppression of the rebellion; was elected to the Missouri legislature as a radical in 1864 ; re-elected in 1866 and chosen speaker pro tem.; was elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 11,506 votes, against 8,280 votes for Lindley, democrat. Re-elected. CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY. Third District.—Bollinger, Butler, Cape Girardeau, Carter, Dent, Dunklin, Iron, Madison Mississippi, Madrid, Oregon, Pemiscott, Perry, Reynolds, Ripley, Scott, Shannon, St. New Francis, St. Genevieve, Stoddard, Washington, and Wayne counties. JAMES R. MCCORMICK, of Ironton, was born August 1, 1824, in Washington county, Missouri; studied medicine and graduated in 1849 ; practiced his profession until 1861, when he was elected to the State convention of Missouri; entered the military service in September, 1861, as surgeon of the Sixth regiment of six months volunteers organized for the suppression of the rebellion ; was elected to the State senate in 1862, and resigned in 1863 on his appointment as brigadier general in the enrolled Missouri militia ; in 1864 he acted as surgeon of the board of enrollment for the third congressional district; in 1865 he was again elected to the State senate, and again resigned his place in the senate to fill the vacancy in the fortieth Congress caused by the death of the Hon. Thomas E. Noell, repre-sentative from the third congressional district; he was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a democrat, receiving 5,153 votes, against 4,226 votes for Bush, republican. Re-elected. Fourth District. —Barry, Barton, Cedar, Christian, Dale, Dallas, Douglas, Greene, Howell, Jasper, Laclede, Lawrence, McDonald, Newton, Ozark, Polk, Stone, Taney, Texas, Webster, and Wright counties. : SEMPRONIUS H. BoyD, of Springfield, was born in Williamson county, Tennessee, May 28, 1868; received a good English education; studied law, was admitted to the bar in 1855, and practiced at Springfield, Missouri; was clerk of the court; was mayor of Springfield in 1857; entered the Union army in 1861 as the commander of a regiment known as the * Lyon legion,” which he raised; was elected to the thirty-eighth Congress; returned to the duties of his profession; was judge of the 14th judicial circuit of Missouri; was a delegate to the Baltimore convention in 1864; raised the 46th Missouri infantry in 1865; supported General Grant for President in convention ; and was elected to the forty-first Congress as a, republican, receiving 8,927 votes, against 4,955 votes for McAfee, democrat, and 1,384 votes for Kelso, republican. Fifth District.—Bates, Benton, Camden, Cass, Cole, Cooper, Henry, Hickory, Johnson, Miller, Moniteau, Morgan, Pettis, St. Clair, and Vernon counties. SAMUEL S. BURDETT, of Osceola, was born in Leicestershire, England, February 21, 1836 ; emigrated to the United States at the age of twelve; received an academic education at Oberlin, Ohio; studied the law, and commenced its practice in De Witt, Iowa, in 1858; entered the Union army as a private in May, 1861, and served until August, 1864; was presidential elector for the 2d district of Iowa in the campaign of that year; removed to Missouri in December, 1864; was appointed circuit attorney in 1866; was chosen a delegate from Missouri to the Chicago presidential convention of 1868; was elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 11,387 votes, against 7,941 for Philips, democrat. Re- “elected. Siath District,—Caldwell, Carroll, Chariton, Clay, Clinton, Jackson, Lafayette, Platte, Ray, and Saline counties. ROBERT T. VAN HoRN, of Kansas City, was born in Indiana county, Pennsylvania, May 19, 1824; received a public-school education ; learned the art of printing ; went to Missouri, where he was mayor and postmaster of Kansas City; was a member of the State senate of Missouri in 1863, 1864, 1865; served in the Union army as major and lieutenant colonel of Missouri volunteers during the war for the suppression of the rebellion; was elected to the thirty-ninth and fortieth Congresses; and was re-elected to the forty first Congress as a radical republican, receiving 5,427 votes, against 4,560 votes for Shields, democrat. Seventh District.—Andrew, Atchison, Buchanan, Davis, De Kalb, Gentry, Grundy, Harri-son, Holt, Livingston, Mercer, Nodaway, Putnam, Sullivan, and Worth counties. JOEL F. ASPER, of Chillicothe, was born in Adams county, Pennsylvania, April 20, 1822; removed with his father to Ohio in 1827; worked on a farm and attended school alternately ; studied law and came to the bar in 1844, writing frequently for the newspapers; was elected a justice of the peace in 1846; in 1847 a prosecuting attorney for his county; was a delegate to the Buffalo convention of 1848; editor of the “Western Reserve Chronicle’ in 1849, and of the ‘‘Chardon Democrat” in 1850; in 1861 he raised a company and was mustered into the volunteer army as captain, serving at the battle of Winchester, where he was wounded ; was promoted to the rank of lieutenant colonel in 1862, and in 1863 he was mustered out of service ‘‘on account of wounds received in action;” in the latter year he organized a regiment of national guards and became its colonel, and, with it, was at the battle of Kellar’s Bridge in 1864, receiving compliments for his services there; he removed to Chillicothe, Missouri, where he practiced law with success in 1864, and in 1866 commenced the publication of the “Spectator,” in which he advocated the nomination of General Grant; was a delegate to the Chicago convention and to the State convention, when he secured the adoption of a suffrage amendment plank in the platform; and was elected, after a spirited contest, to the forty-first Congress as a radical republican, receiving 15,272 votes, against 8,029 votes for Oliver, democrat and old-line whig. SENATORS AND REPRESENTATIVES. 29 \ Eighth District.—Adair, Clark, Howard, Knox, Lewis, Linn, Macon, Marion, Randolph, Scotland, Schuyler, and Shelby counties. JoHN F. BENJAMIN, of Shelbyville, was born at Cicero, New York, January 23, 1817 ; studied and practiced law ; was a member of the State legislature of Missouri in 1850 and 1852; was presidential elector in 1856; enlisted in the Union cavalry service as a private in 1861, and was subsequently captain, major, lieutenant colonel, and brigadier general; was provost marshal of the eighth district of Missouri in 1863 and 1864; was delegate at large from Missouri to the Baltimore convention in 1864; was elected to the thirty-ninth and fortieth Congresses ; and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a radical republican, receiving 8,954 votes, against 7,348 votes for Williams, democrat. Ninth District.—Audrain, Boone, Callaway, Lincoln, Montgomery, Monroe, Pike, Ralls, St. Charles, and Warren counties. Davip P. DYER, of Louisiana, Missouri, was born in Henry county, Virginia, February 12, 1838; removed to Lincoln county, Missouri, in June, 1841; was educated at the com-mon schools and at Saint Charles College in the latter State; studied law at Bowling Green, Pike county, Missouri, and was admitted to the bar in March, 1859; was elected prosecuting attorney for the 3d judicial circuit in November, 1860; was a member of the State legislature from Pike county from 1862 to 1865; recruited and commanded the 49th regiment Missouri volunteer infantry during the recent war, serving in the 16th army corps; was chosen secre-tary of the State senate in 1866; was a delegate to the national republican convention in 1868; and was elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 5,407 votes, against 4,407 for Switzler, democrat. NEBRASKA. SENATORS. JOHN M. THAYER, of Omaha, was born at Bellingham, Massachusetts, January 24, 1820; graduated at Brown University, Rhode Island; studied law; went to Nebraska in 1854; was appointed a brigadier general by the governor, and subsequently elected a major general by the legislature, in which capacity he organized and commanded two expeditions against hostile Indians; was a member of the constitutional convention of Nebraska; was a mem-ber of the upper branch of the territorial legislature in 1860; entered the Union army as colonel of the Ist Nebraska volunteers in 1861; was appointed brigadier general and brevetted major general ¢‘ for distinguished services ; ** was elected to the Senate of the United States as a republican, and took his seat March 4, 1867. His term of service will expire March 3, 1871. . Tromas W. TipTON, of Brownville, was born at Cadiz, Ohio, August 5, 1817; graduated at Madison College, Pennsylvania ; studied and practiced law ; was a member of the State legislature of Ohio in 1845; went to Nebraska, and was elected to a constitutional conven-tion of Nebraska; was a member of the territorial council of Nebraska in 1860; having, studied theology, and being eligible to a chaplaincy, he served in the Union army in that capacity during the war for the suppression of the rebellion; was elected to the Senate of the United States, took his seat March 4, 1867, and was re-elected in 1869. His term of service will expire March 3, 1875. : ; REPRESENTATIVE. NEVADA. SENATORS. l} + CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY. Ww. M. STEWART, of Virginia City, was born in Wayne county, New York, August 9, 1827; was a student at Yale College; went to California, where he was engaged in mining ; studied and practiced law, servingas State attorney and attorney general ; removing to that portion of Utah now Nevada, he was elected to the territorial legislature in 1861; was elected a member of the convention which framed the constitution of Nevada in 1863; was elected to the United States Senate as a republican on the adoption of the State constitution, and took his seat in 1865, and was re-elected in 1869. His term of service will expire March 3, 1875. REPRESENTATIVE. The State at large.—THOMAS FITCH, of Belmont, was bornin New York City, January 27, 1838; received a public-school education; went to Milwaukee in 1855 and engaged as clerk; was local editor of ** Milwaukee Free Democrat” in 1859-60; went to California in 1860; edited the ¢* San Francisco Times” and ‘‘ Placerville Republican ;”’ studied law ; was a member of the California assembly in 1862-63; went to Nevada in June, 1863 ; was reporter of the territorial supreme court in 1863; elected a member of the convention which framed the State constitution in 1864 ; was the Union nominee for territorial delegate to Congress in 1864 ; was district attorney of Washoe county in 1865 and 1866; was elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving about 10,000 votes, against about 8,600 votes for Anderson, democrat. NEW HAMPSHIRE. SENATORS. AARON H. CRAGIN, of Lebanon, was born at Weston, Vermont, February 3, 1821; received an academic education; studied and practiced law; was a member of the State legislature of New Hampshire in 1852, 1853, 1854, 1855, and 1859; was a representative in the thirty-fourth and thirty-fifth Congresses; was elected to the United States Senate as a republican to succeed John P. Hale, republican ; took his seat in 1865, and was re-elected in 1870. His term of service will expire March 3, 1877. JAMES W. PATTERSON, of Hanover, was born at Henniker, New Hampshire, July 2, 1823; graduated at Dartmouth College, New Hampshire ; was secretary of the State board of education from 1857 to 1861 ; was a member of the legislature of New Hampshire in 1862; was a representative in the. thirty-eighth and thirty-ninth Congresses; was elected to the United States Senate as a republican to succeed George G. Fogg, republican, and took his seat in 1867. His term of service will expire March 3, 1873. | REPRESENTATIVES. First District.—Belknap, Carroll, Rockingham, and Strafford counties. JacoB H. ELA, of Rochester, was born at Rochester, New Hampshire, July 18, 1820; learned the art of printing; is engaged in agricultural pursuits; held several local offices, and was a member of the State legislature of New Hampshire in 1857 and 1858 ; was United States marshal from July, 1861, to October, 1861; was elected to the fortieth Congress, and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 1,700 majority over Hibbard, democrat. Second District,—Hillsboro and Merrimack counties. AARON F. STEVENS, of Nashua, was born at Derry, New Hampshire, August 9, 1819; received an academic education ; studied and practiced law ; was a member of the legis-lature of the State of New Hampshire in 1849, 1854, 1856, and 1857; was county solicitor from 1856 until 1861; entered the Union army in 1861 as major of the 1st New Hampshire volunteers; was afterwards colonel of the 13th New Hampshire volunteers; command-ant of a brigade, and brigadier general by brevet; was elected to the fortieth Congress, and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 11,338 votes, against 9,740 votes for Harrington, democrat. Third District,—Cheshire, Coos, Grafton, and Sullivan counties. JacoB BENTON, of Lancaster, was born in Waterford, Vermont, August 14, 1819; received an academic education; engaged in teaching for several years with great success ; studied law, and was admitted to the bar in 1843; located at Lancaster, New Hampshire, where he has since resided; was a member of the State legislature in 1854, 1855, and 1856, taking an active part in the election of Messrs. Hale and Bell to the United States Senate, which sealed the fate of the democratic party in New Hampshire; was a delegate to the national republi-can convention in 1860 ; was brigadier general commanding the State volunteers; was elected to the fortieth Congress, and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican. \ SENATORS AND REPRESENTATIVES. 31 NEW JERSEY. SENATORS. ‘ ALEXANDER G. CATTELL, of Camden, was born at Salem, New Jersey, February 12, 1816 ; received a public-school education ; was a clerk in his father’s store, and afterwards a merchant and a banker in Philadelphia ; was a member of the State legislature of New Jersey in 1840; was clerk of the general assembly of New Jersey from 1842 to 1844; was a member of the State constitutional convention of New Jersey in 1844; was elected to the United States Senate as a republican in the place of John P. Stockton, democrat, who had been unseated, and took his seat December 3, 1866. His term of service will expire March 3, 1871. JoHN P. STOCKTON, of Trenton, was born in Princeton, New Jersey, August 2, 1826; was graduated at Princeton College in 1843 ; was licensed to practice law in 1846; was called to the bar in 1849; was appointed a commissioner to revise the laws of New Jersey; was subsequently reporter to the court of chancery, and published three volumes of equity reports, which bear his name; was appointed in 1858 minister resident at Rome, and was recalled at his own request in 1861; was elected a senator in 1865 for the term ending in 1871; after holding the position for more than a year his election was declared by the Senate to have been informal, and he was unseated, and returned to New Jersey and the practice of his profession; was again elected senator. as a democrat, in the place of Frederick T. Fre-linghuysen, republican, and took his seat March 4, 1869. His term of service will expire March 3, 1875. REPRESENTATIVES. First District.—Atlantic, Camden, Cape May, Cumberland, Gloucester, and Salem coun-ties. WiLLiaM MoORE, of May’s Landing, was born in Montgomery county, Pennsylvania, December 25, 1810 ; received a public-school education ; was interested in mercantile pur-suits and iron-works; was judge of the court of common pleas for Atlantic county from 1851 to 1861; was elected to the fortieth Congress, and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 15,214 votes, against 11,539 votes for Bayard, democrat. Second District.— Burlington, Mercer, Monmouth, and Ocean counties. CHARLES HAIGHT, of Freehold, was born at Colt’s Neck, New Jersey, January 4, 1838; graduated at Princeton College in 1857; studied and practiced law; was a member of the State legislature of New Jersey in 1861 and 1862, serving the last year as speaker of the house ; was commissioned as brigadier general of militia in 1861, and was active in raising troops during the war for the suppression of the rebellion ; was elected to the fortieth Congress, and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a democrat, receiving 16,299 votes, against 15,494 votes for Rusling, republican. Third District.—Hunterdon, Middlesex, Somerset, Union, and Warren counties. JOHN T. BIRD, of Flemington, was born in Hunterdon county, New Jersey, August 16, 1829; received an academic education; read law, and was admitted to the bar in 1855; practiced his profession in his native county ; was nominated as prosecutor of the pleas in 1863 and held the office for the full term, five years; was elected to the forty-first Congress as a democrat, receiving 19,580 votes, against 15,456 votes for Amos Clark, rep. Re-elected. Fourth District.—Bergen, Morris, Passaic, Sussex, and all Essex, except the city of Newark. JoHN HiLL, of Boonton, was born at Catskill, New York, June 10, 1821; received a private-school education; engaged in mercantile pursuits ; went to Boonton, New Jersey, where he held several local offices ; was a member of the State assembly of New Jersey in 1861, 1862, and 1866, serving the last year as speaker; was active in raising troops for the Union army during the war for the suppression of the rebellion ; was elected to the fortieth Congress, and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 16,468 votes, against 16,410 votes for Philip Rafferty. Re-elected. Fifth District.—City of Newark and county of Hudson. ORESTES CLEVELAND, of Jersey City, was born in Duanesburg, Schenectady county, New York, March 2, 1829; received a common-school education; engaged in mercantile pursuits in New York city, and afterwards as manufacturer in Jersey City; was elected alderman in 1861, and was president of the board in 1862; elected mayor in 1864, re-elected -in 1865 and 1866, and in 1867 was assured that no republican candidate would oppose him if he would accept the unanimous nomination tendered by his own party, but refused, and the city went back to the republicans; in 1864 the city exhausted its authority to issue bonds for bounties, and he borrowed large amounts with unauthorized bonds, by attaching his indi-vidual guarantee, furnishing promptly all the men required; was elected to the forty-first Congress as a democrat, receiving 19,110 votes, against 16,862 votes for Halsey, republican, 32 '. © CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY. NEW YORK, SENATORS. Roscor CONKLING, of Utica, New York, was born at Albany, October 30, 1829; received an academic education; studied and practiced law; removed to Utica in 1846; was district attorney for Oneida county in 1850; was elected mayor of Utica in 1858; was a representa-tive in the thirty-sixth, thirty-seventh, and thirty-ninth Congresses, and was re-elected a representativein the fortieth Congress, but was immediately afterwards elected to the Senate of the United States as a Union republican to succeed Ira Harris, republican, and took his seat in the Senate in March, 1867. His term of service will expire March 3, 1873. ReuBEN E. FENTON, of Jamestown, was born at Carroll, Chautauqua county, New York, July 1, 1819; received an academic education; studied law, but engaged in mercantile pursuits ; was elected supervisor of Carroll in 1843; was governor of the State of New York in 1865-66 and 1867-'68; was a member of the House of Representatives in the thirty-third, thirty-fifth, thirty-sixth, thirty-seventh and thirty-eighth Congresses, resigning to serve as governor; was elected to the United States Senate as a republican, in place of Edwin “D. Morgan, republican, and took his seat March 4, 1869. His term of service will expire March 3, 1875. REPRESENTATIVES. First District.—Queens, Richmond, and Suffolk counties. HENRY A. REEVES, of Greenport, was born at Sag Harbor, Suffolk county, New York, December 7, 1832; graduated at Union College, Schenectady, New York, in 1852; read law and was admitted at the bar, but never practiced ; became editor of the ‘‘ Republican Watchman,” at Greenport, in 1858 ; was elected to the forty-first Congress as a democrat, receiving 13,338 votes, against 11,945 votes for Wood, republican. Second District.—6th, 8th, 9th, 10th, 12th, 14th, 16th, 17th, and 18th wards in the city of Brooklyn, and all of Kings county outside of the city. JOHN G. SCHUMAKER, of Brooklyn, was born at Claverack, Columbia county, New York, June 27, 1826, of German parentage ; received an academic education at home and in Lenox, Massachusetts ; studied law and came to the bar in 1847 ; in 1853 he settled in Brooklyn, where he practiced his profession; in 1856 he was elected district attorney for King’s county; in 1362 and 1864 he was elected corporation counsel for the city of Brook-lyn; was a delegate to the Chicago convention of 1864 ; was a member of the State consti-tutional conventions of 1862 and 1867, and was elected to the forty-first Congress as a dem-ocrat, receiving 24,418 votes, against 12,492 votes for Bellows, republican. Third District.—1st, 2d, 3d, 4th, 5th, 7th, 11th, 13th, 15th, 19th, and 20th wards in the ceity of Brooklyn. : HenrY W. SLocuM, of Brooklyn, was born at Delphi, New York, September 24, 1827 ; graduated at the West Point Académy in 1852; on receiving the appointment of second lieutenant he was assigned to duty in Florida, where he spent about one year; and from 1853 to 1856, as a first lieutenant, he was on duty at Fort Moultrie, on leaving which he resigned his commission; studied law, and was engaged in its practice, at Syracuse, from 1856 to 1861; in 1859 he was elected to the State legislature; and from 1859 to 1861 he was instructor of artillery in the New York militia; entered the Union army when the rebellion commenced as colonel of the 27th regiment of New York volunteers, and before the close of 1861 was made a brigadier general of volunteers; in 1862 he was appointed a major general, and served until the end of hostilities ; in 1865 he was the democratic candidate for secretary of state of New York, but was defeated, after which he settled at Brooklyn, in the practice of-law ; in 1868 he was chosen a presidential elector, and was elected to the forty-first Congress as a democrat, receiving 16,598 votes, against 13,734 votes for Booth, republican. Re-elected. Fourth District.—1st, 2d, 3d, 4th, 5th, 6th, and 8th wards in the city of New York. Joan Fox, of New York, was born at New York, June 30, 1835; received a public-school education; engaged in mechanical pursuits; was an alderman and a supervisor in New York city; was elected to the fortieth Congress, and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a democrat, receiving 20,074 votes, against 4,024 votes for Lewis, republican. Fifth District.—7th, 10th, 13th, and 1.4th wards in the city of New York. JodaN MoRRISSEY,of New York, was born in Tipperary county, Ireland, February 12, 1831; came to this country in 1833; received a public-school education; worked as a molder; was elected to the fortieth Congress, and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a demo-crat, receiving 16,064 votes, against 4,494 votes for MeCartin, and 2,583 votes for Train. SENATORS AND REPRESENTATIVES. 33 Sixth District.—9th, 15th, and 16th wards in the city of New York. SAMUEL SULLIVAN CoX, of New York, was born at Zanesville, Ohio, September 30, 1824; attended Ohio University, Athens, but graduated at Brown University, Providence, in the class of 1846; studied and practiced law ; was owner and editorof the Columbus ‘Ohio Statesman ”’ in 1853-54 ; was appointed secretary of legation to Peru in 1855; was a dele-gate to the Chicago and the New York democratic national conventions of 1864 and 1868; is the author of several works, and a constant contributor to the press and periodicals; was elected from the Columbus (Ohio) district to the thirty-fifth, thirty-sixth,thirty-seventh, and thirty-eighth Congresses; removed to New York City on the 4th of March, 1865, and was elected to the forty-first Congress as a democrat, receiving 12,362 votes, against 9,682 votes for Starr, republican. Re-elected. Seventh District.—11th and 17th wards in the city of New York. HERVEY C. CALKIN, of New York, was born at Malden, Ulster eounty, New York, March 23, 1828; received a public-school education; settled in the city of New York in 1347; was-for five years employed in the Morgan Iron Works; in 1852 he commenced business as a dealer in metals, and identifying himself with the shipping interests of the country; held no public positions, excepting that of a school officer in his ward: was elected to the forty-first Congress as a democrat, receiving 18,4385 votes, against 5,987 votes for Pinckney, republican. Eighth District.—18th, 20th, and 21st wards in the city of New York. JAMES BROOKS, of New York, was born at Portland, Maine, November 10, 1810; grad- uated at Waterville College, Maine :studied law ; was admitted to the bar; became con-nected with the press as the first of the Washington correspondents, then as editor, and afterwards as among the first of foreign correspondents for American newspapers; was & member of the State legislature of Maine in 1835; went to New York in 1836 and established ““ The New York Express,” of which he has been chief editor and proprietor; was a member of the legislature of the State of New York in 1849; was a member of the constitutional con-vention of New York in 1867; was elected to the thirty-first, thirty-second, thirty-eighth, and thirty-ninth Congresses, but his seat in the last was successfully contested by W. E. Dodge; was re-elected to the fortieth Congress and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a democrat, receiving 21,487 votes, against 9,866 votes for Laimbeer, rep. Re-elected. Ninth District.—12th, 19th, and 22d wards in the city of New York, including Blackwell’s, Ward’s, and Randall's islands. : FERNANDO Wo0D, of New York, was born of Quaker parentage in the city of Philadel-phia, June 14, 1812; his father removed to New York in 1820, where Mr. Wood has since resided; when nineteen years of age he commenced business as a shipping merchant, in which occupation he was entirely successful, retiring with an ample fortune in 1850; he was three times clected mayor of New York, serving in that office during the years of 1855, 1856, -1857, 1861, and 1862. Ie was earlier a member of the House of Representatives than any other member of the present House, having served as such in the years 1841, 1842, and 1843; he was elected to the twenty-seventh, thirty-eichth, and fortieth Congresses, and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a democrat, receiving 14,648 votes, against 9,087 votes for Thomas, republican, and 1,759 votes for Savage, independent democrat. Fe-elected. Tenth District,—Putnam, Rockland, and Westchester counties. CLARKSON NoOTT POTTER, of New Rochelle, was born in Schenectady, New York, in 1825; graduated at Union College (of which his grandfather, Rev. Eliphalet Nott, was president, and his father, Bishop Alonzo Potter, was vice-president) in 1842; graduated at the Rensselaer Institute as a civil engineer in 1343, and was a surveyor in Wisconsin ; studied law in that State, and after coming to the bar commenced the practice of his profes-sion in New York city in 1847; held no public offices, but was engaged in many important cases ; was elected to the forty-first Congress as a democrat, receiving 16,533 votes, against 12,700 votes for Bradley, republican. Re-elected. Eleventh District.—Orange and Sullivan counties. CHARLES H. VAN WYCK, of Middletown, was born at Poughkeepsie, November —, 1824 ; graduated at Rutgers College, New Jersey; studied and practiced law; was district attor-ney of Sullivan county from 1850 to 1856 ; entered the Union army as colonel of the Tenth Legion, or 56th New York volunteers, and commanded it during the war for the suppression of the rebellion, receiving the rank of brigadier general; was elected to the thirty-sixth, thirty-seventh, and fortieth Congresses, and was elected to the forty-first Congress as a re-publican, the Tlouse deciding that he received more votes than George W. Greene, demo-c¢rat, who claimed the seat. § Twelfth District.—Columbia and Duchess counties. Jonx H. KETcHAM, of Dover, was born at Dover, New York, December 21, 1832; received an academic education; became interested in agricultural pursuits; was a mem-ber of the State assembly of New York in 1856 and 1857 ; was a member of the State senate of New York in 1860 and 1861; entered the Union army as colonel of the 150th volunteers in 1862, and was appointed brigadier general, serving until he resigned, in March, 1865, to 3 CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY. take the seat in Congress to which he had been elected ; he was afterwards appointed major general by brevet; he was a member of the thirty-ninth and fortieth Congresses: and was re-elected to the “forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 13,569 votes, against 13,144 votes for Wheaton, democrat. Re-elected. Thirteenth District.—Greene and Ulster counties. JoHN A. GRISWOLD, of Catskill, was born in Greene county, New York, in 1827; after acquiring a good education he studied law and commenced practice; in 1856 he was elected district attorney of Greene county, and held the position three years; in 1864 he was elected county judge and continued in the office four years; he was elected to the forty-first Con- gress as a democrat, receiving 12,201 votes, against 11,692 votes for Cornell, republican. Fourteenth District.—Albany and Schoharie counties. STEPHEN L. MaYHAM, of Schoharie, was born at Blenheim, Schoharie county, New Yorks October 8, 1825; received an academic education ; studied law and came to the bar in 1848; ‘in 1857 he was elected supervisor of Blenheim and re-elected three times; in 1859 he was elected district attorney for Schoharie county for three years; was a member of the State assembly in 1863; and was elected to the forty-first Congress as a democrat, receiving 13,478 votes, against 15,734 votes for Ramsay, republican. Fifteenth District.—Rensselaer and Washington counties. Aporpraus H. TANNER, of White Hall, was born in Granville, Washington county, New York, May 23, 1833; received a public-school education; studied law and came to the bar in 1854 ; in 1862 he entered the Union army as a captain; and, as lieutenant colonel of the 123d regiment of New York volunteer infantry, served until the close of the war—first in the army of the Potomac, and subsequently throughout the Atlanta campaign and that of the Carolinas. He was elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 17,054 votes, against 14,641 votes for Osgood, democrat. Stateenth District.—Clinton, Essex, and Warren counties. ORANGE FERRISS, of Glenn’s Falls, was born at Glenn's Falls, New York, November 26, 1814 ; was educated at the University of Vermont; studied and practiced law ; was surrogate of Warren county from 1841 to 1845; was judge of Warren county from 1851 to 1863; was elected to the fortieth Congress, and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a repub-lican, receiving 10,428 votes, against 8,218 votes for Livingston, democrat. Seventeenth District.—Franklin and St. Lawrence counties. WILLIAM A. WHEELER, of Malone, was born at Malone, New York, June 30, 1819; received an academic education; studied and practiced law ; was district attorney of Frank- lin county for several years; was a member ot the New York house of assembly in 1850 and 1251 ; was a member of the New York senate and president pro tem. of same in 1853 and 1859; was president of the Ogdensburg railroad for eleven years ; was cashier of a bank for fourteen years; was president of the New York constitutional convention in 1867 and 1868 ; was a member of the thirty-seventh Congress, and was elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 15,262 votes, against 6,234 votes for Wallace, democrat. Re-elected. Eighteenth District.—Fulton, Hamilton, Montgomery, Saratoga, and Schenectady counties. STEPHEN SANFORD, of Amsterdam, was born in Montgomery county, New York, May 26, 1826; educated at Amsterdam Academy, Georgetown College, and Poughkeepsie Col-legiate Institute ; has since been extensively engaged in the business of carpet manufactur-ing ; has never held political office before his election to the forty-first Congress as a repub-lican, receiving 16,611 votes, against 14,508 for White, democrat. Nineteenth District.—Chenango, Delaware, and Otsego counties. CuarLES KNAPP, of Deposit, was born at Colchester, Delaware county, New York, Octo-ber 3, 1797; was bred a farmer; was chiefly educated at home, but taught school for a time ; entered upon mercantile pursuits in 1825: was a member of the legislature of the State of New York in 1841 ; settled in the village of Deposit, Delaware county, in 1848; organized the-Deposit Bank in 1854, which became a national bank in 1864, and of which he was president; and was elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 17,949 votes, against 14,524 votes for Gilbert, democrat. Twentieth District.—Herkimer, Jefferson, and Lewis counties. AppisoN H. LAFLIN, of Herkimer, was born at Lee, Massachusetts, October 24, 1823; graduated at Williams College, Massachusetts, in 1843; went to Herkimer county, New York, in 1849, and became largely interested in the manufacture of paper; was a member of the State senate of New York in 1858 and 1859; was elected to the thirty-ninth and fortieth Ci ngresses, and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 16,856 votcs, against 13,508 votes for Cornwall, democrat. Twenty first District.—Oneida county. ALEXANDER H. BaiLey, of Rome, was born at Minisink, New York, August 14, 1817; was educated at the College of New Jersey, at Princeton ; studied and practiced law ; was master and examiner in chancery in Greene county in 1340, 1841, and 1842; was justice of the peace in the town of Catskill for four years; was a member of the assembly of the State Cyuct M.S=~! mm ~~ Hl A Au ah + SENATORS AND REPRESENTATIVES. 35 of New York in 1849; was county judge of Greene county for four years from 1851; was a member of the State senate in 1861, 1862, 1863, and 1864 ; was elected to the fortieth Con-gress as a republican, to fill the vacancy occasioned by the resignation of Roscoe Conkling, and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress, receiving 12,543 votes, against 11,240 votes for Spriggs, democrat. Twenty-second District.—Madison and Oswego counties. JoHuN C. CHURCHILL, of Oswego, was born at Mooers, New York, January 17, 1821 ; fitted for college at Burr Seminary, Vermont; graduated at Middlebury College, Vermont, July, 1843; taught languages at Castleton Seminary, Vermont, two years; was tutor at Middle-bury College one year; read law at Dane Law School, Harvard University ; was admitted to the bar July, 1847 ; occupied the chair of languages at Middlebury College for a few months during the illness of Professor Solomon Stoddard ; commenced the practice of law at Oswego, New York, early in 1848, and has continued it to the present time; was a member of the board of education of Oswego city from 1853 to 1856 ; of the board of supervisors of Oswego county, 1854 and 1855; was district attorney for Oswego county from 1857 to 1860; was judge of Oswego county from 1860 to 1864, and in the latter year was unanimously pre-sented by his county as candidate for justice of the supreme court ; was elected to the fortieth Congress, and re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 15,761 votes, against 6,169 votes for Stebbins, democrat. Twenty-third District.—Cortland and Onondaga counties. DENNIS MCCARTHY, of Syracuse, was born at Salina, New York, March 19, 1814 ; received an academic education; engaged in mercantile pursuits; was a member of the general assembly of New York in 1846 ; was mayor of Syracuse in 1853; was elected to the fortieth Congress, and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 16,470 votes, against 11,455 votes for Porter, democrat. Twenty-fourth District. —Cayuga, Seneca, and Wayne counties. GEORGE W. COWLES, of Clyde, was born in Otisco, New York, graduated at Hamilton college, New York, in 1345, and was engaged in teaching until 1853; studied law and was admitted to the bar in 1854 ; was elected judge of Wayne county, New York, in 1863, and was re-elected in 1867; was elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 17,234 votes, against 12,743 votes for Ross, democrat. Twenty-fifth District.—Livingston, Ontario, and Yates counties. WiLLiam H. KELSEY, of Geneseo, was born at Smyrna, New York, October 2, 1812; studied and practiced law ; was appointed surrogate of Livingston county in February, 1840; was elected district attorney of Livingston county in 1350; was elected to the thirty-fourth, thirty-fifth and fortieth Congresses, and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a. republican, receiving 13,418 votes, against 9,610 votes for Faulkner. Twenty-sixzth District. —Broome, Schuyler, Tioga, and Tompkins counties. GILEs W. HorcHkIss, of Binghamton, was born at Windsor, Broome county, New York, October 25, 1815 ; studied and practiced law ; was elected to the thirty-eighth and thirty--ninth Congresses ; and was elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 17,398 votes, against 12,280 votes for Devereaux, democrat. Twenty-seventh District.—Alleghany, Chemung, and Steuben counties. HamIiLToN WARD, of Belmont, was born at Salisbury, New York, July 3, 1829; received a liberal education; studied law and commenced practice at Belmont; was district attorney for Alleghany county several years; was engaged in 1262, under an appointment from the governor, in raising troops for the Union army ; was elected to the thirty-ninth and fortieth . Congresses; and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 13,647 votes, against 13,180 votes for Gardiner, democrat. Twenty-cighth District.—Monroe and Orleans counties. ’ quently mayor. In 1556 he returned to New York and setiled at Batavia; engaged as a State commissioner in erecting the buildings for was subsequently the New York State Institution for the Blind in Batavia; was the president of a fire insurance company; and was elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 13,432 votes, against 10,294 votes for Jackson, democrat, CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY. Thirtieth District.—Erie county. DAVID S. BENNETT, of Buffalo, was elected to the forty-firsi Congress as a republican, receiving 16,004 votes, against 14,293 votes for Verplanck, democrat. Thirty-first District.— Cattaraugus and Chautauqua counties. PORTER SHELDON, of Jamestown, was born at Victor, Ontario county, New York, Sep- tember 29, 1831: received an academic education; studied law, and came to the bar in 1854 ; practiced his profession at Randolph, New York, until 1857, when he removed to Rockford, Illinois, where he continued the practice of his profession until 1865, when he returned to Chautauqua, in his native State; in 1861 he was a member of the constitutional convention of Illinois; and he was elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 15,416 votes, against 8,433 votes for Beggs, democrat. NORTH CAROLINA. SENATORS. JosepH C. ABBOTT, of Wilmington, was born at Concord, New Hampshire, July 15, 1825; received an academic education; read law, and was admitted to the bar in March, 1852; was editor and proprietor of the ‘Manchester American” for five years, and subse-quently editor of the ‘“ Boston Atlas;” was appointed adjutant general of the State of New Hampshire in July, 1855, and held the office until July, 1861, when he resigned; received orders from the War Department in September, 1861, to raise a regiment of infantry, which regiment having been raised he entered the service as lieutenant colonel, and in November, 1863, was promoted colonel; in January, 1865, was brevetted brigadier general for ‘‘ gallant services in the capture of Fort Fisher;” after leaving the service removed to North Carolina and entered into business; in September, 1867, was elected to the State constitutional con-vention; in April, 1868, was elected to the State legislature, and in July, 1868, was elected to the United States Senate as a republican. His term of service will expire March 3, 1871. JouN Pool, of Elizabeth City, was born in Pasquotank county, North Carolina, June 16, 1826; graduated at the University of North Carolina in 1847; is a practicing lawyer; was elected to the State senate in 1856, re-elected in 1858, and again in 1364, and again in 1865 ; was a member of the State constitutional convention in 1865; was the whig candidate for governor of the State in 1860; was elected to the United States Senate in 1865, and was re-elected in 1868 and qualified and took his seat in July, 1868; he succeeds Thomas L. Clingman. His term of office ends March 3, 1873. REPRESENTATIVES. First District.—Beaufort, Bertie, Camden, Chowan, Currituck, Gates, Halifax, Hertford, Hyde, Martin, Northampton, Pasquotank, Perquimons, Tyrrel, and Washington counties. CLINTON L. CoBB, of Elizabeth City, was born at Elizabeth City, North Carolina, August 25, 1842; he attended school until he was thirteen years of age, and then went into a counting-room ; studied law, and obtained a license to practice in 1867 ; was a candidate for the legislature in 1866, but was defeated on the Howard amendment; was an independent candidate for Congress in 1863, but withdrew in favor of J. R. French; was elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 15,476 votes, against 11,893 votes for Barnes, democrat. Re-elected Second District.—Carteret, Craven, Jones, Lenoir, Wayne, Greene, Pitt, Edgecombe, Wilson, Duplin, and Onslow counties. JoserH DixoN, of Hookerton, was born in Greene county, North Carolina, —, 18—; was educated at the private and public schools of that county ; resides on a farm, and for three or four years engaged in mercantile pursuits; was a magistrate, and judge of the county court; was a member of the State legislature in 1868 and 1869; and was elected to the forty-first Congress in the place of David Heaton, deceased, receiving votes, against votes. Third District.—Anson, Montgomery, Moore, Richmond, Robeson, Harnett, Cumberland, Bladen, Sampson, New Hanover, Brunswick, and Columbus counties. OrivER H. DOCKERY, of Mangum, was born in Richmond county, North Carolina, August 12, 1830; a son of the Hon. Alfred Dockery, an ex-member of Congress, a man of promi- nence and influence in the State of North Carolina for the last thirty years; he received a good education, graduating at the University of North Carolina in 1848; read law, but never prac- ticed. and is now a farmer by profession ; he represented his county in the legislature of 1858 and 1859; was the district elector for the Union ticket under Bell and Everett in 1860, in which capacity he canvassed his district thoroughly and ably, eliciting applause even from his worst political foes by his manly devotion to the Union of his fathers ; he was for a short time, under the social pressure existing at the South, in the confederate service, but honorably withdrew therefrom, and ever afterwards took a bold and manly stand for the re-establishment of the national government, and a speedy restoration of North Carolina to her original position therein; he was active and enthusiastic in the peace movement in 1864 in his State under the leadership of Governor Holden; was elected to the fortieth Congress, and was re-elected SENATORS AND REPRESENTATIVES. 37 to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 15,314 votes, against 13,353 votes for McKoy, democrat. : Fourth District.—Nash, Warren, Granville, Franklin, Wake, Johnson, Chatham, and Orange counties. JoHN MANNING, JR., of Pittsborough, was born at Edenton, North Carolina, July 3, 1830; received his early education at the academy in Norfolk, Virginia, and was graduated at the University of North Carolina, in June, 1850; removed to Pittsborough, North Caro-lina, in November, 1851, and began the study of the law ; was licensed to practice in 1853, and has followed that profession since; was a member of the convention of 1861; and was elected to the forty-first Congress in November, 1870, (in place of John T. Deweese, resigned, ) as a democrat, receiving a majority of 323 votes over Holden, republican. Fifth District.— Alamance, Randolph, Guilford, Rockingham, Davidson, Forsyth, Stokes, Surry, Person, Stanley, and Caswell counties. ISRAEL G. LasH, of Salem, was born at Bethania, North Carolina, August 18, 1810; worked on the farm until 1830, then became a merchant and manufacturer, and in 1847 a banker ; he was elected to the fortieth Congress, and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 14,525 votes, against 11,123 votes for Brown, democrat. Swath District.—Alexander, Cabarras, Catawba, Davie, Gaston, Iredell, Lincoln, Mecklen-burg, Rowan, Union, Wilkes, and Yadkin counties. Francis E. SHOBER, of , was elected to the forty-first Congress as a democrat, receiving 12,192 votes against 11,103 votes for Boyden, republican. Re-elected. Seventh District.—Alleghany, Ashe, Buncombe, Burke, Cleveland, Cherokee, Clay, Cald-well, Haywood, Henderson, Jackson, Macon, Madison, McDowell, Mitchell, Polk, Ruther-ford, Transylvania, Watauga, and Yancey counties. ALEXANDER H. JONES, of Asheville, was born in Buncombe county, North Carolina, July 21, 1822; received an academic education; was raised a farmer ; was a merchant; had a limited experience as an editor at the beginning of the rebellion ; took an uncompromising stand for the Union; in the early summer of 1863 he fled into the Union lines; was com-missioned by General Burnside to raise a regiment of loyal North Carolinians, and while engaged in recruiting white men was captured in East Tennessee by the confederates; was imprisoned and ironed at Asheville ; imprisoned at Camp Vance, Camp Holmes, and in the Libby at Richmond, Virginia; was conscripted ; made his escape November, 1864, without performing any service ; succeeded in reaching the Union lines about the 7th December, 1364, at Cumberland, Maryland ; was cared for at Cincinnati and Knoxville, Tennessee, in a bad state of health, until the surrender of General Lee; he returned home and was elected to the State convention as a republican in the summer of 1865 ; in the fall of the same year he was elected to the thirty-ninth Congress, but, for the lack of an established civil government in the State, failed to be received; was re-elected to the fortieth Congress and obtained a seat July 20, 1868, and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress. OHIO. SENATORS. JOHN SHERMAN, of Mansfield, Ohio, was born at Lancaster, Ohio, May 10, 1823; received an academic education; studied and practiced law ; was a representative in the thirty-fourth, thirty-fifth, thirty-sixth, and thirty-seventh Congresses; was elected to the United States Senate as a republican after the resignation of S. P. Chase, appointed Secretary of the Treasury, to succeed George E. Pugh, democrat, and took his seat in 1861; was re-elected in 1867. His term of service will expire March 3, 1873. ALLEN G. THURMAN, of Columbus, was born at Lynchburg, Virginia, November 13, 1813 ; removed to Ohio in 1819 ; received an academic education; studied law, and was admitted to the bar in 1835 ; was a representative from Ohio in the twenty ninth Congress ; was elected a judge of the supreme court of Ohio in 1851; was chief justice of that court from 1854 to 1856 ; was the democratic candidate for governor of Ohio in 1867 ; was elected to the United States Senate as a democrat in place of Benjamin F. Wade, republican, and took his seat March 4, 1869. His term of service will expire March 3, 1875. REPRESENTATIVES, First District.—1st, 2d, 3d, 4th, 5th, 7th, 9th, 10th, 11th, 13th, 17th, 19th, and 20th wards of Cincinnati, and eastern part of Hamilton county. PETER W. STRADER, of Cincinnati, was born in Warren county, New Jersey, November 6, 1818; his parents immigrated to Southwestern Ohio in the spring of 1819; he received a common-school education up to twelve years of age; he passed three years in a printing office 38 CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY. be was clerk, engineer, and clerk on Ohio and Mississippi rivers from November, 1835, to June, 1848; then general ticket agent of Little Miami railroad to February, 1867 ; and was elected to the forty-first Congress as a democrat, receiving 10,483 votes, against 10,272 votes for Eggleston, republican. Second District.--6th, 8th, 12th, 14th, 15th, 16th, and 18th wards of the city of Cincin nati, and western part of Hamilton county. Jos E. STEVENSON, of Cincinnati,was born in Ross county, Ohio, February 10, 1831; received an irregular collegiate education ; studied law, and has steadily practiced his pro- fession; was solicitor of Chillicothe in 1859, 1860, 1861, and 1862; was a member of the § Ohio senate from Ross and Highland counties in 1863, 1864, and 1865; was republican can- didate for Congress in the twelfth district of Ohio in 1864; removed to Cincinnati in 1865, and continued the practice of law, and was-elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 497 majority over Samuel F. Cary, independent workingmen’s candidate and adopted democrat. Re-elected. Third District.—Butler, Montgomery, Preble, and Warren counties. ROBERT C. SCHENCK, of Dayton, was born at Franklin, Ohio, October 4, 1809; grad- uated at Miami University ; studied law with the Hon. Thomas Corwin, at Lebanon, and practiced many years at Dayton; was a member of the Ohio legislature in 1841 and 1842; was a representative in the twenty-eighth, twenty-ninth, thirtieth, and thirty-first Congresses, from 1843 to 1851; was appointed in 1851 envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary to Brazil, and was also accredited in 1862 envoy extraordinary to the Oriental Republic of Uruguay, the Argentine Confederation, and Paraguay, negotiating several important treaties ; entered the Union army in 1861 under an appointment by President Lincoln as brigadier general ; was promoted to be major general, to take rank from August 30, 1862, the date of the battle of Groveton, (or second Bull Run,) for his conduct in that action, in which he was severely wounded, and continued in military service until he took his seat in Congress in December, 1863; was elected to the thirty-eighth, thirty-ninth, and fortieth Congresses, and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 16,203 votes, against 15,818 votes for Vallandigham. Fourth District.—Champaign, Darke, Logan, Miami, and Shelby counties. WiLLiaM LAWRENCE, of Bellefontaine, was born at Mount Pleasant, Ohio, June 26, 1819; graduated at Franklin College, Ohio, and afterwards at the Cincinnati Law School ; was a reporter for the ‘Columbus State.Journal,” and subsequently edited * The Logan Gazette” \ and ‘‘ The Western Law Monthly : 7” was bankrupt commissioner for Logan county in 1842 ; was prosecuting attorney for Logan county in 1845; was a member of the State house of repre- sentatives of Ohio in 1846 and 1847; was a member of the State senate of Ohio in 1848, 1849, and 1854 ; was elected reporter of the supreme court of Ohio in 1851; was elected judge of the court of common pleas in 1856, for five years; re-elected in 1861, and resigned in 1864; was in the Union army in 1862 as colonel of the 84th Ohio volunteers; was ap- pointed United States judge in Florida in 1863; was elected to the thirty-ninth and fortieth Congresses, and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 13,656 votes, against 13,027 votes for Leedom, democrat. Fifth District.—Allen, Auglaize, Hancock, Hardin, Mercer, Van Wert, and Wyandot counties. WiLLiaM MUNGEN, of Findlay, was born at Baltimore, Maryland, May 12, 1821 ; went to Ohio in 1830; received a common-school education; studied Latin and German and the physical sciences to some extent at home; studied and practiced law ; was editor and pub- lisher of the ‘‘Findlay Democratic Courier;”’ was chosen auditor of Hancock county in 1846, and again in 1843; was elected to the State senate of Ohio in 1851; declined a renom- ination and election in 1853; entered the Union army in 1861 as colonel of the 57th Ohio volunteers, which he had raised; during the time he has resided in Ohio he has held several local offices; was elected to the fortieth Congress, and was re-elected to the forty-first Con- gress as a democrat, receiving 15,435 votes, against 10,5689 votes for Grissell, republican. Sixth District. —Brown, Clermont, Clinton, Fayette, and Highland counties. : Joun A. SmurtH, of Hillshoro, was born at Hillsboro, Ohio, September 23, 1814; \ graduated at Miami University; studied and practiced law; was a member of the Ohio / legislature in 1841 and 1842; was a member of the State constitutional convention of Ohio of 1851; and was elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 13,463 votes, against 13,120 votes for Barrere, democrat. Re-elected. Seventh District.—Clarke, Franklin, Greene, and Madison counties. : JAMES J. WINANS, of Xenia, Ohio, was born at Maysville, Kentucky, June 7, 1818; had a common-school education; studied law in Kentucky and practiced in Ohio; was appointed clerk of the courts of Greene county in June, 1845; was elected to the State senate in 1857, and to the State house in 1863; was appointed judge of the court of common pleas in 1864, and elected to fill vacancy in the same year, and was re-elected for full term of five years in 1866; and was elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 13,978 votes, against 13,873 votes for Thomas, democrat. | SENATORS AND REPRESENTATIVES. 39 Eighth District.—Delaware, Marion, Morrow, Richland, and Union counties. JouN BEATTY, of Cardington, was born near Sandusky City, Ohio, December 16, 1828 ; received a good English education; engaged in the business of banking; was a republican presidential elector in 1860; volunteered as a private in the 3d Ohio infantry at the begin-ning of the war for the suppression of the rebellion; and was appointed lieutenant-colonel in 1861 ; took part in several battles in West Virginia; was promoted colonel in 1862, and was conspicuous in campaigns in the Southwest; commanded a regiment at Perryviile and a brigade at Stone River; was commissioned brigadier general in 1863, and commanded a brigade at Tullahoma, Chickamauga, and Mission Ridge ; was elected to the fortieth Congress, for the unexpired term of C. S. Hamilton, deceased, and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 12,198 votes, against 11,250 votes for Benson. Re-elected. Ninth District. —Crawford, Erie, Huron, Ottawa, Sandusky, and Seneca counties. EpwaRD F. DICKINSON, of Frémont, was born at Frémont, Ohio, January 21, 1829, grad- uated at the St. Xavier College, Cincinnati, Ohio; studied law and was admitted to the bar; served over three years in the Union army as lieutenant and regimental quartermaster of the eighth Ohio infantry ; was elected judge of the Sandusky county probate court in 1866, and was elected to the forty-first Congress as a democrat, receiving 16,322 votes, against 14,677 votes for Gibson. Tenth District.—Defiance, Fulton, Henry, Lucas, Paulding, Putnam, Williams, and Wood counties. Erasmus D. PECK, of Perrysburg, was born in Connecticut, September 16, 1808; studied medicine and graduated at the Berkshire Medical College in 1829 ; removed to Ohio in 1830; was elected a member of the Ohio legislature in 1856 and 1858 ; was examining surgeon for the army and for pensions, and was elected to the forty-first Congress as a. republican in April, 1870, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Hon. T. H. Hoag, receiving 13,228 votes, against 10,583 votes for Hill, democrat, and 933 votes for Carter, repudiation democrat. Re-elected. : Eleventh District.— Adams, Gallia, Jackson, Lawrence, Scioto, and Vinton counties. JonN T. WILSON, of Tranquility, was born in Highland county, Ohio, April 16, 1811; received a public-school education; was engaged during twenty-four years in mercantile pursuits, and then retired to a farm; raised a company for the Union army in 1861, and served as its captain; was a member of the State senate of Ohio in 1863, 1864, 1865, and 1866; was elected to the fortieth Congress, and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 13,631 votes, against 11,502 votes for Sands, democrat. Re-elected. Twelfth District.—Fairfield, Hocking, Perry, Pickaway, Pike, and Ross counties. PHILADELPH VAN TruUMP, of Lancaster, was born at Lancaster, Ohio, November 15, 1810; received a public-school education; learned the art of printing and edited ‘The Lan-caster Gazette and Enquirer;”’” was a delegate to the national whig convention which nom-inated Scott and Graham in 1852; was a candidate for senatorial elector on the Fillmore ticket for Ohio in 1856; was president of the Bell and Everett State convention in 1860 ; was the democratic candidate for supreme judge of Ohio in the years 1863, 1864, and 1865; served as judge of the court of common pleas from 1862 to 1866; was elected to the fortieth Congress, and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a democrat, receiving 16,287 votes, against 11,374 votes for Turney, republican. Fe-elected. Thirteenth District.—Coshocton, Knox, Licking, and Muskingum counties. GEORGE W. MORGAN, of Mount Vernon, was born at Washington, Pennsylvania, Septem-ber 20, 1820; in 1836 he left college, and as a private, joined a company commanded by his brother, and went to assist Texas in gaining her independence, in which service he rose to the, rank of captain; in 1843 he settled in Mount Vernon, Ohio, and adopted the profession of law : in 1846 he commanded the 2d Ohio volunteers in the Mexican war until the expiration of its term of service, which was one year, and was under the command of General Taylor; in the winter of 1846-'47 ten additional regiments were added to the regular army, and he was appointed colonel of the 15th infantry, and ranking colonel of the eight new infantry regiments, serving in command of that regiment, under General Scott, until the close of the war ; for his services at the battles of Contreras and Cherubusco he was brevetted a brigadier general in the regular army; in 1855 he was appointed consul at Marseilles; in 1858 he was appointed minister resident at Lisbon ; on the breaking out of the rebellion, as brigadier gen-eral of volunteers, he had command of the 7th division of the army of the Ohio; was with General Sherman at Vicksburg; was assigned to the 13th army corps, and was in com-mand at the taking of Fort Henderson, in Arkansas, and, on account of his loss of health, resigned his command in 1863; in 1865 he was the unsuccessful candidate for governorof Ohio; in 1866 he claimed to have been elected a representative from Ohio to the fortieth Congress, but was unseated in favor of Columbus Delano, and he was elected to the forty-first Congress as a democrat, receiving 14,614 votes, against 12,930 votes for Cooper, repub- lican, Re-elected. > Fourteenth District.—Ashland, Holmes, Lorain, Medina, and Wayne counties. MARTIN WELKER, of Wooster, was born in Knox county, Ohio, April 25, 1819; was self- educated; studied and practiced law ; was clerk of the court of common pleas for Holmes CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY, county from 1846 to 1851; was judge of the sixth judicial district from 1852 to 1857; removed in 1857 to Wooster; was elected lieutenant governor of Ohio in 1857, declining a renomination; served three months in the Union army as a staff officer, and was afterwards appointed by the governor of Ohio judge advocate general, with the rank of colonel; was elected to the thirty-ninth and fortieth Congresses, and was re-elected to the forty-first Con-gress as a republican, receiving 13,575 votes, against 13,113 votes for Critchfield, democrat. Fifteenth District.—Athens, Meigs, Monroe, Morgan, and Washington counties. EvriagkiM HASTINGS MOORE, of Athens, was born in Boylston, Worcester county, Massachusetts, June 19, 1812; removed to Ohio in I817; received a common-school education ; from 1836 to 1846 he was county surveyor of Athens county ; from 1846 to 1860 he was auditor of Athens county ; was a director and then president for many years of the Athens branch of the State Bank of Ohio, and subsequently of the First National Bank of Athens, which he organized; was appointed in 1862 a collector of internal revenue, from which office he was removed by Andrew Johnson, in 1866 ; and was elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 13,773 votes, against [2,817 votes for Follett, democrat. Sixteenth District.—Belmont, Guernsey, Harrison, Noble, and Tuscarawas counties. JoHN A. BINGHAM, of Cadiz, was born at Mercer, Pennsylvania, in 1815; received an academic education; passed two years in a printing office ; was a student of Franklin Col-lege, Ohio; was admitted to the bar in 1840 ; was district attorney for Tuscarawas county, Ohio, from 1846 to 1849; was chairman of the managers of the House in the impeachment of Judge Humphreys, impeached for high treason May 22, 1862 ; was appointed by Mr. Lincoln United States district judge for the southern district of Florida, which he declined; was appointed judge advocate in the Union army in 1864; and later.in that year was appointed solicitor of the Court of Claims ; was special judge advocate in the trial of the assassination conspirators in 1865; was chairman, in the fortieth Congress, of the managers of the impeachment of the President of the United States, and made the concluding argument before the Senate; was elected to the thirty-fourth, thirty-fifth, thirty-sixth, thirty-seventh, thirty-ninth, and fortieth Congresses, and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 13,757 votes, against 13,341 votes for Estep, democrat. Re-elected. Seventeenth District.—Carroll, Columbiana, Jefferson, and Stark counties. JACOB A. AMBLER, of Salem, was born at Pittsburg, Pennsylvania, February, 18, 1829 ; studied and practiced law in Ohio; was elected in 1857 to the State legislature of Ohio, and served two terms ; was appointed in 1859 judge of the ninth judicial district, and served until 1867, when he resumed practice; was elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 14,998 votes, against 11,602 votes for Lawson, democrat. Re-elected. Eighteenth District. —Cuyahoga, Lake, and Summit counties. Wirriam H. Upson, of Akron, was born at Worthington, Franklin county, Ohio, Janu- ary 11, 1823; graduated at Western Reserve College in 1842; studied and practiced law ; was a member of the senate of Ohio in 1854 and 1855; was elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 18,359 votes, against 11,930 votes for F. T. Backus. Re-elected. Nineteenth District, — Ashtabula, Geauga, Mahoning, Portage, and Trumbull counties. JAMES A. GARFIELD, of Hiram, was born in Orange, Cuyahoga county. Ohio, November 19, 1831; graduated at Williams College, Massachusetts, in 1856 ; was president of a lite-rary institution for several years; studied and practiced law; was a member of the State senate of Ohio in 1859 and 1860; entered the Union army in 1861 as colonel of the 42d Ohio volunteers; was promoted to the rank of brigadier general; was appointed chief of staff to General Rosecrans, and was promoted to the rank of major general; was elected to thirty-eighth, thirty-ninth, and fortieth Congresses, and was re-elected to the forty-first ‘Congress as a republican, receiving 20,187 votes, against 9,759 votes for McEwen. Re-elected. OREGON. SENATORS. \ GEORGE H. WILLIAMS, of Portland, was born in Columbia county, New York, March 23, 1823; received an academic education; studied law, and removing to Iowa commenced practice there; wasjudge of the first judicial district of Towa from 1847 to 1852; was a presi-dential elector from Iowa in 1852; was appointed chief justice of the Territory of Oregon in 1853, and was reappointed in 1857, but resigned; was elected a member of the convention which framed the constitution of Oregon in 1858; was elected to the United States Senate as a Union republican to succeed B. F. Harding, Union republican, and took his seat in 1865. His term of service will expire March 3, 1871. HENRY W. CORBETT, of Portland, was born at Westboro, Massachusetts, February 18, 1827; removing with his parents to Washington county, N. Y., when young ; received an academic education: commenced mercantile pursuits in 1840, at Cambridge, New York ; removed to New York city in 1843, continuing there in mercantile pursuits until 1851; re-moved to Portland, Oregon, and commenced mercantile business there in March, 1861; was city treasurer, a member of the city council, and chairman of the republican State cen-tral committee ; was elected to the United States Senate as a Union republican to succeed SENATORS AND REPRESENTATIVES. 41 J. W. Nesmith, democrat, and took his seat in 1867. His term of service will expire March 3, 1873. REPRESENTATIVE. State at large.—JOSEPH S. SMITH, of Salem, was born in Fayette county, Pennsylvania, June 20, 1824; received a common-school education; studied and practiced law; in 1855 he was prosecuting attorney of the third judicial district of Washington Territory ; was afterwards elected to the legislature, and was speaker of the house of representatives of that Territory ; under President Buchanan’s administration was United States district attorney for Washing-ton Territory for two years, but resigned on his removal to Oregon ; was elected to the forty-first Congress as a democrat, receiving 11,789 votes, against 10,580 votes for Logan, republican. PENNSYLVANIA. SENATORS. SiMoN CAMERON, of Harrisburg, was born in Lancaster county, Pennsylvania, March 8, 1799; learned the art of printing; worked as a journeyman in Washington city, and after-wards edited newspapers at Doylestown and at Harrisburg; afterwards became interested in important banking and railroad interests, and served as adjutant general of Pennsylvania; was Secretary of War in 1861, organizing the Union armies and initiating the arming of colored men; he resigned when appointed minister plenipotentiary to Russia in 1862; was elected to the United States Senate in 1845, serving until 1849, and was re-elected in 1857 for the term ending in 1863, but resigned in 1861; was again re-elected as a Union republi-can to succeed Edgar Cowan, democrat, and took his seat in 1867. His term of service will expire March 3, 1873. JonN ScorT, of Huntingdon, was born in Huntingdon county, Pennsylvania, July 14, 1824 ; received a common-school education; studied law; was admitted to the bar in 1846, and has practiced ever since: was prosecuting attorney from 1846 to 1849; was a member of board of revenue commissioners in 1851; was a member of the State legislature in 1862; was elected to the United States Senate as a republican to succeed Charles R. Buckalew, democrat, and took his seat March 4, 1869. His term of service will expire March 4, 1875. REPRESENTATIVES. First District.—2d, 3d, 4th, 5th, 6th, and 11th wards of the city of Philadelphia. SAMUEL J. RANDALL, of Philadelphia, was born at Philadelphia, October 10, 1828; received an academic education ; engaged in mercantile pursuits ; was a member of the city councils of Philadelphia four years; was a member of the State senate of Pennsylvania in 1858 and 1859; was elected to the thirty-eighth, thirty-ninth, and fortieth Congresses, and was re-elected to the forty first Congress as a democrat, receiving 14,745 votes, against 8,408 votes for Berry, republican. Re-elected. Second District.—1st, 7th, 8th, 9th, 10th, and 26th wards of the city of Philadelphia. CHARLES O'NEILL, of Philadelphia, was born in Philadelphia, March 21, 1821; graduated at Dickinson College; studied and practiced law ; was a member of the house of representa-tives of Pennsylvania in 1850, 1851, 1852, and 1860; was a member of the State senate of Pennsylvania in 1853; was elected to the thirty-eighth, thirty-ninth, and fortieth Congresses, and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 14,533 votes, against 11,913 votes for Florence, democrat. Third District.—12th, 13th, 16th, 17th, 18th, and 19th wards of the city of Philadelphia. LEONARD MYERS, of Philadelphia, was born at Attleboro, Pennsylvania, November 13, 1827; received a liberal education; studied and practiced law; digested the ordinances for the consolidation of the city of Philadelphia; was solicitor for two of the municipal dis-tricts of Philadelphia; was elected to the thirty-eighth, thirty-ninth, and fortieth Con-gresses, and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, defeating Moffet, democrat. Re-elected. Fourth District.—14th, 15th, 20th, 21st, 24th, 27th, and 28th wards of the city of Phila-delphia. WitLiam D. KELLEY, of Philadelphia, was born at Philadelphia, April 12, 1814 ; received a thorough English education ; was reader in a printing office, and afterwards an apprentice in a jewelry establishment; studied and practiced law, devoting himself also to literary pursuits; was for ten years judge ot the court of common pleas of Philadelphia; was elected to the thirty-seventh, thirty-eighth, thirty-ninth, and fortieth Congresses, and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 17,107 votes, against 15,248 votes for Nicholson, democrat. Re-elected. yk District.—Bucks county and the 22d, 23d, and 25th wards of the city of Philadel-paia. CALEB N. TAYLOR, of Bristol, was born in Bucks county, Pennsylvania, July 27, 1313; received an academic education ; engaged in agricultural pursuits; was elected to the CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY. |} fortieth Cougress, and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, defeating John R. Reading, democrat, who claimed the seat, but the House gave it to Mr. Taylor. Sixth District.—Lehigh and Montgomery counties. JonN D. STILES, of Allentown, was born in Luzerne county, Pennsylvania, January 15, 1823; received an academic education; studied law and was admitted to the bar in 1844; in 1853 he was elected district attorney for Lehigh county, and held the office three years: he was a delegate to the national convention which nominated Mr. Buchanan for President in 1856; to the Chicago convention in 1864, and to the Philadelphia national union convention in 1866, and to the democratic convention in 1868 which nominated Seymour and Blair; he was elected to the thirty-seventh Congress for the unexpired term of his friend, T. B. Cooper, deceased ; was re-elected to the thirty-eighth Congress, and was elected to the forty-first Con-gress as a democrat, receiving 15,247 votes, against 12,568 votes for Breitenbach, republican. Seventh District.—Chester and Delaware counties. WASHINGTON TOWNSEND, of West Chester, was born in West Chester, Pennsylvania, in 1813; received an academic education; became a teller in the Bank of Chester County, Pennsylvania, in 1832; while so employed studied law, and was admitted to the bar in 1844 ; was deputy attorney under Attorneys General Darragh and Cooper; was made cash-ier of the bank above named in 1849, and resigned in 1857 to resume the practice of the law, in which he has continued ever since ; was a delegate to the Baltimore national whig con-vention of 1852, and the Chicago national republican convention of 1860; and was elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 12,771 votes, against 9,481 votes for Monagan, democrat. Re-elected. Eighth District.—Berks county. J. LAWRENCE GETZ, of Reading, was born at Reading, Pennsylvania, September 14, 1821; received an academic education; studied and practiced law ; was for twenty-five years editor of the ‘‘ Reading Gazette and Democrat;”’ was a member of the State legislature of Pennsylvania in 1856 and 1857, serving the last year as speaker of the house; was elected to the fortieth Congress as a democrat, and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a democrat, receiving 13,738 votes, against 7,472 votes for Eckert, republican. Re-elected. Ninth District.—Lancaster county. OLIVER J. DicKEY, of Lancaster, was born in Old Brighton, Beaver county, April 6, 1823; received an academic education ; passed through the junior year at Dickinson College; stud-ied law with Hon. Thaddeus Stevens, in Lancaster, and is a practicing lawyer; never held any public office, except district attorney for Lancaster county from 1856 to 1859; elected to fill the vacancy in the fortieth Congress caused by the death of Thaddeus Stevens, and re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 14,993 votes, against 8,674 for Swarr, democrat. Re-elected. Tenth District.—Lebanon and Schuylkill counties. HENRY L. CAKE, of Tamaqua, was born in Northumberland, Pennsylvania, October 6, 1827; received a common-school education; learned the art of printing and published the “ Pottsville Mining Record’ up to the commencement of the rebellion ; entered the Union army as a private, April 17, 1861, arriving at Washington April 18, 1861, with the first volunteers, afterwards incorporated with the 25th Pennsylvania regiment, of which he was unanimously elected colonel at Washington, May 1, 1861; after the three months’ service he reorganized his regiment, and commanded the 96th Pennsylvania volunteers; is largely engaged in the mining and shipping of anthracite coal; was elected to the fortieth Congress; stood by Thaddeus Stevens from first to last in demanding the impeachment and conviction of Andrew Johnson; was unanimously renominated by the republicans of his district, and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress, receiving 12,501 votes, against 12,276 votes for Conner, democrat. Eleventh District.—Carbon, Monroe, Northampton, Pike, and Wayne counties. DANIEL M. VAN AUKEN, of Milford, was born at , Pennsylvania, January 15, 1826 ; graduated at Union College, New York ; was prosecuting attorney for Pike county, Penn-sylvania, from 1855 until 18—; was elected to the fortieth Congress, and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a democrat, receiving 17,928 votes, against 10,323 votes for Tor- rey, republican. Twelfth District.—Luzerne and Susquehanna counties. GEORGE W. WoobpWARD, of Wilkesbarre, was born at Bethany, Pennsylvania, March 26, 1809; received an academic education; studied and practiced law ; was a member of the State constitutional convention of Pennsylvania in 1837; was appointed president judge of fourth judicial district in 1841, and served ten years; was elected judge of the supreme court of Pennsylvania in 1852, and served for fifteen years and eight months; was elected to the fortieth Congress, and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a democrat, receiving 16,687 votes, against 14,898 votes for Strong, republican. Thirteenth District.—Bradford, Columbia, Montour, Sullivan, and Wyoming counties. ULYSSES MERCUR, of Towanda, was born at Towanda, Pennsylvania, August 12, 1818; graduated at Jefferson College, Pennsylvania; studied and practiced law; was a republican SENATORS AND REPRESENTATIVES. : presidential elector in 1860; was appointed president judge of the thirteenth judicial district of Pennsylvania in March, 1861, and elected to the offices oon afterwards for a term of ten years from December, 1861, but resigned when elected to the thirty-ninth Congress; was re-elected to the fortieth Congress, and again re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a republi-can, receiving 12,723 votes, against 12,412 votes for Piolet, democrat. Re-elected. Fourteenth District.—Dauphin, Juniata, Northumberland, Snyder, and Union counties. JOHN B. PACKER, of Sunbury, was born at Sunbury, Pennsylvania, March 21, 1824; received an academic education; studied law, and has, since his admission to the bar in 1844, continued in the practice of his profession ; was district attorney from 1845 to 1347 ; was a member of the legislature of Pennsylvania in 1850 and 1851, and was elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 15,598 votes, against 12,902 for Knipe, democrat. Re-elected. Fifteenth District.—Cumberland, Perry, and York counties. RicHARD J. HALDEMAN, of Cumberland county, [post office, Harrisburg, ] was born at Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, May 19, 1831; studied in the academy and at Captain Par- tridge’s military school at Harrisburg; graduated at Yale College, Connecticut, in August, 1851; the same year he visited Europe and studied a short time in the Universities of Berlin and Heidelberg ; in 1853 he went with Hon. John Y. Mason, United States minister to France, as attaché of legation in Paris, and later accompanied Hon. Thomas H. Seymour, in a similar capacity, to St. Petersburg ; he travelled extensively and minutely throughout Scandinavia, Central and Southern Europe, and the Far East; in 1857 purchased the ‘¢ Daily and Weekly Patriot and Union,” in Harrisburg, and edited it until 1860; in 1860 he was a delegate to the Charleston and Baltimore conventions; and he was elected to the forty-first Congress as a democrat, receiving 15,818 votes, against 12,519 votes for Small. Re-elected. Sixteenth District.—Adams, Bedford, Franklin, Fulton, and Somerset counties. JonN CESSNA, of Bedford, was born in Bedford county, Pennsylvania, June 29, 1821; graduated at Marshall College, Mercersburg, in 1842; was a tutor in that institution for a short time; after which he studied law and came to the bar in 1844; was a member of the State legislature in 1850, 1851, 1862, and 1863, serving as speaker of the house in 1851 and 1863: was a delegate to the Cincinnati convention of 1856; to the Charleston and Baltimore conventions of 1860; and to the Chicago convention of 1868; in 1865 he was chosen chair-man of the republican State convention; and, on motion of Hon. Thaddeus Stevens, was elected chairman of the republican State central committee ofs 1865; and was elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 13,653 votes, against 13,509 votes for Kimmell, democrat. Seventeenth District.—Blair, Cambria, Huntingdon, and Mifflin counties. DANIEL J. MORRELL, of Johnstown, was born at North Berwick, Maine, August 8, 1821; received a public-school education; in the spring of 1837 went to Philadelphia and was engaged in mercantile pursuits until 1855, when he removed to Johnstown, Pennsylvania, where he has been extensively engaged in the manufacture of railroad iron, and is now the superintendent of the Cambria Iron Works; he has been a member of the town councils of Johnstown from 1858 to the present time ; he was elected to the fortieth Congress, and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 12,100 votes, against 11,096 votes for Linton, democrat. Eighteenth District.—Centre, Clinton, Lycoming, Potter, and Tioga counties. WiLLiam H. ARMSTRONG, of Williamsport, was born at Williamsport, Pennsylvania, September 7, 1824; graduated at Princeton College, New Jersey, in 1847; studied and practiced law; served in the State legislature in 1860 and 1361; in 1862 was tendered a commission as president judge of the 26th judicial circuit of Pennsylvania, which he de-clined; and was elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 16,760 votes, against 14,732 votes for Mackey,who claimed to be a republican, but was nominated and supported by the democrats. Nineteenth District.—Cameron, Clearfield, Elk, rie, Forrest, Jefferson, McKean, and Warren counties. GLENNT W. SCOFIELD, of Warren, was born in Chautauqua county, New York, March 11, 1817 ; graduated at Hamilton College, New York, in 1840; studied law, and has since practiced that profession except as interrupted by official duties; was a member of the State assembly of Pennsylvania in 1850 and 1851; was a member of the State senate in 1857, 1858, and 1859; was temporarily appointed president judge of the eighteenth judicial district of Pennsylvania in 1861; was elected to the thirty-eighth, thirty-ninth, and fortieth Congresses ; and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 16,903 votes, against 14,355 votes for Brown, democrat. Re-elected. Twentieth District.—Clarion, Crawford, Mercer, and Venango’ counties. CALVIN W. GILFILLAN, of Franklin, was born near Newcastle, Pennsylvania, Febru-ary 20, 1832; was educated at Westminster College, Pennsylvania ; studied and practiced law; in 1867 he was elected superintendent of public instruction for Mercer county, hold-ing the office two years; in 1859 he was transcribing clerk in the State house of represent- CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY. atives; in 1861 he was appointed district attorney for Venango county; in 1862 he was elected to the same position and held the office for three years; and he was elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 18,079 votes, against 16,267 votes for De France, democrat. Twenty-first District.—Fayette, Indiana, and Westmoreland counties. JOHN CoVODE, of Lockport, was born in Westmoreland eounty, Pennsylvania. March 17, 1808; received a public-school education; was engaged in agricultural, manufacturing, and transportation pursuits; became largely interested in the coal trade; was elected to the thirty-fourth, thirty-fifth, thirty-sixth, thirty-seventh, and fortieth Congresses; and was Teincied to the forty-first Congress, 1eceiving 13,477 votes, against 13,152 votes for Foster, emocrat. { Twenty-second District.—City of Pittsburg, and all of the Alleghany county south of the Alleghany river. JAMES 8S. NEGLEY, of Pittsburgh, was born in Alleghany county, Pennsylvania, Decem ber 22, 1826; was educated at the Western University ; served in the Mexican war in the 1st Pennsylvania volunteers; entered the Union army as brigadier general, April 19, 1861 ; organized and equipped a brigade of troops with a battery of artillery and joined General Sherman with his brigade in October, 1861 ; received special commendation for the manner in which he defended Nashville in 1862; was promoted to major general for defeating Breckinridge’s corps at the battle of Stone river and for gallantry on that field; participated with credit in the campaigns of Tullahoma, Alabama, and Georgia, and was elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 15,175 votes, against 10,696 votes for Burt, democrat. Re-elected. Twenty-third District.—All of Alleghany county north and west of the Alleghany and Ohio rivers, and Armstrong and Butler counties. DARWIN PHELPS, of Kittanning, was born in East Granby, Hartford county, Connecticut ; when quite young he became an orphan and went to reside with his grand-parents in Port-age county, Ohio; received a good education at the Western University, and after studying law in Pittsburg, Pennsylvania, with his kinsman, Walter Forward, settled in Armstrong county in 1835, devoting himself to the practice of his profession; he was a member of the State legislature in 18556; he was a delegate to the Chicago convention of 1860, and was elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 16,095 votes, against 11,046 votes for Mitchell, democraé, Twenty-fourth District.—Beaver, Greene, Lawrence, and Washington counties. JOSEPH B. DoNLEY, of Waynesburg, was born at Mount Morris, Pennsylvania, October 10, 1838; graduated at Waynesburg College in 1859 ; was engaged in teaching ; entered the Union army in 1862, serving as a captain in the 83d Illinois infantry; graduated at the Law University of Albany, New York, in May, 1866; was appointed register in bankruptcy for ‘the 24th district in May, 1867, and was elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 13,860 votes, against 12,737 votes for Crawford, democrat. RHODE ISLAND. SENATORS, HENRY B. ANTHONY, of Providence, was born in Coventry, Rhode Island, April 1, 1815; graduated at Brown University, Rhode Island; assumed the editorial charge of the *‘Provi-dence Journal;” was elected governor of Rhode Island in 1849; re-elected in 1850, and declined a re-election ; was elected to the United States Serate asa Union republican to sue-ceed Philip Allen, democrat, and took his seat in 1859; was re-elected in 1364, and was again re-elected in 1870. He was re-elected President of the Senate pro tempore, July 1, 1870. His term of service will expire March 3, 1877. WILLIAM SPRAGUE, of Providence, was born in Cranston, Rhode Island, September 12, 1830; received an academic education; became largely interested in manufacturing pur-suits ; was elected governor of Rhode Island in 1860; having raised several regiments for the Union army as governor of the State, he accompanied them to the field, and received from President Lincoln a commission as brigadier general, but he did not accept it; was elected to the United States Senate as a democrat, and took his seat in 1863, and was re-elected in 1868; his term of service will expire March 3, 1875. REPRESENTATIVES. First District.—DBristol, seven-eighths of Providence county, and all of Newport, except New Shoreham and Jamestown, called in the State law the ‘¢ Eastern District.” THOMAS A. JENCKES, of Providence, was born at Cumberland, Rhode Island, November 2, 1818; graduated at Brown University ; studied and practiced law; was elected to the thirty-eighth, thirty-ninth, and fortieth Congresses, and was re-elected to the forty-first Con-gress as a republican, receiving 7,995 votes, against 4,080 for Arnold, democrat. SENATORS AND REPRESENTATIVES. 45 Second District.—Burrillville, Charleston, Coventry, Cranston, East Greenwich, Exeter, Foster, Gloucester, Hopkinton, Johnston, New Shoreham, North Kingston, Richmond, Secit-uate, South Kingston, Warwick, Westerly, and West Greenwich, called in the State law the s¢ Western District.” ° NATHAN F. DIxoN, of Westerly, was born at Westerly, Rhode Island, May 1, 1812; graduated at Brown University ; studied at the Cambridge and New Haven Law Schools ; practiced law ; was a member of the general assembly of Rhode Island in 1840, 1841, 1842, 1843, 1844, 1845, 1846, 1847, 1848, 1849, 1851, 1852, 1855, 1856, 1857, 1858, 1859, 1860, 1861, 1862, and 1863; was one of the governor’s council appointed by the general assembly during the troubles in 1842; was presidential elector in 1844 ; was elected to the thirty-first, thirty-eighth, thirty-ninth, and fortieth Congresses, and was re-elected to the forty-first Con-gress as a republican, receiving 4,135 votes, against 2,640 for Waterhouse, democrat. SOUTH CAROLINA. SENATORS. THOMAS J. ROBERTSON, of Columbia, was born in Fairfield county, South Carolina, August 3, 1823; his ancestors were among the first settlers of the county, a century since, and were good whigs in the war of the American revolution; he was graduated at the South Carolina College ; engaged in planting, in which he was successful, and turned his attention to railroad enterprises; during the rebellion he was a fearless and outspoken Union man, and never in any way compromised his position as a loyal citizen of the United States ; he was a member of the State constitutional convention assembled under the reconstruction acts of Congress, and on the first meeting of the legislature under the present constitution, he was with great unanimity elected to the Senate of the United States, and took his seat July 22, 1868. His term of office will expire March 3, 1871. Re-elected. FREDERICK A. SAWYER, of Charleston, was born in Bolton, Worcester county, Massachu-setts, December 12, 1822; attended the public schools of that and the neighboring towns; graduated at Harvard University in 1844; was successively employed as a teacher in Gardiner, Wiscasset, Lowell, Nashua, South Reading, and Boston, leaving the Brimmer school in the last-named city in April 1859, to accept an invitation to become principal of the State Normal School for girls in Charleston, South Carolina; this position he held until September 1864, when his persistent loyalty rendered him so obnoxious to the rebels that they gave him a passport for himself and his family. through the lines to the post:of Port Royal, then in the possession of the federal forces; in May 1865, he was appointed collector of internal revenue for the second district of South Carolina, the first civil appointment made in the State after the rebellion ; he was elected a member of the State constitutional convention, but was not able to participate in the proceedings of that body; was elected to the Senate of the United States July 16, 1868, and took his seat July 22, 1863. His term of office will expire March 3, 1873. REPRESENTATIVES. First District. —Georgetown, Horry, Marion, Williamsburg, Darlington, Chesterfield, Marlboro, Sumter, Clarendon, Kershaw, and Lancaster counties. JoserpH H. RAINEY, of Georgetown, was born at Georgetown, South Carolina, (where both of his parents were slaves, but by their industry obtained their freedom, ) June 21, 1832. Although debarred by law from attending school, he acquired a good education, and further improved his mind by observation and travel. His father was a barber, and he followed that occupation at Charleston till 1862, when, having been forced to work on the fortifica-tions of the confederates, he escaped to the West Indies, where he remained until the close of the war, when he returned to his native town. He was elected a delegate to the State constitutional convention of 1868, and was a member of the State senate of South Caro-lina in 1870, resigning when elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican to fill the vacancy caused by the non-reception of B. F. Whittemore, by a majority of 17,193 over Dudley, conservative. Re-elected. Second District.—Charleston, Colleton, Barnwell, and Beaufort counties. CHRrisTOPHER C. BOWEN, of Charleston, was born in Rhode Island, January 5, 1832; re-moved to Georgia in 1850 ; studied and practiced law ; removed to Charleston in 1862; in 1867 was elected to the constitutional convention of South Carolina held under the reconstruction acts of the thirty-ninth and fortieth Congresses ; was elected to the fortieth Congress, and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 25,845 votes, against 8,296 votes for Seymour, democrat. Third District.—Abbeville, Anderson, Edgefield, Newberry, Lexington, Richland, and Orangeburg counties. SoLoMoN Li. HoGE, of Columbia. Fourth District. —Fairfield, Chester, York, Spartanburg, Union, Laurens, Oconee, Pickens, and Greenville counties. ALEXANDER 8. WALLACE, of Yorkville, was born in York County, South Carolina, De-cember 30, 1810; received a common-school education; is a planter; was appointed a magis- CS 46 CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY. trate in 1838, and was successively reappointed until 1853; was elected a member of the legislature of South Carolina in 1852 as a Union candidate, in opposition to the secession movement of 1851, 1853, 1854, 1855, 1858, 1859, and was a Union candidate in 1860, but was defeated by the secessionists ; was again elected in 1865 as a Union candidate ; was appointed internal revenue collector of the third district of South Carolina in July, 1866 ; which office he held until he was elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican. His seat was contested by Major Simpson, who was declared ineligible on acconnt of his service in the confederate congress, and Mr. Wallace was admitted May 27, 1870. Re-elected. TENNESSEE. } SENATORS. JosEPH S. FOWLER, of Nashville, was born at Steubenville, Ohio, August 31, 1822; graduated at I'ranklin College, Ohio, and was afterwards its professor of mathematics for four years; studied law in Kentucky and went to Tennessee, where he commenced practice ; was appointed by Governor Johnson comptroller of Tennessee and took an active part in reconstructing the State government; was elected to the United States Senate as a Union republican after the reconstruction of that State, and took his seat July 25, 1866. His term of service will expire March 3, 1871. WILLIAM GANNAWAY BROWNLOW, of Knoxville, was born in Wythe county, Virginia, August 29, 1805; when about twelve years of age his parents died, leaving him penniless ; when eighteen years of age he removed to Abingdon, where he apprenticed himself to a house carpenter, and, after obtaining the trade, he entered the traveling ministry of the Methodist Episcopal church; in 1823 he removed to Tennessee; from 1839 until the last of October, 1861, he published and edited a newspaper called the ‘* Whig ”’—for ten years this paper was published at Jonesboro, East Tennessee, and afterwards it was published at Knoxville, until it was suppressed by the rebels in 1861; he is the author of a work on Methodism entitled “The Iron Wheel Examined and its False Spokes Extracted,” and of the political autobiographies entitled ‘‘ Debates on Slavery,” and ‘Sketches of Seces- sion ;” in 1843 he ran for Congress as the whig nominee against Andrew Johnson; in 1850 he was appointed by President Fillmore one of several commissioners to carry out congres- sional provisions for improving the navigation of the Tennessee river; having always been a supporter of the Union, he was very severe in his denunciations of the rebellion when \ it broke out, and for his boldness and his loyalty he was hunted in the mountains, and im- LN prisoned in a fireless jail in the winter, where he contracted diseases from which he will never recover ; he was a member of the constitutional convention which reorganized the State government of Tennessee; on the 4th of March, 1865, he was elected governor of Tennessee without opposition, and in August, 1867, he was re-elected, defeating Emerson Etheridge, a former representative in Cengress and clerk of the House; he was elected to the United States Senate as a republican, in place of David T. Patterson, war democrat, and took his seat March 4, 1869. His term of service will expire March 3, 1875. REPRESENTATIVES. First District.—Carter, Cocke, Grainger, Greene, Hancock, Hawkins, Jefferson, Johnson Sevier, Sullivan, and Washington counties. RODERICK R. BUTLER, of Taylorsville, was born in Wytheville, Virginia, April 8, 1827; was bound an apprentice to the tailoring business; after arriving at his majority studied and practiced law ; elected county judge in 1856; elected to the lower house of the legislature in 1859, and re-elected in 1861; was appointed lieutenant colonel 13th Tennessee cavalry ; was a member of the Baltimore convention of 1364, and a member of the constitutional copvention of 1865; was elected State senator in April, 1865; was appointed circuit court judge in June, 15365; was elected fo the fortieth Congress, and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, almost without opposition, receiving 10,107 votes, against 78 votes for Powell, independent, and 75 votes for Kyle, democrat. Re-elected. Second District.—Anderson, Blount, Bradley, Campbell, Claiborne, Knox, McMinn, Mor \ gan, Monroe, Polk, Roane, Scott, and Union counties. HorAcE MAYNARD, of Knoxville, was born at Westboro, Massachusetts, August 30, 1814; received his early education at the high school taught by Rev. Dr. Dana, of Charleston, South Carolina, and was subsequently at the Milbury Academy; graduated in August, | 183€, at Amherst College, Massachusetts; removed to Tennessee and studied law at Knox- ville under the late Judge Reese; from October, 1833, until March, 1844, was tutor and afterwards professor in the University of Kast Tennessee; after that time he entered upon the practice of the law ; from 1863 to 1865 he was attorney general of Tennessee; in 1852 and in 1864 he was presidential elector; in January, 1865, he was a member of the consti- | tutional convention of Tennessee, and he has also held several unimportant and local offices ; | he was elected to the thirty-fifth, thirty-sixth, thirty-seventh, thirty-ninth, and fortieth Con- gresses, and he was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a Union republican, receiving 10,403 votes, against 2,681 votes for Houk, independent. Re-elected. —— SENATORS AND REPRESENTATIVES. 47 Third District.—Bledsoe, Cumberland, De Kalb, Fentress, Grundy, Jackson, Hamilton, Macon, Marion, Meigs, Overton, Putnam, Rhea, Sequatchie, Smith, Van Buren, Warren, and ‘White counties. WILLIAM B. STOKES, of Alexandria, Tennessee, was born in Chatham county, North Carolina, September 9, 1814; received a public-school education; engaged in agricultural pursuits ; served in the State house of representatives of Tennessee in 1849, 1850, 1851, and 1852; served in the State senate of Tennessee in 1855 and 1856; entered the Union army in the spring of 1862 as major, was promoted colonel, and served in the war for the suppres-sion of the rebellion until honorably discharged in the spring of 1865; was brevetted briga-dier general in 1867 ‘‘for gallant and meritorious services; ”’ was elected to the thirty-sixth, thirty-ninth, and fortieth Congresses, and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a Union republican, receiving 6,415 votes, against 2,035 votes for Garrett, demecrat. Fourth District.—Bedford, Cannon, Coffee, Franklin, Giles, Lincoln, Marshall, and Ruther-ford counties. \ Lewis TILLMAN, of Shelbyville, was born in Bedford county, Tennessee, August 18, 1816, and has never resided elsewhere; he received a limited common-school education, never studied any profession, and is a farmer by occupation; served a campaign as pri-vate against the Seminole Indians in 1836; was clerk of the circuit court from 1852 to 1860; was appointed clerk and master of the chancery court in March, 1865, and has held the office until recently; was a whig so long as there was a whig party, and has since been a republican; was one of the signers to the call put forth in the fall of 1864 for the convention that abolished slavery in Tennessee ;. was never a candidate for political office until nominated and elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving, according to the proclamation of Governor Brownlow, 3,795 votes, against 3,363 votes for Sheafe, democrat. Fifth District. —Cheatham, Davidson, Robertson, Sumner, Williamson, and Wilson counties. WiLLiaM F. PROSSER, of Nashville, was born at Williamsport, Pennsylvania, March 16, 1834 ; received a common-school education ; studied law but never practiced ; went across the plains to California in 1854; engaged in mining and trading ; served with distinction as a lieutenant in the volunteer Indian service in 1358 and 1859, on the northern coast of that State ; was the first candidate of the republican party for any office in Trinity county, Cal-ifornia, where he was nominated for the legislature in 1860, and in a county strongly demo-cratic, came within 200 votes of an election; when. the war of the rebellion broke out in 1861, he returned from California and enlisted as a private in the ‘“ Anderson troop;”’ served through the war in the army of the Cumberland ; participated in almost all of its battles ; was captured, paroled, and exchanged in 1862; served as quartermaster of the 15th Penn-sylvania cavalry until that regiment left Louisville for Nashville, in December, 1862, when he was placed in command of oue of its companies, and in that capacity took part in the battle of Stone river; shortly after was transferred to the 2d Tennessee cavalry, of which he was adjutant during its organization; was commissioned major in March, 1863, lieuten-ant colonel in March, 1364, and colonel in June, 1865; in the latter part of 1864 commanded a brigade of cavalry, then serving in the district of North Alabama ; at the close of the war he purchased the farm, near Nashville, where he still resides and cultivates ; in 1867 he was elected to the lower house of the legislature by the republican party of Davidson county; was elected speaker pro tem. in February, 1869, pending the investigation of certain charges against the speaker of the house of representatives; in December, 1867, he was elected one of the directors of the Tennessee and Pacific Railroad Company ; in March, 1868, he was appointed one of the directors on the part of the State for the lidgefield and Ken-tucky railroad, and was elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving a vote of 5,304, which was largely reduced by the intimidation and violence made use of by the rebel element of the district, against 2,655 votes for Motley, democrat, 1,817 votes for Mer-cer, independent republican, and 80 votes for Garrett. Sixth District.—Decatur, Dickson, Hardin, Hickman, Humphreys, Lawrence, Lewis, Maury, Montgomery, Stewart, and Wayne counties. SAMUEL M. ARNELL, of Columbia, was born in Maury county, Tennessee, May 3, 1833; was educated at Amherst and East Hampton, Massachusetts; was a member of the consti-tutional convention of Tennessee in 1865; was a member of the State house of representa-tives of Tennessee in 1855 and 1566; was elected to the thirty-ninth Congress and admitted at the second session; was elected to the fortieth Congress, and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as an independent republican, receiving 5,143 votes, against 2,141 votes for Buck, republican. Seventh District.— Benton, Carroll, Dyer, Gibson, Henderson, Henry, Lauderdale, Obion and Weakley counties. Isaac R. HAWKINS, of Huntingdon, was born in Maury county, Tennessee, May 16, 1813 ; received an academic education ; studied and practiced law; served in the Mexican war as a first lieutenant of volunteers ; was elected by the Tennessee legislature as a delegate to the peace congress of 1861; was elected as the Union candidate by a majority of 3,000 to the State convention called to consider the relations of Tennessee with the general govern- | | 48 : CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY. ment; entered the Union army as lieutenant colonel in 1862; was appointed chancellor of the sixth division in 1865, but declined; was unanimously chosen to represent his district in the Chicago convention of 1868; was elected to the thirty-ninth Congress, was elected to the fortieth Congress, and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 2,825 votes, against 1,136 votes for Foote, democrat. Evghth District. —Fayette, Hardeman, Madison, McNairy, Shelby, and Tipton counties. WILLIAM J. SMITH, of Memphis, was born in Birmingham, England, September 24, 1823 ; came to the United States when very young ; received a good public-school education ; learned h the painter’s trade in Goshen, Orange county, New York; removed to the; South in 1846 ; joined a Tennessee regiment at the commencement of the war with Mexico, and served until its close; was engaged in painting at Memphis for ten years, and then went into the horti- E, cultural business in Hardeman county ; at the commencement of the rebellion he was perse- cuted and arrested on account of his devotion to the Union cause, and after his release he acted as guide for the federal troops; he enlisted as a private in the first West Tennessee cavalry, afterwards reorganized as the 6th Tennessee cavalry, and was promoted through the different grades until he became brevet brigadier general ; was a member of the State consti- tutional convention; was a member of the State house of representatives, serving for two years and a half, and was then elected to the State senate ; he was elected to the forty-first Congress, receiving 5,393 legal votes, against 4,032 votes for Leftwich, democrat, and 2,439 votes for Nunn, independent republican. ; TEXAS. SENATORS. MorGaN C. HAMILTON, of Austin, was born in , Alabama, February —, 1809; removed to Texas in 1837, and was a clerk in the war office of the republic of Texas ; engaged in mercantile pursuits; first entered political life as a delegate to the convention of 1868; was elected to the United States Senate as a republican on the reconstruction ot Texas, and took his seat March 31, 1870. His term of service will expire March 3, 1877. J. W. FLANAGAN, of Walling’s Ferry, was born at , Virginia, —, 1805; removed in 1843 to Kentucky, and went {rom there to Texas in 1847; resided at different times in Harrison, Marshall, and Rush counties, practicing law and planting; was a mem- \ ber of the house two sessions and of the senate two sessions in the State legislature of Texas, acting with the whig party ; was a member of the State conventions of 1866 and 1868; was elected to the United States Senate as a republican on the reconstruction of Texas, and took his seat March 31, 1870. His term of office will expire March 3, 1875. REPRESENTATIVES. Furst District.—Anderson, Angelina, Chambers, Cherokee, Hardin, Harrison, Henderson, Houston, Jasper, Jefferson, Liberty, Nacogdoches, Newton, Orange, Panola, Polk, Rusk, Sa- bine, San Augustine, Shelby, Smith, Trinity, Tyler, Van Zandt, and Wood counties. GEORGE W. WHITMORE, of Tyler, was born in McMinn County, Tennessee, August 26, i | 1824; received a December, 1848; common-school education; was studied and practiced law ; was raised on a member a farm; removed to Texas in of the house of representatives in Texas in 1852 and 1853, and 1858; espoused the Union cause, was imprisoned by the rebels on account of his political sentiments, and was kept in prison until a board of sur- geons pronounced his release necessary ; was appointed by Governor Hamilton district attor- ney of the ninth judicial district in 1866; was appointed register in bankruptcy in 1867 ; and was elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 8,456 votes, against 7,406 votes for Armstrong, democrat, and 331 votes for Boughton. Second District.—Bowie, Collin, Cooke, Dallas, Davis, Denton, Ellis, Erath, Fannin, Gray- son, Hopkins, Hood, Hunt, Jack, Johnson, Kaufman, Lamar, Marion, Montague, Palo Pinto, Parker, Red River, Tarrant, Titus, Upshur, and Davis counties. i JonN C. CONNER, of Sherman, was born at Noblesville, Indiana, October 27, 1842; was \ educated at Wabash College, Indiana; entered the Union army in 1862 as a lieutenant in the 63d Indiana volunteers, and served until the close of the war; was an unsuccessful candidate for the legislature of Indiana on the national Union ticket in 1366; upon the reor- ganization of the army in the fall of 1866, was appointed a captain in the 41st infantry, . and served in Texas until nominated for Congress; was elected to the forty-first Congress as a democrat, receiving 6,378 votes, against 4,355 votes for Grafton, republican, 3,540 votes | for Johnson, republican, and 994 votes for Taylor, republican. Third District.— Austin, Bosque, Brazoria, Brazos, Burleson, Falls, Fort Bend, Freestone, Galveston, Grimes, Harris, Hill, Leon, Limestone, Madison, Matagorda, McLennan, Milam, Montgomery, Navarro, Robertson, Washington, Walker, and Wharton counties. WiLLiAM T. CLARK, of Galveston, was born at Norwalk, Connecticut, June 29, 1834; was educated in Connecticut and at New York city ; taught school; read law in the city of New York; removed to Iowa in 1855, and practiced law there until the commencement of the war; served in the Union army in all grades up to brevet major general, and commanded SENATORS AND REPRESENTATIVES. 49 a division in Texas until mustered out in 1866, when he went into business at Galveston; took an active part in reconstruction, and was elected to the forty-first Congress as a repub-lican, receiving 16,582 votes against 8,864 for Elliot, democrat. Fourth Dislrict.— Atascosa, Bandera, Bastrop, Bee, Bell, Bexar, Blanco, Brown, Burnet, Caldwell, Calhoun, Cameron, Colorado, Comal, Comanche, Coryell, De Witt, El Paso, Fay-ette, Gillespie, Goliad, Gonzales, Guadalupe, Hamilton, Hays, Hidalgo, Jackson, Karnes, Kendall, Kerr, Kinney, Lampasas, Lavaca, Live Oak, Llano, Mason, Maverick, Medina, Nueces, Presidio, Refugio, San Patricio, SanS aba, Starr, Travis, Uvalde, Victoria, Webb, Williamson, Wilson, and Zapata counties. EpwARD DEGENER, of San Antonio, was born in Brunswick, Germany, October 20, 1809; received an academic education, partly in England and partly in Germany; was twice member of a legislative body in Anbalt-Dessau, and was a member of the first Ger-man parliament in Frankfort; came to the United States in 1850, and settled in Sisterdale, Texas, as a farmer; was court-martialed and imprisoned by the confederates for his devotion to the Union cause ; after his release he remained in San Antonio and engaged in mercantile pursuits ; was a member of the constitutional convention in 1866, in which he offered the first resolution in favor of universal suffrage; was again a member of the constitutional convention in 1868; and was elected to the forty-first Congress, as a republican, receiving 9,312 votes, against 9,240 votes for Haynes, democrat, and 949 votes for Varnell, democrat. VERMONT. SENATORS. GEORGE F'. EDMUNDS, of Burlington, was born at Richmond, Vermont, February 1, 1826; received a public-school education and the instruction of a private tutor ; studied and prac- ticed law ; was a member of the State legislature of Vermont in 1854, 1855, 1857, 1858, and - 1859, serving three years as speaker; was a member of the State senate, and its presiding officer pro tem. in 1861 and 1862; was appointed to the United States Senate as a republican to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Solomon Foot, and took his seat April 5, 1866; was elected by the legislature for the remainder of the term, ending March 4, 1869, and re-elected without opposition for the further term of six years. His term of service will expire March 3, 1875. JUSTIN 8. MORRILL, of Strafford, was born at Strafford, Vermont, April 14, 1810; received an academic education ; was a merchant, and afterwards engaged in agricultural pursuits; was a representative in the thirty-fourth, thirty-fifth, thirty-sixth, thirty-seventh, thirty-eighth, and thirty-ninth Congresses ; was elected to the United States Senate as a Union republican to suceed Luke P. Poland, Union republican, and took his seat March 4, 1867. His term of service will expire March 3, 1873. REPRESENTATIVES. Fust District.—Addison, Bennington, Rutland and Washington counties. CHARLES W. WILLARD, of Montpelier, was born at Lyndon, Caledonia county, Vermont, June 18, 1827 ; graduated at Dartmouth College in 1851 ; studied law, and was admitted to the bar at Montpelier in 1853 ; was elected secretary of State in 1855-’56, and declined a re-election; was elected a State senatorin 1860 and 1861 ; became the editor, in 1861, of the *‘ Green Moun-tain Freeman ;”’ and was elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 13,999 votes, against 4,396 votes for Cain, democrat. Re-elected. Second District.—Caledonia, Orange, Windsor, and Windham counties. LukE P. PoLAND, of St. Johnsbury, was born at Westford, Vermont, November 1, 1815; received an academic education; studied and practiced law; was register of probate of Lamoille county in 1839 and 1840 ; was a member of the State constitutional convention of Vermont in 1843; was prosecuting attorney in 1844 and 1845; was judge of the supreme court of Vermont from 1348 to 1865, and in 1860 was made chief justice; received in 1861 the degree of doctor of laws from the University of Vermont; was appointed to the United States Senate to fill the vacancy occasioned by the death of Jacob Collamer; was elected to the fortieth Congress, and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 15,407 votes, against 5,152 votes for Chase, democrat. Re-elected. Third District.—Chittenden, Essex, Franklin, Grand Isle, Lamoille, and Orleans counties, WORTHINGTON C. SMITH, of St. Albans, was born at St. Albans, Vermont, April 23, 1823; graduated at the University of Vermont; studied, but did not practice, law; waslargely interested in the manufacture and sale of iron; was a member of the State house of representatives of Vermont in 1863; was a member of the State senate of Vermont in 1864 and 1865, and was its presiding officer pro tem. during the last term; was elected to the fortieth Congress, and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 11,105 votes, against 4,337 votes for Brigham, democrat, Re-elected. 4 CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY. VIRGINIA. SENATORS. JouN W. JOHNSTON, of Abington, was born at Panicello, near Abington, September 9, 1818; was educated at the Abington Academy, and the South Carolina College, at Columbia, South Carolina; studied law at the University of Virginia; practiced law up to March, 1869, when he was made judge, and remained upon the bench until he took his seat as United States senator; was a member of the senate of the State of Virginia in 1847-748 ; was president of | the Northwestern Bank at Jeffersonville, Virginia, from 1850 to 1859; was elected United ) States senator from Virginia as a republican, and took his seat January 24, 1870. His term of service will expire March 3, 1871. JoHN F. LEWIS, of Port Republie, was born near that village March 1, 1818; was raised as a farmer, which occupation he has followed to the present tire; was elected, in 1861, to the convention called for the purpose of determining whether Virginia should remain in the Union or cast her lot with the Gulf States, and was the only member of that body who refused to sign the ordinance of secession; was the Union capdidate for Congress in the sixth dis- trict in 1865, and was defeated by A. H. H. Stuart; was nominated by the “true republican party’ in 1869 as a candidate for lieutenant governor, on the ticket with Gilbert C. Walker, and was elected by about 20,000 majority, leading his ticket several thousand votes; was elected United States senator from Virginia as a republican in November, 1869, and took his seat January 24, 1870. His term of service will expire March 3, 1875. REPRESENTATIVES. First district. —Accomac, Caroline, Elizabeth City, Essex, Gloucester, James City, King and Queen, King George, King William, Lancaster, Matthews, Middlesex, Northampton, Northumberland, Richmond, Warwick, Westmoreland, and York counties. RICHARD S. AYER, of Warsaw, was born in Waldo county, Maine, October 9, 1829; received a common-school education ; was engaged, for a number of years, in agricultural and mercantile pursuits ; at the breaking out of the rebellion, he enlisted as a private in the fourth Maine volunteers, and was promoted to a captaincy, which position he held for three years, serving at the first battle of Bull Run, Seven Pines, and Malvern Hill; in 1865 he removed to Virginia; in 1867 he was elected a delegate to the Virginia constitutional con- vention ; and he was elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 8,023 votes against 7,377 for Segar, conservative, 5,050 for Lewis, conservative, and 6,525 for Norton independent republican. Second District.—The cities of Petershurg, Norfolk, and Portsmouth, and Nottoway, Din- widdie, Greenville, Sussex, Prince George, Isle of Wight, Nansemond, Southampton, Nor- folk, Princess Anne, and Surrey counties. James H. PLATT, jr., was born in Canada, of American parents, July 13, 1837; was reared in Burlington, Vermont, where his parents continued to reside until 1858: received an academic education ; studied medicine in the office of Dr. 8. W. Thayer, dean of the medi- cal faculty of the University of Vermont; graduated from the medical department of this university in 1859; in 1861 he raised two companies of volunteers for the Union army, and entered the service as captain of the second company, fourth regiment Vermont volunteers; was in all the battles participated in by the Army of the Potomac; for gallant conduct at the first battle of Fredericksburg, in 1862, he was tendered a position on the staff of Major Gen- eral Smith, which position he held until that general was relieved by General Sedgwick, to whose staff he was transferred ; continued as aid and chief quartermaster of the Sixth corps until and after the death of Major General Sedgwick ; was taken prisoner May 30, 1864, and held until the following December ; settled in Petersburg, Va., April 6, 1865; was elected a member of the constitutional convention of Virginia in 1367 ; has served as a member of the city council of Petersburg ; is a member of the board of education for that city ; a director in the Richmond and Petersburg railroad, and president of the People’s Savings Bank of Peters- \ burg ; and was elected to the forty-first Congress as a radical republican, receiving 16,781 votes, against 11,255 votes for Godwin, conservative, and 2,736 votes for Bayne. Re-elected. Third District.—Richmond city, and Amelia, Charles City, Chesterfield, Cumberland; | Goochland, Hanover, Henrico, New Kent, and Powhatan counties. | CuaRLES H. PORTER, of Richmond, was born in Cairo, New York; received an aca- demic education; was a student at the law university at Albany, New York, in 1852-53; practiced law in Greene county, until the spring of 1861, when he entered the Union army ; settled at Norfolk, Virginia, and was attorney for the commonwealth there from October 1863 until January 1870, and attorney for the city for one year; was a member of the con- stitutional convention of Virginia in 1867 and 1868; and was elected to the forty-first Con- gress as a republican, receiving 17,311 votes, against 13,041 for Hunnicutt, conservative, 815 for Mulford, independent democrat, and 231 for Cook, independent colored. Re elected. or SENATORS AND REPRESENTATIVES. 51 Fourth District.—Brunswick, Charlotte, Franklin, Halifax, Henry, Lunenburg, Meck-lenburg, Patrick, and Pittsylvania counties. GEORGE W. BOOKER, of Martinsville, was born in the county of Patrick, Virginia, December 5, 1821 ; he received only a common school education, studied law, and ay school; was elected a justice of the peace in the county of Henry, and was presiding jus-tice of Henry county court, which position he occupied for ten years; was an unconditional Union man during the war of the rebellion; was elected to the house of delegates of the legislature of the State of Virginia in 1865; was nominated by the republican party in 1868 as attorney general on the Wells ticket, but resigned the nomination ; and was elected to the forty-first Congress in July, 1869, as a conservative receiving 13,101 votes, against 9,568 votes for Tucker, conservative, and 4,639 votes for Stowell, independent. Re-elected. ’ Fifth Disirict.—Albemarle, Amherst, Appomattox, Bedford, Buckingham, Campbell, Fluvanna, Greene, Nelson, and Prince Edward counties. RicaarD T. W. DUKE, of Charlottesville, was born in Albemarle county, Virginia, June 6, 1822; attended school until he was eighteen years of age, and then taught one year; entered the Virginia Military Institute as a cadet in 1842, and graduated second in the class of 12845; taught school, reading law at the same time ; attended the law lectures in the Uni-versity of Virginia, and graduated in its law school in 1850; practised law ; was elected commonwealth’s attorney for the county of Albemarle in 1858, and continued in that office until all the State officers of Virginia were removed in 1869 ; and was elected to the forty-first Congress as a conservative, (to fill the vacancy occasioned by the death of Robert Ridgway, ) defeating Rives, republican. Re-elected. Sixth District. —Alleghany, Augusta, Bath, Botetourt, Clarke, Frederick, Highland, Page, Rockbridge, Rockingham, Shenandoah, and Warren oounties. WILLIAM MILNES, jr., of Shenandoah Iron Works, Page county, was born in Yorkshire, England, December 8, 1827 ; in the second year of his age his father emigrated to America, and settled in Pottsville, Pennsylvania, where he engaged in mining and manufacturing ; after completing an academic education, he apprenticed himself to a firm engaged in the machine and blacksmithing business; at the expiration of his apprenticeship, he entered into business with his father and brother in the mining and shipping of coal; in 1865 he ‘removed to Virginia, having previously disposed of his business interests in Pennsylvania, and purchased the extensive property located in Page and Rockingham counties, known as the Shenandoah Iron Works ; he was elected to the forty-first Congress as a conservative republican, receiving 12,123 votes against 6,815 votes for Harris, the opposition candidate. Seventh District.— Alexandria, Culpepper, Fairfax, Fauquier, Loudon, Louisa, Madison, Orange, Prince William, Rappahannock, Spottsylvania, and Warren counties. Lewis McKENZIE, of Alexandria, was born at Alexandria, Virginia, October —, 1810; received a common-school education, and left school when he was thirteen years of age ; served three terms in the State legislature of Virginia; was mayor of Alexandria during the first year of the war of the rebellion; is president of the Alexandria, Loudon and Hamp-shire railroad, and of the First National Bank of Alexandria; and was elected to the forty -first Congress as a TJnion conservative, receiving 15,878 votes, against 11,073 votes for Whittlesey, republican. Eighth District. —Bland, Buchanan, Carroll, Craig, Floyd, Giles, Grayson, Lee, Mont-gowmery, Pulaski, Roanoke, Russell, Scott, Smyth, Tazewell, Washington, Wise, and Wythe counties. JAMES KING GIBSON, of Abington, was born in Abington, Virginia, February 18, 1812; received a common-school education, and was brought up in a store; went to Limestone county, Alabama, in 1833 and engaged in mercantile pursuits; returned to Virginia and was deputy sheriff of Washington county in 1834, and again in 1835; was a merchant in Abington from 1835 until 1840; was postmaster at Abington, a distributing office, from 1838 until 1849, by the appointments of Presidents Van Buren, Tyler, and Polk; was appointed teller and clerk in the branch of the Exchange Bank of Virginia at Abington in 1849, also notary public, and held all these offices until after the war, when he became a farmer; and was elected to the forty-first Congress as a democrat, receiving 14,508 votes against 5,966 votes for Smith, republican. WEST VIRGINIA. SENATORS. WaitmaN T. WILLEY, of Morgantown, was born in Monongalia county, Virginia, October 18,1811; graduated at Madison College, Pennsylvania; studied and practiced law ; was clerk of the Monongalia county court, and also of the circuit superior court of law and chancery of the same county, from 1841 to 1852; was a delegate to the constitutional convention ofVirginia in 1851; was a delegate to the Virginia State convention in 1861; was elected tothe United States Senate by their organized Virginia legislature, and took his seat J uly 16, 1861; was a delegate to the convention which adopted the constitution of the State of West 52 CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY. Virginia; was elected to the United States Senate from West Virginia in 1863, and was re-elected in 1864. His term of service will expire March 3, 1871. “ARTHUR I. BOREMAN, of Parkersburg, was born at Waynesburg, Pennsylvania, July 24, 1823 ; when a child, removed with his father to Western Virginia ; received a common school education; studied law, and, coming to the bar in 1845, commenced the practice at Parkersburg; in 1855 he was elected to the house of delegates of Virginia, and was re-elected until 1860; was also a member of the extra session of the legislature in 1861, taking an active part against the secession movement; he was president of the Wheeling convention of 1861 to reorganize the government of Virginia; in October of that year he was elected a judge of the circuit court, and held the office until 1863, when he was elected governer of West Virginia, and was twice re-elected ; and was still in that office when he was elected to the United States Senate as a republican, and took his seat March 4, 1869. His term of service will expire March 3, 1875. REPRESENTATIVES. First District.—Brooke, Calhoun, Doddridge, Gilmer, Hancock, Harrison, Lewis, Mar-shall, Ohio, Pleasants, Ritchie, Tyler, Wetzel, Wirt, and Wood counties. Isaac H. Duvar, of Wellsburg, was born at Wellsburg, Brooke county, Virginia, Sep-tember 1, 1824; received a public-school education; entered the United States volunteer ser-vice June 1, 1861, as major of the first West Virginia infantry ; was promoted to the cole-nelcy of the ninth West Virginia infantry September 6, 1862; was promoted as brigadier general October 20, 1864, and subsequently as major general by brevet; was elected to the State senate of West Virginia, and served two years; was two years adjutant general of West Virginia; was elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 11,569 votes, against 10,720 votes for Walker, democrat. Second District.—Barbour, Berkeley, Grant, Hampshire, Hardy, Jefferson, Marion, Min-eral, Monongalia, Morgan, Pendleton, Pocahontas, Preston, Randolph, Taylor, Tucker, Upshur, and Webster counties. JAMES C. McGREW, of Kingwood, was born in what is now Preston county, West Vir-ginia, then a part of Monongalia county, Virginia, September 14, 1813; received a sub-stantial, practical english education; when not in school worked on his father’s farm; at the age of 20 engaged in mercantile pursuits, which he followed steadily and with fair suc-cess for 30 years, when he engaged in banking, which is his present business; was a delegate to the Virginia State convention in 1861; was a member of the legislature of West Virginia in 1863, 1864, and 1865; has been a managing director of the West Virginia hospital for the insane since 1863; was elected to the forty-first Congress as a Union republican, receiv-ing 9,149 votes, against 6,518 for Brown, democrat. Re-elected. Third District.—Boone, Braxton, Cabell, Clay, Fayette, Greenbrier, Jackson, Kanawha, Lincoln, Logan, Mason, Mercer, Monroe, McDowell, Nicholas, Putnam, Raleigh, Roane, Wayne, and Wyoming counties. JouN S. WITCHER, of Guyandotte, was born in Cabell county, then in Virginia, now West Virginia, July 15, 1839; was brought up on afarm; received a public-school education ; was, in 1861, elected clerk of the circuit court of Cabell county, under the restored govern ment of Virginia, and served some six months, when he resigned, and entered the Union army as second lieutenant, and rose by degrees, serving in every rank, to that of col-onel of his regiment; was appointed brevet brigadier general for gallant and meritorious services upon the field during the Shenandoah Valley campaign, under Sheridan, in 1864, and in the final campaign around Richmond and Petersburg, Virginia, in the spring of 1865, : especially at the battle of Ford’s Station, on the Southside railroad; was mustered out of the United States service to date June 30, 1865; was elected to the State legislature in October, 1865; was elected secretary of state of West Virginia in October, 1866; and served until March 4, 1869; was elected a director of the Chesapeake and Ohio railroad in the fall of 1868; and was elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 6,214 votes, against 4,805 voies for Moore, democrat. WISCONSIN. SENATORS. TiMoTay O. HOWE, of Green Bay, was born at Livermore, Maine, February 24, 1816; received an academic education; studied law and was admitted to the bar; was a member of the legislature of the State of Maine in 1845, in the latter part of which year he removed to Wisconsin; was elected a judge of the circuit and supreme courts in Wisconsin in 1850, and held the office until he resigned in 1855; was elected to the United States Senate as a Union republican to succeed Charles Durkee, and took his seat in 1861, and was re-elected in 1867. His term of service will expire March 3, 1873. MarTHEW H. CARPENTER, of Milwaukee, was born at Moretown, Vermont, in 1824; entered the Military Academy at West Point in 1853, and remained there two years ; studied law with Rufus Choate and was admitted to the bar; removed to Wisconsin in 1848 and SENATORS AND REPRESENTATIVES. Hh3 entered upon the practice of his profession: was elected to the United States Senate as a republican in place of James R. Doolittle, and took his seat March 4. 1869. His term of service will expire March 3, 1875. REPRESENTATIVES. First District.—City and county of Milwaukee, Kenosha, Racine, Walworth, and Wau- kesha counties. HALBERT E. PAINE,of Milwaukee, was born at Chardon, Ohio, February 4, 1826; grad- uated at the Western Reserve College, Ohio; studied and practiced law in Cleveland, Ohio; went to Wisconsin in 1857 ; entered the Union army as colonel of the fourth Wisconsin vol- unteers in 1861; was promoted to the rank of brigadier general for distinguished services in the war for the suppression of the rebellion, and of major general by brevet for gallantry in the assault on Port Hudson, May 27, 1863; was elected to the thirty-ninth and fortieth Congresses, and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 17,513 votes, against 17,084 votes for Mitchell, democrat. Second District.—Columbia, Dane, Jefferson, and Rock counties. Davip Atwoob, of Madison, Wisconsin, was born in Bedford, New Hampshire, Decem-ber 15, 1815; received a common-school education, and became an apprentice to the print-ing business in Hamilton, New York, in 1832; for the past twenty-three years he has been editor and publisher of the ‘‘ State Journal,” at Madison, the capital of Wisconsin. He was a member of the legislature in 1861 ; United States assessor for four years, commencing with the organization of the Internal Revenue department in 1862, and mayor of Madison in 1868. On the 15th of February, 1870, he was elected a member of the forty-first Congress as a republican, without organized opposition, to fill the vacancy occasioned by the death of Hon. B. F. Hopkins, which occurred on the 1st day of January, 1870. Third Districi.—Crawford, Grant, Greene, Iowa, Lafayette, Richland, and Sauk counties. Amasa Coss, of Mineral Point, was born in Crawford county, Illinois, September 27, 1823; received a public-school education; went to Wisconsin Territory in 1842; was en-gaged in lead mining; served in the United States army as a private in the Mexican war, during which he studied law, and afterwards commenced practice ; was district attorney from 1850 until 1854; was a member of the State senate of Wisconsin in 1855 and 1856; was adjutant general of Wisconsin from 1855 until 1858 ; was a member of the State house of representatives in 1860 and 1861, serving the last year as speaker; entered the Union army as colonel of the fifth Wisconsin volunteers, which he had raised, and subsequently, during a recess of Congress, as colonel of the forty-third Wisconsin volunteers, which he had also raised, serving with such gallantry as to receive the brevet rank of brigadier general; was elected to the thirty-eighth, thirty-ninth, and fortieth Congresses, and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 17,903 votes, against 11,162 votes for Pass-more, democrat. Fourth District.—Dodge, Fona du Lac, Ozaukee, Sheboygan, and Washington counties. CHARLES A. ELDRIDGE, of Fond du Lac, was born at Bridport, Vermont, February 27, 1821 ; went with his parents to New York ; studied and practiced law ; settled in Wisconsin in 1848; was a member of the State senate of Wisconsin in 1854 and 1855; was elected to the thirty-eighth, thirty-ninth and fortieth Congresses, and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a democrat, receiving 17,638 votes, against 12,205 votes for Frisbie. Re-elected. Fifth District.—Brown, Calumet, Door, Green Lake, Kewaunee, Marquette, Manitowoc, Oconto, Outagamie, Shawanaw, Waupacca, Waushara, and Winnebago counties. PHILETUS SAWYER, of Oshkosh, was born in Whiting, Vermont, September 22, 1816 ; re-ceived a public school and business education ; went to Wisconsin in 1847 and engaged in the lumber business; was a member of the State legislature of Wisconsin in 1857 and 1861 ; was a delegate to the national republican convention at Baltimore in 1864; was mayor of Oshkosh in 1863 and 1864; was elected to the thirty-ninth and fortieth Congresses, and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 19,422 votes, against 15,234 votes for Vilas, democrat. Re-elected. : Sixth District. —Adams, Ashland, Buffalo, Burnet, Clark, Chippewa, Douglas, Dallas, Dunn, Eau Claire, Jackson, Juneau, La Crosse, La Pointe, Marathon, Monroe, Pepin, Pierce, Polk, Portage, St. Croix, Trempealeau, Vernon, and Wood counties. CADWALLADER C. WASHBURN, of La Crosse, was born at Livermore, Maine, April 22, 1818; received an academic education ; studied and practiced law ; was appointed a major general in the Union army in the war for the suppression of the rebellion; was a member of the thirty-fourth, thirty-fifth, thirty-sixth, and fortieth Congresses, and was re-elected to the forty vet Congress as a republican, receiving 21,164 votes, against 11,477 votes for Ellis, emocrat. CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY. TERRITORIAL DELEGATES. ARIZONA. RicuarD C. McCORMICK, of Tucson, was born in New York city, 1832; received a class-ical education and entered business in Wall street in that city in 1850; in 1854-55 travelled extensively in Europe and Asia, spending some time in the camp of the allied armies during the siege of Sevastopol, and writing letters which appeared in the ‘Courier and Enquirer” and other New York journals, and were subsequently issued in book form in New York and London, and passed through many editions; in 1860 published in New York ‘St. Pauls to St. Sophia; or Sketchings in Kurope;” 1857 to 1861 a trustee of public schools in New York; 1859-60 editor of “The Young Men’s Magazine,” a contributor to various periodi-cals, and lecturing frequently; 1861 connected with the ‘‘ Evening Post” at New York, and in same year and 1862 its correspondent and that of the ‘New York Commercial Advertiser” in Washington and with the army of the Potomac, and present at Bull Run, Williamsburg, and other battles; 1862 chief clerk Department of Agriculture; March, 1863, appointed secre-tary of Arizona; April, 1866, made governor, and June, 1863, elected delegate to the forty-first Congress, as an independent Union candidate, receiving 1,263 votes, against 644 for Rush, and 186 for Adams. Re-elected. COLORADO. ALLEN A. BRADY¥ORD, of Pueblo, was born July 23, 1815, at Friendship, Maine; received an academic education; emigrated to Missouri in 1841; studied law and was admitted to the bar in 1843; was clerk of the circuit court of Atchison county, Missouri, from 1845 to 1851; was judge of the 6th district of Towa from 1852 to 1855; was a member of the legis-lative council of Nebraska in 1856, 1857, and 1858; went to Colorado in 1860 ; was appointed Judge of the supreme court of Colorado Territory by President Lincoln June 6, 1862; was elected delegate to the thirty-ninth Congress from Colorado, and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 4,092 votes, against 4,075 votes for Belden, democrat. DAKOTA. S. L. SPINK, of Yancton, was born in Whitehall, New York, March 20, 1831; received an academic education at Castleton, Vermont; taught school for several years in New Eng-land, New York, and Maryland; studied law and was admitted to practice at Burlington, Towa, in 1856; removed to Paris, Illinois, in 1860, and became editor and publisher of the ‘* Prairie Beacon,” a radical republican newspaper; was elected to the State legislature in 1864 ; in 1865 was appointed secretary of Dukota Territory, his commission being signed by President Lincoln on the afternoon before he was assassinated; was reappointed by President Johnson and confirmed by the Senate in January, 1866; continued to discharge the duties of that office up to March 4, 1869; was elected to the forty-first Congress as a republican nominee, receiving 1,379 votes, against 644 votes for Todd, democrat; 603 votes for Yoohy, independent democrat; 658 votes for Burleigh, independent; and 581 votes for Kidder, people’s candidate. IDAHO. Jacon K. SHAFER, of Idaho City, was born in Rockingham county, Virginia, December 26, 1823; was educated at Washington College, Virginia; graduated in the law school of Judge Lucas P. Thompson, in Stanton, in 1846; in 1849 removed to Stockton, California ; in 1850 was elected district attorney of the fifth judicial district of California ; in 1852 was elected mayor of Stockton ; in 1853 was elected judge of San Joaquin county, California, and continued in office until 1862, when he removed to Washington (now Idaho) Territory, and was elected delegate to the forty-first Congress as a democrat, over Butler, republican, and May, independent democrat ; majority over Butler, 834. MONTANA. James M. CAavaNAUGH, of Helena, was born in Springfield, Massachusetts, July 4, 1823 ; received an academic education; became a newspaper editor; studied and practiced law ; settled in Minnesota in 1854, and represented that State in the thirty-fifth Congress ; removed to Colorado in 1361, and engaged in the practice of his profession and mining; was a mem-ber of the convention that framed the constitution of the State of Colorado; went to Mon-tana in 1866; was elected delegate to the fortieth Congress, and was re-elected to the forty-first Congress as a democrat. TERRITORIAL DELEGATES. hb NEW MEXICO. J. Francisco CHAVES, of Santa Fé, was born in Padillas, New Mexico, June 27, 1833 ; received a liberal education at St. Louis, Missouri; studied medicine at the New York Col-lege of Physicians and Surgeons; engaged in mercantile and agricultural pursuits in New Mexico; entered the Union army as major of the first New Mexico infantry; after seeing much active service on the frontier and participating in several battles, he was promoted to the rank of lieutenant colonel, and was mustered out, at his own request, in 1864; was elected to the thirty-ninth, fortieth, and forty-first Congresses as a republican, receiving at the last election 2,200 majority over Romero, democrat. UTAH. WiLLiaM H. HooPER, of Salt Lake City, was born in Dorchester county, on the eastern shore of Maryland, December 25, 1813; received a very limited common-school education ; was early engaged in mercantile pursuits, but subsequently was commander of a steamer on the western rivers ; was elected United States senator under the State organization of Des eret, adopted by the people of Utah in 1862; was elected delegate to the thirty-sixth, thirty-ninth, and fortieth Congresses, receiving each time a nearly unanimous vote, and was re-elected, unanimously, receiving 8,336 votes, to the forty-first Congress. Re-elected. WASHINGTON. SELUCIUS GARFIELDE, of Olympia, was born in Shoreham, Vermont, December 8, 1822; removed to Kentucky in early life; finished his collegiate course at Augusta College, read law, and was admitted to the bar; in 1849 was elected a member of the convention to revise the State constitution, and spent the following year in South American travel ; emigrated to California in 1851, was elected a member of the legislature of that State in 1852, and in 1853 was selected by that body to codify the laws of the State; returned to Kentucky in 1854 : was a member of the Cincinnati national convention in 1856, and an elector during that canvass; removed to Washington Territory in 1857, where he filled the position of receiver of public moneys to 1860; in 1861 he was nominated for Congress, but beaten by the secession wing of the democratic party; was surveyor general from 1866 to 1869, when he was elected a delegate to the forty-first Congress as a republican, receiving 2,743 votes, against 2,595 votes for Moore, democrat. WYOMING. STEPHEN F. NUCKOLLS, of Cheyenne, was born August 16, 1825, in Grayson County, Virginia; received an academie education; removed to Missouri in 1846 and engaged in mereantile persuits; in 1854 removed to Nebraska Territory, was one of the founders of Nebraska City, and was a member of the Nebraska legislature in 1859; in 1860 went to Colorado Territory, and for four years was engaged in mining ard merchandising; from 1864 to 1867 resided in New York city. Settled in Cheyenne (then in Dakota Territory) in 1867, and upon the organization of Wyoming Territory in 1869, was elected delegate to the forty-first Congress as a demecrat, receiving 3,301 votes, against 1,863 votes for Corlett, republican. CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY. STANDING COMMITTEES OF THE SENATE. Committee on Foreign Relations. Charles Sumner, of Massachusetts. James W. Patterson, of New Hampshire. Simon Cameron, of Pennsylvania. Carl Schurz, of Missouri. James Harlan, of Iowa. Eugene Casserly, of California. Oliver P. Morton, of Indiana. Committee on Finance. John Sherman, of Ohio. Willard Warner, of Alabama. George H. Williams, of Oregon. Reuben E. Fenton, of New York. Alexander G. Cattell, of New Jersey. Thomas F. Bayard, of Delaware. Justin S. Morrill, of Vermont. Committee on Appropriations. Lot M. Morrill, of Maine. John Pool, of North Carolina. Cornelius Cole, of California. George F. Edmunds, of Vermont. William Sprague, of Rhode Island. John P. Stockton, of New Jersey. Frederick A. Sawyer, of South Carolina. Committee on Commerce. Zachariah Chandler, of Michigan. WilliamA. Buckingham, of Connecticut. Henry W. Corbett, of Oregon. Roscoe Conkling, of New York. William P. Kellogg, of Louisiana. George Vickers, of Maryland. George E. Spencer, of Alabama, Committee on Manufactures. Oliver P. Morton, of Indiana. Arthur I. Boreman, of West Virginia. Richard Yates, of Illinois. Alexander McDonald, of Arkansas. Thomas J. Robertson, of South Carolina. Committee on Agriculture. Simon Cameron, of Pennsylvania. Abijah Gilbert, of Florida. Thomas J. Robertson, of South Carolina. Thomas C. McCreery, of Kentucky. Thomas W. Tipton, of Nebraska. : . Committee on Military Affairs and the Militia. Henry Wilson, of Massachusetts. John M. Thayer, of Nebraska. Jacob M. Howard, of Michigan. Joseph C. Abbott, of North Carolina. Simon Cameron, of Pennsylvania. Adelbert Ames, of Mississippi. Oliver P. Morton, of Indiana. Committee on Naval Affairs. Aaron H. Cragin, of New Hampshire, John Scott, of Pennsylvania. Henry B. Anthony, of Rhode Island. Thomas W. Osborn, of Florida. James W. Nye, of Nevada. John P. Stockton, of New Jersey. Charles D. Drake, of Missouri. Committee on the Judiciary. Lyman Trumbull, of Illinois. Benjamin F. Rice, of Arkansas. William M. Stewart, of Nevada. M. H. Carpenter, of Wisconsin, George F. Edmunds, of Vermont, Allen G. Thurman, of Ohio. Roscoe Conkling, of New York. Committee on Post Offices and Post Roads. Alexander Ramsey, of Minnesota. Cornelius Cole, of California. Samuel C. Pomeroy, of Kansas. J. W. Flanagan, of Texas. Alexander McDonald, of Arkansas. Allen G. Thurman, ef Qbio, Abijah Gilbert, of Florida. SENATE COMMITTEES. HT Committee on Public Lands. 1 Samuel C. Pomeroy, of Kansas. i Willard Warner, of Alabama. George H. Williams, of Oregon. William Sprague, of Rhode Island. Thomas W. Tipton, of Nebraska Eugene Casserly, of California. Thomas W. Osborn, of Florida. Committee on Private Land Claims. George H. Williams, of Oregon. William P. Kellogg, of Louisiana. Onris S. Ferry, of Connecticut. Thomas F'. Bayard, of Delaware. Frederick A. Sawyer, of South Carclina. Committee on Indian Affairs. Janies Harlan, of Iowa. William A. Buckingham, of Connecticut, Edmund G. Ross, of Kansas. Morgan C. Hamilton, of Texas. Henry W. Corbett, of Oregon. Garrett Davis, of Kentucky. John M. Thayer, of Nebraska. Committee on Pensions. George F. Edmunds, of Vermont. William G. Brownlow, of Tennessee. Thomas W. Tipton, of Nebraska. James B. Howell, of Iowa. George E. Spencer, of Alabama. Thomas C. McCreery, of Kentucky. Daniel D. Pratt, of Indiana. Committee on Revolutionary Claims. Richard Yates, of Illinois. William G. Brownlow, 8f Tennessee, John Pool, of North Carolina. John W. Johnston, of Virginia. Morgan C. Hamilton, of Texas. Committee on Claims. Timothy O. Howe, of Wisconsin. Daniel D. Pratt, of Indiana. Waitman T. Willey, of West Virginia. William P. Kellogg, of Louisiana. John Scott, of Pennsylvania. Garrett Davis, of Kentucky. William Sprague, of Rhode Island. Committee on the District of Columbia. James W. Patterson, of New Hampshire. James B. Howell, of Iowa. Charles Sumner, of Massachusetts. Hiram R. Revels, of Mississippi. John 8. Harris, of Louisiana. George Vickers, of Maryland. John B. Lewis, of Virginia. Committee on Patents and the Patent Office. Waitman T. Willey, of West Virginia. | William Windom, of Minnesota. Orris 8. Ferry; of Connecticut. | William T. Hamilton, of Maryland. Matthew H. Carpenter, of Wisconsin. Committee on Public Buildings and Grounds. Justin S. Morrill, of Vermont. John P. Stockton, of New Jersey. Lyman Trumbull, of Illinois. William T. Hamilton, of Maryland. Cornelius Cole, of California. Comittee on Territories. James W. Nye, of Nevada. Jacob M. Howard, of Michigan. Aaron A. Cragin, of New Hampshire. Arthur I. Boreman, of West Virginia. Alexander McDonald, of Arkansas. Thomas C. McCreery, of Kentucky. Carl Schurz, of Missouri. Commitiee on the Pacific Railroad. Jacob M. Howard, of Michigan. Charles D. Drake, of Missouri. John Sherman, of Ohio. Benjamin F. Rice, of Arkansas. Alexander Ramsey, of Minnesota. Joseph C. Abbott, of North Carolina. William M. Stewart, of Nevada. Reuben E. Fenton, of New York, Henry Wilson, of Massachusetts. John Scott, of Pennsylvania. James Harlan, of Towa. CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY. Commattee on Mines and Mining. William M. Stewart, of Nevada. Edmund G. Ross, of Kansas. Zachariah Chandler, of Michigan. J. W. Flanagan, of Texas. Richard Yates, of Illinois. John F. Lewis, of Virginia. William T. Hamilton, of Maryland. Committee on the Revision of the Laws of the United States. Roscoe Conkling, of New York. Daniel D. Pratt, of Indiana. \ Matthew H. Carpenter, of Wisconsin. Thomas F. Bayard, of Delaware. John Pool, of North Carolina. - Committee on Education and Labor. Charles D. Drake, of Missouri. Hiram R. Revels, of Mississippi. Justin S. Morrill, of Vermont. J. W. Flanagan, of Texas. Frederick A. Sawyer, of South Carolina. Committee to Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses of the Senate. Orris 8. Ferry, of Connecticut. Garrett Davis, of Kentucky. William Windom, of Minnesota. Commitice on Engrossed Bills. William A. Buckingham, of Connecticut. | Adelbert Ames, of Mississippi. John W. Johnston, of Virginia. | SELECT COMMITTEES OF THE SENATE. Select Committee on Revision of the Rules. Henry B. Anthony, of Rhode Island. George I. Edmunds, of Vermont. Samuel C. Pomeroy, of Kansas. Select Committee on the Removal of Political Disabilities. Thomas J. Robertson, of South Carolina. Morgan C. Hamilton, of Texas. Timothy O. Howe, of Wisconsin. George Vickers, of Maryland. ! Arthur I. Boreman, of West Virginia. John W. Johnston, of Virginia. Adelbert Ames, of Mississippi. Select Committee on the Levees of the Mississippi River. William P. Kellogg, of Louisiana. | George I. Spencer, of Alabama. Lyman Trumbull, of Illinois. Thomas F. Bayard, of Delaware. Carl Schurz, of Missouri. | JOINT STANDING COMMITTEES ON THE PART OF THE SENATE. Joint Committee on Printing. Henry B. Anthony, of Rhode Island. Eugene Casserly, of California. John S. Harris, of Louisiana. Joint Committee on Enrolled Bills. John M. Thayer, of Nebraska. | Joseph C. Abbott, of North Carolina. John F. Lewis, of Virginia. Joint Committee on the Library. Alexander G. Cattell, of New Jersey. Lot M. Morrill, of Maine, | | Timothy O. Howe, of Wisconsin. JOINT SELECT COMMITTEES ON THE PART OF THE SENATE. Jownt Select Committee on Retrenchment. John S. Harris, of Louisiana. Carl Schurz, of Missouri. James W. Patterson, of New Hampshire. Allen G. Thurman, of Ohio. Joint Select Commitiee on Ventilation. James W. Nye, of Nevada. John P. Stockton, of New Jersey. Henry B. Anthony, of Rhode Island. HOUSE COMMITTEES. STANDING COMMITTEES OF THE HOUSE. Committee of Elections. Halbert E. Paine, of Wisconsin. George M. Brooks, of Massachusetts. John C. Churchill, of New York. Peter M. Dox, of Alabama. John Cessna, of Pennsylvania. Michael C. Kerr, of Indiana. Roderick R. Butler, of Tennessee. George W. McCrary, of Iowa. Job E. Stevenson, of Ohio. Clarkson N. Potter, of New York. Samuel S. Burdett, of Missouri. Eugene Hale, of Maine. Albert G. Burr, of Illinois. Heury W. Barry, of Mississippi. Samuel J. Randall, of Pennsylvania. Committee of Ways and Means. Robert C. Schenck, of Ohio. James Brooks, of New York. Samuel Hooper, of Massachusetts. | Austin Blair, of Michigan. William B. Allison, of Iowa. | Dennis McCarthy, of New York. Horace Maynard, of Tennessee. Samuel S. Marshall, of Illinois. William D. Kelley, of Pennsylvania. Committee on Appropriations. Henry L. Dawes, of Massachusetts. Aaron A. Sargent, of California. Fernando C. Beaman, of Michigan. Oliver J. Dickey, of Pennsylvania. William H. Kelsey, of New York. William E. Niblack, of Indiana. Cadwalader C. Washburn, of Wisconsin. James B. Beck, of Kentucky. William Lawrence, of Ohio. Committee on Banking and Currency. James A. Garfield, of Ohio. | Israel G. Lash, of North Carolina. John Lynch, of Maine. | Samuel S. Cox, of New York. Norman B. Judd, of Illinois. | Thomas L. Jones, of Kentucky. John Coburn, of Indiana. Horatio C. Burchard, of Illinois. Worthington C. Smith, of Vermont. | Charles H. Holmes, of New York. John B. Packer, of Pennsylvania. Committee on the Pucific Railroad. William A. Wheeler, of New York. Daniel W. Voorhees, of Indiana. John A. Logan, of Illinois. | Samuel B. Axtell, of California. Daniel J. Morrell, of Pennsylvania. | Bugene M. Wilson. of Minnesota. Robert T. Van Horn, of Missouri. William H. Barnum, of Connecticut. James Buffinton, of Massachusetts. Alfred E. Buck, of Alabama. John Lynch, of Maine. | David Atwood, of Wisconsin. Frank W. Palmer, of Iowa. John Covode, of Pennsylvania. Logan H. Roots, of Arkansas. J. Hale Sypher, of Louisiana. Lawrence S. Trimble, of Kentucky. Committee of Claims., William B. Washburn, of Massachusetts. | Oliver H. Dockery, of North Carolina. Giles W. Hotchkiss, of New York. Jesse H. Moore, of Illinois. William S. Holman, of Indiana. John D. Stiles, of Pernsylvania. Amasa Cobb, of Wisconsin. Julius L. Strong, of Connecticut. William B. Stokes, of Tennessee. Richard S. Ayer, of Virginia. Jacob H. Ela, of New Hampshire. Williaa P. Wolf, of Iowa. Committee on Commerce. Nathan F. Dixon, of Rhode Island. Omar D. Conger, of Michigan. Charles O'Neill, of Pennsylvania. William 8. Holman, of Indiana. Ebon C. Ingersoll, of Illinois. Clarkson N. Potter, of New York. Philetus Sawyer, of Wisconsin. H. H. Starkweather, of Connecticut. Gustavus A. Finkeloburg, of Missouri. Lionel A. Sheldon, of Louisiana. David S. Bennett, of New York. William T. Clark, of Texas. Committee on the Public Lands. George W. Julian, of Indiana. Eugene M. Wilson, of Minnesota. John H. Ketcham, of New York. James R. McCormick, of Missouri. Washington Townsend, of Pennsylvania. John B. Hawley, of Illinois. Thomas Fitch, of Nevada. | Randolph Strickland, of Michigan. James J. Winans, of Ohio. Committee on the Post Office and Post Roads. John F. Farnsworth, of Illinois. : James N. Tyner, of Indiana. Thomas W. Ferry, of Michigan. Thomas Fitch, of Nevada. John Hill, of New Jersey. John Fox, of New York. Ginery Twichell, of Massachusetts. Philadelph Van Trump, of Ohio. Sempronius H. Boyd, of Missouri. Charles H. Van Wyck, of New York. CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY. Committee on Manufactures. Daniel J. Morrell, of Pennsylvania. | William H. Upson, of Ohio. Oakes Ames, of Massachusetts. | Samuel P. Morrill, of Maine. Philetus Sawyer, of Wisconsin. Orestes Cleveland, of New Jersey. Worthington C. Smith, of Vermont. John M. Rice, of Kentucky. Stephen Sanford, of New York. Commitiee on Agriculture. John T. Wilson, of Ohio. Jacob Benton, of New Hampshire. | William Loughridge, of Iowa. John M. Crebs, of Illinois. } John Fisher, of New York. Samuel B. Axtell, of California. William J. Smith, of Tennessee. Henry A. Reeves, of New York. David P. Dyer, of Missouri. James K. Gibson, of Virginia. Committee on Indian Affairs. Sidney Clarke, of Kansas. William Mungen, of Ohio. Robert T. Van Horn, of Missouri. Joseph 8S. Smith, of Oregon. John P. C. Shanks, of Indiana. . George M. Adams, of Kentucky. John Taffe, of Nebraska. Charles H. Van Wyck, of New York. Alexander H. Bailey, of New York. Edward Degener, of Texas. William H. Armstrong, of Pennsylvania, Committee on Military Affairs. John A. Logan, of Illinois. Joel IF. Asper, of Missouri. Amasa Cobb, of Wisconsin. George W. Morgan, of Ohio. James 8S. Negley, of Pennsylvania. | Henry W. Slocum, of New York. Jasper Packard, of Indiana. Solomon L. Hoge, of South Carolina. William L. Stoughton, of Michigan. Irank Morey, of Louisiana. John S. Witcher, of West Virginia. Committee on the Militia. John P. C. Shanks, of Indiana. Joseph B. Donley, of Pennsylvania. Sidney Clarke, of Kansas, Eliakim H. Moore, of Ohio. Thomas Boles, of Arkansas. Lawrence S. Trimble, of Kentucky. John T. Bird, of New Jersey. Committee for the District of Columbia. Burton C. Cook, of Illinois. George W. Cowles, of New York. Martin Welker, of Ohio. Frederick Stone, of Maryland. William Williams, of Indiana. J. Proctor Knott, of Kentucky. Calvin W. Gilfillan, of Pennsylvania. Lewis McKenzie, of Virginia, Thomas Boles, of Arkansas. C. B. Darrall, of Louisiana. Charles M. Hamilton, of Florida. Committee on the Judiciary. John A. Bingham, of Ohio. Ulysses Mercur, of Pennsylvania. Noah Davis, of New York. William Loughridge, of Iowa. Benjamin I. Butler, of Massachusetts. Charles A. Eldridge, of Wisconsin. Burton C. Cook, of Illinois. | Michael C. Kerr, of Indiana. John A. Peters, of Maine. | Stephen W. Kellogg, of Connecticut. \ Commattee on Revolutionary Claims Sempronius H. Boyd, of Missouri. Alexander H. Jones, of North Carolina. Jacob A. Ambler, of Ohio. James S. Negley, of Pennsylvania. William F. Prosser, of Tennessee. John Morrissey, of New York. William L. Stoughton, of Michigan. Thompson W. McNeeley, of Illinois. John S. Witcher, of West Virginia. Committee on Public Expenditures. John Coburn, of Indiana. Joseph B. Donley, of Pennsylvania. Philetus Sawyer, of Wisconsin. Alexander H. Jones, of North Carolina. John T. Wilson, of Ohio. J. Lawrence Getz, of Pennsylvania. Isaac R. Hawkins, of Tennessee. Patrick Hamill, of Maryland, Charles Knapp, of New York. a HOUSE COMMITTEES. Committee on Private Land Claims. Godlove S. Orth, of Indiana. Thomas Swann, of Maryland. Charles O'Neill, of Pennsylvania. J. Proctor Knott, of Kentucky. Nathan F., Dixon, of Rhode Island. Clarkson N. Potter, of New York. Martin Welker, of Ohio. Stephen L. Mayham, of New York. Cadwallader C. Washburn, of Wisconsin. Committee on Naval Affairs. Glenni W. Scofield, of Pennsylvania. Stephenson Archer, of Maryland? Thomas W. Ferry, of Michigan. Charles Haight, of New Jersey. Aaron F. Stevens, of New Hampshire. H. H. Starkweather, of Connecticut. John H. Ketcham, of New York. Charles Hays, of Alabama. George W. McCrary, of Iowa. James H. Platt, jr., of Virginia. Eugene Hale, of Maine. Committee on. Foreign Affairs. Nathaniel P. Banks, of Massachusetts. Charles W. Willard, of Vermont. Godlove S. Orth, of Indiana. Jacob A. Ambler, of Ohio. Norman B. Judd, of Illinois. Fernando Wood, of New York. Morton S. Wilkinson, of Minnesota. Thomas Swann, of Maryland. Porter Sheldon, of New York. Leonard Myers, of Pennsylvania. Committee on the Territories. Shelby M. Cullom, of Illinois. Eliakim H. Moore, of Ohio. Hamilton Ward, of New York. Isaac H. Duval, of West Virginia. John Taffe, of Nebraska. Samuel Hambleton, of Maryland. David P. Dyer, of Missouri. Orestes Cleveland, of New Jersey. Charles Pomeroy, of Iowa. Charles W. Buckley, of Alabama. Committee on Revolutionary Pensions and War of 1812. Charles W. Willard, of Vermont. Roderick R. Butler, of Tennessee. Charles Knapp, of New York. John M. Rice, of Kentucky. Calvin W. Gilfillan, of Pennsylvania. Anthony A. C. Rogers, of Arkansas. James J. Winans, of Ohio. Joseph S. Smith, of Oregon. Committee on Invalid Pensions. John F. Benjamin, of Missouri. Randolph Strickland, of Michigan. Jacob Benton, of New Hampshire. John T. Bird, of New Jersey. John T. Wilson, of Ohio. William M. Sweeney, of Kentucky. John B. Hay, of Illinois. Robert S. Heflin, of Alabama. Darwin Phelps, of Pennsylvania. Caleb N. Taylor, of Pennsylvania. C. C. Bowen, of South Carolina. Erasmus D. Peck, of Ohio. Committee on Railways and Canals. Ebon C. Ingersoll, of Illinois. James C. McGrew, of West Virginia. Oakes Ames, of Massachusetts. Erastus Wells, of Missouri. William Moore, of New Jersey. Boyd Winchester, of Kentucky. Clinton L. Cobb, of North Carolina. William C. Sherrod, of Alabama. John A. Smith, of Ohio. George E. Harris, of Mississippi. William F. Prosser, of Tennessee. Committee on Mines and Mining. Orange Ferriss, of New York. Isaac H. Duval, of West Virginia. Aaron A. Sargent, of California. Logan H. Roots, of Arkansas. Isaac R. Hawkins, of Tennessee. Edward F. Dickinson, of Ohio. p Randolph Strickland, of Michigan. Benj. T. Biggs, of Delaware. Charles Pomeroy, of Iowa. John Manning, Jr., of North Carolina. Committee on Freedmen’s Affairs. Oliver H. Dockery, of North Carolina. James C. McGrew, of West Virginia. John P. C. Shanks, of Indiana. George W. Booker, of Virginia. Alexander H. Bailey, of New York. John C. Connor, of Texas. C. C. Bowen, of South Carolina. George E. Harris, of Mississippi. Lewis Tillman, of Tennessee. Joseph H. Rainey, of South Carolina. John B. Hawley, of Illinois. Committee on Education and Labor. Samuel M. Arnell, of Tennessee. Samuel S. Burdett, of Missouri. John Beatty, of Ohio. ; James N. Tyner, of Indiana. George F. Hoar, of Massachusetts. Thompson W. McNeely, of Illinois. Washington Townsend, of Pennsylvania. Anthony A. C. Rogers, of Arkansas, Charles M. Hamilton, of Florida. Legrand W. Perce, of Mississippi. CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY. Committee on Revision of the Laws of the United States. Luke P. Poland, of Vermont. Gustavus A. Finkelnburg, of Missouri. Orange Ferriss, of New York. Daniel W. Voorhees, of Indiana. Austin Blair, of Michigan. James A. Johnson, of California. George W. McCrary, of Iowa. Thomas A. Jenckes; of Rhode Island. George I. Hoar, of Massachusetts. Committee on Coinage, Weights, and Measures. William D. Kelley, of Pennsylvania. | Peter W. Strader, of Ohio. Samuel Hooper, of Massachusetts. | John A. Griswold, of New York. John Hill, of New Jersey. | Joseph Dixon, of North Carolina. Committee on Patents. Thomas A. Jenckes, of Rhode Island. James A. Johnson, of California. Aaron I. Stevens, of New Hampshire. Stephen Sanford, of New York. John A. Smith, of Ohio. Daniel M. Van Auken, of Pennsylvania. Lewis Tiliman, of Tennessee. Hervey C. Calkins, of New York. Jesse H. Moore, of Illinois. Leonard Myers, of Pennsylvania. Committee on Public Buildings and Grounds. John Beatty, of Ohio. John Covode, of Pennsylvania. William J. Smith, of Tennessee. J. L. Morphis, of Mississippi. Adolphus H. Tanner, of New York. J. Lawrence Getz, of Pennsylvania. Committee on Mileage. Issac R. Hawking, of Tennessee. Job E. Stevenson, of Ohio. Ulysses Mercur, of Pennsylvania. John Fox, of New York. Jasper Packard, of Indiana. Committee on Accounts. Henry L. Cake, of Pennsylvania, | William H. Kelsey, of New York. Samuel M. Arnell, of Tennessee. | William Milnes, jr., of Virginia. James Buffinton, of Massachusetts. Committee on Expenditures in the State Department. Alexander H. Bailey, of New York. John D. Stiles, of Pennsylvania. Eugene Hale, of Maine. Stevenson Archer, of Maryland. Ginery Twichell, of Massachusetts. Committee on Expenditures tn the Treasury Department. William B. Allison, of Iowa. Samuel J. Randall, of Pennsylvania. William A. Wheeler, of New York. Benjamin T. Biggs, of Delaware. Israel G. Lash, of North Carolina. Committee on Expenditures in the War Department. William Williams, of Indiana. Clinton L. Cobb, of North Carolina. Adolphus H. Tanner, of New York. Albert G. Barr, of Illinois. John Cessna, of Pennsylvania. Committee on Expenditures in the Navy Department. John Lynch, of Maine. Patrick Hamill, of Maryland, George W. Cowles, of New York. Henry A. Reeves, of New York. Oliver J. Dickey, of Pennsylvania, Committee on Expenditures i n the Post Office Department. William Moore, of New Jersey. John F. Benjamin, of Missouri. John A. Bingham, of Ohio. Stephen L. Mayham, of New. York, John Ba Hay, of Illinois. Committee on Expenditures in the Interior Department. Jacob H. Ela, of New Hampshire. Peter W. Strader, of Ohio. David S. Bennett, of New York. | George M. Adams, of Kentucky. John B. Packer, of Pennsylvania. HOUSE COMMITTEES. Committee on Expenditures on the Public Buildings. fini lh Nes John C. Churchill, of New York. Samuel Hambleton, of Maryland. Jacob H. Ela, of New Hampshire. John A. Griswold, of New York. Darwin Phelps, of Pennsylvania. Commitiee on the Rules. The Speaker, James A. Garfield, of Ohio. Nathaniel P. Banks, of Massachusetts. James Brooks, of New York. Thomas W. Ferry, of Michigan. Samuel 8. Cox, of New York. SELECT COMMITTEES OF THE HOUSE. Select Commuttee on Reconstruction. Benjamin F'\ Butler, of Massachusetts. James B. Beck, of Kentucky. John F. Farnsworth, of Illinois. Fernando Wood, of New York. Fernando C. Beaman, of Michigan. George W. Woodward, of Pennsylvania, Halbert E. Paine, of Wisconsin. George W. Morgan, of Ohio. Hamilton Ward, of New York. Oliver H. Dockery, of North Carolina. George W. Julian, of Indiana. Charles H. Porter, of Virginia. William H. Upson, of Ohio. George C. McKee, of Mississippi. William Lawrence, of Ohio. Select Committee on the Reorganization of the Civil Service of the Government, Thomas A. Jenckes, of Rhode Island. William E. Niblack, of Indiana. William H. Armstrong, of Pennsylvania. William T. Clark, of Texas. Horace Maynard, of Tennessee. Select Committee on the Ninth Census. William B. Stokes, of Tennessee. Shelby M. Cullom, of Illinois. James A. Garfield, of Ohio. Morton S. Wilkinson, of Minnesota. Nathaniel P. Banks, of Massachusetts. Richard J. Haldeman, of Pennsylvania, William B. Allison, of Iowa. John G. Schumaker, of New York. Addison H. Laflin, of New York. Select Committee on the Causes of the Reduction of American Tonnage. John Liyneh, of Maine. Norman B. Judd, of Illinois. James Buffinton, of Massachusetts. William S. Holman, of Indiana. Cadwalader C. Washburn, of Wisconsin. Hervey C. Calkin, of New York, Giles W. Hotchkiss, of New York. Erastus Wells, of Missouri. Daniel J. Morrell, of Pennsylvania. Select Committee on Postal Telegraph Lines. Cadwalader C. Washburn, of Wisconsin. George W. Woodward, of Pennsylvania. William Lawrence, of Ohio. James B. Beck, of Kentucky. Henry L. Dawes, of Massachusetts. Orange Ferriss, of New York. Frank W. Palmer, of Iowa. JOINT STANDING COMMITTEES ON THE PART OF THE HOUSE, Joint Committee on Printing. Addison H. Laflin, of New York. William Mungen, of Ohio. Henry L. Cake, of Pennsylvania. Joint Committee on the Library. John A. Peters, of Maine. | George W. Woodward, of Pennsylvania. Frank W. Palmer, of Iowa. Joint Committee on Enrolled Bills. John Beatty, of Ohio. John Fox, of New York. James 8. Negley, of Pennsylvania. Legrand W. Perce, of Mississippi. Joint Committee on Retrenchment. Martin Welker, of Ohio. Jacob Benton, of New Hampshire, Porter Sheldon, of New York. Samuel J. Randall, of Pennsylvania. Thomas A. Jenckes, of Rhode Island. Joint Committee on Ventilation, Thomas A. Jenckes, of Rhode Island. | Thomas Swann, of Maryland. Stephen Sanford, of New York. CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY. OFFICERS OF THE SENATE. PRESIDENT OF THE SENATE. The Vice-President. —SCHUYLER COLFAX, 7 Sixteen-and-a-half street, Lafayette square. Chaplain to the Senate.—Rev. J. P. Newman, 456 C street. Private Secretary.— William D. Todd, 448 Sixth street. OFRICE OF THE SECRETARY. Secretary of the Senate.— George C. Gorham, Jenness House. Chief Clerk.—W. J. McDonald, corner C street north and Delaware avenue. Principal Executive Clerk.—J. M. Morris, 128 C street, Capitol Hill. Principal Legislative Clerk.—J. H. Flagg, 1214 F street. Journal Clerk.—John C. Burch, 421 Sixth street west. Financial Clerk.—R. B. Nixon, 1204 E street. Clerks.—C. C. Sympson, Washington House. Wallace B. White, Seaton House. ‘W. E. Spencer, 407 Fourth street northwest. W. W. Presbury, 504 Eleventh street west. M. R. Shankland, 2618 K street. G. C. Garrison, 1511 Eighth street west. H. E. Fitz, 471 C street. Temporary Clerks.—Paul Geddes, 207 First street east. G. A. Pierce, Washington House. H. R. Kincaid, 447 Pennsylvania avenue. John W. Bronaugh, 55 Second street, Georgetown. Keeper of the Stationery.—J. W. Jones, 469 Missouri avenue. Messengers.—Charles N. Richards, 1217 Tenth street. George S. Wagner, South Carolina avenue. Pisges.-—J. N: Fitzpatrick, 313 First street east. W. E. Jones, 469 Missouri avenue. Special Policeman.—J. McGuckian, 230 East Capitol street. Laborers.— William Lucas, 305 Li street north. Thomas L. Hickman, 305 L street north. John L. Hickman, 305 Li street north. Charles F. Murray, 1207 I street. John Foley, 50 H street northwest. OFFICE OF THE SERGEANT-AT-ARMS. Sergeant-at-arms of the Senate.—John R. French, 214 First street east. Assistant Doorkeeper.— Isaac Bassett, 18 Second street east. Acting Assistant Doorkeepers.— William Johnson, Eighth street, corner Li, T.T. Scott, 218 C street southeast. James I. Christie, St. James Hotel. POST OFFICE. Postmaster of the Senate.—C. S. Taft, National Hotel. Assistant Postmaster.—H. R. Witt, 811 G street. Assistants.—W. H. Maguire, 458 C street. Samuel Atkinson, 154 East Capitol street. B.T. Thorn, 154 East Capitol street. DOCUMENT ROOM, Superintendent.—Moses Titcomb, 370 Pennsylvania avenue, Assistants.—T. Griffiths, 920 Fifteenth street. A. O. Morgan, 410 Sixth street. SN OFFICERS OF THE SENATE. ‘FOLDING ROOM. Superintendent.—L. D. Merchant, 415 Fourth street. Assistants.—T. A. Jones, 546 F street. Christian Critzman, 318 C street. Jeremiah Sullivan, 497 New Jersey avenue. John B. Hurley, 104 F' street. William Capen, 1113 Pennsylvania avenue. George S.U. Stumbaugh, Dyer’s Hotel. W. H. H. St. John, 919 Third street east. MESSENGERS. E N. Atherton, 147 B street, south. S. N. Colbath, 225 H street. D. A. Clark, Casparis Hotel. J. D. Farren, 606 Massachusetts avenue. D. W. Wilson, Dyer’s Hotel. D. Kimball, 8 Grant Place. J. G. Merritt, 108 D street. C. S. Draper, 27 B street south. George Boyd, 318 C street. William Heydt, South A street. J. 8S. Read, Saunderson House. W. S. Sanders, 133 A street north. S. L. Wilson, St. Cloud Hotel. W. A. Vran Vrankin, 1005 H street. C. C. Jones. Charles Bridges, 521 New Jersey avenue. Elisha Owens, Dyer’s Hotel. Sandy Bynum, 215 Pennsylvania avenue east. Amzi Smith, Laurel. HEATING AND VENTILATING. Chief Engineer.—H. F. Hayden, 8 Grant Place. Assistants.—R. M. Hodgson, Casparis Hotel. S. K. Coster, 578 East Capitol street. W. E. Webster, 428 First street. Firemen.—J. B. Hutchings, 1214 New York avenue. John A. Westlake, 513 East Capitol street. CLERKS OF COMMITTEES OF THE SENATE. Foreign Relations.—Edward J. Holmes, corner of H street and Vermont avenue, Finance.—D. A. Chambers, 1112 H street west. Appropriations.—Amos Pickard, Washington House, Pennsylvania avenue. Commerce.— Charles L. Miller, 126 Pennsylvania avenue east. Agriculture. —Samuel F. Barr, Mrs. Whitney’s, Capitol Hill. Military Affairs.—Samuel Hunt, Washington House. Naval Affarrs.—Samuel D. Lord, United States Hotel. Judiciary.—Benj. Trumbull, 394 First street east. Post Offices and Post Roads.—E. E. Paulding, Ebbitt House. Private Land Claims.—William Williamson, National Hotel. Public Lands.—W. Scott Smith. Indian Affairs.—T. J. Saunders, 438 Thirteenth street. Revolutionary Claims.—John D. Strong, St. James Hotel. Claims.—S. B. A. Haynes, 415 Fourth street. Patents and Patent Office.—S. R. Dawson, Dyer’s Hotel. Public Buildings.—J. E. Hatch, 467 C street. Territories.—C. M. Nye, 735 Eleventh street northwest. Manufactures.—H. C. Root, Empire House. Pacific Railroads.—H. G. Howard, Ebbitt House. District of Columbia.—Augustus C. Perham, 1630 Sixteenth street. Education and Labor.—James IL. Andem, 476 Second street east. Contingent Expenses.—A. H Byington, 202 East Capitol street. Library.—M. Daniel Conolly, 934 E street. Mines and Mining.—N. L. Gage, 1328 Massachusetts avenue. Revision of the Laws.—W. M. Burnop, 736 Fifteenth street. Removal of Political Disabilities.—W. Shirer, 485 Twelfth street. Printing.—Ben: Perley Poore, 156 Congress street, Georgetown. b CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY. OFFICERS OF THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES. SPEAKER OF THE HOUES. JAMES G. BLAINE, 821 Fifteenth street. Speaker's Clerk.—John D. Barelay, jr., 1720 I street. CHAPLAIN. J. G. Butler, D. D., 738 Eleventh street northwest. : \ STENOGRAPHERS, p Stenographer.—Francis H. Smith, 520 Third street west. Assistant Stenographer.—Henry G. Hayes, 439 First street east. OFFICE OF THY CLERK OF THE HOUSE. Clerk of the House.—Edward McPherson, 31 South A street, Capitol Hill. Chief Clerk.—Clinton Lloyd, 622 H street northwest. Journal Clerk.—John M. Barclay, 1112 Tenth street northwest. File Clerk.—Ferris Finch, 309 First street northwest. Assistant Disbursing Clerk.—John Bailey, 519 Fourth street northwest. Printing Clerk.—George W. Matthews, 7 Lafayette Square. Tally Clerk.—J. W. Nightingale, 401 Fourth street northwest. Reading Clerks,— William K. Mehaffey, Metropolitan Hotel. Charles W. Clisbhee, National Hotel. Engrossing Clerks.—Isaac Strohm, 426 Eleventh street northwest. Edward S. Dana, National Hotel. Albert D. Wood, 1008 F street northwest. Petition Clerk.—James W. Clayton, Casparis House. Newspaper Clerk.—John J. Cochran, 100 West street, Georgetown. Stationery Clerk.—John R. Briggs, National Hotel. Index Clerk.—Judson Holcomb, 6 North A street, Capitol Hill. Assistant Clerks.—Z. Moses, 905 H street northwest. James H. Bonebrake, 1215 I street northwest. John J. Piatt, 2106 G street west. Geo. W. Pratt, St. James Hotel. Geo. Frs. Dawson, Dyer’s Hotel. Chief Messenger.—Joseph Harris, 55 C street southeast. LIBRARY OF THE HOUSE. Librarian.—James Tisdale, E street. Assistants.—Paul Stevens, 214 Four-and-a-half street. : | H. S. Linker, 722 Seventh street southeast. HEATING AND VENTILATING... Engineer.—-J. Thomas Miller, 1108 Fifteenth street northwest. Assistants.—H. D. Tracy, Casparis House. J. C. Roland, northwest corner Sixth and F. Firemen.—John H. Barker, 1229 C street southwest. C. B. Bundick, 465 G street southwest. J. B. Simmons, 1220 Thirteenth street northwest. Francis Ballinger, 1109 Four-and-a-half street southwest. Hugh Lyons, 1704 Pennsylvania avenue northwest. | E. H. Brown, 919 L street northwest. DOCUMENT ROOM. Superintendent.—John B. Clark, jr., 605 Maine avenue. | Assistants.—George W. Harris, Fountain Hotel. Louis Reinberg, 918 M street. : ’ E. S. Pollock, 632 Eighth street. John P. Jefferis, 630 B street southeast. Arthur Li. Thomas, M street between Ninth and Tenth east. William Delplitch, Continental Hotel. E. A. Kreidler, St. James Hotel. Edward Fenno, 1442 Corcoran street. SERGEANT-AT-ARMS OF THE HOUSE. Sergeant-at-Arms.—N. G. Ordway, 112 East Capitol street. . Clerks.—Moses Dillon, 59 North A street. Henry McFarland, Jenness House. OFFICERS OF THE HOUSE. 67 DOORKEEPER OF THE HOUSE. Doorkeeper of the House.—Otis S. Buxton, 615 Sixth street. Assistant Doorkeeper in Charge of the Hall.—John Boyd, 62 Defrees street. Superintendent of Folding Room.—A. Lapham, 5 H street. I Superintendent of Document Room.—S. E. Duffield, United States Hotel. | Assistant Superintendent of Document Room.—Cyril Hawkins, Metropolitan Hotel. | | File Clerk, Document Room.—G. W. Dunn. 117 Third street, Capitol Hill. | \ Clerk to Doorkeeper.— G. Brower, 633 F street. Will. | RY Bookkeeper Folding Room.—John E. Hammond, 1751 K street. t 2 Messengers.—J. S. Samson, 138 East Capitol street. : John H. Hersey, 122 First street east. Samuel B. Wells, 138 East Capitol street. Augustus S. French, 1107 Massachusetts avenue. George Wilford, 634 B street southeast. | Robert A. McPherson, 11 Fourth street southeast. Charles Johnson, 428 Carroll Row, Capitol Hill. George W. Nares, 475 Missouri avenue. A. G. Bradstreet. Nelson Joy, Dyer’s Hotel. 1 John W. Simmons. | Joshua W. Rosebury, Sanderson House. John Sterling, 428 Carroll Row, Capitol Hill. John T. Chaney, 312 I street. J. H. Holmes, 235 Pennsylvania avenue. Thomas McElwain, 706 Secoud street northwest. James M. Davis. PORT OFFICE OF THE HOUSE. Postmaster.— William S. King, 1512 H street. Deputy Postmasier.—George F. Stevens, 108 F street. Messengers.—Norman Crane, Continental Hotel. : B. M. Van Keuren, 603 Pennsylvania avenue east. W. H. Dalgleish, 5 Duddington Place. Hl iH. 1. Prince. Assistant Messengers.— William Tudge, 414 Fourth street east. 1 : Wm. F. Corbett, 338 South C street. a Wm. H. Sampsel, Continental Hotel. il E. S. Bean, Continental Hotel. i CLERKS TO COMMITTEES OF THE HOUSE. a Ways and Means.—George A. Bassett, Mrs, Wheeler's, 118 D street. Appropriations.—R. I. Stevens, 51 Defrees street. : Banking and Currency.—George W. Ross, 532 Maryland avenue. Printing.—A. Walter Suiter. i Claims.—George W. Johnes, 331 Pennsylvania avenue. Public Lands.—William Li. Woods, 611 Sixth street. ; Judiciary.—E. G. Bowdoin, 424 Fifth street. ; Elections.—D. W. Bartlett, 128 Green street, Georgetown. Military Affairs.—E. V. Smalley. ’ Naval Affairs.—Asa B Cook, 1008 F street. p Foreign Affairs.—P. B. Prince, 1429 P street northwest. > | Post Offices and Post Roads.—U. H. Painter, 908 Fourteenth street. | Mines and Mining.—J. H. Riley, 721 Twentieth street. / Reconstruction.—M. A. Clancy, 1426 Corcoran street. Commerce.—J. P. Foley. Territories.—F. Li, Cook, 1219 F street. : Indian Affairs.— | District of Columbia.—C. C. Campbell, 518 East Capitol street. Invalid Pensions.—F. Armstrong Johnson, St. James Hotel. Retrenchment.—C. C. Campbell, 518 East Capitol street. Accounts.—John C. Conrad, 374 North Capitol street. Railways and Canals.—F. R. Reading, 951 Massachusetts avenue Manufactures.—James M. Swank, 1117 G street, CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY. CONGRESSIONAL GLOBE REPORTERS IN THE SENATE. D. F. Murphy, Metropolitan Hotel. | Edward V. Murphy, 338 Pennsylvania av. James J. Murphy, Metropolitan Hotel. Thomas F. Shuey, 104 Third street. Henry J. Gensler, 10 I street. CONGRESSIONAL GLOBE REPORTERS IN THE HOUSE. John J. McElhone, 7 Ingle Place. J. K. Edwards, Washington House. William Hincks, 8 Four-and-a-half street. David Wolfe Brown, 316 Second street. William Blair Lord, Seaton House. LIBRARY OF CONGRESS. Librarian of Congress.—Ainsworth R. Spofford, 105 C street, southeast. Assistant Librarians.—Frederick Vinton, 324 First street southeast. C. H. W. Meehan, 354 H street. Theodore Gill, Smithsonian Institution. George A. Morris, Ebbitt House. J. C. Strout, 491 H street north. W. J. Dockstader, 309 First street, southeast. Louis Solyom, Montgomery county, Maryland. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE. Congressional Printer.—ALMON M. CLAPP, 207 G street northwest. Chief Clerk.—Harry H. Clapp, 1004 M street northwest. Clerk.—John Larcombe, 1817 H street nortliwest. Clerk.—Anson N. Thompson, 1802 T street. Clerk.—George M. Fillmore, 113 G street northwest. Foreman of Printing.—N. F. Ethel, 1321 New York avenue. Assistant Foreman of Printing.—Henry T. Brian, 10 I street northwest. Foreman of Binding.—J. H. Roberts, cor. Third and H sts. and Mass. av. northwest. Assistant Foreman.—J. W. Mattingly, 813 Third street northwest. Superintendent of Press-Room.—A. J. Donaldson, Sixth street northeast. Superintendent of Executive Printing.—J. A. Shanklin, 315 H street northwest. Superintendent of Patent Office Printing.—W. A. Bartlett, 7 A street southeast. Superintendent of Folding-Room.— Thomas B. Penicks, 610 L street northwest. PUBLIC BUILDINGS, GROUNDS, AND WORKS. \| In charge.—N. Michler, maj. of engineers, bt. brig. Superuntendent.—B. IF. Burns, Kirkwood House. Clerk.—James Daly, Kirkwood House, Messenger.—P. Daly, 1714 F street. Laborer.—John Smallwood. gen. U. 8. A., 503 Twenty-first street. WASHINGTON AQUEDUCT. Chief Engineer.—George H. Elliot, maj. of engineers, Ebbitt House. THE CAPITOL POLICE. 69 THE CAPITOL POLICE. Captain.—John Corson, 184 High street, Georgetown. Lieutenants.—S. A. Boyden, 805 East Capitol street. J. W. Westfall, Pennsylvania avenue. (Acting Lt.) —J. M. Lindley, 310 Indiana avenue. Privates. —Babcock, D. A., 318 Pennsylvania avenue west. | Baxter, S. W., 609 A street southeast. | Blackford, S. S., Fourth street northwest. Bower, E. T., Fifth street southeast. Burton, W. E., Twelfth street. | Carter, M., 313 Eighth street east. Chamberlain, C. D., 426 First street east. Creary, W. E., 816 East Capitol street. Evans, J. O., Fifth street east. Fuller, N. A., 419 Second street northwest. Giberson, John, Ninth street northwest. Hiles, J. J., 318 Pennsylvania avenue west. Joice, G. S., 1022 North Carolina avenue. Lemon, H. H., 499 Maryland avenue. Lillebridge, G. H., 125 A street northeast. Mabson, G. L., 405 First street east. Manning, C. H., F street northeast. Murphy, J. M., 292 Pennsylvania avenue. Prentice, C. T. K., 317 Four-and-a-half street. Shomo, J. M., 309 A street south. Stephenson, Joseph, Ninth street. Seaton, John A., Alexandria. Thwing, C. G., 318 Pennsylvania avenue west. Torrey, T., 220 C street southeast. Town, E. D., 120 First street northeast. Van Buskirk, A., 491 Missouri avenue. N Wood, F. A., 21 East Capitol street. 70 : CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY. THE CAPITOL. The Capitol fronts the east, and stands on a plateau ninety feet above the level of the Potomac, in latitude 38° 55 48’ north and longitude 77° 1’ 48" west from Greenwich. The southeast corner-stone of the original building was laid on the 18th of September, 1793, by President Washington, aided by the freemasons of Maryland. It was constructed of sandstone from an island in Aquia creek, Virginia, painted white, under the direction of B. S. Hallett, and afterwards of B. H. Latrobe, architects. The north wing was finished in 1800 and the south wing in 1811, a wooden passage-way connecting them. On the 24th of August, 1814, the interior of both wings was destroyed by British incendiaries, but they were immediately rebuilt. In 1818 the central portion of the building was commenced under the architectural superintendence of Charles Bulfinch, and the original building was finally completed in 1827. Its cost, including the grading of the grounds, alterations, and repairs, up to 1827, was $1,746,718 33. The corner-stone of the extensions to the Capitol was laid on the 4th of July, 1851, by President Fillmore, Daniel Webster officiating as orator of the day. Thomas U. Walter was architect, and subsequently Edward Clark, under whose direction the work was completed in November, 1867. The material used for the extensions is white marble from the quarries at Lee, Massachusetts, with white marble columns from the quarries at Cockeysville, Maryland. The dome of the original central building was constructed of wood, but was removed in 1856 to be replaced by the present stupendous structure of cast iron, which was completed in 1865. The entire weight of iron used is 8,009,200 pounds. The main building is three hundred and fifty-two feet four inches long in front and one hundred and twenty-one feet six inches deep, with a portico one hundred and sixty feet wide, of twenty-four columns on the east, and a projection of eighty-three feet on the west, em-bracing a recessed portico of ten coupled columns. The extensions are placed at the north and south ends of the main building, with connecting corridors forty-four feet long by fifty-six feet wide, flanked by columns. Each extension is one hundred and forty-two feet eight inches in front, by two hundred and thirty-eight feet ten inches deep, with porticos of twenty-two columns each on their eastern fronts, and with porticoes of ten columns on their ends and on their western fronts, The entire length of the building is seven hundred and fifty-one feet four inches, and the greatest depth, including porticoes and steps, is three hundred and twenty-four feet. The area covered by the entire building is one hundred and fifty-three thousand one hundred and twelve square feet. The dome is crowned by a bronze statue of Freedom, modelled by Crawford, which is nineteen feet six inches high, and which weighs 14,985 pounds. The height of the dome above the base-line of the east front is two hundred and eighty-seven feet eleven inches ; the height from the top of the balustrade of the building is two hundred and seventeen feet eleven inches; and the greatest diameter at the base of the dome is one hundred and thirty-five feet five inches. The rotunda is ninety-five feet six inches in diameter, and its height from the floor to the top of the canopy is one hundred and eighty feet three inches. The Senate chamber is one hundred and twelve feet in length, by eighty-two feet in width, and thirty feet in height. Its galleries will accommodate one thousand persons. The Representatives’ Hall is one hundred and thirty feet in length, by ninety-three feet in width, and thirty feet in height. The Supreme Court room was occupied by the Senate until December, 1860, the court having previously occupied the room beneath, now used as a law library. The Library of Congress was burned by the British in 1814, and was partially destroyed by an accidental fire in 1851. The present centre hall was finished in 1853, and the wing halls were finished in 1867. ARCHITECT OF THE CAPITOL. Edward Clark, 417 Fourth street; office directly east of the eastern front of the Capitol. TR Nae 3 NY SNES SNS SON N LIBRARY 5§ NES ESENES 1 ; Le 7 : is ss flue th77 HALL OF Veale) = REPRESENTATIVES. @ 7 3 EE ER H=r) =e | fer 8 7% 7 7, in=ti=m, =, = @ Greer i — pb) Za la ZA ii ERNE = = Sh PLANS OF THE CAPITOL. / 7 EES 02; i 9Ar7 hi EXN= ESN °REPRESENTA-of SUPR EME COURT iss ON sr ag B.S | ATP Eppel Bees Eo IOI DEBE ERE EEE PLAN OF OF PRINCIPAL STORY U. S. CAPITOL. |Lol CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY. | | SOUTH WING | !REENSESSSIRSIS ME SSR Sass 7 : \ \ 5. Ws 4 | 29 3 3 EN. .ma \ Em N | 28 3.8 2 0 Rig} SER | \ ey ie ) BEEN -IY Mmm mm AN \ AN = | | BS | y rl TN a =] NIN \ 8 : Keeper. N N < 3 mm \ \ Store Room. ; = * Hl 2 ND , HEC ERHd = ZN AMM. NAr SSN : NN RANI o © S © © 8 & oo SKI | N | \ \ NY & © ® oo io.olio oF * on a ST= HITTIN : . : ~) 1 Restaurant. \J & 9 2 He Ne 5 \ N Bath Room. == _— |\ (\ mE | | a0 Ll] y N N § I } pss——" CE IETS E \ N \ a 1% ez Store Room. \ = \ Room. JL & ui ss wil TIE = \ S\ mn = 2% 5 N N § © MEN.NE §u | N % N £ 5 N House = = \ N FN | \ = N £2 | SQ} ARERR is nn \ Post Office. \ i N \ Fag JI \| 2 = \ NS N | SONY SII a AE | : \ | ml .ANE EEE EY NE LS errnerEN ENE BASEMENT STORY PLANS OF THE CAPITOL. NORTH WING B = ENE =v TT District \ of Library. Militia.Bz i Columbi ous MilitaryoJ & Judiciary. ] bee] 7 Affairs, aval | N a a Nm Closet. ANMNTINN| = =| [re itories.\ \ \ N= 2 zzz = AN rz No IOIOIé$ms,y. §§ ra Manufactures BASEMENT § By | T Judiciary. u \ EOE ss | _ Disabilities [| EN \ \ LET Contingelit a Expenses. AM \ Superintendent) \ Folding Room. NN SS WN N WIEN N22 « N J ——AON I\\| Refectory. Restaurant. ’ Pensions. \ ! = N eal. : u = iu \N \ £ N 2 Ne \ \Ss Rotronihmiont 5 = : il 2 v5 il o N = LENE eeEE EERE ER EIEN EEE STORY | | | 4 CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY. SOUTH WING | Re SS -— OMIT I : N. Ba2, 2 \!N \\ Q(V] | 3 g Ways & Means. F {5% \ N ©\ <4 \ \ © ‘DE SNNENNENRN Bs ~ 3 Z= | \ 9: PRINCIPAL STORY PLANS OF THE CAPITOL. 5 NORTH WING LSEMENNEINNENNENENENprin =NN7 EET 7] ALobn bd EEN Chief Clerk. | iii Secretary. \ Executive Appropria-tions VY ZZz2Z77ZZ 777 Ze hy | Clerk. 1 ul NN | E Closet. ¢ N MINN N Reporters’ 5 Room N LN Nb NH NMOOMT SHE 0] NG a A N— yPresiden mi A Room. \ \ TE \ aii N p— ml Room ithdrawing Sergeant2] tA BZ I 77 : ul a Vice Ni \ President's \ Room. N N LIRR Reception Room. \ LUNN =\ \ R WN Post Office. | \ \ 2_ AEE ENE EN PRINCIPAL STORY PLANS OF THE CAPITOL. if | EY NORTH WING EEE DMEDNEDIFEINEINENENERTEN N 4 ima \ \ 2 2 9 I = \ =z 3 \ \ LX ns pee \ 2 3 2 | N woe nel A \ \s Dy \ u = UMM ihn rsa Galleries, Reporters’ Telegraph. \ IN E N | : N - Galleries. LU N HHI P | 1 p22 2% ps hyN ATTIC SIORY CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY. THE EXECUTIVE. EXECUTIVE MANSION. President of the United States.—U. S. GRANT, Executive Mansion. Secretaries.—Gen. F. T. Dent, 2 Stoddart street, Georgetown. Gen. Horace Porter, The Arlington. \ Gen. O. E. Babcock, 2024 G street northwest. Private Secretary.—Robert M. Douglas, First street, cor. New Jersey avenue. Executive Clerks.—Levi P. Luckey, 119 Washington street, Georgetown. C. C. Sniffen, 119 Washington street, Georgetown. United States Marshal.— Alexander Sharp. Commissioner of Public Buildings.—Bvt. Brig. Gen, Michler, U. 8. A., 530 Twenty-first st. DEPARTMENT OF STATE. Secretary of State.—HAMILTON F1sH, southwest corner Fifteenth and I streets. Assistant Secretary.—J. C. Bancroft Davis, 1621 H street. Second Assistant Secretary.— William Hunter, 70 First street, Georgetown. Examiner of Claims.—E. Peshine Smith, 305 D street. Chief Clerk.—R. S. Chew, 1627 H street, corner of Seventeenth street. Disbursing Clerk.—George E. Baker, 1104 Thirteenth street, near L street. Index Clerk.—Theo. W. Dimon, 608 Fourteenth street. Keeper of the Rolls.—F'. Jefferson, 1118 Eleventh street. Diplomatic Clerks.—R. S. Chilton, 308 Delaware avenue, Capitol Hill. H. D. J. Pratt, 2107 Pennsylvania avenue. Consular Clerks.—Jasper Smith, corner of Fourteenth and R streets. A. H. Clements, 84 Prospect street, Georgteown. Passport Clerk.—Thomas C. Cox, 7 Eighth street, Georgetown. Appointment Clerk.—George Bartle, Twelfth near O street. Librarian.—Charles Payson, 1116 H street. Translator.—Henry L. Thomas, 1207 G street. Records Clerk.—Edward Haywood, 1327 Tenth street. Dispatch Agents. —Edgar Irving, New York. Jonathan Amory, Boston. B. F. Stevens, London, England. Thomas Taylor, Havre, France. TREASURY DEPARTMENT. Secretary of the Treasury.—GEORGE S. BOUTWELL, 812 Twelfth street. Assistant Secretary.— William A. Richardson. Assistant Secretary.—John F. Hartley, 912 New York avenue. Chief Clerk.—James H. Saville, Ebbitt House. Appointment Clerk.—H. S. Vanderbilt, 1114 Tenth street. Bureau of Statistics.—Edward Young in charge, 1213 Vermont avenue. Chief Clerk.—E. B. Elliott, 521 Twelfth street. Supervising Architect.—A. B. Mullett, cor. Green and Gay streets, Georgetown, Assistant Supervising Architect.—James C. Rankin, 1405 L street north, Chief Clerk.—A. G. Mills, 916 Fourteenth street west. THE COMPTROLLERS., First Compiroller.—R. W. Tayler, 1237 Massachusetts avenue, Chief Clerk.—William Hemphill Jones, 937 H street. Second Comptroller.—J. M. Brodhead, 233 New Jersey avenue. Chief Clerk.—E. B. Curtis, 117 B street southeast. ne, 1 i i i | EXECUTIVE DEPARTMENTS. THE AUDITORS. First Auditor.—-T. L. Smith, 1721 G street. Chief Clerk.—David W. Mahon, 1008 I street northwest. Second Auditor.—E. B. French, 722 Thirteenth street. Chief Clerk.—Sumner I. Kimball, 1004 M street northwest. Third Auditor.—Allan Rutherford, 1113 M street. Chief Clerk.—A. M. Gangewer, 800 Twenty-first street northwest. Fourth Auditor.—S. J. W. Tabor, 1417 Q street northwest. Chief Clerk.— William B. Moore, 126 Eleventh street southeast. Fifth Auditor.—H. D. Barron, St. James Hotel. Chief Clerk.—J. B. Mann, 940 L street. Sixth Auditor.—J. J. Martin, 1331 G street. Chief Clerk.—J. M. McGrew, 1248 Eleventh street. TREASURY OF THE UNITED STATES, Treasurer of the United States.—Francis E. Spinner, Willard’s Hotel. Assistant Treasurer.—L. R. Tuttle, Twenty-first street, near Boundary. Cashier.—A. U. Wyman, 1114 H street. Chief Clerk.—Edward O. Graves, 502 E street. REGISTER’S BUREAU. Register of the Treasury.—John Allison, 4 North A street. Assistant Register.—J. A. Graham, Ebbitt House. Chief Clerk.—J. T. Power, 229 D street. COMPTROLLER OF THE CURRENCY, Comptroller of the Currency.—H. R Hulburd, 1104 L street. Deputy Comptroller.—John Jay Knox, 1312 F street. BUREAU OF THE CUSTOMS. Commissioner of Customs.—Nathan Sargent, 129 Fast Capitol street, Chief Clerk.—H. A. Lockwood, Alexandria County, Virginia. BUREAU OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Commissioner Internal Revenue.—Alfred Pleasanton. Deputy Commissioners.—J. W. Douglas, corner Seventeenth and F streets. George B. Williams, 608 Fourteenth street. Josiah Given, 219 E street. Solicitor.—W. H. Smith, 1010 Eleventh street northwest. Superintendent.—D. C. Cox, 1116 Ninth street. SOLICITOR’S BUREAU. Solicitor of the Treasury.—E. C. Banfield, 927 O street. Assistant Solicitor.—J. H. Robinson, 1317 Thirteenth street. Chief Clerk.—J. O. Green, 918 Seventeenth street northwest. UNITED STATES COAST SURVEY, Superintendent.—Benjamin Peirce. Assistant Superintendentin charge.—J. E. Hilgard, 1313 N street northwest. Inspector of Hydrography.—C. P. Patterson, Brentwood. Disbursing Agent.—Samuel Hein, 32 First street, Georgetown. LIGHT-HOUSE BOARD, Chairman.,—Rear-Admiral W. B. Shubrick, 1617 H street. Naval Secretary.—Commodore Thornton A. Jenkins, 2115 Pennsylvania avenue. Engineer Secretary.—Major George H. Elliot, Ebbitt House. Chief Clerk.—A. B. Johnson, Washington County, near Insane Asylum. BUREAU OF ENGRAVING AND PRINTING. CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY. WAR DEPARTMENT. Secretary of War.— WILLIAM W. BELKNAP, 723 Madison Place, Lafayette Square. Chief Clerk.—John Potts, 812 Seventeenth street northwest. Assistant Judge Adv. Gen.—Bvt. Brig. Gen. Wm. McK. Dunn, 25 First street northeast. HEADQUARTERS ARMY OF THE UNITED STATES. General of the Army.—General W. T. Sherman, 207 I street. Inspector General.—Bvt. Maj. Gen. R. B. Marcy, Arlington House. Atides-de-Camp.—Col. James C. McCoy, 937 M street. Col. Lewis M. Dayton. Col. J. C. Audenried, Arlington House. ADJUTANT GENERAL’S DEPARTMENT. Adjutant General.—Bvt. Maj. Gen. E. D. Townsend, 2003 I street northwest. Ass’t Adj’t Generals.—Bvt. Maj. Gen. W. D. Whipple, 1116 M street northwest. Bvt. Brig. Gen. T. M. Vincent, 1221 N street northwest. Bvt. Lt. Col. J. P. Martin, 1407 G street. MILITARY ACADEMY, Inspector.—Inspector General Edmund Schriver, 1500 H street. QUARTERMASTER GENERAL’S DEPARTMENT. Quartermaster General.—Bvt. Maj. Gen. M. C. Meigs, S. E. corner Vermont ave. and N st Ass’t Q. M. General.—Bvt. Maj. Gen. R. Allen, 3 Madison Place. Depot Quartermaster.—Bvt. Brig. Gen. William Myers, 3 Madison Place, Lafayette Square. Quartermaster. —Bvt. Brig. Gen. J. D. Bingham, 726 Twentieth street. Quartermaster.— Bvt. Lit. Col. M. I. Ludington, 826 Fourteenth street northwest. Chief Clerk.—William A. Gordon, 96 Gay street, Georgetown. SUBSISTENCE DEPARTMENT, Commissary General of Subsistence.—Bvt. Maj. Gen. A, B. Eaton, 1725 H street. Ass’t Com. General. —Bvt. Maj. Gen. A. E. Shiras, 1326 New York avenue. Com. of Subsistence.—Bvt. Col. B. Du Barry, 1246 Eleventh street. Bvt. Maj. Charles McClure, 732 H street. Chief Clerk.—R.M. Hanson, North Carolina avenue, bet. Sixth and Seventh streets. MEDICAL DEPARTMENT. Surgeon General. —Bvt. Maj. Gen. Joseph K. Barnes, 1723 H street northwest. Asst. Surgeon Gen.—DBvt. Brig. Gen. C. H. Crane, 1905 F street northwest. Attending Surgeon.—Bvt. Col. B. Norris, 1829 G street northwest. Sur. Genl’s Office.—Bvt. Lt. Col. J. J. Woodward, 620 F street. Bvt. Lit. Col. J. 8S. Billings, 119 Prospect street, Georgetown. Bvt. Lit. Col. G. A. Otis, 1919 G street. Medical Storekeeper.—Capt. H. Johnson, 330 Indiana Avenue. Chief Clerk.—Richmond Johnson, 1710 Pennsylvania avenue northwest. PAY DEPARTMENT. Paymaster General.—Brevet Maj. Gen. B. W. Brice, Paymaster General’s Office. Paymasters.—Bvt. Brig. Gen. J. H. Eaton, Mount Pleasant, near Washington. Major Wm. B. Rochester, 1321 N street. Major T. H. Stanton, Ebbitt House. Chief Clerk.—GC. or Hanson, 418 Third street. EXECUTIVE DEPARTMENTS. ENGINEER DEPARTMENT. Chief of Engineers.—Bvt. Maj. Gen. A. A. Humphreys, 914 Nineteenth street. First and Second Divistons.—Bvt. Col. T. L. Casey, 1419 K street northwest. Third Division.—Bvt. Maj. Gen. J. G. Parke, 16 Lafayette Square. Fourth and Fifth Divisions.—Bvt. Col. J. B. Wheeler, 2037 I street northwest. Chief Clerk.—F. N. Barbarin, 39 Market street, Georgetown. ORDNANCE DEPARTMENT. Chief of Ordnance.—Bvt. Maj. Gen. A. B. Dyer, Washington arsenal. Inspector of Arsenals.—Bvt. Brig. Gen. W. Maynadier, 1833 G street. Principal Assistant.—Bvt. Lieut. Col, S. V. Benét, 1717 1 street. Ordnance Office.—First Lieut. W. 8S. Smoot, 1209 K street northwest. Chief Clerk.—J. P. Keller, 504 Thirteenth street. BUREAU OF MILITARY JUSTICE, Judge Advocate General.—Bvt, Maj. Gen. J. Holt, 236 New Jersey avenue. Judge Advocates.—Maj. William Winthrop, 1509 H street northwest. : Maj. Henry Goodfellow, 227 Delaware avenue. Chief Clerk.—James M. Wright, 424 Massachusetts avenue. SIGNAL OFFICE, Chief Signal Officer.—DBvt. Brig. Gen. A. J. Myer, 1847 I street. On duty in Signal Office —Bvt. Maj. L. B. Norton, 1713 M street northwest. Bvt. Capt. H. W. Howgate, 808 Twenty-first street northwest. BUREAU OF REFUGEES, FREEDMEN AND ABANDONED LANDS. Commissioner.—Bvt. Maj. Gen. O. O, Howard, Seventh street, beyond Boundary. OFFICE OF MEDICAL STATISTICS, (LATE PRO. MAR. GEN. BUREAU.) Assistant Medical Purveyor.—Bvt. Cel. J. H. Baxter, 704 Fourteenth street. NAVY DEPARTMENT. Secretary of the Navy.—GEORGE M. ROBESON, 1527 I street. Chief Clerk.—H. E. Offley, 132 Green street, Georgetown. Disbursing Clerk.—John W. Hogg, College Hill, near Boundary and Fourteenth streets. BUREAU OF YARDS AND DOCKS. Chief of Bureauw.—Captain Daniel Ammen, Beltsville. Chief Clerk.——Augustus E. Merritt, 740 Sixth street. Civil Engineer.— William P. S. Sanger, 73 Prospect street, Georgetown. BUREAU OF NAVIGATION, Chief of Burecau.—Commodore James Alden, Arlington House. Chief Cierl.—Benjamin F. Greene, 62 West street, Georgetown. BUREAU OF ORDNANCE. Chief of Bureau.—Commodore A, L. Case, 1716 I street. Chief Clerk.—John D. Brandt, 514 Eighth street southeast, Navy Yard. BUREAU OF PROVISIONS AND CLOTHING. Chief of Burecau.—Paymaster E.T. Dunn, F street, corner of Eleventh. Chief Clerk.—Thomas Fillebrown, 1923 H street. BUREAU OF MEDICINE AND SURGERY. Chief of Bureau.—Surgeon W.M, Wood, 1313 K street. Assistant Chief of Burcau.—Surgeon R. C. Dean, 1819 F street. 6 82 CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY. BUREAU OF CONSTRUCTION AND REPAIR. Chief of Bureau.—Naval Constructor John Lenthall, 1818 F street. Chief Clerk.—Hugh Allen Goldsborough, 1916 G street. BUREAU OF EQUIPMENT AND RECRUITING. Claef of Bureau.—Commodore William Reynolds, 1730 H street. Chief Clerk.—S. Henriques, 2007 I street. \ BUREAU OF STEAM ENGINEERING. Chief of Bureau.—Chief Engineer J. W. King, 1215 H street. Chief Clerk.—W. H. H. Smith, H street, corner of T'wenty-second. ADMIRAL’S OFFICE. Admiral D. D. Porter, 1710 H street. Secretary to the Admiral.—J. M. Alden, 1223 Thirteenth street. SIGNAL OFFICE. (1740 F street.) Commodore John M. Almy, in charge. Master C. H. West. NAVAL OBSERVATORY. Superintendent.—Commodore B. F. Sands, at the Observatory. Captain William B. Whiting, 1412 G street. Commander S. L. Breese. Lieut. Commander T. F. Jewell, Gray's, 920 Fifteen-and-a-half street. Professor M. Yarnall, 113 West street, Georgetown. Professor Simon Newcomb, 1336 Eleventh street. Professor Asaph Hall, 18 Gay street, Georgetown. Professor Wm. Harkness, No. Fifteenth street, bet. New York avenue an XH street. 3 Professor Joseph E. Nourse, N. E. cor. Greene and Stoddart streets, Georgetow: 3 3 Professor John R. Eastman, 114 Gay street, Georgetown. HYDROGRAPHIC OFFICE. (Corner of Eighteenth street and New York avenue.) Captain R. H. Wyman, 2101 G street, in charge. Lieut. Commander Yates Stirling. Lieut. Commander Felix McCurley. Lieut. Commander D. C. Woodrow. Master E. C. Pendleton, 26 New Jersey avenue. Clerk.—Thos. T. Thurlow, 1711 G street. NAUTICAL ALMANAC. (Corner of Eighteenth street and New York avenue.) Professor J. H. C. Coffin, 2032 G street N. W. UNITED STATES NAVY YARD, WASHINGTON. [ Rear-Admiral L. M. Goldsbhorough, Navy Yard. Captain T. H. Patterson, Navy Yard. Captain Geo. B. Balch, 139 Congress street, Georgetown, D. C. Commander J. L. Davis, Navy Yard. 3Commander J. H. Gillis, 838 Duke street, Alexandria, Va. % Commander ¥. M. Ramsay, Navy Yard, Washington. Lieut. Commander R. S. Chew, 1627 H street northwest. Master C. V. Morris, Navy Yard. Master C. S_ Ross. ’ Surgeon Ninian Pinkney, Navy Yard. Passed Asst. Surgeon Wm. H. Jones, Navy Yard. Paymaster Jas. D. Murray, 1118 Tenth street northwest. Paymaster W. B. Boggs, Dunbarton street, Georgetown. Chief Engineer W. H. Shock, 6 South Broadway, Baltimore, Md. | | EXECUTIVE DEPARTMENTS. 83 Chief Engineer C. H. Loring, 1221 I street northwest. ‘First Asst. Engineer Geo. D. Emmons, 475 Missouri avenue. First Asst. Engineer D, P. McCartney. Asst. Naval Constructor George R. Boush. Civil Engineer L. A. Stratton, 12 A street northeast. . | PURCHASING AND DISBURSING PAYMASTER., (Corner Fifteenth street and New York avenue.) ) Paymaster —Edwin Stewart, Corcoran street. | | LJ MARINE CORPS. Commandant.—DBrigadier General Jacob Zeilin, headquarters. Adjutant and Inspector.—Major A. S. Nicholson, Woodley lane, Quartermaster.—Major W. B. Slack, 1323 G street. Paymaster.—Major John C. Cash, 200 E street N. W, Washington County. INTERIOR DEPARTMENT. Secretary of the Interior —COLUMBUS DELANO, 1200 K street. Assistant Secretary.— Wm. T. Otto, 1107 F street. Chief Clerk.—J. S. Delano, 1200 K street. Disbursing Clerk.—John R. Goodwin, 12 Grant Place. Superintendent.James BE. Pilkington, 487 E street. — GENERAL LAND OFFICE, Commissioner.—J. S. Wilson, 518 Thirteenth street. Chief Clerk.—M. E. N. Howell, 810 M street north. Recorder.—Julius N. Granger, Washington House. Principal Clerk of Public Lands.—B.'T. Reilly, 806 Seventeenth street. Principal Clerk of Private Lands.—J. ¥'. Stock, 916 New York avenue. A Principal Clerk of Surveys.—S. J. Dallas, 1134 Twelfth street. PENSION OFFICE. Commissioner.—H. Van Aernam, 125 C street southeast. Chief Clerk.—C. S. Trevitt, 1611 Seventh street. PATENT OFFICE. Commaissioner.— | Assistant Commaissioner.—S. A. Duncan | Chief Clerk.—James S. Grinnell, 603 IF street. Ezaminers-in-chief.—S. H. Hodges, 921 I street northwest. J. M. Thacher, 98 Prince street, Alexandria. | R. L. B. Clarke, 216 New Jersey avenue. Ezaminers.—J. Brainerd, 907 H street. | T. C. Connolly, 628 M street. ] ll C. Everett, 319 Ninth street. J.T. Fales, 515 Fourth street. G. W. Gregory, 726 Eleventh street. B. 8. Hedrick, 154 Bridge street, Georgetown. J. W. Jayne, 76 Bridge street, Georgetown. L. Deane, 206 New Jersey avenue south. G. A. Nolen, 1425 Fifth street northwest. T. R. Peale, 1321 K street. | J. W. Abert, (in charge,) 1731 I street. E. Spear, Alexandria, Va. J. C. Tasker, 1103 Ninth street. W. B. Taylor, 316 C street. | A. G. Wilkinson,.1505 K street. | H. T. Munson, 509 N street. E. Quinn, 914 B street south. ! C. M. Parks, 3 Duddington Place. D. S. Stewart, 426 Sixth street. T. C. Folger, 504 Thirteenth street. In charge of Interferences.—J. H. Adams, 1321 New York avenue. Librarian.—@. C. Schaeffer, 1803 H street northwest. CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY INDIAN OFFICE. Commisstoner.—Ely S. Parker, 1310 F street. Chief Clerk.—H. R. Clum, 1429 Corcoran street. CENSUS OFFICE. Superintendent.—Francis A. Walker, 933 M street northwest Chief Clerk.—George D. Harrington, 705 Eighth street. BUREAU OF EDUCATION. [709 G street, north of the Patent Office, between Seventh and Eighth streets. Commissioner of Educativn.—JOHN EATON, jr., 319 East Capitol street. Chief Clerk.—Charles Warren, 1215 Eleventh street northwest. Second Clerk.—Herman Jacobson, 706 Eighth street northwest. POST OFFICE DEPARTMENT. Postmaster General.—JoHN A.J. CRESWELL, 1829 I street. First Assistant Postmaster General.—James W. Marshall, 1507 Rhode Island avenue. Second Assistant Postmaster General.—Giles A Smith, 205 I street northwest. Third Assistant Postmaster General.—W. H. H. Terrell, 730 Twelfth street. Superintendent of Money-order System.—C. F. Macdonald, 312 Indiana avenue. Superintendent of Foreign Mails.—Joseph H. Blackfan, 1130 Twelfth street. Chief of Division of Dead-Letter Office.—Charles Lyman, 1113 K street. Chief Clerk: of Post Office Department.—E. L. Childs, 13 Grant street. Chief Clerk of Appointment Office. —James H. Marr, 1207 Sixth street. Superintendent of Free Delivery.—R. W. Gurley, 201 Fourteenth street, (old number.) Chief Clerk of Contract Office.—J. L. French, 20 Defrees street. Chief Clerk of Finance Office. —Wm. M. Ireland, 413 Fourth street northwest. Disbursing Clerk and Sup’t.—F. A. Macartney, Q street, bet. Fourteenth and Fifteenth. Topographer.—W. L. Nicholson, 939 H street, between Ninth and Tenth. DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE. Attorney General.—AMos T. AKERMAN, 1405 F street. Solicitor General.—B. H. Bristow, corner Seventeenth and I streets. Assistant Attorney General.—Clement Hugh Hill, 1115 I street. Assistant Attorney Genmeral.—Thomas H. Talbot, 1221 Thirteenth street. Solicitor of the Treasury.—E. C. Banfield, 927 O street. Assistant Solicitor of the Treasury.—J. H. Robinson, 1327 Thirteenth street. Solicitor of Internal Revenuwe.—W. H. Smith, 1010 Eleventh street. Solicitor of the Navy.—John A. Bolles, 623 KE street. Examiner of Claims of the State Department.—E. Peshine Smith, 305 D street. Law Clerke.—A. J. Bentley, 1116 Ninth street. Chief Clerk.—A. J. Falls, 951 Massachusetts avenue. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE. Commissioner of Agriculture. —HORACE CAPRON, Agricultural Building. Chief Clerk.—R. TL. McLain, Sunnyside Station, Baltimore and Ohio railroad. Disbursing Clerk.—B. ¥. Fuller, 506 Maryland avenue. Statistical Clerk.—J. R. Dodge, 1423 Eighth street northwest. Entomologist. —Townend Glover, 704 H street. ‘ Chemist.— Thomas Antisell, M. D., Uniontown, Maryland. Superintendent of Propagating Garden.—William Saunders, Four-and-a-half street. Librarian.——Stuart Eldridge, 1003 Massachusetts avenue northwest. Botanist.—C. C. Parry, M.D. 1007 Maryland avenue scuthwest. ee a RS Wi HEY THE JUDICIARY. THE JUDICIARY. a RP Ae SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES. [The * designates those whose wives accompany them; the § designates those whoge daughters accompany them ; the [| designates those having other ladies with them. ] Mr. Chief Justice Chase. N'3 , * Mr. Justice Nelson, National Hotel. f 5M i * Mr. Justice Clifford, National Hotel. * § Mr. Justice Swayne, 513 Thirteenth street. * Mr. Justice Miller, Metropolitan Hotel. * || Mr. Justice Davis, National Hotel. * Mr. Justice Field, 21 First street, east, Capitol Hill. * Mr. Justice Strong, Ebbitt House. “0 || Mr. Justice Bradley, 201 I street, corner of New Jersey avenue. OFFICERS OF THE SUPREME COURT. D. W. Middleton, esq., clerk, 214 New Jersey avenue. " R.C. Parsons, esq., marshal, Willard’s Hotel. John Wm. Wallace, esq., reporter, National Hotel. CIRCUIT COURTS OF THE UNITED STATES. First Judicial Circuit.—Mr. Justice Clifford, of Portland, Maine. Districts of Maine, New Hampshire, Massacht setts, and Rhode Island. Second Judicial Circuit.—-Mr. Justice Nelson, of Cooperstown, New York. Districts of Ver-mont, Connecticut, Southern New York, Southern New York, and Eastern New York. Third Judicial Circuit.—Mc. Justice Strong, of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Districts of New Jersey, Eastern Pennsylvania, Western Pennsylvania, and Delaware. Fourth Judicial Circuit.—Mr. Chief Justice Chase, of Ohio; official residence at Washing -ton, District of Columbia. Districts of Maryland, West Virginia, Virginia, North Carolina, and South Carolina. Fifth Judicial Circuit.—Mr. Justice Bradley, of Newark, New Jersey. Districts of Georgia, Northern Florida, Southern Florida, Northern Alabama, Southern Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, Eastern Texas, and Westerr Texas. Sizth Judicial Circuit.—Mr. Justice Swayne, of Columbus, Ohio. Districts of Northern Ohio, Southern Ohio, Eastern Michigan. Western Michigan, Kentucky, Eastern Tennessee, and Western Tennessee. Seventh Judicial Circuit.—Mr. Justice Davis, of Bloomington, Illinois. Districts of Indi-ana, Northern Illinois, Southern Illinois, and Wisconsin. Eighth Judicial Circuit,—Mr, Justice Miller, of Keokuk, Yowa. Districts of Minnesota, owa, Kastern Missouri, Western Missouri, Kansas, Eastern Arkansas, Western Arkansas, and Nebraska. Ninth Judicial Circuit.—Mr. Justice Field, of San Francisco, California. Districts of California, Oregon, and Nevada. UNITED STATES COURT OF CLAIMS. Chief Justice , — Judge Edward G. Loring, 1512 K street, N. W. Judge Ebenezer Peck, northeast corner of Washington street, Georgetown Heights. Judge Charles C. Nott, Connecticut avenue, corner of I street. Judge Samuel Milligan, Washington House. Chief Clerk.—Samuel H. Huntington, 809 E street. Assistant Clerk.—John Randolph, 215 E street. Bailiff.—Stark B. Taylor, 481 H street. Assistant Attorney General, charged with the business of the Court of Claims.—Thomas H. Talbot, 1221 Eighteenth street. Clerks in the Assistant Attorney General's Office.—Alexander Johnston, 941 L street; Albert D. Robinson, 1228 N street ; Jacob Shroder, 320 Indiana avenue. Assistants in Captured or Abandoned Property Cases.—Joseph A. Ware, 197 C street Southeast. John A. Rowland, 600 Sixth street northwest. Thomas H. Knight, 920 Twen-~ tieth street northwest. TN CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY. / "FOREIGN LEGATIONS IN THE UNITED STATES. ARGENTINE REPUBLIC. Don Manuel Rafael Garcia, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, 912 1 { street. Captain Carlos Carranza, Secretary of the Legation, 1340 I street. Don Tomas Mota, Attaché of the Legation, 1340 I street. AUSTRIA—HUNGARY. Baron Chailes Lederer, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, 1715 H street. Count Maximilian Esterhazy, Attaché, 1801 I street. i Baron Edward Pino Friedenthal, Secretary of the chancery of the Legation, 1749 Penn | sylvania avenue. : BELGIUM. M. Maurice Delfosse, Minister Resident, 1714 Pennsylvania avenue. i M. Alfred Berghmans, Counsellor of Legation, 1721 H street. 4 Baron H. Van Havre, Secretary of Legation. (Absent.) i BRAZIL. Senhor Domingos José Gonsalves de Magalhaens, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. (Absent.) Senhor Dom Luis Augusto de Padua Fleury, Charge d’Affaires ad interim, 1116 Fourteenth street. CHILI. Sefior Don Joaquin Godoy, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. Sefior Carlos Morla Vicuna, Secretary. Sefior Julio Prieto Urriola, Attaché. DENMARK. F. E. Bille, Minister Resident, 1215 K street. ECUADOR Senator Don Antonio Flores, Minister Resident, Arlington House; Westminster Hotel, N.Y. Don Nicolas Ansado, Attaché, 7 Broadway, New York city. FRANCE. M. le Vicomte Treilhard, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Hamilton House, corner K and Fourteenth streets. M. de Bellonnet, First Secretary. (Absent.) M. le Comte de Turenne, Third Secretary, 1707 G street. M. le Comte de Pourtalis-Gorgier, Attaché. M. Paul Dejardin, Consul-chancelier, 828 Fourteenth street, corner of I street. GREAT BRITAIN. Sir Edward Thornton, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, 1627 I street. Francis Clare Ford, Esq., First Secretary. (Absent.) Captain the Hon. Wm. J. Ward, R. N., Naval Attaché. (Absent.) 4 W. Peere Williams Freeman, Esq., Second Secretary. (Absent.) 1 Hon. P. H. Le Poer Trench, Second Secretary. (Absent.) 1 H. Styleman le Strange, esq., Third Secretary, 1724 I street. GREECE, Mr. Cleon Rizo Rangabé, Chargé d’ Affaires ad interim, 1336 G street. HAWAIIAN ISLANDS. S. U. F. Odell, Chargé d’Affaires, 24 Beaver street, New York. FOREIGN LEGATIONS. HAYTI. Stephen Preston, Minister Resident, residence, Arlington House; office of the legation, 1425 F street. Clement Haentjens, Secretary of Legation, 64 and 66 Broadway,New York. j ITALY. 5) Count Corti, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, 2017 G street. Count Zannini, First Secretary of Legation, 1422 New York avenue. LIBERIA. Henry M. Schieffelin, Esq., Chargé d’ Affaires, Yonkers, New York. Mr. William Coppinger, Secretary of Legation, Colonization yooms, Pennsylvania avenue. MEXICO. Senor Don Ignacio Mariscal, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, 1326 Massachusetts avenue. Sefior Don Manuel G. Portugal, First Secretary. (Absent.) Senor Don Cayetano Romero, Second Secretary, 903 O street. NETHERLANDS. Mr. A. Mazel, Minister Resident, 1720 H street, between Seventeenth and Eighteenth streets. NICARAGUA. Senior Don José Rosa Perez, Chargé d’Affaires, 29 Broadway, New York. NORTH GERMAN UNION—PRUSSIA. Baron von Gerolt, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, 734 Fifteenth st. Baron von Alvensleben, Secretary of Legation, 1806 H street. Mr. P. W. Buddecke, Chancellor of Legation, 472 Pennsylvania avenue. PERU. Col. Don Manuel Freyre, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, 737 Fifteenth street. Don Eduardo Villena, Secretary of Legation, 1340 I street, corner of Fourteenth. Don Felipe Freyre, Attaché, 737 Fifteenth street, PORTUGAL. Senhor Antonio da Cunha Pereira de Sotto Maior, Chargé d’ Affaires ad interim, 1532 Ninth street west, and in the summer, 148 Second avenue, New York City. Senhor Jeronimo de Margalhaes Colago, Attaché, Arlington House, and in the summer, 61 Clinton place, New York City. RUSSIA. ‘Mr. Constantin de Catacazy, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, 1336 I street, Franklin Square. Mr. Waldemar de Bodisco, First Secretary. (On a temporary leave of absence.) Mr. Boris Danzas, Second Secretary, 1707 Pennsylvania avenue. Colonel Gorlow, Military Agent and Attaché, Hartford, Connecticut. 1 Senior Don Mauricio Lopez Roberts, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, 2015 G street, near Seventeenth. Senor Don Luis de Potestad, First Secretary, 109 West street, Georgetown. Senior Don Enrique Vallés, Second Secretary, 456 New York avenue. (Absent.) Sefior Don Pedro Diez de Rivera, Attaché. (Absent.) Senior Don Francisco de Estrada Paez, Attaché, 456 New York avenue. (Absent.) Senor Don Casimiro Franguelo, Attaché, 1749 Pennsylvania avenue. Senor Don Tomasco del Pulgar, Attaché 189 F street, old number. CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY. SWITZERLAND. Mr. John Hitz, Political Agent and Consul General, J. C. Warren, Secretary, 1323 F street north. B. Th. Scheitlin, Attaché, 2106 I street. 925 Pennsylvania wvenue. SWEDEN AND NORWAY. Mr. Oluf Stenersen, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Count C. Lewenhaupt, Chargé d’ Affaires ad interim, 1804 H street. 1304 H street. SALVADOR AND GUATEMALA. Senor Don José Maria Vela, Chargé d’Affaires, Baltimore, 138 St. Paul street. TURKEY. Blacque Baltazzi Bey, Envoy Extraordinary Effendi, Secretary, Chargé and Minister d’Affaires ad Plenipotentiary. interim, 1404 H (Absent. ) street. UNITED STATES OF COLOMBIA. Sefior Senor Don Santiago Pérez, Minister Enrique Cortes, Secretary of Resident, Legation, 1417 G street. 111 East Twenty-fifth street, New York. MEXICAN (Office COMMISSION, 1412 H street.) Commissioner on the part of the United States.— William Henry Wadsworth. Agent on the part of the United States.—J. Hubley Ashton. Secretary on the part of the United States.—Randoiph Coyle. Commissioner on the part of the Mexican Republic.—Francisco Gomez Palacio. Agent on the part of the Mexican Republic.—Caleb Cushing. Secretary on the part of the Mexican Republic —J. Carlos Mexia. UNITED STATES LEGATIONS. UNITED STATES LEGATIONS ABROAD. ARGENTINE REPUBLIC. R. C. Kirk, Minister Resident, Buenos Ayres. AUSTRIA. John Jay, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Vienna, John F. Delaplaine, Secretary of Legation. BELGIUM. J. R. Jones, Minister Resident, Brussels. BRAZIL. Henry T. Blow, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Rio de Janeiro, BOLIVIA. Leopold Markbreit, Minister Resident, Cochabamba. CHILI. Joseph P. Root, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Santiago. , Secretary of Legation, Santiago. CHINA. F.F. Low, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Peking. S. Wells Williams, Secretary of Legation and Interpreter, Peking. COSTA RICA. Jacob B. Blair, Minister Resident, San José. DENMARK. M. J. Cramer, Minister Resident, Copenhagen. . ECUADOR. E. Rumsey Wing, Minister Resident, Quito. FRANCE. Ellihu B. Washburne, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Paris. Wickham Hoffman, Secretary of Legation, Paris. Frank Moore, Assistant Secretary of Legation, Paris. GREAT BRITAIN. , Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, London. Benjamin Moran, Secretary of Legation, London. Chargé d’Affaires, ad interim. E. 8. Nadal, Assistant Secretary of Legation. GUATEMALA. S. A. Hudson, Minister Resident, Guatemala City. HAWAIIAN ISLANDS, Henry A. Peirce, Minister Resident, Honolulu. HAYTI. Ebenezer D. Bassett, Minister Resident and Consul General, Port-au-Prince. HONDURAS. Henry Baxter, Minister Resident, Tegucigalpa. ITALY. George P. Marsh, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Florence. George W. Wurts, Secretary of Legation, Florence. 90 CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY. = | C. A. E. L. JAPAN. De Long, Minister Resident, Yedo. C C. Portman, Secretary of Legation and Interpreter, Yedo. J. W. Mason, Minister Resident and LIBERIA. Consul General, Monrovia. | MEXICO. Thomas H. Nelson, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Porter C. Bliss, Secretary of Legation. Plenipotentiary. | Charles T. Gorham, Minister THE NETHERLANDS. Resident, the Hague. Charles N. Riotte, Minister NICARAGUA. Resident, Leon. | John L. Stevens, Minister PARAGUAY. Resident, Asuncion. Henry M. Brent, Chargé d’ Affaires. PERU. Chas. H. Lewis, Minister Resident, PORTUGAL. Lisbon. Alexander Bliss, Chargé d’affaires. PRUSSIA. Andrew Eugene RUSSIA. G. Curtin, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, 8. Schuyler, Secretary of Legation, St. Petersburg. St. Petersburg. IE A. T. A. Torbert, Minister SALVADOR. Resident, San Salvador. SPAIN. D. E. Sickles, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Alvey A. Adee, Secretary of Legation, Madrid. Plenipotentiary, Madrid. C. C. Andrews, Minister SWEDEN AND Resident, Stockholm. NORWAY. Horace Rublee, Minister SWHITZERLAND. Resident, Berne. Wayne Mac Veagh, Minister John P. Brown, Secretary of TURKEY. Resident, Constantinople. Legation and Dragoman, Constantinople. / S. A. Hurlbut, UNITED Minister Resident, STATES Bogota. OF COLOMBIA. ! 3 John L. Stevens, Minister Resident, URUGUAY. Montevideo. J. R. Partridge, Minister VENEZUELA, Resident, Caracas. UNITED STATES CONSULATES, ETC. CONSULATES, CONSULATES GENERAL, AND COMMERCIAL AGENCIES. ALPHABETICALLY ARRANGED, WITH THEIR RESPECTIVE AGENCIES. Consular offices. Consular officers. Rank. Adelnide. ARSON ocean nae Adve, Spain coe senoaiCee on Adrianople, Turkey. los innscoscidonnns Aguadilla, Porio Bice... .-o-ao. Aguas Calientes, Mexico ............. Aintab, Syela dont. co a a Aix--la-Chapelle, Prussia. . ear Alkyab, Bengalil.. on us odonectiaites Albany, Awstealin. . oe. oe iil Aleppo, Syria... nn eeve Sen vans Alexandretin,Syia cco veeecn cman: Alexandria, Boypl. cu covenoan iis Algiers, Afrlea li. ped cut gudindn sabe Bo ciiaiinn ination Alicante, Spain......LL... ...... 8 Almeria, Spain... cai civen opecesni Amoor River , Asia, (Nicolaefski) - SEER Do Aoapate, NovaSeolin. ._ ui: Antigua, West Indies... .... ...ooot 0 ee AR Antwerp, Belplum ..c.0, coumeeiin Apia, Navigator's Islands ...... -..... Avclinngel, Russia... co cave nuaas. Arecibo, Porto Bien 2 oo onieen ines Arica, Polo Arichat, Cape Breton... co vianssins Aspinwall, United States of Colombia.. Doi oil th ain pee Asuncion, Paraguay... cccv oe anien ne Aine Greece ni 0 a ar Fr PRE Aveiro, a a Bahia, Braz) Ea RE Uriah Saunders........ : Consular agent. Alex Brand oneal Deo. John A. Sutter, jr -...... Commercial agent. H.N.Bellows........0.- Vice-commercial agent. Ja asSmithl. ouch Consular agent. Ramen Medina... ...... T.E. Blunt... .. Ed.Kepjseh...-........ NM. Metealf.... . i. Consular agent. Consul. Consular agent. Henry KB. Foll «conn: Do. J.de Piceloto... 0... Do. Do. Consul general. Wm. L. M. Burger ....- Consul. R. 8. Playfair .......... Vice-consgul. Consul. Alexi Lluch......-.... Consular agent. Charles I. Smith. ...... Commercial agent. HW. Hiler Lo Vice-commercial agent. @. W.LeGendre.... -.- Consul. W.R. Jones ............ Vice-consul. Chaz. Mueller ...iwevaids Consul. AVinke oi occ caag Vice-consul. cme cca Emm + cc mer mm _——. pe. Consul. Vice-Consul. W.B. Buggles ...... -.. Consular agent. Henry A. Arrindell...... Commercial agent. Ed. Hovel Mans ........ Vice-commercial agent. Consul. Commercial agent, Consul. Consular agent. Vice-consul. 3.6. McKean ...... ... Consular agent. Charles B. Perry....... Consul. Jo Bewy oo. Vice-consul. Consul. Do. Do. Max. Obermayer -... .... Vice-consul. Wo. A. Gould... -...... Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. R.A.Edes . imsns senile Consul. Do. Viece-consul, Marshal. Interpreter. CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY. Consular offices. Consular officers. Rank. Bavacon, Cuba i coin.ahi Bathadogg gio ee eats Baveslona, Spain Lo oto oo L, Darmen, Progsin) oa. sim ii smh Barrington, Nova Scotia . vuvuevunums Basle, Switzerland... .... ME Cee eee sce eme cme ny sm --— Basse Tor re, nie Se Batavia, avn SL ER Le i ST femme e cece n Veta cm men ---— pg pg Bay of ds, New Zealand ........ Bayonne, Banta eds i Beaumaris, Wales... ora Bedeque, Prince Edward Island ...... Bein, Byriai nh nae oniiu seid Belem, Portugal Belfast, Tosand Ee eee ® cee. meme Bama mem »--a Belleville, Canada. oh wl os a dw Bergen, Norway ..0a. 0 ow... Borlip, Prussia. oarvole ida) Bouts West Indiog: oh... ohnell Tt en a SER Blssan, Afton ogee in oo 0000 Bogota, United States of Colombia .... Bombay, Bengal can... ...... cea: Bonaire, West Indies....ov.nu.vuunns Bordeaux, Heel DT eT Brake, i ET a lee ws la Brava, Verde Islands Bremen, Germany fmm mms teem en mene smn —--a- Ly Na Woy a Brunn, Austria, (Moravia)..-........ Bristol, England oo oo. ooo Si a I Brockville, Comada.: 2... ..... 0.0 Brunswick, Germanyeo-o--consent - Brussels, Belginom. .cccer cvveis vinren Bucharest, Turkeys... .ovnnrzvszinsis Buenaventura, United States of Colombia Buenos Ayres, Argentine Republic... Brixham, England BB. Aayn loc nonin Robert Y. Holley... .....-. D.C. DaCosta... Henry Ruggles...... ... Emil Hoechster......... Gl. Roberison. --.-------Henvyllmml So. cin... A Wollll ieee ie lmeoun Son a 8S. Higginson, jr .-------. MP. Pela: i. i. ‘DavidW. E. Brown. .... JG Wihite oo J Boge. dl T.M. Besoney .------.--JamesiBea. . ....cuu oon. CaMiAllen ......0 0. c. EF. Allene iio. bd. Ed. Ce JW, Layden..... ... .. GC Cane... G. A. Kittredge ........... W.Y. Boye... ........ Cd. Blivoh:. ooo ou Wo Olgioh ieee ne id Tipton hemi ell Jno. W. Barnet -....... i. Schoelley........cveun Edgar Stanton ......-..--Jas. Burrell.....c.cu..-iW. A. Schofield......... DeWitt C. Sprague fits Re Braud) Yo a And, Cheflain.. ..n.vice.- B. HW. Peixoito .....cui-. du. Bder Dexter E. Clapp ....... B.Vitlery..—.. .....-e-.. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Do. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. << Consul. ! Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul, Commercial agent. Consular agent. Deo. Do. Consul general. Vice-consul general. Consular clerk. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Commercial agent. Vice-commercial agent. Consular agent. Consul. Do. Do. Vice: consul. Consul. Vice-consul, Consul. Deo. Consular agent. Consul. Do. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Commercial agent. Vice-commercial agent Consular agent. Do. Consul. Deputy consul. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Ei Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Consul. Viece-consul. - Consular agent. UNITED STATES CONSULATES, ETC. e Consular offices. Consular officers. Rank. Cadiz, Spain... deansmmmes Alfred N. Duffie........ Consul. even Do sama ntobon Ll radii Chae. BIC Younger-y. Vice-consul. Cagliari, Ttaly tik ns sialondite Te POINIR Ld ih sin ennns Consular agent. Colpba, Syria. useless JeNagrallah. o.oo al Do. Core, Boyph abd io lh ne vn sdemen dR he cae Consul. Dio nna asia s 008 Walmass.......... daaeliins Felix Vice-consul. Calols, Bane. nnsis dnmiee J.P, Vendroux ..oe..--. Consular agent. jdiinsecen Calcutta, Besigal BI res mn Se Marsh Giddings -.. .....| Consul general. Bo isos a i se ha vee GC. 0. Bailey.....ocenesn Vice-consul general, Caldera, ar ASelwerly ....ve venus. Consular agent. Callng, Bort co cideaulssai dnms dost D. J. Williamson .......| aes Consul. Camargo, Mexieh neue -rnccos J. P. Kelsey ............| Consular cuaeee agent. Campeachy, Mexlesiold © i ti amano e ser etaioaine Simi ae Consul. Gonna, Jota of Crete, Turkey ...--.. Hugo Hillebrandt ...... Do. SEA EC EE RE ee TE E.A. Alexis ............| Vice-consul. Ont Cilio SR NA nd a a RG. W. Jewell... Consul. a a fu D. Vrooman............| Interpreter. Cape Chaos and ChateauBay, Labrador] J. W. Dodge -.......... Consular agent. Cape Haytien, Haytl ..............u% Stanislas Goutier .......| Consul. Do ume: mala Se iniaiewwe == o}i ViCE-CONSUL Cape Town, Cape of Good Hope -a Gor. Gotavd Consul. Cardons, Venezuela... . ccvewnnui Erastus C. Pruyn ...... Commercial agent, eons Cardenas, Cuba tu. ooe cnc nani-lid Nelyangih 0. eae: Consular agent, Cardiff, Wales ...... FR ed HE Dovis..ooen 520 Consul. Cazligle, Enoland.. oo... cuesena Thos. Wright... ...._...| Consular agent, Cavlstohe, Baden. oiilo. a... 00 WW. H. Young... ........ Consul. |TTR E Ri EC NR EO RE L. W. Broadwell ........ Vice-consul. Carvays, Maly. ovis cceeaosnanl EB. horgey. oan ood Consul. Hr CE LC ee ColPolling 0. aa Vice-consul. Carthagena, Spain... ......... C-Moling. cov: Consul. Carthagena, United States of Colombia.| A.S. Hanabergh........ Do. Caraipano, Venezuela ................ E. Whiteford ....... ..--Consular agent. Casa-Blanca, Morocco ---...occueu--. NVLLANSY. on omc Do. Castelamare, Maly co). Antonio De Luceca.. .... Consular agent. Catania, Slelly ouve. oil Cael A Berstoner. . oo. vee vues Do. {layenne, Guiana. cae abio nn oli Consul. cue. Ceara, Beagll. oad ude on a RiP. Hughes... ...0 Consular agent. Cecimbra, Portugal... ......c.--C.. F. J. Lopez Do. Cotte, Bvance coins vo inna, L.S. Nahmens ......ccuu. Deo. Cloylop, India foesfo oils, GoW. Prescott. ....v.a. Commercial agent Chatham and Newcastle, N.B ........ Consular agent. Chathom; Ontorle. cana Do. cc...neas Che Too, Ching occu t on. Siang: Consul. Chemnilz, Saxony... conceal Henry B. Rider......... Do. Cherbomy, Branee.oo. o... cece ls Pmi¥ Postel ...... ove. Consular agent. Chilwahwa, Mexleo...2--. -o-ie anti JiR Bewnett.. .. 0... Consul. Chin Kiang, China: ooo... oi Eli T. Sheppard........ Do. 10 ya SYS A Ua AQ, Colquit... cwewvvne-Marshal. Chittagong, India vee -ouiauaic. Ware. Consular agent. eeenen eae ie. Christiania, Norway. >... ...... Gerhard Gade... ......... Consul. {Chri stonNeTSe ane mim mini ol QO. Reinhardt. ........ Vice-consul. ethno C. Christiansand, Norway. ..c........... Consular agent. Ulenfuegoes, Cuba ou caeicniaras MBE 5 cola. Morris. Deo. Ciudad Bolivar, Venezuela -.......... John Dalton ....-...o. Consul. | Civita Vecchia, Italy. ..... : ES ET Consular agent. Clifton, Canada. esa taste So cicero Consul. DO amid wie ieme ni Ss Ira'B. Jones ..........-Deputy consul. Coaticook, Canada. TE IN Edwin Vaughn......... Consul. D Miles K. Stone Deputy consul. Cobia, Bolivia gouaeacie. iniaidtioini Consul. Cobourg, Canada: ne niodisicceivaind I . Consular ach. Lawrence. ns agent. Coconada, India Do. Coonng, Trance oli. cue inne Do. risves Cologne, Prussificee ces conte ~amdsen-Consular agent, Colombo, Ceylon. ..... Vice-commercial agent. | 94 CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY. ; I Consular offices. | Colonia, Uruguay -. -- - vo): i Comayagua and Tegucigalpa, Honduras] Censtaniinople, Turkey... wv venus a-s | Bas Ete egre {ne at I Se Sa | A ST GN HIE Do.. nia ee nome of Copenhagen, Pah LE DT Ie Se | Coquimbe, Chill .... ..............; Do....0.cni--==1-n- all Corfu, lonjami sles. ... oi coo - | Cork, Ireland ..L ov conn | Corunna, Spain... oias on -oe=zmeimme Cow Bay, Nova Seofin ..-..- co-owns dowes, England... ..cv....-.... | Crofold, Prussia. 0... ......dies | Cronstads, Russiai.............. oo. | Curagoa, West Todlon: bon aveniisnns Do asa Cyprus, Turkey. HLA ERA Se Si Damagons, Syria... .....-"uoene-aa. | DPanizig, Prussia... .-....---....._. Darimonth, England ...-.......----- Demerara, British Guiana ............ LCRRL SRI a i Denia; Spain. eee te cannes Dieppe, France.........---- ota ino Dighy, Nova Seotia.......... zo] Dresden, SAXONY onze snmr =e on oivoins ( Drontheim, Norway....:-=== + v=o= | Dublin, dead HS ae RR A SI [ Dundee, A De oahu’ mim wm Ta Dundee, Canada... .-..c---.---...... Duneden, New Zealond..........---- Dunkirk, France. .ccwe'eevau'neve Dunmore Town, Bahamas............ Dusseldorf, Prassia.............--az I East Harbor, Turk’s Island..--....... Bisinore, Denmark... ..... cco vu... Espinho, Portugal...--..----x-nn---- | Palmouth, England ........-..-.cx. | fT PRR ey PE LN Falmouth, Jamaica. .--.-..--o-oo Fano, Pent eh hla | Faro, Portugal veeiowsinn smszn nnn Payal, Azores.........----..---..... | Figueira, Portugal ...--- -----.-...--. | Fume, Austria Ln coe ee | Florence, Iialy.--.. so onvicniinrscae-- | 3 OR I | Tlores, AZOTeS. ur einrisi=zievnons. cual Flushing, Netherlands ....0 oie cone Fogo, Cape Verde Islands .. cen. ...... Poo-Chow, China. ....... .=.-.. Coo... | 1ElSR I eeee Fort de France, Martinique. ..........| Fort Erle, Canada ..o---------->..... AR CE RS CI Frankfort-on-the-Main, Prussia . ...... DO..ucimmcssnnnineenow amnion Mo RL Be IR le | Fredericton, New Brunswick ......... Frederickshaven, Denmark........... Consular officers. B.D, Manton... .........{ W. C. Burchard ..._.... J. H. Goodenow ........ D. Stamatiades ......... A. Thompson... .-v.--.- J. Garzuilo..-vc... cect. Ae As Gargailo bn ool, Sn 1.A. Hecksher ..... .... €.¢. Greene .....-..... J. denking ............> T.-Woodley -.-:--.------Chas. K. Brayton....... A. G, Puertes....-------CO: Areliibild ... on. ----TT. Harling. -.......--Julius Magnus.......... A Willsme ova Wm. H. Faxon... ......| HM Cary. ea oY 1.P.diCesnola.......<. M. Meshaka............ P.Collgg ll. oS R. Eingston.........--. P. Bigyelmesy.......... Jog. Tenmély ........... J. Morand... -.----. J.1e Vert ..----..uu... 3.0 Wades .....r.vown- O. Ff. Tuish-............. M. H. Lundgreen -...... * Edward D. Neill ........ John Rainsford.........| Smith -.........- .... E. A. Buckman ........ HH. Diiver...o-v sama H. Temative...-__...... Wm. BH Seay. ...... .... Henry Louis ........... JONES S/n imi sissiesmine Chris. C. Sheals........ J. J: D’Almeids ----.... 2Vom...c......00.... H¥ox.---..---cucnnne R.Nunes ...-cevuennnn.. Ber PY. .Javarez........-.. J.C. Cover... ....._.. GC. 1aidley .---.------.- IL. Brancoyiich ......... Jas. L. Graham.........| J.C Matton! .......... G. de F. Henriques. ---.: J.-J. 1. Hector. ........ J.C. Bubess ..---.-.... Milton M. De Lano -....| Thoyns Donn.......... B-L.lyman....-.---.. Gustave de la Roche....| Andrew C. Phillips......| Jno. M. 8. Hunter. ...... William P. Webster. .... Charles Graebe ......... Aug. Glaser’. .......----S Buwker.......... .... PL. Kall oo. na. Rank. Consul, Deo. Consul general. Vice-consul general. Marshal. » / Acting deputy marshal. ; Interpreter. Consul. Vice-consul. 1 Consul. 7 Deputy consul. Consular agent. | Consul. Consular agent. Do. Deo. | Do. | Do. . Consul. I Yice-constl, { Consul. Consular agent. Do. , Da, Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Consular agent. Do. Consul. 3 Consular agent. 4 Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Consular agent. Do. Do. Do. Do. Do. Consul. Consular agent. Consul. Deputy consul. Consular agent. Do. Do. Consul. Consular agent. Consular agent. 5 Consul general. Vice-consul general. Consular agent. Deo. ti Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Marshal. Consular agent. Consul. Deputy consul. Consul general. Vice-consul general. Consular clerk. Consular agent. Deo. UNITED STATES CONSULATES, ETC. Consular offices. Frederickstadt, Santa Cruz ........... relighsburg, Cotnde. ht Tveemantle, Australia... .. .... 02.) Fanchal, Madelra ...-.0... .0hLa.. Gaboon, Aes he mint wd Se ar D Gallipol], Jaly oo ceamrnenaales crear I Tl nd RS ala Gaspd Basin, Canada... 1... Seosismnds, Preein.. aie Borodin, Prince Edward Island.. .. Ghent, Belgium -....... hieart ee Do a] Spain Ca a se Gioia, aly... 0. ea a Girgenti, Ualy coor odoinocl... Glasgow, Scotland..._ ..... -._.. Glace Bay, No Su s.r. Gloucester, England .................. Gluckstadt, Denmark. ie... heii. Goderich, Canada... 5...ii. Gonaives, Haytl i: _ i... .......... Golienburg, Sweden vous .....-...-c:. Groclogn, Rzores ..... 0 Grong Bassa, Tdberia i... ....... Grand Caymans, Jamaica ............ Green Turtle Bay, West Indies ...._.. Guadaloupe, West Indies. ............ Gusnaiafiame, Cuba......... ... Guatemala, (city)... ...._........ Guayama, Perio: Rico. ----. ........ Guayaquil, Beuador. cue ovensnann LITE ee A Guaymas, Mexico... .......0... Guernsey, Great Britain.............. Guysborough, Nova Scotia............ Bowed, Eo ol ee Do Hamburg, Germeny -.--.............-Hamilton, Bermuds ...... ana .t. Hamilton, COnNan a.a Do 1) Do Harbot Island, ... Bahamas...=... Harbor Grace, Newfoundland......._. Hovamm, Cuba... 0 Hatbure. sr aes nvre, ance. Co. ea |Lr Lt RI eis i Helsiugfors, Finland... ..uee cue Hemminaford, Conads..:.-.......0ui: Hesse-Darmstadt, Prussia ............ Hilo, Hawatian .......... Islands .... Consular officers. W. F. Moore Bonin bas J Fiutchizon . =... Ane Ferrol oll. niie: Wn. R.DBrown -.......: A -Havlman o.oo.io Woartman .... on ‘W. Colvin Brown....... Ed. Ulrichs ae OQ. M. Spencer ..----.... Joseph Valerio .....-.. A.A. McDonald ........ E.R. a eo ln IN. J. Sprague =... ...... LiGifene. 00 an BL. Kendall... JS. Schenck. .......... A. A, Thompson ........ A. Hilchenbach .-..-... PE Basler... iva José de Castio C. e Mello. LL. 2. Richardson: ..-:.: Henry Horben--........ Uriah Saunders. ....-... HenryHouben.......... Eugene M. Verges...... Ewe TT Wo BaRlea on nari N. Emery Rice... --.... M.M Jackson... NN. GCunnigon. .. 4...0... Rank. Consular agent. Do. Do. Consul. Commercial agent. Vice-commercial agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Consul. Do. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Consul. Do. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Consul. Consular agent. Do. Consul. Consular agent. Consular agent. Consul. Consular agent. Commercial agent. Consular agent. Do. Consul. Consular agent. Consul. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Consular agent. Do. Consul. Vice-consul, Do. Do. Consul. Consular agent. Consul. Deputy consul. Consul. Marshal. Do. Do. Consul general. Vice-consul general. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Consul. Consul. Vice-consul. 96 CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY. » Consular offices. Consular officers. Rank Hilo, awaliondslands. .. .. ........c. {clo Worth.... .......wi | Vice-consul. Hobart Town, Tasmania ............. D. McPherson, jr-----.--Consul. Honfleur, Yraneel:.................. CG Weaomer). Consular agent. Hong-Kong, China... ........... Chas. N. Goulding...... Consul. Honolulu, Hawaiian Islands.......... Calvin S. Mattoon ...... Do. Huddersfield, England. .............. ¢.3. Whitman. ._ ....-. Consular agent. Huelva, Spain 00 0 J bl a Do. Holl, Englander te. loo vo OH. J. Atkinson... ..... Do. lloilo, Philippine Islands ............. Jog. Bo Emat 0... 00 | Do. Tvien, (Islandhcmiiesoo on 08 We Waolllsl 0. ..__... | Do. ol Inemel, Hay toes lott Charles .. | Agent of comm’] agent, andi Moravia......| Foiln, Tugay bak 00 John B.Qay...-......-| Consular agent. | Jalopa, Mexieo 0h Ls ea ans Do. | Jeremie, Blayiiiasl ln Con nl Be Weiner ............. Do. Jorsoy Pelomit i020 LEE 11 0 Do. FBewent.....~ | Jotnsalem, Sprit. Looper il R.Denmdsley ....... Consul. | a Le LS EL Sm Jo lay........ Deputy consul. i Romagawa, Japan. i... cui iianil, Lomuel Lyon ...... .... Consul. i Yio oo ttumibss,ati, Jos. Harte... oi... Deputy Lo consul. Boi. gossUn : Interpreter. | Kingston, Jamajen -.... ....... 0 Thos. H. Pearne. ....... Consul. i 0 EL J.B. Nonls:........... Vice-consul. | Hingston; ... .. .... B.Yanecs........0 Canada... SN. Consul. | Buin, Chimal. eis nuin Consul. i Konigshere, Prussia... .........c... J. HH. Brockman ........ Consular agent. | IJurrachee, Sinde.. kL... ..........o0 B.P. Woynham ......... Do. | Lachine, Canada .. ................ [i Fred’k Hiching. .. .. .. ..| Consular agent, [| Tages, Povingal ol.... .... |.J. M. Mascarenhas ..... Do. .... l Laguayra, Venezuels................ Pe Heche. Consul. aESE aap cL en eeon Vice-consul. Laguna, Mexico ...... ............... M.R.Cearballe.......... Do. Lahaina; Hawalien' ote... Lo. Lo agent. Tlands..........0). Consular L.a Libertad, San Salvador............ J. Marcenaro.... . Lone Do. Lambayeque, Perm .......-........... 8. ¢. Mountjoy .-.-.....-. Consul. Be... .. ov... LG Bd Self.2 Viee-congul. Lonthals, Pil Islands -...........5.. JL Brower... 4 Commercial agent. 0. Lanzarotte, Canary Islands .......... J.T. Topham .......... Consular agent. La Paz, San José, and Cape St. Lucas, Mexico: le enn mel ProBoer Consul. D0 eea he Re BR LT Vice-consul. La Paz, Bolivia.. eeren.mul Chas. SeRand... Acting consul. Las Palmas, Canary Telands. Jean R. y Gonsales..... Consular agent. Laricho Morocco. i nee nenive sou M., Abeensis. .._..-.... Do. La Rochelle, France. .........0.. Thos. P. Smith... .......| Consul. 0.0 Latakis, Swyyiat.....__.........___.. 1D, Bulhenys........... Consular agent. La Union, San'Salvador --.---. :.oi0, BIN is enn ved cis Consul. Leen, Portngal.o.o.......... A. A. A. Gumiaraes Consular al agent. Leeds, England-. een. ES Bieherdy i Consul. POs. 2 mo oad is iene BRT Geo. Middlewood. ...... Vice-consul. Leicester, England. . es w-s---...| Joseph Barber..........| Consular agent. Leghorn, Ttaly ee oh Joy l. Howard. ......-. Consul. Patou a re. ens Emil Masio......cc.-.. Vice-consul. Leith, Seotland...o0....... 000.0... John T. Robeson... .... Consul. Pe....-Jas. Gallaway.......... Vice-consul. Leipsic, Saxony... ..-.-....._....._.. John H. Stewart. ... -... Do. B)Gienn-n tenn sin mn n nina A.J deZeyk ......0000 Do. Do.....-neee oe e oo... AlbertJ. de Zeyk.. ....| Consular clerk. Lieate, Bioly.nin.-cence ana, Be Balio.oi ces vennunias Consular agent. Liege, Belginm oo. ooo I Consul. Limoges, Trance ..---..--...-......C H.Berlthet.c.....c.unnn-Consular agent. Timerick, Ireland... --. ..... ...... MB Rywm..... ...... Do. Lingan, Nova Scotia. .----vuunvee-.. P.E.Leaver....... «... Do. Yishon, Portugal ........--....-....% H.W. .Diman .-...-uc.-Consul. Do... Se ud C.F. J. Hutchens. ...... Vice-consul. J ivenon Brgland.......-....--.... TH. Dudley. won snns an Consul. en a vo H. Wilding ............| Vice-consul. UNITED STATES CONSULATES, ETC. Consular offices. Consular officers. Rank. Tianelly, Wales. oo. conan ina... London, Bugland ...ocne seinen casnay Londonderry, Treland .. eae cmos -ven--Yoong, Brenes! to 20 coo ee, Tndwigshaton, . _% o.oo io. Macelo Bagi]. a Modres, British Indian o.oo ici. oan Maio, Cape Verde Islands .... ........ Mahe, Seychelle Islands.---ccacoue---. Maan Soon A SR Tele nS We Poolang .... ............ Manila, Philippine Islands ...-. ...... 0 res ct ms a ee Mannheim, Baden... --co onan Manzanillo, Cuba sr esse ame c:.neesnme Manzanillo, Mexies.....cvases 2a ASS Maracaibo, VOMOTIN sn + woooime eon Maranham, BEZEL ce svi ame Ss Mersals, Maly. crear oan Eon ot tne Marseilles, TIance. . ou vn sees ones ccc ecedl anes even canes eee eee Tui «wi wimiwlnimie wiviela oie oie oo = wie ol oi Maoulmain, Indin .. ons cicec omenssma | Mayaguez, Porto Ric. ince cuvonsan-. Mazatlan, Mexico... von oiaioas, Medellin, United States of Colombia .. Medio, Bupislo. il fae eat Melbourne, Australis oan weescanan Momel, Pras 0. lc. des ese Mentone, Branee o.oo os Merida and Sisal, Mexico cccceeuuua-. Moselun, Maly... oo coolio Maxice, Golly): realness ier, Maxie. ies nie a Milan, Tales Clit sd cronToy Milford Elaven, Wales ..............~ Minatitlan, Moxleo . cao ceive. Morales, Mexleo. cna. Monganui, New Zealand -c.cccv...... Montego Bay, Jamaica...novuu....... Montevideo, U1uguay even .eveescnnns Monterey, Mexio0 aves .cevseewwsnas Montreal, Canads .... co. art. Morale) France co. era Moscow, Busgit io ee sr ie a I A AS CS Set ga Mossel Bay, Cape Town, Africa. ...... Mozambique, Africa ....vuvcneesnnn--Mulhouse, France. ..--z.-srins inane Munich, Bavaria oii Nagasaki, TUPI nh Tolan tmniainn cumin ms ERITREA RL fra dr SE Sn) Naguabo, Porto oo Blea...anil. Napanee, Canada West .-cocuuueen--. Nantes, 4 YOTIOC w oaimie mnie oS tt da le 7 Benj. Tombs oats lila) Adam Badeau.......... J. H. Evora nee aa J.R. Geary pms le lh Lyell’ T. Adams. ...-.... Wm. J. Stevens........ Charles H. Branscomb. -. J.B. Pearson....... co. A. Morrill. PoE a Cr T. C. Jutting EASE eed W.H.Bvans.. ccc... Jog. DD. Hore. ...oci oi Geo. L. Washington .... W.Brooke -= lil. F. W. Bre. mato Lucius Avery wi ie or Nel a AB Haves... ....... RCM. Hoyt .......... C. W. Drury an baled ge Fielding P. Meigs....... J. UIE. .ootorln cio ‘Samuel P. Young -.--... Bago. acneaah anna G Henry Horstman. .... W.P. Mancom........... David L. Moore ........ W. Haddock ----cewonn-Hugh Ralston .......... Benj. Qerrish, jr... ...- J. Dedichen ..---v'ovnin. H M. 1 Bee Mahlon Chance. ........ Consular agent. Consul general. Consul. Consul. Consul. Consular agent. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Do. Do. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Deo. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Consul. 2 Consular agent. Consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Commercial agent. Do. Consular agent. Consul. Consular agent. Do. Consul. Do. Do. Consular agent. Do. Do. Consul. Commercial agent. Consular agent. Do. Consul. Do. Consul general. Vice-consul general. Consular agent, Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent, Consul. Consular agent. Consul. Deo. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Do. CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY. Consular offices. Consular officers. Rank. Nomeario: -upon-Tyne, England -...... Evan R. Jones... .......| Vice-consul. SER Ll Fa ae ea wn nmin A BAP, Orwin.cveoiinivens . Do. Worontin New South Wales. ........ G. Mitchell.....z .cnna-Consular agent. New Chwang, China. .....ccn-nenv---BPR. Knight. ...-..c.--Consul. Newport, England. ...--sonnnneeno---J. N.Knapp....-. ...-.-Consular agent. Nice, France. -icf oo cewnn wer sided William H. Vesey .....-Consul. IO. Jit omg lle se wai EE BO John Meyhoffer ........ Vice-consul. Ningpo, Ching corti one nvesanemainaicn BQ Lord ovens enmens Consul. Nottingham, England....cccaeee..... F..6@. Rawson..--...... Consular agent. Nuremberg, Bavaria..---csvvun coun Joseph C. Brang ........ Consul. Nueviias, Cuba.....c----corns neni. B.Watlington.....-ccx--Consular agent. Osjaca, Mexien. ..cvsiseae ae cone nenenspids ils Lawiones.. «se.--Commercial agent. Odessa, Russi. dois s «oes asa vmis aie ME BIC re Consul. D0:in iad 5s dwn we winsinsmmns TERNSoi cous») «ces VieS:consW, Oldenburg, Germany .......e........| H.W. Carstens ........ Consul. Old Harbor, Jamaica................| M. Bravo ..............| Consular agent. Old Hartlepool, England. .ccee....... C:Niolson i. oo vue vnens Do. Olten, Switzerland. . ~~. coc cne memes FliSalathe. ......ccmn-» Do. Omoa and Truxillo, Honduras ---. .... Ca Bulallin oan. Consul. Oporto, Pertagal cei -b ccnans saiianns James C. Fletcher. ...... o. Osacea and Hiego, Japan. .-..-. ...-.. TS. Stewart. ........., Consul. Ostend, Belgium somes: sobs wants A. Van Iseghem Duclos..| cess Vice-consul. Otranto, Tally. ootieces vii orn s son» slnabisbhisst lone sin syns an ns Consul. Ottaws, Canada ieusiees snvins «oso Hugh Noit.,ccnnesnnnsn Consular agent. Padang, Sumatra .........-.. TC Consul. I Rn eR A AVonGlls o.oo. Vice-consul. Palermo, Tialy ltcecll.cecindobinseh TaoMently-oo. .l ono Consul. Palma, Canary Islands. ....-......... Joseph Rap ----vive an-. Consular agent. Panama, United States of Colombia...| Owen M. Long. ........ Consul. Do.. Be nme in mm hm in ALCS Cl 00EOT os wiiwile Vice-consul. Para, Brattle sitet oe Je Baond. o-oo Consul. Paraiba, Brasil. San von ae RB. 1. Shalders ..--.. 5x Consular oaiiscan. agent. Paramaribo, Dutch Guiana........... I. Bawmyer .. ov inne Consul. Paris, Pranee : coi aes wetione John Meredith Read, jr..| Consul vist general. Do Eft cn mcs Ate tate DYES vv msmwin Vice-consul general, SET a se TF. Olcott. .......-.-:-» --| Consular clerk, Ty Brazil cule ne mild 2h BE: Burnett. .c.cnnso Commercial agent. iti mms Paso del Norte, Mexico .-------r----olemalloreee ee endo Bons nda de a a, es cn ns Vice-consul. Patan, Greece do cn ainsms Bd. Hancock. cans vane Consular agent. Payia, Peru... oommisnnzisnmas=nnesin R.M. Columbus ........ Consul. Pelotas, Brazil ...... ....--..-----F B.R. Cordeiro.....-. Consular agent. ili.cnn nis .. -Pernstes, Brazilian 3h isanonde HE Swift... Acting consul. HS bE Ss aa wwe im we ew Bl F. da C. Guilbheime.. ....| Vice-consul. Peso de i Portugal... .cveovovno]-mrismsisnisesasneessnenns Consular agent. Pesth, Hungary..----..--A Joseph S. Kauser -...-.. Do. Picton, Canaan. od. . e cos smn miei Robert Clapp...-ce cv---Do. Pictou, Nova Seotla. -=< coivamexe-tann--QOszeariMalmyos -....------Consul. DO cin i sine wm mmm ses pcdobnBa Noonan... ..-.... Vice-cousnl. desiintinn Piedras Negras, Mexico «cnn vunnunn--. William Schuchardt. .... Commercial agent. Piedras Negras, Mexico.-.-~vs vc. A Borghavdt..........c. Vice-commercial agent. Plrong, Greece. nis rnr some Robert P. Keep ..c0»--- icin Consul. D0. os on iin vom min meas Gi Constantine. . «ous-Vice-consul. Saltidiraints oo Plymouth, Bugland....«----»-nnnx--BROS es ovale in ws eh Consul. Ponce, Porto Bicol. ..n-oie mien == sini Peter Menoillo.. cane... Consular agent. Portsmouth, England. ....o-o-aunine George Baker .......... Do. Porto Alegre, Brazil... ...xnnmenicans John'MeGinty. ....-----Deo. Port Baliic, Prassins ci. <.c-nv mnie mnma pCR alE on css ooo siemens Do. Port Elizabeth, Cape Colony, Africa. ..| J. 1. Flanders ......--. Deo. Port Hope, in SRS soe L.R.Peck ov vinennonns Do. Manritiug -«cee Plke...---. ----Consul. Port Louis, . ---wat ainetd Nicholas 05 i. loi dois wine mim winnie . ....c.. on ---AW. Thayer ........--Rone de Cuba... .......-...-. Horatio Fox......--=---ee ear oes a LA CI HECCet of SL Trinidad. (Island) .AT Ra i Lee Rh |LEE Eh an mE en Edward H. Bitt........ -Pripoli, Africa ..oues suse sian nanan W. Porler........ 0... vipeli, Syria .......ccow-----.on. A. Yonuni...--=i--.~ Tumaco, United States of Colombia... [00 col. vn wis daa .1 Tumbez, Perm ae dR ut A hererombie. Tunig, Afrles. lo... ce ht. oo os Tunstall, Bogland on, Turbo, Uriited States of COOMA «vali Turin, laly. eeeene rcs ToVaridE enon on uve wn einluimiron i A Ri Tutuilla, Navigator’s Islands ...-.--.-. Eyre, Syplnc 0 Lo hla Valencia, Spon. ... ceaess eaanes saves Valparaiso, Chill. 2... ei dddnidn'sas Po... oe Neoloz «sala. Wenice, Ualy.. dnddaa conuscs. Doe ad Se nl Vera Cruz, MORID. + ol sindun thsi GML ean oo, Ghen John S. Runnells . ...... wees vinennsnners summns Wm. Magoun ..-----... J. 5: Talhot =... vas J..@. Crisson.....-..... 0, Meredith... ..-~--| Aang or ren Fr HE Colt oe 3.6. Caldwell... 0.0 en" A Geary...A Johnna. rele. Se 8. T. Trowbridge.... .... Rank. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Deputy consul. Consul. Consular agent. Do. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Marshal. Consular agent. Commercial agent. Consular agent. Do. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Acting consul. Consular agent. Consul. Do. Commercial agent. Consul general. Consul. Do. Consular agent. Do. Do. Do. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Commercial agent. Consular agent. Do. Consul. Do. Consular agent. Do. Consul. Consul. Do. Viee-consul Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Consular agent. Consal, Do. Do. Do. Do. Consular agent. Vice-consul. Deputy consul. Vice-commercial agent. Consular agent. Consul. Consul. Viee-consul. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. 102 CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY. f Consular offices. Yaoro Cruz, Morlon™ 0.5 nh saa Verviers, Belgium: L000 re Vietorlo Vd oiie doo aaa. Yiegne, West Indies. ¢... oo...nal Vienna, Awstvia iol a 0h onal, Vico, Spalniu ub.coon 20.000 Villa do Conde, Portugal ............. Villa Nove, Portugal... o.oo Waterford, Ireland. .......--....... West Hartlepool, England. ...... ..._. Weymonth, England. i... cc..-i-..-. Wostord: Toland ol. 0 ini rabid Whampos, Ching oil. -eae Windsor, Nova Scola. oo... oun. nh. Winddor, Canada. hei io-omisnmveben Winnepeg, British North America.....| Worcester, Boglond... vey oneness Wyhorg, Finland (00 cousins fon Yarmouth, Nova Seotia. ..: oc ul. Yede, Japan Does bon nly Zanzibar, (Island) o.oo ooo 8 ei I NE SE LT 290010008, MOTI an -ivsasinnn enim Po. oohns Zante, Tonlanlsles. o.oo. noauns Zurich, Switzerland... .. ---ciocis uucins Consular officers. ih iy on vias €.W: Wieebery.......-. BD. Heksteln 1... ..... Lane Garben.... ....... BeSiPost. 0 nnn M. Bareena, . i....uiisi JA de Sousa... M.ide Guedes... Lia: 'Benj. Moore... oo. (. Nielwn....c0oeoened.-We Boharis. .. einoiiia JW Walsh... H. N. Blanchard ......---P. 8. Burnham... George W. Swift .......| Jas. W. Taylor ......... WM. Sowthell ...... ooo J. Sparrow... ooo LS: Balam: conn Charles O. Shepard. .....| Francis BR. Webb ...---.: a BL CER Ee eo GoM. Prevesh......oun-ae WML BSI cns L John Viasto. -...i...-c. Sam’] H. M. Byres...... Rank. Vice-consul. Consul. Consul. Consular agent. Consul. ) Consul. Consular agent. Do. Do. b Do. Do. Do. Do. Do. Consul. Do. Consular agent. Do. Do. Consul. Do. Do. Do. Vice-consul. Do. Do. ir JUDGES AND ARBITRATORS. 103 JUDGES AND ARBITRATORS. Under the provisions of the treaty with Great Britain of April 7, 1862. Truman Smith, judge of the court at New York. Cephas Brainard, arbitrator of the court at New York. Benjamin Pringle, judge of the court at Cape Town. William L. Avery, arbitrator of the court at Cape Town. George W. Palmer, judge of the court at Sierra Leone. F. A. Whittelsey, arbitrator of the court at Sierra Leone. CONSULAR CLERKS. Authorized by the act of Congress approved June 20,1864. Alert J. de Zoyki....cveee-onn Leipsie. Franklin Olcott. .... Paris. Williarh Heine ......-..---=..--Liverpool. O. B. Bradford...--. Shanghai. Burge R. Lewis... .... ..........Shanghai. Aug. Glaser........ Frankfort on-the-Main. (has, Ts Uhivion »..-cccoceis oon Paris. Jos. A. Springer... .. Havana. Jno B. Hay o.oo 0. cecilia. E. P. Maclean...-- CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY. THE CORPORATION OF WASHINGTON. Mayor.—Matthew G. Emery, 621 F' street northwest. : Register.—John F. Cook, 384 Sixteenth street. Assistant Register.—J. E. Doughty, 404 Massachusetts avenue. Collector.—Frederick A. Boswell, 633 Seventh street. Surveyor.—P. H. Donegan, 371 Pennsylvania avenue. Tax Clerk.—William Morgan, National Hotel. Bookkeeper.—J. T. Petty, — D street, west. Clerk to the Mayor.—M. Pechin, 105 First street, west. Attorney.—Enoch Totten, 1708 I street northwest. Messenger to the Mayor and Register.—Charles H. Jones. BOARD OF ALDERMEN. First Ward.—D. M. Davis, Carter A. Stewart. Second Ward.—John 8S. Crocker, (president,) W. H. Chase. Third Ward.—A. R. Shepherd, T. C. Connolly. Fourth Ward.— William W. Moore, J. H. Crossman. Fifth Ward.—George F'. Gulick, Wm. H. Slater. Sixth Ward.—Donald McCathran, Charles Champion. Seventh Ward.—T. G. Hine, Sidney S. Baker, (vice-president.) Secretary.—Charles H. Hulse, 448 Fifteenth street. BOARD OF COMMON COUNCIL, First Ward.—W. Andrew Freeman, E. L. Brooks, J. T. Murray. Second Ward.—George Burgess, Henry Piper, A. F. Moulden. Third Ward.—William H. Pope, Richard C. Lewis, George Wilner. Fourth Ward.—Samuel Robertson, Benjamin McCoy, John O’Donnoghue Fifth Ward.—C. H. Holden, (president,) George T. Basset, Thomas Gant. Sixth Ward.—Clarence M. Barton, Benjamin ¥. Palmer, F. D. Gaines. Seventh Ward.—W. R. Hunt, Thomas Carraher, Anthony Bowen. BOARD OF TRUSTEES OF PUBLIC SCHOOLS. (Rooms on Fifth street, between D and E streets.) President, (ex-officio.)—Matthew G. Emery. Superintendent.—J. O. Wilson. Secretary.—A. P. Fardon. Treasurer.—John C. Proctor. First District.—O. K. Harris, A. Hart, F. D. Stuart, George B. Vashon. Second District.—George T. McLellan, R. M. Hall, William R. Woodward. Third District.— William B. Moore, James C. Dulin. Fourth District.—W. J, Murtagh, Elwood Champlin. T COURTS OF THE DISTRICT. 105 \ SUPREME COURT OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA. CRIMINAL COURT —DISTRICT COURT—COMMON LAW COURT—EQUITY COURT. | Chief Justice DavidK. Cartter, Washington House. | ; Associate Justice Abram B. Olin, 1213 N street. \} Associate Justice Andrew Wylie, Vermont avenue, corner of Fourteenth street. Associate Justice D. C. Humphreys, 917 Sixteenth street northwest. Clerk.—R. J. Meigs, 302 New Jersey avenue. U. S. Marshal.—Alexander Sharp, City Hall. U. 8. Deputy Marshal.—George W. Phillips, 430 Third street. U. S. District Attorney.—George P. Fisher, cor. of Gay and Montgomery sts., Georgetown. REGISTER’S OFFICE, Register of Wills.—Amos Webster, 1734 I street. RECORDER’S OFFICE. Recorder of Deeds.—Simon Wolf, 616 H street. Deputy Recorder.—George F. Schayer, 472 Pennsylvania avenue. THE METROPOLITAN POLICE. COMMISSIONERS. William H. Chase, 1125 Eleventh street. De Vere Burr, Treasurer, old Bladens-we bY Charles H. Cragin, 124 Dunbarton street, burg road. Georgetown. Matthew G. Emery, Mayor of Washington. D. F. Hamlink, 1419 Q street northwest. Henry M. Sweeney, Mayor of Georgetown. W. J. Murtagh, 477 Maryland avenue. Secretary to Board.—Thomas A. Lazenby, 1419 Q street, northwest. Property Clerk.—George R. Herrick, 507 M street. Major and Superintendent of Police.—A. C. Richards, 1009 Eighth street. Captain and Inspector.—W. G. Brock, 706 G street. Clerk to Superintendent.—A. D. V. Burr, old Bladensburg road. Surgeons of Police.—Dr. S. A. H. McKim, Dr. W. G. H. Newman, and Dr. Patrick Croghan. LOCATION OF STATIONS. Headquarters—Louisiana avenue, between Fifth and Sixth streets west. First Precinct—Corner of Four-and-a-half and H streets south; Lieutenant Gessford. Second Precinct— Seventh street west and Boundary ; Lieutenant Johnson. \ Third Precinct—High street, between Bridge and Canal streets, Georgetown; Lieutenant Essex. . . ann Fourth Precinct—X street north, between Twentieth and Twenty-first streets. h 4 Fifth Precinct—Louisiana avenue, between Ninth and Tenth streets ; Lieutenant Skippon. Sixth Precinct—Corner of Ninth and K; Lieutenant Eckloff. Seventh Precinct—Corner of First and F street; Lieutenant Kelly. Eighth Precinct—E street south, between Fifth and Sixth; Lieutenant Austin. CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY. CHURCHES AND THEIR PASTORS. HEBREW SYNAGOGUE. Washington Hebrew Congregation, Eighth street, between H and I north. Service Fri-day evening at 7 o'clock, and Sabbath [ Saturday] morning at 9 o’clock. Isaac Stemple, reader. CATHOLIC. St. Patrick’s Church, F' street north, corner of Tenth street west, one square west from the Patent Office edifice. Rev. J. A. Walter, pastor; Rev. J. J. Keane, assistant. St. Peter’s Church, Capitol Hill, about three squares from the southeast corner of the Capitol grounds. Rev. ¥. E. Boyle, pastor; Rev. Sebastiano Rabbia, assistant. St. Matthew’s Church, corner of Fifteenth and H streets, a short distance north from the State Department. Rev. Charles I. White, D. D., pastor ; Rev. Jas. MeDevitt, assistant. St. Mary’s Church, (German, ) Fifth street, near H. Rev. Matthias Alig, pastor. St. Dominick’s Church, on the Island, Sixth street west, corner of F street south. Rev. F. Coll, O. S. D., pastor ; Rev. Dominick Young, O. S. D., and Rev. M. B. Fortune, O. S. D., assistants. : St. Aloysius Church, North Capitol street, corner of I street. Rev. B.A. Maguire, S. J., pastor ; Rev. Aloysius Roccofort, S. J., assistant. Church of the Immaculate Conception, corner of Eighth and N streets. Rev. P. F. McCarthy. St. Stephen’s Church, Pennsylvania avenue, corner of Twenty-first street. Rev. John MeNally pastor. St. Martin’s Church, Fifteenth street ne ar Li street north. Rev. F. Barotti, pastor. St. Joseph’s Church, (German.) Rev. B. F. Widget, S. J., pastor; Rev. F. Hoganforst, S. J., assistant. > EPISCOPAL. St. Paul’s Church, Twenty-third street, south of circle. Rev. A. Jackson. Memorial Church, A street south, between Second and Third streets east. Rev. A. Flo-ridus Steele. Christ Church, G street south, between Sixth and Seventh streets east. Rev. Charles H. Shield. St. John’s Church, opposite the President’s House. Rev. John V. Lewis. Trinity Church, Third and C streets. Rev. Thomas G. Addison. Church of the Epiphany, G street north. Rev. Thomas A. Starkey, D. D. Church of the Ascension, H street north, between Ninth and Tenth streets west. Rev. William Pinkney, D. D. Church of the Incarnation, N street, corner of Twelfth. Rev. R. W. Lowrie. Grace Church, Island, D street south, between Eighth and Ninth. Rev. A. Holmead. Rock Creek Church, near Soldiers’ Home. Rev. James A. Buch. St. Mary’s Chapel, Twenty-third street. Rev. John E. McKee. METHODIST EPISCOPAL. Metropolitan, corner of Four-and-a-half and C streets. Rev. J. P. Newman, D. D. East Washington, Fourth street east. Rev. W. T. D. Clemm. Foundry Church, corner of G and Fourteenth streets. Rev. Alexander E. Gibson. Wesley Chapel, corner Fifth and F streets. Rev. B. Peyton Brown. McKendree Chapel, Massachusetts avenue, near Ninth street. Rev. Samuel A. Wilson. Fletcher Chapel, corner New York avenue and Fourth street. Union Chapel, Twentieth street, near Pennsylvania avenue. Rev. W.T.L. Weech. Ryland Chapel, Tenth street, corner of D, Island. Rev. J. B. Vanmeter. Gorsuch Chapel, Li street south, corner of Four-and-a-half street. Rev. James Brads. Waugh Chapel, A street north, corner of Fourth street east. Rev. E. D. Owen. Providence Chapel, Second street east, corner of I north. Rev. Thomas C. Clark. First Congregational Methodist Chapel, M street, near Ninth. Rev. W. B. Tudor. Hamline Church, corner of Ninth and P streets north. Rev. L. T. Welderman. Wesley Chapel Mission, corner of Ninth and S streets north. Rev.James G. Henning. METHODIST PROTESTANT. Methodist Protestant Church, on Ninth street, between E and F. Rev. Mr. Drinkhouse. Methodist Protestant Church, Virginia avenue, near Navy Yard. Rev. Jos. P. Wilson. CHURCHES AND PASTORS. 107 CONGREGATIONAL. First Congregational Church, corner of Tenth and G. Rev. Dr. Rankin. BAPTIST. First Baptist, Thirteenth street, between G and H. Rev. Mr. Cuthbert. Second Church, Virginia avenue, corner Fourth street, near Navy Yard, Rev. Mr. Warren. E street Church, south side ofE street, nearly a square east from the General Post Office. aan Baptist Church, D street south, near Four-and-a-half street, Island. Rev. C. C. eador Calvary Church, corner of H and Eighth streets, J. W. Parker, D. D. Baptist Church, (old schook ) Massachusetts avenue. Elder Purrington. Kendall Mission Chapel, Calvary Mission Chapel, corner. of Fifth and P streets. CHRISTIAN. First Christian Church, M street, near Ninth street, northwest. Rev. O. A. Bartholomew : PRESBYTERIAN. First Presbyterian Church, Four-and-a-half street, near the City Hall. Rev. Byron Sun- derland, D. D. New York Avenue Church, on New York avenue, between Thirteenth and Fourteenth streets, Rev. 8. 8. Mitchell. Fourth Church, Ninth street, half a square north of the Patent Office. Rev. John C. Smith, D. D. Assembly’s Church, corner of Massachusetts avenue and Fifth street. Rev. C. B. Boynton, D. D. Sixth Presbyterian Church, Sixth street, near Maryland avenue. Rev. George H. Smyth. Western Presbyterian Church, on H street; between Nineteenth and Twentieth streets, near Pennsylvania avenue, First Ward. Rev. J. N. Coombs. Capitol Hill Presbyterian Church, Fourth street east, between B street south and Penn sylvania avenue. Rev. John Chester. Seventh Street Presbyterian Church, Seventh street, Island. Rev. B. F. Bittinger. North Presbyterian, on N street, between Ninth and Tenth. Rev. Louis R. Fox. Reformed Presbyterian, First street, between N and O, Island. Rev.J.M. Armour. Central Presbyterian, Law School Building. Rev. A. W. Pitzer. UNITARIAN, Unitarian Church, corner Sixth and D streets. Morning and evening service at 11 and 7.30. Rev. F. W Hinchley. ; FRIENDS’ MEETING-HOUSES. Orthodox Meeting House, No. 453 Ninth street, two doors south of F street, west side. Meeting at 11 o’clock a. m. Meeting House, (Hicksite,) North I street, north side, betweenDigs and Nineteenth streets yest Meeting every Sabbath at 11 o’clock a. m. NEW JERUSALEM. Church, North Capitol street, between B and C streets. Rev. Jabez Fox. Services at 11 o'clock a.m. Free reading-room over Metzerott Hall, open every evening. LUTHERAN. German Evangelical Congregation of Trinity, Unaltered Augsburg Confession, Fourth street west, corner of I street north. German Evangelical Church, G street north, corner of Twentieth street west, First ward. Service 11 o'clock a. m., and evening. Rev. G. L. Rietz. German Evangelical, St. John's Church, Four-and-a-half street, Island. William Frey. Services every Sabbath morning at 11 o clock. St. Paul’s Church, corner of Eleventh and H streets west. Rev. J. G. Butler, D.D ; asso-ciate, Rev. W. E. Parsons. Services 11 o’clock a. m. and evening. Lecture on Thursday evening. Memorial Chapel, corner of N and Fourteenth streets. Rev. J. G. Butler, D. D. Service every Sabbath evening. Capitol Hill Mission, First street east, between C and D streets south. Rev. W. E. Par-son in charge. Service at 11 a. m., Sabbath mornings. 108 CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY. GERMAN REFORMED CHURCH, First Reformed Church, corner of Sixth street west and N street. Rev. J. W. Ebbing hause. German service in the morning, English service in the-evening. UNIVERSALIST,. Metzerott Hall, Pennsylvania avenue. Services at 11 a. m. and 7 p. m. every Sunday. CHURCHES IN GEORGETOWN. Trinity Church, (Roman Catholic,) near the Georgetown College. Rev. Chas. Stonestreet. Christ Church, (Episcopal,) corner of Congress and Beall streets. Rev. W. W. Williams. Grace Church, (Episcopal,) South High street. Rev. J. E. Brown. St. Alban’s Church, (Episcopal,) Tenallytown road. Rev. J. H. Chew. St. John’s Church, (Episcopal,) Second street. Rev. A. B. Atkins. Methodist Episcopal Church, Dunbarton street. Rev. J. H. Dashiell, J, W. Hoover. Methodist Episcopal Church, West Georgetown. Rev. H. C. McDaniel. Methodist Protestant Church, Congress street. Rev. L. W. Bates. Methodist Protestant Church, Uniontown. Rev. A. Foster. Presbyterian Church, corner of Bridge and Washington streets. Baptist Church, corner of Congress and Gay streets. Rev. James Nelson. Lutheran Chapel, corner of High and Fifth streets. Rev.John Suman. THE SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION. Presiding officer, ex officio.—U. S. Grant, President of the United States. Chancellor.—Salmon P. Chase. Secretary.—Joseph Henry, Smithsonian Building. Assistant Secretary.—Spencer F. Baird, 918 New York avenue. Chief Clerk.—Clarence B. Young, 1213 Vermont avenue. Corresponding Clerk.—D. Leech, 1500 L street. Meteorological Clerk.—H. M. Bannister, Smithsonian Building. Executive Committee.—Richard Delafield, 1715 I street. Peter Parker, 700 Jackson Place. John Maclean, Princeton, New Jersey. REGENTS OF THE INSTITUTION, Schuyler Colfax, Vice-President of the United States. Salmon P. Chase, Chief Justice of the United States. Matthew G. Eniery, Mayor of the city of Washington. Lyman Trumbull, member of the Senate of the United States. Garrett Davis, member of the Senate of the United States. Hannibal Hamlin, member of the Senate of the United States. James A. Garfield, member of the House of Representatives, Luke P. Poland, member of the House of Representatives. Samuel S. Cox, member of the House of Representatives. William B Astor, citizen of New York. Theodore D. Woolsey, citizen of Connecticut. Louis Agassiz, citizen of Massachusetts. John Maclean, citizen of New Jersey. Richard Delafield, citizen of Washington. Peter Parker, citizen of Washington. MEMBERS EX OFFICIO OF THE INSTITUTION. Ulysses S. Grant, President of the United States. Schuyler Colfax, Vice-President of the United States. Hamilton Fish, Secretary of State. George S. Boutwell, Secretary of the Treasury. W. W. Belknap, Secretary of War. George M. Robeson, Secretary of the Navy. John A. J. Cresswell, Postmaster General. Amos T. Akerman, Attorney General. Salmon P. Chase, Chief Justice of the United States. , Commissioner of Patents. Matthew G. Emery, Mayor of Washington. C. C. Delano, [honorary member, ] Secretary of the Interior. “ CITY POST OFFICE. 109 WASHINGTON CITY POST OFREICE, Postmaster.—J. M. Edmunds, 736 Fifth street northwest. . Assistant Postmaster.—Lewis Porter, 622 F street northwest. Chief Clerk.— Lambert Tree, 414 Ninth street west. Assistant Chief Clerk.—Nathan H. Barrett, 1312 F street north. Cashier.—W. J. Brown, 221 Eighth street southeast. Superintendent.—W. T. Turpin, 227 Massachusetts avenue northwest. Chief Assorting Clerk for City Delivery.— George H. Plant, jr., 930 M street northwest. Superintendent Money-Order Department.—Simeon H. Merrill. 434 New York av. northwest. Clerk of Registry Department.—S. R. Kilby, 1008 Sixth street. Superintendent of Letter-carriers.—James BE. Bell, 713 F street southwest. Chief of Mailing Department.—Richard Lay, 610 Tenth street west. Clerk in charge of Branch Office at the Capitol.—S. S. Baker, C st., near Eleventh, southw’t. The general delivery window is kept open from 5 a. m. to 11 o’clock p. m., except on Sundays, on which day it is closed between the hours of 10 a. m. and 6 o’clock p. m. The box delivery windows are open from 8 a. m. to 8 p. m., except on Sundays, on which day they are open from 8 to 10 a m. and 6 to 7 p. m. The letter-carriers’ window is open from 7 to 8 o’clock p.m. The money-order and registered-letter departments are open from 8 a. m. to 4 p. m. No business is transacted in either of these departments on Sunday. In the central and business portions of the city deliveries by carriers will be made at 7, 8.30, and 11 a. m., at 2, 4.15, and 6.30 p.m. In the outside districts deliveries are made at 8.30 a. m. and 2 p. m. Collections from the street boxes are made at the same time of the delivery in each section. * Deliveries and collections are made at the hotels for the arrival and departure of each mail. TIME OF ARRIVAL AND CLOSING OF THE MAILS. Northern and Eastern Mails.—1st. Due at 6.45 a. m. ; closes at 7 a. m. 2d. Due at 5.40 p. m. ; closes at 8 p. m. Western Mails, via Relay House.—1st. Due at 6.10 a. m.; closés at 6 a. m. 2d. Due at 1.15 p. m. 3d. Due at 6.30 p.m. ; closes at 7 p. m. Southern Mails, for Lynchburg and Chattanooga.—Due at 6.25 p. m.; closes at 5 a. m. Southern Mail, via Richmond and Fredericksburg.—1st. Due at 6.45 a. m.; closes at 5.30 a.m. 2d. Due at 7 p.m. ; closes at 5.30 p. m. Annapolis Mail.—1st. Due at 10.30 a. m.; closes at 12 m. 2d. Due at 6.30 p. m.; closes at 6 p. m. Alexandria (Va.) Mail.—1st. Due at 7 a. m.; closes at 5a.m. 2d. Due at 6.25 p. m.; closes at 5 p. m. Georgetown (D. C.) Mail.—1st. Due at 11.45 a. m.; closes at 7 a. m. 2d. Dué at 5.30 p. m.; closes at 1 p. m. 3d. Due at 10.50 p. m. ; closes at 7 p. m. Rockville (Md.) Mail.—Due at 6 p. m.; closes at 6.30 a. m. Port Tobacco, Piscataway, and Duffield Mail.—Due Monday, Wednesday, and Friday at 7 p. m.; closes Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday at 6 a. m. Upper Marlboro’ (Md.) Mail.—Due at 5 p. m.; closes at 6.30 a. m. Norfolk (Va.) Mail.—1st. Due at 10.30 a. m.; closes at 12 m. On Sunday only one mail is received from the North, and two from the South, West, and Northwest. Mails departing on this day for these routes close at 7.30 p. m. POSTAL RULES. Many errors occur by persons not observing the following regulations in depositing letters, papers, or miscellaneous publications (not franked) for mailing : All drop letters must be prepaid, two cents, by postage stamps. Prepayment by stamps required on all letters to places within the United States. Full prepayment by stamps required on all transient printed matter, foreign and domestic. An impression seems to prevail that letters for Georgetown require only two cents, or local rates of postage. Georgetown being a separate office, full prepayment by three.cent stamp is required. All matters conveyed by mail westward beyond the western boundary of Kansas, and eastward from the eastern boundary of California, except one newspaper to a bona fide sub-seriber, and franked matter, must be prepaid at letter rates. Valuable letters for any part of the United States, Canada, Great Britain, Holland, the Italian States, or States of the German-Austrian Postal Union, will be registered on applica-tion at the office. 110 CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY. - "WASHINGTON TIME-TABLE. BALTIMORE. Leave for—6.45, 8.00, and 9.25 a. m., and 2.50, 4.10, 5.40, and 7.45 p. m. On Sun-} day, 8.00 a. m., and 2.50, 5.40, and 7.45 p. m. NEW YORK. Leave for—8.00 a. m., 12.45 and 9.00 p. m. On Sunday, 9.00 p.m. PHILADELPHIA. Leave for—8.00 a. m., 12.45 and 5.40 p. m. On Sunday, 5.40. WEST—vIA B. & O. R. R. Leave for—6.45 and 8.00 a. m., 2.50 and 7.45 p. m. Ou Sunday, 2.50 and 7.45 p. m. NORTH AND WEST—via N. C. R. R. Leave for—9.25 a. m., 5.40, 7.45 p. m. SOUTH—vIA O. & A. R. R. Leave for—7.00 a. m., 3.30 p. m. SOUTH—viA AQUIA CREEK. Leave for—7.00 a. m., 7.00 p. m. ROCKVILLE—(BY STAGE.) Leave for—10.00 a.m. MARLBORO—(BY STAGE.) Leave for—7.00 a. m. MOUNT VERNON—(BY STEAMBOAT ) The steamer “Arrow,” Captain Stackpole leaves every day, except Sunday, at 10.00 a. m, CITY DIRECTORY. CITY DIRECTORY. Executive Mansion.—Pennsylvania avenue, between Fifteenth and Seventeenth streets. State Department.—Fourteenth street west. Treasury Department.—Fifteenth street west, opposite F' street north. Navy Department.—Seventeenth street west, opposite F street north. War Department.—Corner of Seventeenth street west and Pennsylvania avenue. Interior Department.—F street north, between Seventh and Ninth streets. Post Office Department.—E street north, between Seventh and Eighth streets. Department of Justice.— Treasury building. Department of Agriculture.—On the island, opposite Thirteenth street. Commissioner of Public Buildings.— Office in the Capitol. Congressional Printer.—Corner of North Capitol street and H street north. Supreme Court of the United States.—At the Capitol. Court of Claims.—At the Capitol; basement story. National Observatory.—E street north, opposite Twenty-third street west. Navy Yard.—On the Eastern Branch, three-fourths of a mile southeast of the Capitol. Navy Paymaster’s Office.—Corner of Fifteenth street and New York avenue. Arsenal.—Southern extremity of Four-and-a-half street west. Coast Survey Buildings.—New Jersey avenue, south of the Capitol. Congressional Cemetery.—One mile east of the Capitol. United States Conservatory.—Between First and Third streets west. Collector's Office United States Internal Revenue.—Seventh street west. City Hall.—D street north, at the head of Four-and-a-half street west. County Jail.—Corner of Fourth street west and G street north. Masonic Hall. —Corner of F' street north and Ninth street west. Odd Fellows’ Hall.—Seventh street west, between D and E streets north. 0dd Fellows’ Hall, (Navy Yard.)—Eighth street east, south of Pennsylvania avenue. Grand Army of the Republic Hall. —Corner of Tenth and D streets. Temperance Hall.—E street north, between Ninth and Tenth streets west. American Colonization Society.—450 Pennsylvania avenue,corner of Four-and-a-half street. Young Men's Christian Association.—Ninth street, corner of D street. Washington and Georgetown Railroad Company.—New Jersey avenue. Board of Trade.—Rooms No. 4 Market Space. Columbian Institution for the Instruction of the Deaf and Dumb and the Blind.—Kendall Green, near the junction of M and Boundary streets north. Providence Hospital. —Corner of Second street east and D street south. Academy of Visitation.—462 G street north. St. Ann's Infant Orphan Asylum.—Corner of Twenty-fourth street west and K street north. St. Joseph's Male Orphan Asylum.—Corner ofI street north and Tenth street west. St. Vincent's Roman Catholic Female Orphan Asylum.—A439 Tenth street west. Arlington House.—Vermont avenue, between H and I streets. Willard's Hotel.—Corner of Fourteenth street west and Pennsylvania avenue. Ebbitt House.—X street north, between Thirteenth and Fourteenth streets west. Kirkwood House.—Corner of Twelfth street west and Pennsylvania avenue. Seaton House.—Louisiana avenue, between Sixth and Seventh streets west. Metropolitan Hotel. —Pennsylvania avenue, between Sixth and Seventh streets west. National Hotel.—Corner of Sixth street west and Pennsylvania avenue. St. James Hotel.—Corner of Pennsylvania avenue and Sixth street west. Continental Hotel.—Pennsylvania avenue, between Third and Four-and-a-half streets. Washington House.—Corner of Third street west and Pennsylvania avenue. St. Charles Hotel.—Corner of Third street west and Pennsylvania avenue. Owen House.—312 Pennsylvania avenue. Wormley’s.—Corner of H and Fifteenth streets. Gray’s.—920 Fifteenth-and-a-half street. Jenness House.—E street between Thirteenth and Fourteenth, facing Pennsylvania avenue. St. Cloud Hotel. —Corner of F and Ninth streets. St. Marc Hotel.—Corner of Pennsylvania avenue and Seventh street. ¥12 CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY. MEMBERS-ELECT OF THE FORTY-SECOND CONGRESS. THE SENATE. [With the expiration of Senators’ terms of service.) ALABAMA. George IB. Spencer. . see: resvesonmees 1873 | ‘George Goldihwalte........uun.- cucu 1877 ARKANSAS, Benjamin TV. Rice: cones tnmeesmmmseins 1873 CALIFORNIA. Cornelngs Cole..ccas’atenimneion 1a 1873 | Eugene Casserly... «ce ves wun ver -1875 orien CONNECTICUT. Oris BL TOY. . iv vies vosican 1873 | William A. Buckingham. ...ccuu..--.. 1875 saminsivesl DELAWARE. Thomas Francis Bayard .............. 1875 FLORIDA. Thomas W..O8b0N uv oivmnmn22 1873] | Abljah CHIBert, « svn. sv nmmmnms 1875 vsisin wnvsissnin GEORGIA. ILLINOIS. Lyman Trombull.......ceuionoid ins 1873 : INDIANA. Oliver P. Morton. .-a. cvoin. s = 1R73° I). Pratt. iJ. cusaniniiiidao 1875 dun. Daniel IOWA. James Warlen.. ..... 0eea. dana ol 1873 Georpe'G. Wright... ... ......ciun 187” KANSAS. Samuel C. PomeIoY -.; oi vn wanna 1873 KENTUCKY. Gore Davis. ...vu.cvent inns vo uuae 1873 ['John' W. Sievenson...coeoneness 1877 cous LOUISIANA, Wit Bit Relloggs. cenceonne ann nnn. 1873 MAINE, Hannibal Hamlin. ....-:oeesunenea i 575 MARYLAND. Qoorge VIEKeYS.ous va cons Soins suns 'th ns 1573 | Willlam 1. Hamilton... ..oovuinun 1875 MASSACHUSETTS, Charles Sumner. . .... .......... >iale ins 1875 MICHIGAN, Zachoriah Chandler... veoceeeae, cao 1875 THE FORTY-SECOND CONGRESS. 113 MINNESOTA. Alexander Bamsey.co-eeieoooin20 1875 MISSISSIPPI. AeIDerl AER oo inciah a 1875 | Jomes L., Al0OM . cevcusisntnvizciin sn 1977 sa MISSOURI. Corl Behurg.. -oie e aden rent Hebaons 1875 NEBRASKA. Thomas W. TIplon «ccs inbinassnnnns 1875 NEVADA. James W. Nye... coho dione 1873 | William M. Stewart...ce.'iv.. vain 1875 NEW HAMPSHIRE. ‘James Wo Pattersons. cree ons vanes 1873: Aaron TE. Cragin. wove vase 1877 ...encvvse NEW JERSEY. Stoekiofi..cons 1875 John P. votes so vemuns NEW YORK. Bosco Conkling. sus. inuai 1823 | Reuben E. Fenton.....ovvcu-. Liedsie 1875 ..«vvcuones NORTH CAROLINA. John Tool... cio avadh NOIR aden 1873 1} Zebulon B. Vanes ..--.v odin. iis ress 1877 OHIO. John Sherman. Jou... ouivernerinenss 1873 | Allen: G. Thurman. ......cce buss ve. 1875 OREGON. Henry: W. Corbell... ©. i 0 o.oocs 1873 James K. Kelley .. ..... ..-cinecnn... 1877 PENNSYLVANIA. Simon Cameron... c.ic-a-coarser mus 1573 John Sool ui rohan ah 1875 RHODE ISLAND, Henry B. Anthony. .---.c-ic-cleccno 1277, William Sprague. ...co -ucive.iivnnans 1875 SOUTH CAROLINA, Prederick A. Bawyer.... ccceo. ooons 1873.4. Thomas J. Robertson... ce cnnensanne 1877 TENNESSEE. William Gannaway Brownlow........ 1275 | Henry Cooper .. -.. oaneivs «obs snssins 1807 TEXAS. Morgan C. Hamilton. ... .i.. .cconionse 1877.1 500. WW. Flomagon. ces vevscsavnss 1875 anns VERMONT. George ¥. Rdmunds........... cc... 1270 Justin 8, Morrill .... -ccoicavenase amen 1873 VIRGINIA. John BH. Lewis. aca ns saecos ney sromos 1875 WEST VIRGINIA, Anthmr 1. Boreman.... ce---rcns.s. 1875 WISCONSIN. . Timothy: 0. Howe. ..nevssszesssansss 1873 | Matthew H. Carpenter........ «cau... 1875 8 CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY. THE [Those whose names I. Benjamin L. Turner. II. Charles W. Buckley*. III. William A. Handley. I. J. M. Hanks, II. O. P. Snyder. I. Benjamin T. Biggs.* I. 8S. Q. Walls. I. C. B. Farwell. I1. J. F. Farnsworth.* IY. H. C. Borehard.” Iv. J. B. Hawley. * V. R. N. Stevens. VI. Burton C. Cook. VII. J. H. Moore. * I. Wm. E. Niblack.* IT. MichaelC. Kerr. * 1I1. Wm. S. Holman.* IV. Jere. M. Wilson. V. John Coburn.* Vi. DD. W. Voorhees.” I. George W. McCrary.* II. Aylett R. Cotton. III. W. G. Donnan. I, David P. Lowe. I. Edward Crossland. II. H. D. McHenry. III. Joseph H. Lewis.* IV. W. B. Read. V. Boyd Winchester.” I. James H. Sypher.* II. Lionel A. Sheldon.” IY. €. B. Darrall.” I. John Lynch.* II. William P. Frye. 111. James G. Blaine. * HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES. are marked with a * are members of the present Congress. | ALABAMA. | IV. Charles Hays. * V. Peter M. Dox.* f 3 | "v1 J. H. Slow. ARKANSAS, | III. Thomas Boles.* DELAWARE. FLORIDA. ILLINOIS. VIIL J. C. Robinson. IX. T. W. McNeelly.* X. E. L. Rice. XI. 8S. S. Marshall.* XII. John B. Hay.* XIII. John M. Crebs.* At Large. John A. Logan.” INDIANA. ri VII. Mahlon D. Manson. : VIII. James N. Tyner.” IX. J. P. C. Shanks.” X, William Williams. * XI. Jasper Packard.*® IOWA. IV. Madison M. Walden. V. Frank W. Palmer.* VI. Jackson. Orr. KANSAS. KENTUCKY. VI. William E. Arthur. VII. James B. Beck.* po VIII. George M. Adams.* IX. John M. Rice.* 5 LOUISIANA. IV. James McCleary. V. Frank Morey. * MAINE. IV. John A. Peters* V. Eugene Hale.* THE FORTY-SECOND CONGRESS. MARYLAND. I. Samuel Hambleton.* IV . John Ritchie. II. Stevenson Archer.* Vv . William M. Merrick. III. Thomas Swann.” MASSACHUSETTS. /fl 3 I. JamesII . Oakes Buffinton.* Ames.* | Yi.VII. Nathaniel P. Banks.* George M. Brooks.” . Ginery Twichell.* | VIII. George F. Hoar.® IV. Samuel Hooper.” | IX. Wiliiam B. Washburn.” V. Benjamin F. Butler. * = Henry L. Dawes.® MICHIGAN. I. Henry Waldron. | IV. Thomas W_Ferry. ~ II. William L. Stoughton.* V. Omar D. Conger. ™ III. Austin Blair.* : | VI. Jabez G. Sutherland. MINNESOTA I. Mark H. Dunnell. | Xl. John T. Averill. MISSISSIPPI, 1. GE. Hawis.” Vv. G. C. McKee.” II. J. L. Morphis.* V. Legrand W. Perce. 13. H. W. Barry.® MISSOURI. i ™N I. Erastus Wells.® | NN. A. Cominge. IL G. A. Finkelnburg.* Vil. Isaac C. Parker. III. J. R. McCormick.* VII, James G. Blair. IV. H. E. Havens. | IX. Andrew King. V. S. 8. Burdett.? : WEBRASKA., I. John Taffe.* NEVADA. I C. W. Kendall. NEW JERSEY, I. John W. Hazleton. | IV. John Hill.” II.IIL. Samuel C. Forker.John T. Bird.* | V. George A. Halsey. NEW YORK. I. Dwight Townsend. XVII. William A. Wheeler.® II. Thomas Kinsella. XVII. John M. Carroll. ITI. Henry W. Slocum.” XIX. Elizur H. Prindle. IV. Robert B. Roosevelt. XX. Clinton L. Merriam. ¢ V. William R. Roberts. XI. Ellis H. Roberts. VI. Samuel S. Cox. * XXII. William E. Lansing. VII. Smith Ely, jr. XXIII. Robert H. Duell. VIII. James Brooks.” XXiy. John E. Seeley. IX. Fernando Wood.* XXYV. William H. Lamport. . Clarkson N. Potter.” | XXVI. Milo Goodrich. XI. Charles St. John. i XXVIT, H. Boardman Smith. XII. John H. Ketcham.™ | XXVIII. Freeman Clarke. XIII. Joseph H. Tuthill. i SEXY . Seth Wakeman. XIV. Eli Perry. I XXX . William Williams. 5 XV. Joseph M. Warren. | XXXI . Walter L. Sessions. . John Rogers. | 116 CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY. NORTH CAROLINA. I. Clinton L. Cobb.* v. James M. Leach. II. Charles R. Thomas. Ve Francis E. Shober.* III. Alfred M. Waddell. VIL J. C. Harper. IV. Sion H. Rogers. OHIO. I. Aaron F. Perry. . John T. Wilson. II. Job E. Stevenson.* . Phila. Van Trump.” IIT. Lewis D. Campbell. . George W. Morgan.” IV. J. F. McKinney. . James Monroe. V. Charles L. Lameson. . W. P. Sprague. VI. John A. Smith.* . John ‘A. Bingham, * VII. Samuel Shellabarger. . Jacob A. Ambler.* VIII. John Beatty.® . William H. Upson.* IX. Charles Foster. . James A. Garfield.* X. E.D. Peck.” OREGON. I. Joseph Slater. PENNSYLVANIA, I. Samuel J. Randall.* XIII. Ulysses Mercur.” 11. J. V. Creely. XIV. John B. Packer. * ITI. Leonard Myers.* XV. R. J. Haldeman, * IV. William D. Kelley.* XVI. B. F. Meyers. V. Alfred C. Harmer. XVII. R. M. Speer. YI. E. L. Acker. XVIII. Henry Sherwood. VII. W. Townsend.* XIX. Glenni W. Scofield. * VIII. J. Lawrence Getz. * XX. Samuel Griffith. IX. Oliver J. Dickey.* XXI. Henry D. Foster. a X. J W. Killinger. XXII. James S. Negley. * XI. John B. Storm. XXIII. Ebenezer McJunkin. XII. L. D. Shoemaker. XXIV. William McClelland. RHODE ISLAND. I. Benjamin T. Eames. 1. James M. Pendleton. SOUTH CAROLINA. J. H. Rainey. ITT. R. B. Elliott. II. R. C. De Large. IV. A. S. Wallace. * TENNESSEE. I. R. R. Butler.* Yi E. I. Golladay. II. Horace Maynard.” VI. W. C. Witthorne. III. A. E, Garrett. VII. Robert P. Caldwell. 1V. John W. Bright. VIII. William W. Vaughan. VERMONT. I. Charles W. Willard.* JIT. W. C. Smith.* >11. Luke P. Poland.” VIRGINIA, I. John Critcher. v. Richard T. W. Duke®. II. James H. Platt, jr.* VAR J.T. Harris. I1I. Charles H. Porter.* VII. Eliot M. Braxton. - IV. W. H. H. Stowall. VIII William Terry. THE FORTY-SECOND CONGRESS. WEST VIRGINIA. 1. T. J. Davis. | ITI. F. Hereford. II. J. C. McGrew.* WISCONSIN. I. Alexander Mitchell. | IV. C. A. Eldridge.* II. G. W. Hazleton. V. Philetus Sawyer. * III. J. Allen Barber. | VI. Jeremiah M. Rusk. 118 CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY. Dm = Sn 5 foe] om [@] m wm [®] O [o) oe = wd in z a nd [= or 8 = E< =: 2 Q [] COAT ROOM COAT ROOM SONA re. Lal w - 2) = SAIAvT h ‘ATOLOHYIA TVNOISSHIONOD 0¢l NOOY LYOO COAT ROOM WryGLOBE_a 2 : 5 2ES TT Cm = | [50 | EL = i 55 54 re DOOR PRIVATE DOOR [0] PRIVATE DOOR hs ENGRAVED IN RELIEF BY E. R. JEWETT & CO., BUFFALO. H0OOdNY3Lsv3 DIRECTORY OF THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES. WEST SIDE. EAST SIDE. ‘SHAILVINISHYdHE dO NOLLVOOT Charles H. Porter. 44. Benjamin F. Butler. . Addison H. Laflin. Israel G. Lash. . Michael C. Kerr. . George M. Adams. . . William H. Upson. 45. Halbert E. Paine. . Ulysses Mercur. Patrick Hamill. . Benjamin T. Biggs. . Richard CC. McCormick. . . John Cessna. 46. William Williams. Thomas Swann. . Samuel Hambleton. William F. Prosser. Aaron A. Sargent. . . . James S. Negley. 47. James N. Tyner. . Joseph B. Donley. . Eugene M. Wilson. . Charles Haight. . Thomas Fitch. Horace Maynard. 48. William B. Allison. . Darwin Phelps. Oakes Ames. . Albert G. Burr. . Sempronius H. Boyd. John A. Bingham. . Thompson W. McNeely. . Samuel S. Burdett. Stevenson Archer. . Clarkson N. Potter. . Alexander H. Jones. Fernando C. Beaman. 49. James A. Garfield. . Frank W. Palmer. . Charles Knapp. 50. John A. Logan. . S. L. Spink. . . William H. Kelsey. 51. Godlove S. Orth. . William Moore. James A. Johnson. . John M. Crebs. . . Glenni W. Scofield. 52. Sidney Clarke. James R. McCormick. . John M. Rice. . . . Job E. Stevenson, 53. Anthony A. C. Rodgers. . George W. Whitmore. . Samuel Hooper. . John F. Benjamin. . Orange Ferriss. 54. Philetus Sawyer. . Edward Degener. . William C. Sherrod. . Joel F. Agper. . David S. Bennett. 55. John Taffe. . John G. Schumaker. . John Coburn. . Clinton L. Cobb. . James C. McGrew. 55% James Buffington. . James H. Platt. . Henry W. Slocum. . Logan H. Roots. 56. Roderick R. Butler. . Horatio C. Burchard. . William S. Holman. . Erasmus D. Peck. . John A. Peters. 57. John P. C. Shanks. . Stephen W. Kellogg. 1 . Thomas Boles. . J. Francisco Chaves. . Eugene Hale. 58. Charles W. Willard. . Oliver J. Dickey. 15. William E. Niblack. . Joseph H. Lewis. . James M. Cavanaugh. . Samuel P. Morrill. 59. George W. Cowles. . Legrand W. Perce. 15% . S. S. Cox. . William H. Barnum. . George W. Morgan. . John C. Churchill. 60. George W. Julian. 3. Porter Sheldon. . John Fox. 59. John D. Stiles. . Caleb N. Taylor, . Thomas A. Jenckes. 61. John Fisher. . George F. Hoar. . George W. Woodward. . Stephen L. Mayham. . Dennis McCarthy. 62. Hamilton Ward. . William H. Armstrong. . Richard J. Haldeman. . Hervey C. Calkin. . Henry A. Reeves. . Martin Welker 63. Cadwallader C. Washburn. . Calvin W. Gilfillan. . Frederick Stone. . Daniel W. Voorhees. -William N. Sweeney. . David Atwood. 64. Henry L. Dawes. . Worthington C. Smith. . John Beatty. . Boyd Winchester. A.B. Buck, . Morton S. Wilkinson, 65. Shelby M. Cullom. . John H. Ketcham. . 8S. S. Nuckells. Edward F. Dickinson. . Robert S. Heflin. . Burton C. Cook. 66. Jesse H. Moore. . Aaron F. Stevens. . William L. Stoughton. 5. J. Procter Knott. . Porter Sheldon. . Henry L. Cake. 67. William B. Stokes. . William D. Kelley. . Randolph Strickland. . James B. Beck. . Charles M. Hamilton. . Ginery Twichell. 68. Charles O'Neill. 111. Stephen Sanford. . Joseph S. Smith. . Willam H. Hooper. . Nathaniel P. Banks. 69. Gustavus A. Finkelnburg. 119, Robert T. Van Horn. : John A. Griswold. . John Lynch. . William Milnes. . Adolphus H. Tanner. 70. Isaac H. Duval. 113. John S. Witcher . Luke P. Poland. . David P. Dyer. . Robert C. Schenck. 71. Wiliiam Lawrence. 114. Jacob H. Ela. . Philadelph Van Trump. . Oliver H. Dockery. . John C. Connor. . William B. Washburn. 72. Jacob Benton. 115. James J. Winans, . Samuel J. Randall. . John F. Farnsworth. . Joseph Dixon. . William Loughridge. 73. Charles H. Van Wyck. 116. John A. Smith. . Daniel M. Van Auken. . James K. Gibson, 6. . Thomas W. Ferry. 74. Eliakim H. Moore. 117. Alexander S. Wallace. . Charles A. Eldridge. . John T. Wilson. 75. John B. Hawley. 118. Solomon L. Hoge. . Fernando Wood. . Austin Blair. 76. Giles W. Hotchkiss. 119. Henry H. Starkweather, . Peter W. Strader. . Lewis McKenzie. . Lewis Tillman. 77. Jacob A. Ambler. 120. Julius L. Strong. . Thomas L. Jones. . George W. Booker. . John Hill. 78. Norman B. Judd. 121, John Covode. . Lawrence S. Trimble. . Richard S. Ayer. . Allen A. Bradford. 79. George W. McCrary. 122. George M. Brooks. . Samuel B. Axtell. . John Morrissey. . Selucius Garfielde. . John B. Hay. 80. Daniel J. Morrell. 123. . Samuel S. Marshall. . Francis I&. Shober. . Henry W. Barry. . William J. Smith. 81. Washington Townsend. 124. C. C. Bowen. . Peter M. Dox. . George E. Harris. . Isaac R. Hawkins. 813 William A. Wheeler. 125. J. P. Newsham. . Charles Hays. . J. Lawrence Getz. . George C. McKee. . Alexander H. Bailey, 82. Charles Pomeroy. 126. William T. Clark, . Omar D. Conger. . John 0. Bird. . Samuel M. Arnell. 83. Nathan F. Dixon. 127, Leonard Myers. . GC. W. Buckley. . Orestes Cleveland. . Joseph L. Morphis. . Ebon C. Ingersoll. 84. John B. Packer. . J. K. Shafer. . James Brooks. . Amasa Cobb. 85. Jasper Packard. . William Mungen. . Erastus Wells. O00 IO ULI G0 20 pd DO pd 122 CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY. ALPHABETICAL LIST OF SENATORS, REPRESENTATIVES, AND DELEGATES, WITH THEIR HOME POST OFFICES, AND RESIDENCES IN WASHINGTON The * designates those whose wives accompany them ; the § designates those whose daughters accompany them ; the || designates those having other ladies with them. | > *|SCHUYLER COLFAX Name. Abbott, Joseph C...-. ui *Ames, Adelbert. Lo. ...-.0 Anthony, Henry Br... ....ttt.n Bayard, Thomas B.......L...... Boreman, Arthur I............ Brownlow, William G ......... || Buckingham, William A...... Cameron, SIMOA .. eae oi ais Carpenter, Matthew H......... *Cagsserly, Eugene ...... ...... Cattell, Alexander .......... Chandler, Zachariah........... *§Cole, Corneliug.-...0000 J5. Conkling, Roscoe ...ceu-inuii.u. Corbett, Henry WW... .cuieiienesi *Cragin, Aaron H..........o.L0 Davis, Garrett... ... cau. aa. Drake, Charles . . -ceki nucle *Edmunds, George F .......... *SFenton, Reuben E........... Torry, Oris 8. ...... cues: Planagan, J. Wi. veceiuais eae Fowler, Joseph'S... uicanas. Gilbert, Abjjah -......ceree.a-. Hamilton, Morgan C........... Hamilton, William EB. ....-..=-Hamlin, Hannibal...... Ar *Harlan, Jamez ....--5--a... *fTownls, John 86. oc... ule. .d Howard, Jacob M:........d.... *SHowe, Timothy O....-...-... Howell, JamesiB ...cacicemeenns Johnston, John W ............. Kellogg, William P...--..-is.. Lewis, John'F........ 0c... 000 MecCreery, Thomas C.......... McDonald, Alexander.......... Morrill, Justin 8. ......-..-., Morrill, Lot Ml... cule deeluiaint Morton, Oliver P. ...... 00.0. Nye, James W.... cu ledasniid Osborn, ‘Thomas W.---cn-wemee Patterson, James W ---.-....-. *Pomeroy, Samuel C.....c.-... Pool, John, i. 0 vhlwald ole on ws Pratt, Daniel D..... FARETh EN *§Ramsey, Alexander.......... Revels, Hiram RB. ...---ania. Rice, Benjamin PF ......l eee, Robertson, Thomas J..caeeuaunn Ross, BAMund G... veecisann vrei. *Saulsbury, Willard =... ...-. *Sawyer, Frederick A ......... Schurz) iQarl. .... cee vdae dudes THE VICE-PRESIDENT. SENATORS. Post office. Wilmington, North Carolina. ....... Natchez, Mississippi --ceceeeennnn.. Providence, Rhode Island.......... Wilmington, Delaware ..ee.-..auu-. Parkersburg, West Virginia........ Knoxville, Tennessee... uceuu.--. Norwich, Connecticuts----..--.. Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.......... Milwaukee, Wisconsin. ...ceceeae--San Francisco, California .......... Camden, New Jersey ....u.-veee-ss Detroit, Michigan. ....c.o 000 San Francisco, California.......... Ultca, New York. vb atwaall neste Portland, Oregon... id. .ose.suuaiaa Lebanon, New Hampshire ......... Paris, Kentuekyi.. iti cont. does St. Louis, Missouri... so ist oat Burlington, Vermont... .-c«-ceu=x> Jamestown, New York......u.uun-. Norwalk, Connecticut. --.cnuuenn-n. Walling's Ferry, Texas... .....u--Nashville, Tennessee ....c....ccx--St. Augustine, Florida ...couaean... Hagerstown, Maryland .....c...... Angin) exas, cites.Sas Bangor, Maine... ivivis e's. is wiwwies Mount Pleasant, Iowa. .cccuuouan.. Vidalia, Concordia Parish,Louisiana.| Detroit, Michigamw..-.....cl. 0.0... Green Bay, Wisconsin. ............ Kooks, JoOWR = =. 2 «ivan nm niauimelaissin Abingdon, Virginia . «cessines seems New Orleans, Louisiana. ...cnucuun.. Port Republie, Virginia ............ Owenboro, Kentueky-..eeecmnenan. Little Rock, Arkansas, ..ccee-.ueun-Augusta, Maine. ...c..:.oo0m dome Strafford, Vermont .--:.. .cneieuaas Indianapolis, Indiana ..cceeeooonaa. Carson City, Nevada.ca. uunenenn--"Dallahassee, Florida... ..--. wan vn Hanover, New Hampshire.......... Atchison, Kansas. o.oo. .uala.diie-Raleigh, North Caroling..--w--a.-.. T.ogangport, Indiana. .... ..u-tuas St. Paul, Minnesola. ...-.t.aneasae. Natchez, Mississippi. .-«xe--ueeanau Little Rock, Arkansas.......a..... Columbia, South Caroling..:c...... Lawrence, Banuagi. ..u.-duue nme Georgetown, Delaware -c-ueua.--u-. Charleston, South Carolina......... St. Louis, MiSsourl..... sr atw=s 7 Lafayette square, west. Residence in Washington. 1320 F street. 1445 1 street. 1517 Pennsylvania avenue. Wormley’s, 1500 H street. ‘Washington House. 4 North A street. 819 Fifteenth street. ‘Whitney’s Hotel. S Willard’s Hotel. oN % 1518 H street. / 608 Ninth street. 1408 H street, 913 I street. 736 Fifteenth street. 514 Thirteenth street, west. 325 C street. 310 Indiana avenue. 506 E street. 1411 Mass. av, [Highland Terrace. ] Arlington House. 1410 G street. Casparis House. 1417 G street. National Hotel. 516 Tenth street. 226 Third street. Seaton House. 1623 H street. Willard’s Hotel. Ebbitt House. 1708 I street. 923 M street. 508 Twelfth street. -Willard’s Hotel. 1330 I street. » 713 Fourteenth street. Metropolitan Hotel. 810 Twelfth street. National Hotel. Willard’s Hotel. 1320 F street. 414 Sixth street. 1523 H street. St. Cloud Hotel. . 127 C street south, [14 Ingle Place. ] National Hotel. 1828 K street. 1512 H street. Willard’s Hotel. Metropolitan Hotel. Kirkwood House. 1310 F street. 2020 F' street. SENATORS AND REPRESENTATIVES. Name. Post office. Residence in Washington. Scott; JOR... .-.c-c-cnanant: Huntingdon, Pennsylvania......... 516 Thirteenth street. “Sherman, JON... ve ae teaa-Mansfield, OOo... Saas. said, Hamilton House, Fourteenth and XK. Spencer, George E............. Decatur, Alabama .'................ Willard’s Hotel. Sprague, Willlam.............. Providence, Rhode Island.......... 601 BE street. Stewart, William M ........... Virginia City, Nevada ....... cco... 1328 Massachusetts avenue. *Stockton, John'P:. . weet. cui. Princeton, New Jersey.....-w=.-. 1607 H street, Lafayette square. Summer, Charles. .............. Boston, Massachusetts ............. Corner Vermont avenue and H street. *Phayer, John M........c-nr.-Omaha, Nebraska... co... obo, National Hotel. Thurman, Allen'G2.. 0.00. Golumbue, "Ohle’. So coi ied lian3d ‘Wormley's, 1500 H street. "Lipton, Thomay W. .c......__. Brownsville, Nebraska...ocueua.... 913 O street. Trumbull, Lyman-..........--. Chicago, Winois'.. nan oio. 608 Thirteenth street. creer Vickery, George... .-o-=..2.. Chestertown, Maryland............ National Hotel, room 61. Worner, Willard ....... 0... Montgomery, Alabama. .....cc...... Ebbitt House. Willey, Waltman FP... ...000 Morgantown, West Virginia........ Missouri avenue, corner Third street. *Williams, George H.......... Portland, Oregon... o.oo.) National Hotel. Wilson, Henry . --. 2.0000 Natick, Massachusetts .......-..... Washington House. Windom, William -...-.......0 Winona, Minnegotn ----...-.. 1512 H street. Yates, Richard... c..---. 2-00 Jacksonville, Tinois.......neeeun.. St. Mare Hotel. REPRESENTATIVES. *JAMES G. BLAINE, Speaker.. .. Adam, GeorgeM. cone an Allison, Willijam B.........t... Ambler, JacoD A... ..-aekciiosie Ames; Oaker. waco sana ne Archer, Stevenson............. Armstrong, William H......... Arnel], Samuel Mio. Coin a. “88 Asper, Joel I. LLL oc naLE *39Atwood, David... .. oni Axtell, Samuel B.........00 Ayer, Richard SL... ...L. cu. Bailey, Alexander H........... Banks, Nathaniel P.......... 3 *§ Barnum, William H.......... Barry, HenryiWi....ntl. 0... Beaman, Fernando C.......... Benjamin, John F............. Bennett, David 8... Benton, Jacob... ual ribo. Biggs, Benjamin T........a. Bingham, John A...L Sito. Bird, Johm TT. . sod iio Blair, Astin. bi. an eatail] Boles, Thomas... eee hha Booker, George W.....cee-®."" *Bowen, C.C Boyd, Sempronius H...... .... *Brooks, George M.-.c.evun---Brooks, James... ... Southern Ass. Press...... pa 1349 Mistreet .. <= -o-x-830 Thirteenth street. Bartlett, D. W.* ....| New York Independent..| 2 | 24 519 Fourteenth street .. — Green st., Geo’town. Springfield Republican. .. Boltean, Rol ...i-----Washington Star ........ 15 | 44 1247 Ninth street. Boynton, H. V.% ....| Cincinnati Gazette....... 13 | 15 1407 L street. Chicago Tribune. ......--Pittsburg Commercial. ... St. Louis Democrat ...... Briggs, Mrs... Philadelphia Press.....-. Asal Casparis House. Brown, D. W ....... Congressional Globe ...o.|-ae|en--316 Second street. Burritt, I. N=. ...... Jd. Washington Herald..| 18 | 1 728 Seventeenth street. Byington, A..H..... Norwalk Gazette ........ rms 48 East Capitol street. Qameron, H........ Kansas W. M. Journal...|---.| 41 Carpenter, Li. ©..... Milwaukee Sentinel...... w=] 730) 725 Fifteenth street. Morristown Jerseyman. .. Newburg Journal........ Warwick Bulletin . ...... Windham Transeript .... Chivington, J. M....| Nebraska Press.......... Qlarke, W. H -...... American Press Ass’n....|.--.|.--513 Fourteenth street .. 823 Fourteenth street. Coffin, W. GQ... ....-Leavenworth Times..... Colburn, Justin E...| New York TimeS........ Gil. La 527 Fourteenth street .. 526 Sixth street. Gone, ID. D= .._..:; Philadelphia Ledger ..... 14 | 16 503 Fourteenth street .. 74 1 street. Cook Aga B.....---Erie Dispateh .. nr." a FA 1008 F sireet. Copeland, W. P.*._.| N. Y. Journal Commerce.| 17 | 17 503 Fourteenth street .. 51 Defrees street. Crounse, L. 1. *..... New York Times. -..--. 6 | 12 527 Fourteenth street .. 1129 Fourteenth street. Davie, D. 3... conve Chicago Republican ..... gat Dawson, Geo. Frs. ..| Sacramento Union....... ie ei 509 Second street. Bell Vn is Fort Smith New Era..... Deering, J., jr .-----Portland Transeript...... a Er 209 Ninth street. Dodge, C.B .....5.. Chicago Prairie Farmer..|..-.|---819 M street. Edwards, J. K ...... Congressional Globe ..... SA ‘Washington House. Byang, BK. oc. American Press Ass’'n....|....]|..-513 Fourteenth street .. 1119 Tenth street. Florence, T. B..----. Ed. Washington Gazette .| 20 |-.. 513 Fourteenth street .. 428 Seventh street. Foley, J.P"... ..% New York Standard..... He 513 Fourteenth street .. Ebbitt House. Folwell,C.H ....... Newark Advertiser ...... 39 |38 510 I street. Forney, D.C -...... ‘Washington Chroniele ...|---.|---935 Grant place. Forney, John W....| Ed. Philadelphia Press...|{....|.--. 553 New Jersey avenue. Ed. Washington Chronicle Fornay, John W., jr| Washingfon Chronicle ...|....|..-National Hotel. Gallagher, J. C...... Bureau of Correspondence|---.|---1008 ¥ street. Geddes. BX ..e one Baltimore Gazette ....... ewes) 3D 309 D street. Gensler aH... .... Congressional Globe -.... rinintel| ole mie 10 I street. Gilbert, J. J »....--.{i New York Ass'd Presz...| ‘1... 1351 Bstreet 0oe a 342 Pa. avenue. Gobright, L. A. *....| New York Ass’d Press...|-e-.|.--1351 Bistreet........... 918 E street. Grace, W. El. __._... Trish Republic. ....-:..-. Sedr Grey, Tompkins C..| Washington Chronicle...| 16 |---. 802 G street, northwest. Harris, 0.K ........ ‘Washington Patriot. ..... Bieieay id 27D street... oi... 464 Thirteenth street. Harvey, James E...| Ed. Washington Patriot .|....|---. PDD street 00... 712 Fourteenth street. Hawes, J. H.-...... Washington New Era....|[-cau|--a-1225 N street. Hegging, M.H ....... Detroit Herald .---......--oe wimie OF, Hineks, W -..-..... Congressional Globe... .. wie lie dele 8 Four-and-a-half st. Hinton, R. J .... ...| New York Evening Mail. |....| 18 933 H street. Worcester Spy... -...... Houston, S. . ....... Lancaster Express....... Impry, B.H ......--. Davenport Gazette ...... aed 1 — D street south. Tewin, Hl. M........ American Pregs Assn....|....| 7 513 Fourteenth street .. 427 Fourth street. Jones, AL CC Zo. Alabama State Journal ..| 26 | 31 1324 Patreet.. ---.-oi. 335 G street. Kauffmann, S. H...| Washington Star ........ get Pa. av., cor. Eleventh . 1000 M street. Kock, Werner. ..... Wash’'n German Advertis'y|....|.-. La. av., cor. Seventh .. 710 Sixth street. Knowlton, J. W....| Chicago Tribune ........ 6 lm 519 Fourteenth street .. Lambert, Richard. ..| Vallejo Chronicle ........ 23 1... 1424 Pa. avenue ....... 1424 Pa. avenue. Lanman, Charles ...| London Athenseum ...... Bl ET 120 West st., Geo’t'n. Lippincott, Mrs .. ..| New York Tribune ...... eos 232 New Jersey avenue. Maecfarland, J....... New York Herald ....... 10 | 27 517 Fourteenth street .. National Hotel. McBride, W. QC... ... Washington Chronicle ...| 8 | 14 511 Ninth street........ 626 G-street, northwest. McElhone, J.J ..... Congressional Globe .....|.... afaYes 341 Pa, avente.ec.c-v-7 Ingle Place. Pn 128 CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY. 88 Name. Papers represented. Se = Office. Residence. : w®3Rn |=| = | @|» McKee, D. R.......| New York Ass’d Press...| C | 47 | 1351 E street .......... 1213 F street. San Francisco Bulletin®.. \ Merritt, H.C.-...-- Rochester Democrat -.... PE pe ESTSN i Casparis House. 3 Columbia News ......... Morris, Jno, M*..... Charlegion Republican. . feel. ldenves ole meninse ene snmmms 128 C street southeast. i Morse, P *.......-.- Galveston News ......... «e--|.--.| 813 Fifteenth street ....| 813 Fifteenth street. i ‘Motley, J.B. -.-.u=: St. Louis Times . ........ er Bes EeSR A American House. Murphy, D.F ...... Congressional Globe ..... rin zo leinee | OAL Pa. Avene .. oe.x Metropolitan Hotel. Murphy, B.V ...... Congressional Globe ..... eine eine] O41 Pa, avenue... 338 Pa. avenue. Murphy, J.J ....... Congressional Globe ..... dente [3 Pa avenne.. oa, Metropolitan Hotel. Murtagh, W. J ..... ‘Washington Republican..|....|....| Tenth and D street..... 477 Maryland avenue. Myers, J. F..veconss Washington GC. S. Jounal. |. -. foci |e tei ee ae aa simi smimiain 445 Mass. avenue. : Richmond Radical ....... Noah, M. M ........ San Francisco Call. ...... SI Br SI Or ee a 604 Eleventh steet. Noah, RB. Pi... .... New York Democrat..... sina 26 13 TY ghreeli. ov cimim 604 Eleventh street. Noyes, €. 8. .......- Bd. Washinoton: Stay... leeel 8 on ne es eae niniaieie — G street S. W. Noyes, 8. V vcneree- American Press Assm....|....|....| 513 Fourteenth street 721 First street. O’Brien, W.......:. Sacramento Record...... Sr le se ol es CF BETOON, Overton, W. G. *....| Louisville Courier........ 24 | 32 Painter, U. H .o--- Philadelphia Inquirer ....| 7 | 11 | 523 Fourteenth street 908 Fourteenth street. Perking, W..'T.....- Cincinnati Chronicle. .... Piatt Donn. .c--e--- Cincinnati Commerelnl. |... 00 oC a. Arlington Hotel. Pilsbury, Chas. A. *.| New York Democrat..... ---.| 29 | 513 Fourteenth street ..| 1414 G street. Savannah News ......... Atlanta Congtitution ..... Augusta Constitutionalist. Poon, Chill. oc aviss- American Press Ass'n ...|....|....| 513 Fourteenth street..| 1908 G street. Poore, Ben. Perley* .| Boston Journal .......... 23 | 40 | 525 Fourteenth street ..| 156 Congress st., Geo’t'n. Poulton, J. P. C ....| Des Moines Register..... ee a a a EL rere heath he ms — Eleventh street. Preston, H. A --.--~ New York Herald. ....... tamale=-.| 207 Penn, avenue east. Proctor, J, C nue. Philadelphia Ledger..... wei.|---.| 503 Fourteenth street ..| 1516 Twelfth street. Ramsgdell, H. J. *....| Cincinnati Commercial...| 9 |. 9 | 515 Fourteenth street ..| Metropolitan Hotel. New York Tribune ...... Reynolds, J. S...... Idaho Statesman. ........ Richards, C. N...... Boston, Mass., Ploughman|....|... 1217 Tenth street. fi Richardson, I. A. *..| Baltimore Assid Press: cot 2 Oil. coinaainnesss aie sane 1213 K street. : Riley, J, Hn... Alta Californian -......-- mE ta 721 Twentieth street. { Saville, Wm. P..... Washington Chronicle ...|....|....| 511 Ninth street........ 55 Defrees street. | Show, Bi, Taunton, Mass., Gazettee Shaw, W.B.*.....» Boston Transeript ....... 8 | 22 | 523 Fourteenth street ..| National Hotel. Cincinnati Chronicle ..... Chicago Journal......... New York Commercial... Toledo Blade. ....-.c.aus Shepherd, Arthur ...| Washington Republican. .|....|....| Tenth and D street ....| 921 Ninth street. Shuey, B.1........ Congressional Globe ..... samosas OSPR, AVENUE «seams 104 Third street. Slade, TL. M =... Cleveland Herald. ....... Smith, W. Scott*...| Boston Traveler ......... B 9111921 TM sirect oon. cae 512 I street. N.Y. Evening Post. ...... 3 Philadelphia Bulletin. . ... Snead, Miss ....-.-- New York World........ ae Sein as aateiis i 520 Thirteenth street. Snodgrass, T. E ....| Va. Valley Star.......... CRA HL aii Sein AR — C street. Stetson; Morin A. ...] "Topeknh Sinte ReCOTA. o.oo Jinn ]snanemsnenive suse sine 214 Four-and-a-half st. Solteldo, A. M ...... New York Sun Taleott, A. B....-..- Washington Patriot ee] 13 | F0B7 PD Siraet sean sinicieieis 606 Fifth street. Thompson, J. Q ....| Cleveland Leader th a 509 Sixth street. Townsend, G. A....| Chicago Tribune......... AR Oe SI Ss 926 Seventeenth street. ‘Warden, Clifford....| Boston Post, &€ venue... 12 |....| 1414 Pa. avenue .......| 1414 Pa. avenue. Warden, W. W. >... | Boston Post . ..cceeseeeds 19 3 1414 Pa. avenue ......- 1414 Pa. avenue. Philadelphia Day........ ‘Washington Republican. . ) Galveston News. «eeu... i ‘Washington, L. Q ..| Washington Patriot...... 19 | 39'| 997 1D Street oe eesns=- 3 London (Bog. J LelogTapit. 1: <= [~~ -[we cieie smn me sane aids mies 1000 Sixth street. i White, Z. I" -.---. New York Tribune ...... 5 |....| 515 Fourteenth street ..|13%7 F street. A Webster, J cca. swe. Jackson, Miss., Pilot..... 42 ‘Wedderburn, A.J ..| Alexandrian, Va......... Young Jas. R*x..... New York Standard ..... eee-|.--.| 521 Fourteenth street ..| Ebbitt House. Philadelphia Post ........ Philadelphia Star ........ EE RE LS [i3, 9, \ & Madisoh\St. W E \ ah a Oak Hill Eo 5 - STEEN > 18 NN LDL= AEE Cemetery & i =< ZN [0d bi ; ong St SHEDS FEE a ] aE vA: 3 5 : | hadard | | sel] = = 3 5 = Convent oe E L [ SO Sl ainle : A 9) District of Columbia. 1870 VIRGINIA 2 [\ A\ } SN i 1] A)\ ll fl CL SN =] = | =) J Zz a i REFERENCES 1 The Capitol. 15 City Hall and Court House. 2 President's House. : 16 Jaql. 3 State Department. 17 City Asylum. “4 Treasury Department. 18 City Muarkets. 5 War Department. 19 Smithsonian Institution. 6 Novy Department. 20 Washington Monument. 7 Interior Department. 21 Statue of Washington. 8 Post Office Department. 22 Ee css 3; 9 Attorney General’s Office. 23 Statue of Jackson. 10 Department of Agriculture. 24 Corcoran Art Gallery. IL FLL 11 Observatory. 25 Botanical Garden. -12 Arsenal. 26 Congressional Burial Ground. AYI \ Te/ 1 Ei 13 Navy Yard. 271 Nawal Hospital. ~~ 14 Marine Borrocks. ee D CIE / : = 110 NIL = EEE 00d IN ii =f CAOERNTI2 & xe i 4] (FON [ebibaona Sas] IZ | Qs] TNS i Str IAN LUCINEZ I 13 = J TReesdin Z Jeet EFEIEHE SESS SRA Sabin Vm = | HL | AVE R LIE JE ICE RAE = 10 = a ae : LL i == Nh DOL UNIONTOWN GAIT a0 7 SHA AN ) al S = <.—— MARYLAND