p SE i aR a . i h | r Hi f | | | 0Hi i | FORTY-NINTH CONGRESS. [ SECOND SESSION. | (CONGRESSIONAL Directory, COMPILED FOR THE USE OF CONGRESS By BEN: PERLEY POORE, { CLERK OF PRINTING RECORDS. SECOND Forrion, CORRECTED TO FEBRUARY 5, 1887. WASHINGTON: GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE, 1387, 2D ED ENTERED ACCORDING TO ACT OF CONGRESS, IN THE YEAR 1886 By BEN: PERLEY POORE, IN THE OFFICE OF THE LIBRARIAN OF CONGRESS, AT WASHINGTON. TABLE OF CONTENTS. Page. AmuSemems, Places Of i. i tat co ire a th ee ae eee Fansiteoid en ome Sew fuisiv 182 Biographies of Senators and Representatives, alphabetically arranged by States .................. 5 of Territorlal Delegates. oo... oi i a Fa Se Sat seis tains seth ala Hes 97 yy oN Botanical Garden, Superintendent of... i is i eannes thnk ese De sein Se en 117 Bureanr ol Bihnology. oo nc RRa i de ts 186 CAlenan Or IEG. i ati deen eae eh, 4 Capitol building, Description and diagrams hg ME Ae RR Je SR Re Re i ee 119 A EE a a eS Os a i a 104 | CIty: Post-Offleei tus. c i iiiaie ds vets iraah iah Te i oh a hah an Se I es 91 | Civil Bervica Commission Fe nT 142 Columbia Institutionforthe Deaf and Dumb’... co cin oii oe ila ess PIERRE 186 Committees, Standing, Selectyand Joint, of the coins cesar ies aes 100 Senate............. | House of Representatives... ..........cceiveueuns 105 : Consulates-General, Consulates, Consular and Commercial Agencies, and Consular Clerks. ....... 163 fr Corcoran GallerVol Abs. uv voll vio frail Loria ha that ames svat ies sam se ws aan isan n 0a 185 | Courtsiof the United Stales ii... i. visitashese ase onl aaa iia aes 157 District of Columbia... ., Ahr AN Ter 183 Departments. Department of Agriculture.... . .. . . .. .. ‘ we TAT Interior Department... . 4... ~:%. a raeed Pa Trt em os PE 139 ...... Departmentof JUS. suit acianers se te a ere es 141 Navy Department cio 0 on a aan daa a 133 Post-Office Department. i i ri fe 138 | Department ol Stale. nrey ae rea 128 Preasury Department. ies aa ae =i 198 | ar Depa mel Son a a ees deine 131 i Departments, Duties of. The Department of Agriculture. .... .......cccueeeeeessarrvnsennns ever 156 g. : Thenterior Department... ..... a a he, 153 { The Department 0 Tustice. ... cv. ih see dade ares 155 The Navy Departmient.,.. oc. 0 ve sine ae ahaa 152 The Post-Office Department... ...... i... fi. cs dis neseinarne ness 154 The Departmentof State... . Eeicc ser inn 143 { TheTreasgry Department... 00 on. oe ve aie eee es 144 -h The War Department. o.oo ie iat hes el I5r" Diagram of seats and location of Senators... ....ic.e.veteesconten: cos terior gos situenis sinners. sos 196 Representativesand Delegates... 000s. ove.) 198 .................. District of:Columbia Government. ....i ....o hk. i TL td sien oe ean clas sas 180 Benevolent INSLHULIONS No. cuir eich sso 0 eect ve Vaninisls an sobs ties 183 Blection, Census, and Territorial SiatiSties . ... i... cherie a sents cease as 195 Executive Mansion... ci. oo ao versie ta sash hs ies raise ses Ci ee Aaa 128 Government Prinfiny Office... ... coor. er iii retine: cassia oss sen sans sane rs teasers ac 142 Government TelegTapB=. oor tll Lil iio Li i vi ae er a eet ede 117 Health, National Board 0f .... 0 cess vienna san sania in Tainensns ar Benn fsa states suninn 142 Legations. Foreign Legationsinthe United. States.... .. .........cc.cceviverseeseconveennnrensns 158 Legationsiof the United Statesabroad:............ ch. ie seis ode devon rae 161 A TADrary of Congress... ...v. «reuseseve verges iais Viliin gs nites svab eden sa ee dae rae te iirases 118 i National Museums... co. ieee ee tes sine h nnsdeemnes earls shit senna Sos oiom nals nin ss wien ssa ce'vebie vie 184 { Officers of the Senate and Clerks of Senate Committees... einen orerarsnernnn 112 ..............ccee Officers of the House and Clerks of HouSe Committees. .......... .i.......vevesvosesinaters shee IT4 Official Reporters of Debates... ci. il seria isd sadun shass adrienne ei i 116 V Placesof Divine Worship... .........c. ois os ra 188 7 > 3 HEE EH Tn BR a BE a i Se RR Seem ne 117 Postal Informaflon a Ea a LE a a, 193 Press, Correspondents of the ............ rT LTH TUT STR Rr PL CA RAS ER 126 | The Washington Press... ye. ve ass sais sansesises Sateinlsiviste elaiuic inks see AN nie eis wo ad 187 | ReNeious ASSoelalions i. Ldve tensa Sie Slee Siw ais sae ee alee 2 191 Senators, Representatives, and Delegates, with their residences at home and in Washington ...... 209 The Smithsonian Institution United States Fish Commission .... .......c.coiiiiiiiiiniiinennnnnnn. 184 TheSoldlers Hlome i ih i a a asin Aer aA 187 In Unofficial list of Membersiof Fiftleth Congress... ............0c..ccsl vot sve swiss iss sisees vedi 201 Washington Monument. oii. cl. ini. fas ds Tans uss asilan snd sais soils Sum males aie nae 185 : Washington Observatory... .........ueeiiininse SE ra SI NE a 185 ian CALENDAR FOR 1887. | JANUARY, JULY. | Sun.|M. |T. | W.| T. | F. Sat. |Sun.| M.| T. | W.| T. | F. |Sat. | 80 op! 2! 30 glo 16 (17 23 24 30. 31 . a! 31 6{ x ir2iag| (13 vg 20 [25{26 (27 I Tos I 7! 84 3 al 5] 6] 7/8} gag tox {12]13] 1415] 20 {22 x7 | 18 19 [20/21 [22 28 2924 | 2520 |"27 | 28201] ali af 3 9 16 23 30 hoi" FEBRUARY. AUGUST. . 61 ¥3 20 a 51 xa {21 008 Ee Ee aR 8 olor az wih 8 fig ldo 1 12 13 15126 vy [18 {vol 2a 3526 17 | 183 | 10] 20 (22 | 2324 25262722 [23|24]25 [26/27 ae eau] aer]irea] 28 {20 [ 30 [38.00 siunmalian MARCH. SEPTEMBER. . efi 6»: 13 14 30 | 21 gq ta | | xl 2 3l 8 olrof 15 [16 1 17 22 (23 | 24 {20730 31 1 a) xr 18 [25 |... | 3% lye 1g 26) oy ll 4 N31) 18 25 | 5 12. 19 (26 | . 61 15. |20 27 | | 71 24.) 21 28 | tla |-2 8.010 25 |. 26 | 1” |'22 | 23 | 24 29 | 30 : I 2 APRIL OCTOBER. | | os 3/4 5/6] 10} 11 (12 | 13 17] 18110 | 20 24 | 2512627 | Lj 2 7 81 9f 14} 15-16 [21 | 22 23 (2820304 {| fl... wa ofall 2 3p 41564 7]:8 observ | 12 13 | 14 | 18 16 | 17 | 183 [39 [20 | 21 | 22 23 (24125126 [27 (2829 30 | tfc iifenci]ennnlmessfarse MAY NOVEMBER yl 8 15 22 29 | | 2 3/27 351 6] 7 9101112 13/4) 16 | 17 {18 | 19 | 20 | 22 (23 (24 (25 [26,27 |28 30 [ 3X |. weef--nelranrfr=--l | nl vlinbigboad g 6% 71 8 g{10|31]| 12 13 | 14 | 25 | 16] 17] 18 | 19 20|21|22|23)24/|25/:26 27 | 28 {20 (30 |-nru|onniefsnnn JUNE DECEMBER x | | | | | A > esl 12 109.{ 26. 61 13 20 1.27 (4) | 71 (14 21. | {28 1 2] fas 22 [201 2 8|. 4 . otro: 4 p26 Vay {1S yr |. 23 | 24. | 25:4.13 30 [.caisl-v.ill 28 | A 51:67! 12 131.14 |.29.\ 20| 21 26.) 27.| 28. | Xi ie i = 3] 910 15.261 17 [232 | 23:4 24 20 {430 { 3% 0 tL CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY, MEMBERS OF THE FORTY-NINTH CONGRESS. ALABAMA. SENATORS. John T. Morgan, of Selma, was born at Athens, Tennessee, June 20, 1824 ; received an academic education, chiefly in Alabama, to which State he emigrated when nine years old, and has since resided there ; studied law, was admitted to the bar in 1845, and practised until his election to the Senate ; was a Presidential Elector in 1860 for the State at large, and voted for Breckinridge and Lane; was a Delegate in 1861 from Dallas County to the State Convention which passed the ordinance of secession; joined the Confederate Army, in May, 1861, as a private in Company I, Cahaba Rifles, and when that company was assigned to the Fifth Alabama Regiment, under Col. Robert E. Rodes, he was elected Major and afterward Lieutenant-Colonel of that regiment; was commissioned in 1862 as Colonel and raised the Fifty-first Alabama Regiment ; was appointed Brigadier-General in 1863, and assigned to a brigade in Virginia, but resigned ‘to rejoin his regiment, whose colonel had been killed in battle ; later in 1863 he was again appointed Brigadier-General, and assigned to an Alabama brigade, which included his regiment ; after the war, he resumed the practice of his profession at Selma ; was chosen a Presidential Elector for the State at large in 1876, and voted for Tilden and Hendricks; was elected to the United States Senate as a Democrat, to succeed George Goldthwaite, Dem-ocrat; took his seat March 5, 1877, and was re-elected in 1882. His term of service will expire March 3, 18809. James L. Pugh, of Eufaula, was born in Burke County, Georgia, December 12, 18203 received an academic education in Alabama and Georgia; came to Alabama when four years old, where he has since resided; was licensed to practise law in 1841, and was so employed when elected to the Senate; was Taylor Elector in 1848, Buchanan Elector in 1856, and State Elector for Tilden in 1876; was elected to Congress, without opposition, in 1859 ; retired from the Thirty-sixth Congress when Alabama ordained to secede from the Union ; joined the Eufaula Rifles, in the First Alabama Regiment, as a private ; was elected to the Confederate Congress in 1861, and re-elected in 1863; after the war, resumed the practice of the law; was President of the State Convention of the Democratic party in 1874; was member of the Convention that framed the State Constitution of 1875; was elected to the Senate as a Demo-crat, to fill the balance of the term made vacant by the death of George S. Houston. Took his seat December 6, 1880, and was re-elected in 1884. His term of office will expire March 3, 1891. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. COUNTIES.~— Choctaw, Clarke, Marengo, Mobile, Monroe, and Washington. James Taylor Jones, of Demopolis, was born at Richmond, Virginia, in 1832, and removed with his father to.Marengo County, Alabama, when two years old; received a classical education, graduating from Princeton College, New Jersey, in 1852, and from the (5) | | | | | 6 Congressional Directory. [ALABAMA. Law School of the University of Virginia in 1855; was admitted to the bar in 1856, and has since been engaged in the practice of his profession, with the exception of four years during the war, when he was a private and afterwards an officer in the Fourth Alabama Regiment; was a Delegate to the Alabama State Constitutional Convention in 1865; was a State Senator in 1872-73; was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress in 1876, and to the Forty-eighth Congress in 1883,and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 8,871 votes against 6,403 votes for F. H. Threat, Republican. Re-elected. SECOND DISTRICT. COUNTIES.Baldwin, Butler, Conecuh, Crenshaw, Covington, Escambia, Montgomery, and — Pile. Hilary A. Herbert, of Montgomery, was born at Laurensville, South Carolina, March 12, 1834; removed to Greenville, Butler County, Alabama, in 1846; attended the University of Alabama in 1853-54 and the University of Virginia in 1855-56; studied law, and was admitted to the bar; entered the Confederate service as Captain; was promoted to the Colonelcy of the Eighth Alabama Volunteers; was disabled at the battle of the Wilderness, May 6, 1864 ; continued the practice of law at Greenville, Alabama, until 1872, when he removed to Mont-gomery, where he has since practised ; was elected to the Forty-fifth, Forty-sixth, Forty-seventh, and Forty-eighth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 11,331 votes against 8,991 votes for Whitehead, Republican. . Re-elected. THIRD DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Barbour, Bullock, Coffee, Dale, Geneva, Henry, Lee, and Russell. William C. Oates, of Abbeville, was born in Pike (now Bullock) County, Alabama, No-vember 30, 1835; was self-educated; studied law, was admitted to the bar in 1858, and became a successful lawyer and business man; entered the Confederate Army as Captain of Company G, Fifteenth Alabama Infantry, in July, 1861; was appointed Colonel in the Pro-visional Army of the Confederate States, May 1, 1863, and was assigned to the command of his old regiment; the Forty-eighth Alabama Regiment was also subsequently placed under his command ; was wounded four times slightly and twice severely, losing his right arm in front of Richmond August 16, 1864, in the twenty-seventh battle he was enagaged in; was a Delegate to the National Democratic Convention held in New York in 1868 which nom-inated Seymour for the Presidency; was a member of the Alabama House of Represent-atives, and Chairman of the Committee on Ways and Means at the sessions of 1870-71 and 1871-72; was an unsuccessful candidate for the Democratic nomination for Governor in 1872; was, later in the same year, nominated for Congress in the Montgomery district and defeated by the Republican candidate; was a member of the Constitutional Convention in 1875 and Chairman of its Judiciary Committee; was elected to the Forty-seventh and Forty-eighth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 10,965 votes against 4,349 votes for Mabson, Republican. Re-elected. FOURTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Dallas, Hale, Lowndes, Perry, and Wilcox. A. C. Davidson, of Uniontown, was born in Mecklenburgh County, North Carolina, December 26, 1826; was educated at the public schools of Marengo County, Alabama, and a the University of Alabama, where he graduated July 11, 1848; studied law in the office of Campbell & Chandler, Mobile, Alabama, but never practised; is a cotton planter; was a member of the State House of Representatives of Alabama in 1880-81,and of the State Senate in 1882, ’83, 84 and ’85; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 14,225 votes against 6,794 votes for G. H. Craig, Republican, 674 votes for De Lemos, Republican, and 683 votes for Haralson, Republican. Re-elected. FIFTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Autauga, Bibb, Chambers, Chilton, Clay, Coosa, Elmore, Macon, and Talla-hassa. Thomas William Sadler, of Prattville, was born near Russellville, Franklin County, Ala-bama, April 17, 1831; removed with his parents to Jefferson County, Alabama, in 1833; re-ceived an academic education; removed to Autauga County, Alabama, in 1855; engaged in mercantile pursuits until the beginning of the late war between the States; volunteered and served in the division of the Confederate Army commanded by Gen. Joseph Wheeler; has been engaged in agricultural pursuit and the practice of law since 1865; was County Super-intendent of Education from 1875 to 1884; was a Hancock Elector in 1880; and was elected to the Forty ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 10,773 votes against 218 votes scattering. ALABAMA. | Senators and Representatives. vi . SIXTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Fayette, Greene, Jefferson, Lamar, Marion, Pickens, Sumter, Tuscaloosa, Walker, and Winston. : John Mason Martin, of Birmingham, was born at Athens, Limestone County, Alabama, January 20, 1837; received his early education at the best high schools of the South, including the one at Green Springs, Alabama, taught by Henry Tutwiler, LL. D.; was a student at the University of Alabama for two and a half years; was then a student at Centre College, Dan-ville, Kentucky, from June 5, 1855, to September 11, 1856, when he was graduated an A. B.; studied law; was admitted to the bar, and is a lawyer by profession and practice; was Professor of Equity Jurisprudence in the University of Alabama from 1875 to 1886; was a member of the State Senate of Alabama from August, 1871, to November, 1876, serving as President pro tempore from 1873 to 1876; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, re-ceiving 10,132 votes against 75 votes scattering. SEVENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Blount, Calhoun, Cherokee, Cleburne, De Kalb, Etowak, Marshall, Randolph, Saint Clair, Shelby, and Talladega. William Henry Forney, of Jacksonville, was born at Lincolnton, North Carolina, No-vember 9, 1823; received a classical education, graduating at the University of Alabama in 1844; served in the war with Mexico as a First Lieutenant in the First Regiment of Alabama Volunteers; studied law, was admitted to the bar in 1848, and has practised ever since; was elected by the Legislature of Alabama a Trustee of the University of Alabama, and served 1851-60; was a member of the State House of Representatives of Alabama 1859-60; en-tered the Confederate Army at the commencement of hostilities in 1861 as Captain, and was successively promoted Major, Lieutenant-Colonel, Colonel, and Brigadier-General; surren-dered at Appomattox Court-House; was a member of the State Senate of Alabama 1865-'66, serving until the State was reconstructed; was elected to the Forty-fourth, Forty-fifth, Forty-sixth, Forty-seventh, and Forty-eighth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Con-gress as a Dem., receiving 14,187 votes against 8,217 votes for Ewing, Repub. Re-elected. EIGHTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Colbert, Franklin, Jackson, Lauderdale, Lawrence, Limestone, Madison, ana Morgan. Joseph Wheeler, of Wheeler, was born at Augusta, Georgia, September 10, 1836; gradu-ated in the five-year course at the Military Academy at West Point in 1859; was commissioned in the United States Army as Lieutenant of Dragoons; served in Kansas and New Mexico; resigned in 1861, and was appointed as Lieutenant of Artillery in the Confederate Army; was promoted, and commanded an Infantry brigade at the battle of Shiloh; was soon afterwards again promoted, and appointed to the command of the Army Corps of Cavalry of the Western * Army, continuing in that position until the war closed; by joint resolution of the Confederate Congress received the thanks of that body for successful military operations, and for the defence of the city of Aiken received the thanks of the State of South Carolina; upon the death of General Stuart became the senior Cavalry General of the Confederate Armies; was appointed Professor of Philosophy in the Louisiana State Seminary in 1866, which office he declined; was counsellor at law and cotton planter until 1880, when hé was elected to the Forty-seventk Congress as a Democrat; but his election was contested, and he was on June 3, 1882, deprivec of his seat, but was re-elected, and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 12,912 votes against 11,559 votes for Lionel W. Day, Independent. Re-elected. ARKANSAS. SENATORS. James K, Jones, of Washington, was born in Marshall County, Mississippi, September 29, 1839; received a classical education; was a private soldier during the “late unpleasantness*’ on the losing side; lived on his plantation after the close of the war until 1873, when he commenced the practice of law; was a member of the State Senate of Arkansas in 1873; was a member of the State Senate when the Constitutional Convention of 1874 was called; was re-elected under the new government, and in 1877 was elected President of the Senate; was elected Congressional Directory. [ARKANSAS to the Forty-seventh Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-eighth and Forty-ninth Con-gresses; was elected to the United States Senate, as a Democrat, to succeed James D. Walker, Democrat, and took his seat March 4, 1885. Ilis term of service will expire March 3, 1891. James H. Berry, of Bentonville, was born in Jackson County, Alabama, May 15, 1841; removed to Arkansas in 1848; received a limited education at a private school at Berryville, Arkansas; studied law, and was admitted to practice in 1866; entered the Confederate Army in 1861 as Second Lieutenant, Sixteenth Arkansas Infantry; lost a leg at the battle of Corinth, Mississippi, October 4, 1862; was elected to the Legislature of Arkansas in 1866; was re-elected in 1872; was elected Speaker of the House at the extraordinary session of 1874; was President of the Democratic State Convention in 1876; was elected Judge of the Circuit Court in 1878; was elected Governor in 1882; was elected to the United States Senate as a Democrat, to succeed Hon. A. H. Garland, appointed Attorney-General, and took his seat March 25, 1885. His term of service will expire March 3, 1889. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Chicot, Clay, Craighead, Crittenden, Cross, Desha, Greene, Independence, Jack-son, Lawrence, Lee, Mississippi, Phillips, Poinsett, Randolph, Saint Francis, and Sharp. Poindexter Dunn, of Forest City, was born in Wake County, North Carolina, November 3, 1834; removed with his father to Limestone County, Alabama, in 1836; received his primary education in the schools there; was four years in Jackson College at Columbia, Tennessee, where he graduated in 1854; removed to Saint Francis County, Arkansas, in March, 1856; engaged in cotton-growing until 1861; was elected as a Democrat to the lower house of the Arkansas Legislature in 1858; served in the Confederate Army during the war; commenced the practice of law in 1867; was on the Democratic electoral ticket for Arkansas in 1872 and 1876; was elected to the Forty-sixth and Forty-seventh Congresses, and Forty-eighth Con-gresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 14,836 votes against 8,651 votes for Remmel, Republican. Re-elected. SECOND DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Arkansas, Cleburne, Conway, Dorsey, Faulkner, Grant, Jefferson, Lincoln, Lonoke, Monroe, Pope, Prairie, Stone, Van Buren, White, and Woodruff. SE Clifton R. Breckinridge, of Pine Bluff, was born at Lexington, Kentucky, November 22, 1846; received a common school education; served in the ‘Confederate Army as a private soldier, and at the close of the war was a midshipman on duty below Richmond, Virginia; was a clerk in a commercial house for two years; attended Washington College, now Wash-ington and Lee University, Virginia, three years; became a cotton planter in Arkansas in 1870, and was engaged in planting and in the commission business for thirteen years; was an alderman of his town one term; was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress from the State-at-large, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 14,692 votes against 12,229 votes for Rogers, Republican. : Re-elected. THIRD DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Askley, Bradley, Calloun, Clark, Columbia, Dallas, Drew, Hempstead, Hot Spring, Howard, Lafayette, Little River, Miller, Nevada, Ouachita, Pike, Polk, Sevier, and Union. Thomas C. McRae, of Prescott, was born at Mount Holly, Union County, Arkansas, De-cember 21, 1851; was educated at private schools at Shady Grove, Mount Holly, and Falcon, Arkansas; received a full course of instruction at Soulé Business College, New Orleans; studied law at the Washington and Lee University of Virginia, under Hon. John W. Brocken-borough and Hon. J. Randolph Tucker, and was admitted to practice in State Circuit Courts at Rosston, Nevada County, Arkansas, in January, 1873; in the Askansas Supreme Court in January, 1876, and in the Uuited States Supreme Court in January, 1886; was a member of the State Legislature of Arkansas in 1877, in which year he moved from Rosston to Prescott, in the same county, where he has since practiced his profession; was a member of the town ‘council of the incorporated town of Prescott in 1879; was nominated by the Democratic party and elected as a Presidential Elector for Hancock and English; was Chairman of the Demo-cratic State Convention 1884, and also a Delegate from Arkansas to the National Convention at Chicago; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress, to fill the vacancy caused by the election of Hon. J. K. Jones to the United States Senate, as a Democrat, receiving 13,877 votes against 8,738 votes for Judge C. E. Mitchel, Independent. Re-elected. = H ¥ ARKANSAS. | Senators and Representatives. 9 ns - 3 FOURTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.Crawford, Franklin, Garland, Johnson, Logan, Monigomery, Perry, Pulaski, — Saline, Sebastian, Scott, and Yell. John Henry Rogers, of Fort Smith, was born in Bertie County, North Carolina, October 9, 1845; in 1852 his parents removed to Mississippi; in March, 1862, he joined the Ninth Mississippi Regiment, Volunteers, Confederate States Army, as a private; was promoted to First Lieutenant in same regiment, and served through the war; was educated at Centre Col-lege, Danville, Kentucky, and at the University of Mississippi, at Oxford, graduating at the latter college in the class of 1868; was admitted to practise law at Canton, Mississippi, in 1868; in 1869 removed to Fort Smith, Arkansas, where he has since resided and practised his profession; in 1877 was, elected Circuit Judge; was re-elected in 1878, and resigned in May, 1882; and was elected to the Forty-eighth and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Con-gress as a Democrat, receiving 16,256 votes against 11,324 votes for Sarber, Rep. Re-elected. FIFTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Baxter, Benton, Boone, Carroll, Fulton, lzard, Madison, Marion, Newton, Searcy, and Washington. Samuel W. Peel, of Bentonville,was born in Independence County, Arkansas, September 13, 1832; received a common-school education; was elected Clerk of the Circuit Court of Carroll County, Arkansas, in 1858, and again in 1860; entered the Confederate service in 1861 as a private, and was elected Major of the Third Arkansas Infantry (State troops); re-en-tered the Confederate service in 1862 as a private, and was elected Colonel of the Fourth Regiment, Arkansas Infantry; at the close of the war he commenced the practice of law in the State courts; was appointed Prosecuting Attorney of the fourth judicial circuit of Arkansas in 1873; upon the adoption of the new constitution in 1874, was elected to the same place; was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 11,5I4 votes against 5,107 votes for Keener, Republican, 286 votes for Byrd Smith, and 29 votes scattering. Re-elected. CALIFORNIA. SENATORS. Leland Stanford, of San Francisco, was born in Albany County, New York, March 9 1824; received an academical education; entered the law office of Wheaton, Doolittle & Hadley, at Albany, in 1846, and after three years’ study was admitted to practise law in the Supreme Court of the State of New York; removed to Port Washington, in the northern part of the State of Wisconsin, where he was engaged in the practice’ of his profession for four years; a fire in the spring of 1852 destroying his law library and other property, he went to California, where he became associated in business with his brothers, three of whom had pre-ceded him to the Pacific Coast; he was at first in business at Michigan Bluffs, and in 1856 removed to San Francisco to engage in mercantile pursuits on a large scale; was a Delegate to the National Republican Convention at Chicago in 1860; was elected Governor of Cali-fornia, and served from December, 1861, to December, 1863; as President of the Central Pacific Railroad Company he superintended its construction over the mountains, building 530 miles of it in 293 days; he is interested in other railroads on the Pacific Slope, in agriculture, and in manufactures. He was elected to the United States Senate, as a Republican, in the place of J. T. Farley, Democrat, and took his seat March 4, 1885. His term of service will expire March 3, 1891. Abram P. Williams, of San Francisco, was born at New Portland, Somerset County, Maine, February 3, 1832; received a common-school and academic education; taught school until he was twenty-two years old, when he removed to Fairfield, Somerset County, Maine, and engaged in mercantile pursuits; in 1858 moved to California, and began mining in Tuolumne County; in 1859 resumed mercantile business, and in 1861 moved to San Fran-cisco, where he has since resided; is an importer, stock-raiser, and farmer; was one of the founders of the San Francisco Board of Trade, and its first President, and is a member of the San Francisco Chamber of Commerce; in 1880 was chosen chairman of the finance committee and treasurer of the Republican State committee of California, and in 1884 was elected chair-man of the State committee; was elected United States Senator by the California Legislature August 4, to succeed George Hearst, who was appointed by Governor Stoneman, and took his seat December 6, 1886. His term of service will expire March 3, 1887. Congressional Directory. [CALIFORNIA REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Colusa, Del Norte, Humboldt, Lake, Lassen, Mendocino, Modoc, Napa, Plumas, Shasta, Sierra, Siskiyou, Sonoma, Tehama, and Trinity. Barclay Henley, of Santa Rosa (son of Thomas J. Henley, who was a Representative in Congress from Indiana, 1842-1849), was born in Clark County, Indiana, March 17, 1843; © came to California in 1853; returning to Indiana, was educated at Hanover College ; studied law in San Francisco; was admitted to the bar in 1864 ; has been District Attorney of Sonoma County ; was a member of the State Assembly; in 1876 was nominated Presidential Elector on the Democratic ticket; in 1880 was again nominated for the same position and elected; was elected in 1882 to the Forty-eighth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 16,461 votes against 16,316 votes for Carothers, Republican, and 321 votes for Bateman, Prohibitionist. SECOND DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Amador, Butte, Calaveras, El Dorado, Mariposa, Merced, Nevada, Placer, San Joaquin, Stanislaus, Sutter, Tuolumne, and Yuba. J. A. Louttit, of Stockton, was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiv-ing 18,327 votes against 18,208 votes for Sumner, Democrat, and 558 votes for Webster, Pro-hibitionist. THIRD DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Alameda, Contra Costa, Marin, Sacramento, Solano, and Yolo. * Joseph McKenna, of Suisun, was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, August 10, 1843; went to California with his parents in January, 1855 ; was District Attorney of Solano County for two terms, commencing in March, 1866; served in the California Legislature in the ses-sions of 1875 and 1876; was the unsuccessful Republican candidate for Congress in 1876 from the Third District, as the State was then districted, and was again the unsuccessful candidate in 1879; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 17,435 votes against 13,197 votes for Glasscock, Democrat, and 212 votes for Burns, Prohibi-tionist. Re-elected. FOURTH DISTRICT. ASSEMBLY DISTRICTS OF CITY OF SAN FRANCISCO.—29t%, 30th, 31st, 32d, 33d, 34th, 35h, 36th, 37th, 38th, and 41st. William W. Morrow, of San Francisco, was born near Milton, Wayne County, Indiana, July 15, 1843; removed*with his parents to Illinois in 1845, and settled in Adams County; went to California in 1859; received a common-school education, supplemented by private tuition in special branches; in the spring of 1862, joined a party which discovered gold placers on the headwaters of the John Day River in Oregon; engaged in mining for a season; returned East in January, 1863, intending to pursue a course of studies in some Eastern col-lege; but the active operations of the Government in the war of the rebellion drew him to Washington, where he was appointed to a position in the office of the Secretary of the Treasury; served in the National Rifles, a military organization raised in the District of Columbia; appointed Special Agent of the Treasury Department in January, 1865, and placed in charge of a large shipment of treasure to California; employed during the next four years in con-fidential positions under the Secretary of the Treasury; studied law, was admitted to the bar in 1869, and has since been engaged in the practice of his profession; Assistant United States Attorney for California from 1870 to 1874; Chairman of the Republican State Central Committee of California from 1879 to 1882; Attorney for the State Board of Harbor Commissioners from 1880 to 1883; Chairman of the California Delegation to the National Republican Convention at Chicago in 1884, and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 15,083 votes against 10,422 votes for R. P. Hastings, Democrat, 123 votes for Fitch, Greenbacker, and 15 votes for G. Babcock, Prohibi. Re-elected. FIFTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Assembly Districts and Counties 39th, 40th, 42d, 43d, 44th, 45th, 40th, 47th, 48th, San Mateo, Santa Clara, and Santa Cruz Counties. Charles N. Felton, of San Francisco, was born in Erie County, New York, in 1832; received an academic education; after having retired from active business was assistant CALIFORNIA. | Senators and Representatives. II Treasurer and Treasurer of the Mint of San Francisco for six years; was elected to the Legislature of California for two terms; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 17,019 votes against 15,706 votes for F. J. Sullivan, Democrat, 232 votes for Crowhurst, Prohibitionist, and 42 votes scattering. Re-elected. SIXTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—A pine, Fresno, Inyo, Kern, Los Angeles, Mono, Monterey, San Benito, San Ber-nardino, San Luis Obispo, San Dicgo, Santa Barbara, Tulare, and Ventura. Henry H. Markham, of Pasadena, was born in Wilmington, Essex County, New York, November 16, 1840; received an academic education; served in the Union Army from Wis-consin, and was discharged in June, 1865; practised law in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, until he removed to Pasadena, Los Angeles County, California, in 1879; he never ran for or held any public office until he was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 17,397 votes against 16,990 votes for R. F. Del Valle, Democrat, 821 votes for Gould, Prohibitionist, and 236 votes for Kinley, Greenbacker. COLORADO. SENATORS. Thomas M. Bowen, of Del Norte, was born near the present site of Burlington, Iowa, October 26, 1835; received an academic education at Mount Pleasant, Iowa; was admitted to the bar at the age of eighteen, and very soon thereafter removed to Wayne County, Iowa, where, in 1856, he was elected to the House of Representatives of that State; removed to the then Territory of Kansas in 1858; served in the Union Army from June, 1861, until July, 1865, first as a Captain in the First Regiment Nebraska Volunteers, after which he raised and com-manded, as Colonel, the Thirteenth Kansas Infantry until the close of the war; was Brigadier-General by brevet and had command of a brigade the last two years of the war, first in the Army of the frontier, but later in the Seventh Army Corps; was a member of the National Republican Convention as a Delegate from the State of Kansas in 1864; at the close of the war remained in Arkansas; was a member and President of the Constitutional Convention of that State, which convened under the reconstruction acts of Congress, and was a Justice of the Supreme Court of that State for four years, when he accepted the position of Governor of Idaho Territory, tendered to him by President Grant in 1871, but resigned and returned to Arkansas, where he was defeated for the Senate of the United States by Hon. S. W. Dorsey in an open contest before the Legislature, the party caucus having failed te agree; in January, 1875, he removed to Colorado, then a Territory, resumed the practice of law, and at the organization of the State government was elected Judge of the Fourth Judicial District, and served in that ca-pacity for four years, after which he engaged in several large mining enterprises and remained in private life until the fall of 1882, when he was elected a Representative in the State Legis-lature; served in that body as Chairman of the Committee of Ways and Means until he resigned, having been elected to the United States Senate as a Republican, to succeed Horace A. W. Tabor, (who had been elected to fill the unexpired term of H. M. Teller), and took his seat December 3, 1883. His term of service will expire March 3, 1889. : Henry M. Teller, of Central City, was born in Allegany County, New York, May 23, 1830; studied law, was admitted to the bar in New York, and has since practised; removed to Illinois in 1858, and from there to Colorado in 1861 ; never held office until he was elected to the United States Senate (on the admission of Colorado as a State), and took his seat De-cember 4, 1876; was re-elected December 11, 1876, and served until April 17, 1882, when he was appointed Secretary of the Interior by President Arthur, and served until March 3, 18853; was elected to the United States Senate as a Republican, to succeed Nathaniel P. Hill, Repub-lican, and took his seat March 4, 1885. His term of service will expire March 3, 1891. REPRESENTATIVE. STATE AT LARGE. George G. Symes, of Denver, was born in Ashtabula County, Ohio, April 28, 1840; received a common-school education ; studied law, was admitted to the bar, and has practised continuously since the close of the war, except when on the bench; enlisted as private in Company B, ‘Second Regiment of Wisconsin Volunteers, April 12, 1861; was wounded in the first battle of Bull Run; was Adjutant of the Twenty-fifth Wisconsin Infantry; was in _ the Sioux Indian campaign of 1862; was in the Vicksburg campaign of 1863 and the Atlanta campaign of 1864, and was wounded in the battle of Atlanta, July 22, 1864; was commis-sioned Colonel of the Forty-fourth Regiment of Wisconsin Volunteers in August, 1864; com- Congressional Directory. [coLorADO. manded the post at Paducah, Kentucky, during the summer of 1865, and was mustered out with his regiment at Madison, Wisconsin, about September 1st, 1865; practised law at Padu-cah, Kentucky, from January 1, 1866, until appointed Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of Montana Territory in April, 1869; resigned said judgeship in December, 1870, to take effect February 1, 1871; resumed and continued the practice of law, at Helena, Montana, until February, 1874; then removed to Denver, Colorado, where he has since resided ; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 35,446 votes against 28,720 votes for C. S. Thomas, Democrat, and 2,489 votes for Wa -, Greenbacker. Re-elected. CONNECTICUT. SENATORS. Orville H. Platt, of Meriden, was born at Washington, Connecticut, July 19, 1827; re-ceived an academic education; studied law at Litchfield; was admitted to the bar in 1849¢ and has since practised law at Meriden; was Clerk of the State Senate of Connecticut in 1855 and ’56; was Secretary of State of Connecticut in 1857; was a member of the State Senate in 1861 and ’62; was a member of the State House of Representatives in 1864 and 1869, serving the last year as Speaker; was elected to the United States Senate as a Repub-lican, to succeed William H. Barnum, Democrat (who had been elected to fill the vacancy occasioned by the death of Orris S. Ferry, Republican), took his seat March 18, 1879, and was re-elected. His term of service will expire March 3, 1891. Joseph R. Hawley, of Hartford, was born at Stewartsville, Richmond County, North Car-olina, October 31, 1826; graduated at Hamilton College, New York, in 1847; was admitted to the bar in 1850 at Hartford, Connecticut, where he has since resided; practised law six and a half years; became editor of “The Hartford Evening Press,” February, 1857, which was consolidated with ¢ The Hartford Courant,” of which he is editor, in 1867; enlisted in the Union Aymy as a Lieutenant, April 15, 1861; became Brigadier and Brevet Major General; was mustered out January 15, 1866; was elected Governor of Connecticut, April, 1866; was a Delegate to the Free Soil National Convention of 1852; Presidential Elector in 1868; Pres-ident of the Republican National Convention of 1868, and delegate to the Republican Na-tional Conventions of 1872, 1876, and 1880; was President of the United States Centennial Commission from its organization, in March, 1873, to the completion of the work of the Cen-tennial Exhibition; is a member of the Connecticut Historical Society and a Trustee of Ham-ilton College; received the degree of Doctor of Laws from Hamilton College and Yale Uni-versity ; was elected in November, 1872, a Representative in the Forty-second Congress to fill a vacancy caused by the death of J. L. Strong; was re-elected to the Forty-third Con-gress, and was elected to the Forty-sixth Congress; was elected to the United States Senate as a Republican, to succeed William W. Eaton, Democrat, took his seat March 4, 1881, and was re-elected in 1887. His term of service will expire March 3, 1893. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. CoUNTIES.— Hartford and Tolland, including the cities of Hartford and New Britain. John R. Buck, of Hartford, was born at Glastonbury, Connecticut, December 6, 1836; was educated at the Select School in East Glastonbury, at Wilbraham (Massachusetts) Academy, and was one year at Wesleyan University; studied law, was admitted to the bar in 1862, and has since practised law at Hartford; was assistant clerk of the Connecticut House of Repre- sentatives in 1864, Clerk in 1865, and Clerk of the Senate in 1866; was President of the Common Council of the city of Hartford in 1868; was City Attorney in 1871 and in 187 3; was treasurer of the county of Hartford 1863-1881; was State Senator from the First Senatorial District 1880-1881; was a member of the Forty-seventh Congress, and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 16,589 votes against 16,285 votes for William W. Eaton, Democrat, 410 votes for Hammond, Prohibitionist, 237 votes for and Andrews, Greenbacker. SECOND DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Middlesex and New Haven, including the city of New Haven. Charles Le Moyne Mitchell, of New Haven, was born at New Haven, Connecticut, August 6, 1844; received an academical education; was a member of the State House of ‘Representatives in 1877; was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 22,589 votes against 20,593 votes for Allen, Republican, 718 votes for Baldwin, Greenbacker, and 552 for Dowd, Prohibitionist. / CONECTICUT. | Senators and Representatives. 13 THIRD DISTRICT. CoUNTIES.—New London and Windham, including the cities of New London and Norwich. John Turner Wait, of Norwich, was born at New London, Connecticut, August 27, 1811; received a mercantile training in early life, and afterwards was two years at Trinity College, Hartford; studied law, was admitted to the bar in 1836, and commenced to practise at Nor-wich, where he has since remained; was State’s Attorney for the County of New London in 1842-44 and in 1846-54; has been President of the Bar Association of that county from its organization in 1874 to the present time; was an unsuccessful candidate for Lieutenant-Gov-ernor on the Democratic ticket in 1854, ’55, ’56, and ’57, receiving each year the highest vote on the ticket; was the first Elector at Large, as a War Democrat, in 1864, on the Lincoln and Johnson ticket; was a member of the State Senate in 1865 and ’66, serving the last year as President pro tempore, was a member of the State House of Representatives in 1867, 1871, and 1873, serving as Speaker the first year and subsequently declining that position; was an unsuc-cessful candidate for Lieutenant-Governor on the Republican ticket in 1874, receiving the highest vote on the ticket; received the degree of A. M. from Trinity College in 1851 and from Yale in 1871, and the degree of LL.D. from Howard University in 1883 and from Trinity College in 1886; was elected to the Forty-fourth Congress (to fill the vacancy cauSed by the death of Hon. H. H. Starkweather); was elected to the Forty-fifth, Forty-sixth, Forty-seventh, and Forty-eighth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty’ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 11,700 votes against 9,238 votes for Johnson, Democrat, 255 votes for Vallette, Greenbacker, and 521 votés for Crocker, Prohibitionist. Declined a re-election. FOURTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Fairfield and Litchfield, including the city of Bridgeport. Edward Weéodruff Seymour, of Litchfield, was born at Litchfield, August 30, 1832; was graduated at Yale College in 1853; studied law; was admitted to the bar in 1856, and has practised law since; was a member of the Connecticut House of Representatives in 1859, 1860, 1870, and 1871; was a member of the Connecticut Senate, 1876; was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiv-ing 18,526 votes against 18,373 votes for Lyman W. Coe, Republican, 298 votes for Taylor, Greenbacker, and 602 votes for Strang, Prohibitionist. [4 DELAWARE. SENATORS. Eli Saulsbury, of Dover, was born in Kent County, Delaware, December 2g, 1817; at tended common and select schools, and an irregular course at Dickinson College; studied and practised law; was a member of the State Legislature of Delaware in 1853 and ’54; and was elected to the United States Senate as a Demoerat, to succeed Willard Saulsbury, Dem-ocrat; took his seat March 4, 1871; was re-elected in 1876 and in 1883. His term of service will expire March 3, 1889. George Gray, of New Castle, was born at New Castle, Delaware, May 4, 1840; he gradu-ated at Princeton College when nineteen years old, receiving the degree of A. B., and in 1862 the degree of A. M..; after studying law with his father, Andrew C. Gray, he spent a year in the Harvard Law School, and was admitted to practice in 1863; he ~vas appointed Attorney-General of the State of Delaware in 1879 by Governor Hall, ana re-appointed Attorney-General in 1884 by Governor Stockley; he was a Delegate to the National Democratic Con-ventions at Saint Louis in 1876, at Cincinnati in 1880, and at Chicago in 1884; was elected to the United States Senate as a Democrat to fill the vacancy caused by the appointmentof Thomas F. Bayard as Secretary of State, and took his seat March 19, 1885. His term of service will expire March 3, 1887. REPRESENTATIVE. AT LARGE. Charles B. Lore, of Wilmington, was born at Odessa, Delaware, March 16, 1831; received a primary education at public schools and at Middletown Academy, Delaware, and collegiate education at Dickinson College, Pennsylvania, graduatihg in June, 1852, with the honors of his class; studied law with Judge John K. Findlay, of ‘Philadelphia, and Chancellor D. M. Bates, of Wilmington, Delaware; was admitted to the bar of New Castle County, Delaware, in 1861,and has since then been practising law in Wilmington, Delaware; was Clerk of the Congressional Directory. [DELAWARE. House of Representatives of Delaware in 1857; was Commissioner of the Draft for New Castle County, Delaware, 1862; was Attorney-General of the State of Delaware, 1869-74; was one of the Presidential Electors for Delaware in 1880; was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 17,054 votes against 12,978 votes for Higgins, Republican. FLORIDA. SENATORS. . A Charles W. Jones, of Pensacola, was born in Ireland in 1834; emigrated to the United States in 1844, and, after residing temporarily in different parts of the South while working at his trade, settled at Pensacola in 1854; is self-educated ; studied law, and was admitted to the bar in 1857, and has since practised ; was a member of the National Democratic Convention at Baltimore in 1872; was an unsuccessful Democratic candidate for Congress in 1872; was a member of the State House of Representatives of Florida in 1874; was elected to the United States Senate as a Conservative Democrat, to succeed Abijah Gilbert, Republican; took his seat March 5, 1875, and was re-elected in 1881. His term of service will expire March 3, 1887. Wilkinson Call, of Jacksonville, was born at Russellville, Logan County, Kentucky, Jan-uary 9, 1834 ; is by profession a lawyer; was elected to the United States Senate after the war, but was not allowed to take his seat; was elected to the United States Senate as a Democrat, in the place of Simon B. Conover, Republican, took his seat March 18, 1879, and was re-elected. His term of service will expire March 3, 1891. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. ’ COUNTIES.— Calloun, Escambia, Franklin, Gadsden, Hernando, Hillsboro’ , Holmes, Jackson, Jefferson, Lafayette, Leon, Levy, Liberty, Manatee, Monroe, Polk, Santa Rosa, Taylor, Wakulla, Wallon, and Washington. Robert H. M. Davidson, of Quincy, was born in Gadsden County, Florida, , September 23» 1832; received an academic education at Quincy; studied law at the University of Virginia, and is a practising lawyer; was a member of the House of Representatives of Florida in 1856-57 and 1858-’59; was elected to the State Senate in 1860; retired from the State Senate in 1862 and entered the Confederate Army as Captain of Infantry, and became Major and then Lieu-tenant-Colonel of the Sixth Florida Infantry; received a wound May 28, 1864, which rendered him unable to do further military service; was a member of the Constitutional Convention of the State in 1865; was a candidate for Elector on the Greeley and Brown ticket in 1872; was elected to the Forty-fifth, Forty-sixth, Forty-seventh, and Forty-eighth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress, as a Democrat, receiving 14,619 votes against 11,899 votes for Locke, Republican. Re-clecteds SECOND DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Alachua, Baker, Brevard, Bradford, Clay, Columbia, Dade, Duval, Hamilton, Madison, Marion, Nassau, Orange, Putnam, Saint John’s, Sumter, Suwannce, and Volusia. Charles Dougherty, of Port Orange, was born at Athens, Georgia, October 15, 1850; was educated at the public schools at Athens, and was afterwards two years at the University of Virginia, leaving there when seventeen years of age; has been a sailor, and is now engaged in planting; was elected to the Legislature of Florida in 1876, 78, ’8o, and ’82, serving as Speaker in the session commencing in 1878, and in that commencing in 1882 until he was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 17,857 votes against 15,857 votes for H. Bisbee, Republican, and 252 votes for J. T. Walls, Ind. Republican. Re-elected. GEORGIA. SENATORS. Joseph E. Brown, of Atlanta, Georgia, was born in Pickens District, South Carolina, April 15,1821; when he was a boy, his father moved to Georgia ; he was educated at Calhoun Acad-emy, South Carolina; he taught school in Canton, Georgia; he was admitted to the bar in August, 1845; he afterwards graduated in Yale College Law School, and returned to Georgia and commenced the practice of law in 1846; in 1849 he was elected to the State Senate; in GEORGIA. ] Senators and Representatives. Ig 1852 he was a Pierce Elector; in 1855 he was elected Judge of the Superior Courts of the Blue Ridge Circuit; in 1837 he was elected Governor by the Democratic party over Hon. Ben-jamin H. Hill; re-elected in 1859 over Hon. Warren Aiken. He was a Secessionist in 1860, and was active and energetic as a war Governor after the State had seceded. In 1861 he was IE again elected Governor over the Hon. Eugenius A. Nisbet; in 1863 he was again a candidate for Governor, and opposed by Hon. Joshua Hill, an original Union man, and Hon. Timothy Furlow, an original Secessionist; Governor Brown was elected over both by a handsome ma- | jority. During the war, Governor Brown opposed the policy of President Davis on the con-script act, but threw no obstacles in the way of the execution of the law by the Confederate Government ; he simply discussed with the President the constitutionality of the measure. After | the surrender he advocated acquiescence in the reconstruction measures, and became very un- ~ popular on account of his recommendation that the people acquiesce and carry them out in good faith. As the Democratic party opposed these measures, as a reconstructionist he voted for General Grant, who favored them. During the Legislature of 1868 he was nominated by the Republicans for United States Senator, and defeated by Hon. Joshua Hill, which was the only defeat of his life; in every instance when he has been a candidate before the people he has been successful. After his defeat for Senator he was appointed by Governor Bullock Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Georgia, which position he held till December, 1870, when he resigned and accepted the presidency of the Western Atlantic Railroad Company. He then devoted his life to business pursuits, being a candidate for no office, but acting with the Democratic party since 1872 upon the reconstruction platform. When General Gordon resigned his posi-tion in the Senate Governor Brown was appointed to fill the vacancy ; he was afterwards elected over General A. R. Lawton, his opponent, by over a two-thirds majority of the Legislature. Ile was re-elected in 1884 by the unanimous vote of the Legislature with the exception of a single vote cast for General Robert Toombs. His term of service will expire March 3, 1891. Alfred Holt Colquitt, of Atlanta, was born in Walton County, Georgia, April 20, 1824; graduated at Princeton College, New Jersey, in the class of 1844; studied law and was ad-mitted to the bar in 1845; served as a staff officer, with the rank of Major, during the Mexican war; was elected and served as a member of the Thirty-third Congress; wasa member of the Georgia Legislature in 1859; was a Presidential Elector for the State at large on the Breck-inridge ticket in 1860; was a member of the Secession Convention of the State of Georgia; entered the Confederate service as Captain; was subsequently chosen Colonel of the Sixth Georgia Infantry; served as a Brigadier-General, and was commissioned as a Major-General; was elected Governor of the State of Georgia in 1876 for four years, and was re-elected under a new constitution for two years; at the expiration of his term as Governor, he was elected to the United States Senate as a Democrat, to succeed Pope Barrow, Democrat, for the full term commencing March 4, 1883. His term of service will expire March 3, 1889. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. COUNTIES. —Appling, Bryan, Bullock, Camden, Charlton, Chatham, Clinch, Echols, Effing-ham, Emanuel, Glynn, Liberty, McIntosh, Pierce, Scriven, Tatnall, Ware, and Wayne. Thomas M. Norwood, of Savannah, was born in Talbot County, Georgia, April 26, 1830; received an academic education at Culloden, Monroe County, Georgia; was graduated at Emory College, Oxford, Georgia, in 1850; studied law and was admitted to practice in Feb-ruary, 1852; removed to Savannah in March, 1852, where he has practised law ever since; was a member of the Georgia Legislature in 1861-'62; was elected alternate Democratic Elector for the State at ]arge in 1868 on the Seymour and Blair ticket; was elected to the United States Senate in November, 1871; after a contest for his seat with Foster Blodgett, he was admitted to his seat December 19, 1871, and served until March 3, 1877; was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 10,857 votes against 6,012 votes for Pleasant, Republican. Re-elected. SECOND DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Baker, Berrien, Brooks, Calhoun, Clay, Colquitt, Decatur, Dougherty, Early, Lowndes, Miller, Mitchell, Quitman, Randolph, Terrell, Thomas, and Worth. Henry G. Turner, of Quitman, was born in North Carolina, March 20, 1839; was elected to the Forty-seventh anc Forty-eighth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 7,828 votes. Re-elected. THIRD DISTRICT. COUNTIES.Coffee, Dodge, Dooly, Houston, Irwin, Laurens, Lee, Macon, Montgomery, Pu- — laski, Schley, Stewart, Sumter, Telfair, Webster, and Wilcox. Charles Frederick Crisp, of Americus, was born onthe 29th of January, 1845, in Sheffield, England, where his parents had gone on a visit; was brought by them to this country the year 16 : Congressional Directorv. [GEORGIA. a an ama Er of his birth; received a common-school education in Savannah and Macon, Georgia; cntered the Confederate Army in May, 1861; was a Lieutenant in Company K, Tenth Virginia Infantry, and served with that regiment until the 12th of May, 1864, when he became a prisoner of war; upon his release from Fort Delaware in June, 1865, he joined his parents at Ellaville, Schley County, Georgia; read law in Americus, and was admitted to the bar there in 1866; began the practice of law in Ellaville, Georgia; in 1872 was appointed Solicitor-General of the South-western Judicial Circuit, and was reappointed in 1873 for a term of four years; in June, 1877, was appointed Judge of the Superior Court of the same circuit; in 1878 was elected by the General Assembly to the same office; in 1880 was re-elected Judge for a term of four years; resigned that office in September, 1882, to accept the Democratic nomination for Congress; was Permanent President of the Democratic Convention which assembled in Atlanta in April, 1883, to nominate a candidate for Governor; was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 9,963 votes against 4,286 votes for B. F. Bell, Republican, and 93 votes for Reese, Ind. Rep. Ae-elected. FOURTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Coweta, Chattahoochee, Carroll, Harris, Heard, Marion, Meriwether, Muscoge Talbot, Taylor, and Troup. Henry R. Harris, of Greenville, was born at Sparta, Georgia, February 2, 1828, and removed to Greenville, Meriwether County, Georgia, where he now resides, in 1833; gradu-ated at Emory College in 1847; is by profession a planter; was a member of the Georgia Convention of 1861; was elected to the Forty-third, Forty-fourth, and Forty-fifth Congresses, and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 10,608 votes against 4,156 votes for R. F. Milner, Republican, and 5,473 votes for Henry Person, Independent Democrat. : FIFTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Campbell, Clayton, De Kalb, Douglas, Fayette, Fulton, Henry, Newton, Rock-dale, Spalding, and Walton. Nathaniel J. Hammond, of Atlanta, was born in Elbert County, Georgia, December 26, 1833; graduated at the University of Georgia, at Athens, in 1852; has practised law since 1853; was Solicitor-General from 1861 to 1865; was Reporter of the Supreme Court from 1867 to 1872; was Attorney-General from 1872 to 1877; was a member of the Constitutional Con-ventions of 1865 and 1877; was elected to the Forty-sixth, Forty-seventh, Forty-eighth Con-gresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 9,008 votes against 5,130 votes for J. J. Martin, Republican. SIXTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Baldwin, Bibb, Butts, Crawford, Jasper, Jones, Monroe, Pike, Twiggs, Upson, and Wilkinson. James H. Blount, of Macon, was born in Georgia, September 12, 1837; was elected to the Forty-third, Forty-fourth, Forty-fifth, Forty-sixth, Forty-seventh, and Forty-eighth Congresses, and re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 7,922 votes. Re-elected. SEVENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Bartow, Catoosa, Chattooga, Cobb, Dade, Floyd, Gordon, Haralson, Murray, Paulding, Polk, Walker, and Whitfield. : Judson C. Clements, of La Fayette, was born in Walker County, Georgia, February 12, 1846; was educated in the schools of that county, also in the law at Cumberland University, at Lebanon, Tennessee; was admitted to the bar and began the practice of law in 1869 at La Fayette, Georgia, and has continued in the same at that place until the present time; was elected Representative in the General Assembly of Georgia in 1872 for the term of two years, and re-elected in 1874; was elected State Senator in 1877; was elected to the Forty-seventh and Forty-eighth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 10,496 votes against 3,417 votes for Kirkwood, Republican, 570 votes for Hargrove, Independent Republican, and 283 votes for Mitchell, Independent Republican. Re-elected. EIGHTH DISTRICT, COUNTIES.— Clarke, Elbert, Franklin, Greene, Hancock, Hart, Madison, Morgan, Ogle-thorpe, Oconee, Puinam, and Wilkes. ; : Seaborn Reese, of Sparta, was born at Madison, Morgan County, Georgia, November 28, 1846; educated partly at the University of Georgia, which institution he left in his senior year, A EE DEE APT GEORGIA. | Senators and Representatives. 7 1868; has practised law since 1869; was elected Representative in the General Assembly of Georgia in 1872 for the term of two years; was Solicitor-General of the Northern Judicial Circuit from 1877 to 1880; was a Presidential Elector on the Hancock ticket in 1880; was elected to fill the vacancy in the Forty-seventh Congress caused by the resignation of A. H. Stephens after his election as Governor of Georgia; was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 7,834 votes against 3,250 votes for Martin, Republican, and 38 votes scattering: NINTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Banks, Cheroliee, Dawson, Fannin, Forsyth, Gilmer, Guwinnelt, Habersham, Hall, Jackson, Lumpkin, Milton, Pickens, Rabun, Towns, Union, and White. Allen D. Candler, of Gainesville, was born in Lumpkin County, Georgia, November 4, 1834; he graduated at Mercer University, Georgia, in 1858; studied law, but the war coming on, he never practised; was successively a private, Lieutenant, Captain, Lieutenant-Colonel, and Colonel in the Confederate Army; was a member of the Georgia House of Representa-tives, 1872-"77 ; was a member of the Georgia State Senate, 1877-79; is a manufacturer and farmer; was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Con-gress as a Democrat, receiving 8,137 votes. Re-elected. TENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.Burke, Columbia, Glascock, Jefferson, Johnson, Lincoln, McDuffie, Richmond, — Taliafero, Warren, and Washington. George T. Barnes, of Augusta, was born in Richmond County, Georgia, August 14, 1833; was educated at the Richmond County Academy, and at Franklin College, University of Georgia, Athens, where he graduated in August, 1853; studied law, was admitted to the bar, and has since practised ; was a member of the State House of Representatives of Georgia in 1860-1865; was a member of the National Democratic Committee from Georgia in 1876-1884; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 9,166 votes against 1,277 votes for Wright, Republican, 161 votes for Craig, Independent Republican, 26 votes scatter-ing. Re-elected. ILLINOIS. SENATORS. Shelby M. Cullom, of Springfield, was born in Wayne County, Kentucky, November 22, 1829; his father removed to Tazewell County, Illinois, the following year; he received an academic and university education; went to Springfield in the fall of 1853 to study law, and has since resided there; immediately upon receiving license to practise was elected City Attorney; continued to practise law until he took his seat in the House of Representatives, in 1865; was a Presidential Elector in 1856 on the Fillmore ticket; was elected a member of the House of Representatives of the Illinois Legislature in 1856, 1860, 1872, and 1874, and was elected Speaker in 1861 and in 1873; was elected a Representative from Illinois in the Thirty-ninth, Fortieth, and Forty-first Congresses, serving from December 4, 1865, to March 3, 1871; was a Delegate to the National Republican Convention at Philadelphia in 1872, being Chairman of the Illinois Delegation, and placed Generali Grant in nomination; was a Delegate to the National Republican Convention in 1884, and Chairman of the Illinois Dele-gation; was elected Governor of Illinois in 1876, and succeeded himself in 1880, serving from January 8, 1877, until February 5, 1883, when he resigned, having been elected to the United States Senate as a Republican, to succeed David Davis, Independent Democrat. Ie took his seat December 4, 1883. His term of service will expire March 3, 1880. Charles B. Farwell, of Chicago, was born near Painted Post, New York, July 1, 1823; was educated at the Elmira Academy; was a wholesale merchant; held the office of County Clerk of Cook County, in which Chicago is situated, eight years, 1853-1861 ; was elected to Con-gress in 1870, over John Wentworth, and was re-elected in 1872 and 1874, after which he declined re-election; was a candidate again in 1880, and was elected ; declined further elec-tion; was elected to the Senate of the United States on the 19th of January, 1887, to fill a vacancy occasioned by the death of Gen. John A. Logan, and took his seat January 24, 1887. His term of service will expire March 3, 1891. 2D ED 2 re \ | I; Congressional Directory. fiLLINOIS, REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. CoUNTY.— Te first four wards of the city of Chicago, with the townships of Bloom, Bre-men, Calumet, Hyde Park, Lake, Lemont, Lyons, Orland, Rick, Riverside, Thornton, Worth, in Cook County. : Ransom W. Dunham, of Chicago, was born at Savoy, Massachusetts, March 21, 1838; was educated at the common school, closing at the High School at Springfield, Massachusetts; was engaged in the office of the Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Company from August, 1855, to August, 1860, removing from Springfield to Chicago, April 1, 1857; has since been a grain and provision commission merchant; was President of the Board of Trade of Chicago in 1882; was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 20,245 votes against 14,655 votes for Tilden, Democrat, 501 votes for Clark, Greenbacker, and 288 votes for Gates, Prohibitionist. Re-elected. SECOND DISTRICT. COUNTY.— Part of Cook. The 5th, bth, and 7th wards of the city of Chicago, and that part of the 8th ward south of the center of Polk street and the center of Macalaster Place. Frank Lawler, of Chicago, was born at Rochester, New York, June 25, 1842; attended a public school until thirteen years of age, when, owing to a serious accident which befell his father, he was compelled to leave school and seek employment in a brick-yard, where he con-tinued to labor fortwo years; was a news-agent on railroads for three years; learned the trade of ship-builder, was elected president of the Ship-carpenters’ and Ship-caulkers’ Association, and took an active part in organizing trade and labor unions; became agent for ¢ The Work-ingman’s Advocate,” a newspaper published in the interest of the toiling masses; was appointed upon the request of the trade and labor organizations to a position in the Chicago post-office, which he held from 1869 to 1877; was elected a member of the Chicago City Council from the Eighth ward in April, 1876, and was re-elected in 1878, 1880, 1882, and 1854; engaged in business in 1878 at Chicago as a liquor merchant, and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 13,954 votes against 11,552 votes for John F. Finerty, Independent Republican, and 23 votes for Kellett, Prohibitionist. Re-elected. THIRD DISTRICT. «COUNTY.—Part of Cook. That partof the City af Chicago north of Polk street, of ward ecoht, and wards nine to fourteen, inclusive. James H. Ward, of Chicago, was born in Chicago, November 30, 1853; was educated at the public schools in Chicago, and afterwards attended the University of Notre Dame, Indiana, graduating in 1873; attended the Union College of Law at Chicago, graduating in 1876; was admitted to the bar in July, 1876, and has since been a practising attorney; was elected Supervisor of the town of West Chicago in 1879; was an elector on the Cleveland and Hendricks ticket in 1884, and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 15,601 votes against 10,806 votes for William E. Mason, Republican, 8,928 votes for Charles Fitz-Simons, Republican, and 2,801 votes for J. Lee, Greenbacker. Declined a renomination, having accepted the nomination in 1884 out of deference io his party, at the sac- vifiee of private interests. FOURTH DISTRICT. COUNTY.—15%h, 16th, 17th, and 18th wards of the city of Chicago, and the towns of Bar rington, Cicero, Elk Grove, Evanston, Hanover, jefferson, Lakeview, Leyden, Maine, Niles, New Trier, Norwood Park, Northfield, Palatine, Proviso, Schaumburg, and Wheeling, in Cook County. George Everett Adams, of Chicago, was born at Keene, New Hampshire, June 18, 1840; graduated at Harvard in 1860; studied law at the Dane Law School, Cambridge, Massachu-setts, and has since practised; was elected State Senator of Illinois from the Sixth District, being part of Chicago, in November, 1880, and resigned on the 3d of March, 1883; was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Re-publican, receiving 18,333 votes against 15,291 votes for John P. Altgeldt, Democrat, and 467 votes for H. W. Austin, Prohibitionist. Re-elected. FIFTH DISTRICT. : COUNTIES.— Boone, De Kalb, Kane, Lake, and McHenry. Albert J. Hopkins, of Aurora, was born in De Kalb County, Illinois, Augast 15, 1846; graduated at Hillsdale College, Michigan, in June, 1870; studied law and commenced practice rr ILLINOIS. | Senators and Representatives. IQ at Aurora, Illinois; was State’s Attorney of Kane County from 1872 to 1876; was a member of the Republican State Central Committee from 1878 to 1880; was Presidential Elector on the: Blaine and Logan ticket in 1884; was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Hon. Reuben Ellwood, receiving 6,000 majority over Richard Bishop, Democrat. Re-elected. SIXTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Carroll, Jo Daviess, Ogle, Stephenson, and Winnebago. Robert Roberts Hitt, of Mount Morris, was born at Urbana, Ohio, January 16, 1834; removed to Ogle County, Illinois, in 1837; was educated at Rock River Seminary (now Mount Morris College) and at Asbury University; was occupied with farming, short-hand, and litera-ture; was clerk of the Senate Committee on Privileges and Elections in 1872; was first sec-retary of Paris Legation and chargé d’affaires ad znzerize from December, 1874, until March, 1881; was Assistant Secretary of State in 1881; was elected to the Forty-seventh Congress November 7, 1882, to fill the vacancy occasioned by the death of Hon. R. M. A. Hawk ; was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Re-publican, receiving 18,048 votes against 10,891 votes for Blaisdell, Democrat, 142 votes for Meacham, Greenbacker, and 15 votes scattering. Re-elected. SEVENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Bureau, Henry, Lee, Putnam, and Whitesides. Thomas J. Henderson, of Princeton, was born at Brownsville, Haywood County, Ten-nessee, November 29, 1824; removed to Illinois at the age of eleven; received an academic education; was reared upon a farm; was elected Clerk of the County Commissioners’ Court of Stark County, Illinois, in 1847, and served until 1849; was elected Clerk of the County Court of Stark County, and served from 1849 until 1853; studied law, was admitted to the bar in 1852, and has since practised his profession; was a member of the State House of Representatives in 1855 and ’56, and of the State Senate in 1857, ’58, ’59, and 60; entered the Union Army in 1862 as Colonel of the One hundred and twelfth Regiment of Illinois Volunteer Infantry, served until the close of the war, and was brevetted Brigadier-General in January, 1865; was elected a Presidential Elector for the State at large on the Republican ticket in 1868; was elected to the Forty-fourth, Forty-fifth, Forty-sixth, Forty-seventh, Forty-eighth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 15,498 votes against 10,680 votes for Eckles, Democrat, 712 votes for Haaff, Prohibitionist, and 13 votes scattering. Re-elected. EIGHTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Du Page, Grundy, Kendall, La Salle, and Will. Ralph Plumb, of Streator, was born in Busti, Chautauqua County, New York, March 29, 1816; was educated at common schools; was brought up a merchant’s clerk, and was a mer-chant for eighteen years; was elected in 1855 a member of the Lower House of the Ohio Legislature ; studied law and was admitted to the practice; served in the Union Army as Captain and Quartermaster of Volunteers during the late war, served four years and was bre-vetted Lieutenant-Colonel ; has since been engaged in coal mining and railroad building; was mayor of Streator 1882-1885; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 18,711 votes against 15,953 votes for Patrick C. Haley, Democrat, 764 votes for Wood, Greenbacker, and 719 votes for Kilburn, Prohibitionist. Re-elected. NINTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.— Ford, [roguois, Kankakee, Livingston, Marshall, and Woodford. Lewis E. Payson, of Pontiac, was born in Providence, Rhode Island, September 17, 1840; removed to Illinois in 1852; received a common-scheol education, with two years at Lombard University, Galesburg, Illinois; studied law and was admitted to the bar at Ottawa, Illinois in 1862; removed to Pontiac in January, 1865, where he has since resided, practising law; was Judge of County Court 1869-'73; was elected to the Forty-seventh and Forty-eighth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 16,481 votes against 13,716 votes for Kim, Democrat, 626 votes for McGrew, Prohibitionist, and 2c votes scattering. Re-elected. TENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Fulton, Knox, Peoria, and Stark. Nicholas Ellsworth Worthington, of Peoria, was born in Brooke County, West Vir-ginia, March 30, 1836; graduated at Allegheny College, Pennsylvania; is a lawyer by pro- 20 Congressional Directory. [1LLINOIS, ession; was County Superintendent of Schools of Peoria County, 1865-’72; was a member otthe State Board of Education of Illinois, 1869-72; was elected to the F orty-eighth Congress;and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 16,758 votes against -16,582 votes for Starr, Republican, and 84 votes for Hammond, Greenbacker. R 4 } ELEVENTH DISTRICT. ; “COUNTIES.— Hancock, Henderson, McDonough, Mercer, Rock Island, Schuyler, and Warren. William H. Neece, ot Macomb, was born in what was then Sangamon County, now part «of Logan County, Illinois, February 26, 1831; his parents moved to McDonough County in the same year, where he was raised on a farm and educated in the common schools; read law and was admitted to the bar in 1858, which profession he has since followed ; was elected a member .of the City Council of Macomb in 1861; was elected to the Legislature of that State in 1864, .and a member of its Constitutional Convention in 1869; was again elected to the Legislature in 1871, and in 1878 to the State Senate; was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat and Anti-Monopolist, receiving 18,291 votes against 17,864 votes for Petrie, Republican, and 370 votes for Broadus, Prohibitionist. | | TWELFTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Adams, Brown, Calkoun, Cass, Greene, fersey, Pike, and Scott. James M. Riggs, of Winchester, was born in Scott County, Illinois, April 17, 1839; re-ceived a common-school and a partial collegiate education; studied law, was admitted to the bar, and has since practised; was elected Sheriff of Scott County in November, 1864, and served two years; represented Scott County in the House of the Twenty-seventh General Assembly of Illinois, 1871-72; was elected State’s Attorney for Scott County in November, 1872, and served four years; was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 22,046 votes against 15,177 votes for Black, Republican, 820 votes for Parker, Greenbacker, 161 votes for Wallace, Prohibitionist, and 40 votes scattering. THIRTEENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Christian, Mason, Menard, Morgan, Sangamon, and Tazewell. William M. Springer, of Springfield, was born in Sullivan County, Indiana, May 30, 1836; removed to Illinois with his parents in 1848; graduated at the Indiana State University, Bloomington, in 1858; studied law and was admitted to the bar in 1859; was Secretary of the State Constitutional Convention of Illinois in 1862; was a member of the State Legislature of Illinois in 1871-72; was elected to the Forty-fourth, Forty-fifth, Forty-sixth, Forty-seventh, and Forty-eighth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, re-ceiving 20,308 votes against 16,971 votes for Taylor, Republican, 628 votes for Knowles, Greenbacker, and 747 votes for Harrington, Prohibitionist. Re-elected. FOURTEENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—De Witt, Logan, Piatt, Macon, and McLean. Jonathan H. Rowell, of Bloomington, was born in Haverhill, New Hampshire, February 10, 1833; graduated at Eureka College, Illinois, and at the Law Department of the Uni-versity of Chicago; is by profession a lawyer; was State’s Attorney of the Eighth Judicial Circuit of Illinois, 1868-72; was Presidential Elector on the Garfield and Arthur ticket in 1880; served three years as a company officer in the Seventeenth Illinois Infantry; and was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 18,052 votes against 15,673 votes for C. C. Clark, Democrat, 1,168 votes for Randolph, Prohib., and 241 votes for Braucher, Greenbacker. Re-elected. FIFTEENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES. — Champaign, Coles, Douglas, Edgar, and Vermillion. Joseph G. Cannon, of Danville, was born at Guilford, North Carolina, May 7, 1836; is a lawyer; was State’s Attorney in Illinois from March, 1861, to December, 1868; was elected to the Forty-third, Forty-fourth, Forty-fifth, Forty-sixth, Forty-seventh, and Freceiving 17,884 gresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 17,884 votes against 17,337 votes for Black, Democrat, 340 votes for Thornton, Prohibitionist, and § votes scattering. Re-elected. | | | i ee ILLINOIS. | Senators and Representatives. 21 SIXTEENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Clark, Clay, Crawford, Cumberland, Edwards, Jasper, Lawrence, Richland, Wabash, and Wayne. Silas Z. Landes, of Mount Carmel, was born in Augusta County, Virginia, May 15, 1842; was licensed by the supreme court of Illinois in August, 1863, to practise law; has practised law at Mount Carmel since 1864; was elected State’s Attorney for Wabash County in 1872, 1876, and 1880; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 17,109 votes against 16,791 votes for James W. McCartney, Republican, Independent Greenback, and Soldiers’ candidate, 175 votes for Honey, Prohibitionist, and 1 vote scattering. Re-elected. SEVENTEENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Effingham, Fayette, Macoupin, Monigomery, Moultrie, and Shelby. John R. Eden, of Sullivan, was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, re-ceiving 20,402 votes against 13,366 votes for Hamlin, Republican and Greenbacker, 470 votes for Gomer, Prohibitionist, and 12 votes scattering. EIGHTEENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Bond, Madison, Monroe, Saint Clair, and Washington. William R. Morrison, of Waterloo, was born in Monroe County, Illinois, September 14, 1825; was educated in the common schools and at McKendree College, Illinois; is a lawyer by profession; was Clerk of the Circuit Court; was four terms a member and one term Speaker of the Illinois House of Representatives; was elected to the Thirty-eighth, Forty-third, Forty-fourth, Forty-fifth, Forty-sixth, Forty-seventh, and Forty-eighth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 17,728 votes against 15,136 votes for Needles, Republican, and 298 votes for Moore, Prohibitionist. NINETEENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Clinton, Franklin, Gallatin, Hamilton, Hardin, Jefferson, Marion, Salinc and White. Richard W. Townshend, of Shawneetown, was born.in Prince George’s County, Mary land, April 30, 1840; came to Washington City when ten years of age, and was there educated at public and private schools; removed to Illinois in 1858; taught school in Fayette County; studied law with S. S. Marshall at McLeansboro’, was admitted to the bar in 1862, and has since practised; was Clerk of the Circuit Court of Hamilton County 1863-"68; was Prosecuting At-torney for the Twelfth Judicial Circuit 1868~’72; removed in 1873 from McLeansboro’ to Shaw-neetown, where he was an officer of the Gallatin National Bank; was a member of the Demo-cratic State Central Committee of Illinois 1864, ’65, ’74, and '75; was a Delegate to the Na-tional Democratic Convention at Baltimore in 1872; was elected to the Forty-fifth, Forty-sixth, Forty-seventh, and Forty-eighth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 18,296 votes against 13,613 votes for Ridgway, Republican, and 267 votes, scattering. Re-elected, TWENTIETH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Alexander, Jackson, Johnson, Massac, Perry, Pope, Pulaski, Randolph, Union, and Williamson. John R. Thomas, of Metropolis, was born at Mount Vernon, Jefferson County, Illinois, October 11, 1846; received a common-school education; served in the Union Army during the war of the rebellion; rose from the rank of private to that of Captain of Infantry; studied law, and was admitted to the bar in 1869; was elected and served as State’s Attorney from 1872 to 1876; was elected to the Forty-sixth, Forty-seventh, and Forty-eighth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 17,891 votes against 15,798 votes for Albright, Democrat, and 540 votes for Davis, Prohibitionist. Re-elected. IR Congressional Directory. [INDIANA. INDIANA. SENATORS. Daniel W. Voorhees, of Terre Haute, was born in Butler County, Ohio, September 26, 1827; graduated at the Indiana Asbury University in 1849; studied law and commenced 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, Thirty-ninth, (in which his seat was successfully contested,) Forty-first, and Forty-second Congresses; was de-feated as a Democratic candidate for the Forty-fifth Congress; was appointed to the United States Senate as a Democrat, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Oliver P. Morton, Republican; took his seat November 12, 1877, and was subsequently elected by the Legisla-ture for the unexpired term and for the full term ensuing. Was re-elected in January, 1885, and his term of service will expire March 3, 1891. Benjamin Harrison, of Indianapolis, was born at North Bend, Hamilton County, Ohio, August 20, 1833; received a classical education, graduating at Miami University, Oxford, Ohio, in 1852; studied law at Cincinnati, Ohio; removed in March, 1854, to Indianapolis, where he has since resided and has been engaged in the practice of the law; was elected in October, 1860, by the people, Reporter of the decisions of the Supreme Court of the State; was commissioned in July, 1862, as Second Lieutenant of Indiana Volunteers; raised Company A of the Seventieth Indiana Voluntéer Infantry, was commissioned Captain, and on the organization of the regiment was commissioned Colonel; in August went with the regiment to Kentucky, and served until mustered out in June, 1865; was brevetted Brigadier-General 'in February, 1865; in October, 1864, while in the field, was re-elected Reporter of the Supreme Court, which office he had lost by accepting his commission in the Army; aftgr having been mustered out, he entered upon the duties of Reporter and served for four years; in 1876 he was the candidate of the Republican party for Governor of Indiana, but was defeated; was appointed a member of the Mississippi River Commission in 1879; was elected to the United States Senate as a Republican, to suc-ceed Joseph E. McDonald, Democrat, and took his seat March 4, 1881. -His term of service will expire March 3, 1887. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Gibson, Perry, Pike, Posey, Spencer, Vanderburg, and Warrick. John J. Kleiner, of Evansville, was born in West Hanover, Pennsylvania, February 8, 1845; served as a private in the Union Army in 1863-'64; was a member of the City Council of Evansville in 1873; was Mayor of Evansville, 1874-’80; was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 19,930 votes against 18,493 votes for Gudgel, Republican, 287 votes for Francis M. English, and 14 votes scattering. SECOND DISTRICT. COUNTI1ES.—Dauviess, Dubois, Greene, Knox, Lawrence, Martin, Orange, and Sullivan. Thomas R. Cobb, of Vincennes, was born in Lawrence County, Indiana, July 2, 1828; was raised on a farm; attended the Bloomington University; studied and practised law at Bedford from 1853 until 1867, when he removed to Vincennes, where he has since continued to practise; was commissioned Major of Militia by the Governor of Indiana in 1852; was elected to the State Senate from 1858 to 1866; was Democratic candidate for Elector in 1868; was President of the Indiana State Democratic Convention in 1876; was a Delegate to the National Democratic Convention at Saint Louis which nominatéd Tilden and’ Hendricks in 1876; was elected to the Forty-fifth, Forty-sixth, Forty-seventh, and Forty-eighth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 18,832 votes against 15,128 votes for Riley, Republican. THIRD DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Clark, Crawford, Floyd, Harrison, Jackson, Jennings, Scott, and Washington. Jonas G. Howard, was born in Floyd County, Indiana, now resides at Jeffersonville, Clark County, Indiana; was educated at Asbury College, Greencastle, Indiana; graduated at law in the State University at Bloomington, Indiana, in 1851; since graduating in the law has prac-ticed in Clark County ; was elected to the State Legislature of Indiana in 1862, and again in 1864; was Presidential Elector on the ticket of Seymour and Blair in 1868 ; was again Elector from the Second Congressional District (now Third) in the Tilden and Hendricks campaign in 1876; has always been of the Democratic political faith, and has never voted with nor be-longed to any other than the Democratic party; was the Democratic nominee for the Forty-ninth Congress, and was elected over Keigwin, Republican, by 4,700 votes. Re-elected. a INDIANA. | Senators and Retresentatives. 23 FOURTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Dearborn, Decatur, Franklin, Jefferson, Ohio, Ripley, Switzerland, and Union. William S. Holman, of Aurora, was born at a pioncer 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 practised law; was Judge of the Court of Probate from 1843 to 1846; was Prosecuting Attorney from 1847 to 1849; was a member of the Constitutional Convention of Indiana in 1850; was a member of the Legis-lature 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, Fortieth, Forty-first, Forty-sec-ond, Forty-third, Forty-fourth, Forty-seventh, and Forty-eighth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 17,233 votes against 15,494 votes for Cravens, Republican, and 68 votes for Augustus Welch. Re-elected. FIFTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Bartholomew, Brown, Hendricks, Johnson, Monroe, Morgan, Owen, and Pul-nam. . Courtland C. Matson, of Greencastle, was born at Brookville, Indiana, April 25, 1841; is a graduate of Indiana Asbury University; at the beginning of the war enlisted as a private in the Sixteenth Indiana Volunteers, and after one year’s service in that regiment entered the Sixth Indiana Cavalry, (Seventy-first Volunteers,) and served in that regiment until October, 1865, filling different intermediate grades up to that of Colonel of the latter regiment ; after the war he studied law with his father, Hon. John A. Matson; entered the practice at his present home, and has so continued; was three times elected as Prosecuting Attorney of different courts in Indiana; was elected to the Forty-seventh and Forty-eighth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 17,951 votes against 16,582 votes for Grubbs, Republican, 471 votes for Burton, Greenbacker, and I vote scattering. Re-elected. SIXTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Delaware, Fayette, Henry, Randolph, Rush, and Wayne. Thomas M. Browne, of Winchester, was born at New Paris, Ohio, April 19, 1829; re- moved to Indiana in January, 1844; received a common-school education; studied law at Winchester, and was admitted to the bar in 1849; was elected Prosecuting Attorney for the Thirteenth Judicial Circuit in 1855, and re-elected in 1857 and 1859; was Secretary of the . State Senate of Indiana in 1861, and represented Randolph County in that body in 1863; as-sisted in organizing the Seventh Volunteer Cavalry, and went to the field with that regiment as its Lieutenant-Colonel, was promoted to its Colonelcy, and subsequently commissioned by President Lincoln Brigadier-General by brevet; was appointed in April, 1869, United States Attorney for the District of Indiana, and resigned that office August 1, 1872; was the Repub-lican candidate for Governor of Indiana in 1872, and was defeated by Thomas A. Hendricks; elected to the Forty-fifth, Forty-sixth, Forty-seventh, and Forty-eighth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 22,115 votes against 13,625 votes for Smith, Democrat, 447 for Jeffries, Greenbacker, and 1 scattering. Re-elected. SEVENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Hancock, Marion, and Shelby. William D. Bynum, of Indianapolis, was born near Newberry, Greene County, Indi-ana, June 26, 1846; received a primary education in the commuo schools, and collegiate at State University at Bloomington, Indiana, graduatingin 1869; studied law with Hon. William _ Mack, of Terre Haute, and was admitted to practice in 1869; was City Attorney of Washington, Indiana, 1871-1875; was Mayor of Washington, Indiana, 1875-1879; was appointed by Gover-nor Hendricks a Trustee of the State Normal School of Terre Haute, Indiana, in February, 1873, and served until he resigned in June, 1875; wasa Democratic Elector in 1876; removed from Daviess County to Marion County in May, 1881; was a member of the State Legislature of Indi-ana in 1882, and elected Speaker of the House at the beginning of the session of 1883; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 20,240 votes against 18,995 votes for Stanton J. Peelle, Republican, 175 votes for Young, Greenbacker, and 285 votes for Tomlinson, Prohibitionist. Re-elected. EIGHTH DISTRICT. | COUNTIES.— Clay, Fountain, Montgomery, Parke, Vermillion, Vigo, and Warren. | James T. Johnston, of Rockville,was born in Putnam County, Indiana, January 19, 1839 ; received a common-school education; commenced the study of law in 1861; in July, 1862, |enlisted as a private in Company C, Sixth Indiana Cavalry; in September, 1863, was trans- | | = ® 24 © Congressional Directory. [INDIANA ferred to Company A, Eighth Tennessee Cavalry, and commissioned as Second Lieutenant and served in that capacity until January, 1864, resigning on account of disability; afterwards served as Commissary Sergeant of One hundred and thirty-third Indiana Infantry; was com-missioned Lieutenant and Assistant Quartermaster of the One hundred and forty-ninth Indiana Infantry, and mustered out with the Regiment in September, 1865; was admitted to the bar in March, 1866; was elected Prosecuting Attorney, serving two years; was elected as Repre-sentative to the State Legislature in 1868, from Parke County; was elected State Senator from the Counties of Parke and Vermillion in 1874, serving four years; was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 20,185 votes against 20,035 votes for John E. Lamb, Democrat, 149 votes for A. Tomlinson, Prohibitionist, and 2 scattering. , Re-elected. NINTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Boone, Clinton, Hamilton, Madison, Tippecanoe, and Tipton. Thomas B. Ward, of La Fayette, was born at Marysville, Union County, Ohio, April 27, 1835; his parents removed to La Fayette, Indiana, (where he has since resided,) in May, 1836; was educated at Wabash College, Indiana, and at Miami University, Oxford, Ohio; graduated at the last-named institution in June, 1855; studied law at La Fayette, Indiana, and was admitted to the bar in 1857; was elected Mayor of La Fayette in 1861, and re-elected in 1863, serving four years; served one term as Clerk to the city of La Fayette, and ‘three terms as City Attorney of that city; was appointed by Governor Hendricks, in 1875, Judge of the Superior Court of Tippecanoe County, Indiana, then newly created, and elected to that position in 1876, serving five years in all as Judge; was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 19,241 votes against 18,628 votes for Doxey, Republican, 602 votes for Cotton, Greenbacker, and 271 votes for Cor-nelius M. Riggin. TENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Benton, Carroll, Cass, Fulton, Jasper, Lake, Newton, Porter, Pulaski, and White. William D. Owen, of Logansport, was born at Bloomington, Indiana, September 6, 1846; is a minister of the Christian Church; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Re-publican, receiving 19,262 votes against 18,781 votes for Thomas J. Wood, Democrat, 473 votes for N. J. Bozorth, Greenbacker, and 1 vote scattering. Re-elected. ELEVENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Adams, Blackford, Grant, Howard, Huntington, Jay, Miami, Wabask, and Wells. George W. Steele, of Marion, was born in Fayette County, Indiana, December 13, 1839; received a common-school education; studied law, and was admitted to the bar in February, 1861; enlisted in Company H, Eighth Indiana Infantry, April 22, 1861; was commissioned First Lieutenant Twelfth Indiana Infantry, May 2, 1861; Captain One hundred and first Indiana Infantry, September 6, 1862; Major, February 8, 1863; and Lieutenant-Colonel, June 1, 1863; continued to serve in that capacity until the close of the war, the first year’s service in the Eastern Army and the last three in the Army of the Cumberland ; was commissioned First Lieutenant Fourteenth United States Infantry February 23, 1866; was appointed Regimental Quarter-master July 1, 1868; resigned, to take effect February 1, 1876, while performing duty as Depot Quartermaster at Ogden, Utah; with the exception of a short time on recruiting service, was doing active duty on the frontier; is now engaged in pork-packing and farming; was elected to the Forty-seventh and Forty-eighth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Con-gress as a Republican, receiving 22,679 votes against 22,625 votes for Kidd, Democrat, and 1,224 votes for Pleas, Greenbacker. Re-elected. TWELFTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—A/llen, De Kalb, La Grange, Noble, Steuben, and Whitley. Robert Lowry, of Fort Wayne, was born in Ireland; removed in early youth to Rochester, New York; was instructed in the elementary branches at private schools and had partial academic course, but education mainly self-acquired; was Librarian of Rochester Atheneum and Young Men’s Association; studied law; removed to Fort Wayne in 1843; was elected by the Common Council, while yet under age, City Recorder; was re-elected, but declined; was admitted to the bar; commenced practice in Goshen, Indiana, in 1846; was appointed by the Governor Circuit Judge in 1852, to fill vacancy for an unexpired term; was unexpectedly nominated by the Democrats in 1856, in a district having a large adverse majority, as a candi-date for Congress, and defeated only by a close vote; in 1860 was President of the Democratic State Convention and one of the four Delegates at Large to the Democratic National Conven-tion; in 1861 and 1862, while still retaining residence and practice in Indiana, had law office INDIANA. | Senators ana Representatives. 25 in Chicago; in 1864 was nominated by the Democrats and elected Circuit Judge for a term of six years; while yet occupying the bench was again nominated by the Democrats in 1866, and renominated in 1868, as a candidate for Congress in heavily Republican districts and defeated, but by reduced majorities; in 1867 resumed his residence in Fort Wayne; was re-elected Cir- cuit Judge on the expiration of his term, in 1870, without opposition; was Delegate at Large to the Democratic National Convention in 1872; resigned the Circuit Judgeship in January, 1875, and resumed practice in Fort Wayne as a member of the firm of Lowry, Robertson & O’Rourke; in September, 1877, was appointed by the Governor, on the unanimous recommen- dation of the bar, as Judge of the newly-created Superior Court, and afterwards elected as such in 1878 by a unanimous popular vote; was elected the first President of the Indiana State Bar Association in July, 1879; on the expiration of his term as Judge, in 1882, he was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 19,507 votes against, 16,957 votes for Keator, Republican, 369 votes for Harstuck, and 303 votes for Gale. THIRTEENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Elkhart, Kosciusko, La Porte, Marshall, Saint Joseph, and Starke. George Ford, of South Bend, was born at South Bend, Indiana, January 11, 1846; received a common-school education ; is a lawyer by profession; was Prosecuting Attorney ten years; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 20,971 votes against 18,792 votes for H. G. Thayer, Republican. IOWA. SENATORS. William B. Allison of Dubuque, was born at Perry, Ohio, March ,1829; was educated at the Western Reserve College, Ohio; studied law and practised in Ohio until he removed to Iowa in 1857; served on the staff of the Governor of Iowa, and aided in organizing volun-teers in the beginning of the war for the suppression of the rebellion; was elected a Repre-sentative in the Thirty-eighth, Thirty-ninth, Fortieth, and Forty-first Congresses; and was elected to the United States Senate as a Republican, to succeed James Harlan, Republican; took his seat March 4, 1873, and was re-elected in 1878 and in 1884. His term of service will expire March 3, 1891. James F. Wilson, of Fairfield, was born at Newark, Ohio, October 19, 1828; received an academical education; studied law, and commenced its practice in Iowa; was a member of the Constitutional Convention of Iowa in 1856; was a member of the State Legislature in 1857,’59, and’61, serving the last year as President of the Senate; was elected a Representative from Iowa for the unexpired term of S. R. Curtis; was re-elected to the Thirty-eighth, Thirty-ninth, and Fortieth Congresses, serving from December 2, 1861, to March 3, 1869; and was elected to the United States Senate as a Republican, to succeed James Wilson McDill, Republican, and took his seat December 4, 1883. His term of service will expire March 3, 1889. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Des Moines, Henry, Jefferson, Lee, Louisa, Van Buren, and Washington. Benton J. Hall, of Burlington, was born at Mount Vernon, Knox County, Ohio, January 13, 1835, but has been a resident of Iowa since December, 1839; was educated at Knox College, Illinois, and at Miami University, Ohio, at which latter institution he was graduated in June, 1855; studied law in the office of his father, Hon. J. C. Hall, at Burlington, and since his admission to the bar in 1857 has been continuously engaged in the active practice of his profession; was a member of the lower house of the General Assembly of the State of Towa for the term of 1872-'73; was a Senator in the General Assembly of Iowa for four years, commencing in January, 1882; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 16,734 votes against 16,661 votes for John Woolson, Republican, 103 votes for Palmer, and 3 votes scattering. SECOND DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Cedar, Clinton, Jackson, Jones, Muscatine, and Scott. Jeremiah H. Murphy, of Davenport, was born at Lowell, Massachusetts, February 19, 1835; was educated in the schools of Boston and the State University of Iowa; read law; was admitted to the practice in April, 1858, and he has practised the profession ever since; was elected Mayor of Davenport in 1873; was elected to the State Senate of Iowa in 1874 and held the office four years; was again elected Mayor in 1879 and held the office one year; 26 Congressional Directory. [1owa. was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 19,730 votes against 15,241 votes for Shaw, Republican, and 4 votes for Palmer. THIRD DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Black Hawk, Bremer, Buchanan, Butler, Delaware, Dubuque, and Grundy. David Bremner Henderson, of Dubuque, was born at Old Deer, Scotland, March 14, 1840; was brought to Illinois in 1846 and to Iowa in 1849; was educated in common schools and at the Upper Iowa University; studied law with Bissel & Shiras, of Dubuque, and was ad-mitted in the fall of 1865; was reared on a farm until twenty-one years of age; enlisted in the Union Army in September, 1861, as private in Company C, Twelfth Regiment Iowa Infantry Volunteers, and was elected and commissioned First Lieutenant of that company, serving with it until discharged, owing to the loss of his leg, March 26, 1863; in May, 1863, was appointed Commissioner of the Board of Enrolment of the Third District of Iowa, serving as such until June, 1864, when he re-entered the Army as Colonel of the Forty-sixth Regiment Iowa In-fantry Volunteers, and served therein until the close ot his term of service; was Collector of Internal Revenue for the Third District of Iowa from November, 1865, until June, 1869, when he resigned and became a member of the law firm of Shiras, Van Duzee & Henderson; was Assistant United States District Attorney for the Northern Division of the District of Iowa about two years, resigning in 1871; is now a member of the law firm of Henderson, Hurd & Daniels; was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth ‘Congress as a Republican, receiving 16,431 votes against 15,105 votes for John J. Linehan, Fusionist, and 2 votes scattering. Re-elected. FOURTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES. —A/llamakee, Clayton, Chickasaw, Fayette, Floyd, Howard, Mitchell, and Win-neshiek. William E. Fuller, of West Union, was born at Howard, Centre County, Pennsylvania, March 30, 1846; was educated at the Upper Towa University and the State University; grad-uated from the law department of the State University in June, 1870, and has since practised his profession; in 1866 and ’67 he held a position in the office of Indian Affairs, Depart-ment of the Interior; was a member of the Iowa House of Representatives 1n 1876 and 1877; has been a member of the Republican State and Congressional Committees; was a member of the West Union Board of Education for six years, and also its President; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 15,082 votes against 14,852 votes for L. H. Weller, Fusion Democrat and Greenbacker. Re-elected. FIFTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Benton, lowa, johnson, Linn, Marshall, and Tama. Benjamin Todd Frederick, of Marshalltown, was born at Fredericktown, Columbiana County, Ohio, October 5, 1834; is engaged in manufacturing; was a member of the City Council of Marshalltown three terms, and of the School Board three terms ; was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress, but was compelled to contest the seat, which was given to him on the last day of that Congress, March 4, 1885; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 16,679 votes against 16,541 votes for Milo P. Smith, Republican, 29 votes for Lewis, and 7 votes scattering. SIXTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Davis, jasper, Keokuk, Mahaska, Monroe, Poweshiek, and Wapello. J. B. Weaver, of Bloomfield, was born in Dayton, Ohio, June 12, 1833; had a common-school education in his boyhood; graduated at the law school of the Ohio University at Cin-cinnati in 1854; enlisted as a private in the Second Iowa Infantry in April, 1861 ; was elected First Lieutenant of Company G of that regiment; was promoted Major October 3, 1862, and was commissioned as Colonel of that regiment October 12, 1862] the coloneliand lieutenant having both been killed at the battle of Corinth, Mississippi; was brevetted Brigadier-Gen-eral of Volunteers ¢ for gallentry on the field,” to date from March 13, 1864 ; is a lawyer by profession, and one of the editors of ¢ The Iowa Tribune,” published at Des Moines, Iowa; was elected District Attorney of the Second Judicial District of Towa in 1866, and served four years; was appointed by President Johnson Assessor of Internal Revenue for the First Dis-trict of Towa in 1867, and served six years; was elected to the Forty-sixth Congress; was nom- inated in 1880, at Chicago, by the National Party as their candidate for President of the United States, and received about 350,000 votes; was elected to the Forty ninth Congress by the Nationals and Democrats, having been nominated and supported by both, receiving 16,684 votes, against 16,617 votes for Campbell, Republican. Re-elected. SEVENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Adair, Dallas, Guthrie, Madison, Marion, Polk, and Warren. Edwin H. Conger, of Des Moines, was born in Knox County, Illinois, March 7, 1843; was educated at Lombard University, graduating in the class of 1862; enlisted at once as a private in IOWA. ] Senators and Representatives. 2% ‘Company I, One hundred and second Illinois Volunteer Infantry, in which he served until the close of the war, attaining the rank of Captain, and receiving from the President the brevet of Major for «gallant and meritorious conduct in the field”; studied law, and graduated at the Albany law school in 1866, when he was admitted to the bar, and practised at Galesburg, Illinois, until 1868; removed to Dexter, Dallas County, Iowa, in 1868, and has since been engaged in farm-ing, stock-growing, and banking; was elected Treasurer of Dallas County in 1877 and re-elected in 1879; was elected State Treasurer of Iowa in 1880 and re-elected in 1882; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 19,274 votes against 15,924 votes for W. H. McHenry, Democrat, and I vote scattering. Re-elected. EIGHTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Adams, Appanoose, Clarke, Decatur, Lucas, Page, Ringgold, Taylor, Union, and Wayne. William Peters Hepburn, of Clarinda, was born in Columbiana County, Ohio, November 4, 1833; removed to Iowa in 1840; was educated in the common schools of Iowa ann in a printing office; studied law in 1853-55; was elected Prosecuting Attorney of Marshall County, Iowa, in 1856; was elected Chief Clerk of the Towa House of Representatives in January, 1858; was elected District Attorney of the Eleventh Judicial District in October, 1858; entered the military service in August, 1861, as Captain of Company B, Second Iowa Volunters Cavalry; was promoted to Major in November, 1861, and Lieutenant-Colonel of the same regiment in January, 1863; served on the staff of Major-General Rosecrans in 1862-'63, as Judge-Advo-cate of the Army of the Mississippi, and for a time of the Army of the Cumberlard; later as Inspector of Cavalry of the Army of the Cumberland; in the winter and spring of 1864 com-manded the Second Brigade Cavalry Division, Sixteenth Army Corps; was elented one of the Presidential Electors at large for Towa in 1876; was elected to the Forty-seventh and Forty-eigh‘h Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 17,671 votes against 15,294 votes for Davis, Fusionist, and 8 votes scattering. NINTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES,—Audubon, Cass, Crawford, Fremont, Harrison, Mills, Montgomery, Pottawatta-me, and Shelby. Joseph Lyman, of Council Bluffs, was born at Lyons, Michigan, September 13, 1840; re-ceived a common-school and academic education, entered college. but immediately thereafter nlisted in the Union Army as private in Company E, Fourth Iowa Volunteer Cavalry; was Adjutant of the Twenty-ninth Iowa Infantry from October 19, 1862, to February 21, 1865, and Major of the same regiment from February 21, 1865, to August 10, 1865, serving during the entire war of the Rebellion; during the year 1864 was Aid-de-camp and Inspector-General on the staff of Brigadier-General Samuel A. Rice, and from February 1, 1865, until his muster-out was Aid-de-camp and Acting Assistant Adjutant-General on the staff of Major-General Fred. Steele; studied law, was admitted to the bar, and has since practised at Council Bluffs; was deputy collector of internal revenue of the Fifth district of Iowa from January 1, 1867, to March 1, 1870; was circuit judge of the Thirteenth judicial district of Iowa from January I, 1884, to December 31, 1884; and was elected ‘to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 19,071 votes against: 18,500 votes for W. H. Pusey, Democrat and Fusionist, and 6 votes for Hatton, Greenbacker. Re-elected. TENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Boone, Cerro Gordo, Franklin, Hamillon, Hancock, Hardin, Humboldt, Kos-sutk, Story, Webster, Winnebago, Wright, and Worth. Adoniram Judson Holmes, of Boone, was born in Wayne County, Ohio, March 2, 1842; removed with his parents to Palmyra, Wisconsin, in 1853; received a thorough academic edu-cation ; entered Milton College, Wisconsin, but left his studies there in 1862 to enter the Union Army, where he served until the close of the war; studied law after tho war at Janesville, and was admitted to the bar; afterwards took a full course at the Law Department of the Univer-sity of Michigan, graduating in 1867; commenced practice at Boone, Iowa, in 1868, and has since been continuously engaged in the practice of his profession; was elected a member of the House of Representatives in the Iowa Legislature in the fall of 1881 for the two following years; was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Con-gress as a Republican, receiving 20,328 votes against 12,117 votes for MeCoy, Fusionist. Re-elected. ; : ELEVENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Buena Vista, Calloun, Carroll, Cherokee, Clay, Dickinson, Emmet, Greene, Ida, Lyon, Monana, O’ Brien, Osceola, Palo Alto, Pocakontas, Plymouth, Sac, Stoux, and Woodbury Isaac S, Struble, of Le Mars, was born near Fredericksburg, Virginia, November, 3, 1843; received a common-school education and, after the war, a partial course in the Iowa State PF 28 Congressional Directory. [TOWA. University ; enlisted at the age of seventeen, and served three years as a private in Company F, Twenty-second Iowa Infantry; studied law, and was admitted to practice in 1870 in Ogle County, Illinois; settled at Le Mars, Iowa, in the spring of 1872, and has been continuously in the practice there and in Illinois since his admission to the bar; never held any office prior to being elected to the Forty-eighth Congress; and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 24,063 votes against 17,107 votes for Thomas F. Barbee, Fusionist, and 6 votes scattering. Re-elected. KANSAS. SENATORS. John James Ingalls, of Atchison, born at Middleton, Essex County, Massachusetts, De-cember 29, 1833; graduated at Williams College, Williamstown, Massachusetts, in 1855, and received the degree of LL. D. in 1884; admitted to the bar in 1857; removed to Kansas in October, 1858; a delegate to the Wyandotte Constitutional Convention in 1859; Secretary of the Territorial Council in 1860; Secretary of the State Senate in 1861; member of the State Senate of Kansas from Atchison County in 1862; Major, Lieutenant-Colonel, and Judge-Advo-cate Kansas Volunteers, 1863-65; elected to the United States Senate as a Republican, to suc-ceed S. C. Pomeroy, Republican, took his seat March 4, 1873, and has been twice re-elected. His term of service will expire March 3, 1891. Preston B. Plumb, of Emporia, was born in Delaware County, Ohio, October 12, 1837; received a common-school education; learned the art of printing; removed to Kansas in 1856; was a member of the Leavenworth Constitutional Convention in 1859; was adnutted to the bar in 1861; served in the lower house of the Legislature in 1862; and was Chairman of the Judiciary Committee, and subsequently Reporter of the Supreme Court; in August of the same year entered the service as Second Lieutenant in the Eleventh Kansas Infantry, and served successively as Captain, Major, and Lieutenant-Colonel of that regiment; was a member and Speaker of the Kansas House of Representatives in 1867, and also a member in the following year; was elected to the United States Senate as a Republican, to succeed James M. Harvey, Republican, took his seat March 4, 1877, and was re-elected in 1883. His term of service will expire March 3, 188g. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. COUNTIES. —Nemaha, Brown, Doniphan, Polluwatomie, Jackson, Alchison, Jefferson, ana Leavenworth. Edmund N. Morrill, of Hiawatha, was born at Westbrook, Cumberland County, Maine, February 12, 1834; received a common English education at Westbrook Seminary; is a banker; was a member of the Territorial Legislature of Kansas in 1857; enlisted in the Union Army October 5, 1861; was elected Sergeant October 10, 1861; was appointed Commissary of Subsistence in August, 1862, and was mustered out as Major in October, 1865; was elected Clerk of the District Court in Brown County, Kansas, in 1866, and was re-elected in 1868; was elected County Clerk in 1867, and re-elected in 1869 and 1871; was elected State Senator of Kansas in 1872, and re-elected in 1876; was elected President pro fem. of the Senate in 1879; was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Con-gress as a Republican, receiving 19,535 votes against 15,934 votes for Fenlon, Democrat, and 5 votes scattering. Re-elected. SECOND DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Alen, Anderson, Bourbon, Douglas, Franklin, Johnson, Lynn, Miami, and Wyandotte. Edward H. Funston, of Iola, was born in Clark County, Ohio, 1836; was reared on a farm; educated in the common schools, New Carlisle Academy, and Marietta College; entered the Army in 1861 as Lieutenant Sixteenth Ohio Battery; participated in the prin-cipal engagements along the Mississippi River; was mustered out 1865; located in Kansas on a prairie farm 1867, on which he resides at present; was elected to Kansas House of Representatives 1873, 1874, and 1875; was Speaker in 1875; was elected to State Senate 1880, of which he was made President 470 tempore; was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress KANSAS. | Senators and Representatives. 29 March 1, 1884, to fill vacancy caused by the death of the late Hon. D. C. Haskell; and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 22,518 votes against 14,703 votes for Nicholson, Democrat and Greenbacker, and 83 votes scattering. Re-elected. THIRD DISTRICT. CoUNTIES.— Crawford, Cherokee, Neosho, Labette, Wilson, Montgomery, Elk, Chautauqua, and Cowley. ; Bishop W. Perkins, of Oswego, was born in Rochester, Lorain County, Ohio, October 18, 1841; received a common-school education, with a short attendance at Knox Academy, at Galesburg, Illinois; read law at Ottawa, Illinois; was admitted to the bar there in 1867, and commenced practice; served four years as a soldier in the Union Army, going out as Sergeant in the Eighty-third Illinois Infantry, and was Adjutant and Captain of the Sixteenth United States Colored Infantry for two years and six months; was County Attorney of Labette County in 1869; was elected Probate Judge of the county in 1870 and again in 1872; in February, 1873, was appointed Judge of the Eleventh Judicial District of Kansas, and in November of that year was elected for the unexpired term; was re-elected in November, 1874, and again in November, 1878, holding the office for almost ten years; is President of the Board of Trustees of the Oswego College for Young Ladies, and was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress as Con-gressman at Large from Kansas, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Repub-tican, receiving 23,854 votes against 13,341 votes for G. W. Gabriel, Democrat, 5,163 for Tipton, Greenbacker, and 1 vote scattering. Re-elected. FOURTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Buller, Chase, Coffey, Greenwood, Lyon, Marion, Morris, Osage, Shawnee, Wabaunsee, and Woodson. 3 Thomas Ryan, of Topeka, was born at Oxford, New York, November 25, 1837; lived in Bradford County, Pennsylvania, from infancy until 1865, when he removed to Topeka, Kansas, where he has since resided; received an academic education; entered the Volunteer Army of the United States in 1862, and was mustered out as a Captain in the fall of 1864, on account of wounds received in the battle of the Wilderness; was admitted to the practice of law in * 1861; was County Attorney in Kansas for eight successive years; was Assistant United States Attorney for Kansas from 1873 to 1877; was elected to the Forty-fifth, Forty-sixth, Forty-sev-enth, and Forty-eighth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Repub-lican, receiving 26,177 votes against 15,799 votes for Wood, Democrat, 323 votes for Melvin, Independent, and 6 votes scattering. Re-elected. FIFTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES. — Clay, Cloud, Davis, Dickinson, Marshall, Ottawa, Republic, Riley, Saline, and Washington. John A. Anderson, of Manhattan, Riley County, was born in Washington County, Penn-sylvania, June 26, 1834; graduated at Miami University, Oxford, Ohio, in 1853; ordained as a Minister by the Presbytery of San Francisco in 1857; was elected by the Legislature of Cali-fornia Trustee-of the State Insane Asylum in 1860; was apjointed Chaplain of the Third Infan-try California Volunteers in 1862, and accompanied General Connor’s expedition to Salt Lake; was in the service of the United States Sanitary Commission from 1863 to 1867 as California correspondent and as agent; was President of the Kansas State Agricultural College from 1873 to March, 1879; was appointed one of the Judges by the United States Centennial Commission in 1876, and served as such on Group XXI; had not been engaged in political life; was elected to the Forty-sixth, Forty-seventh, and Forty-eighth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 22,554 votes, against 10,866 votes for Carna-ham, Democrat, 1,784 votes for Tenney, Greénbackeér, and 6 votes scattering. Re-elected. SIXTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Cheyenne, Decatur, Ellsworth, Ellis, Graham, Gore, Jewell, Lincoln, Mitchell, Norton, Osborne, Phillips, Rawlins, Russell, Rooks, Sheridan, Sherman, Smith, Trego, St. John, Thomas, and Wallace. Lewis Hanback, of Osborne, was born in Winchester, Scott County, Illinois, March 27, 1839; received a common-school education; enlisted in the Union Army in the war of the rebellion, first in the Tenth Illinois Infantry, and then in the Twenty-seventh Illinois Infantry, and was promoted to be Second and First Lieutenant in Company K of the last-named regi-ment; after the war removed to Kansas; was in 1868 elected Probate Judge of Shawnee Congressional Directory. [KANSAS. County, holding the position for four years; afterwards was appointed Assistant United States Attorney for the District of Kansas, and held the position for more than two years, when he was appointed Receiver of Public Moneys at Salina, Kansas, which position he held until he was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress; and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 15,085 votes against 10,060 votes for Uhl, Democrat and Greenbacker, and I vote scattering. SEVENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.~—Mc Pherson, Harvey, Sedgwick, Sumner, Harper, Kingman, ton, Stafford, Pratt, Barbour, Comanche, Edwards, Pawnee, Rush, Ness, Lane, Scott, Finney, Seward, Wichita, Greeley, and Hamilton. Reno, Rice, Hodgeman, Bar-Ford, - ¥ - Samuel Ritter Peters, of Newton, was born in Walnut Township, Pickaway County, Ohio, August 16, 1842; received a common-school education and about three years of a collegiate education; enlisted in the Army in the fall of 1861, and was mustered out in June, 1865, hav-ing held successively the offices of Sergeant, Second Lieutenant, First Lieutenant, Adjutant, and Captain in the Seventy-third O. V. V. S.; was elected in the fall of 1874 to the State Senate of Kansas; was appointed in March, 1875, Judge of the Ninth Judicial District; in the fall of 1875 was elected to the same judgeship without opposition, and re-elected in 1879; was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress as Congressman at Large from Kansas, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 26,240 votes against 15,913 votes for Bickell, Democrat, 496 votes for Arnott, Greenbacker, and 25 votes scattering. Re-elected. KENTUCKY. SENATORS. James B. Beck, of Lexington, was born in Dumfriesshire, Scotland, February 13, 1822; received an academic education in Scotland; graduated as a lawyer at Transylvania Univer-sity, Lexington, Kentucky, in March, 1846, and practised there, never holding any office until elected a Representative in the Fortieth, Forty-first, Forty-second, and Forty-third Con-gresses; declined a re-election as Representative; was elected to the United States Senate as a Democrat, to succeed John W. Stevenson, Democrat, took his seat March 5, 1877, and was re-elected in 1882. His term of service will expire March 3, 1889. | Joseph C. S. Blackburn, of Versailles, was born in Woodford County, Kentucky, October 1, 1838; was educated at Sayres Institute, Frankfort, Kentucky, and at Centre Col-lege, Danville, Kentucky, whence he graduated in 1857; studied law with George B. Kin-caid, esq., at Lexington, was admitted to the bar in 1858, and practised until 1861; entered the Confederate Army in 1861, and served throughout the war; resumed practice in 1865; was elected to the State Legislature of Kentucky in 1871 and ’73; was elected to the House in the Forty-fourth, Forty-fifth, Forty-sixth, Forty-seventh, and Forty-eighth Congresses; was elected to the United States Senate as a Democrat, to succeed John S. Williams, Democrat, and took his seat March 4, 1885. His term of service will expire March 3, 1891. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Ballard, Caldwell, Calloway, Lyon, Marshall, McCracken, and Trigg. Crittenden, Fulton, Graves, Hickman, Livingston, William Johnson Stone, of Kuttawa, was born June 26, 1841, in Lyon (then Caldwell} County, Kentucky; was educated at the common schools of the county and at Q. M. Tyler's Collegiate Institute in Cadiz, Trigg County, Kentucky; is a farmer by occupation; was elected a member of the State House of Representatives in 1867, 1875, and 1883, and was Speaker of the House during his second term; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Regular Democrat, receiving 10,303 votes against 7,440 votes for Oscar Turner, Independent Demo-crat, and 7,167 votes for H. H. Huston, Republican. Ae-¢lected. i | SECOND DISTRICT. | COUNTIES.— Christian, Daviess, Hancock, Henderson, Hopkins, McLean, Union, and Webster. { Polk ceived Laffoon, of Madisonville, was a common-school education; born in entered Hopkins County, the Confederate Kentucky, Army as October 24, 1844; a member of the | | \ KENTUCKY. | Senalors and Representatives. 31 Eighth Confederate Infantry; was captured at Fort Donelson on the 16th of February, 1862, and was exchanged at Vicksburg in September of the same year; was a member of Morgan’s command during the remainder of the war; was captured at Cheshire, Ohio, on the raid into that State, and was confined in the Pennsylvania penitentiary as a prisoner of war; followed teaching for two years; studied law, was admitted to the bar in 1867, and was once county attorney of his county, and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 12,472 votes against 9,485 votes for Moore, Republican, and 11 scattering. Re-elected. THIRD DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—AWen, Butler, Clinton, Cumberiand, Edmonson, Logan, Monroe, Muklenburs, Simpson, Todd, and Warren. John E. Halsell, of Bowling Green, was born in Warren County, Kentucky, September 11, 1826; was educated at Cumberland University, Lebanon, Tennessee; studied law; was admitted to the bar and commenced the practice of law at Bowling Green in 1856; was elected County Attorney for Warren County and served four years; was elected Circuit Judge of the Fourth Judicial District of Kentucky in 1870; was elected to the Forty-eighth Con-gress, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 12,833 votes against 10,386 votes for Golladay, Republican. FOURTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Breckinridge, Bullitt, Grayson, Hardin, La Rue, Marion, Meade, Nelson, Ohio, and Washington. Thomas A. Robertson, of Elizabethtown, was born at Hodgensville, La Rue County, Kentucky, September 9, 1848; was graduated from Cecilian College, and afterward from law university at Louisville; entered immediately upon the practice of his profession; held several minor positions in his county; served one term in the Kentucky Legislature; was several times elected Commonwealth’s attorney of the eighteenth judicial district, resigned to become a candidate for Congress, was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress, and was re-elected. to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 12,153 votes against 246 votes scatter-ing. FIFTH DISTRICT. CouN1Y.— Jefferson. Albert S. Willis, of Louisville, was born in Shelby County, Kentucky, January 22, 1843; received his early education in common schools, and graduated at the Louisville Male High School in 1860; taught school for four years; studied law and graduated at the Louisville Law School in 1866, since which time he has been continuously engaged in tle practice of his pro-fession ; canvassed the State on the Democratic electoral ticket in 1872; was elected Attorney for Jefferson County in 1870, was re-elected in 1874, and served until he was elected to the-Forty-fifth Congress; was elected to the Forty-sixth, Forty-seventh, and Forty-eighth Con-gresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 12,152 votes against 8,373 votes for Willson, Republican, and 71 votes scattering. SIXTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Boone, Campbell, Carroll, Gallatin, Grant, Kenton, Pendleton, and Trimble. John Griffin Carlisle, of Covington, was born in Campbell (now Kenton) County,. Kentucky, September 5, 1835; received a common-school education; taught school in the: county and afterwards at Covington; studied law with J. W. Stevenson and W. B. Kinkead, was admitted to the bar in March, 1858, and has practised since; was a member of the State House of Representatives 1859-61; was nominated for Presidential Elector on the Demo-cratic ticket in 1864, but declined; was elected to the State Senate in February, 1866, and re-elected in August, 1869; was a Delegate at Large from Kentucky to the National Democratic Convention at New York in July, 1868; was nominated for Lieutenant-Governor of Kentucky in May, 1871, resigned his seat in the Senate in June, 1871, and was elected Lieutenant-Gov-ernor in August, 1871, serving until September, 1875; was alternate Presidential Elector for the State at large in 1876; was elected to the Forty-fifth, Forty-sixth, Forty-seventh, and Forty-eighth Congresses as a Democrat, receiving no opposition; was elected Speaker of the House of Representatives, Dec. 3, 1883, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 15,261 votes against 9,329 votes for Landrum, Republican, and 500 votes scattering. Re-elected. || Congressional Directory. [KENTUCKY. SEVENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Bourbon, Fayette, Franklin, Harrison, Henry, Oldham, Owen, Scott, and Woodford. $15, William C. P. Breckinridge, of Lexington, was born August 28, 1837; graduated at Center College, Danville, Kentucky, April 26, 1855, and in the Law department of the Uni- versity of Louisville February 27, 1857; is an attorney at law; and was elected to the Forty- ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 16,239 votes against 1,173 votes for Lindsey, Repub- lican, and 10 votes scattering. Re-elected, without opposition. EIGHTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Anderson, Boyle, Garrard, Jackson, Jessamine, Laurel, Lincoln, Madison, Mercer, Owsley, Rockcastle, Shelby, and Spencer. James B. McCreary, of Richmond, was born in Madison County, Kentucky, July 8, 1838; received a classical education, graduated at the age of eighteen at Center College, and Dan-ville, Kentucky, in 1857; at once commenced the study of law, and graduated in the Law Department of the Cumberland University of Tennessee (with the first honor in a class of forty-seven) in 1859, and immediately commenced the practice of law at Richmond, Ken-tucky; entered the Confederate Army in 1862, and was Lieutenant-Colonel of the Eleventh Kentucky Cavalry at the close of the war; was selected as a Presidential Elector on the Dem-ocratic ticket in 1868, but declined; was subsequently elected a Delegate to the National Democratic Convention held in New York in July, 1868; was elected a member of the State House of Representatives of Kentucky in 1869, 1871, and 1873, and was elected Speaker of the House in 1871 and in 1873; was nominated as Democratie candidate for Governor in May, 1875, and was elected, serving as Governor from August, 1875, to September, 1879; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 14,924 votes against 12,784 votes for James Sebastian, Republican. Re-elected. NINTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—ZBath, Bracken, Boyd, Carter, Fleming, Greenup, Johnson, Lawrence, Lewrs, Martin, Mason, Nickolas, Robertson, and Rowan. William Henry Wadsworth, of Maysville, was born at Maysville, Mason County, Ken-tucky, July 4, 1821; received his early education at the town and county private schools; graduated (A. B.) at Augusta College, Bracken County, Kentucky, in 1841; studied law, was admitted to the bar in 1846, and has been engaged in the practice since; was created LL. D. by Center College, Kentucky; was a member of the Kentucky State Senate 1853-1856; was President of the Electoral College of Kentucky in 1860; was United States Commissioner under the treatyof Washington with Mexico for the adjustment of claims; was a member of the Thirty-seventh and Thirty-eighth Congresses; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 16,189 votes against 16,087 votes for Frank Powers, Democrat. TENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Bell, Breathitt, Clark, Clay, Elliott, Estili, Floyd, Harlan, Knox, Lee, Leslie, Letcher, Magoffin, Menifee, Montgomery, Morgan, Perry, Pike, Powell, and Wolfe. William Preston Taulbee, of Saylersville, was born in Morgan County, Kentucky, October 22, 1851; was educated in private country schools; studied for the ministry from 1875 to 1878, and for the law from 1878 to 1881; was admitted to the bar in 1881; was elected clerk of the Magoffin County Court in 1878 and re-elected in 1882, and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 16,184 votes against 13,878 votes for A. J. Auxier, Republican. Re-elected. ELEVENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES. —Adair, Barren, Casey, Green, Hart, Metcalre, Pulaski, Russell, Taylor, Wayne, and Whitley. Frank L. Wolford, of Columbia, was born in Adair County, Kentucky, September 2, 1817; was educated in the common school; is by profession a lawyer; served in the House of Representatives in the General Assembly of Kentucky in the years 1847, ’48, ’65, and ’66; was elected Presidential Elector for the State at large in 1864 and ’68; was Colonel of the First Kentucky Cavalry 1861-'64; was Adjutant-General of the State of Kentucky 1867-68; was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 10,748 votes against 9,932 votes for Jones, Republican. A LOUISIANA. | Senators and Representatives. 33 S LOUISIANA. SENATORS. Randall Lee Gibson, of New Orleans, was born September 10, 1832, at Spring Hill, near Versailles, Woodford County, Kentucky; was educated in Lexington, Kentucky; in Terre Bonne Parish, Louisiana; at Yale College; in the Law Department of the Tulane University of Louisiana; declined the Secretaryship of Legation to Spain in 1855; was aid to the Gov-ernor of Louisiana at the commencement of the civil war, and served until its close in the Confederate Army; is President of the Board of Administrators of the Tulane University of Louisiana; is a lawyer and planter; was elected to the Forty-third Congress from the Second Congressional District, but was denied admission; was a Representative in the Iorty-fourth, Forty-fifth, Forty-sixth, and Forty-seventh Congresses, and was elected to the United States Senate without opposition as a Democrat, and took his seat March 4, 1883. His term of service will expire March 3, 1889. James B. Eustis, of New Orleans, was born at New Orleans August 27, 1834; received a classical education; was at the Harvard Law School in 1853 and 1854; was admitted to the bar in 1856, and practised at New Orleans; entered the Confederate service atthe commence-ment of hostilities as Judge-Advocate on the staff of General Magruder, and after one year’s service was transferred to the staff of General Joe Johnston, with whom he served until the close of the war; resumed practice at New Orleans; was elected a member of the State Legis-lature prior to the reconstruction acts; was one of the committee sent to Washington to con-fer with President Johnson on Louisiana affairs; was nominated for Congress in 1872 as a candidate at large, but was left off by the fusion of tickets; was a member of the State House of Representatives in 1872; was elected a member of the State Senate for four years in 1874; was a United States Senator from December 10, 187%, to March 3, 1879; at the time of election to the Senate in 1884 was Professor of Civil Law in the University of Louisiana; and was again elected to the United States Senate as a Democrat, to succeed Benjamin F. Jonas, Democrat, and took his seat March 4, 1885. His term of service will expire March 3, 1301, REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. CITY AND PARISHES.— Zat portion of the parish of Orleans between Julia street and the lower city limits, including the 3d, 4th, 5th, 6th, 7th, 8th, 9th, and 15th wards of the city of New Orleans, and the parishes of Plaquemines and Saint Bernard. Louis St. Martin, of New Orleans, was born in Saint Charles Parish, Louisiana, in 1820; was educated at Saint Mary’s Collegg, Missouri, and Jefferson College, Louisiana; entered a notary’s office with the purpose of studying law and becoming a notary; here he remained until he was appointed to fill a vacancy in the New Orleans post-office; was elected in 1846 to the Legislature of Louisiana; was appointed the same year Register of the United States Land Office for the Southeastern District of Louisiana by President Polk; was elected a sec-ond time to the Legislature; after two years’ service he was elected to the Thirty-second Con-gress from the First District of Louisiana; at the end of his term he embarked in mercantile pursuits, and soon thereafter was appointed register of voters for the city of New Orleans; in 1866 he was nominated by the Democratic party and elected to the Thirty-ninth Congress; his seat in the House of Representatives, however, was denied him, as it was held that Lou-isiana was not a State in the Union; again, in 1863, he was elected to the Forty-first Congress, but the election was contested and sent back to the people; was a delegate to the National Democratic Conventions that nominated Pierce, Seymour, Tilden, and Hancock; was a presi-dential elector on the Tilden ticket; has for several years occupied a position in the municipal government of New Orleans; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 5,685 votes against 3,361 votes for J. H. Acklen, Republican, and 4,458 votes for Hunt, Reform Democrat. SECOND DISTRICT. * CITY AND PARISHES.— 7%at portion of the parish of Orleans above Julia street, including the 1st, 2d, roth, 11th, 12th, 13th, 4th, 16th, and r7ik wards of the city of New Orleans, and the parishes of Jefferson, Saint Charles, Saint James, and Saint John the Baptist. Nathaniel Dick Wallace, of New Orleans, was born at Columbia, Tennessee, October 27, 1845; was sent at nine years of age to Europe and there educated; spent four years (the requisite time for a degree course) at Trinity College, Dublin, and there graduated in 1865, stand-ing fourth in one of the largest classes ever known at that university; returning home two years 2D ED 3 Congressional Directory. [LouisiANA. afterwards, he spent several years in the management of his family estate, but finally seed into the commission business in 1878; has been elected twice as President of the New Orlea Produce Exchange, and now holds that position; is also active in manufacturing interests, and is President of two large factories in New Orleans; has never been a candidate for politi-cal honors until he was nominated to succeed Governor Hahn, whose death caused a vacancy in the Forty-ninth Congress, and by his election converted a Republican into a Democratic district; he received 5,080 votes against 1,765 votes for Henry A. Martin, Republican, and 1,194 votes for O. T. Flagg, Independent. Was not a candidate for »e-election. THIRD DISTRICT. PARISHES. —Ascension, Assumption, Calcasien, Cameron, Iberville, Iberia, La Fayette, La Fourche, Saint Martin, Saint Mary, Terve Bonne, and Vermillion. Edward J. Gay, of Plaquemine, was born at. Liberty, Bedford County, Virginia, February 3, 1816; his father, John H. Gay, and family removed in 1820 to Illinois, and thence to Saint Louis, Missouri, in 1824, where he settled; he spent several years under the tuition of John H. Dennis, an accomplished teacher residing in Belleville, Illinois, and in 1833, ’34, at Au-gusta College, Kentucky; he became familiar with business affairs in early life, from being entrusted by his father with transactions of importance and responsibility; was extensively engaged in commercial affairs at Saint Louis from 1838 to 1860; since 1855 has resided in Louisiana, and been largely engaged in commercial, manufacturing, and agricultural pursuits; was prominently instrumental in the enterprise of the erection of the first and the present Merchants’ Exchange building at Saint Louis, and the first President of the Louisiana Sugar Exchange of New Orleans from its foundation in 1883; has never devoted time to political affairs; was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 15,302 votes against 14,605 votes for Kellogg, Republican. Re-elected. ’ FOURTH DISTRICT. PARISHES.— Bienville, Bossier, Caddo, De Soto, Grant, Natchitoches, Rapides, Red River, Sabine, Vernon, Webster, and Winn. Newton Crain Blanchard, of Shreveport, was born in Rapides Parish, Louisiana, Janu-ary 29, 1849; received an academical education; commenced the study of law at Alexandria, Louisiana, in 1868; entered the Law Department of the University of Louisiana, at New Orleans, in the winter of 1869, and graduated with the degree of Bachelor of Laws in 1870; commenced the practice of law at Shreveport in 1871, and still continues the practice there; in 1876 was made Chairman of the Democratic Committee of Caddo Parish; took an active part in the politics of the State, looking to the restoration of the government of the State to the hands of her own people; was nominated by the Democracy of Caddo Parish for the position of Representative Delegate to the State Constitutional Convention of 1879, and elected by a large majority ; served in that body as Chairman of the Committee on Federal Relations; was appointed by Governor Wiltz, of Louisiana, to the position of aide-de-camp on his staff, with the rank of Major, in the Louisiana State militia, and now holds a similar position with similar rank on the staff of Gov. S. D. McEnery, of Louisiana; was elected to the Forty-seventh and Forty-eighth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 12,269 votes against 1,377 votes for Slattery, Republican, 84 votes for Stockwell, Prohibitionist, and § votes scattering. Re-elected. FIFTH DISTRICT. PARISHES.— Caldwell, Catahoula, East and West Carroll, Claiborne, Concordia, Franklin, Jackson, Lincoln, Madison, Morehouse, Ouachita, Richland, Tensas, and Union. J. Floyd King, of Vidalia, was born at Monticello, the private residence of his father Hon. Thomas Butler King, near the town of St. Mary’s, Georgia, April 20, 1842; went to Russell School, New Haven, Connecticut, Bartlett’s College Hill School, Poughkeepsie, New York, and the Military Institute of Georgia; prepared for West Point, but was sent to the University of Virginia; entered the Confederate service as a private, served in the Army of Virginia, was promoted through various grades to the rank of Colonel of Artillery; at the close of thé war refused service in several foreign armies; his property in Georgia being con-fiscated, he removed to Louisiana, where he became interested in and controller of a large planting interest; during this time he studied law; was made Brigadier-General of State troops by Governor McEnery, and reappointed by Governor Nichols; was elected Inspector of Levees and President of the Board of School Directors of his district, and also Trustee of the University of the South; served on the Democratic Executive Committee of his Parish for many years; was made a member of the State Central Committee, serving a number of years; was subsequently again made a member of the same, serving until recently; has attended vari- { | | | LOUISIANA. | Senators and Representatives. 35 ous Democratic Conventions of his State; was elected to the Forty-sixth, Forty-seventh, and -Forty-eighth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, re-ceiving 11,692 votes against 2,565 votes for Morey, Republican, and 5,513 votes for Boatner, Independent Democrat. SIXTH DISTRICT. PARISHES.—Awoyelles, East and West Bator Rouge, East and West Feliciana, Livingston, Pointe Coupée, Saint Helena, Saint Landry, Saint Tammany, Tangipakoa, and Washington, Alfred Briggs Irion, of Marksville, was born in Avoyelles Parish, Louisiana, February 18. 1833; was educated at the University of North Carolina, graduating in 1855; studied law, was admitted to the bar in 1857, and is a lawyer by profession; was elected in 1880 Judge of the Circuit Court of Appeals, which office he held for four years, and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 9,927 votes against 6,197 votes for C. C. Swayzie; Republican, 33 votes for Toomer, Greenbacker, and 2 votes scattering. MAINE. SENATORS." Eugene Hale, ot Ellsworth, was born at Turner, Oxford County, Maine, June 9, 1836; * received an academic education; studied law; was admitted to the bar in 185%, and commenced practice; was for nine successive years County Attorney for Hancock County; was a member of the Legislature of Maine in 1867, 68, and ’80; was elected to the Forty-first, Forty-second, and Forty-third Congresses; was appointed Postmaster-General by President Grant in 1874, but declined; was re-elected to the Forty-fourth and Forty-fifth Congresses; was tendered a Cabinet appointment by President Hayes, and declined; was Chairman of the Republican Congressional Committee for the Forty-fifth Congress; received the degree of LL. D. from Bates College and Colby University ; was a Delegate to the Cincinnati Convention in 1876 and the Chicago Conventions in 1868 and 1880; was elected to the United States Senate as a Republican to succeed Hannibal Hamlin, Republican, (who declined a re-election,) and took his seat March 4, 1881. His term of service will expire March 3, 1893. William P. Frye, of Lewiston, was born at Lewiston, Maine, September2, 1831; grad-uated at Bowdoin College, Maine, 1850; studied and practised law; was a member of the State Legislature in 1861, ’62, and 67; was Mayor of the City of Lewiston in 1866 and ’67; was Attorney-General of the State of Maine in 1867,’68,and ’69; was elected a member of the National Republican Executive Committee in 1872, re-elected in 1876, and re-elected in 1880; was elected a Trustee of Bowdoin College in June, 1880; received the degree of LL. D. {rom Bates College in July, 1881; was a Presidential Elector in 1864; was a Delegate to the Na-tional Republican Conventions in 1872, ’76, and ’8o; was elected Chairman of the Repub-lican State Committee of Maine in place of Hon. James G. Blaine, resigned, in November, 1881; was elected a Representative in the Forty-second, Forty-third, Forty-fourth, Forty-fifth, Forty-sixth, and Forty-seventh Congresses; was elected to the United States Senate as a Repub-lican to fill the vacancy occasioned by the resignation of James G. Blaine, appointed Secretary of State, took his seat March 18, 1881, and was re-elected in 1883. His term of service will expire March 3, 1889. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— York and Cumberland. Thomas B. Reed, of Portland, was born at Portland, October 18, 1839; graduated at Bow-doin College, Maine, in 1860; studied law; was Acting Assistant Paymaster, United States Navy, from April 19, 1864, to November 4, 1865; was admitted to the bar in 1865, and com-menced practice at Portland ;-was a member of the State House of Representatives in 1868-69, and of the State Senate in 1870; was Attorney-General of Maine in 1870, ’71, and ’72; was City Solicitor of Portland in 1874,’75,’76,and ’77; was elected to the Forty-fifth, Forty-sixth, Forty-seventh, and Forty-eighth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 17,594 votes against 16,679 votes for Cleaves, Democrat, 190 votes for Clark, Greenbacker, and 23 votes for Jewett, Prohibitionist. Re-elected. Congressional Directory. [MAINE. SECOND DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Oxford, Franklin, Androscoggin, Sagadaloc, Knox, and Lincoln. Nelson Dingley, Jr., of Lewiston, was born in Durham, Androscoggin County, Maine, February 15, 1832; graduated at Dartmouth College in the class of 1855; studied law and was admitted to the bar, but left the profession to become proprietor and editor of ¢“ The Lew-iston (Maine) Journal,” daily and weekly, in 1856, and still maintains that connection; was a member of the State House of Representatives in 1862,63,’64,’65,’68, and ’73; was Speaker of the State House of Representatives in 1863 and ’64; was Governor of Maine in 1874 and 75; received the degree of LL. D. from Bates College in 1874; was a Delegate to the Na-tional Republican Convention in 1876; was elected to the Forty-seventh Congress as a Repub-lican, at a special election on the 12th of September, 1881, to fill the vacancy caused by the election of Hon. William P. Frye to the United States Senate; was re-elected a Representative at Large to the Forty-eighth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 20,795 votes against 14,757 votes for Hastings, Democrat, 1,658 votes or Perry, Greenbacker, and 285 votes for Hunt, Prohibitionist. Re-elected. THIRD DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Kennebec, Somerset, Waldo, and Hancock. Seth L. Milliken, of Belfast, was born in Montville, Waldo County, Maine; was educated at Union College, New York, where he graduated in 1856; is a lawyer by profession; was, during two terms, a member of the Maine Legislature; was Clerk of the Supreme Judicial Court; was Delegate to the Republican National Convention at Cincinnati in 1876; was* Elector of President the same year; was a delegate to the Republican National Convention at Chicago in 1884; and was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 20,083 votes against 13,866 for D. H. Thing, Dem., and 745 scattering Re-elected. POURTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Penobscot, Piscataquis, Aroostook, and Washington. | Charles A. Boutelle, of Bangor, was born at Damariscotta, Lincoln County, Maine, Feb-ruary 9, 1839; was educated in public schools at Brunswick, and at Yarmouth Academy; early adopted the profession of his father, a shipmaster, and on return from a foreign voyage in the spring of 1862 volunteered and was appointed Acting Masterin the United States Navy; he served in the North and South Atlantic and West Gulf Squadrons ; took part in the block-ade of Charleston and Wilmington, the Pocotaligo expedition, the capture of Saint John’s Bluft and occupation of Jacksonville, Florida, and while an officer of United States steamer Sassacus was promoted to Lieutenant ¢for-gallant conduct in the engagement with the rebel iron-clad Albemarle,” May 5, 1864 ; afterwards in command of United States steamer Nyanza participated in the capture of Mobile, and in receiving surrender of the Confederate fleet; was subsequently assigned to command of naval forces in Mississippi Sound, and honorably dis-charged at his own request January 14, 1866; engaged in commercial business in New York; in 13870 became managing editor of the Bangor (Maine) “Whig and Courier,” and pur-chased controlling ownership in 1874; was a Delegate to National Republican Convention in 1876; was unanimously nominated in 1880 as Republican candidate for Congress in the Fourth Maine District; was elected Representative at Large to the Forty-eighth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 19,669 votes against 14,165 votes for Lynch, Democrat, 275 votes for Besse, Prohibitionist, 592 votes for Sprague, Green-backer, and 356 votes scattering. Re-elected. MARYLAND. SENATORS. Arthur P. Gorman, of Laurel, was born in Howard County, Maryland, March 11, 1839; attended the public schools in his native county for a brief period; in 1852 was appointed page in the Senate of the United States, and continued in the service of the Senate until 1866, at which time he was Postmaster; on the 1st of September of that year he was removed from his position and 1mmediatery appointed Collector of Internal Revenue for the fifth district of vay MARYLAND. | © Senators and Representatives. Maryland, which office he held until the incoming of the Grant administration in 1869; in June, 1869, he was appointed a Director in the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal Company, and in’ November was elected a member of the House of Delegates of the Maryland Legislature as a Democrat; he was re-elected in 1871, then elected Speaker of the House of Delegates at the ensuing session; in June, 1872, he was elected President of the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal Company; in 1875 he was elected to represent Howard County in the Maryland State Senate, and was re-elected for a term of four years in November, 1879; was elected in January, 1880, to the United States Senate as a Democrat, to succeed Hon. William Pinkney Whyte, took his seat March 4, 1881, and was re-elected in 1886. His term of service will expire March 3, 1893. Ephraim King Wilson, of Snow Hill, was born at Snow Hill, Maryland, December 22, 1821; was educated at Union Academy, Snow Hill, and at Washington Academy, Princess Anne, Maryland, and graduated at Jefferson College, Pennsylvania, in 1841; studied law, and practised in that profession for twenty years; was a member of the Maryland House of Dele-gates in 1847; was an Elector for Pierce and King in 1852; was a Representative in the Forty-second Congress; was Judge of the First Judicial Circuit of Maryland from 1878 to 1884; was elected to the United States Senate as a Democrat, to succeed James B. Groome, Democrat, and took his seat March 4, 1885. His term of service will expire March 3, 1891. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Kent, Queen Anne's, Caroline, Talbot, Dorchester, Somerset, Wicomico, and Worcester. Charles Hopper Gibson, of Easton, was born in Queen Anne’s County, Maryland, Janu- ary 19, 1842; his education was commenced at the Centreville Academy, and he was after- wards sent to the Archer School in Harford County, and from there to Washington College, Chestertown, where his course of study was completed ; was admitted to the bar in 1864, and commenced the practice of law at Easton with Col. Samuel Hambleton; was appointed by President Johnson Collector of Internal Revenue for the Eastern Shore District, but his nom- ination was rejected in the Senate by a majority of one vote ; was appointed in/ 1869 Commissioner in Chancery, and Auditor in 1870, which offices later on in 1870 he resigned to accept the ap- pointment by the Circuit Court for the three years’ unexpired term of the State’s Attorney for Talbot County, to which position he was elected for four years in 1871, and again in 1875, holding the office for three consecutive terms, and declining a renomination for the fourth ; was elected as a Democrat to the Forty-ninth Congress, receiving 16,726 votes against 14,641 votes for George M. Russum, Republican. Re-elected. : SECOND DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Carroll, Cecil, Harford, and 2d, 3d, 4th, 5th, 6th, 7th, Sth, th, 10th, 11th, ana 12th districts of Baltimore County. Frank T. Shaw, of Westminster, was born at Woodsboro’, Frederick County, Maryland, October 7, 1841; received a common-school education; graduated at the medical department of the University of Maryland in 1864; located at Uniontown, Carroll County, Maryland, where he practised his profession until November, 1873, when he was elected clerk of the Circuit Court for Carroll County for the term of six years, and was re-elected to the same position in 1879; was nominated in 1880 for Representative in the Forty-seventh Congress, but declined; is one of the managers of the Maryland House of Correction; is now and has been for many years a member of the Democratic State Central Committee of Maryland; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 16,274 votes against 14,003 votes for T. C. Blair, Republican. Re-elected. THIRD DISTRICT. CirY.— 1st, 2d, 3d, 4th, 5th, Oth, 7th, Sth, and gth wards of the city of Baltimore. Henry Welles Rusk, of Baltimore, was born at Baltimore, Maryland, October 17, 1852; was educated at private schools and at the Baltimore City College, graduating from the latter in 1866, and graduating from the Maryland University Law School in 1882, with the degree of LL. B.; was admitted to the bar, and has ever since practiced law in Baltimore; was for six years a member of the Maryland House of Delegates, and for four years a member of the Maryland Senate; was elected to fill the unexpired term of William H. Cole, deceased, in the Forty-ninth Congress, receiving 13,534, votes, against 3,300 votes for Henry A. Bosse, Indus-trial candidate, indorsed by the Republicans, 1,727 votes for D. W. Glass, Prohibition candi-date, and 195 votes for William T. Hartley, Republican. Re-elected. » Congressional Directory. [MARYLAND. ¥ FOURTH DISTRICT. CITY.— 10th, 11th, 12th, 13th, and 14h wards; the 15th ward, except the 6th and 7th pre-cincts,; the 16th ward, except the 1st precinct; the 18th ward, except the 1st precinct, and the 19th and 20th wards of the city of Baltimore. John V. L. Findlay, of Baltimore, was born December 21, 1839; was educated at Prince-ton, New Jersey; is a lawyer by profession and practice ; has been a State and City Director of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Company; was a member of the State Legislature of Maryland, Collector of Internal Revenue for one of the Baltimore districts, and City Solicitor for Baltimore ; was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 15,726 votes against 14,324 votes for Sebastien Brown, Re-publican, and 624 votes for Odom, Prohibitionist. FIFTH DISTRICT. City AND COUNTIES.— Z%e 6th and 7th precincts of the 15th ward, the 1st precinc.of the 16th ward, the 17th ward, the 1st precinct of the 18th ward of the city of Baltimore; the 1st and 13th districts of Baltimore County; Anne Arundel, Calvert, Charles, Howard, Prince George's, and Saint Mary's Counties. ; Barnes Compton, of Laurel, was born at Port Tobacco, Charles County, Maryland, No-vember 16, 1830; was educated at Charlotte Hall Academy and at Princeton College, where he graduated in June, 1851; is a planter and farmer; was a member of the State House of Delegates from Charles County in 1860-’61, and of the Senate from the same county in 1867,’68, 70, and ’72, serving as President of the Senate during the sessions of 1868 and ’70; was State Tobacco Inspector in 1873-"74; was elected State Treasurer of Maryland in 1874 for two years, and re-elected for five successive terms, holding the office for eleven years and two months, and resigning in the second year of his sixth term, when elected a Representa-tive in the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 15,612 votes against 14,0641 votes for H. B. Holton, Republican. Re-elected. SIXTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Aleghany, Garrett, Frederick, Montgomery, and Washington. Louis Emory McComas, of Hagerstown, was born in Washington County, Maryland, October 28, 1846; attended the village schools in Williamsport, in that county, and went thence to Saint James College, where he was from 1860 to 1863, and at Dickinson College in 1863, graduating in 1866; studied law at Hagerstown, where he was admitted to the bar in August, 1868, and has since practised; was the Republican candidate for Congress in 1876, but the Hon. William Walsh was returned as elected by 14 majority; was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving pty 17,995 votes against 16,379 votes for Fred. J. Nelson, Democrat. Re-elected. MASSACHUSETTS. SENATORS. Henry L. Dawes, of Pittsheld, was born at Cummington, Massachusetts, October 30, 1816; graduated at Yale College; was a school-teacher, and edited the “Greenfield Gazette” and “Adams Transcript; studied and practised law ; was a member of the House of Represent-atives of Massachusetts in 1848, 749, and 52; was a member of the Senate of Massachusetts 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 57; was elected a Representative in the Thirty-fifth, Thirty-sixth, Thirty-seventh, Thirty-eighth, Thirty-ninth, Fortieth, Forty-first, Forty-second, and Forty-third Congresses, and declined being a candidate for election to the Forty-fourth; he was elected to the United States Senate as a Republican, to succeed Charles Sumner, (whose unexpired term had been filled by William B. Washburn,) took his seat March 4, 1875, and was re-elected in 1881 and 1387. His term of service will expire March 3, 1893. ny MASSACHUSETTS. | Senators and Representatives. 39 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 practised; was a member of the State House of Representatives in 1852, and of the State Senate in 1857; was elected a Representative to the Forty-first, Forty-second, Forty-third, and Forty-fourth Congresses; declined a renomination for Representative in the Forty-fifth Con-gress: was an Overseer of Harvard College, 1874-80; presided over the Massachusetts State Republican Conventions of 1871,’77, ’82, and ’85; was a Delegate to the Republican National Conventions of 1876 at Cincinnati and of 1880 and 1884 at Chicago, presiding over the Con-vention of 1880; was one of the managers on the part of the House of Representatives of the Belknap impeachment trial in 1876; was a member of the Electoral Commission in 1876; was Regent of the Smithsonian Institution in 1880; was Vice-President and is now President of the American Antiquarian Society ; is Trustee of the Peabody Museum of Archaeology; is a member of the Massachusetts Historical Society; has received the degree of Doctor of Laws from William and Mary, Amherst, Yale, and Harvard Colleges; was elected to the United States Senate as a Republican, to succeed George S. Boutwell, took his seat March 5, 1877, and was re-elected in 1883. His term of service will expire March 3, 1889. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. COUNTIES.Barnstable, Dukes, and Nantucket, with the towns of Acushnet, Dartmouth, — Dighton, Fairkaven, Freetown, Rehoboth, Seekonk, Somerset, Swansea, and Westport, and the citiesof Fall River and New Bedford, in the county of Bristol; and the towns of Lakeville, Marion, Mattapoisett, Middleborough, Rochester, and Wareham, in the county of Plymouth. Robert T. Davis, of Fall River, was born in the County of Down, North of Ireland, Au-gust 28, 1823, of parentage Presbyterian on the paternal and Quaker on the maternal side; his parents emigrated to this country and settled in Amesbury, Essex County, Massachusetts, when he was three years of age; received an academic education; graduated atthe Medi-cal Department of Harvard University in 1847; was for a short time Dispensary Physician in Boston; practised medicine three years at Waterville, Maine, and removed to Fall River in 1850, where he has since resided, except for a short period ; was a member of the Massachu-setts State Constitutional Convention of 1853; of the Massachusetts State Senate of 1859 and 61; of the Republican National Conventions of 1860 and ’76; was Mayor of Fall River in 1873, being elected without opposition, and declining a re-election; was a member of the State Board of¢ Charities when organized in 1863; was appointed a member of the State Board ot Health upon its organization in 1869, and so remained until its consolidation with the State Board of Health, Lunacy, and Charity in 1879, when he became a member of that Board; was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 14,080 votes against 5,307 votes for Howland, Democrat, 1,041 votes for Stow, Greenbacker, 735 votes for Edward H. Hatfield, Prohibitionist, and 16 votes scat-tering. Re-elected : SECOND DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— ZVe towns of Attleborough, Berkley, Easton, Mansfield, Norton, and Raynham, and the city of Taunton, in the county of Bristol; the towns of Braintree, Canton, Cohasset, Holbrook, Quincy, Randolph, Sharon, Stoughton, and Weymouth, in the county of Norfolk, and the towns of Abington, Bridgewater, Brockton, Carver, Duxbury, East Bridgewater, Halifax, Hanover, Hanson, Hingham, Hull, Kingston, Marshfield, Pembroke, Plymouth, Plympton, Rockland, Scituate, South Abington, South Scituate, and West Bridgewater, in the county of Plymouth. John D. Long, of Hingham, was born at Buckfield, Oxford County, Maine, October 27, 1838; was educated at the common school in Buckfield, and at Hebron Academy, Maine; graduated at Harvard College in 1857; taught school two years in Westford Academy, Massa-chusetts ; studied law at the Harvard Law School and in private offices; was admitted to the bar and has since practised; was a member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives in 1875,°76, ’77, and ’78, serving the three last years as Speaker of the House; was Lieuten-ant-Governor of Massachusetts in 1879; was elected Governor of Massachusetts in 1880, ’81, and '82; was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Con-gress as a Republican, receiving 15,039 votes against 9,734 votes for Everett, Democrat, 2,630 votes for Dean, Greenbacker, 972 votes for George M. Buttrick, Prohibitionist and 9 votes scattering. Re-elected. ; Congressional Directory. [MASSACHUSETTS. THIRD DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— of Suffolk, comprising wards 11, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, and precincts Part 3 and 4 of ward 15, in the city of Boston, and the town of Milton, in the county of Norfolk. Ambrose A. Ranney, of Boston, was born at Townshend, Vermont, April 16, 1821; graduated at Dartmouth College in the class of 1844; studied law at Woodstock, Vermont ; began practice in Boston in 1848; was Corporation Counsel for that city in 1855-56; was a member of the State House of Representatives in 1857, 63, and ’64, and in active practice of the law all the time; was elected to the Forty-seventh and Forty-eighth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 13,596 votes against 9,248 votes for Swasey, Democrat, 2,412 votes for Loring, Greenbacker, 396 votes for John W. Field, Prohibitionist, and 19 votes scattering. FOURTH DISTRICT. City OF BOSTON.— Wards 1, 2, 6, 7, 12, 13, 14, 16; precincts 2, 3, and 4, of ward 8, and precincts 1 and 2 of ward 15. Patrick A. Collins, of Boston, was born near Fermoy, County of Cork, Ireland, March 12, 1844; came to the United States in 1848; received a common-school education; was in early life an upholsterer; read law in the Harvard Law School and in Boston, where he has practised since his admission to the bar in 1871; was a member of the Massachusetts House of Repre-sentatives in 1868 and ’69, and of the Massachusetts Senate in 1870 and ’71; was Judge-Ad-vocate-General of Massachusetts in 1875; was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 13,664 votes against 7,182 votes for Jos. H. O'Neil, Republican and “ Peoples’ ”” candidate, 228 votes for John W. Sayre, Prohibitionist, and 19 votes scattering. Re-elected. EIETH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— of Suffolk, comprising wards 9, 10, and 25, and precinct 1 of ward 8, in Part the city of Boston, with the cities of Somerville and Cambridge, and the towns of Arlington, Bel-mont, Burlington, Lexington, Waltham, Watertown, and Woburn, in the county of Middlesex, Edward Daniel Hayden, of Woburn, was born in Cambridge, Massachusetts, December 27,1833; was educated at Lawrence Academy, Groton, Massachusetts, and at Harvard College, where he graduated in 1854; studied law, was admitted to the bar, and practised until 1862, when he entered the United States Navy as assistant paymaster; was a member of the State House of Representatives of Massachusetts in 1880, 1881, and 1882; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 13,290 votes against 11,018 votes for Robert Treat Paine, jr., Democrat, 930 votes for Douglas Frazar, Greenbacker, 317 votes for D. G. Dexter, Prohibitionist, and 5 votes scattering. Re-elected. SIE. DISTRICT, COUNTIES.— Part of Suffolk, comprising wards 3, 4, and 5 in the city of Boston, the city of Chelsea, and the towns of Revere and Winthrop; with the city of Lynn, and the towns of Nahant, Saugus, and Swampscott, in the county of Lssex; and the city of Malden, and the towns of Everett, Medford, Melrose, Reading, Stoneham, Wakefield, and Winchester. Henry B. Lovering, of Lynn, was born at Portsmouth, New Hampshire, April §, +1841; was educated in the common schools of Lynn, and has since been connected with Lynn's great industry, the manufacture of shoes; was Representative to the State Legislature in 1872 and ’74; was Assessor in 1879-’80; was Mayor of Lynn in 1881 and ’82; was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, supported by the People’s party, receiving 15,146 votes against 14,881 votes for [lenry Cabot Lodge, Republican, 530 votes for William F. Johnson, Prohibitionist, and g votes scattering. SEVENTH DISTRICT. C1TiES AND TOWNS.— 7%e cities of Gloucester, Haverhill, Newburyport, and Salem, with the towns of Amesbury, Beverly, Boxford, Bradford, Danvers, Essex, Georgetown, Groveland, 2 Re MASSACHUSETTS. Senators and Representatives. 4 1 Hamilton, Ipswich, Lynnfield, Manchester, Marblehead, Merrimac, Middleton, Newbury, Pea-body, Rockport, Rowley, Salisbury, Topsfield, Wenham, and West Newbury, in the county or Essex. Eben F. Stone, of Newburyport, was born at Newburyport, Massachusetts, in 1822; graduated at Harvard University in 1843, and at the Law School of the University in 1846; commenced the practice of law in Newburyport in 1847, and has, with some interruptions, followed it there ever since; has served in both branches of the Massachusetts Legislature; has held office, both civil and military, under the United States, and in the war of the rebellion commanded the Forty-eighth Regiment of Massachusetts Volunteer Militia during its term of service; served two years as Chairman of the Republican State Committee of Massachusetts; was elected to the Forty-seventh and Forty-eighth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 12,475 votes against 9,623 votes for R. S. Spofford, Democrat, 3,948 votes for Baker, Greenbacker, and 38 votes scattering. EIGHTH DISTRICT. CITIES AND TOWNS.— 7%e city of Lawrence, with the towns of Andover, North Andover, and Methuen, in the county of Essex, and the city of Lowell, and the towns of Acton, Ashby, Ayer, Bedford, Billerica, Roxborough, Carlisle, Chelmsford, Concord, Dracut, Dunstable, Groton, Litileton, North Reading, Pepperell, Shirley, Stow, Tewksbury, Townsend, Tyngs-borough, Westford, and Wilmington, in the county of Middlesex; and the towns of Bolton, Harvard, Lancaster, and Lunenburg, in the county of Worcester. Charles H. Allen, of Lowell, was born at Lowell, Massachusetts, April 15, 1848; was fitted for college in public schools; graduated at Amherst College in 1869; took the degree of A. M. in 1872; engaged in mercantile pursuits; has held various local offices; was a member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives in 1881 and 1882, and of the Massachusetts Senate in 1883; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 12,643 votes against 9,446 votes for Lilley, Democrat, 1,055 votes for Eastman, People’s party, 378 votes for John W. Reed, Prohibitionist, and 76 votes scattering. Re-elected. NINTH DISTRICT. CITIES AND TOWNS.— 7%e city of Newion, and the towns of Ashland, Framingham, Hollis ton, Hopkinton, Natick, Sherborn, Wayland, Weston, Hudson, Marlborough, Sudbury, May-nard, and Lincoln, in the county of Middlesex; and the towns of Blackstone, Mendon, Milford, Westborough, Southborough, Northborough, Berlin, and Clinton, in the county of Worcester ; and the towns of Bellingham, Brookline, Dedham, Dover, Foxborough, Franklin, Medfield, Medway, Needham, Norfolk, Norwood, Walpole, Wellesley, Wrentham, and Hyde Park, in the county of Norfolk. Frederick David Ely, of Dedham, was born at Wrentham, Norfolk County, Massachusetts, September 24, 1838; was educated at Day’s Academy, Wrentham, and at Brown University, Providence, R.I., where he graduated in 1859; studied law in the office of Hon. Waldo Col-burn; was admitted to practice in 1862, and has since devoted himself exclusively to the pro-fession of law; was trial justice from 1867 to March 3, 1885; was a member of the State House of Representatives of Massachusetts in 1873, and a member of the State Senate in 1878-79; was a member of the school committee of Dedham, 1882-1885; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 12,265 votes against 6,301 votes for H. E. Fales, Democrat, 4,260 votes for Theodore Lyman, Independent, 2,429 votes for H. Lemon, jr., People’s party, 617 votes for E. M. Stowe, Prohibitionist, and 4 votes scattering. TENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— 7 Vee city of Worcester, with the towns of Auburn, Barre, Boylston, Brookfield, Charlton, Douglas, Dudley, Grafton, Hardwick, Holden, Leicester, Millbury, New Braintree, Northbridge, North Brookfield, Oakham, Oxford, Paxton. Princeton, Rutland, Shrewsbury, Southbridge, Spencer, Sterling, Sturbridge, Sutton, Upton, Uxbridge, Warren, Webster, West Boylston, West Brookfield, and the city of Worcester, in the county of Worcester, and the towns of Brimfield, Holland, and Wales, in the county of Hampden. William W. Rice, of Worcester, was born at Deerfield, Massachusetts, March 7, 1826; was fitted for college at Gorham Academy, Maine; graduated at Bowdoin College in 1846; was preceptor in Leicester Academy, Massachusetts, for four years; studied law at Worcester Congressional Directory. [MASSACHUSETTS. with Hon. Emory Washburn and Hon. George F. Hoar; was admitted to the bar and has practised since at Worcester; was appointed Judge of Insolvency for the county of Worcester in 1858; was Mayor of the city of Worcester in 1860; was District Attorney for the Middle District of Massachusetts 1869-74; was a member of the State House of Representatives in 1875; was elected to the Forty-fifth, Forty-sixth, Forty-seventh, and Forty-eighth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 13,940 votes against 6,551 votes for Estabrook, Democrat, 2,637 votes for Mellen, Greenbacker, 588 votes for William H. Earle, Prohibitionist, and 24 votes scattering. ELEVENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Franklin and Hampshire, with the cityof Holyoke, in the county of Hampden ; the city of Fitchburg, with the towns of Ashburnham, Athol, Dana, Gardner, Hubbardston, Leominster, Petersham, Phillipston, Reoyalston, Templeton, Westminster, and Winchendon, in the county of Worcester. William Whiting, of Holyoke, was born at Dudley, Massachusetts, May 24, 1841; was ° elected to the Massachusetts State Senate in 1873; was elected Treasurer of Holyoke in 1876-77; was a Delegate to the National Republican Convention of 1876; was elected Mayor of Holyoke 1878-79; was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 15,325 votes against 8,693 votes for Hill, Democrat, 819 votes for Olner, Greenbacker, 701 votes for W. F. Whitney, Prohibitionist, and 67 votes scattering. Re-elected. TWELFTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.Berkshire, with the city of Springfield and the towns of Blandford, Chester, Chic- — opee, Granville, Hampden, Long Meadow, Ludlow, Monson, Montgomery, Palmer, Russell, Soutk-wick, Tolland, Westfield, West Springfield, and Wilbraham, in the county of Hampden. Francis W. Rockwell, of Pittsfield, was born at Pittsfield, Massachusetts, May 26, 1844; was educated in the public schools and at Edwards’ Place School at Stockbridge, Massachu-setts; graduated at Amherst College in 1868 and at Harvard Law School in 1871; is a lawyer at Pittsfield ; was appointed one of the Special Justices of the District Court of Central Berk-shire in 1873, resigning in 1875; has held various local offices; was elected to the Massachu-setts House of* Representatives in 1879; was elected to the Massachusetts Senate in 1881 and 1882; was elected on January 17, 1884, as a Republican to the Forty-eighth Congress, to fill a vacancy caused by the resignation of Hon. George D. Robinson, who had been elected as Governor of’ Massachusetts, a.special mid-winter election being held, and the Legislature having passed an act legalizing the same; and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 13,012 votes against 10,856 votes for Dunham, Democrat, 820 votes for Cadle, Greenbacker, 440 for J. Blackmer, Prohib., and 60 scattering. Re-elected. MICHIGAN. SENATORS. 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 copper and iron regions in 1845,’46,’47; in 1848 engaged in the practice of law at. Port Huron, Michigan, where he has since resided; was elected Judge of the Saint Clair County Court in 1850, and Senator in the Michigan Legislature for the biennial terms of 1855, ’57, and ’59, and was elected President pro tempore of the Senate in 1859; was elected in 1866 a member of the Constitutional Convention of Michigan; was a Presidential Elector on the Republican ticket in 1864; was elected to the Forty-first, Forty-second, Forty-third, Forty-fourth, Forty-fifth, Forty-sixth, and Forty-seventh Congresses; was elected to the United States Senate as a Republican, to succeed Hon. Henry P. Baldwin, Republican, and took his seat March 4, 1881, His term of service will expire March 3, 1887. MICHIGAN.| Senators and Representatives. Thomas Witherell Palmer, of Detroit, was born at Detroit, Michigan, January 25, 1830; was educated in the public schools, at Thompson’ s Academy at Palmer, now Saint Clair, Mich-igan, and at the Michigan University; is and has been a manufacturer and farmer; has served on the Board of Estimates of Detroit, and as State Senator in 1879-80; was elected to the United States Senate as a Republican, upon the eighty-first joint ballot of the Legislature, to succeed Hon. Thomas W. Ferry, Republican, and took his seat December 3, 1883. His term of service will expire March 3, 1889. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. COUNTY.— Wayne. William C. Maybury, of Detroit, was born at Detroit, Michigan, November 21, 1849; was educated at the University of Michigan, which gave him the degree of Master of Arts; studied law, was admitted to the bar, and has since practised; was city attorney of Detroit 1875-'80; was lecturer on medical jurisprudence in Michigan College of Medicine; was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 21,673 votes against 15,549 votes for Atkinson, Republican, 1,061 votes for Eakins, Greenbacker, and 544: votes for Pitkin, Prohibitionist. SECOND DISTRICT. COUNTIES. — Hillsdale, Lenawee, Monroe, and Washtenaw. Nathaniel B. Eldredge, of Adrian, was born at Auburn, New York, March 28, 1813; received a common-school education; practised medicine for fifteen years, then practised law for twenty years, and is now a farmer; has held several minor offices; was Clerk of the Michi-gan Senate in 1845; was elected a member of the Michigan Legislature in 1848; was elected Judge of Probate in 1852-'56; was commissioned Captain in the Union Army in June, 1861, Major in August, 1861, and Colonel in April, 1862; was Mayor of the City of Adrian in 1870; was elected Sheriff of Lenawee County, Michigan, in 1874; was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 17,710 votes against 17,656 votes for Allen, Republican, 2,418 votes for Mosher, Prohibitions, and I vote scattering. THIRD DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Barry, Branch, Calhoun, Eaton, and Jackson. James O’Donnell, of Jackson, was born at Norwalk, Connecticut, March 25, 1840; re-moved with his parents to Michigan in 1848; enjoyed no educational advantages, but after commencing to learn the printer’s trade in 1856 made up this deficiency by study after work-ing hours; at the breaking out of the war he enlisted as a private in the First Michigan In-fantry, and served out his time, participating in the first battle of Bull Run; was elected recorder of the city of Jackson for four terms, 1863-1866; established “The Jackson Daily Citizen,” in 1865, and has owned and edited the same since ; was Presidential Elector in 1872, and was designated by the State Electoral College as messenger to convey the vote of Michi-gan to Washington; was elected mayor of Jackson iin 1876, and was re-elected in 1877; was appointed in 1878 as aid-de-camp on the staff of Governor Croswell, with the rank of colonel; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 20,438 votes against 19,210 votes for Henry F. Pennington, Fusionist, 2,531 votes for Michael J. Fanning, Prohibis tionist, and 5 votes scattering. Re-elected. FOURTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Berrien, Cass, Kalamazoo, Saint Joseph, and Van Buren. Julius C. Burrows, of Kalamazoo, was born at North East, Erie County, Pennsylvania, January 9, 1837; received a common-school and academic education; studied law, was ad-mitted to the bar, and has since practised ; was an officer in the Union Army, 1862-1864; was Prosecuting Attorney of Kalamazoo County, 1865-1867; was appointed Supervisor of In-ternal Revenue for the States of Michigan and Missouri in 1867, but declined the office ; was elected a Representative in the Fort third, Forty-sixth, and Forty-seventh Congresses; was appointed Solicitor of the United St 3s Treasury Department by President Arthur in 1884, but declined the office ; was elected a Delegate at Large from Michigan to the National Repub-lican Convention at Chicago in 1884; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Repub-lican, receiving 18,567 votes ag: ainst 18,212 votes for Yople, Democrat and Greenbacker Fu-sionist, 1,232 votes for Alcott, “Prohibitionist, and II votes scattering. Reelected. 44 : Congressional Directory. ~~ [mIcHIGAN. FIFTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—dA/llegan, lonia, Kent, and Ottawa. Charles Carter Comstock, of Grand Rapids, was born at Sullivan, Cheshire County, New Hampshire, March 5, 1818; received a common district school education; is a farmer, lum-berman, and manufacturer of furniture, wooden-ware, etc.; was Mayor of Grand Rapids in 1863-64; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Fusion Democrat, receiving 20,406 votes against 20,050 votes for J. C. Fitzgerald, Republican, 2,449 votes for W. C. Edsell, Prohibitionist, and 4 votes scattering. SIXTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Clinton, Genesee, Ingham, Livingston, and Oakland. Edwin B. Winans, of Hamburg, Livingston County, Michigan, was born at Avon, New York, May 16, 1826; was educated at Albion College, Michigan; is a farmer by occupation; was a member of the Michigan Legislature, 1861-65; was elected a Delegate to the Con-stitutional Convention held at Lansing, May 15, 1867; was Probate Judge of Livingston County, 1876-80; was elected to the I'orty-eighth Congress; and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 19,857 votes against 18,377 votes for Willson, Repub-lican, 2,445 votes for L.. C. Smith, Prohibitionist, and 2 votes scattering. SEVENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Huron, Lapeer, Macomb, Sanilac, and Saint Clair. Ezra C. Carleton, of Port Huron, was born at Saint Clair, Michigan, September 6, 1838; was graduated from the Port Huron High School; is a hardware merchant; was Mayor of Port Huron in 1881; was Chairman of the Port Huron Fire Relief Commission in 1881; was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 14,535 votes against 12,316 votes for Edgar Weeks, Republican, 1,096 votes for O’Brien J. Atkinson, Anti-Monopolist, 1,008 votes for John Russell, Prohibitionist, and 22 votes scattering. EIGHTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Gratiot, Isabella, Midland, Montcaim, Saginaw, and Shiawassee. Timothy E. Tarsney, of East Saginaw, was born at Ransom, Hillsdale County, Michigan, February 4, 1849; was educated at the common schools; served seven years as a marine engi-neer, meantime reading law; entered the Law Department of Michigan University in 1870, and graduated in the class of 1872; was justice of the peace 1873-74; was city attorney in 1875,°76,777,’78, when he resigned, serving as ex-gfficio member of the board of supervisors at the same time; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 19,446 votes against 17,824 votes for Roswell G. Horr, Republican, 141 votes for Colvin, Greenbacker, 1,010 votes for Merritt, Prohibitionist, and 6 votes scattering. Re-elected. NINTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES. —Antrim, Charlevoix, Kalkaska, Lake, Manistee, Mason, Mecosta, Missaukee, Muskegon, Newaygo, Oceana, and Wexford. Byron M. Cutcheon, of Manistee, was born at Pembroke, Merrimac County, New Hamp-shire, May 11, 1836; pursued his preparatory studies at Pembroke, and completed them at Ypsilanti, Michigan, where he removed in 1855; graduated from the University of Michigan, classical course, in 1861; became principal of the High School at Ypsilanti, Michigan, in 1861; was Captain, Major, Lieutenant-Colonel, and Colonel of the Twentieth Michigan Infantry, 1862-'04; was Brevet Colonel and Colonel Twenty-seventh Michigan Infantry, and Brevet Brig-adier-General, “for conspicuous gallantry,” 1864-65; was twice wounded at Spottsylvania Court-House; was assigned to the command of the Second Brigade, First Division, Army of the Potomac, in 1864; was mustered out in 1865; studied law with Hon. S. M. Cutcheon, Ypsilanti, Michigan, 1865-66; graduated from Michigan University Law School, 1866, and was admitted to practice at Ann Arbor, Michigan; commenced the practice of law at Manistee, Michigan, in 1867, where he has since resided; was a member of the Board of Control of Rail-roads of Michigan, 1866-83; was Presidential Elector, 1868; was City Attorney, 1870 and 71; was County Attorney, 1873 and 74; was Regent of the Michigan University, 1875-’83; was Postmaster at Manistee City, 1877-83; was elected to-the Forty-eighth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 18,963 votes against 16,207 votes for Silas S. Fallass, Democrat, Greenbacker, and Workingman’s candi- nd date, 1,704 votes for H. P Blake, Prohibitionist, and 27 votes scattering. Re-elected. i MICHIGAN. | Senators and Representatives. 0A8 TENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES. —Alcona, Montmorency, Ogemaw, Alpena, Oscoda, Bay, Cheboygan, Clare, Crawford, Emmet, Gladwin, Otsego, Presque Isle, Roscommon, and Tuscola. losco, g ~~ Spencer O. Fisher, of West Bay City, was born at ‘Camden, Hillsdale County, Michigan, February 3, 1848; was educated at the public schools, one year at Albion College, and one year at Hillsdale College, both in Michigan, but never graduated; is engaged in lumbering and banking; was Mayor of West Bay City, Michigan, 1881-84; was Delegate to the Na-tional Democratic Convention at Chicago in 1884; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Con-gress as a Democrat, receiving 15,360 votes against 13,078 votes for C.F. Gibson, Repub-lican, 855 votes for A. M. Webster, Prohibitionist, and 5 votes scattering. Re-elected. ELEVENTH. DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Baraga, Benzie, Chippewa, Delta, Grand Traverse, Houghton, Isle Royal, Ke-weenaw, Leelenaw, Mackinac, Manitou, Marquette, Menominee, Ontonaggon, cad Schoolcraft. Seth C. Moffatt, of Traverse City, was born at Battle Creek, Michigan, August 10, 1841, received a common-school education; was a student one year in the Literary Department and two years in the Law Department of Michigan University, studying the last year in the office of Hon. T. M. Cooley; graduated from the Law Department of Michigan University in 1863, and has since been engaged in the practice of his profession; was Prosecuting Attorney for Grand Traverse and Leelenaw Counties for ten years; was a member of the State Senate of Michigan in 1871-1872; was a member of the Constitutional Commission in 1873; was Reg-ister of the United States Land Office at Traverse City from 1874 to 1878; was a member of the State House of Representatives of Michigan in 1881-1882, serving as Speaker both terms; was a Delegate to the National Republican Convention at Chicago in 1884; and was elected to the Forty-ninth. Congress as a Republican, receiving 16,467 votes against 8,992 votes for John Power, Democrat, and 53 votes scattering. Re-elected. | MINNESOTA. : SENATORS. Samuel J. R. McMillan, of Saint Paul, was born at Brownsville, Pennsylvania, February 22,1826; received a classical education, graduating at Duquesne College, Pittsburgh, in 1846; studied law with Shaler & Stanton, was admitted to the bar in 1849, and commenced practice at Stillwater, Minnesota, in 1852; was elected Judge of the first judicial circuit in 1857; was appointed Associate Justice of the Supreme Court in 1864, to fill a vacancy, was elected and re-elected, and resigned in 1874; was appointed in 1874 and afterward re-elected Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, and resigned when he was elected to the United States Senate as a Republican, to succeed Alexander Ramsey, Republican; he took his seat March 4, 1875, and was re-elected. His term of service will expire March 3, 1887. a au Dwight May Sabin, of Stillwater, Minnesota, was born April 25, 1843, at Manlius, La Salle County, Illinois; was reared on a farm, attending the country school during the winter—also studied the higher branches of mathematics and civil engineering; is engaged in lumbering, and the general manufacture of railroad cars and agricultural machinery; served three sessions in the popular branch of the Legislature and two terms in the State Senate of Minnesota pre-vious to his election to the United States Senate; has been a member of the National Repub-lican Committee for Minnesota, and Delegate to the National Republican Conventions of 1872, ’76, and ’8o, respectively; was elected Chairman of the Republican National Committee, December 12, 1883; was elected to the United States Senate as a Republican, to succeed William Windom, Republican, and took his seat March 3, 1883. His term of service will expire March 3, 1889. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Dodge, Winona. Fillmore, Freeborn, Houston, Mower, Olmsted, Steele, Wabasha, and Milo White, of 1830; was educated of Supervisors of his Chatfield, was born in Fletcher, Franklin County, Vermont, August 17, at common schoels; is a merchant; was unanimously elected Chairman town at its organization as a town; was elected in 1879 President of the |Ii| | a6. Congressional Directory. [ MINNESOTA. Council of Chatfield; was elected to the State Senate of Minnesota in 1871, 1872, 1874, and 1880; was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Con-gress as a republican, receiving 16,604 votes against 13,961 votes for A. Bierman, Democrat, and 594 votes for A. Bierce, Prohibitionist. SECOND DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Blue Earth, Brown, Cottonwood, Faribault, Jackson, Le Sueur, Lincoln, Lac-qui-parile, Lyon, Martin, Murray, Nicollet, Nobles, Pipe Stone, Redwood, Rock, Sibley, Waton-wan, Waseca, and Yellow Medicine. James B. Wakefield, of Blue Earth City, was born at Winsted, Connecticut, March, 1828; graduated at Trinity College, Hartford, in 1846; studied law in Painesville, Ohio, and com-menced practice at Delphi, Indiana, in 1852; removed to Minnesota in 1854; was elected to the State House of Representatives in 1858 and 1863; was again elected in 1865, and was Speaker of that body in session of 1866; was a member of the Senate in 1867 and ’68, and was re-elected for 1869 and ’70; resigned in 1869, and was appointed Receiver of United States Land Office at Winnebago City, Minnesota; resigned in 1875, and was elected in the fall Lieutenant-Governor for a term of two years; received the degree of LL. D. from Trinity College in 1886; was re-elected in 1877; was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 20,813 votes against 10,639 votes for Thornton, Democrat, and 1,079 votes for Copp, Prohibitionist. THIRD DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Carver, Chippewa, Dakota, Goodhue, Kandiyohi; Meeker, McLeod, Renville, Rice, Scott, and Swift. Horace B. Strait, of Shakopee, was born in Potter County, Pennsylvania, January 26, 1835; received a common-school education; removed to Indiana in 1846, and from there to Minnesota in 1855; entered the Union Army in 1862 as Captain in the Ninth Minnesota In-fantry; was promoted to Major of said regiment in 1864, and was serving at the close of the war as Inspector-General on the Staff of General McArthur; was elected Mayor of Shakopee in 1870, and re-elected in 1871 and ’72; has been one of the trustees of the Minnesota Hospital for the Insane since 1866; since the close of the war has been engaged in mercantile, manu-facturing, and banking business, and is now President of the First National Bank of Shakopee; was elected to the Forty-third, Forty-fourth, Forty-fifth, Forty-seventh, and Forty-eighth Con-gresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 16,456 votes against 15,038 votes for Donnelly, Democrat, and 568 votes for Stearns, Prohibitionist. FOURTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Anoka, Chisago, Hennepin, Isanti, Kanabec, Pine, Ramsey, Sherburne, Wash-ington, and Wright. John B. Gilfillan, of Minneapolis, was born at Barnet, Caledonia County, Vermont, Feb-ruary II, 1835; graduated at the Caledonia County Academy in 1855, and then removed to Minneapolis, where he has since resided; studied law, was admitted to the bar in July, 1860 and has practised constantly ever since; was a member of the Board of Education, 1860-68; was an Alderman of the city of Minneapolis, 1865-"69; was Prosecuting Attorney of Hennepin County, 1863-67 and 1869-73; was City Attorney of Minneapolis, 1861-64; was a member of the State Senate of Minnesota 1875-85; was Regent of the State University of Minnesota in 1880, and still holds that office; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Repub-lican, receiving 28,930 votes against 24,496 votes for O. C. Merriman, Democrat, 978 votes for J. M. Douglas, Prohibitionist, and 4 votes scattering. FIFTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—dAitkin, Becker, Benton, Big Stone, Carlton, Cass, Clay, Crow Wing, Douglas, Grant, Itasca, Kittson, Lake, Marshall, Mille Lacs, Morrison, Norman, Otter Tail, Polk, Pope, Stearns, Stevens, Saint Louis, Todd, Traverse, Wadena, and Wilkin. Knute Nelson, of Alexandria, was born in Norway, February 2, 1843; came to the United States in 1849; received an academic education; studied law, was admitted to the bar, and has since practised; served in the Union Army as a private and non-commissioned officer in the Fourth Wisconsin during three years of the late war; was a member of the Assembly in the Wisconsin Legislature, 1868-69; was Prosecuting Attorney of Douglas County, Minnesota; in 1872, ’73, and ’74; was State Senator in the Minnesota Legislature in 1875, ’76, ’77, and ’78; was Presidential Elector on the Garfield and Arthur ticket; is at present a member of the Board of Regents of the State University of Minnesota; was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 25,609 votes against 13,176 votes for L. L. Baxter, Democrat. Re-elected. Ba" 2 MISSISSIPPL | Senators and Representatives. 47° MISSISSIPPI. SENATORS. James Z. George, of Jackson, was born in Monroe County, Georgia, October 20, 1826; his father having died in his infancy, he removed, when eight years of age, with his mother to Noxubee County, Mississippi, where he resided two years; he then removed to Carroll County, where he was educated 1n the common schools then existing; he volunteered as a’ private in the Iirst Regiment of Mississippi Volunteers in the Mexican War, commanded by Col. Jefferson Davis, and was at the battle of Monterey; on his return he studied law, and was admitted to the bar in Carroll County; he was elected Reporter of the High Court of Errors and Appeals in 1854, re-elected in 1860, and prepared and published ten volumes of the Reports of the decisions of that court, and afterwards prepared and published a Digest of all the decisions of the Supreme Court and High Court of Errors and Appeals of that State, from the admission of the State into the Union to and including the year 1870; he was a member of the Convention in Mississippi in 1861 which passed the ordinance of secession, and he voted for and signed that instrument; he was a captain in the Twentieth Regiment of Mississippi Volunteers in the Confederate States Army; afterwards a. Brigadier-General of State troops, and afterwards Colonel of the Fifth Regiment of Mississippi Cavalry in the Confederate States Army; was Chairman of the Democratic State Executive Committee of Mississippi in 1875 and 1876; in 1879 was appointed one of the Judges of the Supreme Court of Mississippi, and elected Chief Justice; resigned his seat on the Supreme Bench in February, 1881, to take his seat in the Senateon the 4th of March of that year, and was re-elected in 1886. His term of service will expire March 3, 1893. Edward Cary Walthall, of Grenada, Mississippi, was born in Richmond, Virginia, April 4, 1831; received an academic education at Holly Springs, Mississippi; studied law at Holly Springs; was admitted to the bar in 1852, and commenced the practice of law the same year in Coffeeville, Mississippi; was elected in 1856 District Attorney for the tenth judicial district of Mississippi, and re-elected in 1859; resigned that office in the spring of 1861, and entered the Confederate service as a Lieutenant in the Fifteenth Mississippi Regiment; was soon after elected Lieutenant-Colonel of that regiment; in the spring of 1862 was elected Colonel of the Twenty-ninth Mississippi Regiment, was promoted to Brigadier-General in December, 1862, and Major-General in June, 1864; after the surrender practised law at Coffeeville until January, 1871, when he removed to Grenada, and has continued the practice there until March, 1885; was a Delegate at Large to the National Democratic Conventions in 1868, 1876, 1880, and 1884; in 1868 was one of the Vice-Presidents of the Convention, and in 1876, 1880, and 1884, was Chairman of the Mississippi delegation; was appointed to the United States Senate as a Dem-ocrat, to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Hon. L. Q. C. Lamar, appointed Secre-tary of the Interior, and took his seat March 12, 1885; was elected by the Legislature in Jan-uacy, 1886, for the unexpired term. His term of service will expire March 3, 1889. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. COUNTIES. —A/lcorn, Itawamba, Lee, Lowndes, Monroe, Oktibbeha, Prentiss, and Tisho-mingo. John M. Allen, of Tupelo, was born in Tishomingo County, Mississippi, July 8, 1847; re-ceived a common school education up to his enlistment as a private in the Confederate Army, in which he served through the war; after the cessation of hostilities, attended the law school at the Cumberland University in Lebanon, Tennessee, and graduated in law in the year 1870, at the University of Mississippi; commenced the practice of his profession at Tupelo, Lee County, Mississippi, in 1870; in 1875 was elected District Attorney for the First Judicial Dis-trict of Mississippi; served a term of four years, and retired from that office; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 11,862 votes against 2,657 votes for Green C. Chandler, Republican. Re-clected. SECOND DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Benton, De Soto, La Fayette, Marshall, Panola, Tallahatchee, Tate, Tippak, and Union. James Bright Morgan, of Hernando, was born in Lincoln County, Tennessee, March 14, 1835; was brought by his parents to De Soto County, Mississippi, in 1840, where he has since resided ; received an academic education; studied law at ITernando under Hon. John K. Con-nelly, was admitted to the bar in 1857, and has been since, when not engaged in the public service, and is now, employed in the practice of his profession; was elected Judge of Pro-bates before the war; resigned and was mustered into the Confederate States service as a private; was elected Captain, and in the organization of the Twenty-ninth Mississippi Infantry Congressional Directory. [MISSISSIPPI was elected Major; was promoted Lieutenant-Colonel and Colonel ; at the close of the war was again elected Judge; was a member of the State Senate of Mississippt iin 1876, 1877, and 1878, and was Chairman of the Committee on the Judiciary; was appointed, in October, 1878, by the Governor, Chancellor of the Third Chancery District, and served for four years; is now Grand Master of Masons in Mississippi; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 14,872 votes against 10,833 votes for James R. Chalmers, Republican and Greenbacker, and 320 votes for Johnson, Independent Republican. Re-elected. THIRD DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Bolivar, Coahoma, Issaquena, Le Flore, Quitman, Sharkey, Sunflower, Tunica Warren, and Washington. Thomas Clendinen Catchings, of Vicksburg, was born in Hinds County, Mississippi, January 11, 1847; entered the University of Mississippi in September, 1859, and, after passing through the freshman and part of the sophomore years, left to enter Oakland College, Missis-sippi, where he passed into the junior class in the spring of 1861; entered the Confederate Army early in 1861,and served throughout the war; commenced the study of law in 1865, after the termination of the war, was admitted to the bar in May, 1866, and has since practised law at Vicksburg; was elected to the State Senate of Mississippi in 1875 for a term of four years, but resigned on being nominated in 1877 for Attorney-General; was elected Attorney-General of Mississippi in November, 1877, for a term of four years, was renominated by acclamation in August, 1881, and elected in the following November, resigning February 16, 1885; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 9,837 votes against 4,307 votes for A. G. Pearce, Republican. Re-elected. FOURTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Calhoun, Carroll, Chickasaw, Choctaw, Clay, Grenada, Kemper, Montgomery, Noxubee, Pontotoc, Webster, Winston, and Yalobusha. F. G. Barry, of West Point, was born at Woodbury, Tennessee, of Irish parentage, January 15, 1845; received a rudimental education; served as a private in the Confederate Army; studied law, was admitted to the bar, and has since practised ; was a member of the State Senate of Mississippi in 1875-79; was a Democratic Elector at Large for the State of Mississippi in i 1880; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 13,200 > votes against 5,723 votes for W. D. Frazee, Republican. Re-elected. FIFTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Altala, Clarke, Holmes, Jasper, Lauderdale, Leake, Neshoba, Newton, Scott Smith, Wayne, and Yazoo. Otho R. Singleton, of Forest, was born in Jessamine County, Kentucky, October 14, 1814; received a classical education, graduating at Saint Joseph’s College, Bardstown, Ken-tucky; studied law and graduated at the Lexington Law School and practised law; removed to Mississippi in 1838; was a member of the Mississippi House of Representatives two years, and of the Mississippi Senate six years; was a Presidential Elector on the Pierce and King icket in 1852; was a Representative from Mississippi in the Thirty-third, Thirty-fifth, and Thirty-sixth Congresses of the United States, retiring January 12, 1861; was a Representative from Mississippi in the Confederate Congress from 1861 until 1865; was elected to the Forty-fourth, Forty-fifth, Forty-sixth, Forty-seventh, and Forty. eighth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 11,934 votes against 3,665 votes for Smith, Republican, and 10 votes scattering. SIXTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Adams, Amite, Cini Greene, Hancock, Harrison, Jackson, Jones, Law-rence, Marion, Perry, Pike, and Wilkinson. Henry S. Van Eaton, of Woodville, was born in Hamilton County, Ohio, September 14, 1826; his family moved to Jacksonville, Illinois, in 1832; graduated at Illinois College in 1848, and the same year removed to Woodville, Mississippi, where he taught school and studied law; in 1857 was elected State’s Attorney for the Southern Mississippi district; in 1859 was elected to the State Legislature; served in the Confederate Army during the war; resumed the practice of law after the war; in 1880 was appointed Chancellor of the Tenth Mississippi District; was elected from the bench to the Forty-eighth Congress; and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 10,190 votes against 6,570 votes for John R. Lynch, Republican. SEVENTH DISTRICT. , COUNTIES.— Claiborne, Copiak, Franl’lin, Hinds, Jefferson, Lincoln, Madison, Rankin, and Simpson. Ethelbert Barksdale, of Jackson, was born in Rutherford County, Tennessee; he removed to Mississippi when a youth; entered upon journalism in his twenty-first year, and adopted it r MISSISSIPPI. | Senators and Representatives. 49 as a profession; in the mean time has been engaged in farming; he conducted the official jour-nal of the State from 1854 to 1861, and from 1876 to 1883; was a member of the Congress of the Confederate States during the existence of that government; he served on the Platform Committees of the National Democratic Conventions of 1860, ’68, 72, and 80; he was on the Democratic Electoral ticket for the State at large in 1876, and Chairman of the State Electoral College; he was Chairman of the Democratic State Executive Committee from 1877 to 1879; was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Con-gress as a Democrat, receiving 10,946 votes against 5,485 votes for Yellowly, Republican. MISSOURI.: SENATORS. Francis Marion Cockrell, of Warrensburg, was born in Johnson County, Missouri, October 1, 1834; received his early education in the common:schools of his county; gradu-ated from Chapel Hill College, La Fayette County, Missouri, in July, 1853; studied law, and has pursued that profession, never having held any public office prior to his election to Con-gress; was elected to the Senate as a Democrat, to succeed Carl Schurz, Independent Repub-lican; took his seat March 4, 1875, and was twice re-elected. His term of service will expire March 3, 1893. George Graham Vest, of Kansas City, was born at Frankfort, Kentucky, December 6, 1830; graduated at Centre College, Kentucky, in 1848, and at the Law Department of the Transylvania University, at Lexington, Kentucky, in 1853; removed the same year to Mis-souri, and began the practice of law in Central Missouri; was a Presidential Elector on the Democratic ticket in 1860; was a member of the Missouri House of Representatives in 1860-61 ; was a member of the House of Representatives of the Confederate Congress for two years and a member of the Confederate Senate for one year; was elected to the United States Senate as a Democrat, in the place of James Shields, Democrat, (who had been elected to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Lewis V. Bogy, Democrat,) took his seat March 18, 1879,and was re-elected. His term of service will expire March 3, 1891. REPRESENTATIVES. / FIRST DISTRICT. . -COUNTIES.— Adair, Clarke, Knox, Lewis, Macon, Marion, Putnam, Schuyler, Scotland, and Shelby. William Henry Hatch, of Hannibal, was born in Scott County, Kentucky, September 11, 1833; was educated at Lexington, Kentucky; was admitted to the bar in September, 1854, and is a practising lawyer; was elected Circuit Attorney of the Sixteenth Judicial Cir-cuit of Missouri in October, 1858, and re-elected to the same position in November, 1860; served in the Confederate Army; was commissioned Captain and Assistant Adjutant-General December, 1862, and in March, 1863, was assigned to duty as Assistant Commissioner of Ex-change under the cartel, and continued in this position until the close of the war; was elected to the Forty-sixth, Forty-seventh, and Forty-eighth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 18,932 votes against 15,955 votes for Gray, Republican, and 3 votes scattering. Re-elected. SECOND DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Carroll, Chariton, Grundy, Linn, Livingston, Monroe, Randolph, end Sulli-van. John Blackwell Hale, of Carrollton, was born in Brooks (now Hancock) County, West Virginia, February 27, 1831; was educated at a common country school; studied law, was admitted to the bar, and has since practised at Carrollton; was a member of the Missouri Legislature in 1856-1858; was a Douglas elector in Missouri in 1860; was Colonel of the Sixty-fifth Regiment Missouri Militia, and of the Fourth Provisional Regiment of Missouri Militia in the United States service during the late war; was a Delegate to the Democratic National Conventions in 1864 and 1868; was a Democratic Elector on the Greeley ticket in Missouri in 1872; was a member of the Missouri Constitutional Convention of 1875; and was clected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 20,204 votes against 15,749 votes for William N. Norville, Republican and 1 vote scattering. 2D ED 4 & Congressional Directory. [MISSOURI THIRD DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Caldwell, Clay, Clinton, De Kalb, Daviess, Gentry, Harrison, Mercer, Ray, and Worth. . Alexander Monroe Dockery, of Gallatin, was born in Livingston County, Missouri, Feb-ruary 11, 1845; attended the common schools, completing his education at Macon Academy, Macon, Missouri; studied medicine and graduated at the Saint Louis Medical College in March, 1865; also attended lectures at Bellevue College, New York City, and Jefferson Med-ical College, Philadelphia, during the winter of 1865-’66; practised medicine at Chillicothe, Missouri, until January, 1874, serving several years as County Physician of Livingston County; in March, 1874, abandoned the practice of medicine and removed to Gallatin, Missouri, and assisted in organizing the Farmers’ Exchange Bank, of which organization he was cashier until elected to Congress; was one of the Curators of the University of Missouri from 1872 to 1882, and in 1870, 71, and 72 President of the Board of Education of Chillicothe, Mis-souri; has served as Chairman of the Congressional Committee of his District; was a member of the City Council of Gallatin for the five years previous to April, 1883, serving the last two years as Mayor, elected without opposition; was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 19,129 votes against 15,854 votes for Harwood, Republican, and 814 votes for Jordan, Greenbacker. Re-elected. FOURTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Andrew, Atchison, Buchanan, Holt, Nodeway, and Platte. James Nelson Burnes, of Saint Joseph, .was born in Indiana, August 22, 1832; was taken to Platte County, Missouri, in 1837; received a common and high school education; studied law, graduating at the Harvard Law School, class of 1853; practised law actively for twenty years; was Circuit Attorney in 1856; was Presidential Elector in 1856, voting for Buchanan and Breckenridge; was Judge of the Common Pleas Court from 1868 to 1872; was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 16,397 votes against 13,141 votes for Henry S. Kelly, Republican-Greenbacker, and I vote scattering. Re-elected. ¢ FIFTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Jackson, Johnson, and La Fayette. William Warner, of Kansas City, was born in 1841, and raised in Wisconsin; was edu-cated at Lawrence University, Wisconsin, and Michigan University; is a lawyer; served three and a half years in the Union Army in the Thirty-third and Forty-fourth Wisconsin Infantry; was elected City Attorney of Kansas City, Missouri, in April, 1867, and Circuit Attorney for the counties of Jackson, Johnson, Lafayette, Cass, Pettis, and Saline, Missouri, in November, 1868; was Mayor of Kansas City, Missouri, in 1871; was Presidential elector on the Grant ticket in 1872; was appointed United States Attorney for the Western District of Missouri, in 1882; received in 1885, the votes of the Republican members of the Missouri Legislature for United States Senator; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 16,176 votes against 14,651 votes for Alexander Graves, Democrat. Re-elected. SIXTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Benton, Boone, Camden, Cooper, Dallas, Hickory, Howard, Monitean, Morgan, Pettis, Polk, and Saline. John T. Heard, of Sedalia, was born at Georgetown, Pettis County, Missouri; was edu-cated at the common schools of Pettis County and at the State University at Columbia, gradu-ating in 1860; read law in the office of his father, George Heard, with whom he practised SN several years at the Sedalia bar; was elected to the State Legislature of Missouri in 1872, serving as chairman of the committee of ways and means and appropriations, and as a mem-ber of the committees on judiciary and the University; was elected without opposition to the State Senate in 1861, and served four years; was chairman of the committee, on constitutional amendments and on banks and corporations, a member of the judiciary committee and author of the bill to establish the ¢ Supreme Court Commission;’’ was employed in 1881 by the Fund Commissioners of the State to prosecute and adjust all claims of the State against the General Government, and resigned that position on being elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 21,107 votes against 16,139 votes for W. S. Shirk, Republican, and 2 votes scattering. Re-elected. : , MISSOURL | Senators and Representatives. 51 SEVENTH DISTRICT, COUNTIES. —Audrain, Franklin, Lincoln, Montgomery, Pike, Ralls, Saint Charles, ana Warren. John E. Hutton, of Mexico, was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, re-. ceiving 16,712 votes against 14,946 for Reynolds, Repub.,and 2 scattering. Re-elected. EIGHTH DISTRICT. City AND COUNTY.—yt%, Oth, 8ik, 12th, 14th, 16th, 20th, 23d, and 28th wards of the city of Saint Louis, Saint Louis County, and Saint Ferdinand Township. John J. O’Neill, of Saint Louis, was born June 25, 1846, of Irish parents; received a com-mon-school education; was in the Government civil service during the war, and was afterwards engaged in manufacturing pursuits; was elected to the State Legislature from Saint Louis in 1872, and re-elected in 1874 and 1876; was nominated for Congress in 1878 by the Working-men’s party, but withdrew; was elected to the Municipal Assembly of Saint Louis in 1879 ° and re-elected in 1881; was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 9,657 votes against 8,006 votes for Eccles, Republican, and 5 votes scattering. Re-elected. NINTH DISTRICT. Crry.— The 15st, 2d, 3d, 10th, 13th, 15th, 17th, 18th, 19th, 26th, and 27th wards of the city of Saint Louis. . John Milton Glover, of Saint Louis, was born at Saint Louis, Missouri, June 23, 18-5; was educated at Washington University, Saint Louis, Missouri; studied law, was admitted to the bar, and is the business member of the firm of Glover & Shepley, attorneys at law; held no public office prior to his election to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 9,830 votes against 8,133 for J. H. McLean, Rep., and 18 for Wilson. Re-elected. 7 : TENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES AND CITY.— Wards 5, 7, 9, 11, 21, 22, 24, and 25 of the city of Saint Louis, county of Saint Louis, except Saint Ferdinand; counties of Iron, Madison, Jefferson, Perry, Reynolds, Saint Francois, Sainte Genevieve, and Washington. Martin Linn Clardy, of Farmington, was born in Sainte Genevieve County, Missouri, April 26, 1844; was educated at the Saint Louis University and the University of Virginia; is a lawyer by profession; never held any public office; was elected to the Forty-sixth, Forty-seventh, and Forty-eighth Congresses; and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 15,329 votes against 12,797 votes for Morse, Independent, and 899 votes for Jackson, Greenbacker. Re-elected. ELEVENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Callaway, Cole, Crawford, Dent, Gasconade, Laclede, Maries, Miller, Osage, Prelps, Pulaski, Texas, and Wright. Richard Parks Bland, of Lebanon, was born near Hartford, Kentucky, August 19, 1835; received an academic education; removed to Missouri in 1855, thence to California, and thence to that portion of Utah now Nevada, locating at Virginia City; practised law; was interested in mining operations in California and Nevada; was County Treasurer of Carson County, Utah Territory, from 1860 until the organization of the State government of Nevada; returned to Missouri in 1865; located at Rolla, Missouri, and practised law with his brother, C. C. Bland, until he removed to Lebanon in August, 1869, and continued his practice there; was elected to the Forty-third, Forty-fourth, Forty-fifth, Forty-sixth, Forty-seventh, and Forty-eighth Con-gresses; and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 16,959 votes against 14,288 votes for Dallmeyer, Republican, and 13 votes scattering. = Re-elected. TWELFTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Barton, Bates, Cass, Cedar, Dade, Henry, Saint Clair, and Vernon. [Jasper County has since been added. ] William J Stone, of Nevada, was born in Madison County, Kentucky, May 7, 1848; was educated at the University of Missouri; is a lawyer by profession; was Prosecuting At-torney of Vernon County from 1873 to 1874 ; was Elector on the Tilden and Hendricks ticket in 1876; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 20,091 votes, against 16,222 for S. A. Worden, Rep.-Greenbacker, and 19 scattering. Re-elected. \ rs, Congressional Directory. [MISSOURI. =» / THIRTEENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Barry, Christian, Dallas, Greene, Jasper, Lawrence, McDonald, Newton, Polk, Stone, Taney, and Webster. : William H. Wade, of Springfield, was born in Clark County, Ohio, November 3, 1835; was raised on a farm; was educated in common schools and at Grove School Academy; is a farmer; enlisted in the Union Army April 17, 1861, and was mustered out April 26, 1866; removed to Missouri in May, 1866, and engaged in farming; was a member of the State House of Representatives of Missouri in 1881, 1882, 1883, and 1884, and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican on Fusion ticket, receiving 20,101 votes against 17,931 votes for Thomas, Democrat, and 1,869 votes for Haseltine, Greenbacker. Re-elected. FOURTEENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Bollinger, Butler, Cape Girardean, Carter, Douglas, Dunklin, Howell, Missts-sippt, New Madrid, Oregon, Ozark, Pemiscot, Ripley, Scott, Shannon, Stoddard, and Wayne. William Dawson, of New Madrid, was born at New Madrid, New Madrid County, Missouri, March 17, 1848; graduated at the college of the Christian Brothers at Saint Louis, Missouri, in 1869; was elected Sheriff and Collector of New Madrid County in 1870, and re-elected in 1872; was elected in 1878 to the lower house of tbe General Assembly of Missouri, and re-elected in 1880 and 1882; was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 17,694 votes against 11,020 for Cramer, Rep., and 3 scattering. Declined a renomi-nation. NEBRASKA. SENATORS. Charles H. Van Wyck, of Nebraska City, was born at Poughkeepsie, New York, November —, 1824; graduated at Rutgers College, New Jersey; studied and practised law; was District Attorney of Sullivan County, New York, from 1850to 1856; entered the Union Army as Colonel of the Tenth Legion, or Fifty-sixth 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, Fortieth, and Forty-first Congresses; removed to Nebraska in 1874; was elected a Delegate to the Constitutional Convention in 1876; was a member of the State Senate for three terms, 1876-80; was elected to the United States Senate as a Republican, to succeed Algernon S. Paddock, Republican, and took his seat March 4, 1881. His term of service will expire March 3, 1887. Charles F. Manderson, of Omaha, was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, February 9, 1837 ; was educated in the schools and academies of his native city ; removed to Canton, Ohio, in 1856, where he studied law, and was called to the bar in 1859; was elected City Solicitor of that city in 1860, and in April, 1861, entered the Army as First Lieutenant Company A, Nineteenth Regiment Ohio Infantry; participated in the campaign under General McClellan in West Virginia in the summer of 1861, and afterwards in the campaigns of the Army of the Cumberland ; rose through the grades of Captain, Major, Lieutenant-Colonel, and Colonel of the Nineteenth Ohio Infantry, being in command of the regiment from the date of the battle of Shiloh; on September 2, 1864, at the battle of Lovejoy’s Station, he was severely wounded, and, because of disability from such wounds, resigned in April, 1865; in March, 1865, he was brevetted Brigadier-General of Volunteers, United States Army, “for gallant, long-continued, and meritorious service during the war of the rebellion;”’ he continued the practice of law at Canton, Ohio, being twice elected as District Attorney, until November, 1869, when he removed to Omaha, Nebraska, where he has since resided and practised law ; for six years he was City Attorney at Omaha, and in 1871 and again in 1874 was elected by both political parties as a member of the Constitutional Convention for those years; he was elected to the United States Senate as a Republican, to succeed Alvin Saunders, Republican, and took his seat December 3, 1883. His term of service will expire March 3, 18809. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. CoUNTIES.— Cass, Douglas, Gage, Johnson, Lancaster, Nemaka, Otoe, Pawnee, Richardson Saunders, and Sarpy. ‘ ‘ Archibald J. Weaver, of Falls City, was born at Dundaff, Susquehanna County, Penn-sylvania, April 15, 1844; worked by the month as a farm hand from the time he was nine years old until he was seventeen; was educated at Wyoming Seminary, Pennsylvania, and & | ? | | | ¢ = “ NEBRASKA. | Senators and Representatives. 23 was one of the faculty of that institution from 1864 to 1867; studied law at Harvard University, and was admitted to practise law at Boston, Mass., in January, 1869; removed to Falls City, Nebr., his present residence, in the spring of 1869; in 1871 was elected to the Constitutional Convention of that State; in 1872 was elected District Attorney for the First District of Nebraska; was a member of the Constitutional Convention of Nebraska in 1875; was elected Judge of the First Judicial District of Nebraska in 1875, and re-elected to the same position in 1879, which position he resigned in 1883; was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 22,644 votes against 21,669 votes for Brown, Democrat, 1,024 votes for O’ Neil, Prohibitionist, and 2 votes scattering. SECOND DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Adams, Butler, Chase, Clay, Dundy, Fillmore, Franklin, Frontier, Furnas, Gosper, Hamilton, Harlan, Hayes, Hitchcock, Jefferson, Kearney, Nuckolls, Phelps, Polk, Rea Willow, Saline, Seward, Thayer, Webster, and York. James Laird, of Hastings, was born at Fowlerville, Livingston County, New York, June 20, 1849; was brought up in Michigan and educated at Adrian College and Michigan Uni-versity, at Ann Arbor; was graduated from the Law College of the Michigan University in 1871, and has since been actively engaged in the practice of law; entered the volunteer mili-tary service of the United States from Michigan as a private, July 24, 1862, and served with the Army of the Potomac until the close of the war; was a member of the Nebraska Consti-tutional Convention of 1875; was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 21,182 votes against 17,650 votes for John H. Stickel, Democrat and Anti-Monopoly, 1,176 votes for B. Crabbe, Prohibitionist, and 39 votes scattering. Re-elected. THIRD DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—A/ that part of the State not included in the First and Second Districts. George W. E. Dorsey, of Fremont, was born in Loudoun County, Virginia, January 235, 1342; removed with his parents to Preston County (now West Virginia) in 1856; was edu-cated in private schools and at Oak Hill Academy; recruited a company and entered the Union Army in August, 1861, as first lieutenant Sixth West Virginia Infantry; was promoted to the rank of captain and of major, and was mustered out with the Army of the Shenandoah in August, 1865; removed to Nebraska in 1866; studied law, and was admitted to practice in 1869; has been engaged in banking during the past ten years; has been a member of the board of trustees of the Insane Hospital, a member and vice-president of the State Board of Agriculture, and chairman of the Republican State Central Committee; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 25,985 votes against 20,671 votes for Neville, Democrat, 578 votes for Fitch, Prohibitionist, and 51 votes scattering. Re-elected. NEVADA. SENATORS. John P. Jones, of Gold Hill, was born in Herefordshire, England, in 1830, and came with his parents to this country when he was less than a year old, settling in the northern part of Ohio, where he attended public school in Cleveland for a few years; in the early part of the California excitement he went to that State, and engaged in farming and mining in one of the tnland counties, which he subsequently represented in both houses of the State Assembly; went to Nevada in 1867, and since then has been entirely engaged in the development of the mineral resources of that State; was elected to the United States Senate as a Republican, to succeed J. W. Nye, Republican; took his seat March 4, 1873, and ‘was twice re-elected. His term of service will expire March 3, 1891. James Graham Fair, of Virginia City, was born December 3, 1831, near Belfast, Ireland; he came to this country with his parents in 1843, and settled in Illinois, where he attended the public schools, completing his education in Chicago, where he received a thorough business education, paying special attention to scientific studies; on the breaking out of the gold fever, in 1849, he moved to California and engaged in mining until 1860, when he removed to Nevada, where he has ever since resided, and where he has at all times been extensively engaged in mining, constructing huge quartz-mills, building water-works, etc.; in 1867 he formed a part-nership with John W. Mackay, J. C. Flood, and Wm. S. O’Brien. The firm purchased the control of the Bonanzas and various other well-known mines, the yield of gold and silver from .- 54 Congressional Directory. [NEVADA. which, while under the superintendency of Mr. Fair, is estimated at about two hundred million dollars; he is also extensively engaged in real estate and buildings in San Francisco, and is largely interested in the various manufactures of the Pacific coast; he was elected to the United States Senate as a Democrat, to succeed William Sharon, Republican, and took his seat March 4, 1881. His term of service will expire March 3, 1887. : : REPRESENTATIVE. AT LARGE. William Woodburn, of Virginia City, was born in the county of Wicklow, Ireland, in 1838; emigrated to this country in 1849; was educated at Saint Charles College, State of Maryland; was admitted to the bar in 1866; was district attorney of Storey County in 1871 and 1872; was elected to the Forty-fourth Congress, and was elected to the Forty-ninth Con-gress as a Republican, receiving 6,807 votes against 5,992 for Cassidy, Democrat. Re-elected. NEW HAMPSHIRE / SENATORS. Person C. Cheney, of Manchester, was born at Holderness, now Ashland, New Hamp-shire, February 25, 1828; received a common-school and academic education; was placed, when seventeen years of age, in charge of the paper-making establishment which had been purchased by his father, and has since been largely interested in paper-making, a company in which he is the principal stockholder now producing seven tons of paper daily; was a mem- ber of the State Legislature in 1853; served in the Union Army as Quartermaster of the Thirteenth Regiment, but was forced by severe illness caused by exposure to resign; was State Railroad Commissioner 1864-67; removed to Manchester in 1867, and in 1871 was elected Mayor, declining a re-nomination; was Governor of the State of New Hampshire 1875-76 and 1876-97; has travelled extensively in Europe; is engaged in agricultural pursuits; is president of a number of financial and industrial corporations, and was appointed United States | Senator, as a Republican, to fill the vacancy occasioned by the death of Hon. Austin F. Pike. He took his seat December 7, 1886. His term of service will expire with the meeting of the next term of the Legislature, when a Senator will be chosen to serve until March 3, 1889. Henry W. Blair, of Manchester, was born at Campton, New Hampshire, December 6, 1834; received a common-school and academic education; studied law with William Leverett, at Plymouth; admitted to the bar in May, 1859, and has since practised ; was appointed Prose- | cuting Attorney for Grafton County in 1860; served in the Union Army as Lieutenant-Colonel | of the Fifteenth New Hampshire Volunteers; was a member of the State House of Repre-sentatives in 1866, and of the State Senate in 1867-"68; was elected a Representative in the Forty-fourth and Forty-fifth Congresses as a Republican, and declined a renomination to the House of Representatives of the Forty-sixth Congress; he was elected to the United States | Senate as a Republican, to succeed Charles H. Bell, who had been temporarily appointed by | the Executive of New Hampshire, and took his seat June 20, 1879; his term expiring March | 3, 1885, he was appointed to fill the vacancy until the next session of the Legislature, in the month of June following, when he was elected to serve the balance of the term, which will | | expire March 3, 1891. : : REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. | COUNTIES.— Belknap, Carroll, Rockingham, Strafford, and parts of Hillsborough and Merri-mack Counties. | Martin A. Haynes, of Lake Village, was born at Springfield, New Hampshire, July 30, | 1842; removed to Manchester, New Hampshire, at the age of four years, where he received a common-school education and learned the printer’s trade; in June, 1861, he enlisted as a private in the Second New Hampshire Regiment, in which he served as a private three years, receiving wounds at the first Bull Run, Glendale, and second Bull Run battles; in 1868 he removed to Lake Village, where he established ¢ The Lake Village Times,” which he has ever since published; was a member of the New Hampshire House of Representatives in 1872 and 1873; Clerk of the Supreme Court for Belknap County from 1876 to 1883; Presi- | dent of the New Hampshire Veteran Association 1881 and 1882; Department Commander I | Grand Army of the Republic 1881 and 1882; was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress; and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 19,866 votes against I | 17,678 votes for Luther F. McKinney, Democrat, 644 votes for Charles K. Chase, Prohibi- tionist, 134 votes for John F. Woodbury, Greenbacker, and 33 votes scattering. NEW HAMPSHIRE. | Senators and Representatives. SECOND DISTRICT. Ra =: = COUNTIES.— Cheshire, Coos, Grafton, Sullivan, and parts of Hillsborough and Merrimack Counties. Jacob H. Gallinger, of Concord, was born at Cornwall, Ontario, March 28, 1837; received a common-school and academic education; was a printer in early life, but studied medicine; graduated in May, 1858, and has practised medicine and surgery ever since; is a member of various State and National Medical Societies, and has an extensive practice which extends beyond the limits of his own State; was a member of the State House of Representatives of New Hampshire 1872-73, of the Constitutional Convention in 1876, and of the State Senate in 1878, 1879, and 1880, being president of that body the last two years; was Surgeon-General of New Hampshire, with the rank of Brigadier-General, in 1879-80; received the honorary -degree of A. M. from Dartmouth College; was elected Chairman of the Republican State Committee in September, 1882, and holds the place now; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 22,804 votes against 20,407 votes for John H. George, Democrat, 737 votes for the Prohibition candidate, and 330 votes scattering. Re-elected. NEW JERSEY. SENATORS. John Rhoderic McPherson, of Jersey City, was born at York, Livingston County, New York, May 9, 1833; received a common-school and academic education ; removed to Jersey City, New Jersey, in 1859; was elected a member of the Board of Aldermen of Jersey City in 1864, and held that office for six years, serving for three years as President of the Board; was President of the People’s Gas-Light Company during the years 1868-69; was a member of the State Senate of New Jersey in 1871-"73; was a Presidential Elector on the Tilden and Hendricks ticket in 1876; was elected to the United States Senate as a Democrat, to succeed F. T. Frelinghuysen, Republican, took his seat March 5, 1877, and was re-elected in January, 1883. His term of service will expire March 3, 1889. William J. Sewell, of Camden, was born in Ireland in 1835; left an orphan at an early age, he came to the United States in 1851, and engaged in business in the city of New York; shortly thereafter he entered the merchant marine, making several voyages; abandoning the sea after a few years, he located in Chicago and re-entered upon business life; returning east just previous to the rebellion, he entered the service as Captain in the Fifth New Jersey Vol-unteers; he was mustered out at the close of the war with the rank of Brevet Major-General; he served nine years in the State Senate of New Jersey, three years of which he was Presi-dent of that body; he was a Delegate at Large from that State to the Republican National Conventions at Cincinnati, in 1876, at Chicago, in 1880, and at Chicago, in 1884; he was elected to the United States Senate as a Republican, to succeed Theodore F. Randolph, Demo- crat, and took his seat March 4, 1881. His term of service will expire March 3, 1887. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Camden, Cape May, Cumberland, Gloucester, and Salem. George Hires, of Salem, was born in Salem County, January 26, 1835; received a com-mon-school and commercial education; has been engaged in the mercantile and manufactur-ing business since 1855; was elected Sheriff of Salem County in 1867, 1868, and 1869; was elected State Senator from Salem County in 1881 for three years; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 19,745 votes against 18,003 votes for Ferrell Democrat, 1,343 for Harbison, Prohib., and 385 for Atkinson, Greenbacker. * Re-elected. SECOND DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Atlantic, Burlington, Mercer, and Ocean. James Buchanan, of Trenton, was born at Ringoes, Hunterdon County, New Jersey, June 17, 1839; wasraised on a farm, and educated at public schools and Clinton Academy ; studied aw at the Albany University, and for four years in the law office of Hon. John T. Bird, £6: Congressional Directory. [NEW JERSEY. now Vice-Chancellor of New Jersey; was admitted to practice in 1864 ; was Reading Clerk of the New Jersey Legislature in 1866; was a member of the Board of Education of Trenton, New Jersey, in 1868-79; was Presiding Judge of Mercer County 1874, 75,76, 77,78, and 79; was a member of the Common Council of Trenton in 1883-45; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 19,144 votes against 16,853 votes for Frank-lin Gauntt, Democrat, 898 votes for Henry B. Howell, Prohibitionist, and 271 votes for S. A. Dobbins, Nationalist. Re-elected. THIRD DISTRICT. COUNTIES.Middlesex, Monmouth, and Union. — Robert S. Green, of Elizabeth, was born at Princeton, New Jersey, March 25, 1831; grad-uated at the College of New Jersey 1850; was admitted to the bar of New Jersey as an attor-ney in 1853, and as counsellor in 1856; was City Attorney of the city of Elizabeth 1857-68; was Surrogate of Union County 1862-67; was Presiding Judge of Union County Court of Common Pleas 1868-73; was a member of the Commission to suggest amendments to the Con-stitution of New Jersey in 1873; became a member of the bar of New York in 1874; was a delegate to the Democratic Conventions of 1860 and 1880; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 19,604 votes against 17,756 votes for Kean, Repub-lican, 620 votes for Parker, Prohibitionist, and 609 votes for Stout, Greenbacker. FOURTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Hunterdon, Somerset, Sussex, and Warren. James Nelson Pidcock, of White House Station, was born at White House, Hunterdon County, New Jersey, February 8, 1836; received a district-school education; was engaged in civil engineering from 1850 to 1857; since 1857 has been a farmer and dealer in live stock was State Senator from Hunterdon County 1877-1880; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 15,225 votes against 12,972 votes for B. F. Howey, Repub-lican, 282 for Davis, Greenbacker, and 1,218 for Morrow, Prohib. Re-elected. FIFTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Bergen, Morris, and Passaic. William Walter Phelps, of Teaneck, Englewood, was born in New York City August 24, 1839; graduated at Yale College in 1860, and at the Columbia College Law School in 1863; retired from the practice of law in 1868, refusing a judgeship offered by Governor Fenton; was elected in 1872 a Representative in the Forty-third Congress, and was a candidate for re-election to the Forty-fourth Congress,but was defeated by seven votes; was a Delegate at Large to the National Republican Convention at Chicago in 1880, also in 1884; was sent as Minister to Austria in 1881 and relinquished the position in 1882; was elected to the Forty-eighth Con-gress, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 17,367 votes against 15,126 votes for Stevenson, Democrat, 481 votes for Potter, Greenbacker, and 638 votes for Buckley, Prohibitionist. Re-elected. SIXTH DISTRICT. COUNTY of Essex. Herman Lehlbach, of Newark, was born July 3, 1845, in Baden, Germany; is a surveyor by profession; was a member of the House of Assembly of New Jersey in 1884 from the fourth district of Essex County; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiv-ing 21,162 votes against 20,318 votes for W. H. F. Fiedler, Democrat, and 845 votes for S. E. Tompkins, Prohibitionist. Re-elected. SEVENTH DISTRICT. COUNTY of Hudson—including the cities of Jersey City and Hoboken. William McAdoo, of Jersey City, was born in Ireland, October 25, 1853, and was brought by his parents at an early age to Jersey City, where he has continued to reside; received a good education in the schools of Jersey City; studied law with ex-Congressman Scudder, of New Jersey, and became a member of the bar of that State in 1874; has been counsel for many years to a municipal board in Hudson County, New Jersey; served as a member of the Legislature of New Jersey; was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 21,985 votes against 16,654 votes for Brig-ham, Republican, and 130 votes for Lee, Prohibitionist. Re-elected. of RH Ee WEW YORK. | Senators and Representatives. NEW YORK. SENATORS. Warner Miller, of Herkimer, was born in Oswego County, New York, August 12, 1838; graduated at Union College in 1860; commenced teaching in the Fort Edward Col-legiate Institute, but on the breaking out of the war enlisted as private in the Fifth New York Cavalry; served in the Shenandoah Valley; was promoted to be Sergeant-Majorand Lieutenant; was taken prisoner at the battle of Winchester; is now engaged in the manufacture of paper, and farming; was a Delegate to the National Convention at Philadelphia in 1872; was elected to the New York Legislature in 1874, and also in 1875; was elected to the Forty-sixth Con-gress, and was re-elected to the Forty-seventh Congress; was elected to the United States Senate as a Republican, July 16, 1881, in the place of Thomas C. Platt, resigned, and took his seat October 11, 1881. His term of service will expire March 3, 1887. William Maxwell Evarts, of New York City, was born in Boston, February 6, 1818; received a classical education, graduating at Yale College in 1837; studied in the Harvard Law School, and was admitted to the bar in New York in 1841, where he has practised law ever since; was Chairman of the New York delegation in the National Republican Conven-tion of 1860; was Attorney-General of the United States from July 15, 1868, to March 3, 186g; received the degree of LL. D. from Union College in 1857, from Yale in 1865, and from Harvard in 1870; was counsel for President Johnson on his trial upon his impeachment in 1868; was counsel for the United States before the tribunal of arbitration on the Alabama claims at Geneva, Switzerland, in 1872; was counsel for President Hayes, in behalf of the Republican party, before the Electoral Commission; was Secretary of State of the United States from March 12, 1877, to March 3, 1881; was elected to the United States Senate as a Repub-lican in the place of Elbridge G. Lapham, Republican, and took his seat March 4, 1885. His term of service will expire March 3, 1891. REPRESENTATIVES. -FIRST DISTRICT. COUNTIES. —Sujfolk, Rickmond, and Queens. Perry Belmont, of Babylon, Long Island, was born in the city of New York, December 28, 1851; graduated at Harvard College in 1872; was admitted to the bar in 1876, and has since been engaged in the practice of the law; was elected to the Forty-seventh and Forty-eighth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 22,050 votes against 18,104 for Platt, Republican, and 33 votes scattering. Re-elected. SECOND DISTRICT. CITY OF BROOKLYN.— 7%e¢ territory comprised in the present Sth, 9th, 12th, 22d, 24th, and 25th wards, with the towns of Flatbush, Flatlands, Gravesend, New Lots, and New Utrecht. Felix Campbell, of Brooklyn, was born at Brooklyn, New York, February 28, 1829; re-ceived a common-school education; is a manufacturer of iron pipe, and a consulting engineer; was President of the King’s County Board of Supervisors in 1858; was appointed one of the Centennial Commissioners by Governor Tilden in 1876; was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 17,503 votes against 11,771 votes for Sheridan, Republican and Greenbacker, 425 votes for Frank Bowman, and 186 votes scattering. Re-elected. THIRD DISTRICT. CITY OF BROOKLYN.— 7%e territory comprised in the present jth, 13th, roth, 20th, 21st, und 23d wards. Darwin R. James, of Brooklyn, was born in Williamsburg, Massachusetts, May 14, 1834;received an academic education at Mount Pleasant Boarding-School, Amherst, Massachu- 58 Congressional Directory. [NEW YORK. setts; enfered into mercantile business in the city of New York, as an importer of indigo, spices, &c.; the firm Packard & James also owns spice and drug mills; is President of the East Brooklyn Savings Bank; is Secretary of the New York Board of Trade and Transporta-tion, in which capacity he has served for nearly ten years; served for six years, from 1876 to 1882, as a Park Commissioner of the city of Brooklyn; was elected to the Forty-eighth Con-gress, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 20,125 votes against 13,000 votes for Caleb L. Smith, Democrat, and 149 votes scattering. Re-elected. FOURTH DISTRICT. CITY OF BROOKLYN.—7%e territory tomprisnd in the 15t, 2d, 3d, 4th, 5th, 6th, 10th, and 11th wards of the city of Brooklyn. * Peter P. Mahoney, of Brooklyn, was born in the City of New York, June 25, 1848; was educated in the grammar schools of New York City; was engaged in the dry-goods business for several years; never held any public office; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 18,698 votes against 13,072 votes for B. Mulholland, Republican, 162 votes for William B. Shotwell, People’s Party, and 279 votes scattering. Re-elected. FIFTH DISTRICT. CITY OF BROOKLYN.—7%e territorv comprised in the present 14th, 15th, 16th, ryth, and 78th wards. Archibald M. Bliss, of Brooklyn, was born at Brooklyn, New York, January 25, 1838; received an academic education; was engaged for many years in mercantile pursuits; was an Alderman of Brooklyn in 1864, ’65, ’66, '67, serving in 1866 as President of the Board; was the Republican candidate for Mayor of Brooklyn in 1867; was a Delegate to the National Re-publican Conventions at Baltimore in 1864, at Chicago in 1868, to the Liberal National Con-vention at Cincinnati in 1872, and to the National Democratic Convention at Saint Louis in 1876, at Cincinnati in 1880, and at [Chicago in 1884; was member of the Board of Water Commissioners of Brooklyn in 1871-72; was Director in the Mechanics and Traders’ Bank of Brooklyn, and the Loaners’ Bank of New York; was President and Vice-President of the Brunswick Railroad Company from 1868 until 1878, and is now a Director; is a Director of the New York and Long Island Bridge Company; was elected to the Forty-fourth, Forty-fifth, Forty-sixth, and Forty-seventh Congresses; and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 13,985 votes, against 12,865 votes for Jacob Worth, Republican, 773 votes for Walter F. Blaisdell, Butler Democrat, and. 278 votes scattering. Re-elected. SIXTH DISTRICT. City oF NEW YORK.—zst, 5th, and gth assembly districts, including Governor's and Bed-J0¢’s Islands. Nicholas Muller, of New York City, was born in the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg, No-vember 15, 1836; received his education in the cities of Luxembourg and Metz; has been en-gaged in business 4s a Railroad Ticket agent for over twenty years, and is now General Eastern Passenger Agent of the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad ; was a mem-ber of the State Assembly in 1875 and 1876; was a member of the State Central Committee in 1875, 1885, and 1886; was a member of the Forty-fifth, Forty-sixth, and Forty-eighth Congresses,and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 13,307 votes against 6,796 votes for F. B. House, Republican. SEVENTH DISTRICT. City oF NEW YORK.— 7%e 2d, 3d, and 7th assembly districts of the county of New York. John J. Adams, of New York City, was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 15,864 votes against 8,228 votes for Conkling, Republican, and 201 votes scattering. EIGHTH DISTRICT. City oF NEW YORK.— 7%e 42k, bth, and 8th assembly districts of the county of New York. Timothy J. Campbell, of New York City, was born in County Cavan, Ireland, in 1840; is of Scotch-Irish ancestry; came to this country when five years old; attended the public pf NEW YORK. | : Senators and Representatives. : EO schools in the city of New York; learned the. printing business and worked on the New York Times, Express, Tribune, and Herald; was employed as a printer on the Herald when he was nominated in 1867 for the State Assembly by the Democracy of his district; elected to the Assembly in 1868, *69,’70, *71,°72,and ’73; served on all leading and important com-mittees and took an active part in the legislation during this period; was re-elected to the Assembly in 1875, and was afterwards elected justice of the fifth district civil court in New York City; served six years in this capacity, and in 1883 was returned to the State Assembly; supported the administration of Governor Cleveland while in the legislature, and was nomi-nated for State Senator in opposition to the Tammany candidate and was elected by 5,547 majority ; before his term expired a vacancy occurred in the Eighth Congressional District of New York, by the appointment of S.S. Cox as Minister to Turkey, and Mr. Campbell was nominated and elected to the Forty-ninth Congress to fill the vacancy thus created. Re-elected. NINTH DISTRICT. City OF. NEW YORK.— 7%e¢ 10th, 12th, and 14th assembly districts of the county 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 practised law; was owner and editor of “The Columbus (Ohio) Statesman’ in 1853 and ’54; was appointed Secretary of Legation to Peru in 1855; was a Delegate 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; was elected to the Forty-first Congress, was re-elected to the Forty-second Congress, and was the candidate of the Democrats and Liberal Republicans for Representative at Large in the Forty-third Congress, and defeated by Lyman Tremain, though running several thousand ahead of the rest of his ticket; he was subsequently re-elected to the Forty-third Congress, (to succeed James Brooks, deceased ;) was re-elected to the Forty-fourth Congress ; was appointed Speaker pro tem. of the House June 7, 1876, and elected Speaker pro fem. June 19, 1876, serving until he vacated the office June 24, 1876; was elected to the Forty-fifth, Forty-sixth, Forty-seventh, Forty-eighth, and Forty-ninth Congresses as a Democrat; resigned to accept the position of Minister to Turkey; returned to New York, and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of the Hon. Joseph Pulitzer. Re-elected. a TENTH DISTRICT. City oF NEW YORK.—7%e 11th, 16th, and 18th assembly districts of the county of New York. [Vacant.] ELEVENTH DISTRICT. City oF NEW YORK.— 7%e 13th, 15th, and 17th assembly districts of the County of New York. Truman Adams Merriman, of New York City, was born at Auburn, New York, Sep-tember 5, 1839; was educated at the Auburn Academy, and at Hobart College, Geneva, New York, graduating in 1861; entered the Union Army in September, 1861, as Captain in the Ninety-second New York Infantry, and was mustered out in December, 1864, as Lieutenant-Colonel ; studied law, and was admitted to the bar in 1867 ; entered the profession of journal-ism in 1871; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as-a Democrat, receiving 19,588 votes against 11,563 votes for John Hardy, Democrat, and 252 scattering. Re-elected. TWELFTH DISTRICT. City oF NEW YORK.— 77%e 20th and 21st assembly districts of the County of New York, as now constituted, and that portion of the 22d district bounded on the north by the south side of Eighty-sixth street, on the south by the north side of Fifty-ninth street, on the west by the east side of Lexington avenue, and onthe east by the East River. [Vacant.] | | f 6o Congressional Directory. [NEW YORK. THIRTEENTH DISTRICT. \ City oF NEW YORK.— 7%e 19th and 23d assembly districts of the County of New York, as now constituted, and that portion of the 22d assembly district bounded on the north by the south side of Ninety-first street, on the south by the north side of Eighty-sixth street, on the west by the east side of Fifth avenue, and east by the East River. Egbert L. Viele, of New York City, was born at Waterford, Saratoga County, New York, Jnne 17, 1825; received his early education at the Albany Academy, Albany, New York; graduated at the United States Military Academy, West Point, June 17, 1847; was appointed Brevet Second Lieutenant in the Second United States Infantry, and subsequently Second and First Lieutenant in the First United States Infantry; served in the Mexican war and in cam-paigns against the Indians in the Southwest until 1853, when he resigned and became a civil and military engineer; was appointed State Engineer of New Jersey in 1855; was designer of the Central Park in New York in 1856; was appointed Engineer-in-chief of Central Park in 1856; was designer of Prospect Park, Brooklyn, in 1859; was appointed Engineer of Prospect Park in 1860; was appointed Captain of the Engineer Corps of the Seventh New York Regiment in 1860; was appointed Brigadier-General of United States Volunteers in 1861 ; was Military Governor of Norfolk, Virginia, in 1862; was appointed President of the Department of Public Parks in New York City in 1884; is a Fellow of the Academy ot Sciences, a Fellow of the American Geographical Society and Member of its Council, a Fel-low of the National Academy of Design, and a member of the National Association for the Advancement of Sciences; is the author of ¢ Hand-book for Active Service,” ¢ Topograph-ical Atlas of the City of New York,” and numerous papers on geography, sanitation, and engineering; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 17,622 votes against 11,027 votes for E. B. Smith, Republican, and 430 votes scattering. FOURTEENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Westchester, and the 24th assembly district of the County of New York. William G. Stahlnecker, of Yonkers, was born at Auburn, Cayuga County, New York, June 20,1849; received an academic education; engaged in mercantile business, and is a member of the New York Produce Exchange; was elected Mayor of Yonkers in March, 1884, for aterm of two years, and will hold the office until the expiration of his term, in April, 1886; was a Dele-gate to the Democratic State Convention held at Saratoga, New York, in June, 1884,and also to the National Democratic Convention held at Chicago, Illinois, in July, 1884; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a'Democrat, receiving 17,507 votes against 15,745 votes for E. A. McAlpin, Republican, 476 votes for Herbert A. Lee, Prohibitionist, and 24 votes scattering. Re-elected. FIFTEENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Orange, Rockland, and Sullivan. HenryBacon, of Goshen, was born at Brooklyn, New York, March 14, 1846; received an academic education at the Mount Pleasant Academy at Sing Sing and at the Epis-copal Academy at Cheshire, Connecticut; was at Union College, Schenectady, New York, where he graduated in 1865; studied law and commenced the practice in December, 1866; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 480 votes over Moses D. Stiles, Republican. Re-elected. SIXTEENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Columbia, Dutchess, and Putnam. John H. Ketcham, of Dover Plains, was born at Dover, New York, December 21, 1832; received an academic education; became interested in agricultural pursuits; was supervisor of his town in 1854 and ’55; was a member of the State Assembly of New York in 1856 and 57; was a member of the State Senate of New York in 1860 and ’61; entered the Union Army as Colonel of the One hundred and fiftieth Volunteers in October, 1862, and was ap-pointed Brigadier-General, serving until he resigned, in March, 1863, to take the seat in Con-gress to which he had been elected; he was afterwards appointed Major-General by brevet; was elected to the Thirty-ninth, Fortieth, Forty-first, and Forty-second Congresses; was a Delegate to the National Republican Convention in 1876; was Commissioner of the District of Columbia from July 3, 1874, until June 30, 1877, when he resigned, having been elected to NEW YORK. | Senators and Representatives. 61 the Forty-fifth Congress; was elected to the Forty-sixth, Forty-seventh, and Forty-eighth Con-gresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 18,942 votes against 15,391 votes for R. P. Huntington, Democrat, 660 votes for George A. Fortney, Pro-hibitionist, and 54 votes scattering. AKe-elected. SEVENTEENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Delaware, Greene, and Ulster. James Girard Lindsley, of Rondout, was born at Orange, New Jersey, March 19, 1819; was educated at district schools, Ransom’s Military Academy, and Pierson’s Orange Classical School ; is resident agent and manager of the Newark Lime and Cement Manufacturing Com-pany, at Rondout; was elected trustee of the village of Rondout in 1859, 1860, 1861, 1862, 1863, and 1864; was elected president of the village of Rondout in 1852, 1867, 1868, and 1869; was elected supervisor of the town of Kingston in March, 1872, and in April of the same year was elected the first mayor of the city of Kingston, to which office he was re-elected for six consecutive years; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, re-ceiving 20,557 votes against 18,671 votes for John H. Bagley, Democrat, 759 votes for Porter G. Northrup, Prohibitionist, 369 votes for James (. Tubby, Geeenbacker, and 43 votes scattering, EIGHTEENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Rensselaer and Washington. Henry G. Burleigh, of Whitehall, was born at Canaan, New Hampshire, June 2, 1832; received a common-school education; is engaged in business connected with lumber, coal, mining iron ore, and transportation; was Supervisor of the town of Ticonderoga, Essex County, New York, for several years; was a member of the Assembly from Washington County in 1876, and was Chairman of the Committee on Canals; was a Delegate to the Republican National Convention at Chicago in 1884; was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 20,732 votes against 2,775 votes for McClellan, Prohibition candidate, and 42 votes scattering. NINETEENTH DISTRICT. COUNTY.—A/lbany. John Swinburne, of Albany, was born at Deer River, Lewis County, New York, May 30, 1820; received his earlier education at the public schools and academies of Denmark and Lowville, Lewis County, and the academy at Fairfield, Herkimer County; graduated from the Albany Medical College in the spring of 1847 and commenced practice as a physician and surgeon; was appointed in 1861 chief medical officer on the staff of Genéral John F. Rathbone, and placed in charge of the depot for recruits at Albany; was appointed by Governor Morgan in May, 1862, auxiliary volunteer surgeon at the front with the rank of Medical Superintendent of New York wounded troops, and was reappointed June 13 by Governor Seymour; was ap-pointed by the Surgeon-General of the United States and assigned to duty at Savage’s Station by General McClellan; was taken prisoner of war June 29, 1862; was appointed by Governor Seymour in 1864 health officer of the port of New York, and reappointed by Governor Fenton in 1866, holding the position six years; was in charge of the American Ambulance Corps dur-ing the siege of Paris by the Prussians in 1870-1871; was elected mayor of Albany as an independent candidate in 1882 by 3,000 majority over Michael N. Nolan, Democrat, and was counted out, but after fourteen months’ litigation was awarded the office by the courts; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress on the Republican and Citizens ticket, receiving 19,790 votes against 17,286 votes for Thomas B. Van Alstyne, Democrat, 218 votes for John C. Sanford, Prohibitionist, and 26 votes scattering. TWENTIETH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Fulton, Hamilton, Montgomery, Saratoga, and Schenectady. George West, of Ballston Spa, was born in Devonshire County, England, February 17, 1823; received a common-school education; came to this country in February, 1849; is a paper manufacturer; served five terms in the New York State Assembly 1872-76; was a del-egate to the Republican National Conventions at Chicago in 1880 and in 1884; is president of the First National Bank at Ballston Spa, New York; was a member of the Forty-seventh Congress, and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 20,919 votes against 19,282 votes for Edward Wemple, Democrat, 617 votes for Ray Hubbell, Pro-hibitionist, 92 votes for A. A. McLaughlin, Greenbacker, and 45 scattering. Re-elected, 62 Congressional Directory. [NEW YORK. TWENTY-FIRST DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Clinton, Essex, Franklin, Warren. Frederick A. Johnson, of Glens Falls, was born at Glens Falls, Warren County, New York, January 2, 1833; was educated at the common schools and at Glens Falls Academy; for many years prior to 1884 was engaged in banking; never held office until he waselected . tothe Forty-eighth Congress; and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 19,049 votes against 13,462 for Smith, Dem., and 12 scattering. Re-elected. TWENTY-SECOND DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Jefferson and Saint Lawrence. Abraham X. Parker, of Potsdam, was born at Granville, Addison County, Vermont, November 14, 1831, and has been a resident of Saint Lawrence County, New York, over forty years; was educated at Saint Lawrence Academy and the Albany Law School, and, after being admitted to practice, continued law studies at Buffalo and Syracuse; has, since 1857, been a lawyer in active practice; served in the New York Assembly in 1863 and ’64, and as State Senator in 1868, ’69, ’70, and ’71; was first Elector at Large upon the Republican Presi-dential ticket in 1876; is Secretary of the State Normal School at Potsdam; received the honorary degree of A. M. from Middlebury College in 1880; was elected to the Forty-seventh and Forty-eighth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 22,541 votes against 12,920 votes for Hall, Democrat, 809 votes for Gates Curtis, Prohibitionist, and 123 votes scattering. Re-elected. TWENTY-THIRD DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Lewis and Oneida. John Thomas Spriggs, of Utica, was born at Peterborough, Northamptonshire, England, 1827; graduated from Union College; is a lawyer by profession; has been County Treasurer and District Attorney of Oneida County; served twice as Mayor of Utica; was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiv-ing 18,164 votes against 17,327 votes for Cookinham, Republican, 870 votes for L. W. Fisk, Prohibitionist, and 15 votes scattering. TWENTY-FOURTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES. —Zerkimer, Otsego, and Schoharie. John S. Pindar, of Cobleskill, was born in Sharon, Siliohorle County, New Voit, Novem-ber 18,1835; was educated at the common schools and at Richmondville Seminary studied law with Messrs. Young & Ramsey, and was admitted to the bar in 1865; was elected presi-dent of the village of Cobleskill in 1882, 1883, and 1884; has been chairman of the Demo-cratic County Committee for ten years; and was elected ‘to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 17,884 votes against 16,772 votes for Joseph H. Ramsey, Republican, 734 votes for R. E. Fenton, Prohibitionist, and 16 votes scattering. TWENTY-FIFTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Cortland and Onondaga. Frank Hiscock, of Syracuse, was born at Pompey, September 6, 1834; received an academic education; studied law, was admitted to the bar in 1855, and commenced to practise at Tully, Onondaga County; was elected District Attorney of Onondaga County, serving 1860 ’63; was a member of the State Constitutional Convention in 1867; was elected to the Forty-fifth, Forty-sixth, Forty-seventh, and Forty-eighth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 21,148 votes against 15,335 votes for Porter, Demo-crat, 991 votes for W. W. Porter, Prohibitionist, and 40 votes scattering, Re-elected. TWENTY-SIXTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Broome, Chenango, Madison, and Tioga. Stephen C. Millard, of Binghamton, was born at Stamford, Vermont, January 14, 1841; was educated at Williams College, Massachusetts, graduating in the class of 1865; read law at Harvard Law School, and in the office of Pingree & Baker, Pittsfield, Massachusetts, and was admitted to the bar of the State of New York in May, 1867,at Binghamton; was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 23,773 votes against 18,783 votes for Remick, Democrat, 1,534 votes for Joseph W. Bruce, Prohibitionist, and 21 votes scattering. TWENTY-SEVENTH DISTRICT. CoOUNTIES.— Cayuga, Oswego, and Wayne. Sereno E. Payne, of Auburn, was born at Hamilton, New York, June 26, 1843, and graduated from the University at Rochester in 1864; was admitted to the bar in 1866, and has since practised law at Auburn; was city clerk of Auburn, 1868-71; was Supervisor of NEW YORK. | Senators and Representatives. : 63 Auburn, 1871-72; was District Attorney of Cayuga County, 1873-79; was President of the Board of Education at Auburn, 1879-82; was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 26,446 votes against 17,79S votes for William C. Beardsley, Democrat, 1,308 votes for O. M. Bond, Prohibitionist, 751 votes for David H. Foster, Greenbacker, and 24 votes scattering. TWENTY-EIGHTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Chemung, Schuyler, Seneca, and Tompkins. [Vacant.] TWENTY-NINTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Ontario, Steuben, and Yates. Ira Davenport, of Bath, was born at Hornellsville, New York, June 28, 1841; was elected to the New York State Senate 1878-79 and 1880-81; was elected Comptroller of the State "of New York in 1881, serving two years; was defeated as the Republican candidate for Gov-ernor of New York in 1885, receiving 490,331 votes against 501,465 votes for David H. Hill, Democrat [11,134 Democratic plurality], 30,867 votes for Bascom, Prohibitionist, and 3,576 Greenback and scattering votes; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 19,987 votes against 17,377 votes for Pierpont, Democrat, 1,246 votes or O. F. Ingolsby, Prohibitionist, 443 for R. C. Hewson, and 13 scattering. Re-elected. THIRTIETH DISTRICT. COUNTY .— Monroe. Charles Simeon Baker, of Rochester, was born at Churchville, Monroe County, New York, February 18, 1839; received an academic education; was a teacher in 1856-57; studied law, was admitted, to the bar in December, 1860, and has since practised the profession, except during the first yearof the war, when he served as First Lieutenant of Company E, Twenty-seventh New York Volunteers, being disabled at the first battle of Bull Run; was a member of the Board of Supervisors of Monroe County three years; was a member of the Rochester Board of Education two years, and President thereof the second year; was a mem-ber of the New York State Assembly from the Second (Rochester) district of Monroe County in 1879-'80-'82; was a member of the State Senate of New York from the Twenty-ninth district in 1884-85, and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 16,733 votes against 15,496 votes for Halbert S. Greenleaf, Democrat, 1,073 votes for Devalson G. Weaver, Prohibitionist, and 10 votes scatering. Re-elected. THIRTY-FIRST DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Genesee, Livingsion, Orleans, and Wyoming. John Gilbert Sawyer, of Albion, was born at Brandon, Vermont, June 5, 1825; was edu-cated at the common schools and at Millville Academy ; studied law, was admitted to the bar, and has since practised ; was a justice of the peace from January 1, 1852,to April, 1858; was District Attorney of Orleans County from January 1, 1863, to January 1, 1866; was Judge and Surrogate of Orleans County from January I, 1868, to January 1, 1884, and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 17,529 votes against 14,474 votes for R. S. Stevens, Democrat, 1,869 votes for C. H. Richmond, Prohibitionist, and 243 votes scattering. Re-elected. THIRTY-SECOND DISTRICT. CITY OF BUFFALO.—15t, 2d, and 3d assembly districts of the county of Erie. John M. Farquhar, of Buffalo, was born near Ayr, Scotland, April 17, 1832; was edu-cated at Ayr Academy; has been for thirty-three years a*printer, editor, or publisher; is now a manufacturer of lubricants; was President of the National Typographical Union two terms, 1860-62; enlisted in the Union Army as a private in the Eighty-ninth Illinois Infantry, rose to the rank of major,and served as judge-advocate and as inspector on the staffs of Generals Willich, Beatty, and Wood in the Fourth Army Corps; participated in all the battles of the former Twentieth (McCook’s) and Fourth Army Corps, excepting Missionary Ridge; never held civic office until elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 17,469 votes against 17,302 votes for Daniel N. Lockwood, Democrat, 123 votes for D. L. Waters, Prohibitionist, and 48 votes scattering. Re-elected. . . > § 64. Congressional Directory. [NEW YORK. THIRTY-THIRD DISTRICT. COUNTIES.Niagara, 4th and 5th assembly districts of the county of Erie, and 12th ward — of Bujfalo. ; John B. Weber, of Buffalo, was born at Buffalo, New York, September 21, 1842; was educated in the public and private schools and the Central School of Buffalo; was last in business as a wholesale grocer, and now resides on a farm just outside of Buffalo; enlisted as a private in the Forty-fourth Regiment of New York Volunteers August 7, 1861, and was promoted to Corporal August 9, 1861, Sergeant January 2, 1862, Sergeant-Major March 28, 1862, Second Lieutenant May 30, 1862, First Lieutenant and Adjutant of the One hundred and sixteenth Regiment New York Volunteers July 25, 1862, Acting Assistant Adjutant-General of Brigade January 10, 1863, and Colonel of the Eighty-ninth United States Colored Infantry September 19, 1863; participated in the siege of Yorktown, Hanover Court-House, Gaines Mill, Malvern Hill, and seven days battles; Plain Store, Louisiana, siege of Port Hud-son, assaults on Port Hudson, May 27 and June 14, 1863, and Cox Plantation; was Assistant Postmaster of Buffalo in 1871-73; was elected Sheriff of Erie County for 1874-76, and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 14,591 votes against 13,990 votes for L. S. Payne, Democrat, 959 votes for Edward Evans, Prohibitionist, 67 votes for Bement Bennett, and 19 votes scattering. Re-elected. THIRTY-FOURTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—ANegany, Cattaraugus, and Chautauqua. Walter L. Sessions, of Jamestown, was born in Brandon, Vermont; was raised on a farm; received a common-school education ; studied law, and has practised the profession; was Com-missioner of Schools for several years; was a member of the Assembly of the State of New York in 1853-54; was a member of the State Senate of New York in 1859 and in 1865; was a Representative from New York in the Forty-second.and Forty-third Congresses, and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 24,068 votes against 15,533 votes for Hiram Smith, Democrat, 1,411 votes for Daniel B. Sill, Prohibitionist, and 475 votes * scattering. NORTH CAROLINA. SENATORS. : Matt W. Ransom, of Northampton County, (post-office, Weldon,) was born in Warren County, North Carolina, in 1826; received an academic education; graduated from the Uni-versity of North Carolina in 1847; studied law and was admitted to the bar on graduating in 1847; is a lawyer and planter; was elected Attorney-General of North Carolina in 1852, and resigned in 1855; was a member of the Legislature of North Carolina in 1858, ’59, and ’60; was a Peace Commissioner from the State of North Carolina to the Congress of Southern States at Montgomery, Alabama, in 1861; entered the Confederate Army, serving as Licutenant-Col-onel, Colonel, Brigadier-General, and Major-General, and surrendered at Appomattox; was elected to the United States Senate as a Democrat in January, 1872, took his seat April 24, 1872, and was re-elected in 1876 and in 1883. His term of service will expire March 3, 1889 Zebulon B. Vance, of Charlotte, was born in Buncombe County, North Carolina, May 13, , 1830; was educated at Washington College, Tennessee, and at the University of North Car-olina; studied law, was admitted to the bar in January, 1852, and was elected County Attor-ney for Buncombe County the same year; was a member of the State House of Commons in 1854; was a Representative from North Carolina in the Thirty-fifth and Thirty-sixth Con-gresses; entered the Confederate Army as Captain in May, 1861, and was made Colonel in August, 1861; was elected Governor of North Carolina in August, 1862, and re-elected in August, 1864; was elected to the United States Senate in November, 1870, but was refused admission, and resigned in January, 1872; was the Democratic nominee for the United States Senate in 1872, but was defeated by a combination of bolting Democrats and Republicans; was elected Governor of North Carolina for the third time in 1876; was elected to the United States Senate as a Democrat in place of A. S. Merrimon, Democrat, took his seat March 18, 1879, and was re-elected in 1884. His term of service will expire March 3, 1891. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. CoUNTIES.— Beaufort, Camden, Carteret, Chowan, Currituck, Dare, Gates, Hertford, Hyde, Martin, Pamlico, Pasquotank, Perquimans, Pitt, Tyrrell, and Washington. Thomas Gregory Skinner, of Hertford, was born January 21, 1842, in Perquimans County, North Carolina; was educated at the University of North Carolina; was a student at law in ~— inn NORTH CAROLINA. | Senators and Representatives. 1866-67 ; obtained license to practise law of the Supreme Court of North Carolina, January, 1868; never held a civil office; was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress November 20, 1883, to fill vacancy caused by death of Hon. W. F. Pool, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 16,381 votes against 14,093 votes for J. B. Respass, Republican. SECOND DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Bertie, Craven, Edgecombe, Greene, Halifax, Jones, Lenoir, Northampton, Vance, Warren, and Wilson. James E. O’Hara, of Enfield, was born in New York, February 26, 1844; received an academical education; studied law; was admitted to the bar of North Carolina in June, 1873; at present a practising attorney; was Engrossing Clerk to the Constitutional Conven-tion of North Carolina in 1868, also to the Legislature of 1868-69; was a member of the State Constitutional Convention of 1875; was Chairman of the Board of Commissioners for the county of Halifax, 1872-76; was elected to the Forty-sixth Congress, but the certificate of election was given to W. H. Kitchin, Democrat; was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 22,309 votes against 15,699 votes for Woodward, Democrat. THIRD DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Bladen, Cumberland, Duplin, Harnett, Moore, Onslow, Pender, Sampson, and Wayne. Wharton J. Green, of Fayetteville, was born near Saint Mark’s, Florida, where his father had lately moved from Warren County, North Carolina; upon his mother’s death, which occurred when he was four years old, he was placed in charge of an uncle, whilst his father was engaged in the struggle for Texan independence, and shortly after with his grandmother in Warren County; was partially educated at Georgetown College, Lovejoy’s Academy at Raleigh, West Point, and the University of Virginia; read law at the last, and afterwards at Cumberland University; immediately after obtaining a United States Supreme Court license he abandoned the law, and has been ever since a farmer, and also a vineyardist at this time; enlisted in one of the three first companies that went into camp upon the breaking out of the war; was promoted to Lieutenant-Colonel commanding Second North Carolina Battalion in the Confederate Army, and was afterwards on General Daniel’s staff; was a Delegate to the Democratic National Convention in New York in 1868; was a State Delegate to the Democratic National Convention at Saint Louis; was State Alternate to the Cincinnati Na-tional Democratic Convention, and was a candidate for Elector on the Democratic ticket of 1368; has never held civic position until elected to the Forty-eighth Congress; he was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 16,785 votes against 12,252 votes for Brogden, Republican. FOURTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—.4/amance, Chatham, Durham, Franklin, Johnston, Nash, Orange, and Wake. William Ruffin Cox, of Raleigh, was born in Scotland Neck, North Carolina; he re-moved to Tennessee, and after due preparation entered Franklin College, near Nashville, where he graduated; subsequently he became a student at the Lebanon Law School, and, after receiving his degree of Bachelor of Laws, practised his profession in Nashville, Tennessee; prior to the war he returned to his native State; engaged in planting in Edgecombe County, and is still occupied in the same pursuit; early in the war he entered the Confederate States Army as Major of the Second North Carolina State Troops; by successive promotions be-came Brigadier-General, and commanded his division in the last charge at Appomattox; after the termination of hostilities, he resumed the practice of the law at Raleigh; was elected So-licitor of the Metropolitan District, and held the office for six years; subsequently he was appointed a Judge of the Superior Court for the same District, and held the office until neai the expiration of his term, when he resigned to canvass for a nomination to Congress; he rs a Trustee of the University of the South; was a Delegate from the State at large to the Na-tional Democratic Convention which met in New York; was similarly delegated to the Saint Louis Democratic Convention, but declined the honor, and was for several years Chairman ot the State Democratic Committee; was elected to the Forty-seventh and to the Forty-eighth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 18,930 votes against 13,448 votes for Turner, Republican. 2D ED 53 Congressional Directory. [NORTH CAROLINA, FIFTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Caswell, Forsyth, Granville, Guilford, Person, Rockingham, Stokes, and Surry. James Wesley Reid, of Wentworth, was born in Wentworth, Rockingham County, North Carolina, June II, 1849; received an academic education; was tutor in Emory and Henry College, Virginia, from which he graduated in 1869 ; studied law, and was admitted to the bar June, 1873; is a lawyer and farmer; was elected County Treasurer of Rockingham County, North Carolina, in August, 1874, and continuously elected to said office until he resigned the same in November, 1884 ; elected to serve out the unexpired term of Governor A. M. Scales, resigned, in the Forty-eighth Congress, at the special election January 15, 1885, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 15,047 votes against 12,522 votes for Edwards, Liberal. SIXTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.Anson, Brunswick, Cabarrus, Columbus, Mecklenburg, New Hanover, Rick- — mond, Robeson, Stanly, and Union. Risden T. Bennett, of Wadesborough, was born in Anson County, North Carolina, June 18, 1840; was educated at Anson Institute; took the degree of Bachelor of Laws at Lebanon Law School, Tennessee, in June, 1859; entered the Confederate Army as a private April 30, 1861, and rose through the several grades to the Colonelcy of the Fourteenth North Carolina Troops; was Solicitor of Anson County in 1866 and 1867; was a Member of the Legislature of North Carolina in 1872, and Delegate to the Constitutional Convention of the State in 1875, serving in each ‘body as Chairman of the Judiciary Committee; was Judge of the Superior Court in 1880, and resigned to accept the nomination for Congress as Congressman at Large from North Carolina; was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 19,344 votes against 14,010 votes for Dockery, Republican. SEVENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.Catawba, Davidson, Davie, Iredell, Montgomery, Randolph, Rowan, and — Yadkin. John Steele Henderson, of Salisbury, was born near Salisbury, Rowan County, North Carolina, January 6, 1846; was prepared for college at Dr. Alexander Wilson’s school, Mel-ville, North Carolina; entered the University of North Carolina in January, 1862, and left in November, 1864, to enter the Confederate Army as a private in Company B, Tenth Regiment North Carolina State Troops; after the war studied law under the late Judge Nathaniel Boy-den, and in January, 1866, entered Judge Pearson’s Law School at Richmond Hill, North Car-olina; obtained County Court License in June, 1866, and Superior Court License in June, 1867; was appointed in June, 1866, Register of Deeds for Rowan County, and resigned that office in September, 1868; was elected in 1871 a Delegate to the proposed Constitutional Convention; declined a nomination in 1872 for a seat in the lower House of the General Assembly; was a member of the State Constitutional Convention in 1875; was a member of the State House of Representatives in 1876, and of the State Senate in 1878; was elected by the General Assem-bly in 1881 one of the three commissioners to codify the statute laws of the State; was elected presiding justice of the Inferior Court of Rowan County in June, 1884; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 14,262 votes against 10,851 votes for James G. Ramsay, Republican. Re-elected. EIGHTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES. —Alexander, Alleghany, Ashe, Burke, Caldwell, Cleveland, Gaston, Lincoln, Watauga, and Wilkes. W. H. H. Cowles, of Wilkesborough, was born at Hamptonville, North Carolina, April 22, 1840; was educated at home, at the common schools and academies of his native county; entered the Confederate service as a private in Captain Crumpler’s company, afterwards Company A of the First North Carolina Cavalry which formed a part of ten regiments of State troops en-listed for the war and for the service of the Confederate States; upon the organization of the company he was made first lieutenant, and served from the spring of 1861 to the close of the war with the Army of Northern Virginia, holding successively the positions of captain, major, and lieutenant-colonel of his regiment; was twice wounded, once through the body at Mine Run, Virginia, in November, 1863, and again severely in the head in the closing battles around Petersburg, March 31,1865; in 1866 entered upon the study of law at “Richmond Hill,” Yadkin County, under the instruction of the Hon. Richmond M. Pearson; obtained a county court license in January, 1867, and that of the superior court in January, 1868 ; removed to Wilkesborough, where he entered upon the practice of his profession; was reading clerk of the Senate of North Carolina in the sessions of 1872-73 and 1873-"74; was elected Solictor ) NORTH CAROLINA. | Senators ard Representatives. of the Tenth Judicial District in 1874 and served for four years; was a member of the Demo-cratic State Executive Committee for eight years; was a candidate for the House of Repre-sentatives of North Carolina in 1882 and was defeated; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 11,422 votes against 8,036 votes for L. L. Greene, Re-publican. Re-elected. i NINTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Buncombe, Cherokee, Clay, Graham, Haywood, Henderson, Jackson, McDowell, Macon, Madison, Mitchell, Polk, Rutherford, Swain, Transylvania, and Yancey. Thomas Dillard Johnston, of Asheville, was born in Waynesville, Haywood County, North Carolina, April 1, 1840; was educated at common schools until 1853, when he was placed under the tuition of Colonel Stephen Lee, near Asheville, and was by him prepared for college; in the winter of 1858-59 entered the sophomore class at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, but left college in-the spring of ’59 on account of failing health ;. studied law with Judge Bailey in 1860; entered the Southern Army in the spring of 1861, and received three desperate wounds at Malvern Hill, from which he came near losing his life, they still causing him suffering; was licensed to practise law in 1866 by the supreme court of North Carolina; was elected mayor of Asheville in 1869—the first Democratic mayor after the war; was elected in 1870 to the Lower House of the Legislature of North Carolina and was desig-nated by the House as one of the managers of the impeachment of Governor W. W. Holden; was a candidate for Democratic elector on the Greeley ticket in 1872; was re-elected to the: State Legisature in 1872, but declined a third election in 1874; was elected to the State Sen-ate from the Buncombe district in’ 1876; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a. Democrat, receiving 13,024 votes against 11,466 votes for H. G. Ewart, Rep. Re-elected. OHIO. SENATORS. John Sherman, of Mansfield, was born at Lancaster, Ohio, May 10, 1823; received am academic education; studied law, and was admitted to the bar May 11, 1844; was a Delegate in the National Whig Conventions of 1848 and 1852, and presided over the first Republican Convention in Ohio in 1855; was a Representative in the Thirty-fourth, Thirty-fifth, Thirty-sixth, and Thirty-seventh Congresses, and was the Republican candidate for Speaker in the winter of 1850-'60; was elected to the Senate in March, 1861, and re-elected in 1866 and: 1372; was appointed Secretary of the Treasury in March, 1877, and served as such during President Hayes’ administration; and was re-elected to the United States Senate as a Repub-lican, to succeed Allen G. Thurman, Democrat, took his seat March 4, 1881, and was re-elected in 1886. His term of service will expire March 3, 1893. Henry B. Payne, of Cleveland, was born in Madison County, New York, November 30; 1810; was educated at Hamilton College; studied law with John C. Spencer in Canandaigua ; was ddmitted to the bar, and commenced practice at Cleveland in 1834 ; after twelve years was compelled to retire, since which time he has been largely interested in manufacturing, railroad, and many other enterprises; was a member of the State Senate of Ohio in 1849-50; was the Democratic candidate for the United States Senatorship in the protracted contest of 1851, and for Governor against Salmon P. Chase in 1857; was chosen a Presidential Elector in 1848; was a Delegate to the National Democratic Convention at Cincinnati in 1856, and to that at Charleston in 1860, (and reported from the minority of the committee the resolutions which were adopted as the platform,) and was the Chairman of the Ohio Delegation in the Baltimore Convention in 1872; was elected to the Forty-fourth Congress, and was Chairman of the House Committee on the Electoral Bill; was a member of the Electoral Commission in 1876; was elected to the United States Senate as a Democrat to succeed George H. Pendleton, Dem-ocrat, and took his seat March 4, 1885. His term of service will expire March 3, 1891. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. Civ of Cincinnati, part of Hamilton County, 1st, 2d, 3d, 4th, 5th, 6th, 7th, Sth, 9th, roth, 11th; and 18th wards; townships of Anderson, Columbia, Spencer, Symmes, and Sycamore, and Avondale and the Northeast, Saint Bernard, and Bond Hill precincts of Mill Creek Township. Benjamin ‘Butterworth, of Cincinnati, was born in Warren County, Ohio, Octoher 22, 1839; is an attorney-at-law; was a member of the State Senate of Ohio from Warren and 68 Congressional Directory. [oHIO. . Butler counties in 1873-74; was elected to the Forty-sixth and Forty-seventh Congresses; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 17,929 votes against 16,320 votes for Follett, Democrat, 88 votes for Chichester, Greenbacker, and 8o votes for Martin, Prohibitionist. Re-elected. SECOND DISTRICT. CITY of Cincinnati, part of Hamilton County, 12th, 13th, 14th, 15th, 16th, 17th, 19th, 20th, 2158, 22d, 23d, 24th, and 25th wards; townships Colerain, Crosby, Delhi, Greene, Harrison, Springfield, and Whitewater, and Clifton, College Hill, Winton Place, and Western precincts of Mill Creek Township. : Charles Elwood Brown, of Cincinnati, was born at Cincinnati, Ohio, of Quaker parentage, July 4, 1834; after two years’ attendance at Greenfield Academy, he entered Miami Univer-sity, at Oxford, Ohio, where he graduated with the class of 1854; he then went South, and while serving as tutor at Baton Rouge read law; in 1859 he returned to Ohio and entered the law practice at Chillicothe; after the war was inaugurated he enlisted as private in Company B, Sixty-third Regiment Ohio Volunteers, and on October 23, 1861, was commissioned a cap-tain; he was promoted to major for meritorious conduct March 20, 1863, and lieutenant-colo-nel May 17,1863; he commanded his regiment in the Atlanta campaign, and on July 22, 1864, in front of Atlanta, lost his left leg; while recovering from his wound he served as pro-vost-marshal of the Eighteenth Ohio District; he was promoted to colonel June 6, 1865, and was subsequently brevetted brigadier-general ¢ for gallant and meritorious conduct in the cam-paign before Atlanta, Ga.;”” he resumed the law practice at Chillicothe, Ohio; in 1872he was commissioned by President Grant United States Pension Agent at Cincinnati, which position he held until President Hayes’ administration; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 19,718 votes against 17,513 votes for Adam A. Kramer, Democrat, 84 votes for Kronauge, Greenbacker, and 37 for Ogden, Prohibitionist. Re-elected. THIRD DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Butler, Clermont, Preble, and Warren. James E. Campbell of Hamilton was born at Middletown, Ohio, July 7, 1843; served in the Navy during the war; was Prosecuting Attorney of Butler County, Ohio, from 1876 to 1880, was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Con-gress as a Democrat, receiving 16,398 votes against 15,986 votes for Morey, Republican, 153 votes for Keister, Prohibitionist, and 67 votes for Coobly, Greenbacker. Re-elected. FOURTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Darke, Miami, Montgomery. Charles M. Anderson, of Greenville, was born in Juniata County, Pennsylvania, January 5, 1845; emigrated to Ohio in 1855; served in the Union Army during the war in one of the Ohio regiments ; has practised law since 1868; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 21,087 votes against 20,786 votes for Sinks, Republican, 44 votes for Polley, Greenbacker, and 229 votes for Legg, Prohibitionist. FIFTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES. —A/len, Auglaize, Hardin, Logan, Mercer, and Shelby. Benjamin Le Fevre, of Maplewood, was born at Maplewood, Shelby County, Ohio, Octo-ber 8, 1838; was educated at the Miami University; studied law at Sidney; is a farmer by occupation; volunteered as a private soldier in the Union Army in 1861, and served until the close of the war; was elected to the Legislature from Shelby County in 1865; was nominated in 1866 for Secretary of State by the Democrats of Ohio; was appointed United States Consul at Nuremberg, Germany, in 1867, by President Andrew Johnson; was elected to the Forty-sixth, Forty-seventh, and Forty-eighth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 21,986 votes against 16,852 votes for Davis, Republican, 254 votes for Watson, Prohibitionist, and 5 votes scattering. SIXTH DISTRICT. i CoOUNTIES.— Defiance, Fulton, Henry, Poulding, Putnam, Van Wert, and Williams. William D. Hill, of Defiance, was born in Nelson County, Virginia, October 1, 1833; was educated in country schools, and was a student at Antioch College two years; studied law at Springfield, Ohio; edited a Democratic paper at Springfield, Ohio, from 1857 to 1860; was admitted to the bar in 1860, and practised law since; was elected Mayor of Springfield, Ohio, in 1861; was a member of the Ohio Legislature in 1866, '67, ’68, and ’69; was defeated as a candidate for Congress in 1870; was appointed Superintendent of Insurance of the State OHIO. | Senators and Represenictives. 69 of Ohio by Governor Allen in 1875, and served three years; was a Delegate to the National Democratic Convention at Cincinnati in 1880; was a member of the Forty-sixth and Forty-eighth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 20,684 votes against 17,154 votes for Glenn, Republican, 77 votes for Hayes, Greenbacker, and 317 votes for Crary, Prohibitionist. SEVENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.Crawford, Hancock, Seneca, Wood, and Wyandot. — George Ebbert Seney, of Tiffin, was born at Uniontown, Fayette County, Pennsylvania, May 29, 1832, and removed with his parents to Tiffin in November, 1832, where he has since resided; was educated at Norwalk, Ohio, Seminary; was admitted to the bar in 1853, and has practised his profession at Tiffin ever since; was a candidate for Presidential Elector on the Buchanan and Breckinridge ticket in 1856; was elected Judge of the Court of Common Pleas of the Third Judicial District in 1857; in July, 1862, enlisted in the 10o1st Ohio Regiment, and subsequently was commissioned a First Lieutenant, and acted as Quartermaster of the Regiment until near the close of the war; was a Delegate to the Democratic National Con-vention at Saint Louis in 1876; was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 20,615 votes against 16,609 votes for Babst, Republican, 170 for Vail, Greenbr., and 428 for Nestlerode, Prohib. Re-elected. EIGHTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Champaign, Clarke, Clinton, Greene, and Fayette. John Little, of Xenia, was born in Greene County, Ohio, in 1837; attended common school and Antioch College, graduating in 1862; was admitted to the bar in 1865; was twice elected prosecuting attorney of Greene County, 1866 and 1868; twice to the House of Representatives of Ohio, 1869 and 1871; and twice attorney-general of Ohio; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 23,019 votes against 15,381 votes for James W. Denver, Democrat, 937 votes for W. Colvin, Prohibitionist, and 33 votes for George Hem-pleman, Greenbacker. NINTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Delaware, Knox, Madison, Marion, Morrow, and Union. William C. Cooper, of Mount Vernon, was born at Mount Vernon, Ohio, December 18, 1832; was educated in the public schools and at the Mount Vernon Academy; is an attorney at law; was prosecuting attorney Jaruary, 1850-1863; was mayor of the city of Mount Vernon April, 1862—April, 1864; was a member of the General Assembly of the State of Ohio, Janu-ary, 1872—January, 1874; was judge-advocate-general of the State of Ohio January, 1879— January, 1884; has held since April, 1881, the office of member of the Board of Education of the city of Mount Vernon and has been President of that Board since April, 1882; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 18,415 votes against 16,634. votes for E. F. Poppleton, Democrat, 930 votes for J. W. Sharp, Prohibitionist, and 42 votes for L. Graham, Greenbacker. Re-elected. TENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Z7ie, Lucas, Ottawa, and Sandusky. Jacob Romeis, of Toledo, was born in Weisenbach, Kingdom of Bavaria, in Germany, December 1, 1835; attended the village schools until April, 1847, when he came with his parents to America, and attended the public and select schools of Buffalo, New York, until 1850; has been engaged in shipping business and railroading since 1856; was elected to the Board of Aldermen in the city of Toledo in 1874, re-elected in 1876, and was President of the Board in 1877; was elected Mayor of Toledo in 1879, re-elected in 1881, and again in 1883; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 17,605 votes against 17,366 votes for Frank H. Hurd, Democrat, 208 votes for Rawle, Prohibitionist, and votes scattering. Re-elected. ELEVENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Adams, Brown, Highland, and Ross. William W. Ellsberry, of Georgetown, was born at New Hope, Brown County, Ohio, De-cember 18, 1833; received a good education in the public schools of his native county, finish- \ 70 Congressional Directory. [oHIO. ing at a private academy in Clermont County; after having taught school two years, he began the study of medicine with his father, Dr. E. M. Elsberry, a noted physican of his time; he attended medical lectures at the Cincinnati College of Medicine and Surgery, graduating there, and some years later he attended a full course at the Ohio Medical College, adding its diploma to the former; he continued in the successful practice of his profession until his election to Congress; he was appointed Superintendent of the Central Insane Asylum at Columbus in 1878, but declined to serve; he has been chosen three times County Auditor; at the outbreak of the war he was one of the County Military Board; he is a member of various medical socie-ties, including the American Medical Association; he has always been a Democrat, and was a Delegate to the National Convention which nominated Hancock in 1880; and he was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 15,251 votes against 14,841 votes for Hart, Republican, and 1 vote scattering. TWELFTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Jackson, Lawrence, Pike, Scioto, and Vinton. Albert Clifton Thompson, of Portsmouth, was born at Brookville, Jefferson County, Penn-sylvania, January 23, 1842; was educated in the common schools of his native town, and at Jefferson College, Cannonsburgh, Pennsylvania; studied law, was admitted to the bar Decem-ber 13, 1864, and has since practised; was elected Probate Judge of Scioto County, Ohio, in October, 1869; was elected Common Pleas Judge of the Seventh Judicial District of Ohio in October, 1881; served in the Union Army as Second Lieutenant of Company B, One hundred and fifth Pennsylvania Volunteers;* was promoted to Captain of Company K, in the same regiment, November 28, 1861, and served until March 23, 1863, when he was discharged for wounds received in battle; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 15,782 votes against 13,384 votes for Elbert, Democrat, 35 votes for Dodge, Green-backer, and 117 votes for Collins, Prohibitionist, and 1 vote scattering. Re-elected. THIRTEENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Fairfield, Franklin, Hocking, and Pickaway. Joseph H. Outhwaite, of Columbus, was born in Cleveland, Ohio, December 5, 1841, was educated in the public schools of Zanesville, Ohio, taught two years in the High School of that city, and was principal of a grammar school in Columbus, Ohio, three years; read law while teaching, and was admitted to the bar in 1866; practised law from 1867 to 1871 at Osceola, Missouri; was elected prosecuting attorney of Franklin County, Ohio, in 1874, and again in 1876; was appointed one of the trustees of the County Children’s Home from March, 1879, until July, 1883, and one of the trustees of the sinking fund of the city of Columbus in 1883, and reappointed in 1884 for a term of five years; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 23,475 votes against 18,607 votes for Allen Miller, Repub-lican, 210 votes for J. B. Williams, Greenbacker, 209 votes for W. A. Dobyns, Prohibitionist, and 5 votes for G. W. Hurst. FOURTEENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Athens, Gallia, Meigs, Morgan, and Perry. Charles Henry Grosvenor, of Athens, was born at Pomfret, Windham County, Connecti-cut, September 20, 1833; his grandfather was Colonel Thomas Grosvenor, of the Second Con-necticut Regiment in the Revolution, and his father was Major Peter Grosvenor, who served in the Tenth Connecticut Regiment in the war of 1812; his father carried him from Connect-icut to Ohio in May, 1838, but there was no school-house near where he settled until he was fourteen years old, when he attended a few terms in a country log school-house in Athens County, Ohio; studied law, was admitted to the bar in 1857, and has been the chairman of the executive committee of the Ohio State Bar Association from its organization; served in the Union army, in the Eighteenth Ohio Volunteers, from July, 1861, to November, 1865; was Major, Iieutenant-Colonel, and Brevet Brigadier-General of Volunteers, commanding a brigade at the battle of Nashville in December, 1864 ; has held divers township and village offices; was a member of the State House of Representatives of Ohio, 1874-1878, serving as Speaker of the House two years; was Presidential Elector for the Fifteenth District of Ohio in 1872, and was chosen to carry the electoral vote of the State to Washington ; was Presidential Elector at Large in 1880; has been a member of the Board of Trustees of the Ohio Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Orphans’ Home, at Xenia, from April, 1880, until now, and President of the Board for three years; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 17,008 votes against 11,281 votes for John L. Vance, Democrat, 1,689 votes for Christopher Evans, Greenbacker, and 386 votes for Thomas Peden, Prohibitionist. Re-elected. OHIO. | Senators and Representatives. 71 FIFTEENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Coshocton, Licking, Muskingum, and Tuscarawas. Beriah Wilkins, of Urichsville, was born in Union County, Ohio, July 10, 1846; nie a common-school education in the public schools at Marysville, Ohio; is a banker; was elected in 1879 to represent the Eighteenth Senatorial District in the Ohio Senate; was a member of the Democratic State Central Committee in 1882; was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress; and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 20,717 votes against 17,421 votes for Elijah C. Little, Republican, 122 votes for Shryock, Prohibitionist, and 2 votes for Sharp, Greenbacker. Re-elected. SIXTEENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Ashland, Holmes, Huron, Lorain, and Rickland. George W. Geddes, of Mansfield, was born at Mount Vernon, Ohio, July 16, 1824, received a common-school education; studied law in the office of Hon. Columbus Delano, and was admitted to the bar in July, 1845, and has been continuously engaged in the business of the profession since; was elected Judge of the Court of Common Pleas of the Sixth Judicial District in 1856, and re-elected without opposition in 1861; after serving ten years on the bench he returned to the practice until 1868, when he was again elected Judge of the same court for five years, at the expiration of which time he again returned to the practice; was the Democratic candidate for Supreme Judge in 1871; was elected to the Forty-sixth, Forty-seventh, and Forty-eighth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 18,528 votes against 17,835 votes for Hedges, Republican, and 660 votes tor Noel, Prohibitionist. SEVENTEENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Belmont, Guernsey, Monroe, Noble, and Washington. A. J. Warner, of Marietta, was born in Erie County, New York, January 13, 1834, was educated at Beloit, Wisconsin, and New York Central College, New York; was Principal of the Lewistown Academy, and Superintendent of Public Schools of Mifflin County, and Prin-cipal of Mercer Union Schools, Pennsylvania, from 1856 to 1861; entered the Army as Cap-tain in a Pennsylvania Regiment in 1861, was promoted to Lieutenant-Colonel and Colonel, and brevetted Brigadier-General; served through the war, participating in various battles, and was severely wounded at Antietam; studied law, and was admitted to the bar in 1865, but en-gaged in other business; was elected to the Forty-sixth and Forty-eighth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 19,173 votes against 18,947 votes for Taylor, Republican, 91 votes for Sigman, Greenbacker, and 214 votes for McElhany, Prohibitionist. EIGHTEENTH DISTRICT. CoUNTIES.— Carroll, Columbiana, Harrison, Jefferson, and Mahoning. Isaac Hamilton Taylor, of Carrollton, was born near New Harrisburg, Carroll County, Ohio, April 18, 1840; received a common-school and academic education; studied law and is by profession a lawyer; was Clerk of Courts in Carroll County, Ohio, from January, 1870, until February, 1877; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 22,459 votes against 16,309 votes for Jonathan H. Wallace, Democrat, 9og votes for C. Jenkins, Greenbacker, and 106 votes for A. R. Silver, Prohibitionist. NINETEENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Ashtabula, part of Cuyahoga, Geauga, Lake, Portage, and Trumbull. * Ezra B. Taylor, of Warren, was born at Nelson, Portage County, Ohio, July 9, 1823; was the son of a farmer and worked on the farm, having the advantages of neighborhood com-mon schools till he was seventeen years old, when he attended select schools and academies for three years; at the age of twenty commenced reading law with Judge Paine, now of Cleve-land, then residing in Portage County; in August, 1845, commenced the practice of law in his native county; in 1854 was elected Prosecuting Attorney, and at the expiration of his term was tendered a unanimous renomination, which he declined ; in 1861 he removed to Warren, Trumbull County, Ohio, where he still resides; in March, 1877, was appointed by Governor Young Common Pleas Judge for the Ninth Judicial District, consisting of the nine northeastern counties of the State, to fill a vacancy caused by the death of Judge F. G. Servis; was elected in October, 1877, for a full term; on his nomination as candidate for the Forty-seventh Con-gress he resigned his position on the bench, September 5, 1880, and was elected in the follow -ing October by a majority of 12,678 votes over Mr. Adams, his Democratic opponent, who | | | 72 : Congressional Directory. : [oHIO. lp—— received about 10,000 votes; General Garfield, having been elected President, resigned his membership of the Forty-sixth Congress-on the 8th day of November, 1880, and Mr. Taylor was, on the 3oth day of November of the same year, elected to fill the vacancy so caused; was elected to the Forty-seventh and Forty-eighth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 27,039 votes against 13,053 votes for Alvord, Democrat, 1,002 votes for Odell, Prohibitionist, 467 votes for Brooks, Greenbacker, and 24 votes scattering. Re-elected. TWENTIETH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Medina, Stark, Summit, and Wayne. ~~ William McKinley, Jr., of Canton, was born at Niles, Ohio, February 26, 1844; en-listed in the United States Army in May, 1861, as a private soldier in the Twenty-third Ohio Volunteer Infantry, and was mustered out as Captain of the same regiment and Brevet Major in September, 1865 ; was Prosecuting Attorney of Stark County, Ohio, 1869-71; was elected to the Forty-fifth, Forty-sixth, Forty-seventh, and Forty-Eighth Congresses, receiving the cer-tificate of election to the latter, but late in the first session his opponent was given the seat by the House; and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 22,672 votes against 20,643 votes for David R. Paige, Democrat, 412 votes for Thomas Rhodes, Pro-hibitionist, and 242 votes for H. P. Smith, Greenbacker. Re-elected. TWENTY-FIRST DISTRICT. I CouNTY.— Part of Cuyahoga. i . Martin Ambrose Foran, of Cleveland, was born at Choconut, Susquehanna County, Pennsylvania, November 11, 1844; received a public-school and collegiate education; spent two terms in Saint Joseph’s College, Susquehanna, Pennsylvania; taught school three years; served in the Fourth Pennsylvania Cavalry from April, 1864, to July, 1865, as private; is a cooper by trade; was a member of the Constitutional Convention of Ohio, 1873; is a lawyer by profession, having been admitted, 1874, in the District Court of Cincinnati; was Prosecut-ing ‘Attorney for city of Cleveland from April, 1875, to April, 1877; was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 19,154 votes against 17,884 votes: for C. C. Burnett, Republican, 239 votes for A. Teachout, Prohi bitionist, and 3 votes scattering. Re-elected. i} 1 i i il fit A = ib! § OREGON. 4 SENATORS. ; A Joseph N. Dolph, of Portland, was born at what was then called Dolphsburg, in Tompkins (now Schuyler) County, New York, October 19, 1835; received a common-school education, private instruction, and for a time attended the Genesee Wesleyan Seminaryat Lima, New York; after arriving at the age of eighteen years, taughtschool a portion of each year while acquiring an education and his profession; studied law with Hon. Jeremiah McGuire at Havana, New York, and was admitted to the bar at the General Term of the Supreme Court of that State held at Binghamton, November, 1861; practised his profession in Schuyler County, New York, during the winter of 1861-62; in 1862 enlisted in Captain M. Crawford’s company, known as the Oregon Escort, raised under an act of Congress for the purpose of protecting the emi-gration of that year to the Pacific Coast against hostile Indians crossing the Plains, filling the position of Orderly Sergeant; settled in Portland, Oregon, in October, 1862, where he has since resided; in 1864 he was elected City Attorney of the City of Portland, and the same year was appointed by President Lincoln District Attorney for the District of Oregon, and held both positions until he resigned them to take his seat in the State Senate of Oregon; was a member of the State Senate in 1866, ’68, ’72, and ’74; has been actively engaged since his removal to Oregon in the practice of his profession, and at the time of his election had a large and lucra-tive law practice, and was actively engaged in various business enterprises; he was elected to the United States Senate as a Republican to succeed L. F. Grover, Democrat, and took his seat March 3, 1883. His term of service will expire March 3, 1889. . ~ John H. Mitchell, of Portland, was born in Washington County, Pennsylvania, June 22, 1835; received a public-school education and the instruction of a private tutor; studied and practised law; removed to California and practised law, first in San Luis Obispo, and then in San Francisco; removed to Portland, Oregon, in 1860, and there continuedhis profession; was elected Corporation Attorney of Portland in 1861, and served one year; was elected as a Republican to the State Senate in 1862, and served four years, the last two as President of that OREGON. | Senators and Representatives. 73 body; was commissioned by the Governor of Oregon in 1865 Lieutenant-Colonel in the State militia; was a candidate for United States Senator in 1866, and was defeated in the party caucus by one vote; was chosen Professor of Medical Jurisprudence in Willamette University, at Salem, Oregon, in 1867, and served in that position nearly four years; was elected to the United States Senate and served from March 4, 1873, to March 3, 1879; was again elected to the United States Senate as a Republican, to succeed James H. Slater, Democrat, and took his seat December 17, 1885. His term of service will expire March 3, 1891. REPRESENTATIVE. AT LARGE. Binger Hermann, of Roseburg, was born at Lonaconing, Alleghany County, Maryland, February 19, 1843; was educated in the rural schools of Western Maryland and at the Inde-pendent Academy, (afterwards Irving College,) near Baltimore City; removed to Oregon, taught country schools, studied law, was admitted to the supreme court of Oregon in 1866, and has practised law continuously since then; represented Douglas County in the Lower House of the Oregon Legislature in 1866, and was State Senator for Douglas, Coos, and Curry Coun-ties in 1868; was deputy collector of United States internal revenue for Southern Oregon 1868-1871; was receiver of public moneys at the United States Land Office at Roseburg, Ore-gon, under appointment by President Grant, 1871-1873; was largely interested in shipping and lumber manufacturing on the Southern Oregon coast and rivers; was judge-advocate with the rank of colonel in the Oregon State Militia, 1882—1884; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 25,699 votes against 23,652 votes for John Myers, Democrat. Re-elected. . PENNSYLVANIA. SENATORS. James Donald Cameron, of Harrisburg, was born at Middletown, Dauphin County, Pennsylvania, in 1833; graduated at Princeton College in 1852; entered the Middletown Bank, now the National Bank of Middletown, as clerk, became its cashier, and afterwards its president, which position he now fills; was President of the Northern Central Railway Company of Pennsylvania from 1863 until 1874, when the road passed under the control of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company; was Secretary of War under President Grant from May 22,1876,to March 3, 1877; was a Delegate to the National Republican Convention at Chicago in 1868, and at Cincinnati in 1876; was Chairman of the Republican National Committee and a Delegate to the Republican National Convention at Chicago in 1880; was elected a United States Senator from Pennsylvania, as a Republican, to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of his father, Hon. Simon Cameron, in March, 1877, and took his seat October 15, 1877; was re-elected in 1879; and was again re-elected a United States Senator in 1885. His term of service will expire March 3, 1891. John I. Mitchell, of Wellsboro’, was born in Tioga County, Pennsylvania, July 28, 1838; spent his boyhood upon his father’s farm; received a common-school education and private instruction, and passed some time at the University of Lewisburg, Pennsylvania, (1857-'59,) but did not graduate; taught school; served in the Union Army as a Lieutenant and Captain in the One hundred and thirty-sixth Pennsylvania Volunteers; was admitted to the bar in 1864, and has since practised law; was elected District Attorney of his native county in 1868, serving three years; edited ¢“ The Tioga County Agitator’ during the year 1870; was a mem-ber of the State House of Representatives five years, from 1872 to 1876 inclusive, and served as Chairman of the Judiciary and Ways and Means Committees; was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-sixth Congress; was elected to the United States Senate as a Republican, to succeed William A. Wallace, Democrat, and took his seat March 4, 1881. His term of service will expire March 3, 1887. REPRESENTATIVES. ; @ AT LARGE. Edwin S. Osborne, of Wilkes-Barre, was born at Bethany, Pennsylvania, August 7, 1839; was educated at the University of Northern Pennsylvania and at the New York State and National Law School, graduating in the class of 1860 with the degree of LL. B.; is by pro- 74 Congressional Directory. [ PENNSYLVANIA. fession a lawyer, and has never held any civil office; served in the Union Army during the war; has held the rank of major-general, and was commander of the Department of Pennsyl-vania, Grand Army of the Republic, in 1883; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 476,240 votes against 401,042 votes for W. H. H. Davis, Democrat, 9,684 votes for Atwood, Greenbacker, and 10,471 votes for Black, Prohibitionist. The vote of Gen-eral Osborne was the largest ever cast for any candidate in Pennsylvania, and exceeded Blaine’s | 2,536. Re-elected. FIRST DISTRICT. CITY OF PHILADELPHIA.—7st, 2d, 7th, 26th, and 30th wards. Henry H. Bingham, of Philadelphia, was born at Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, in 1841; was graduated at Jefferson College in 1862; studied law; entered the Union Army as a Lieu tenant in the One hundred and fortieth Pennsylvania Volunteers; was wounded at Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, in 1863, Spottsylvania, Virginia, in 1864, and at Farmville, Virginia, in 1865; mustered out of service July, 1866, as Brevet Brigadier-General of Volunteers; was appointed Postmaster of Philadelphia in March, 1867, and resigned November, 1872, to accept the Clerkship of the Courts of Oyer and Terminer and Quarter Sessions of the Peace at Philadel-phia, having been elected by the people; was re-elected Clerk of Courts in 1875; was Dele-gate at Large to the Republican National Convention at Philadelphia in 1872, also Delegate from the First Congressional District to the Republican National Convention at Cincinnati in 1876 and Chicago in 1884; was elected to the Forty-sixth, Forty-seventh, and Forty-eighth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 20,227 votes against 13,403 votes for Tipton, Democrat, and 2 votes scattering. Re-elected. SECOND DISTRICT. CITY OF PHILADELPHIA.—8?%%, 9th, 10th, 13th, 14th, and 20th wards, and that part of the 17th ward lying west of Second street. Charles O’Neill, of Philadelphia, was born in Philadelphia, March 21, 1821; graduated at Dickinson College in 1840; studied and practised law; was a member of the House of Rep-resentatives of Pennsylvania in 1850, ’51, ’52, and 60: was a member of the State Senate of Pennsylvania in 1853; was elected to the Thirty-eighth, Thirty-ninth, Fortieth, Forty-first, Forty-third, Forty-fourth, Forty-fifth, Forty-sixth; Forty-seventh, and Forty-eighth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 18,336 votes against 11,952 votes for B. F. Dotts, Democrat, 22 votes for Cotton, Greenbacker, and 38 votes scattering. Re-elected. THIRD DISTRICT. CITY OF PHILADELPHIA.—3d, 4t%, 5th, Oth, 11th, 12th, and 16th wards. 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 ’59; was elected to the Thirty-eighth, Thirty-ninth, Fortieth, Forty-first, Forty-second, Forty-third, Forty-fourth, Forty-fifth, Forty-sixth, Forty-seventh, and Forty-eighth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving I 2,340 votes against 9,033 votes for Gumper, Republican, and 2 votes scattering. He was elected Speaker of the House for the last session of the Forty-fourth, Forty-fifth, and Forty-sixth Congresses. Re-elected. FOURTH DISTRICT. CITY OF PHILADELPHIA.—75¢%, 21st, 24t%, 27th, 28th, and 29th wards. William D. Kelley, of Philadelphia, was born at Philadelphia, April 12, 1814; received a thorough English education; was reader in a printing-office, and afterward an apprentice in bf a jewellery establishment; removed to Boston, where he worked five years as a journeyman jeweller; returned to Philadelphia, where he studied and practised law, devoting himself also to literary pursuits; was twice Prosecuting Attorney for the city and county of Philadelphia, and for ten years Judge of the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia; was a Delegate to the National Republican Convention at Chicago in 1860; was elected to the Thirty-seventh, Thirty-eighth, Thirty-ninth, Fortieth, Forty-first, Forty-second, Forty-third, Forty-fourth, Forty-fifth, Forty-sixth, Forty-seventh, and Forty-eighth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 27,421 votes against 15,817 votes for Fahy, Democrat, and 94 votes for Lieter, Prohibitionist. Mr. Kelley is the senior member of the House in continuous service. Re-elected. > PENNSYLVANIA. | Senators and Representatives. 75 FIFTH DISTRICT. CITY OF — 182%, 19th, 22d, 23d, and 25th wards, and that part of the PHILADELPHIA. ryth ward lying east of Second street. Alfred C. Harmer, of Philadelphia, was born in Germantown, (now part of the city of Philadelphia,) Pennsylvania,; was educated at public schools and at Germantown Academy; was engaged in mercantile pursuits; is identified with railroad enterprises, and is largely en-gaged in mining and land operations; was elected a member of the City Councils of Philadel-phia in 1856 and served four years; was elected Recorder of Deeds for Philadelphia in 1860, and served three years; was elected to the Forty-second, Forty-third, Forty-fifth, Forty-sixth, Forty-seventh, and Forty-eighth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 26,618 votes with no opposing candidate. Re-elected. SIXTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Chester and Delaware. James Bowen Everhart, of West Chester, was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 18,593 votes against 11,551 votes for Heckel, Democrat, 607 votes for Passmore, Prohibitionist, and 7 votes scat-tering. SEVENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Montgomery, and all that part of Bucks not included in the Tenth District. I. Newton Evans, of Hatboro, was born in East Nantmeal Township, Chester County, July 29, 1827; received an academic education; studied medicine; graduated in the Medical Department of Bowdoin College of Maine in 1851, and the Jefferson Medical College of Philadelphia in 1852; has followed his profession since that time to the present in Bucks and Montgomery Counties; is a member of the Pennsylvania State Medical Society and the American Medical Association; is President of the Hatboro National Bank; was elected to the Forty-fifth and to the Forty-eighth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Con-gress as a Republican, receiving 18,048 votes against 16,425 votes for Ross, Democrat, and 4 votes scattering. EIGHTH DISTRICT. COUNTY.—Berks. Daniel Ermentrout, of Reading, was born at Reading, Pennsylvania, January 24, 1837, and has continued to reside there ever since; was educated in the public and classical schools of his native city, Franklin and Marshall College, Lancaster, and Elmwood Institute, Norris-town, Pennsylvania; studied law and was admitted to practice in August, 1859; was elected District Attorney for three years in 1862; was Solicitor for the city of Reading 1867-70; was elected to the State Senate of Pennsylvania in 1873 for a term of three years, and re-elected in 1876 for four years; was a member of the Board of School Control of Reading for many years; was appointed in October, 1877, by Governor Hartranft, a member of the Penn-sylvania Statuary Commission; was several times chosen Chairman of the Standing Committee of Berks County, and Delegate to.various Democratic State Conventions; was a Delegate to the National Democratic Convention held at Cincinnati in 1880; was elected to the Forty-seventh and Forty-eighth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 16,577 votes against 9,403 votes for Richards, Republican. Re-elected. ‘NINTH DISTRICT. CoOUNTY.— Lancaster. John A. Hiestand, of Lancaster, was born in East Donegal Township, Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, October 2, 1824; was raised on a farm; attended the common schools and acad-emies of the neighborhood and Pennsylvania College at Gettysburg; studied law with the late Judge Champneys, was admitted to the Lancaster bar in 1849; was elected to the State House of Representatives of Pennsylvania as a Whig in 1852, 1853, and 1856; he purchased in Octo-: ber, 1858, an interest in the Lancaster Examiner newspaper and printing establishment, with which he has since been continuously connected, relinquishing the practice of law; was nom-inated to the State Senate in 1860 by the Republican party and elected for a term of three years; was a District Lincoln and Johnson elector in 1864, and was appointed by the Electoral College the messenger to carry the vote to Washington; was appointed by President Grant, in 1871, Naval Officer at the Port of Philadelphia, and reappointed by him in 1875, serving eight years; was nominated for Congress at a Republican primary election by a popular vote in April, 1884, receiving 9,547 votes against 6,767 votes cast for the Hon. A. Herr Smith, and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 19,676 votes against 9,959 votes for P. Haldeman, Democrat, 426 votes for B. Spangler, Prohibitionist, and 2 votes scat- tering. Re-elected. | 76 ; Congressional Directory. [PENNSYLVANIA. TENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Lehigh and Northampton, and the townships of Bridgeton, Durham, Eas? Rockhill, Haycock, Milford, Nockamixon, Richland, Springfield, Tinicum, and West Rockhill, and the boroughs of Quakertown and Sellersville, in the county of Bucks. W. H. Sowden, of Allentown, was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 20,797 votes against 14,349 votes for Chidsey, Republican, and 2 votes scattering. Re-elected. : ELEVENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Carbon, Columbia, Montour, Monroe, Pike, and the townships or INescopeck, Black Creek, Sugar Loaf, Butler, Hazle, Foster, Bear Creek, Bucks, Salem, Hollenback, Hun-tingdon, Fairmount, and the boroughs of New Columbus, White Haven, Jeddo, and Hazleton, in Luzerne County, and the townships of Roaring Brook, Lehigh, Spring Brook, that part of the city of Scranton south of Roaring Brook Creek and east of Lackawanna River, and the boroughs of Dunmore and Gouldsborough, in Lackawanna County. John B. Storm, of Stroudsburg, was born in Monroe County, Pennsylvania, in 1838; graduated at Dickinson College in 1861; studied law, and was admitted to the bar in 1863; was County Superintendent of Public Schools for seven years; was elected to the Forty-second, Forty-third, and Forty-eighth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 19,394 votes against 12,622 votes for T. F. Walter, Republican, 117 votes for Robinson, Prohibitionist, and 38 votes scattering. TWELFTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—AU those portions of Luzerne and Lackawanna Counties not included in the Eleventh District. Joseph A. Scranton, of Scranton, was born at Madison, Connecticut, July 26, 1838; removed to Pennsylvania in 1847; received an academic education; was Collector of Internal Revenue, 1862-266; was Postmaster at Scranton, 1874~'81; was Delegate to the Republican National Convention at Philadelphia in 1872; founded the ¢ Scranton Daily Republican” in 1867, and has since maintained its sole ownership and control; was a member of the Forty-seventh Con-gress, and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 17,016 votes against 15,179 votes for D. W. Connolly, Democrat, and 1,001 votes for E. D. Nichols, Prohibition candidate. THIRTEENTH DISTRICT. COUNTY.— Schuylkill. Charles N. Brumm, of Minersville, was born at Pottsville, Pennsylvania, June 9, 1838; received a common-school education with the exception of one year at the Pennsylvania College, Gettysburg, Pennsylvania; served an apprenticeship at the trade of watchmaker; studied law two years in the office of the late Howell Fisher, esq.; left studies and enlisted as a private under the first call of President Lincoln for three-months men; was elected as First Lieutenant Company I, Fifth Pennsylvania Volunteers; after expiration of term re-enlisted i September 15, 1861, for three years, and was elected First Lieutenant of Company K, Seventy-sixth Pennsylvania Volunteers, November 18, 1861; was detailed on the staff of General Barton as Assistant Quartermaster and Aide-de-camp, which position he held under Generals Barton and Pennypacker until the expiration of his term of service; resumed the study of law under the late E. O. Parry, and was admitted to the bar in 1871; has since practised the pro-fession of law at the Schuylkill County bar; was elected to Congress in 1878 to represent the Thirteenth District of Pennsylvania, but was counted out by 192 votes; was elected to the Forty-seventh and Forty-eighth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican and Greenbacker, receiving 12,587 votes against 11,677 votes for Reilly, Dem-ocrat, Re-elected. FOURTEENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Dauphin, Lebanon, and Northumberland. FranklinBound, of Milton, was born in Milton, Northumberland County, Pennsylvania, n 1829; was educated in the common schools and at the old Milton Academy ; taught a public school long enough to acquire means to attend the Law School at Easton, Pennsylvania, then under the management of Judge McCartney and Hon. Henry Green, now of the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania; was admitted to the bar in 1853 at Easton, and then settled down to the practice of his profession in his native town, where he has resided ever since; was elected to the Senate of Pennsylvania in 1860 as a Republican from one of the strongest Democratic districts served three years, but declined a re-nomination; was a delegate to the State Conven- PENNSYLVANIA. | Senators and Representatives. 77 ion that re-nominated Andrew G. Curtin for governor,and was a delegate to the National Convention at Chicago that nominated Grant and Colfax; served as a private in one of the emergency regiments called for the defence of the State; was mustered into the United States service and discharged with his regiment; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 20,767 votes against 15,256 votes for William Foster, Democrat, and 3 votes for Wolverton. Re-elected. FIFTEENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Bradford, Susquehanna, Wayne, and Wyoming. Frank C. Bunnell, of Tunkhannock, was born in Washington Township, Luzerne County, Pennsylvania, March 19, 1842; received an academic education; left Wyoming Seminary to enlist as private in Company B, Fifty-second Pennsylvania Volunteers, in September, 1861 ; was promoted and served as quartermaster-sergeant of his regiment during the Peninsular campaign under General McClellan; was discharged April 2,1863,0n a surgeon’s certificate of disability ; engaged in mercantile pursuits 1864-1869, and has since been principally engaged in farming and banking; was elected to the Forty-second Congress in 1872 to serve out the unexpired term of Hon. Ulysses Mercur, resigned ; was a member of the Board of Education 1882-1885 ; was appointed by Governor Hoyt a member of the Bi-centennial Association of Pennsylvania in 1882; was elected Burgess and Borough Treasurer of Tunkhannock in 1884, and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 17,906 votes against 12,979 votes for G. A. Post, Democrat, 1,275 votes for R. T. Dodson, Prohibitionist, and 276 votes for C. Decker, Labor-reformer. Re-elected. SIXTEENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Camemdn, Lycoming, McKean, Potter, Sullivan, and Tioga. William Wallace Brown, of Bradford, was born at Summerhill, Cayuga County, New York, April 22, 1836; was educated at Alfred College, Allegany County, New York; studied law; was admitted to the bar and has since practised; enlisted May 16, 1861, in the Twenty-third New York Volunteers for two years; was transferred to the First Pennsylvania Rifles December 18, 1861, serving his term of enlistment in the ranks; was Aide-de-camp to Gov-ernor Hartranft, with the rank of Colonel; was elected Recorder of McKean County in 1864; was District Attorney in 1867; was a member of the Legislature of Pennsylvania from Erie County, 1872-1876; was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 19,400 votes against 16,440 votes for Kennedy, Democrat, 557 votes for John Brown, Prohibitionist, and 30 votes scattering. SEVENTEENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Bedford, Blair, Cambria, and Somerset. Jacob Miller Campbell, of Johnstown, was born in Allegheny township, Somerset County, Pennsylvania, November 20, 1821; received a common-school education; learned the art of printing in the office of ‘The Somerset Whig”; from 1841 to 1847 was engaged in steam-boating on the Lower Mississippi River and its tributaries; in 1850 was gold-mining in Cali-fornia; in 1853 aided in building the Cambria Iron Works, at Johnstown, Pennsylvania, and remained in the employ of that company until the commencement of the war of the rebellion in 1861; in April, 1861, entered the military service as First Lieutenant of Company G, Third Pennsylvania Volunteers; in the fall of the same year recruited the Fifty-fourth Regiment, three-years volunteers, and commanded it as Colonel; was brevetted Brigadier-General June 5, 1864; was elected Surveyor-General (now called Secretary of Internal Affairs) of Pennsyl-vania in 1865 for a term of three years, and was re-elected in 1868 for a like term; was a Delegate to the first Republican National Convention, held in Philadelphia in 1856; is a Trustee of the Pennsylvania State College; was a member of the Forty-fifth Congress; was elected to the Forty-seventh and to the Forty-eighth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 19,569 votes against 16,005 votes for Americus Enfield, Democrat, and 491 votes scattering. EIGHTEENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Franklin, Fullon, Huntingdon, Juniata, Perry, and Snyder. Louis E. Atkinson, of Mifflintown, was born in Delaware Township, Juniata County, Pennsylvania, April 16, 1841; was educated in the common schools, and at Airy View and Milnwood Academies; studied medicine, and graduated at the Medical Department of the {Jniversity of the City of New York March 4, 1861; entered the Medical Department, 78 Congressional Directory. [ PENNSYLVANIA. United States Army, September 5, 1861; served as Assistant Surgeon of the First Pennsyl-vania Reserve Cavalry and Surgeon of the One hundred and eighty-eighth Pennsylvania In-fantry, and was mustered out in December, 1865; was disabled while in the Army; and, being unable to practise medicine, studied law; was admitted to the bar in September, 1870, and has practised law since that time; was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 18,367 votes against 15,277 votes for Alfred J. Patterson, Democrat, and 2 votes scattering. Re-elected. NINETEENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Adams, Cumberland, and York. John A. Swope, of Gettysburg, was born at Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, December 25, 1827; graduated at Princeton College in 1847; studied medicine, but relinquished the practice of it after a few years in order to engage in financial and mercantile pursuits; became Presi-dent of the Gettysburg National Bank in 1879, and still remains its President; is also engaged in manufacturing and agricultural pursuits; was elected to fill the unexpired term of Hon. William A. Duncan for the Forty-eighth Congress, serving two months in that Congress; was re-elected, at a special election, to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 16,063 votes against 12,400 for John Bair, Republican. TWENTIETH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Centre, Clearfield, Clinton, Elk, Mifilin, and Union. Andrew G. Curtin, of Bellefonte, was born at Bellefonte, Pennsylvania, in 1817; was educated for and practised law; was Secretary of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, and Superintendent of Public Instruction; was Governor of Pennsylvania; was Minister to Russia; was a member of the Constitutional Convention of Pennsylvania; was elected to the Forty-seventh and Forty-eighth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 17,656 votes against 16,419 votes for Patton, Republican, 139 votes for Rynder, 140 votes for Hall, and 11 votes scattering. TWENTY-FIRST DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Fayette, Greene, and Westmoreland. Charles E. Boyle, of Uniontown, was born at Uniontown, Fayette County, Pennsylvania, February 4, 1836; his early education was had in the schools of that town and at Waynes-burg College, in Waynesburg, Greene County, Pennsylvania; he studied law, was admitted to the bar in December, 1861, and has since continuously practised the profession; in 1862 he was elected District Attorney for Fayette County and held that office for three years; before the expiration of his term, in 1865, he was elected to the Pennsylvania Legislature, and was re-elected in 1866, serving two years; the last year of his service he was a member of the Committee of Ways and Means, and also of the General Judiciary; was President of the Demo-cratic State Convention in 1867, and again in 1871; in 1868 he was nominated as the Demo-cratic candidate for Auditor-General of Pennsylvania, but failed of election by a small majority against him; was a Delegate to the Saint Louis National Democratic Convention of 1876,and to the Cincinnati National Democratic Convention of 1880; has been one of the State Man-agers of the Western Pennsylvania Hospital, (Dixmont,) by appointment of the Governor, for six or seven years past; was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 19,500 votes against 17,006 votes for Ray, Re-publican, 305 votes for Porter, and 140 votes for Gill. TWENTY-SECOND DISTRICT. CITY OF PITTSBURGH.—Zight boroughs and fourteen townships of Allegheny County, south of the Allegheny and of the Monongahela Rivers. James S. Negley, of Pittsburgh, was born in Allegheny County, Pennsylvania, December 22, 1826; was educated at the Western University; served in the Mexican War, in the Du-quesne Grays, First Pennsylvania Volunteers ; entered the Union Army as Brigadier-General April 19, 1861; commanded a division in Patterson’s command, three months’ service ; took part in the battle of Falling Waters; organized and equipped a brigade of infantry and artil-lery for the West, and joined General Sherman October, 1861; participated in the Buell campaign in Tennessee; defended Nashville in 1862, and received special commendation for this service; was promoted to Major-General for distinguished services and gallantry on the field at the battle of Stone River; commanded a division and took a prominent part in the PENNSYLVANIA. ] Senators and Representatives. : campaigns of Tallahoma, Chattanooga, Alabama, and Georgia; succeeded Jay Cook as a member of the Board of Managers of the National Home for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers; was elected to the Forty-first, Forty-second, and Forty-third Congresses, and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 20,136 votes against 15,113 votes for James H. Hopkins, Democrat, 281 votes for Riley, and 12 votes scattering. TWENTY-THIRD DISTRICT. COUNTY. —Allegheny. Thomas M. Bayne, of Allegheny, was born in that city June 14, 1836; was educated at the public schools and at Westminster College; entered the Union Army in July, 1862, as Colonel of the One hundred and thirty-sixth Regiment of Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry, which he commanded during its nine months’ term of service, taking part in the battles of Fredericksburg and Chancellorsville; resumed the reading of law in 1865, and was admitted to the bar of Allegheny County in April, 1866: was elected District Attorney for Allegheny County in October, 1870, and held the office until January 1, 1874; was nominated by the Republican party for the Forty-fourth Congress, and was défeated by Alexander G. Cochrane, Democrat, and Samuel A. Purviance, Independent Republican; was elected to the Forty-fifth, Forty-sixth, Forty-seventh, and IForty-eighth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 15,354 votes against 8,073 votes for Foster, Democrat, 508 votes for Dunn, and 9 votes scattering. Re-elected. TWENTY-FOURTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Beaver, Lawrence, and Washington. Oscar L. Jackson, of New Castle, was born in Lawrence County, Pennsylvania, September 2, 1840, of Scotch-Irish ancestry, who settled in that State at an early date; was educated in common schools, at Tansy Hill Select School, and at Darlington Academy; served in the Union Army from 1861 to 1865, entering as Captain and receiving the promo-tions of Major, Lieutenant-Colonel, and Colonel by brevet; took part with the Army of the Tennessee in the campaigns in Missouri, Tennessee, and Mississippi, also from Chattanooga to Atlanta, the march to the sea, and through the Carolinas, commanding his regiment during the latter part of the war; was very severely wounded in battle at Corinth, Mississippi, Octo-ber 4, 1862; studied law, was admitted to the bar at New Castle in 1867, and has practised there since; was District Attorney, 1868-71; was a member of the Commission to codify laws and devise a plan for the government of cities of Pennsylvania, 1877, 1878; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 16,436 votes against 11,538 votes for Stockdale, Democrat, 561 votes for Gourley, Prohibitionist, 353 votes for Covert, Greenbacker, and 41 votes scattering. Re-elected. ; TWENTY-FIFTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Armstrong, Clarion, Forest, Indiana, and Jefferson. Alexander Colwell White, of Brookville, was Lorn near Kittanning, Armstrong County Pennsylvania, December 12, £833; was raised on a farm, attending the public school in winter until the age of twenty years, when he commenced teaching school in winter and attended in summer the Jacksonville Institute and the Dayton Union Academy; removed in 1860 to Jef-ferson County, where he studied law; was admitted to practice in December, 1862, and has since that time been actively engaged in the practice of his profession; served in the Union Army as a private in: Company I of the Eighth Regiment Pennsylvania Volunteers; was elected District Attorney in 1867 and re-elected in 1870; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 16,741 votes against 14,929 votes for Daniel Reitz, Fusion Democratic Greenbacker, and 8 votes scattering. TWENTY-SIXTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Butler, Crawford, and Mercer. George W. Fleeger, of Butler, was born in Butler County, Pennsylvania, March 13, 1839; was educated in the common schools and at West Sunbury Academy; enlisted in the Union Army June 10, 1861, as private in Company C, Eleventh Regiment Pennsylvania Reserves, and was discharged as First Lieutenant March 13, 1865; studied law, was admitted to the bar in 18606 at Butler, Pennsylvania, where he has since practised; was a member of the Legis-lature of Pennsylvania in 1871 and 1872; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 17,290 votes: against 15,674 votes for JohnL. McKinney, Democrat, 2,702 votes for W. B. Roberts, Independent Republican and Greenbacker candidate, and 1,116 votes for J. M. Wilson, Prohibitionist. | | | Congressional Directory. [PENNSYLVANIA. TWENTY-SEVENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—ZE7ie, Venango, and Warren. William L. Scott, of Erie, was born in the city of Washington, D. C., July 2, 1828, his parents being residents of Virginia; he received a common-school education; served as page in the House of Representatives from 1840 to 1846; settled in Erie, Pennsylvania, in 1848, and was employed as a clerk in the shipping business; engaged, in 1850, in the coal and ship-ping business, owning and running several vessels on the lakes; subsequently became largely interested in the manufacture of iron and the mining of coal, as well as in the construction and operation of railroads, either as president or director of various lines, aggregating over 22,000 miles of completed road, the greatest number of miles of railroad, probably, which any one individual was ever an officer or director of; was a District Delegate to the National Demo- "cratic Convention held in the city of New York in 1868, and a Delegate at Large from the State of Pennsylvania to the Democratic National Convention held in Cincinnati, Ohio, in 1880, and also represented the State of Pennsylvania on the Democratic National Committee from 1876 to 1884; was elected Mayor of the city of Erie in 1866, and again in 1871, and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, supported by Independent Republicans, receiving 16,002 votes against 15,340 votes for C. W. Mackey, Republican, 1,204 votes for Borland, and 3 votes scattering. The Republican Presidential Electors received 17,139 votes, and the Democratic Electors 12,846 votes. Re-elected. RHODE ISLAND. SENATORS. Nelson W. Aldrich, of Providence, was born at Foster, Rhode Island, November 6, 1841; received an academic education; is engaged in mercantile pursuits; was President of the Providence Common Council in 1872-73; was a member of the Rhode Island General Assembly in 1875-76, serving the latter year as Speaker of the House of Representatives; was elected to the Forty-sixth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-seventh Congress; was elected to the United States Senate as a Republican, to succeed Ambrose E. Burnside, Re-publican, took his seat December 5, 1881, and was re-elected in 1886. His term of service will expire March 3, 1893. Jonathan Chace, of Providence, was born at Fall River, Massachusetts, July 22, 1829; received an academic education; is a cotton manufacturer; was a member of the State Senate two terms, 1876 and 1877; was a Representative in the Forty-seventh and Forty-eighth Congresses, and was elected to the United States Senate to succeed Henry B. Anthony, deceased, taking his seat January 26, 1885. His term of service will expire March 3, 188g. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. CITIES AND TOWNS.— Providence, Newport, Barrington, Bristol, East Providence, James-down, Little Compton, Middletown, New Shoreham, Portsmouth, Tiverton, and Warren. Henry J. Spooner, of Providence, was born at Providence, Rhode Island, August 6, 1839; received his earlier education and was prepared for college mostly in the public schools of his native city; graduated at Brown University, Rhode Island, in 1860; studied law; entered the Union Army in 1862 as Second Lieutenant in the Fourth Regiment Rhode Island Volun-teer Infantry, serving in the Armies of the Potomac and the James, and mostly in the Ninth Army Corps; and soon after the battle of Antietam was promoted to First Lieutenant and Ad-jutant of the same regiment; was mustered out of service in 1865; and later, in the same year, was admitted to the bar, and has since been engaged in the practice of law in Providence, Rhode Island; was Commander of the Department of Rhode Island, Grand Army of the Re-public, 1877; was Representative from the city of Providence to the General Assembly of Rhode Island, by seven successive elections, from 1875 to 1881, inclusive, serving upon Com-mittees on Judiciary, Militia, &c., and Speaker of the Rhode Island House of Representatives two years, by successive elections, 1879-81; was elected to the Forty-seventh Congress, to fill the vacancy occasioned by resignation of Nelson W. Aldrich, elected United States Senator ; was re-elected to the Forty-eighth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Con-gress as a Republican, receiving 10,140 votes against 5,976 votes for Slocum, Democrat, 539 votes for Buffum, Prohibitionist, and 239 votes for Bruce, Greenbacker. Re-elected. RHODE ISLAND. ] Senators and Representatives. 81. SECOND DISTRICT. TOWNS.—Burrillville, Charlestown, Coventry, Cranston, Cumberland, East Greenwich, Exeter, Foster, Gloucester, Hopkinton, Johnston, Lincoln, North Kingston, North Providence, North Smithfield, Pawtucket, Richmond, Scituate, Smithfield, South Kingston, Warwick, West- erly, West Greenwich, and Woonsocket. 3 [Vacant.] SOUTH CAROLINA. SENATORS. Matthew C. Butler, of Edgefield, was born near Greenville, South Carolina, March 8, 1836; received a classical education at the academy at Edgefield, and entered the South Caro-lina College in October, 1854; left this institution before graduating, and studied law at Stone-lands, the residence of his uncle, Hon. A. P. Butler, near Edgefield Court-House; was ad-mitted to the bar in December, 1857; practised at Edgefield Court-House; was elected to the Legislature of South Carolina in 1860; entered the Confederate service as Captain of Cavalry in the Hampton Legion in June, 1861, and became a Major-General through the regular grades; lost his right leg at the battle of Brandy Station on the gth of June, 1863; was elected to the Legislature of South Carolina in 1866; was a candidate for Lieutenant-Governor of South Carolina in 1870; received the Democratic vote of the South Carolina Legislature for United States Senator in 1870, receiving 30 votes; was elected to the United States Senate as a Demo-crat, to succeed Thomas J. Robertson, Republican; was admitted to his seat December 2, 1877, and was re-elected in 1882. His term of service will expire March 3, 1889. Wade Hampton was born in Charleston, South Carolina, on the 28th of March, 1818; graduated at the South Carolina College; served in both branches of State Legislature; was a member of Senate when State seceded; resigned and served in Confederate Army during the war; was elected Governor of the State in 1876, and again in 1878, and elected United States Senator in December, 1878; he took his seat April 16, 1879, and was re-elected in 1884. His term of service will expire March 3, 1891. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— County of Charleston, except James Island, Folly Island, Morris Island, and the island lying between them; the lower harbor of Charleston Harbor, and the ocean coast line from and below high-water mark; the towns of Mount Pleasant and Summerville, and so muck of the Parish of Saint James, Goose Creek, as lies between the western track of the South Carolina Railway and the Ashley River, in the County of Berkeley, and below the County of Colleton, parts of the counties of Colleton and Orangeburg and the county of Lexington. Samuel Dibble, of Orangeburg, was born at Charleston, South Carolina, September 16, 1837; received his early education in his native city, and at Bethel, Connecticut, and his academic education at the High School of Charleston; entered the College of Charleston in 1853, and afterwards Wofford College, Spartanburg, South Carolina, where he graduated in 1856; engaged in teaching, and studied law; was admitted to the bar in 1859, and commenced practice at Orangeburg, South Carolina; volunteered at the beginning of the late civil war as a private in the Confederate Army, and served till its close in the First and Twenty-fifth Regi-ments of South Carolina Volunteers, attaining the rank of First Lieutenant; resumed the practice of the law at Orangeburg, South Carolina; was elected a member of the State House of Representatives in 1877; was elected a trustee of the University of South Carolina in 1878, and was Chairman of Executive Committee of South Carolina Agricultural College and Me-chanics’ Institute for colored students (a branch of the State University;) was a Delegateto National Democratic Convention at Cincinnati in 1880, and was a Presidential Elector on the Democratic ticket of the same year; was elected to and took his seat in the forty-seventh Con-gress as a Democrat, (filling the vacancy occasioned by the death of Hon. M. P, O’Connor,) but 2D ED——F6 : ; 82 Congressional Directory. [SOUTH CAROLINA. Mr. O’Connor’s claim to an election having been successfully contested, Mr. Dibble as a con-sequence lost his seat in said Congress; was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 8,612 votes against 3,108 votes for Taft, Republican. Re-elected. SECOND DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—dAzken, Barnwell, Edgefield, Hampton, and part of Colleton. George D. Tillman, of Clark’s Hill, was born near Curryton, Edgefield County, South Car-olina, August 21, 1826; after receiving an academical education at Penfield, Georgia, and at Greenwood, South Carolina, entered Harvard University, but did not graduate; studied law with Chancellor Wardlaw, ahd was admitted to the bar in 1848; practised at Edgefield Court-House until the civil war broke out, but has been a cotton-planter since the war; volunteered in the Third Regiment of South Carolina State troops in 1862, and shortly after its disband-ment entered the Second Regiment of South Carolina Artillery, in which he served as a private until the close of the war; was elected to the State House of Representatives of South Caro-lina in 1854-55, and again in 1864; was chosen a member of the State Constitutional Con-vention in 1865, held under the reconstruction proclamation of President Johnson; was also elected State Senator from Edgefield County in 1865, under that constitution; was likewise a member of the Democratic State Executive Committee of South Carolina in 1876; was the Democratic candidate in the Fifth District of South Carolina for the Forty-fifth Congress, and unsuccessfully contested the seat of his competitor, Robert Smalls; although the Committee of Elections reported in favor of vacating the election, the House failed to act on the report; was elected to the Forty-sixth Congress; was elected to the Forty-seventh Congress, but was contested out of his seat by Robert Smalls; was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress, and was re-elected‘to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 11,419 votes against 1,920 votes for Dickerson, Republican, and 186 votes scattering. Re-elected. THIRD DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Abbeville, Anderson, Newberry, Oconee, and Pickens. ; D. Wyatt Aiken, of Cokesbury, was born at Winnsboro’, Fairfield County, South Carolina, March 17, 1828; received an academic education at Mount Zion Institute, Winns- boro’; graduated at the South Carolina College, Columbia, in 1849; taught school two years; settled upon a farm in 1852, and has continued until the present time to profess and practise farming; in 1861 entered the volunteer service of the Southern Confederacy as a pri-vate; was appointed Adjutant of the Seventh Regiment of Volunteers, Kershaw’s Brigade, McLaw’s Division, Longstreet’s Corps; was elected Colonel of the same when reorganized at the expiration of one year; was relieved from service temporarily by reason of being shot through the lungs on the 17th of September, 1862, at Antietam, but rejoined his command and served until the close of the Gettysburg campaign, when he was sent to Macon, Georgia, to establish a military post, which he commanded till October, 1864, when from ill-health he was compelled to resign; was elected to the State Legislature in 1864 and again in 1866; was Master of the State Grange for two years and member of the Executive Committee of the National Grange for fourteen yearss was a Delegate to the National Democratic Convention at Saint Louis that nominated Tilden and Hendricks; was elected to the Forty-fifth, Forty-sixth, Forty-seventh, and Forty-eighth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 10,855 votes against 752 votes for Talbert, Republican, and 6 votes scattering. . FOURTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Fairfield, Greenville, Laurens, the County of Spartanburg, except the townships of White Plains and Limestone Springs; the County of Union, except the townshipsof Gowdeys ville and Draytonville; and the townships of Centre, Columbia, and Upper, in the county of Richland. William Hayne Perry, of Greenville, was born at Greenville, South Carolina, June og, 1839; received his early education at Greenville Academy; graduated at the Furman Uni-versity, Greenville; then entered the South Carolina College at Columbia, but left there before graduation and entered Harvard College, where he graduated in 1859; read law under Hon. B. F. Perry, his father, at Greenville; was admitted to the bar and has since practised; served during the whole war of the Rebellion in the Confederate cavalry service; was a member of the | SOUTH CAROLINA. | Senarors and Represeniatives. 83 State Convention of South Carolinain 1865; was a member of the State Legislature of South . Carolinain 1865-66; was Solicitor of the Eighth Judicial Circuit of South Carolina in 1868-72; was a member of the State Senate of South Carolina from Greenville County, 1880-84; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 13,008 votes against 81 votes scattering. Re-elected. FIFTH DISTRICT. CoUNTIES.— Chester, Chesterfield, Kershaw, Lancaster, York, the townships of White Plains and Limestone Springs in the County of Spartanburg, and the townships of Gowdeysville and Draytonville in the County of Union. John J. Hemphill, of Chester, was born at Chester, South Carolina, August 25, 1849, and has always resided in his native town; he attended the schools in the town until 1866, when he entered the South Carolina University, from which he was graduated in 1869; after leaving -college he began the study of law, and was admitted to the bar in the fall of 1870, and began practice on the first of January following; he was nominated by the Democrats as a candidate for the Legislature in 1874, but was not elected; he was again nominated for the same office by the same party in 1876 and elected, and was likewise renominated and re-elected in 1878 and 1880; was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Dem., receiving 9,861 votes against 2,881 for C. C. Macoy, Rep. Re-elected. SIXTH DISTRICT. Counries.— Clarendon, Darlington, Horry, Marion, Marlborough, and the townships of Lake, Lees, Johnson, and Sumter, and the town of Kingston in the County of Williamsburg. George W. Dargan, of Darlington, was born in Darlington County, South Carolina, in 1841; educated at the academies of his native county, and at the State Military Academy; was admitted to the bar in 1872; was elected as a Democrat to the State Legislature without opposition in 1877; was elected Solicitor of the Fourth Judicial Circuit of South Carclina without opposition in 1880;” was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 10,465 votes against 3,289 votes for Deas, Republican, and 386 votes scattering. Re-elected. SEVENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Beaufort, Georgetown, Sumter, and Berkeley (excepting the towns of Mount Pleasant and Summerville, and so much of the parish of Saint James, Goose Creek, as lies be-tween the western track of the South Carolina Railway and the Ashley River below the County of Colleton) the lower township of Richland County; the townships of Collins, Adams Run, Glover, Fraser, Lowndes, and Blake, in the County of Colleton; the townships of Amelia, Good-by’s, Lyons, Pine Grove, Poplar, Providence, and Vance's, in the County of Orangeburg; the townships of Anderson, Hope, Indian, King's (excepting the town of Kingstree,) Laws, Mingo, Penn, Ridge, Sutton’s, and Turkey, in the County of Williamsburg, and that portion of Charles-ton County composed of James Island, Folly Isiand, Morris Island, and the island lying be-tween them, the lower harborof Charleston Harbor, and the ocean coast line from and below Ligh-water mark. Robert Smalls, of Beaufort, was born at Beaufort, South Carolina, April 5, 1839; being a slave, was debarred by statute from attending school, but educated himself with such lim-ited advantages as he could secure; removed to Charleston in 1851, worked as a rigger, and led a seafaringlife; became connected in 1861 with the Planter,” a steamer plying in Charles-ton Harbor as a transport, which he took over Charleston Bar in May, 1862, and delivered her and his services to the Commander of the United States Blockading Squadron; was ap-pointed Pilot in the United States Navy, and served in that capacity on the monitor ¢ Keokuk *’ in the attack on Fort Sumter; served as Pilot in the Quartermaster’s Department, and was promoted as Captain for gallant and meritorious conduct December 1, 1863, and placed in command of the Planter,” serving until she was put out of commission in 1866; was elected a member of the State Constitutional Convention of 1868; was elected a member of the State House of Representatives in 1868, and of the State Senate, to fill a vacancy, in 1870, and re-elected in 1872; was appointed Lieutenant-Colonel of the Third Regiment South Carolina State Militia in 1873; afterwards appointed Brigadier-General of the Second Brigade South Carolina State Militia, and subsequently was appointed Major-General of the Second Division South Carolina State Militia, which office he held until the reorganization of the Militia in -1877, under the Democratic Administration of the State; was a Delegate to the National Re- lj 84 Congressional Directory [SOUTH CAROLINA. publican Convention at Philadelphia in 1872 which nominated Grant and Wilson, and also to the National Republican Convention which met at Cincinnati in 1876 and nominated HAyes and Wheeler; also Delegate to the National Republican Convention which met at Chicago and nominated Blaine and Logan ; was elected to the Forty-fourth Congress, re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress, and defeated as a candidate for the Forty-sixth Congress; was elected to the Forty-seventh and Forty-eighth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Con-gress as a Republican, receiving 8,419 votes against 4,584 votes for Elliott, Democrat, and 235 votes scattering. TENNESSEE. SENATORS. Isham G. Harris, of Memphis, was born in Franklin County, Tennessee; was educated at the academy at Winchester; studied law, was admitted to the bar, and commenced to prac-tise at Paris, Henry County, Tennessee, in 1841; was elected to the State Legislature as a Democrat from the counties of Henry, Weakley, and Obion, in 1847; was a candidate for _ Presidential Elector in the Ninth Congressional District of Tennessee on the Democratic ticket in 1848; was elected to Congress as a Democrat from the Ninth Congressional District in 1849, re-elected in 1851, and nominated as the candidate of the Democratic party in 1853, but declined the nomination; removed to Memphis, and there resumed the practice of his pro-fession; was a Presidential Elector for the State at large in 1856; was elected Governor of Tennessee as a Democrat in 1857, re-elected in 1859, and again in 1861; was a Volunteer Aid upon the staff of the Commanding General of the Confederate Army of Tennessee for the last three years of the war; returned to the practice of law at Memphis in 1867, and was en-gaged in it when elected to the United States Senate as a Democrat, (defeating Judge L. L. Hawkins, Republican,) to succeed Henry Cooper, Democrat, took his seat March 5, 1877, and was re-elected in 1883. His term of service will expire March 3, 1889. | Washington Curran Whitthorne, of Columbia, was born in Marshall County, Ten- | nessee, April 19, 1825; graduated at the East Tennessee University, Knoxville, Tennessee, in 1843 ; studied law, and has since practised; was a member of the State Senate of Tennessee in 1855, ’56, ’57, and ’58; was elected in 1859 to the lower house of the General Assembly of Tennessee, and was made Presiding Officer thereof; was upon the Breckinridge electoral ticket for the State at large in 1860; was Assistant Adjutant-General in the Provisional Army of Tennessee in 1861, and was afterwards Adjutant-General of the State, which position he held under Governor Harris until the close of the civil war; his disabilities were removed by act of Congress approved July, 1870; was elected a Representative from Tennessee to the Forty-second, Forty-third, Forty-fourth, Forty-fifth, Forty-sixth, and Forty-seventh Congresses, and was appointed to the United States Senate, as a Democrat, to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Hon. H. E. Jackson. He took his seat April 26, 1886, and was elected when the Legislature met to fill out the unexpired term, receiving the unanimous nomination of his party. [fe had been previously elected to the House of Representatives in the Fiftieth Congress. | REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Carter, Claiborne, Cocke, Grainger, Greene, Hamblen, Hancock, Hawkins, Johnson, Sullivan, Unicoi, and Washington. Augustus H. Pettibone, of Greeneville, was born at Bedford, Cuyahoga County, Ohio, January 21, 1835; was educated at Hiram College, Ohio, and at the University of Michigan, graduating in 1859; studied law with Hon. Jonathan E. Arnold at Milwaukee, Wisconsin, and entered on the practice at La Crosse, Wisconsin; entered the Federal Army as a private in 1861; was promoted to Second Lieutenant, Captain, and Major of the Twentieth Wiscon-sin Volunteers; resumed the practice of his profession at Greeneville, Tennessee, at the close of the rebellion in 1865; was elected Attorney-General for the First Judicial Circuit of Ten-nessee; was Presidential Elector for the First Congressional District of Tennessee on the Grant and Colfax Electoral Ticket in 1868; was for several years Assistant United States District Attorney for the Eastern District of Tennessee; was Elector for the State at large on the Hayes TENNESSEE. | Senators and Representatives. 8g and Wheeler ticket in 1876; was elected to the Forty-seventh and Forty-eighth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 15,487 votes against 12,981 votes for King, Democrat. SECOND DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Anderson, Blount, Campbell, Jefferson, Knox, Loudon, Monroe, Morgan, Roane, Scott, Sevier, and Union. Leonidas C. Houk, of Knoxville, was born in Sevier County, Tennessee, June 8, 1836; attended an old-field school something less than three months, but was otherwise self-educated, when at work as a cabinet-maker and by the fireside at night; he read law while working at his trade, was admitted to the bar October 13, 1859, and practised until the war; was a mem-ber of the Loyal East Tennessee Convention in 1861; entered the Union Army as a private August 9, 1861; was promoted to Lieutenant in the First Tennessee Infantry; was mustered in as Colonel of the Third Tennessee Infantry February 2, 1862, and served until April 23, 1863, when he resigned on account of ill-health; was connected with the press from his resig-nation until July, 1864; was a candidate for Elector on the Lincoln and Johnson ticket in 1864; was a member of the State Convention which amended the constitution and provided for the reorganization of the State government of Tennessee in February, 1865; was elected Judge of the Seventeenth Judicial Circuit of Tennessee on the 3d day of March, 1866, and served four years, when he removed from Clinton to Knoxville, Tennessee, and resumed the practice of law; held a position for a short time under the Southern Claims Commission; was a member of the National Republican Convention which met at Chicago in 1868 and nomi-nated General Grant; was an Elector for the State at large on the Grant and Wilson ticket in 1872; was at the same time chosen a Representative in the lower house of the Tennessee Legislature, in which he was the Republican candidate for Speaker, coming within one vote of an election, although that body was largely Democratic; was an Elector on the Hayes and Wheeler ticket in 1876; was a Delegate to the Republican National Convention in 1880; was elected to the Forty-sixth, Forty-seventh, and Forty-eighth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 19,357 votes against 8,975 votes for Led-, gerwood, Democrat, and 5 votes scattering. Re-elected. THIRD DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Bledsoe, Bradley, Cumberland, Grundy, Hamilton, James, Marion, McMinn, Meigs, Monroe, Polk, Rhea, Sequatchie, Van Buren, Warren, and White. John Randolph Neal, of Rhea Springs, was born in Anderson County, Tennessee; re-ceived his early education in the common schools of Tennessee, and graduated at Emory and Henry College, Virginia, in June, 1858; studied law, and was admitted to the bar in 1860; volunteered in the Confederate Army as a private; was elected Captain of a Cavalry Company, which afterwards became a part of the Sixteenth Battalion Tennessee Cavalry, and was pro-moted to Lieutenant-Colonel of the Battalion; was elected a member of the House of Repre-sentatives of Tennessee in November, 1874, and of the Tennessee Senate in November, 1878, and was elected Speaker of the Senate in January, 1879; was an elector on the Hancock and English ticket in 1880; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 14,289 votes against 14,221 votes for H. Clay Evans, Republican. Re-elected. FOURTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.Clay, De Kalb, Fentress, Jackson, Macon, Overton, Putnam, Smith, Sumner, — Trousdale, and Wilson. Benton McMillin, of Carthage, was born in Monroe County, Kentucky, September 11, 1845; was educated at Philomath Academy, Tennessee, and Kentucky University, at Lexing-ton; studied law under Judge E. L. Gardenhire, and was admitted to the bar; commenced the practice of the law at Celina, Tennessee, in 1871; was elected a member of the House of Rep-resentatives of the Tennessee Legislature in November, 1874, and served out his term; was commissioned by the Governor to treat with the State of Kentucky for the purchase of territory in 1875; was chosen Elector on the Tilden and Hendricks ticket in 1876; was commissioned by the Governor Special Judge of the Circuit Court in 1877; was elected to the Forty-sixth, Forty-seventh, and Forty-eighth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 14,134 votes against 2,842 votes for Smith, Democrat, and 1 vote scattering. Re-elected. 86 : Congressional Directory. [TENNESSEE. FIFTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Bedford, Cannon, Coffee, Franklin, Lincoln, Marshal, Moore, and Rutherfora, James D. Richardson, of Murfreesboro’, was born in Rutherford County, Tennessee, March 10, 1843; was educated at good country schools; was at Franklin College, near Nashville, Tennessee, when the war began, and entered the Confederate Army at eighteen years of age, before graduating ; served in the army nearly four years, the first year as private and the re-maining three as adjutant of the Forty-fifth Tennessee Infantry; read law after the war, and began the practice January 1, 1867, at Murfreesboro’; was elected to the Lower House of the Tennessee Legislature, took his seat in October, 1871, and on the first day was elected Speaker of the House, he being then only twenty-gight years of age ; was elected to the State Senate the following session, 1873-1874; was a delegate to the Saint Louis Democratic Con-vention in 1876; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 13,285 votes against 7,144 votes for James A. Warder, Republican, 1,882 votes for Matt Martin, Ind. Democrat, and 416 votes for J. R. Beasley, Ind. Greenbacker. Re-elected. SIXTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Cheatham, Davidson, Houston, Humphreys, Montgomery, Robertson, and Stewart, Andrew J. Caldwell, of Nashville, was born at Montevallo, Alabama; received his early education at Washington Institute and graduated from Franklin College, Tennessee; was with the Confederate Army until the close of the war; studied law with Hon. Thomas J. Freeman and with Hon. John M. Lea; was admitted to the bar in January, 1867; was elected Attorney-General for the district of Davidson and Rutherford Counties, Tennessee, in August, 1870, and held the office eight years; was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 16,873 votes against 12,124 votes for Baker, Republican. SEVENTH DISTRICT. = COUNTIES.— Dickson, Giles, Hickman, Lawrence, Lewis, Maury, Wayne, and Williamson John G. Ballentine, of Pulaski, was born in Pulaski; Giles County, Tennessee; received a classical education; was elected to the Forty eighth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 12,157 votes against 9,682 votes for Cliff, Re-publican. EIGHTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Benton, Carroll, Chester, Decatur, Hardin, Henderson, ih Madison, McNairy, and Perry. John May Taylor, of Lexington, was born at Lexington, Henderson County, Tennessee, May 18, 1838; was educated at the Male Academy, Lexington, and Union University, Mur-freesboro’, Tennessee; studied law and graduated at the law “school of Cumberland University, Lebanon, Termessce; is a lawyer; was elected First Lieutenant, Confederate States Army, in June, 1861, and in same year promoted to Captain in the Twenty-seventh Tennessee Regular Infantry; in 1862 was elected Major of the Regiment; was elected Mayor of Lexington in May, 1869; was elected a Delegate to the State Constitutional Convention of Tennessee in December, 1869, and was a member in 1870, serving on the Committee on Bill of Rights and New Counties and County Lines; in August, 1870, was elected Attorney-General of the Eleventh Judicial Circuit of Tennessee, and served eight years; was a Delegate from the Eighth Congressional District to the National Democratic Convention at Cincinnati in 1880; was elected a Representative in the Legislature from Henderson County in September, 1881; was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 12,781 votes against 11,529 votes for James Warren, Republican. NINTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Crockett, Dyer, Gibson, Haywood, Lake, Lauderdale, Obion, and Weakley. Presley T. Glass, of Ripley, was born in Halifax County, Virginia, October 18, 1824; was carried by his parents in 1828 to Weakley County, Tennessee, where he was brought up; was educated at the Dresden Academy; was elected colonel of militia at eighteen years of age; studied law under Hon. John A. Gardner, attended one course at the Lexington (Kentucky) Law School, and was admitted to the bar in 1847; commenced the practice of the law in partnership with Hon. E. Etheridge, and was the same year elected a member of the State Leg-islature; was a major commissary in the Confederate service; has been chiefly a farmer and business man; was again elected to the Legislature in 1882, when he was chairman of the committee on agriculture and was the author of the bill fo establish an Agricultural Exper- a A TENNESSEE. | Senators and Representatives. 87 \ imental Station at Knoxville, Tennessee; has been a justice of the peace of his county for more than fifteen years and chairman of the court; was several times an Alderman of his town, Rip-ley; trustee for the County Academy, and also trustee for a joint stock company academy; has long been an earnest Sabbath School teacher; as a member of the Tennessee Legislature was the author of the bill to pay in full the State bonds held by.the Baltimore Peabody Institute, as bonds of the State held by Tennessee educational institutions were by law to be paid; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 13,481 votes against 11,019 votes for Emerson Etheridge, Republican. Re-elected. TENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Fayette, Hardeman, Shelby, and Tipton. Zachary Taylor, of Covington, was born in Haywood County, Tennessee, May 9, 1849, receiveu such early education as the common schools of the country afforded; entered the Vir-ginia Military Institute in December, 1868, and graduated as senior captain July 4, 1872; entered the Law School of Cumberland University at Lebanon, Tennessee, in January, 1873, and gradu-ated in January, 1874; engaged in the practice of law at Covington in 1878 and has practised since; was elected to the forty-second General Assembly of Tennessee as a Senator from the counties of Tipton, Fayette, and Shelby in November, 1880; was postmaster at Covington from July 1, 1883, to January 1, 1885, when he resigned, having been elected in November, 1884, to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 14,299 votes against 13,713 votes for James M. Harris, Democrat. TEXAS. SENATORS. Samuel Bell Maxey, of Paris, was born in Monroe County, Kentucky, March 30, 1825; received his primary education there; entered the West Point Military Academy in 1842, and graduated in 1846; joined the Seventh Infantry, United States Army, at Monterey, Mexico, as Brevet Second Lieutenant; was brevetted First Lieutenant for gallant services at Contreras and Churubusco; served through the Mexican war; resigned in 1849; returned to Kentucky; studied law, and was admitted to the bar in 1850; removed to Texas in 1857, and practised law; was elected State Senator for four years in 1861, but declined, and raised the * Ninth Texas Infantry for the Confederate States Army, of which he was Colonel; was pro-moted Brigadier-General in 1862 and Major-General in 1864; commanded the Indian Ter-ritory military district 1863-65, and was also Superintendent of Indian Affairs; remained in the service until the surrender of the Trans-Mississippi Department May 26, 1865 ; resumed the practice of law ; was commissioned as Judge of the Eighth District of Texas April 18, 1873, but declined; was elected to the United States Senate asa Democrat, to succeed James W. Flanagan; Republican; took his seat March 5, 1875, and was re-elected. His term of service will expire March 3, 1887. : Richard Coke, of Waco, was born at Williamsburg, Virginia, March 13, 1829; was edu-cated at William and Mary College; studied law, was admitted to the bar when twenty-one years of age, and has since practised constantly, when not in the public service; removed in 1850 to Waco, McLennan County, Texas, where he has since resided; served in the Confed-erate Army as private and afterward as Captain; was appointed District Judge in June, 1865; was nominated by the Democratic party for Judge of the State Supreme Court in 1866, and elected, and after having occupied the position one year was removed by General Sheridan as “an impediment to reconstruction’; returned to the practice of law the latter part of 1867; was elected Governor of Texas in December, 1873, by a majority of 50,000, and was re-elected in February, 1876, by a majority of 102,000, resigning December 1, 1877, after having been elected the previous April to the United States Senate as a Democrat, to succeed Morgan C. Hamilton, Republican; took his seat March 4, 1877, and was re-elected in 1883. His term of service will expire March 3, 1880. | REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. COUNTIES. —Angelina, Brazos, Chambers, Grimes, Hardin, Harris, Jasper, Jefferson, Lib-erty, Madison, Monigomery, Newton, Orange, Polk, San Jacinto, Trinity, Tyler, Walker, and Waller. ‘ Charles Stewart, of Houston, was born at Memphis, Tennessee, May 30, 1836; is by pro-fession a lawyer; was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 24,145 votes against 15 votes scattering. Re-elected. - 88 : Congressional Directory. | TEXAS. SECOND DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Anderson, Cherokee, Freestone, Henderson, Houston, Leon, Nacogdoches, Robin-son, Sabine, and San Augustine. John H. Reagan, of Palestine, was born in Sevier County, Tennessee, October 8, 1818; received a common-school and limited collegiate education, but did not graduate; is a lawyer and farmer; settled in the Republic of Texas in May, 1839; was a Deputy Surveyor of the Public Lands 1839-43; was elected to the State House of Representatives for two years in 1847; was elected Judge of the District Court for six years in 1852; resigned, and was re-elected for six years in 1856; was elected in 1857 a Representative to the Thirty-fifth Con-gress from the First District of Texas, and was re-elected in 1859 to the Thirty-sixth Con-gress; was elected to the Secession Convention of Texas in 1861, and was elected with others by that convention Deputy to the Provisional Congress of the Confederacy; was appointed Postmaster-General of the Provisional Government of the Confederacy March 6, 1861, was reappointed on the permanent organization of the Confederate Government in 1862, and occu- -pied the position until the close of the war; was also appointed Acting Secretary of the Treasury of the Confederate Government for a short time preceding the close of the war; was a member of the State Constitutional Convention of 1875; was elected to the Forty-fourth, Forty-fifth, Forty-sixth, Forty-seventh, and Forty-eighth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 16,840 votes against 8,276 votes for Monroe, Republican. Re-elected. THIRD DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Camp, Gregg, Harrison, Hunt, Panola, Rains, Rusk, Shelby, Smith, Upshur, Van Zandt, and Wood. James H. Jones, of Henderson, was born in Shelby County, Alabama, September 13 1830; was raised in Talladega County, Alabama; received an academic education; studied law; was admitted to the bar in 1851, and commenced practice at Henderson, Texas; served in the Confederate service as Captain, Lieutenant-Colonel, and Colonel of the Eleventh Texas Infantry, and at the close of the war was commanding the Third Brigade in Walker’s Old Division of the Trans-Mississippi Military Department; was a Presidential Elector on the Hancock and English Ticket in 1880; never held any civil office until he was elected to the . Forty-eighth Congress. He was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiv-ing 23,504. votes against 529 votes for Conley, Republican, and 149 votes scattering. FOURTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Bowie, Cass, Delta, Fannin, Franklin, Hopkins, Lamar, Marion, Morris, Red River, and Titus. David B. Culberson, of Jefferson, was born in Troup County, Georgia, September 29, 1830; was educated at Brownwood, La Grange, Georgia; studied law under Chief Justice Chilton, of Alabama; removed to Texas in 1856, and was elected a member of the Legisla-ture of that State in 1859; entered the Confederate Army as a private, and was promoted to the rank of Colonel of the Eighteenth Texas Infantry; was assigned to duty in 1864 as Adju-tant-General, with the rank of Colonel, of the State of Texas; was elected to the State Legis-lature in 1864; was elected to the Forty-fourth, Forty-fifth, Forty-sixth, Forty-seventh, and Forty-eighth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiv-ing 23,165 votes against no opposition. Re-elected. FIFTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Archer, Baylor, Clay, Collin, Cook, Denton, Grayson, Montague, Rockwall, Wichita, Wilbarger, and Wise. James W. Throckmorton, of McKinney, was born at Sparta, Tennessee, February 1, 1825; his father emigrated to Texas in 1841; is a lawyer; was elected to the State Legisla-ture of Texas in 1851, and served continuously as Representative and Senator until 1861; was a member of the Secession Convention of Texas, and was one of the seven members of that body that voted against the ordinance of secession; he served as Captain and Major in the Con-federate service from the spring of 1861 until November, 1863, when he was again returned to the Senate; in 1864 he was appointed by the Governor Brigadier-General of State troops, and commander on the northwest border of the State; in May, 1864, under authority of the Confederate States Government, and also that of the State of Texas, he concluded a treaty ‘with all the wild tribes of Indians on the Texas border, including the Comanches, Lipans, Cheyennes, and other small bands; he returned from the plains in the discharge of this duty TEXAS. | Senators and Representatives. =. 39 in June, after the surrender; was a Delegate to the Constitutional Convention under President Johnson's proclamation, and was chosen the Presiding Officer of that body; was elected Gov-ernor of the State of Texas for a term of four years; was inaugurated August 8, 1866, and removed by order of General Sheridan August 9, 1867; was elected a Representative to the Forty-fourth, Forty-fifth, and Forty-eighth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 28,462 votes against 331 votes scattering. Declined re-election on account of long-continued illness. SIXTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Bosque, Dallas, Ellis, Hill, Johnson, Kaufman, and Tarrant. Olin Wellborn, of Dallas, was elected to the Forty-sixth, Forty-seventh, and Forty-eighth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 27,804 votes against 4,721 votes for Bigger, Republican. SEVENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Aransas, Bee, Brazoria, Calloun, Cameron, Dimmit, De Witt, Duval, Encina:-Fort Bend, Frio, Galveston, Goliad, Hidalgo, Jackson, La Salle, Matagorda, Maverick, Mec-Mullen, Nueces, Refugio, San Patricio, Starr, Victoria, Webb, Wharton, Zapata, and Zavala. William H. Crain, of Cuero, Texas, was born at Galveston, Texas, November 25, 1848; graduated at Saint Francis Xavier’s College, New York City, July 1, 1867, and received the de-gree of A. M. several years afterwards; studied law in the office of Stockdale & Proctor, Indian-ola, and was admitted to practice in February, 1871; has practised law since that time; was elected a State Senator on the Democratic ticket in February, 1876; was elected as the Demo-cratic candidate for district attorney of the Twenty-third Judicial District of Texas in Novem-ber, 1872; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 15,471 votes against 9,586 votes for R. B. Rentfro, Republican, and 1,032 votes for Richard Nelson, col-ored, Republican. Re-elected. EIGHTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Atascosa, Austin, Caldwell, Colorado, Fayette, Gonzales, Guadalupe, Hayes, Karnes, Lavaca, Lee, Live Oak, and Wilson. James Francis Miller, of Gonzales, was born in Tennessee, August 1, 1832; received a classical education in a private school; is by profession a lawyer, and has also been engaged in banking and stock-raising; never held any civil or political office, and never was a candi-date for any until elected to the Forty-eighth'Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 17,143 votes against 8,473 votes for Burns, Republican. | NINTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Falls, Limestone, McLennan, Milan, Navarro, and Washington. Bell, Burleson, Roger Q. Mills, of Corsicana, was elected to the Forty-third, Forty-fourth, Forty-fifth, Forty-sixth, Forty-seventh, and Forty-eighth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 22,333 votes against 9,049 votes for Osterhout, Republican. Re-elected. TENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Bandera, Bastrop, Bexar, Blanco, Burnet, Coleman, Comal, Concho, Crockett, Edwards, Gillespie, Kendall, Kerr, Kimball, Kinney, Lampasas, Llano, McCulloch, Mason, Medina, Menard, Runnels,San Saba, Travis, Uvalde, and Willianisorn. Joseph D. Sayers, of Bastrop, was born at Grenada, Mississippi, September 23, 1841; removed with his father to Bastrop, Texas, in 1851; was educated at the Bastrop Military Institute; entered the Confederate Army in 1861 and served continuously until April, 1865; when the war terminated, taught school and at the same time studied law at Bastrop, Texas; was admitted to the bar in 1866 and became a partner of Hon. George W. Jones; served as a member of the State Senate in the session of 1873; was chairman of the Democratic State Executive Committee during the years 1875-1878; was Lieutenant-Governor of Texas in 1879 and 1880; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 21,523 votes against 12,253 votes for John B. Rector, Independent. Re-elected. ELEVENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Andrews, Avmstrong, Bailey, Borden, Briscoe, Brown, Callahan, Carson, Cas-tro, Childress, Cochran, Collingsworth, Comanche, Coryell, Cottle, Crosby, Dallam, Dawson, Deaf Smith, Dickens, Donley, Eastland, El Paso, Erath, Fisher, Floyd, Gaines, Garza, Gray, Congressional Directory. [TEXAS. Greer, Hale, Hall, Hamilton, Hansford, Hardeman, Hartley, Haskell, Hemphill, Hockley, Hood, Howard, Hutchinson, Jack, jones, Kent, King, Knox, Lamb, Lipscomb, Lubbock, Lynn, Martin, Midland, Mitchell, Moore, Motley, Nolan, Oclkiltree, Oldham, Palo Pinto, Parker, Parmer, Pecos, Potter, Presidio, Randall, Reeves, Roberts, Scurry, Shackleford, Sherman, Somerville, Stephens, Stonewall, Swisher, Taylor, Terry, Tom Green, Throckmorton, Val Verde, Wheeler, Yoakum, and Young —83 counties. : Samuel W. T. Lanham, of Weatherford, was born in Spartanburg District, South Caro-lina, July 4, 1846; received only a common-school education; entered the Confederate Army ; (Third South Carolina Regiment) when a boy; removed to Texas in 1866; studied law, and was admitted to practice in 1869; was District Attorney of the Thirteenth District of Texas; Si was Democratic Elector of the Third Congressional District of Texas in 1880; was elected -to the Forty-eighth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 29,738 votes against 184 votes for Saylor, Republican. Re-elected. VERMONT. SENATORS. George F. Edmunds, of Burlington, was born at Richmond, Vermont, February 1, 1828; received a public-school education and the instruction of a private tutor; studied and practised law; was a member of the State Legislature of Vermont in 1854, ’55, ’57, ’58, and ’59, serv-ing three years as Speaker; was a member of the State Senate, and its Presiding Officer pro tempore, in 1861 and 62; 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 has since been successively re-elected four times. He was a member of the Electoral Commission of 1876. His term of service will expire March 3, 1893. Justin S. Morrill, of Strafford, was born at Strafford, Vermont, April 14, 1810; received an academic education; was a merchant, and afterward 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, tosucceed Luke P. Poland, Union Republican, and took his seat March 4, 1867; was re-elected in 1872, in 1878, and in 1884. His term of service will expire March 3, 1891. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Addison, Bennington, Chittenden, Franklin, Grand Isle, Lamotille, and Rut-land. John W. Stewart, of Middlebury, was born at Middlebury, Vermont; graduated at Mid-| dlebury College in 1846; studied law and was admitted to the bar in 1850; was Prosecuting Attorney of the County three years; was a member of the Vermont House of Representatives eight years; was Speaker of the House four years; was a member of the Senate two years; | was Governor-of the State of Vermont two years, 1870-"72; was elected to the Forty-eighth | Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 18,889 votes against 6,594 votes for Simmons, Democrat, 202 votes for Kidder, Greenbacker, and 23 | votes scattering. Re-elected. | SECOND DISTRICT. | ch | - COUNTIES.— Caledonia, Essex, Orange, Orleans, Washington, Windsor, and Windham. : | William W. Grout, of Barton, was born of American parents at Compton, P. Q., May 24, | 1836 ; received an academic education and graduated at the Poughkeepsie Law School in the olass of 1857; was admitted to the bar in December of the same year; practised law and was State’s Attorney for Orleans County 1865-66; served as Lieutenant-Colonel of the Fifteenth Vermont Volunteers in the Union Army; was a member of the Vermont House of Represent-atives in 1868, 1869, 1870, and 1874, and of the Senate in 1876, and President pro fem. of that body; was elected to the Forty-seventh Congress, and was re-elected to the Fortyninth-Congress as a Republican, receiving 20,026 votes against 8,479 votes for Goddard, Democrat, 186 votes for Cummins, Greenbacker, and 65 votes scattering. Re-elected. ’ VIRGINIA. | Senators and Representatives. 91 VIRGINIA. SENATORS. William Mahone, of Petersburg, was born at Southampton, Virginia, in 1827; gradu-ated from the Virginia Military Institute in 1847; became a civil engineer, and constructor of the Norfolk and Petersburg Railroad; embarked in the secession movement in 1861, and took part in the capture of the Norfolk navy-yard; raised and commanded the Sixth Virginia Regi-ment, and was with it in most of the battles of the peninsular campaign, those on the Rappa-hannock and those around Petersburg; was made both Brigadier-General and Major-General in 1864, and afterwards commanded a corps in Hill’s division; at the close of the war he returned to railroad engineering, and in a few years became president of a trunk line from Norfolk into Tennessee, over four hundred miles in length; was elected to the United States Senate as a Readjuster, in the place of Robert E. Withers, Democrat, and took his seat March 4, 1881. His term of service will expire March 3, 1887. Harrison H. Riddleberger, of ‘Woodstock, was born in Edinburg, Shenandoah County, Virginia, October 4, 1844; received a common-school education, and had a home preceptor for two years; served three years in the Confederate States Army as Second and First Lieu-tenant of Infantry, and as Captain of Cavalry; is a lawyer by profession; served as Common-wealth’s Attorney of his county for two terms; also two terms of two years each in the House of Delegates, and one term of four years in the State Senate; since 1870 he has been editor of three newspapers, ¢ The Tenth Legion,” ¢ The Shenandoah Democrat,” and ¢ The Vir-ginian’’; was a member of the State Committee of the Conservative party until 1875; was a Presidential Elector on the Democratic ticket of 1876, and the same on the Readjuster ticket of 1880; in 1881, while Commonwealth’s Attorney and State Senator, he was elected to the United States Senate as a Readjuster, in the place of John W. Johnston, Conservative, and took his seat December 3, 1883. His term of service will expire March 3, 1880. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Accomack, Northampton, Lancaster, Richmond, Northumberland, Westmore-land, Gloucester, Middiesex, Matthews, Essex, King and Queen, Caroline, Spottsylvania, and city of Fredericksburg. Thomas Croxton, of Tappahannock, was born at Tappahannock, Essex County, Virginia, March 15, 1822; was educated at primary schools in Tappahannock, at Rappahannock and Fleetwood Academies and at the University of Virginia; graduated in law June, 1842, and has practised since; was Attorney for the Commonwealth from July, 1852, to July, 1865, when he resigned ; was elector from the First District of Virginia on the Hancock and English (Democratic) ticket in 1880; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, re-ceiving 14,136 votes against 13,573 votes for Robert Mayo, Republican, and 4 votes scattering. SECOND DISTRICT, COUNTIES.— Princess Anne, Norfolk, Nansemond, Isle of Wight, Southampton, Elizabelh City, Warwick, York, James City, Charies City, and Surry, and the cities of Norfolk, Williams-burg, and Portsmouth. " Harry Libbey, of Old Point Comfort, was born at Wakefield, New Hampshire, November 22, 1843; received a common-school education; engaged in mercantile pursuits; was ap-pointed one of the Presiding Justices of Elizabeth City County, Virginia, in 1869; was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress as a Coalition Republican; and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 19,083 votes against 13,652 votes for Marshall, Democrat, and 36 votes scattering. THIRD DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Henrico, Goochland, Chesterfield, New Kent, Hanover, and King William, and the cities of Richmond and Manchester. George D. Wise, of Richmond, was born in Accomack County, Virginia, in 1835; gradu-ated at Indiana University; studied law at William and Mary College, at Williamsburg, Vir­ a 92 | Congressional Directory. [viRGINIA. ginia, and has practised at Richmond; was Captain in the Confederate Army; was Common-wealth’s Attorney of the city of Richmond from 1870 until he resigned in 1880; was elected to the Forty-seventh and Forty-eighth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Con-gress as a Dem., receiving 15,741 votes against 14,301 votes for Hubard, Rep. Re-elected. FOURTH DISTRICT. 8 e COUNTIES.— Prince George, Sussex, Dinwiddie, Greensville, Brunswick, Mecklenburg, Lunen | burg, Nottoway, Amelia, Powhatan, and Prince Edward, and the city of Petersburg. James D. Brady, of Petersburg, Virginia, was born in Portsmouth, Virginia, April 3, 1843; received a common-school education; engaged in mercantile pursuits; residing temporarily in New York at the commencement of the war, he enlisted as a private in the Thirty-seventh New York Volunteers, in which regiment he served as acting adjutant, when he was transferred and commissioned adjutant of the Sixty-third New York Volunteers; subsequently held the rank of captain, major, lieutenant-colonel, and colonel of that regiment, serving in the judge-advocate’s, adjutant-general’s, and inspector-general’s departments of the Second Corps, Army of the Potomac, and commanding the Sixty-third Regiment when honorably mustered out of serv-ice in July, 1865; was appointed during the latter part of 1866 naval storekeeper at the Norfolk | navy-yard, and held that position until it was abolished; was then appointed chief accountant of the Norfolk navy-yard, which office he resigned to accept that of clerk of courts of Ports-mouth, Virginia, to which he had been elected and which he held from July 1, 1870, to June 30, 1876; was appointed collector of internal revenue in June, 1877; was tendered the posi-tion of clerk of the court of appeals of Virginia, but declined; was a delegate from Virginia to the National Republican Convention of 1880, and delegate at large to the National Repub- | lican Convention of 1884; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, re-| ceiving 11,408 votes against 10,326 votes for Rives, Democrat, 6,447 votes for Evans, Inde-* pendent, and 17 votes scattering. | FIFTH DISTRICT. i COUNTIES.Pittsylvania, Franklin, Floyd, Henry, Patrick, Carroll, and Grayson, and the — cities of Danville and North Danville. George C. Cabell, of Danville, was born at Danville, Virginia, January 25, 1837; was instructed by his father, the late General B. W. S. Cabell, until twelve years of age, and from ] that time until the age of eighteen attended the Danville Academy; taught school in Henry County, devoting his leisure hours to the study of law; attended the Law School of the Uni-versity of Virginia in 1857; commenced the practice of law at Danville in 1858; also edited for a year or two “The Republican’ and then “The Democratic Appeal,” papers published at Danville; was elected in September, 1858, Commonwealth’s Attorney for Danville; held | said position to April 23, 1861, when he volunteered as a private soldier in the Confederate Army; he was commissioned Major in June, 1861, by Governor Letcher, and assigned to the | Eighteenth Virginia Infantry, Colonel Withers, Pickett’s Division, Longstreet’s Corps; par-ticipated in most of the battles fought by that portion of the Army of Northern Virginia to which he was attached; was twice wounded, and left the army at the ‘close of the war with | the rank of Colonel; after the war, returned to the practice of his profession; was elected to | the Forty-fourth, Forty-fifth, Forty-sixth, Forty-seventh, and Forty-eighth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 16,588 votes against 11,100 votes for Hartnell, Republican, and 2 votes scattering. | : SIXTH DISTRICT. | | COUNTIES.— Botetourt, Roanoke, Monigomery, Bedford, Campbell, Charlotte, Halifax, and the city of Lynchburg. John Warwick Daniel, of Lynchburg, was born at Lynchburg, Campbell County, Virginia, September 5, 1842; attended Lynchburg College and Dr. Gessner Harrison’s University School; volunteered in the Confederate States Army in May, 1861, and served throughout the war as Second Lieutenant, Twenty-seventh Virginia Infantry, Second Lieutenant, Eleventh Virginia Infantry, First Lieutenant and Adjutant, Eleventh Virginia Infantry, and as Major and Adju-tant-General Early’s Division, Army of Northern Virginia; studied law at the University of Virginia in 1865-’66, and has practised ever since; is author of ¢“ Daniel on Negotiable Instru-: ments ’’ and ¢ Daniel on Attachments’’; was elected a member of the State House of Delegates of Virginia in 1869, and of the State Senate in 1875 and again in 1879; was an Elector at Large on the Tilden and Hendricks ticket in 1876; resigned as State Senator on being nomi-nated by the Debt-Paying Democracy for Governor in 1881 against W. E. Cameron, readjuster, who was elected; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 17,177 | I votes against 13,526 votes for R. P. W. Morris, Republican, and 1 vote scattering. a aa ERR VIRGINIA. | Senators and Representatives. 93" SEVENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—A/lbemarle, Clarke, Frederick, Green, Madison, Page, Rappahannock, Rock-ingham, Shenandoah, Warren, and the cities of Charlottesville and Winchester. Charles T. O’Ferrall, of Harrisonburg, was born in Frederick County, Virginia, October 21, 1840; at the age of fifteen he was appointed Clerk pro tempore of the Circuit Court of Morgan County, Virginia, to fill a vacancy occasioned by the death of his father, and at the age of seventeen was elected Clerk of the County Court of that county for six years; in May, 1861, he enlisted in the cavalry service of the Confederate States as a private; passed through all the grades of Sergeant to Colonel, and at the surrender of Lee was in command of all the Con-federate Cavalry in the Shenandoah Valley; he was several times wounded—once through the lungs; soon after the close of the war he studied law at Washington College, Lexington, Virginia; graduated and located at Harrisonburg, where he commenced the practice of his profession; he was a member of the General Assembly of Virginia, 1871-73; judge of the County Court .of Rockingham County, 1874-80; Democratic State Canvasser 1880,-’81, and ’83; in 1882 he was the Democratic nominee for Congress in the Seventh District, and accord-ing to returns he received 11,041 votes against 12,146 votes for John Paul, the nominee of the Republican-Readjuster-Coalition party; he contested upon the ground of fraud and illegal voting, and was seated by the Forty-eighth Congress, May 5, 1884; he was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 15,491 votes against 12,221 votes for Webb, Republican. Reelected. EIGHTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—A/lexandria, Culpeper, Fairfax, Fauquier, King George, Loudoun, Louisa, Orange, Prince Wilitam, and Stafford, and the city of Alexandria. John S. Barbour, of Alexandria, was born in Culpeper County, Virginia, December 29, 1820; was educated at the University of Virginia; was a graduate of the Law School of the University of Virginia, and began the practice of law in his native county of Culpeper; was elected to the Legislature of Virginia from Culpeper County in 1847, and was re-elected, serving four consecutive sessions; in 1852 was elected President of the Railroad Company then called “The Orange and Alexandria Railroad Company,” in which position he continu-ously remained until it was merged in what is now known as ¢ The Virginia Midland Railway Company,” extending from Alexandria to Danville, Virginia, of which he was President for twenty-nine years; he has not held any other civil or military office; was elected to the Forty-seventh and Forty-eighth Congresses. and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 15,792 votes against 12,598 votes for Green, Republican, and 2 votes scattering. NINTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Bland, Buchanan, Craig, Dickenson, Giles, Lee, Pulaski, Russell, Scott, Smyth, Tazewell, Washington, Wise, ana Wythe. Connally F. Trigg, of Abingdon, was born at Abingdon, Virginia, September 18, 1847; is a lawyer; was elected Commonwealth Attorney for Washington County in 1872, which po-sition he held until he resigned in 1884; was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Dem-ocrat, receiving 13,844 votes against 12,650 votes for D. F. Bailey, Republican. « TENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Allegheny, Amherst, Appomattox, Augusta, Bath, Buckingham, Cumberland, Fluvanna, Highland, Nelson, and Rockbridge, and the city of Staunton. John Randolph Tucker, of Lexington, was born at Winchester, December 24, 1823; was educated at the University of Virginia; is a lawyer; was Attorney-General of Virginia from 1857 to 1865; was Professor of Equity and Public Law at Washington and Lee Uni-versity, Lexington; was elected to the Forty-fourth, Forty-fifth, Forty-sixth, Forty-seventh, and Forty-eighth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, re-ceiving 15,059 votes against 13,872 votes for Yost, Republican; was Chairman of the Com-mittee on the Judiciary in the Forty-eighth and Forty-ninth Congresses. Declined a re-nomi-nation and re-election, 94 Congressional Directory. WEST VIRGINIA, WEST VIRGINIA. SENATORS. Johnsen N. Camden, of Parkersburg, was born in 1828 in Lewis County, West Virginia; y was appointed a Cadet to West Point in 1846; resigned in 1848; studied law and was admitted to the bar in 1851; was appointed the same year Prosecuting Attorney for Braxton Count. and in 1852 was elected Prosecuting Attorney for Nicholas County; in 1854 was elected to a position in a bank; resigned in 1858, and entered into the development of petroleum and manufacturing interests at Parkersburg, West Virginia; was made President of the First National Bank at Parkersburg at its organization in 1862, and still holds the position; was the nominee of the Democratic party for Governor of the State in 1868, and again in 1872; was a delegate to the Democratic National Convention in 1868, in 1872, and in 1876; was elected to the United States Senate as a Democrat, to succeed Frank Hereford, Democrat, and took his seat March 4, 1881. His term of service will expire March 3, 1887. John E. Kenna, of Charleston, Kanawha County, was born at Valcoulon, Virginia, (now West Virginia,) April 10, 1848; lived and worked on a farm; entered the Confederate Army as a pri-vate soldier; was wounded in that service in 1864, and was surrendered at Shreveport, Louisi-ana, in 1865; ; afterward attended Saint Vincent’s College, Wheeling; studied law with Miller & Quarrier at Charleston; was admitted to the bar June 20, 1870, and has continued to practice law from that time; was elected Prosecuting Attorney for Kanawha County, on the Democratic ticket, in 1872, and served until January 1, 1877; in 1875 was elected .by the bar in the re-spective counties under statutory provision to hold the Circuit Courts of Lincoln and Wayne; was elected to the Forty-fifth, Forty-sixth, and Forty-seventh Congresses, and had been elected to the Forty-eighth Congress, when he was elected to the United States Senate as a Democrat, to succeed Henry G. Davis, Democrat, and took his seat December 3, 1883. His term of service will expire March 3, 1880. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Braxton, Broce Doddridge, Gilmer, Hancock, Harrison, Lewis, Marshall, Ohio, Tyler, and Wetzel. Nathan Goff, Jr., of Clarksburg, was born at Clarksburg, Virginia, February 9, 1843; was educated at the Northwestern Virginia Academy, Georgetown College, and the University of the City of New York; was admitted to the bar in 1865; in 1867 was elected a member of the West Virginia Legislature; in 1868 was appointed United States Attorney for the District of West Virginia, to which position he was reappointedin 1872, ’76, and ’8o; he resigned the District Attorneyship in January, 1881, when he was appointed Secretary of the Navy by President Hayes; in March, 1881, President Garfield reappointed him District Attorney for West Virginia, which position he again resigned in July, 1882; he enlisted in the Union Army in June, 1861, in the Third Regiment Virginia Volunteer Infantry; served as Lieutenant of Company G; also as Adjutant of said Regiment, and as Major of the Fourth Virginia Volun-teer Cavalry; was the Republican candidate for Congress in 1870 in the First West Virginia District, as also in the year 1874; was the candidate of the Republican party for Governor of West Virginia in 1876, and was defeated by Hon. H. M. Mathews; was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 17,462 votes against 17,258 votes for Brennan, Democrat, and 4 votes scat, Re-elected. SECOND DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Barbour, Berkeley, Grant, Hampshire, Hardy, Jefferson, Marion, Mineral, Monongalia, Morgan, Pendleton, Preston, Randolph, Taylor, and Tucker. William L. Wilson, of Charlestown, Jefferson County, was born in Jefferson County, Virginia, now West Virginia, May 3, 1843; was educated at Charlestown Academy, and at Columbian College, District of Columbia, where he graduated in 1860, and at the University of Virginia; served in the Confederate Army; was, after the close of the war, for several years Professor in Columbian College, during which time he graduated in its Law School, and WEST VIRGINIA. | Senators and Representatives. on the overthrow of the lawyers’ test oath in West Virginia, resigned and entered upon the practice of law at Charlestown; was a Delegate in 1830 to the National Democratic Conven- tion at Cincinnati, and an Elector for the State at large on the Hancock ticket; was chosen President of the West Virginia University, and entered upon the office September 4, 1882; but on September 20 was nominated for a seat in the Forty-eighth Congress, and was elected; resigned the Presidency of the State University with the beginning of his Congressional term; received the degree of LL. D. from the Columbian University in 1833; he was re--elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 18,266 votes against 16,737 votes for Rey- nolds, Republican, and 5 votes scattering. Re-elected. THIRD DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Boone,. Clay, Fayette, Greenbrier, Kanawha, Logan, Mercer, Monroe, McDow-ell, Nicholas, Pocahontas, Raleigh, Summers, Upshur, Webster, and Wyoming. Charles Philip Snyder, of Charleston, was born at Charleston, Kanawha County, West Virginia, June 9, 1847; received an academic education; studied law, and has since prac-tised; was elected Prosecuting Attorney of Kanawha County, West Virginia, in 1876, for a term of four years, and re-elected to the same office in 1880; was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress, as a Democrat, at a special election held May 15, 1883, to fill the vacanc-caused by the resignation of Hon. John E. Kenna, over Judge James H. Brown, the Repub-lican candidate; and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 15,359 votes against 13,240 for Davis, Republican, and 8 scattering. Re-elected. FOURTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Cabell, Calhoun, Jackson, Lincoln, Mason, Pleasants, Ritchie, Roane, Putnam, Wayne, Wirt, and Wood. Eustace Gibson,of Huntington, was born in Culpeper County, Virginia, October 4, 1842; received a common education in the ordinary Virginia schools of that day; studied law and commenced the practice in the spring of 1861; enlisted in Confederate Army June, 1361, as First Lieutenant; was made Captain in 1863, and retired on account of wounds; ; was a mem-ber of the Constitutional Convention of Virginia in 1867-68; settled in Huntington in 1871 ; was elected to the House of Delegates of West Virginia in 1876, and by that House elected Speaker; was a Hancock elector in 1880; was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 16,588 votes against "16,445 votes for Barbee, Greenbacker and Republican, and 3 votes scattering. WISCONSIN. SENATORS. Philetus Sawyer, of Oshkosh, was born at Whiting, Vermont, September 22, 18i6; re-moved with his family to New York in the following year; received a common-school educa-tion; went to Wisconsin in 1847 and engaged in the lumber business; was a member of the Legislature of Wisconsin in 1857 and 1861; was Mayor of Oshkosh in 1863 and "64; was a Delegate to the National Republican Convention at Baltimore in 1864, at Cincinnati in 1876, and at Chicago in 1880; was a Representative in the Thirty-ninth, Fortieth, Forty-first, Forty-second, and Forty-third Congresses; was elected to the United States Senate as a Re. publican to succeed Angus Cameron, Republican, took his seat March 4, 1881, and was re-elected in 1887. His term of service will expire March 3, 1893. John C. Spooner, of Hudson, was born at Lawrenceburg, Dearborn County, Indiana, Jan-uary 6, 1843; removed with his father’s family to Wisconsin, and settled at Madison June I, 1859; graduated at the State University in 1864 ; was private in Company D, Fortieth Regiment, and Captain of Company A, Fiftieth Regiment, Wisconsin Infantry Volunteers; was brevetted Major at the close of service ; was military and private secretary of Governor Lucius Fairchild, of Wisconsin ; was admitted to the bar in 1867, and served as Assistant Attorney-General of the State until 1870, when he removed to Hudson, where he has since resided in the practice of his profession; was elected member of the Assembly from Saint Croix County in 1872; is a member of the Board of Regents of the Wisconsin University ; and was elected United States Senator as a Republican, to succeed Angus Cameron, Republican, taking his seat March 4, 1885. His term of service will expire March 3, 1891. Congressional Directory. [wisconsIN. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Jefferson, Kenosha, Racine, Rock, and Walworth. Lucien B. Caswell, of Fort Atkinson, was born at Swanton, Vermont, November 27, 1827; removed to Wisconsin in 1837; pursued a partial collegiate course; studied law with Hon. Matt. H. Carpenter; was admitted to the bar in 1851, and has practised since; was elected District Attorney in 1855 and ’56; was a member of the Legislative Assembly of Wis-consin in 1863, ’72, and ’74; was Commissioner of the Second District Board of Enrolment from September, 1863; to May 5, 1865; was a Delegate to the Republican National Conven-tion at Chicago in 1868; was elected to the Forty-fourth, Forty-fifth, Forty-sixth, and Forty-seventh Congresses, and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 19,284 votes against 14,509 votes for Ernest Merton, Democrat, 1,404 votes for Robert Fargo, Prohibitionist, and 58 votes scattering. Re-elected. SECOND DISTRICT. COUNTIES.Dodge, Fond du Lac, Washington, and Waukesha. . — Edward S. Bragg, of Fond du Lac, was born in New York February 20, 1827; educated a lawyer; served in the Union Army in active field service from the breaking out of the Re-bellion to the close of the war; was a member of the Forty-fifth, Forty-sixth, and Forty-sev-enth Congresses, and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 16,865 votes against 12,643 votes for Barney, Republican, 563 votes for Patchen, Prohibitionist, and 356 votes for W. M. Jones, Greenbacker. THIRD DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Dane, Grout, Green, lowa, and La Fayette. Robert M. La Follette, of Madison, was born in the town of Primrose, Dane County, June 14, 1855; received a collegiate education, graduating at the University of Wisconsin in June, 1879; 1s by profession a lawyer; was elected District Attorney of Dane County in 1880, and re-elected in ’82; was elected as a Republican to the Forty-ninth Congress, receiving 17,433 votes against 16,942 votes for Burr W. Jones, Democrat, and 1,885 votes for John M. Olin, Prohibitionist. Re-elected. FOURTH DISTRICT. COUNTY.— Milwaukee. Isaac W. Van Schaick, of Milwaukee, was born at Coxsackie, Greene County, New York December 7, 1817; received such an education as the common schools afforded ; is engaged in the manufacture of flour; filled various local offices in his native State; removed to Wis-consin in 1861; was elected to the Milwaukee Common Council in 1871; was elected to the Wisconsin Assembly in 1872 and in 1874; was elected to the Wisconsin Senate in 1877-78, 1879-80, and 1881-'82; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiv-ing 16,783 votes against 15,907 votes for P. V. Deuster, Democrat, 1,296 votes for H. Smith, National, 226 votes for C. E. Reed, Prohibitionist, and 1 vote scattering. FIFTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Brown, Calumet, Kewaunee, Manitowoc, Ozaukee, and Sheboygan. Thomas R. Hudd, of Green Bay, was born at Buffalo, New York, October 2, 1835; removed to Wisconsin in 1853, and settled at Appleton, from whence, in 1868, he removed to Green Bay; was educated in the common schools, printing office, and Lawrence University; is an attorney-at-law; was District Attorney of Outagamie County 1656-57; City Attorney of Green Bay 1873-"74; was State Senator from the twenty-second district in 1862 and ’63; ‘was a member of the State Assembly from Outagamie County in 1868, and from Brown County in 1875; was State Senator from second district in 1876, 77,778, and ’79; was Delegate from the State at large to the National Democratic Convention at Cincinnati in 1880; was State Senator for 1882 and ’83, and re-elected for the term ending December 31, 1888; was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Hon. Joseph Rankin, receiving 9,633 votes, against 5,852 votes for Luling. Hetook his seat March 8, 1886, Re-elected, : : WISCONSIN. | Senators and Representasives. 97 SIXTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Adams, Columbia, Green Lake, Marquette, Outagamie, Waushara, and Win-nebago. Richard Guenther, of Oshkosh, was born at Potsdam, Prussia, November 30, 1845; s received a collegiate education; studied pharmacy in the Royal Pharmacy at Potsdam; emi-grated to the United States in July, 1866; removed to Oshkosh in 1867; was elected State Treasurer of Wisconsin in 1876 and re-_elected in 1878; was elected to the Forty-seventh and Forty-eighth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 16,425 votes against 15,197 votes for Smith, Democrat, 955 votes for Sutton, Pro-hibitionist, 271 votes for Hanson, Greenbacker, and 55 votes scattering. Re-elected. SEVENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Crawford, Juneau, La Crosse, Monroe, Richland, Sauk, and Vernon. Ormsby B. Thomas, of Prairie du Chien, was born in Sandgate, Bennington County, Vermont, August 21, 1832; went to Wisconsin in 1836; received a common-school education; studied law and graduated at the National Law School of Poughkeepsie, New York, and was admitted to the bar at Albany, New York, in 1856; has been District Attorney of Craw-ford County, Wisconsin, several terms; was a member of the Wisconsin Assembly in 1862, 1865, and 1867,and of the Wisconsin State Senate in 1880 and 1881; was ‘Presidential Elector in 1872; was in the Union Army, and served as Captain of Company D, Thirty-first Regiment Wisconsin Volunteer Infantry ; was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Repub-lican, receiving 18,437 votes against 15,446 votes for Gilbert M. Woodward, Democrat, 1,147 votes for S. B. Loomis, Prohibitionist, and 5 votes scattering. Re-elected. EIGHTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Barron, Bayfield, Buffalo, Burnett, Clark, Douglas, Dunn, Eau Claire, Jack son, Pepin, Pierce, Polk, Saint Croix, Washburn, rect Trempealean. Hugh H. Price, of Black River Falls, was born at Black River Falls, Jackson County, Wisconcin, December 2, 1859; received a public school education, with a short course in the University of Wisconsin; is engaged in milling and lumber business; was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, to fill a vacancy caused by the death of his father, Hon. William T. Price, and took his seat February 2, 1887. NINTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Ashland, Chippewa, Door, Florence, Langlade, Lincoln, Marathon, Marinette, Oconto, Portage, Price, Sawyer, Shawano, Taylor, Waupaca, and Wood. ; Isaac Stephenson, of Marinette, was born near Fredericton, in York County, New Bruns-wick, June 18, 1829; received a common-school education; is a farmer, lumberman, and a banker; removed to Wisconsin in 1845, with headquarters at Milwaukee; engaged in the lum-ber business at Escanaba, Michigan, for twelve years; in the spring of 1858 he removed to Marinette, Wisconsin, and has resided there since; has held various local offices, and was a member of the Wisconsin Legislature in 1866 and 1868; was elected to the Forty-eighth Con-gress, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 23,414 votes against 19,885 votes for James Meehan, Democrat, 457 votes. for A. J. Smith, Prolibitionist, and 4 votes scattering. Re-elced. 20 ED—7 Congressiona! Direclory. [ARIZONA. TERRITORIAL DELEGATES. ARIZONA. Curtis C. Bean, of Prescott, was born in Tamworth, New Hampshire, January 4, 1828; was educated at Phillips Academy, Exeter, New Hampshire; studied law, and was admitted to the bar in Tennessee in 1865; was appointed by Governor Brownlow attorney-general tou the Eleventh Judicial Circuit of Tennessee in 1865; never practised law; represented Wil-liamson, Maury, and Lewis Counties in the Tennessee Legislature in 1866-67; went to Ari-zona in June, 1868; was a member of the Upper House in the Tenth Legislative Assembly of Arizona in 1879; was nominated by acclamation inthe Republican Convention held at Tomb-stone in September, 1884, and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican. re-ceiving 6,820 votes against 5,671 votes for C. P. Head, Democrat. DAKOTA. Oscar Sherman Gifford, of Canton, was born at Watertown, New York, October 20, 1842 received a common-school and academic education; served in the Union Army as private in -the Elgin (Illinois) Battery, 1863-1865; studied law, was admitted to the bar in 1870, and has practised since ; was elected district attorney for Lincoln County in 1874; was mayor of the city of Canton 1882-’83; was a member of the Constitutional Convention of Dakota which convened at Sioux Falls September 7, 1883; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 71,579 votes against 15,124 votes for John M. Wilson, Democrat, and 61 votes scattering. Re-elected. / IDAHO. John Hailey, of Boisé¢ City, was born in Smith County, Tennessee, August 29, 1835; re-ceived a common-school education; removed with his parents to Dade County, Missouri, in 1848 ; crossed the plains to Oregon in 1853; went in 1862 to what is now Idaho Territory; has been engaged in staging, farming, stock-raising, butchering, and mining ; was elected to the Forty-third Congress as a Democrat ; was elected to the Legislative Council of Idaho in 1880, and was its president; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, “receiving 6,488 votes against 5,702 votes for Theodore F. Singeser, Republican. MONTANA. Joseph Kemp Toole, of Helena, was born at Savannah, Missouri, May 12, 1851; received his education at the public sehools at Saint Joseph, Missouri, and at the Western Military Academy at New Castle, Kentucky, of which General E. Kirby Smith was principal; studied law, was admitted to the bar, and has since practised; was elected district attorney of the Third Judicial District in Montana in 1872, and was re-elected in 1874 without opposition; was elected in 1831 to the Twelfth Legislative Assembly of Montana as a member of the Council from Lewis and Clarke County, and was chosen President of the Council; was elected a member of the Constitutional Convention which met in Helena in January, 1884; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 13,584 votes against 13,385 votes for Hiram Knowles, Republican. Re-elected. NEW MEXICO. Antonio Joseph, of Ojo Caliente, was born at Taos, New Mexico, August 25, 1846; re-ceived his early education at Lux’s Academy in Taos and attended Bishop Lammy’s school in Santa Fé, New Mexico, for two years; he afterwards attended Webster College, in Saint Louis County, Missouri, for four years, completing a commercial course at Bryant & Stratton’s Com-mercial College, in Saint Louis, Missouri; engaged in mercantile pursuits, and is now a mer-chant; has been county judge of Taos county, New Mexico, for six years; has been a mem-ber of the Territorial Legislature six years, and was a Senator in the Territorial Legislature when he was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 12,271 votes against 9,930 votes for L. B. Prince, Republican, and 5,192 votes for N. L. Rynerson, Inde-pendent Republican. Re-elected. \ egy UTAH Territorial Delegates. 99 4 UTAH. John T. Caine, ot Salt Lake City, was born in the Isle of Man, January 8, 1829; received a grammar-school education;.emigrated to the United States in 1846, and lived in New York City and Saint Louis till 1852, when he crossed the plains and settled in Utah; has mostly followed business pursuits, and for many years has been manager of the Salt Lake theater; in 1870, with two associates, he founded ¢ The Salt Lake Herald,” became its managing editor, and is now President of. its company; served as Secretary of the Legislative Council during the sessions of 1856, ’57, ’59, and 60; was a member of the Constitutional Conventions of 1872 and 1882, which adopted constitutions and the admission of Utah as a State; by the latter convention he was appointed one of the delegates to present the constitu-tion and memorial to Congress; was elected to the Council of the Legislative Assembly for the sessions of 1874, ’76, ’80, and ’82; by joint vote of the Assembly he was elected a Regent of the Deseret University in 1876, ’78, 80, and 82; was elected Recorder of Salt Lake City in 1876, and re-elected in 1878, ’80, and ’82; was elected to the Forty-seventh Congress, to fill a vacancy; was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-ninth Congress on the ¢ People’s Ticket,” receiving 21,120 votes against 2,215 votes or Smith, Liberal. Re-elected. WASHINGTON. Charles Stewart Voorhees, ot Colfax, was born at Covington, Indiana, June 4, 1853; graduated at Georgetown College, District of Columbia, June 26, 1873; studied law, and was admitted to the bar at Terre Haute, Indiana, in 1875; reached Washington Territory April 6, 1882, locating at Colfax; was (lected prosecuting attorney for Whitman County November 4, 1882, and served until January 10, 1885; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 20,995 votes against 20,847 votes for J. M. Armstrong, Republican, Re-elected. WYOMING. Joseph M. Carey, of Cheyenne, was born in Sussex County, Delaware, January 19, 1845; received a common-school education, and attended Fort Edward Collegiate Institute and Union College, New York; studied law at Philadelphia, and was admitted to the bar in 1867, graduating the same year at the Law Department of the University of Pennsylvania; is en-gaged in stock-growing, and is President of the Wyoming Stock-Growers’ Association; was appointed United States Attorney for the Territory of Wyoming on the organization of the Territory in 1869; resigned this office in 1871, on his appointment as an associate justice of the Supreme Court of Wyoming, which office he held until 1876; was a member of the United States Centennial Commission 1872-76; was three times elected mayor of Cheyenne, serving 1881-'85; and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress as a Republican, receiving 7,225 votes against 5,586 votes for Wm. H. Holliday, Democrat, and 19 votes scattering. Re-elected. =» Congressional Directory. 100 COMMITTEES OF THE SENATE. : 1 STANDING COMMITTEES. Committee on Agriculture and Forestry. Warner Miller, of New York. James Z. George,of Mississippi. Henry W. Blair, of New Hampshire. James G. Fair, of Nevada. Preston B. Plumb, of Kansas. Randall L. Gibson, of Louisiana. Charles H. Van Wyck, of Nebraska. James K. Jones, of Arkansas. Philetus Sawyer, of Wisconsin. Committee on Appropriations. William B. Allison, of Iowa. John A. Logan, of Illinois. Henry L. Dawes, of Massachusetts. James B. Beck, of Kentucky. Preston B. Plumb, of Kansas. Francis M. Cockrell, of Missouri. Eugene Hale, of Maine. Wilkinson Call, of Florida. William Mahone, of Virginia. Arthur P. Gorman, of Maryland. Committee to Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses of the Senate, John P. Jones, of Nevada. Zebulon B. Vance, of North Carolina. Jonathan Chace, of Rhode Island. Commaittee on Civil Service and Retren iment. Joseph R. Hawley, of Connecticut. [ Daniel W. Voorhees, of Indiana. Henry L. Dawes, of Massachusetts. | E. C. Walthall, of Mississippi. John I. Mitchell, of Pennsylvania. Ephraim K. Wilso:, of Maryland. Leland Stanford, of California. James H. Berry, of Arkansas. A. P. Williams, of California. Committee on Claims. John C. Spooner, of Wisconsin. James Graham Fair, of Nevada. George F. Hoar, of Massachusetts. James K. Jones, of Arkansas. Joseph N. Dolph, of Oregon. George Gray, of Delaware. John H. Mitchell, of Oregon. W. C. Whitthorne, of Tennessee. P. C. Cheney, of New Hampshire. Committee on Coast Defenses. Joseph N. Dolph, of Oregon. Samuel B. Maxey, of Texas. James Donald Cameron, of Pennsylvania. John R. McPherson, of New Jersey. William J. Sewell, of New Jersey. James Graham Fair, of California. Joseph R. Hawley, of Connecticut. Committee on Commerce. Samuel J. R. McMillan, of Minnesota. Matt W. Ransom, of North Carolina. John P. Jones, of Nevada. Richard Coke, of Texas. Omar D. Conger, of Michigan. George G. Vest, of Missouri. William P. Frye, of Maine. Arthur P. Gorman, of Maryland. i | Warner Miller, of New York. Charles W. Jones, of Florida. ; Joseph N. Dolph, of Oregon. John E. Kenna, of West Virginia. James Donald Cameron, of Pennsylvania. Randall L. Gibson, of Louisiana. Committee on the District of Columbia. John J. Ingalls, of Kansas. Isham G. Harris, ot Tennessee. Thomas W. Palmer, of Michigan. Zebulon B. Vance, of North Carolina. John C. Spooner, of Wisconsin. Joseph E. Brown, of Georgia. Jonathan Chace, of Rhode Island. Joseph C, S, Blackburn, of Kentucky. P. C. Cheney, of New Hampshire. I | a ~Gi= Re Cl ~§= Senate Committees. Committee on Education and Labor. Henry W. Blair, of New Hampshire, | Wilkinson Call, of Florida. William Mahone, of Virginia. James L. Pugh, of Alabama. Warner Miller, of New York. Henry B. Payne, of Ohio. Thomas M. Bowen, of Colorado. ! E. C. Walthall, of Mississippi. Thomas W. Palmer, of Michigan. Committee on Engrossed Bills. Eli Saulsbury, of Delaware. | William B. Allison, of Iowa. Wilkinson Call, of Florida. Committee on Enrolled Bills. Thomas M. Bowen, of Colorado. Alfred H. Colquitt, of Georgia. Dwight M. Sabin, of Minnesota. Committee on Epidemic Diseases. Isham G. Harris, of Tennessee. William J. Sewell, of New Jersey. Wade Hampton, of South Carolina. Leland Stanford, of California. James B. Eustis, of Louisiana. P. C. Cheney, of New Hampshire. James H. Berry, of Arkansas. Committee to Examine the Several Branches of the Civil Service. Dwight M. Sabin, of Minnesota. Wade Hampton, of South Carolina. Shelby M. Cullom, of Illinois. George Gray, of Delaware. William B. Allison; of Iowa. Commitiee on Expenditures of Public Money. Shelby M. Cullom, of Illinois. James B. Beck, of Kentucky. Benjamin Harrison, of Indiana. John E. Kenna, of West Virginia. Preston B. Plumb, of Kansas. Randall I. Gibson, of Louisiana. Orville H. Platt, of Connecticut. Committee on Finance. Justin S. Morrill, of Vermont. D. W. Voorhees, of Indiana. John Sherman, of Ohio. ? James B. Beck, of Kentucky. John P. Jones, of Nevada. John R. McPherson, of New Jersey. William B. Allison, of Iowa. Isham G. Harris, of Tennessee. Nelson W. Aldrich, of Rhode Island. Zebulon B. Vance, of North Carolina. Warner Miller, of New York. ; Committee on Fisheries. Thomas W. Palmer, of Michigan. Leland Stanford, of California. William J. Sewell, of New Jersey. John T. Morgan, of Alabama. Henry L. Dawes, of Massachusetts. George Gray, of Delaware. Committee on Foreign Relations. + John Sherman, of Ohio. J. T. Morgan, of Alabama. George F. Edmunds, of Vermont. Joseph E. Brown, of Georgia. William P. Frye, of Maine. Eli Saulsbury, of Delaware. William M. Evarts, of New York. Henry B. Payne, of Ohio. Benjamin Harrison, of Indiana. Committee on the Improvement of the Mississippi River and its Tributaries. Charles H. Van Wyck, of Nebraska. Francis M. Cockrell, of Missouri. John I. Mitchell, of Pennsylvania. James Z. George, of Mississippi. Shelby M. Cullom, of Illinois. James B. Eustis, of Louisiana. A. P. Williams, of California. 102 Congressional Directory. Committee on Indian Affairs. Henry L. Dawes, of Massachusetts. Samuel B. Maxey, of Texas. John J. Ingalls, of Kansas. John T. Morgan, of Alabama. Benjamin Harrison, of Indiana. Wade Hampton, of South Carolina. Thomas M. Bowen, of Colorado. James K. Jones, of Arkansas. Dwight M. Sabin, of Minnesota. Committee on the Judiciary. George F. Edmunds, of Vermont. William M. Evarts, of New York. John J. Ingalls, of Kansas. James L. Pugh, of Alabama. Samuel J. R. McMillan, of Minnesota. Richard Coke, of Texas. George F. Hoar, of Massachusetts. George G. Vest, of Missouri. James F. Wilson, of Iowa. James Z. George, of Mississippi. Committee on the Library. William J. Sewell, of New Jersey. Daniel W. Voorhees, of Indiana. George F. Hoar, of Massachusetts. Committee on Manufactures. \ H. H. Riddleberger, of Virginia. Leland Stanford, of California. Dwight M. Sabin, of Minnesota. Alfred H. Colquitt, of Georgia. John I. Mitchell, of Pennsylvania. M. C. Butler, of South Carolina. Committee on Military Affairs. James Donald Cameron, of Pennsylvania. Francis M. Cockrell, of Missouri. William J. Sewell, of New Jersey. Wade Hampton, of South Carolina. Benjamin Harrison, of Indiana. Johnson N. Camden, of West Virginia. Joseph R. Hawley, of Connecticut. E. C. Walthall, of Mississippi. Charles F. Manderson, of Nebraska. Committee on Mines and Mining. Henry M. T eller, of Colorado. Wade Hampton, of South Carolina. John P. Jones, of Nevada. James Graham Fair, of Nevada. Charles H. Van Wyck, of Nebraska. Johnson N. Camden, of West Virginia. John H. Mitchell, of Oregon. Committee on Naval Affairs. James Donald Cameron, of Pennsylvania. | John R. McPherson, of New Jersey. Eugene Hale, of Maine. Charles W. Jones, of Florida. Henry L. Dawes, of Massachusetts. M. C. Butler, of South Carolina. H. H. Riddleberger, of Virginia. Joseph C. S. Blackburn, of Kentucky. Leland Stanford, of California. W. C. Whitthorne, of Tennessee. Committee on Patents. Orville H. Platt, of Connecticut. Johnson N. Camden, of West Virginia. John I. Mitchell, of Pennsylvania. James K. Jones, of Arkansas. Jonathan'Chace, of Rhode Island. George Gray, of Delaware. Henry M. Teller, of Colorado. : Coumitiee on Pensions. John I. Mitchell, of Pennsylvania. Philetus Sawyer, of Wisconsin. Henry W. Blair, of New Hampshire. -Johnson N. Camden, of West Virginia. Charles H. Van Wyck, of Nebraska. Alfred H. Colquitt, of Georgia. Nelson W. Aldrich, of Rhode Island. Ephraim K. Wilson, of Maryland. William J. Sewell, of New Jersey. W. C. Whitthorne, of Tennessee. _*This committee has power to act concurrently with the same committee of the House of Representa tives. : | ia = Senate Committees. Committee on Post-Offices and Post-Roads. Omar D. Conger, of Michigan. Samuel B. Maxey, of Texas. Philetus Sawyer, of Wisconsin. El Saulsbury, of Delaware. James F. Wilson, of Iowa. Alfred H. Colquitt, of Georgia. William Mahone, of Virginia. Ephraim K. Wilson, of Maryland. Jonathan Chace, of Rhode Island. Committee on Printing.* Charles F. Manderson, cf Nebraska. Arthur P. Gorman, of Maryland. Joseph R. Hawley, of Connecticut. Committee on Private Land Claims. Matt W. Ransom, of North Carolina. George F. Edmunds, of Vermont. Alfred H. Colquitt, of Georgia. William M. Evarts, of New York. James B. Eustis, of Louisiana. Committee on Privileges and Elections. George I. Hoar, of Massachusetts. Eli Saulsbury, of Delaware. William P. Frye, of Maine. | Zebulon B. Vance, of North Carolina, Henry M. Teller, of Colorado. James L. Pugh, of Alabama. William M. Evarts, of New York. James B. Eustis, of Louisiana. Commitiee on Public Buildings and Grounds.* William Mahone, of Virginia. Charles W. Jones, of Florida. Justin S. Morrill, of Vermont. George G. Vest, of Missouri. Leland Stanford, of California. Johnson N. Camden, of West Virginia, John C. Spooner, of Wisconsin. Committee on Public Lands. Preston B. Plumb, of Kansas. John T. Morgan, of Alabama. Henry W. Blair, of New Hampshire. Francis M. Cockrell, of Missouri. Charles H. Van Wyck, of Nebraska. E. C. Walthall, of Mississippi. Joseph N. Dolph, of Oregon. James H. Berry, of Arkansas. Henry M. Teller, of Colorado. Committee on Railroads. Philetus Sawyer, of Wisconsin. John H. Mitchell, of Oregon. Joseph R. Hawley, of Connecticut. Joseph E. Brown, of Georgia. William J. Sewell, of New Jersey. John E. Kenna, of West Virginia. Dwight M. Sabin, of Minnesota. James Z. George, of Mississippi. Shelby M. Cullom, of Illinois. Joseph C. S. Blackburn, of Kentucky. Committee on the Revision of the Laws of the United States. James F. Wilson, of Towa. John E. Kenna, of West Virginia. Orville H. Platt, of Connecticut. Ephraim K. Wilson, of Maryland. Eugene Hale, of Maine. Committee on Revolutionary Claims. Charles W. Jones, of Florida. Samuel J. R. McMillan, of Minnesota. Richard Coke, of Texas. Jonathan Chace, of Rhode Island. James L. Pugh, of Alabama. Committee on Rules. e William P. Frye, of Maine. Isham G. Harris, of Tennessee. John Sherman, of Ohio. Joseph C. S. Blackburn, of Kentucky. John J. Ingalls, of Kansas. Committee on Territories. Benjamin Harrison, of Indiana. M. C. Butler, of South Carolina. Orville H. Platt, of Connecticut. Charles W. Jones, of Florida. Omar D. Conger, of Michigan. Henry B. Payne, of Ohio. Shelby M. Cullom, of Illinois. George Gray, of Delaware. Charles F. Manderson, of Nebraska. * This committee has power to act concurrently with the same committee of the House of Represent-atives. 104 Congressional Directory. Committee on Transportation Routes to the Seaboard. . Nelson W. Aldrich, of Rhode Island. Randall L. Gibson, of Louisiana. Thomas W. Palmer, of Michigan. George G. Vest, of Missouri. Shelby M. Cullom, of Illinois. Wilkinson Call, of Florida. John H. Mitchell, of Oregon. M. C. Butler, of South Carolina. A. P. Williams, of California. -SELECT COMMITTEES OF THE SENATE. Select Committee on Additional Accommodations for the Library of Congress. Daniel W. Voorhees, of Indiana. Justin S. Morrill, of Vermont. M. C. Butler, of South Carolina. John H. Mitchell, of Oregon. Randall L. Gibson, of Louisiana. Select Committee to make Provisions for Taking the Tenth Census and Ascertaining the Result Thereof. Eugene Hale, of Maine. Richard Coke, of Texas. Justin S. Morrill, of Vermont. James H. Berry, of Arkansas. Philetus Sawyer, of Wisconsin. W. C. Whitthorne, of Tennessee. James F. Wilson, of Towa. Select Committee on Ordnance and War-Ships. Joseph R. Hawley, of Connecticut. M. C. Butler, of South Carolina. Nelson W. Aldrich, of Rhode Island. William J. Sewell, of New Jersey. John T. Morgan, of Alabama. Select Committee to Inquire into Claims of Citizens of the United States against Nicaragua. Samuel B. Maxey, of Texas. George F. Hoar, of Massachusetts. Ephraim K. Wilson, of Maryland. Benjamin Harrison, of Indiana. Select Committee to Investigate Condition of Potomac River Front of Washington. John R. McPherson, of New Jersey. Dwight M. Sabin, of Minnesota. Matt W. Ransom, of North Carolina. Charles F. Manderson, of Nebraska. Arthur P. Gorman, of Maryland. John C. Spooner, of Wisconsin. Omar D. Conger, of Michigan. Select Committee on Woman Suffrage. Francis M. Cockrell, of Missouri. Thomas W. Palmer, of Michigan. James Graham Fair, of Nevada. Jonathan Chace, of Rhode Island. Joseph E. Brown, of Georgia. Thomas M. Bowen, of Colorado. Henry W. Blair, of New Hampshire. Select Committee on Inter-State Cominerce. Shelby M. Cullom, of Illinois. Arthur P. Gorman, of Maryland. Orville H. Platt, of Connecticut. Isham G. Harris, of Tennessee. Warner Miller, of New York. Select Committee on Reduction of Senate Employés and Committees. William B. Allison, of Iowa. Francis M. Cockrell, of Missouri. Orville H. Platt, of Connecticut. Isham G. Harris, of Tennessee. Preston B. Plumb, of Kansas. Henry B. Payne, of Ohio. Warner Miller, of New York. Select Committee on Indian Traders. Orville H. Platt, of Connecticut. Richard Coke, of Texas. Shelby M. Cullum, of Illinois. Joseph C. S. Blackburn, of Kentucky. John P. Jones, of Nevada. Select Committee on the Constitution and the Discovery of America. John Sherman, of Ohio. Daniel W. Voorhees, of Indiana. George F. Hoar, of Massachusetts. Arthur P. Gorman, of Maryland. William J. Sewell, of New Jersey. James B. Eustis, of Louisiana. Joseph R. Hawley, of Connecticut. | i House Committees. 108 COMMITTEES OF THE IIOUSE. ' STANDING COMMITTEES. Committee on Elections. Henry G. Turner, of Georgia. Benton J. Hall, of Iowa. Robert Lowry, of Indiana. Augustus H. Pettibone, of Tennessee. Thomas A. Robertson, of Kentucky. Sereno E. Payne, of New York. Charles E. Boyle, of Pennsylvania. Albert J. Hopkins, of Illinois. John S. Henderson, of North Carolina. Frederick D. Ely, of Massachusetts. Thomas Croxton, of Virginia. George W. E. Dorsey, of Nebraska. John M. Martin, of Alabama. John H. Rowell, of Illinois. Committee on Ways and Means. William R. Morrison, of Illinois. W. C. P. Breckinridge, of Kentucky. Roger Q. Mills, of Texas. William D. Kelley, of Pennsylvania. Benton McMillin, of Tennessee. Frank Hiscock, of New York. Henry R. Harris, of Georgia. Thomas M. Browne, of Indiana. Clifton R. Breckinridge, of Arkansas. Thomas B. Reed, of Maine. William C. Maybury, of Michigan. William McKinley, jr., of Ohio. ! | Committee on Appropriations. Samuel J. Randall, of Pennsylvania. William I. Wilson, of West Virginia. William H. Forney, of Alabama. Joseph G. Cannon, of Illinois. William S. Holman, of Indiana. Thomas Ryan, of Kansas. Richard W. Townshend, of Illinois. Benjamin Butterworth, of Ohio. James N: Burnes, of Missouri. John D. Long, of Massachusetts. George C. Cabell, of Virginia. Louis E. McComas, of Maryland. Benjamin Le Fevre, of Ohio. David B. Henderson, of Iowa. John J. Adams, of New York. Committee on the Judiciary. JohnRelA Tucker, of Virginia. Risden T. Bennett, of North Carolina. Nathaniel J. Hammond, of Georgia. Ezra B. Taylor, of Ohio. David D. Culberson, of Texas. Abraham X. Parker, of New York. Patrick A. Collins, of Massachusetts. Ambrose A. Ranney, of Massachusetts. George E. Seney, of Ohio. William P. Hepburn, of Iowa. William C. Oates, of Alabama. John W. Stewart, of Vermont. John R. Eden, of Illinois. Lucien B. Caswell, of Wisconsin. John H. Rogers, of Arkansas. Committee on Banking and Currency. James F. Miller, of Texas. Charles N. Brumm, of Pennsylvania. Allen D. Candler, of Georgia. George E. Adams, of Illinois. Beriah Wilkins, of Ohio. James D. Brady, of Virginia. Charles P. Snydet, of West Virginia. William Woodburn, of Nevada. Jonas G. Howard, of Indiana. J. V. L. Findlay, of Maryland. John E. Hutton, of Missouri. Henry Bacon, of New York. Nelson Dingley, jr., of Maine. Committee on Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Richard P. Bland, of Missouri. | William D. Bynum, of Indiana. Samuel W. T. Lanham, of Texas. | Darwin R. James, of New York. Edward W. Seymour, of Connecticut. | Francis W. Rockwell, of Massachusetts. John J. Hemphill, of South Carolina. | John Little, of Ohio. Thomas M. Norwood, of Georgia. | Charles N. Felton, of California. William L. Scott, of Pennsylvania. | William E. Fuller, of Towa. James B. McCreary, of Kentucky. | Joseph K. Toole, of Montana. 106 Congressional Directory. Committee on Commerce. -John H. Reagan, of Texas. Charles O’Neill, of Pennsylvania. Martin L. Clardy, of Missouri. Robert T. Davis, of Massachusetts. Charles F. Crisp, of Georgia. Ransom W. Dunham, of Illinois. Andrew J. Caldwell, of Tennessee. Archibald J. Weaver, of Nebraska. Charles T. O’Ferrall, of Virginia. Frederick A. Johnson, of New York. Timothy E. Tarsney, of Michigan. William W. Morrow, of California. William D. Bynum, of Indiana. Thomas R. Hudd, of Wisconsin. Alfred B. Irion, of Louisiana. Committee on Rivers and Harbors. Albert S. Willis, of Kentucky. John M. Glover, of Missouri. Newton C. Blanchard, of Louisiana. Thomas J. Henderson, of Illinois. James T. Jones, of Alabama. Thomas M. Bayne, of Pennsylvania. J. H. Murphy, of Iowa. Eben F. Stone, of Massachusetts. Eustace Gibson, of West Virginia. Henry G. Burleigh, of New York. Charles Stewart, of Texas. Charles H. Grosvenor, of Ohio. Ezra C. Carleton, of Michigan. Henry H. Markham, of California. Thomas C. Catchings, of Mississippi. ’ Committee on Agriculture. William H. Hatch, of Missouri. Milo White, of Minnesota. Wharton J. Green, of North Carolina. E. H. Funston, of Kansas. Edwin B. Winans, of Michigan. George Hires, of New Jersey. Benjamin T. Frederick, of Iowa. John Swinburne, of New York. ‘A. C. Davidson, of Alabama. Oscar S. Gifford, of Dakota. William G. Stahlnecker, of New York. Henry R. Harris, of Georgia. James B. Morgan, of Mississippi. Albert J. Hopkins, of Illinois. Presley T. Glass, of Tennessee. Committee on Foreign Affairs. Perry Belmont, of New York. William H. Crain, of Texas. Judson C. Clements, of Georgia. William W. Rice, of Massachusetts. William R. Cox, of North Carolina. John T. Wait, of Connecticut. Otho R. Singleton, of Mississippi. John H. Ketcham, of New York. Nicholas E. Worthington, of Illinois. William Walter Phelps, of New Jersey. John W. Daniel, of Virginia. Robert R. Hitt, of Illinois. James B. McCreary, of Kentucky. Committee on Military Affairs. Edward S. Bragg, of Wisconsin. Charles M. Anderson, of Ohio. Joseph Wheeler, of Alabama. George W. Steele, of Indiana. Frank L. Wolford, of Kentucky. James Laird, of Nebraska. > Daniel Ermentrout, of Pennsylvania. Byron M. Cutcheon, of Michigan. George W. Dargan, of South Carolina. Leonidas C. Houk, of Tennessee. John V. L. Findlay, of Maryland. James S. Negley, of Pennsylvania. Egbert L. Viele, of New York. Joseph M. Carey, of Wyoming. Committee on Naval Affairs. Hilary A. Herbert, of Alabama. Joseph D. Sayers, of Texas. George D. Wise, of Virginia. Alfred C. Harmer, of Pennsylvania. John G. Ballentine, of Tennessee. John R. Thomas, of Illinois. William McAdoo, of New Jersey. Nathan Goff, jr., of West Virginia. Thomas M. Norwood, of Georgia. Charles A. Boutelle, of Maine.. Charles B. Lore, of Delaware. John R. Buck, of Connecticut. Comainittee on the Post-Office and Post-Roads. James H. Blount, of Georgia. F. G. Barry, of Mississippi. Thomas B. Ward, of Indiana. Henry H. Bingham, of Pennsylvania. James M. Riggs, of Illinois. James B. Wakefield, of Minnesota. John M. Taylor, of Tennessee. Julius C. Burrows, of Michigan. James H. Jones, of Texas. Richard Guenther, of Wisconsin. Alexander M. Dockery, of Missouri. Stephen C. Millard, of New York. A. J. Warner, of Ohio. Samuel R. Peters, of Kansas. Truman A. Merriman, of New York. John T. Caine, of Utah. House Commiuttees. 10% Committee on the Public Lands. Thomas R. Cobb, of Indiana. Thomas C. McRae, of Arkansas. Barclay Hanley, of California. Horace B. Strait, of Minnesota. Henry S. Van Eaton, of Mississippi. John A. Anderson, of Kansas. Martin A. Foran, of Ohio. Lewis E. Payson, of Illinois. Polk Laffoon, of Kentucky. Isaac Stephenson, of Wisconsin. William J. Stone, of Missouri. Oscar L. Jackson, of Pennsylvania. Silas Z. Landes, of Illinois. Charles S. Voorhees, of Washington. Committee on Indian Affairs. Olin Wellborn, of Texas. James H. Ward, of Illinois. Samuel W. Peel, of Arkansas. : Bishop W. Perkins, of Kansas. Thomas G. Skinner, of North Carolina. Knute. Nelson, of Minnesota. John B. Storm, of Pennsylvania. Walter L. Sessions, of New York. Felix Campbell, of New York. Charles H. Allen, of Massachuetts. John B. Hale, of Missouri. Robert M. La Follette, of Wisconsin. John M. Allen, of Mississippi. John Hailey, of Idaho. Commiettee on the Territories. William D. Hill, of Ohio. William Dawson, of Missouri. William M. Springer, of Illinois. Isaac S. Struble, of Iowa. J. Thomas Spriggs, of New York. Charles S. Baker, of New York. Charles E. Boyle, of Pennsylvania. William C. Cooper, of Ohio. George T. Barnes, of Georgia. Binger Herman, of Oregon. Thomas W. Sadler, of Alabama. George D. Symes, of Colorado. William H. Perry, of South Carolina. Anthony Joseph, of New Mexico. Committee on Railways and Canals. Robert H. M. Davidson, of Florida. James N. Pidcock, of New Jersey. Jeremiah H. Murphy, of Iowa. Louis E. Atkinson, of Pennsylvania. Alfred B. Irion, of Louisiana. Ralph Plumb, of Illinois. William W. Ellsberry, of Ohio. John B. Weber, of New York. John S. Henderson, of North Carolina. Isaac W. Van Schaick, of Wisconsin. William J. Stone, of Kentucky. Nathaniel D. Wallace, of Louisiana. Committee on Manufactures. George D. Wise, of Virginia. John S. Pindar, of New York. John A. Swope, of Pennsylvania. Jacob M. Campbell, of Pennsylvania. Benjamin Le Fevre, of Ohio. George West, of New York. William L. Wilson, of West Virginia. Isaac W. Van Schaick, of Wisconsin. Thomas C. Catchings, of Mississippi. George Hires, of New Jersey. Frank Lawler, of Illinois. Commitlee on Mines and Mining. Martin L. Clardy, of Missouri. F. G. Barry, of Mississippi. Charles T. O’Ferrall, of Virginia. Milo White, of Minnesota. William D. Hill, of Ohio. William Woodburn, of Nevada. Thomas G. Skinner, of North Carolina. James G. Lindsley, of New York: James H. Jones, of Texas. George G. Symes, of Colorado. John R. Neal, of Tennessee. Joseph McKenna, of California. Edward J. Gay, of Louisiana. Curtis C. Bean, of Arizona Territory. Committee on Public Buildings and Grounds. Samuel Dibble, of South Carolina. Seth L. Milliken, of Maine. Seaborn Reese, of Georgia. William W. Brown, of Pennsylvania. Charles P. Snyder, of West Virginia. Francis W. Rockwell, of Massachusetts. Barclay Henley, of California. > William H. Wade, of Missouri. Beriah Wilkins, of Ohio. William D. Owen, of Indiana. Nicholas E. Worthington, of Illinois. Nathaniel D. Wallace, of Louisiana. Thomas D. Johnston, of North Carolina. Committee on Pacific Railroads. James W. Throckmorton, of Texas. James D. Richardson, of Tennessee. Charles F. Crisp, of Georgia. Lewis Hanback, of Kansas. George C. Cabell, of Virginia. Adoniram J. Holmes, of Iowa. Poindexter Dunn, of Arkansas. James B. Everhart, of Pennsylvania. Archibald M. Bliss, of New York. Edward D. Hayden, of Massachusetts. George D. Tillman, of South Carolina. John B. Weber, of New York. Joseph H. Outhwaite, of Ohio. 108 Congressional Directory. Committee on Levees and Improvements of the Mississippi River. J. Floyd King, of Louisiana. William Whiting, of Massachusetts. Henry S. Van Eaton, of Mississippi. Edmund N. Morrill, of Kansas. John J. Kleiner, of Indiana. Charles E. Brown, of Ohio. Thomas C. McRae, of Arkansas. Frank C. Bunnell, of Pennsylvania. Presley T. Glass, of Tennessee. William W. Grout, of Vermont. William Dawson, of Missouri. Thomas R. Hudd, of Wisconsin. Committee ore Education. D. Wyatt Aiken, of South Carolina. Horace B. Strait, of Minnesota. Allen D. Candler, of Georgia. William Whiting, of Massachusetts. Albert S. Willis, of Kentucky. Jacob M. Campbell, of Pennsylvania. James F. Miller, of Texas. Isaac H. Taylor, of Ohio. William C. Maybury, of Michigan. James O’Donnell, of Michigan. James N. Burnes, of Missouri. Beriah Wilkins, of Ohio. Peter P. Mahoney, of New York. Committee on Labor. John J. O’Neill, of Missouri. William H. Crain, of Texas. Martin A. Foran, of Ohio. E. H. Funston, of Kansas. Henry B. Lovering, of Massachusetts. Darwin R. James, of New York. James B. Weaver, of Iowa. Martin A. Haynes, of New Hampshire. Frank Lawler, of Illinois. Franklin Bound, of Pennsylvania. John W. Daniel, of Virginia. James Buchanan, of New Jersey. Timothy E. Tarsney, of Michigan. Committee on the Militia. Nicholas Muller, of New York. Barnes Compton, of Maryland. William H. Forney, of Alabama. Albert J. Hopkins, of Illinois. William McAdoo, of New Jersey. Edward D. Hayden, of Massachusests. Samuel W. Peel, of Arkansas. Seth C. Moffatt, of Michigan. Patrick A. Collins, of Massachusetts. William D. Owen, of Indiana. John G. Ballentine, of Tennessee. William H. Wade, of Missouri. W. C. P. Breckinridge, of Kentucky. Commattee on Patents, Charles L. Mitchell, of Connecticut. William H. H. Cowles, of North Carolina. John E. Halsell, of Kentucky. Louis E. Atkinson, of Pennsylvania. Richard W. Townshend, of Illinois. George West, of New York. John M. Martin, of Alabama. Herman Lehlbach, of New Jersey. George T. Barnes, of Georgia. John B. Gilfillan, of Minnesota. James B. Morgan, of Mississippi. Ralph Plumb, of Illinois. Spencer O. Fisher, of Michigan. Committee on Invalid Pensions. Courtland C. Matson, of Indiana. John S. Pindar, of New York. Edwin B. Winans, of Michigan. Edmund N. Morrill, of Kansas. Henry B. Lovering, of Massachusetts. Martin A. Haynes, of New Hampshire. William IH. Neece, of Illinois. James E. O’Hara, of North Carolina. John A. Swope, of Pennsylvania. John G. Sawyer, of New York. William P. Taulbee, of Kentucky. Edwin H. Conger, of Iowa. James N. Pidcock, of New Jersey. J. A. Loutitt, of California. William W. Ellsberry, of Ohio. Committee on Pensions. Nathaniel B. Eldredge, of Michigan. John E. Hutton, of Missouri. " Frank L. Wolford, of Kentucky. Isaac S. Struble, of Iowa. James T. Jones, of Alabama. Zachary Taylor, of Tennessee. William L. Scott, of Pennsylvania. James D. Brady, of Virginia. William H. H. Cowles, of North Carolina. Alexander C. White, of Pennsylvania. Silas Z. Landes, of Illinois. Albert C. Thompson, of Ohio. Peter P. Mahoney, of New York. Committee on Claims. William M. Springer, of Illinois. | William H. Sowden, of Pennsylvania. Nicholas Muller, of New York. | Charles E. Brown, of Ohio. Samuel W. T. Lanham, of Texas. | Joseph McKenna, of California. Frank T. Shaw, of Maryland. William Warner, of Missouri. Jonas G. Howard, of Indiana. George W. Fleeger, of Pennsylvania. Charles Dougherty, of Florida. James Buchanan, of New Jersey. Connolly F. Trigg, of Virginia. Jacob H. Gallinger, of New Hampshire. John R. Neal, of Tennessee. = House Committees. 109 Committee on War Claims. ol George W. Geddes, of Ohio. Charles C. Comstock, of Michigan. John J. Kleiner, of Indiana. Harry Libbey, of Virginia. William J. Stone, of Kentucky. “Robert Smalls, of South Carolina. Timothy J. Campbell, of New York. John A. Hiestand, of Pennsylvania. James D. Richardson, of Tennessee. James T. Johnston, of Indiana. William H. Perry, of South Carolina. Joseph Lyman, of Towa. Committee on Private Land Claims. John E. Halsell, of Kentucky. Benton J. Hall, of Towa. Ethelbert Barksdale, of Mississippi. Edwin S. Osborne, of Pennsylvania. Louis St. Martin, of Louisiana. Frederick D. Ely, of Massachusetts. Nathaniel B. Eldredge, of Michigan. Ormsby B. Thomas, of Wisconsin. Thomas W. Sadler, of Alabama. George W. E. Dorsey, of Nebraska. Thomas Croxton, of Virginia. Albert C. Thompson, of Ohio. Committee or the District of Columbia. John S. Barbour, of Virginia. John T. Heard, of Missouri. John J. Hemphill, of South Carolina. Jonathan IH. Rowell, of Illinois. James E. Campbell, of Ohio. William H. Wadsworth, of Kentucky. Barnes Compton, of Maryland. Joseph A. Scranton, of Pennsylvania. Edward J. Gay, of Louisiana. Ira Davenport, of New York. George Ford, of Indiana. William W. Grout, of Vermont. Committee on the Revision of the Laws. William C. Oates, of Alabama. | John B. Hale, of Missouri. Henry G. Turner, of Georgia. Sereno E. Payne, of New York. John J. Adams, of New York. John R. Thomas, of Illinois. Joseph H. Outhwaite, of Ohio. William E. Fuller, of Iowa. George Ford, of Indiana. John B. Gilfillan, of Minnesota. Polk Laffoon, of Kentucky. A. C. White, of Pennsylvania. Charles Dougherty, of Florida. Committee on Expenditures in the State Department. Risden T. Bennett, of North Carolina. Joseph Lyman, of Iowa. George D. Tillman, of South Carolina. J. A. Loutitt, of California. Charles B. Lore, of Delaware. Henry Bacon, of New York. Joseph A. Scranton, of Pennsylvania. Committee on Expenditures in the Treasury Department. J Robert Lowry, of Indiana. Frank C. Bunnell, of Pennsylvania. Richard P. Bland, of Missouri. James T. Johnston, of Indiana. Clinton R. Breckinridge, of Arkansas. Zachariah Taylor, of Tennessee. Frank T. Shaw, of Maryland. Committee on Expenditures in the War Department. Thomas A. Robertson, of Kentucky. Frederick A. Johnson, of New York. Joseph Wheeler, of Alabama. William Warner, of Missouri. Egbert L. Viele, of New York. George W. Fleeger, of Pennsylvania. Charles M. Anderson, of Ohio. Committee on Expenditures in the Navy Department. John M. Taylor, of Tennessee. Jonathan H. Rowell, of Illinois. William H. Sowden, of Pennsylvania. William W. Brown, of Pennsylvania. Robert H. M. Davidson, of Florida. Ormsby B. Thomas, of Wisconsin. Timothy J. Campbell, of New York. Committee on Expenditures in the Post-Office Department. Seaborn Reese, of Georgia. . Zachary Taylor, of Tennessee. A. J. Warner, of Ohio. Binger Herman, of Oregon. Thomas B. Ward, of Indiana. Franklin Bound, of Pennsylvania. Alexander C. Davidson, of Alabama. 110 Congressional Directory. Committee on Expenditures in the Interior Department. James B. Weaver, of Iowa. Charles N. Brumm, of Pennsylvania. George W. Dargan, of South Carolina. Harry Libbey, of Virginia. Henry R. Harris, of Georgia. Ira Davenport, of New York. David C. Culberson, of Texas. Committee on Expenditures in the Department of Justice. Eustace Gibson, of West Virginia. Seth L. Milliken, of Maine. Nathaniel J. Hammond, of Georgia. Lewis Hanback, of Kansas. Edward W. Seymour, of Connecticut. John G. Sawyer, of New York. James H. Ward, of Illinois. Committee on Expenditures on Public Buildings. John J. O’Neill, of Missouri. Augustus H. Pettibone, of Tennessee. George E. Seney, of Ohio. James E. O’Hara, of North Carolina. James M. Riggs, of Illinois. Jacob H. Gallinger, of New Hampshire. Committee on Rules. The Speaker. Thomas B. Reed, of Maine. Samuel J. Randall, of Pennsylvania. Frank Hiscock of New York. William R. Morrison, of Illinois. Commdzttee on Accounts. J. Thomas Spriggs, of New York. George E. Adams, of Illinois. Alexander M. Dockery, of Missouri. Henry J. Spooner, of Rhode Island. Louis St. Martin, of Louisiana. I. Newton Evans, of Pennsylvania. Charles H. Gibson, of Maryland. Isaac H. Taylor, of Ohio. Connolly F. Trigg, of Virginia. Committee on Mileage. John H. Rogers, of Arkansas. Ambrose A. Ranney, of Massachusetts. Olin Wellborn, of Texas. Charles N. Felton. Jonas G. Howard, of Indiana. Joint Committee on the Library. * Otho R. Singleton, of Mississippi. Charles O’Neill, of Pennsylvania. William G. Stahlnecker, of New York. Committee on Printing. * Ethelbert Barksdale, of Mississippi. | John M. Farquhar, of New York. Committee on Enrolled Bills. William H. Neece, of Illinois. Adoniram J. Holmes, of Iowa. Charles P. Snyder, of West Virginia. Bishop W. Perkins, of Kansas. Spencer O. Fisher, of Michigan. Charles H. Allen, of Massachusetts. Thomas C. McRae, of Arkansas. *This committee has power to act concurrently with the same committee of the Senate. SELECT COMMITTEES. Select Committee on Reform in the Civil Service. William R. Cox, of North Carolina. William J. Stone, of Missouri. Judson C. Clements, of Georgia. Thomas M. Bayne, of Pennsylvania. John B. Storm, of Pennsylvania. Henry J. Spooner, of Rhode Island. Newton C. Blanchard, of Louisiana. John Little, of Ohio, John V. L. Findlay, of Maryland. Herman Lehlbach, of New Jersey. Charles L. Mitchell, of Connecticut. John M. Farquhar, of New York. Select Commitiee on American Ship-Building and Ship-Owning Interests. Poindexter Dunn, of Arkansas. Charles C. Comstock, of Michigan. William S. Holman, of Indiana. Nelson Dingley, jr., of Maine. D. B. Culberson, of Texas. William H. Wadsworth, of Kentucky. J. Floyd King, of Louisiana. Edwin S. Osborne, of Pennsylvania. Archibald M. Bliss, of New York. Charles N. Felton, of California. Nathaniel J. Hammond, of Georgia. Jacob Romeis, of Ohio. Benton’ McMillin, of Tennessee. Louse Committees. Select Committee on the Election of President and Vice-President. A. J. Caldwell, of Tennessee. Thomas D. Johnston, of North Carolina. John R. Eden, of Illinois. James Laird, of Nebraska. Daniel Ermentrout, of Pennsylvania. Charles S. Baker, of New York. Samuel Dibble, of South Carolina. John A. Hiestand, of Pennsylvania. Charles H. Gibson, of Maryland. William C. Cooper, of Ohio. John T. Heard, of Missouri. Seth C. Moffatt, of Michigan. Select Committee on Ventilation and Acoustics. Wharton J. Green, of North Carolina. I. Newton Evans, of Pennsylvania. Charles Stewart, of Texas. John Swinburne, of New York. Felix Campbell, of New York. James O’Donnell, of Michigan. John M. Allen, of Mississippi. Select Committee on the Alcoholic Liquor Traffic. James E. Campbell, of Ohio. Joseph D. Sayers, of Texas. Ezra B. Carleton, of Michigan. Truman A. Merriman, of New York. * Benjamin T. Frederick, of Iowa. James B. Everhart, of Pennsylvania. William P. Taulbee, of Kentucky. James D. Lindsley, of New York. John M. Glover, of Missouri. Jacob Romeis, of Ohio. Select Committee on Pan-Electric Telephone Stock. Charles E. Boyle, of Pennsylvania. Ambrose A. Ranney, of Massachusetts. William C. Oates, of Alabama. Stephen C. Millard, of New York. John R. Eden, of Illinois. Lewis Hanback, of Kansas. B. J. Hall, of Iowa. Seth C. Moffatt, of Michigan, John B. Hale, of Missouri. Select Committee on Existing Labor Troubles. Andrew G. Curtin, of Pennsylvania. John W. Stewart, of Vermont. James N. Burnes, of Missouri. Abram X. Parker, of New York. W. H. Crain, of Texas. James Buchanan, of New Jersey. Joseph H. Outhwaite, of Ohio. Select Committee on Admission to the Floor. James D. Richardson, of Tennessee. Richard Guenther, of Wisconsin. Thomas,C. McRea, of Arkansas. Joseph Lyman, of Iowa. James E. Campbell, of Ohio. COMMISSIONS. On Signal Service, Geological Survey, Coast and Geodetic Survey, and the Hydrographic Office of the Navy Department. Robert Lowry, of Indiana. John T. Wait, of Connecticut. Hilary A. Herbert, of Alabama. On Ordnance and Gunnery. Samuel J. Randall, of Pennsylvania. Frank Hiscock, of New York. James N. Burnes, of Missouri. Thomas B. Reed, of Maine. Charles F. Crisp, of Georgia. William Walter Phelps, of New Jersey. Committee on Expenditures for the Indians and Yellowstone Park. William S. Holman, of Indiana. Joseph G. Cannon, of Illinois. William H. Hatch, of Missouri. Thomas Ryan, of Kansas. Samuel W. Peel, of Arkansas. 112 Congressional Director y. OFFICERS OF THE SENATE. PRESIDENT OF THE SENATE. President pro tempore of the Senate.—]JOHN SHERMAN, 1319 K street, N. W. Chaplain to the Senate—Rev. J. G. Butler, 1107 Eleventh street, N. W. Private Secretary. —E. J. Babcock, 1334 Thirteenth street, N W. Messenger to Vice-President. —George L. Whitaker, 612 Sixth street, N. W. OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY. Secretary of the Senate—Anson G. McCook, 1224 Seventeenth street, N. W. Chief Clero—Charles W. Johnson, 606 Ninth street, N. W., Temple Hotel. Principal Legislative Clerk—Henry H. Gilfry, 945 K street, N. W. Principal Executive Clerk—James R. Young, 1506 Q street, N. W. Minute and Journal Clerke.—William E. Spencer, Congressional Hotel. Financial Clere—R. B. Nixon, 409 M street, N. W. Assistant Financial Clerk.—Henry A. Pierce, 1416 N street, N. W. Enrolling Clerk—C. C. Sympson, 467 C street, N. W. Librarian.—George M. Weston, National Hotel. Assistant Librarian.—A. W. Church, 1404 L street, N. W. Clerks—M. R. Shankland, 1136 Seventeenth street, N. W. H. B. McDonald, 1204 Eighteenth street, N. W. Jere Williams, 709 Eleventh street, N. W. Jacob C. Donaldson, 608 Twelfth street, N. W. J. W. Bartlett 1308 I street, N. W. C. C. Morrew, Congressional Hotel. J. H. C. Wilson, 517 Thirteenth street, N. W. B. S. Platt, 40414 First street, N. W. Charles Newell, 1805 G street, N. W. S. Brown Allen, 233 Four-and-a-half street, N. W. Keeper of Stationery.—Charles N. Richards, 101 Massachusetts avenue. Assistant Keeper of Stationery. —Frank M. Evans, 1416 N street, N. W. Assistant in Stationery Room.—]John L. Nichols, St. Charles Hotel. Messengers.—E. A. Hills, goq French street. Joseph McGuckian, 230 East Capitol street. Page.—A. A. Clemons, 933 New Jersey avenue, N. W. Laborers.—Charles Murray, 1207 I street, N. W. T. S. Hickman, 305 L street, N. W. William Lucas, 305 L street, N. W. Moses Jessup, 2431 M street, N. W. Griffin Johnson, 20 Union Alley, between I, and. M streets. OFFICE OF THE SERGEANT-AT-ARMS. Sergeant-at-Arms of the Senate—William P. Canaday, 302 Delaware avenue, N. E. Assistant Doorlkeeper.—Isaac Bassett, 18 Second street, N. E. Acting Assistant Doorkeeper— James I. Christie, 825 Iifteenth street, N. W. Messengers Act’g Asst. Doorkeepers.—D. W. Wilson, 1406 T street, N. W. C.'S. Draper, 325 ‘A street, S. E. Clerk to Sergeant-at-Arms—William 1. Lewis, 1507 Twenty-eighth street, N. W. POST-OFFICE. Postmaster of the Senate.—James W. Allen, 1119 I street, N. W. Assistant Postmaster.—Aaron W. Kellogg, St. Charles Hotel. DOCUMENT-ROOM. Superintendent.—Amzi Smith, 125 C street, S. E. First Assistant.—W. D. Blackford, 705 B street, S. E. Second Assistant. —-S. G. Anderson, 1405 New York avenue. Clerk. —Thomas H. McKee, 912 H street, N. W. FOLDING-ROOM. Superintendent.—]. S. Hickcox, 106 C street, N. E. Assistant.—W. P. Brownlow, 312 C street, N. W. Clerfe.—Ross B. Brodhead, 1733 Nineteenth street, N, W, Officers of the Senate. 113 MESSENGERS. ohn G. Merritt, 120 Massachusetts ave., N.E. W. R. Reynolds, 815 E street, S. E. J J. G. Ball, 621 Second street, N. W. James Brown, 1805 G street, N. W. J. D. Corse, 339 C street, N. Ww. | J. B. Strayer, 1312 G street, N. W. W. H. May, 312 Sixth street, N. W. C. W. Barrett, 1343 L street, N. W. A. Barnes, 509 Twelfth street, N. W. G. McKew, 211 North Capitol street. J. F. Edwards, Congressional Hotel. Edward Ham, 1847 Ninth street, N. W. iL. 7T. Strawbridge, Clarendon Hotel. W. L. Wilson, 339 C street, N. W. S.K.Hannegan, 1704 Nineteenth street, N.W. PrestonL. Belden, 8o2 Eleventh street, N. W, H. W. Wall, 109 First street, N. E. Charles E. Stueven, 223 Four-and--a-half st. William Griffis, 507 E street, N. W. B. H. Shivers, 623 Pennsylvania ave., N. W. O. H. Curtis, 917 G street, N. W. George W. Seaver, 715 Twelfth street, N. WV. D. S. Corser, 31 B stree, S. E. George Seaver, 512 Tenth street, N. W. J. M. Pipes, 909 F street, N. W. Chas. W. Fitch, 1444 N street, N. W. C. H. Hitchcock, Congressional Hotel. HEATING AND VENTILATING. Chief Engineer —T. A. Jones, 946 F street, S. W. Assistants.—E. C. Stubbs, 327 Eleventh street, S. W. W. H. Prescott, 632 B street, N. E. James Moran, 113 Maryland avenue, N. E. CLERKS TO SENATE COMMITTEES. Additional Accommodations for the Library of Congress—]. P. Voorhees. Agriculture and Forestry—C. S. Wilbur, 1715 De Sales street. Appr opriations.— Thomas P. Cleaves, 627 G street, S. W. Assistant Clerk.—Joseph S. Morgan, National Hotel. Messenger —Christian Chritzman, 1 B street, N. W. Census.—Pitman Pulsifer, 1523 Fourteenth street, N. W. Civil Service and Retrenchment.—Geo. B. Edwards, 6 Iowa Circle. Claims.—H. C. Reed, 312 C street, N. W. Messenger —IH. H. Rand, 1010 North Carolina avenue, S. E. Cominerce—]. B. McMillan, 340 C street, N. W. Assistant Clerfe.—Walcott Lay. Contingent Expenses—Eugene Davis, 804 Eleventh street, N. W. District of Columbia.—Thomas J. White, 910 I street, N. W. Education and Labor —George G. Kimball. Lngrossed Bills.—T. H. Saulsbury, 815 Eleventh street, N. W. Messenger —]. W. Allen, 915 Maryland avenue, S. W. Enrolled Bills.—Bradford Otis, Riggs House. Epidemic Diseases—Emmet Woodward, 120 Fourth street, S. E. Examine the several branches of the Civil Service—TFred G. Norris, The Woodmont. Expenditure of Public Money—C. R. Paul, 1323 Thirteenth street, N. W, Finance.—Benj. Durfee, 446 New Jersey avenue, S. E. MMessenger.—G. M. Taylor, 129 C street, N. E. Lisheries.—]. M. Shepard, 1435 K street. Foreign Relations—Wilson Vance, Congressional Hotel. Indian Affairs.—Wm. M. Olin, 1421 K street, N. W. Indian Tradership and Licenses (Select Committee).— John Addison Porter, 1611 Twenty-first street, N. W. Jidiciary.—George P. Bradstreet, 2017 Q street, N. W. Messenger—J. T'. Gaskin, 416 Ninth street, S. W. Library.—W. J. Bruce, 1416 N street, N. W. Manufactures—F. B. Riddleberger. Military Affairs.—W. B. Taylor, Belmont Place, Clifton street. Mines and Mining.—Thomas F. Dawson. Mississippi River and tts Tributaries—Mark Brodhead. Naval Affairs—H. J. Gensler, 1318 Thirteenth street. Nicaraguan Claims.— Patents. N. W. Pensions. 3. Potter, 472 O street, N. W. Assistant Clerk.—Geo. D. Mitchell, 13 First street, N E. Messenger.—H. C. Young, 13 First street, N. E. Potomac River Front—E. T. Mathews. 2D ED 8 114 Congressional Direct ory. Post-Offices and Post-Roads.—C. P. Conger. Messenger.—D. S. Barry, 1224 Thirteenth street, N. W. Printing. —Ben: Perley Poore, Ebbitt House. Private, Land-Claims—Thomas R. Ransom, National Hotel. Privileges and Elections —George S. Taft, Hamilton House. Public Buildings and Grounds.—R. B. Mahone, Arlington Hotel. Public Lands—1. F. Flenniken, 318 Third street, N. W. Railroads.—Joseph Harris, sr., 440 New jersey avenue, S. E. Revision of the Laws.—Hawkins Taylor, jr., 212 First street, N. E. Revolutionary Claims—C. W. Jones, jr. Rules.—Charles B. Reade, 1326 L street, N. W. = Zerritories.—Charles P. Watson, 219 Third street, N. W. Transportation Routes to the Seaboard —W. HE. Boblits. Woman Suffrage—John S. Juréy, 1502 Q street, N. W. OFFICERS OF THE HOUSE SPEAKER OF THE HOUSE. The Speaker.—JouN G. CARTY, Riggs House. Private Sec e, 1003 East Capitol street. Speaker's Clert. 0. 0 Stealey, 2134 L street, N. W. Clerk at the Speaker's Table—Nathaniel T. Crutchfield, 512 E street, N. W, CHAPLAIN. Rev. W. H. Milburn, D. D., 917 New York avenue. STENOGRAPHERS TO COMMITTEES. A. C. Welch, 306 F street, N. W, George C. Lafferty, 1536 I street, N. W. OFFICE OF THE CLERK OF THE HOUSE. Clerk of the House.—John B. Clark, jr., Laurel, Md Chief Clerk. —T. O. Towles, 1643 Thirteenth street, N. W. Journal Clerk—Henry Il. Smith, 1613 Thirteenth street, N. W. Assistant Journal Clerk.—A. W. Cochran, 1513 Rhode Island avenue. File Clerk.—Ferris Finch, 148 A street, N. LE. Printing C 17 East Capitol street, Assistant Clerk—William H. Wiggins, 1330 I street, N. Ww. Zally Clerk—S. D. Craig, National Hotel. Reading Clerks. Thomas S. Pettit, Belvidere Hotel. Neill S. Brown, jr., Clarendon Hotel. | Disbursing Clerk.—S. B. Cunningham, 1455 Q street, N. W. Assistant Disbursing Clerke—~—W. T. Hudson, 1325 G street, N. W. Lnrolling Clerk.—T. I. King, 123 Maryland avenue, N. LE. Assistant Enrolling Clerf.—]. K. Metzger, 234 First street, S. E. Resolution and Petition Clerk.—R. H. Cowan, 413 Sixth street, N. W. Newspaper Clerk.—IHez. Purdom, 226 Third street, N. W. SE Clerfe—W. T. Hutchings, 222 Second street, N. W. Indexers of Private Claims.—John F. Treutlen, 917 Sixteenth street, N. W. William B. Dobson, 8oz Eleventh street, N. W, Henry Gumble, Harris House. Distributing Clerfe—William A. Fields, 939 H street, N. W. Stationery Clerk.—]John I'. Ancona, 301 Second street, N. W. George S. Donnell, 412 Second street, S. E. Bookkeeper —John B. McDonnell, 318 Third street, N. W. Assistant Clerf.—F. H. Richardson, Metropolitan Hotel. ~13 Page.—William T. Page, 221 First street, N. E. DOCUMENT-ROOM. ] | Superintendent. —Peter H. Pernot, 927 I street, N. W. Clerks—Henry H. Moler, 511 B street, S. E. J. W. Hiatt, 338 Indiana avenue. \ LIBRARY OF THE HOUSE. | Librarian.—William Butler, 121 Maryland avenue, N. E. | Assistants —William H. Smith, 816 Fourth street, N. W. | Asher Barnett, 922 E street, N. W. Messenger. —Aaron Russell, 411 N street, N. W. ATTIRE Officers of the House. 115 SERGEANT-AT-ARMS OF THE HOUSE. Sergeant-at-Arms—7]. P. Leedom, 117 B street, S. E. r Cashier —C. E. Silcott, 407 A street, S. E. Zeller.—H. L. Ballentine, 1532 I street, N. W. Deputy Sergeant-at-Arms.—Isaac R. Hill, 125 B street, S. E. Messenger —D. A. Roberts, 404 First street, N. W. Boolkkeeper.—]. D. Selzer, Meyers’ Hotel. Page—Samuel T. Kalbfus, 318 B street, S. E. DOORKEEPER OF THE HOUSE. Doorkeeper of the House.—Samuel Donelson, The Clarendon. Assistant Doorkecper.—George A. Bacon. Clerk to Doorkeeper.—James A. Newsom, 1011 E street, N. W, Special Employe.—John T. Chancey, 221 I street, N. W. Seal-Room.—Blake Ryan, 222 Third street, N. W. Chief Page.—Alvin H. Pickens, 624 Fifth street, N. W. Henry T. Lyle, Laurel, Maryland. Messengers,—Thomas A. Coakley, George R. Brumblay, H. T. Norman, H. B. Lingenfelter, H.V. Yandel, Matt Stratton, jr., W. H. Moffett, C. II. Mann, A. Hoener, Michael Sullivan, Le Claire Fulton, 1-H. Chinn, Adam Clark, W. IF. Early, Michael Keenan, A. C. Long, Geo. W. Rae, C. H. Harris. Soldiers Roll.—John A. Stewart, S. H. Decker, Joseph F. Wilson, James J. McConnell, |Fernando Page, J. W. White, J. R. Whitacre, John A. Travis, E. S. Williams, Hugh Lewis, William Irving, W. I. Fitch, John Ryan, John Rome. Janitor —John A. Jones, 212 Fourth street, N. W. | FOLDING-ROOM. Superintendent.—John G. Healy, 1321 G street, N. W. Chief Clerf.— James W. Blackburn, jr., 226 A street, S. E. Foreman Folding-Room.—G. S. Chilton, g Second street, S. E. | Clerks.—D. H. Naylor, 1009 G street, N. W. Samuel Toole, 320 Indiana avenue, N. W. Department Messenger—C. W. Coombs, 118 F street, N. E. DOCUMENT-ROOM. Superintendent. —A. W. Gibson, National Hotel. Assistant Superintendent.—H. G. Williams, 401 Fourth street, N. W. File Clerk.—]John A. Corwin, Willard’s Hotel. Assistant File Clerk.—John A. Hannay. POST-OFFICE OF THE HOUSE. Postmaster —Lycurgus Dalton, 240 North Capitol street. Assistant Postmaster.—]J. R. Fisher, 1513 Tenth street, N. W. Messengers.—W. C. Crawley, 127 B street, S. E.; J. 1. Pratt, 319 C street, 1a W.; G.B: Parsons, 338 Indiana avenue; S. P. Ivins, ire, 212 Four-and-a-half street, W.; RH Carlton, 105 Second street, N. Ww. ; Reuben Bourne, 240 North Capitol street; i P. Hume, 420 Sixth street, N.W.; David Peel, 420 Sixth street, N. W.; John Stack, 69 I street, N. E.; W. A. Horbach, 915 G street, N. W.; Saunders Garland, 115 E. street, N. W.; R. T. Merrifield, National Hotel; Henry Yater; Junius Wingfield, 1102 Eighth street, N. W.; ‘William R. Prescott, 212 D street, N. W. ; Lewis Huber; H. J. Jackson. Laborer.—Daniel Webster. ~P HEATING AND VENTILATING OF THE HOUSE. Chief Engineer —Wm. Lannan, 810 First street, N. W. Assistant Engineers.—H. W. Taylor, 501 C street, N. E. ° B. H. Morse, 1905 F street, N. W. Electrician—A. B. Talcott, 1339 E street, S. E. Firemen.—Thomas McKeig, 112 Sixth street, S. E.; Eppa Norris, 625 G street, S. W. C. T. Jett, 3621 M street, N. W.; E. B. Burke, 600 Seventh street,'S, W.; James W, Shely, 914 Virginia avenue, S. W, : ® ~ 116 Congressional Directory. CLERKS TO HOUSE COMMITTEES. Accounts —William F. Fort, Brunswick, 318 Pennsylvania avenue. Agriculture—Rob’t M. Wallace. Alcoholic Liquor Traffic—Edward Hughes. Appropriations.—Clerk, James C. Courts, 507 Fourth street, N. W. Assistant Clerk, L. Olie Meek, 936 E street, N. W, Messenger, James P. McCann, Cutler House. Banking and Currency. _-wc Hill, 710 Eleventh street, N. W. Claims.— Clerk, Alex. J. Jones, 13 Second street, N. E. Coinage, Weights, and Measures—D. P. Bailey, 1132 Twelfth street, N. W. + Commerce—Louis Chable, 31 B street, S. E. District of Columbia.—W. W. Scott, 129 Maryland avenue. Education.—XK. S. Murchison, 724 Twelfth street, N. W. Llections—]. W. Bennet. Llection of President and Vice-President. — Albert S. Williams, 317 Four-and-a-half street, N. W. Enrolled Bills—Cyrus A. Lawson, Hillman House. Expenditures in the Department of Justice.—W. O. Wiatt. . ’ Expenditures in the Interior Department.—Abram C. Weaver, 1012 Fourteenth street, N. W. Expenditures in the Post-Office Department.—Jno. P. Shannon. Lxpenditures in the State Department —George |’. Horton. Expenditures in the Treasury Department —Wm. C. Williams. Expenditures in the War and Navy Departments— Albert W. Moremen, 601 13th street, N. W, Foreign Affairs—B. D. Sleight, St. James Hotel. Indian Affairs—John IF. Elliott, 1211 N street, N. W. Invalid Pensions.—John Mesler, 467 Missouri avenue. : Assistant Clerk.—S. M. Guthridge, 315 Four-and-a-half street, N. W. Assistant Clerk—Ivan Somerlin, 317 Four-and-a-half street. Judiciary.—John Carmichael, 620 Eleventh street, N. W. Labor —Frank Moore. . Library.—Mary P. J. Sampson. Manufactures—James M. Fisher, 1513 Tenth street, N. W. Military Affairs—W. P. Rix. St. James Hotel. Militia and Mileage.—DP. V. De Graw. Mines and Mining. —D. C. Ilornsby. Mississippi River Improvements and Levees.— Naval Affairs.—]Jos. Baumer, 317 Delaware avenue. Pacific Railroads.—Jas. F. McElhone. Patents —W. H. Smith, 623 F street, N. W. Pensions —D D. Eldredge, 109 First street, N. E. Post-Office Post-Roads.— P. National and John Ross, Hotel. Printing —W. W. Lester, Branchville, Maryland. Private Land-Claims.—]. M. Jones, 221 East Capitol street. Public Buildings and Grounds.—Albert H. Mowry, 1205 Twentieth street, N. W, Public Lands. Gio. B. Cobb, 922 I street, N. W. Railways and Canals.—R. W. Tucker. Reform in the Civil Service.—P. B. Cox. Revision of the Laws.—]James H. G. Martin. Rivers and Harbors—]. L. Clemmons, 304 Indiana avenue. Ship-building and Ship-owning Interests—Rees E. Edmondson. Zerritories.—Chas. Gordon, 226 Third street, N. W. Ventilation and Acoustics.—]. W. Powell, 1608 Thirteenth street, N. W. War-Claims.— James I. Geddes, 207 Pennsylvania avenue, N. W. Assistant Clerk, Joel Myers, 207 Pennsylvania avenue. Ways and Means—Henry Talbott, 31 B street, S. E. Assistant Clerk, Willis H. Allen, Congressional Hotel. Messenger, John J. Mumme, Congressional Hotel. OFFICIAL REPORTERS OF DEBATES, SENATE. : HOUSE. D. F. Murphy, 314 C street, N. W. J. J. McElhone, Ckief of Corps, 1318 Vt. av. Assistants —Theo. I. Shuey, St. James Hotel. | David Wolfe Brown, 314 A street, S. E. E. V. Murphy, 419 2d st.,, N. W. | J. K. Edwards, 211 North Capitol st. Henry J. Gensler, 1318 13th st. | John II. White, 1502 Vermont avenue. Dan.B. Lloyd, 340 Pa. av., N. W. | Andrew Devine, 130 C street, S. E. TY The Government Telegraph— The Capitol Police. fe THE GOVERNMENT TELEGRAPH. SENATE MANAGER. : HOUSE MANAGER. E. E. Morison, 1202 K street, N. W. C. F. L. Braulik, 240 First street, S. E. ET ay,EES ARCHITECT. OF THE CAPITOL. Edward Clark, 417 Fourth street, N. W.; Office, basement of _the Capitol. THE BOTANICAL GARDEN, Superintendent.—William R. Smith, at the garden, west of the Capitol grounds. THE CAPITOL POLICE. Captain.—P. H. Allabach, 223 B street, N. W, Lieutenanis—Wm. Knowland, 630 Pennsylvania avenue. J. O. Finks, 226 Third street, N. W. D. B. Bradley, 629 Maryland avenue, N. E. Privates.—F. G. Jones, 300, corner Third and H street, N. W. Jos. Gilbert, American House. Charles Stone, 134 East Capitol street. J. R. Riley, 654 E street, S. E. T. W. Keller, 9 Second street, S. E. Daniel O’Neill, 121 Sixth street, S. E. F. A. Wood, 15 Second street, S. E. J. H. Bush, Saint Charles Hotel, Third street and Pennsylvania avenue. L. D. Bumpus, 111 Seventh street, N. E. G. W. Hazer, American House. James W. Jones, 133 Carroll street, S. E. Simon P. Mast, 123 Sixth street, S. E. . H. H. Lemon, 503 Maryland avenue, S. W. R. E. Chonstant, 226 Third street, N. W. I. Hammond, 30 Seventh street, N. E. James Stump, 243 New Jersey avenue. R. H. Betts, 108 Fifth street, N. E. Joseph Swindell, 16 First street, N. E. E. H. Ewell, 404 B street, N. E. J. H. Crawford, 1 B street, N. W. A. B. Suit, Suitland, Md. . A. Burrows, 117 Carroll Place. Watchmen.—S. A. Boyden, Hyattsville, Md. D. B. Moore, 321 Missouri avenue. Arthur M. Payne, 1317 Eleventh street, N. W. W. B. Drury, Congressional Hotel. Phillip Carrigan, 319 First street, S. E. P. J. Crenshaw, 400 B street, S. E. Thomas Randolph, 117 East Capitol street. William Saunders, 25 Fifth street, S. E. 118 Congressional Directory. THE LIBRARY OF CONGRESS. Librarian of Congress.—AINSWORTH R. SPOFFORD, 1621 Massachusetts avenue, N. W. Assistants.—Charles W. Hoffman, 114 Maryland avenue, N. E. Louis Selyom, 138 East Capitol street. David Hutcheson, Harewood Road, Brooks, D. C. James C. Strout, 127 E street, N. W. John Savary, 322 C street, N. W. W. J. Dockstader, 148 A street, N. E. Paul Neuhaus, 607 Sixth street, N. W. J. S. P. Wheeler, 311 Delaware avenue, N. E. George A. Mark, 609 F street, N. W. Thorvald Solberg, Anacostia, D. C. P. Lee Phillips, 1707 H street, N. W. Maurice Schlosser, 921 G street, N. W. Spencer Marsh, 221 A street, S. E. Vernon Dorsey, 1828 H street, N. W. W. M. Griswold, 206 Delaware avenue, N. E. T. J. Putnam, Anacostia, D. C. J. F. N: Wilkinson, gor E street, S. W. Arthur Crisfield, 1633 Twenty-ninth street, N. W. P. C. Nicholas, 1924 N street, N. W. Daniel Murray, 1333 Twelfth street, N. W. J. G. Morrison, 811 Thirteenth street, N. W. The Library of Congress occupies the entire western projection of the central Capitol building. The original library was commenced in 1800, but was destroyed with the Capitol in 1814 during the war with England. It was afterwards replenished by the purchase of the library belonging to Ex-President Jefferson, by Congress, embracing about 7,000 volumes. In 1851 it contained 55,000 volumes, and by an accidental fire in that year the whole collec-tion was destroyed, except 20,000 volumes. It was rebuilt in 1852, when $75,000 was, appropriated in one sum to replenish the collection. The new library halls, three in number- . are fitted up with ornamental iron cases and iron ceilings, the whole being perfectly fire-proof. The library is recruited by regular appropriations made by Congress, which aver-age about $11,000 per annum; also by additions received by copyright, by exchanges, and from the Smithsonian Institution. The library of the Smithsonian Institution has now been deposited in the Library of Congress, where it is secured against loss by fire. This collection is especially rich in scientific works, embracing the largest assemblage of the transactions of learned societies which exists in the country. The library was also enriched by the presen-tation to the Government, in 1882, of the large private library of Dr. Joseph M. Toner, of Washington, numbering over 27,000 volumes, besides nearly as many pamphlets. The donor, whose public spirit is worthy of emulation, adds to the collection annually. The library of copyright books was removed here from the Patent Office in 1870, and all copyrights issued in the United States are now recorded in the books deposited in the office of the Librarian of Congress. The present number of volumes in the whole library, including law books, which are kept in a separate library room under the Supreme Court, is over 575,000, besides about 180,000 pamphlets. A new building to contain its overflowing stores of learning and to afford room for their proper arrangement has become a necessity, and has been provided for by , the legislation of the Forty-ninth Congress. This collection is very rich in history, political science, jurisprudence, and in books, pamphlets, and periodicals of American publication, or relating in any way to America. At the same time the libraryis a universal one in its range, no department of literature or science being unrepresented. The public are privi-leged'to use the books in the library, while members of Congress and about thirty official mem-bers of the Government only can take away books. The library is open every day (Sundays excepted) during the session of Congress from 9 a. m. to the hour of adjournment. In the recess of Congress it is open between the hours of 9 a. m. and 4 p. m. The Capitol. : 119 / a ey / THE CAPITOL. The Capitol fronts the east, and stands on a plateau eighty-eight feet above the level of the Potomac, in latitude 23° 537 2077.4 north and longitude 77° oo” 3577.7 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 sand-stone, painted white, from an island in Aquia Creek, Virginia, under the direction of Stephen II. 1Iallett, James Hoban, Geo. Hadfield, and afterwards of B. IH. Latrobe, architects. The north wing was finished in 1800 and the south wing in 1811, a wooden passage-way connect-ing 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, alter-ations, and repairs, up to 1827, was $2,433,844.13. : The corner-stone to the extensions of the Capitol was laid on the 4th of July, 1851, by Pres-ident Fillmore, Daniel Webster officiating as orator of the day. Thomas ©. Walter was arch-itect, and subsequently Edward Clark, under whose direction the work was completed in No-vember, 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 8,909,200 pounds. The main building is three hundred and fifty-two feet four inches long in front and one hun-dred 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, embracing 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 porticos 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 porticos 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, modeled by Crawford, which is nine-teen 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 five 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 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 thirteen feet three inches in length, by eighty feet three inches in width, and thirty-six feet in height. Its galleries will accommodate one thou-sand persons. . The Representatives’ Hall is one hundred and thirty-nine feet in length, by ninety-three feet in width, and thirty-six feet in height. The Supreme Court room was occupied by the Senate until December, 18509, the court hav-ing 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. "A 40122.00(] JDUOISSIASUO) hi > BASEMENT =] 92: = %Z Z 75 VA Y,% b= — on = NN WS Y 3 514 50N ESS NS [ON Ny ERNE Fo aN TAIN IVER N SB THE BASEMENT OF THE CAPITOL. HOUSE WING. MAIN BUILDING. SENATE WING. Room. Room. Room Committee on Invalid Pensions. 49. Committee on Claims. Committee on Agriculture. Committee on Manufactures. Stationery Room. Committee on War-Claims. Official Reporters of Debates. Official Reporters of Debates. Committee on the Territories. Clerk's Document-Room. Committee on Shipping. Committee on Public Buildings and Grounds. Post-Office. . Committee on Expenditures in the Post-Office De- partment. Committee on the Post-Office and Post-Roads. Store-Room, losets. Box-Room. Restaurant. Restaurant. Restaurant. ‘Committee on Printing. Committee on Indian Affairs, Committee on Accounts, Committee on Mileage. Committee on Expenditures in the War Department. Senate Committee on the Tenth Census. . Senate Committee on Manufactures. . Committee on Education and Labor. . Committee on Election of President and Vice-Presi- dent. Committee on Expenditures on Public Buildings. . House Committee on Mines and Mining. . Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Committee on Manufactures. $ House Committee on Education and Labor. House Committee on Accoustics and Ventilation. . House Committee on Public Expenditures. . House Committee on Expenditures in the Treasury Department. ; Law Library. . Police. Revolvtionary Claims. . Store-Room for Library. . Store-Room Supreme Court. . Senate Bath-Room. . The Supreme Court—Consultation Room. . The Supreme Court—Consultation Room. Congressional Law Library, formerly the Supreme Court Room. . Congressional Law Library. . Office of Doorkeeper of the House. Superintendent of Folding-Room. House Document-Room, . House Committee on Private Land Claims. . Offices of the Chief Clerk of the House. . House Committee on Expenditures in the State Department. . House Committee on Expenditures in the Interior Department. . House Committee on Mines and Mining. . House Committee on Alcoholic Liquor Traffic. 24. Committee on the Library. 25. Committee on the Revision of the Laws. 26. Committeeon Transportation Routes to the Seaboard 27. Committee on Military Affairs. 28. Committee on Naval Affairs. 29. Committee on the Judiciary. 30. Committee on Civil Service and Retrenchment. 32. Committee on Indian Affairs. 33. Committee on Fisheries. 36. Restaurant. 37. Ladies’ Room. 38. Committee on Public Lands. 39-Document Rooms. 40. Committee on Pensions. 41. Committee on Territories. 43. Committee on Agriculture. 44. Committee on Contingent Expenses. 45. Committee on Foreign Relations. 46. Committee on Foreign Relations. 47. Committee on Patents. g 48. Committee on Post-Offices and Post-Roads. 49. Elevator. 50. Senate Post-Office. ST. Gentlemen’s Room, suvid fo 2yp 70090) LIBRARY Cn .am me om ° q5 OB 9 \ In 8 SSSR SE a2 [ SST > S3 25 iN 8 § HALL OF REPRESENTATIVES © OLD HALL OF REPRESENTATIVES ROTUNDA » SENATE CHAMBER LE26 +N | SN N 3 ANS AY a &NA 3 SUPREME COURT I N SN === coool SA ¥ BES Nm ESR N N= i NE SAD SAVER CASE : = ay == = Op BRERBRBA doodogoddoad ogo Kg Q Dl = CHERE PRINCIPAL STORY “(4072.4 WT JVUOISSASUO) . THE PRINCIPAL STORY OF THE CAPITOL. : HOUSE WING. MAIN BUILDING. SENATE WING. Room. Room. Room. 1. Office of the Speaker. 33-House Document-Room. 16. Office of the Secretary of the Senate. 2. Office of the Sergeant-at-Arms. 34. Index Room. 17. Executive Clerk of the Senate. 3. Committee on Rivers and.Harbors. 35. House Committee on Banking and Currency. 18. Financial Clerk of the Senate. 4. Journal and Printing Clerks of the House. 36. Clerk House Representatives. It was in this room, | . Chief Clerk of the Senate. 5. Committee on Naval Affairs. then occupied by the Speaker of the House, that . Engrossing and Enrolling Clerks of the Senate. 6. Closets. ex-President John Quincy Adams died, two days . Committee on Appropriations. 7 "after he fell at his seat in the House, February 23, . Closets. 8 {embers Retiring Room. 1848. . Committee on Enrolled Bills. g 37. Office of the Clerk of the Supreme Court. . Cloak-Rooms. 10. Committee on Appropriations. 38. Robing-Room of the Judges of the Supreme Court. . The President of the United States’ Room. 11. Hall Folding-Room, -39. Withdrawing-Room of the Supreme Court. . The Senators’ Withdrawing-Room. 12. Cloak-Rooms. 40. Office of the Marshal of the Supreme Court. . The Vice-President’s Room. 13. Committee on Appropriations. The Supreme Court, formerly the Senate Chamber. . Committee on Finance. 14. Committee on Ways and Means, The Old Hall of the House of Representativesis now . Official Reporters of Debates. 15. Committee on Military Affairs. used as-a statuary hall, to which each State has . Reception-Room. 16. House Library. been invited to contribute two statues of its most 31. Committee on District of Columbia. distinguished citizens. 32 . Office of the Sergeant-at-Arms of the Senate. The Congressional Library contains 314,000 vol-_33. Elevator. umes. : 2002400) yp fo suvlf RETTT ————————————— ————————————— Ses [ooo oooab Fay ST YN NN = \ N 15° R772 77 2 —7) 4 ©7 D=th=1Y) N ES NN ctl foe ha] so]N TU 777 pd : %z o Yi=t= 2 = Uy HALL OF © OLD HALL OF N 3 SENATE NROTUNDA REPRESENTATIVES CREPRESENTATIVI ES = x 34 \ CHAMBER N 2 N o 33 NEERAW 4 N Ii 0 | Now a) N gooa N li R i N Q 40 } b il I aide. Ngo oc on asso og 4 N 22 5 ml 1} AR No =} ol o I 3 1] gol Bl Bl a BO 8 Bb Ne : hy N{ 23 \5 LS) N == A ag [a SECC] ! I 1 N A [emt A Sy | ess «| N N 25 26 i -— N 23 24 B N NETENETETENR el = | ATTIC STORY & N Aa \ tl I SN I] o It SEHR ‘A022. JV025524510 0 10040) yp Jo suvgy THE ATTIC STORY OF THE CAPITOL. HOUSE WING. MAIN BUILDING. SENATE WING. Room. Room. Room. I. Committees on Pacific Railroads, and Pensions. 27. Senate Library. 14. Committee on Public Buildings and Grounds. . Committee on Elections. 28. Senate Library—Librarian’s Room. 15. Committee on Expenditures of Public Moneys. . Comniittee on Railways and Canals. 29. Select Committee on Library Building. 16. Committee on Railroads. Committee on Patents. 30. Senate Committee on Nicaragua Claims, 17. Committee on Privileges and Elections. . Committee on the District of Columbia. 3I. Senate Document-Room. i 18, Committee on Commerce. Committee on Banking and Currency. . Senate Document-Room. 19. Committee on Engrossed Bills. . Lobby. . Senate Document-Room, 20. Lobby. Correspondents and Journalists’ Withdrawing-Room. . Superintendent of the Senate Documents, 21. Correspondents’ Room. Western Union Telegraph. . House Library. 22. Committee on Epidemic Diseases. t Water-Closet. . House Document-Room. 23. Senate and Joint Committees on Public Printing. . Ladies’ Retiring-Room. . House Document-Room. 24. Conference Room. . Committee on Public Lands. . House Document-Room. 25. Committee on Claims. Committee on Civil Service and Retrenchment. . Clerk’s Office. 26. Committee on Private Land-Claims. 12. Committee on Commerce. J . Senate Document Room. 27. Elevator. x3 Committee on Foreign Affairs. 28. Committee on Rules. Committee on Tenth Census. 14. Committee on the Judiciary. = N wt MEMBERS OF THE PRESS WHO ARE ENTITLED TO ADMISSION TO THE REPORTERS’ GALLERIES. Name. Papers represented. Office. Residence. Allison, James W...... New York Star... ........ 1305 F street, N.W... 1424 Pennsylvania av. Armistead, George H.. Nashville, Tenn. American .. 1303. F street. ..c...... 421 Sixth street. Austin, O. P Cincinnati Times-Star (¢Z a/). . Fourteenthst.& Pa.av. 1620 Massachusetts av, Ayres, BoW, Los Kansas City Times and Alta 1420 New York av.... 1418 I street, N. W. California. Barry, David S Detroit Evening News I IT 1224 Thirteenth street. Bickford, F. T Associated Press... ....... Corcoran Building ... 1912 Fifteenth street Boyle, John... .....5.. The United Press'..... ....... 515 Fourteenth street. . 1610 Fifteenth street. Boynton, C. A. ....... Agent Western Associated Corcoran Building .... 1113 Seventeenth st. " Press. Boynton, H. V....... . Cincinnati Commercial Ga-siz Fourteenth street. . 1321 R street, N. W. zette. Brooks, Hobart Eveaing Critic and Cleveland 1309 N street, N.W. Press. Burhans, W.W ‘The United Press.........\... 515 Fourteenth street . 1814 Fourteenth street. Burtony A.C .... 0...» Brooklyn Eagle ...... ....... 1424 New Yorkav.... Hamilton House. Carpenter, Frank G ... American Press Association. . 1423 F street, N. W... 1528 O street, N. W, Carson, John M Philadelphia Ledger.......... 513 Fourteenthstreet. . 1332 Vermont avenue. Corwin, John A........ Chicago Times........-...... Fourteenthst.& Pa.av. Willard’s Hotel. Clarlh'S, NL... 005 New York Tribune 1322 F street, N. W... 041 H street, N. W, Clarke, Hy. C.......... Boston Journal 1312 FF street, N. W ... 1309 Fourteenth street. Clark Percy. .....%:5 Selma Times Osborne, Fourteenth Osborne. street. Crawford, 0. C:.. .... NewYork World............. 610 Fourteenth street. . 610 Fourteenth street. Curtis, William. E . .... Chicago Daily News......... s13 Fourteenth street. . 1424 O street, N. W. Dailey, Reuben........ Indianapolis Sentinel......... 1343 FF street, N. W... s14 Fourteenth street. DeGraw, P.V.... .... Manager United Press........ s15 Fourteenth street . o Fifth street, S. E. De Puy, Frank A. .... New York Times. ..:....... s15 Fourteenth street. 1515 Corcoran st. Dunnell, BE. G.......... New York Times ............ s15 Fourteenth street. 1625 Fourteenth street. Dunnington, Geo. A... Wheeling Intelligencer and 931 P street, N. W. Wine and Spirit Review. Durham, Jay New York World ..... aiiciedie 610 F street, N.W .... Arlington. F re Eland, Henry E N.Y.Commercial Advertiser, 1305 I street, N. W... s14 Thirteenth street. Phila. Evening Telegraph. Elliot, € S.iiv. ins Memphis Appeal and New so7 Fourteenth street, 1014 Seventeenth st. York Star. Ferris, F. P Evening Star...<:..csvseernan Eleventh st. & Pa. av.. 455 Missouri avenue. Flymn,S. RR... ....... Baltimore Sun. ...:........ 1314 F street, N. W... 1227 LL street, N. W. Fox, Monroe L......... National Republican 943 D street, N.W .... 1306 Clifton street. Gilliland, George E...... Cincinnati Enquirer .......... Fourteenth st.& Pa.av. oz21 I street, N. W. Gray, Chas. Saint Paul Pioneer Press. .... 1312 FF street, N.W ... 1310 Wallach Place. Guthridge, Jules....... New York Herald and San gor Fifteenth street ... 1420 New York av, Francisco Examiner. Habercom, L..W.... ... Milwaukee Herald and Saint s15 Fourteenth street. . Louis Westliche ost. Hamilton, Charles A... Detroit Tribune, Brooklyn 1420 Pennsylvania av . soo Maple avenue, Le Times, Boston Post. Droit Park. Handy, Fred A. G..... Chicago Times. .... 0... uh Fourteenth st.& Pa.av. 1310 G street, N. W. Hannum, Tom C....... Rintsburgh veh iol Fourteenthst.& 19 Myrtle street. Post... Pa.av. Harris, Cicero W Richmond Dispatch 1507 Vermontav ...... 1307 Vermont av. Hayes,Chas. J. Associated Press........ .... Corcoran Building ... 110 C street, S. E. Heath, P. S Indianapolis Journal, Pitts-513 Fourteenth street . Ebbitt House. burgh Leader, United Press. Heazelion, G.......... | San Francisco Chronicle 612 Fourteenth street . 612 Fourteenth street. Hood, Edwin M ... ... Associated Press............. 71 Corcoran Bui.ding.. 221 Twelfth st., S. W. Hopkins, Sherburne G. Manchester Union .... ....... 1425 New York av.... 736 Eighth st., N. W. Howe, Frank 1... .... Pittsburgh Com’l Gazette . ... 1420 Pennsylvania av . orcoran street. Hudson, Edmund Boston Herald 1420 Pennsylvania av . 1706 M street, N. W, ont, CP 0 ooo od, BuffaloiTimes. .........0.00 sts Fourteenth street. . 1432 Corcoran street. Judkine,T.C ...ivi ‘The Oregonian..........vvs 620 Eleventh st., N.W. 620 Eleventh st., N.W. Keim, De B. Randolph. Philadelphia Times and Har-607 M street, N. W. risburg Telegraph. Kennan, George. . ie Associated Press. ........ .... 71 Corcoran Building... 1318 Massachusetts av. Kerbey, JO 5.00.0 Salt Lake Tribune..... ey 515 Fourteenth street. . 23 Seventh street, N. E. Kincaid, Charles E. ... 3 Louisville Times and Morn-1343 F street, N. W ... 726 Eleventh st., N.W, ing Journal. Kirby, Thomas B... . | N. v. Journal of Commerce, Fourteenthst.& Pa.av. 705 D street, S. E. Richmond (Va.) Whig. Knapp, Charles W. ...| Missouri Repubiican......... sor Fourteenth street . 825 Vermont avenue. Larner, Robert M eS aie Balto. Sun, Charleston News 1314 FF street, N. W... 1224 Eleventh street. and Courier, Savan. Times. Y-Supns Francis E...... | Syracuse (N. Y.) Herald Evening Star office ... 3017 O street, N. W. Lewsley, David........ The Washington Post........ Tenth and D streets .. 1814 G street, N. W. Lyman, A. W.......... The New York Sun.. ...... so7 Fourteenth street . 1705 N street, N, W, r5 Members of the Press. Members of the Press who are entitled to admission to the Reporters’ Galleries—Continued. Name. Papers represented. Office. Residence. McCarthy, John B..... Hartford Times... .......... MacBride, William C .. Cincinnati Enquirer, Tag-Fourteenthst.& Pa.av. gart’s Philadelphia Times. Macfarland, H. B. F... Boston Herald, Philadelphia 1420 Pennsylvania av.. Record, Savannah News. McKee, David R ...... Agent of ‘Associated Press. .. Corcoran Building... Macpherson, L. C...... Cleveland Plaindealer........ Fourteenthst. & Pa.ayv. Markle, Frank......... Milwaukee Sentinel. ........ 1206 G street, N. W.. Martin, ‘George Carat Philadelphia Press........... 1423 © Sheet... Merillat, Charles H.... Associated Press. ............ Corcoran Building... Miller, John Po bana Washington Evening Star. . Pa. av. & Eleventh st. Moore, BAS on Telegraph, Nashua, N. H.. 317 East Capitol street. M organ, Prank P...... Brooklyn Citlen: 0. 1424 New Yorkav.... Morgan, James ........ Boston Daily Globe .......... s15 Fourteenth street . ; Murray, Chas. TT... Pittsburgh Dispatch...... ... 515 Fourteenth street. Mussey, F..D... 0.0 Cincinnati Commercial Ga-six Fourteenth street. . zette. Newman, E. W........ Courier-Journal . . 1343 F street, N. W... Nixon, Richard........ New Orleans Times-Demo-1343 FF street, N. W... crat. Nozh, Jacob J......... Chicago Herald, Denver Tri-1420 New York av... bune, Re ublican. Nordhoff, Charles...... New York Herald. ........... sor Fifteenth st., N.W. Ogden, OM... Philadelphia News and Cali-515 Fourteenth street. . fornia Associated Press. O’Brien, W. F......... The United Press -.... .....: 15 Fourteenth street . Pagaud, JosephS ...... Portsmouth Times ........... altimore, Md........ Pamter, Uhl... 0.0L. Philadelphia Enquirer........ oo Fourteenth street. Pepper, Charles M .... Chicago Tribune. ............ ’m 7 Corcoran Build’g Poore, Ben: Perley.... Boston Budget, Albany Ev’g Ebbitt House........ Journal, Omaha Republican. Porter, Robert P....... Philadelphia Press........... 1423 Iistreet.. v... +... Powers, Ered. Perry... Chicago Dimes.............-Fourteenthst.& Pa.av. Preston, HerbertA... . New York Herald........ 7or Fifteenth st.,N.W. Reade, john | EONAR Press’...ivi L N. Porflond i. 1324 street, W... Richardson, BoA... Baltimore Sun..'.............. 1314 IF street, N. W... Richardson, F. H...... Atlanta Constitution ......... Metropolitan Hotel. .. Ringwalt, William E .. N. Y. Commercial Bulletin, 515 Fourteenth street . W. Critic, United Press. Seckendorff, M. G...... New York Tribune RAG 1322 F street, N. W... Shaw, W. B.. ao 1406: GG street .......... Shriver, John'S ........ 1420 Pennsylvania av. Snowden, Harold...... Alexandria, Va....... 1420 Pennsylvania av . Pittsburgh Penny Press...... 14 Grant Place. ....... Louisville Courier-Journal . 1343 F street, N. W... Saint Louis Globe-Democrat . siz Fourteenth st..... Stofer, Alfred J., grove RichmondiState........ 0.0... Fourteenthst.& Pa.av. Tompkins, BH. Shreveport Times............ Towle, Charles F...... Boston Traveller, New York Telegram. Truesdell: J. A ....... Saint Paul, Minn.,Globe...... s15 Fourteenth street . Underwood, H.S..... Boston Daily Advertiser, Bos-siz Fourteenth stieet . ton Evening Record. Walker, George H..... Cleveland Leader............ 1427 F street, N. W.. Warden, CHI... Washington Republican...... street..... 43D . Washington, L.Quinton New Orleans Picayune. ...... ourteenthst.& Pa,av Weightman, Richard . New-York Star 05... 1343 IF street, N. W.. Wells, Travis D ....... Chicago Tribune............. R’my Corcoran Build’ g West, Hu I, oi Washington'Post .... ....... Tenth and D streets. Wight, B.B.l aus Chicago Inter-Ocean, Boston 1312 F street, N. W.. Journal, New York Post. Wilson, J. H. c oh as Towa State Register... ....... 416 Thirteenth street.. Wollt, Paul... 2, New York Staats-Zeitung. . 1351 Pennsylvania av . "Wynne, Robert J...... Cincinnati Commercial Ga-s11 Fourteenth street. . gette. 7oung, James R....... Philadelphia Evening Star .... 1506Q street, N. W .. C. H. Mann, Doorkeeper House Press Gallery, residence, 614 C street, S. E. THE WASHINGTON PRESS. [See page 187.] 248 Third street, N.W, 1504 Q street. 1727 F street. 1753 Rhode Island av. 913 G street, N. W, 1206 G street, N, W: nor K street, N. W. 1430 Eighth st., N.W. 2327 } N.E. Marylandayv., 317 East Capitol street. 8os I) street, S. E. 515 Fourteenth street. Willard’s Hotel. 728 Seventeenth street. 918 New York avenue. 1307 F street, N. W 1426 Eleventh st.,N.W, 1731 K street, N. W, 1150 Seventeenth st. 720 Twelfth st., N. W. Baltimore, Md. goo FF ourleenth street. 1414 IK street, N. Ebbitt House. Riggs House. 1213 K street, N. W. 1908 I ifteenth street. 1324 L street, N. W. 1308 Vermont av. Metropolitan Hotel. s15 Fourteenth street. 1418 Twentieth street. Riggs Annex. Willard’s Hotel. Alexandria, Va. 1621 Massachusetts av. 14 Grant Place. 2134 L street, N. W. 513 Thirteenth street. 930 I street, N. W. 1327 N street, N. W. 2020 N street, N. W. 1310 Twenty-second st. 1341 L street, N. W. 1426 N street, N. W. goo Twenty-third st. 1105 Ninth st., N. W, 1006 Sunderland Place. 1013 Vitek street. 1135 Fifth st., N. W. 1312 F a 'N.W. 416 Twelfth st., N. W, 705 D street, S. E. 1004 S street, N. W. 1506 Q street, N. W. 128 Congressional Directory. THE EXECUTIVE, EXECUTIVE MANSION. | President of the United States—GROVER CLEVELAND, Executive Mansion. Joey’ Private Secretary.—Daniel S. Lamont, 2003 I street, N. W. Assistant Secretary. —QO. L. Pruden, 317 Eleventh street, S. W. Executive Cleris.—James C. Saunders, 814 New Jersey avenue, N. W. | William H. Crook, 727 20th street, N. W. Charles M. Hendley, 1223 Tenth street, N. W. Commissioner of Public Buildings.—Col. John M. Wilson, 1141 Connecticut avenue. i | DEPARTMENT OF STATE. | | Secretary of State.—THOMAS F. BAYARD, 1413 Massachusetts avenue. | Assistant Secretary. —James D. Porter, Riggs House. Second Assistant Secretary.—Alvey A. Adee, 1019 Fifteenth street, N. W. Third Assistant Secretary.—]John B. Moore, 1725 H street. Chief Clerk. —Sevellon A. Brown, 1500 Thirteenth street, Iowa Circle. | Chief of the Diplomatic Bureau—H. Sidney Everett, 1227 Nineteenth street. | Chief of the Consular Bureau~—F. O. St. Clair, 1428 Rhode Island avenue. Chief of the Bureau of Archives and Indexes.—John H. Haswell, 1219 O street. 4 Chief of the Bureau of Accounts—Francis J. Kieckhoefer, 1505 Vermont avenue. Chief of the Bureau of Statistics— Worthington C. Ford, 1725 H street. Chief of the Bureaw of Rolls and Library.—Theodore F. Dwight, 1603 H street. : Stenographer to the Secretary.—Ellis Mills, 403 Indiana avenue. m8 Passport Clerk.—N. Benedict, 1623 Q street. : TREASURY DEPARTMENT. Secretary of the Treasury —~DANIEL MANNING, 1501 Eighteenth street, N. W, j Assistant Secretary.—Hugh S. Thompson, 1514 K street, N. W. i Assistant Secretary.—Charles S. Fairchild, 1347 Connecticut avenue. | Chief Cleri—E. B. Youmans, 1520 Connecticut avenue. Appointment Division.— Chief, Eugene Higgins, Baltimore. Warrant Division.— Chief, W. I. Maclennan, 1517 Thirty-first street, West Washington. Public Moneys.— Chief, Eugene B. Daskam, 1425 R street, N. W. Customs Division.— Chief, J. G. Macgregor, 1902 H street, N. W. Mercantile Marine and Internal Revenue Divisiorn.— Chief, Darius Lyman, 1 Grant Place. Revenue Marine Division.— Chief, Peter Bonnett, Riggs House. Stationery Division.— Chief, A L. Sturtevant, Howard avenue, Mount Pleasant. : Loans and Currency Division.— Chief, Robert L. Miller, 1010 K street, N. W. Mail and Files Division.— Chief, Herman Kretz, Metropolitan Hotel. Captured Property, Claims and Lands Division.— Chief, Albert W. Crites, 1107 Massachu- setts avenue. Supervising Special Agent of the Treasury Department—L. G. Martin, Baltimore, Md. Government Actuary.—E. B. Elliott, 1210 G street, N. W. Disbursing Clerk. —George A. Bartlett, Park street, Mount Pleasant. Disbursing Clerk—Thomas J. Hobbs, 1622 I street. ~~ 3 Private Secretary to Secretaryof the Treasury.—Thomas J. Brennan, goz S street, N. W. T SUPERVISING ARCHITECT’S OFFICE. Supervising Arvchitect—M. E. Bell, 1338 Vermont avenue. Chief Clerk.—Thomas D. Fister, 1507 Rhode Island avenue. BUREAU OF ENGRAVING AND PRINTING. Chief of Burean.—Edward O. Graves, 1700 Fourteenth street, N. W. Assistant Chief—Thomas J. Sullivan, 1530 Ninth street, N. W. Accountant.—Edwin Lamasure, 216 Twelfth street, 5. W. Engraving Divison.— Superintendent, John A. O'Neill, 1464 Thirteenth street, N. ; W. | . Executive Departments. 129 OFFICE STEAMBOAT INSPECTION. Supervising Inspector- General.—James A. Dumont, 216 A street, S. E. : BUREAU OF STATISTICS. ] (Young’s Building, 407 Fifteenth street, N. W.) | Chief of Burean.—W. F. Switzler, 608 Twelfth street, N. W. | i Chief Clerk.—]. N. Whitney, 1827 I street, N. W. fi Examining and Revising Division.— Chief, E. J. Keferstein, 1500 Kingman Place. | { Compiling Division.— Chief, William Burchard, 513 Twelfth street, N. W, | Si Miscellaneous Division.—Chief, J. D. O’Connell, 1312 G street, N. W. LIFE-SAVING SERVICE. General Superintendent. —S. I. Kimball, 511 Maple avenue, Le Droit Park. Assistant General Superintendent.—W. D. O’Connor, 1015 O street, N. W. FIRST COMPTROLLER’S OFFICE. Comptroller. —Milton J. Durham, 2139 Pennsylvania avenue, N. W. | . Deputy.—]. R. Garrison, 1009 G street, N. W. Division of Judiciary Accounts—]. Altheus Johnson, 413 Sixth street, N. W. Division of Internal-Revenue and Miscellaneous Accounts.— Chief, S. A. Walton, 601 Thir- teenth street, N. W. | | Division of Warrants and Records, Public Lands and Territorial Accounts.— Chief, L. H. Mangum, 1340 Riggs street, N. W. : Division of Accounts of the United States Treasurer, Assistant Treasurers, Loans and Assay Offices, &c.— Chief, E. P. Speer, 1303 Corcoran street, N. W. Division of Foreign-Intercourse and District of Columbia Accounts.— Clerk in charge, John Walker, 1011 M street, N. W. SECOND COMPTROLLER’S OFFICE. Comptroller —Isaac H. Maynard, 25 Lafayette Square. 1 Deputy. —Richard R. McMahon, 1505 H street, N. W. Army Pay Division.—]Jerome Lee, 3024 Q street, N. W. Navy Division.—Geo. H. French, 1701 T street, N. W. Quartermasters’ Division.—Chas. H. Brice, 1005 Thirteenth street, N. W. = Army Paymasters' Division.— George G. McCorkle, 1121 Fourteenth street, N. W., | } Indian Division.—]. D. Terrill, 1334 Vermont avenue. | Miscellaneous Division.—S. W. Shadle, 51 C street, S. E. | Army Pension Division—T. O. W. Roberts, Brightseat, Md. COMMISSIONER OF CUSTOMS. Commissioner.—John S. McCalmont, 1513 Twentieth street, N. W. Deputy.—H. A. Lockwood, corner First and B streets, S. W. Customs Division.— Chief, Edmund Jones, 142 A street, N. E. Bond Division.— Chief, B. F. Cutter, 631 East Capitol street. Disbursing Officer's Division.— Chief, N. H. Thompson, 1606 Thirteenth street. Division of Appointments and Refunds.— Chief. (Vacant.) Stub Division.—A. J. Gunning, 136 East Capitol street. REGISTER OF THE TREASURY. Register—~William S. Rosecrans, Willard’s Hotel. Assistant Register.—Ros. A. Fish, 1208 Virginia avenue, S. W. Coupon and Note Division.— Chief, Fractional Currency Division.— Chief, L. W. Reid, Alexandria, Va. Loan Division.— Chief, James R. Sneed, 1207 S street, N. W. Receipts and Expenditures Division.—Chief, Thomas Holladay, 1346 Riggs street, N. W. Loans and Interest Commission.— Chief, John Morris, 2212 G street, N. W. FIRST AUDITOR. | : Auditor.—]. Q. Chenoweth, 1424 New York avenue, N. W. Deputy —Ernest P. Baldwin, Laurel, Md. 4 Customs Division.—Chicf, Henry K. Leaver, 1528 Sixteenth street, N. W. Judiciary Division.— Chief, Thaddeus Sturgis, 207 Thirteenth street, S. W. Public Debt Division.— Chief, John P. Bentley, 915 L street, N. W, Miscellaneous Division.— Chief, A. F. McMillan, 1311 Wallach Place, N. W. Warehouse and Bond Division.—John P. Torbert, Acting Chief, 129 C street, S. E, | : SECOND AUDITOR. (Winder's Building, west of War Department.) L 2D ED 9 a 130 Congressional Directory. Paymasters’ Division.-—Chief, David Okey, 719 Eleventh street, N. W. -Bookkeepers’ Division.— Chief, Thomas Rathbone, 149 D street, S. E. Indian Division.— Chief, Charles C. Snow, 1216 G street, N. W. Pay and Bounty Division.— Chief, William H. Smyser, 27 Iowa Circle. Archives Division.— Chief, James M. Watt, 1228 Twelfth street, N. W. Property Division.— Chief, Thomas Lanigan, 1012 Twelfth street, N. W. Ordnance, Medical and Miscellaneous Division.— Chief, Alexander H. Gambrill, 1114 Eleventh street, N. W. ' THIRD AUDITOR. Auditor —John S. Williams, 25 Lafayette square. ; ER Deputy —William H. Welsh, Baltimore, Md. Bookkeepers’ Division.— Chief, J. F. Jones, 1639 Thirteenth street, N. W. Military Division— Chief, W. S. Kiser, 2112 K street, N. W. Miscellaneous Division.Chief, J. A. Swartz, 126 E street, N. W. — Pension Division.— Chief, John B. Hussey, 1446 Q street, N. W. Claims Division.— Chief, W. S. Stetson, 1412 Sixth street, N. W. Collection Division.—Joseph R. Owens, Hyattsville, Md. Horse Claims Division—Oscar J. Harvey, 14 Fourth street, S. E. FOURTH AUDITOR. Auditor —Charles M. Shelley, 1507 Rhode Island avenue. Deputy —Lawrence N. Buford, 1627 Fourteenth street, N. W. Record and Prize Division.— Chief, B. P. Mimmack, 1763 Q street, N. W. Navy Agents’ Division.— Chief, J. M. Wright, 1358 B street, S. W. Paymasters’ Division.— Chief, A. C. Ervin, 816 Fifteenth street, N. W. Claim Division.— Chief, Robert Kearon, 614 M street, N. W. Bookkeepers’ Division.—F. C. Severance, 728 Ninth street, N. W. FIFTH AUDITOR. Auditor— Anthony Eickhoff, 304 Maryland avenue, N. E. Deputy —Alfred E. Lewis, 1807 H street, N. W. | Internal-Revenue Collectors’ Division.— Chief, James C. Truman, 1010 Massachusetts avenue, Miscellaneous Division.— Chief, Endicott King, 1318 Tenth street, N. W. Diplomatic and Consular Division.—Chief, A. O. Latham, 1306 R street, N. W. ~ SIXTH AUDITOR. Auditor —Daniel McConville, 1414 N street, N. W. Deputy.—Hugh A. Haralson, 911 E street, N. W, Chief Clerk. —Richard M. Johnson, 213 New Jersey avenue, N. W. Disbursing Clerk.—T. D. Keleher, 409 A street, S. E. Collecting Division.— Chief, P. Cunningham, gog M street, N. W. Stating Division.— Chief, T. Stobo Farrow, 932 North Carolina avenue. Examining Division— Chief, A. S. Howell, 1009 Thirteenth street, N. W. Checking Division.— Chief, C. T. Mitchell, 1814 G street, N. W. Inspecting Division.— Chief, W. E. Dougherty, 1717 De Sales street, N. W. Recording Division.— Chief, R. W. Ellis, 1346 Riggs street, N. W. Foreign Mail Division. —Chief, D. N. Burbank, 732 Thirteenth street, N. W. Registering Division.— Acting Chief, A. H. Nixon, 1529 Twenty-ninth street, N. W, Pay Division.— Chief, J. M. Leach, jr., 1101 K street, N. W. Bookkeeping Division.— Chief, Isaac G. Peetrey, 911 M street, N. W. Review Division.— Chief, Gresham Hough, 67 Saint Paul street, Baltimore, Md. TREASURER OF THE UNITED STATES. | Treasurer. —Conrad N. Jordan, 1537 P street, N. W. | Assistant Treasurer.—J. W. Whelpley, 800 East Capitol street. Chief Clerk—A. L. Rutter, 1453 Q street, N. W. Cashier.—E. R. True, 933 New York avenue. | Assistant Cashier.—James F. Meline, 1716 Thirteenth street, N. W. Vault Clerfe—Alfred R. Quaiffe, The Portland. RL » & Receiving Teller —G. C. Bantz, 22 Columbia avenue, Baltimore, Md. } | Paying Teller—William Howard Gibson, 2435 K street, N. W. | Assistant Teller.—James A. Sample, 1344 Riggs street, N. W. Assistant Teller.—W. F. Williams, 1819 F street, N. W. ! ; Redemption Division.— Chief, James C. Poynton, 340 Indiana avenue. | Loan Division.— Chief, Ferdinand Weiler, 1316 V street, N. W. Accounts Division.— Chief, D. W. Harrington, 15 Grant Place. Division of Issues.— Chief, C. L. Jones, 1245 Twenty-ninth street, N. W. fee WNational-Bank Division.— Chief, Jerome C. Burnett, 206 Fifth street, S. E. Principal Bookkeeper.—Sherman Platt, 1705 Lincoln avenue. Assistant Bookkeeper —A. D. Johnston, 1332 V street, N. W. National Bank Redemption Div.—~Supt., T. E. Rogers, 523 Spruce street, Le Droit Park. — Executive Departments. [31 COMPTROLLER OF THE CURRENCY. Comptroller —William L. Trenholm, 1812 N street, N. W. Deputy Comptroller—]. D. Abrahams, 1231 G street, N. W. Division of Reports— Chief, R. P. Mayfield, 135215 B street, S. W. Redemption Division.— Chief, A. B. Dickerson, 1101 Thirteenth street, N. W. Division of Issues— Chief, George M. Coffin, 1421 Twentieth street, N. W. Organization Division.— Chief, John J. Crawford, 1228 Twelfth street, N. W. Bond Cler. —W. D. Swan, 323 First street, S. E. ~ COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE. Commissioner —Joseph S. Miller, 1401 K street, N. W. Deputy —E. Henderson, 315 Four-and-a-half street, N. W. Solicitor —Charles Chesley, 641 East Capitol street. Chief Clerk and Appointment Division.—John D. Biddis, 917 Fifteenth street, N. W. Tobacco Division— Chief, Israel Kimball, 224 New Jersey avenue, S. E. Law Division.— Chief, O. F. Dana, 1529 Rhode Island avenue. Stamp Division.— Chief, Holly G. Armstrong, 1306 T street, N. W. Assessment Division.— Chief, C. A. Bates, 1016 T street, N. W. Division of Distilled Spirits.— Chief, T. A. Cushing, 1333 N street, N. W. Division of Revenue Agents.—F. D. Sewall, 1338 H street, N. W. DIRECTOR OF THE MINT. Director of the Mint—James P. Kimball, 1311 New Hampshire avenue. Examiner —R. E. Preston, 53 K street, N. E. ‘Computer of Bullion.—E. O. Leech, 1423 Corcoran street. Assayer—Winfield P. Lawver, 1912 I street, N. W. Adjuster —Frank P. Gross, 1312 R street, N. W. BUREAU OF NAVIGATION. | Commissioner of Navigation.—Charles B. Morton, 1531 P street, N. W. Acting Deputy Commissioner— Thomas B. Sanders, 1410 Tenth street. \ LIGHT-HOUSE BOARD. Chairman.—Vice-Admiral Stephen C. Rowan, U. S. N., Ebbitt House. Naval Secretary —Commander Henry F. Picking, U. S. N., 1730 H street, N. W. Engineer Secretary.~Maj. David Porter Heap, U. S. A., 1618 Rhode Island avenue. Clief Clerk.—Arnold B. Johnson, 501 Maple avenue, Le Droit Park. UNITED STATES COAST AND GEODETIC SURVEY. (Coast and Geodetic Survey Building, south of the Capitol.) Superintendent —Frank M. Thorn, 1714 Fourteenth street, N. W. Assistant in Charge of Office—B. A. Colonna, 23 Grant Place, N. W. = | Hydrographic Inspector.—Lieut. Commander W. H. Brownson, U. S. N., 1709 Rhode Island avenue. Naval Paymaster.—]. R. Stanton, Metropolitan Club. MARINE-HOSPITAL SERVICE. (Supervising Surgeon-General’s Office, 1421 G street, N. W.) Supervising Surgeon-General.—John B. Hamilton, 9 B street, N. W., Capitol Square. Chief Purveying and Quarantine Divisions—Surgeon Geo. W. Stoner, 1115 Seventeenth street, N. W. Acting Chief Clerk.—Fairfax Irwin, Passed Assistant Surgeon, 1727 Nineteenth street, N. W, WAR DEPARTMENT. Secretary of War.—WILLIAM C. ENDICOTT, 1313 Sixteenth street, N. W. Chief Clerk.—John Tweedale, 911 Rhode Island avenue. Disbursing Clerk. —W. S. Yeatman, 301 Eleventh street, S. W. Record Division.— Chief, Samuel Hodgkins, 1434 Q street, N. W. Correspondence Division.— Chief, Jay Stone, 1756 P street, N. W. Requisition and A.counts Division.— Chiefy L. W. Tolman, 1112 New Hampshire avenue. Private Secretary and Stenographer—Charles S. Sweet, 1317 M street, N. W. Officer on Duty.—Capt. Charles H. Hoyt, Assistant Quartermaster, in charge of Supply Division, 1511 Sixteenth street, N. W. 132 Congressional Directory. a HEADQUARTERS OF THE ARMY. Lieut. Gen. P. H. Sheridan, 1617 Rhode Island avenue. Military Secretary.— Lieut. Col. M. V. Sheridan, 1712 N street, N. W. Aids-de-Camp.— Lieut. Col. Sanford C. Kellogg, 1228 Seventeenth street, Lieut. Col. Stanhope E. Blunt, 2023 Hillyer Place. N. W, ADJUTANT-GENERAL’S DEPARTMENT. Adjutant-General.—Brig. Gen. Rich’dC. Drum, Langdrum, BethesdaP. O., Montg’y Co., Assistants. —Bvt. Brig. Gen. J. C. Kelton, 1520 P street, N. W. Bvt. Brig. Gen. Oliver D. Greene, 1920 Sunderland Place. Bvt. Col. H. Clay Wood, 1419 K street, N. W. Maj. Thomas Ward, 1901 N street, N. W. Maj. T. Schwan, 1512 P street, N. W. Capt. D. M. Taylor, Ordnance Department (on special duty), 324 Indiana Chie Clerk. = P. Thian, 3311 N street, Georgetown. Md. ave. at INSPECTOR-GENERAL’S DEPARTMENT. Inspector-General. —Bvt. Maj. Gen. Absalom Baird, 1741 G street, Inspector-General—Maj. H. J. Farnsworth, 1739 G street, N. W. Chief Clerk.—Warren H. Orcutt,’509 East Capitol street. N. W. QUARTERMASTER’S DEPARTMENT. Quartermaster-General.—Brig. Gen. S. B. Holabird, 1311 P street, Assistants. —Bvt. Col. J. G. Chandler, 1320 F street, N. W. Bvt. Brig. Gen. C. G. Sawtelle, 2819 P street, N. W. Bvt. Brig. Gen. B. C. Card, 1517 L street, N. W. Maj. W. B. Hughes, 1518 P street, N. W. . Capt. John F. Rodgers, 1310 Sixteenth street, N. W. Chief Clerk.—]. Z. Dare, 1340 Corcoran street, N. W. Depot Quartermaster andll iki Bin }—Bw. Col. R. N. Batchelder, 1338 N. W. :H street, N. W. SUBSISTENCE DEPARTMENT. < (Offices, 17 Fifteen-and-a-half street.) Commissary-General.—Brig. Gen. Robert Macfeely, 2015 I street, N. W. Assistants —Bvt. Col. Beekman Du Barry, 1826 H street, N. W. Bvt. Lt. Col. J. H. Gilman, 1337 Fifteenth street, N. W. Chief Clerk —William A. De Caindry, 1713 H street, N. W. Depot Commissary. —Capt. Wells Willard, 1335 N street, N. W. - al ll MEDICAL DEPARTMENT. -Surgeon-General.—John Moore, 1714 Rhode Island avenue, N. W. Assistants —Bvt. Lt.-Col. John S. Billings, 3027 N street, Georgetown. f Bvt. Lt. Col. D. L. Huntington, 1822 I street, N. W Maj. Charles Smart, 2017 Hillyer Place. Capt. Washington Matthews, 1362 New Hampshire ave., N. W. Capt. J. O. Skinner, 1529 O street, N. W. Capt. F. C. Ainsworth, The Woodmont. Chief Clerk.—Samuel Ramsey, 2116 H street, N. W. Chief Medical Purveyor—Col. J. H. Baxter, 1504 H street, N. W, Attending Surgeon—Maj. R. M. O'Reilly, 1911 I street, N. W. Assistant Surgeon.—P. F. Harvey, The Clarendon. : | PAY DEPARTMENT. | (Office, northwest corner of Pennsylvania avenue and Seventeenth street, N. W.) | Paymaster-General —Brig. Gen. Wm. B. Rochester, 1320 Eighteenth street, N. W. Assistant in charge of Bounties, &>c.—Byvt. Lt. Col. 1. O. Dewey, 1325 N. Hamp. ave., Chief Clerk. — Grafton D. Hanson, 1228 Massachusetts avenue, N. W. Post Paymaster—W. F. Tucker, jr., corner Clifton and Thirteenth streets, N. W. N. W, : ; Wak » | CORPS OF ENGINEERS. Chief of Engineers—Brig. Gen. J. C. Duane, 1618 Rhode Island avenue, N. W, Assistants.—Bvt. Maj. Gen. John G. Parke, 16 Lafayette Square. Maj. Chas. W. Raymond, The Portland. Capt. Henry M. Adams, 1905 I street, N. W. : Chief Clerk.—William J. Warren, The Woodmont. Secretary to Light-House Board. —Maj. D. P. Heap, 1618 Rhode Island avenue, N. W. Bvt. Lt. Col. P. C. Hains, in charge of Potomac River improvements, 1824 Jeffersan, Place. 4 ET Bxecutrve Departments. 133 PUBLIC BUILDINGS AND GROUNDS. (Office, 1700 Pennsylvania avenue.) In charge.—Col. John M. Wilson, 1141 Connecticut avenue. Chief Clerk.—E. F. Concklin, 418 B street, S. E. Public Gardener —Geo. H. Brown, 1312 S street, N. W. STATE, WAR, AND NAVY BUILDING, AND WASHINGTON MONUMENT. (Office, 612 Seventeenth street, N. W.) In charge.—Col. Thomas L. Casey, Corps of Engineers, New York. Assistant. —Bernard R. Green, 1738 N stréet, N. W. Chief Clerks—Ed. Sutherland, 1418 S street, N. W. F. L. Harvey, jr., 1123 Seventeenth street, N. W. ORDNANCE DEPARTMENT. Chief of Ordnance.—Brig. Gen. Stephen V. Benét, 1717 I street, N. W. Assistants.—Capt. Charles S. Smith, 19 Iowa Circle. Capt. Rogers Birnie, jr., 1341 New Hampshire avenue, N. W. | Capt. V. McNally, Hamilton House. Chief Cler.—]ohn J. Cook, 927 M street, N. W. JUDGE-ADVOCATE-GENERAL’S DEPARTMENT. | Acting Judge-Aimer General —Col. G. N. Lieber, 1322 Eighteenth street, N. W. | Assistant—Maj. J. W. Clous, 1311 Twentieth street, N. W. | Chief Clerk. ius Duke, 1455 Corcoran street. | SIGNAL OFFICE. Acting Chief Signal Officer —Capt. A. W. Greely, 5th Cavalry, 1914 G street, N. W. Assistants. —Capt. F. B. Jones, A. Q. M., 1722 Fifteenth street, N. W. First Lieut. Henry H. C. Dunwoody, 4th Art., 1515 Twenty-ninth st.,, N. W, First Lieut. T. M. Woodruff, 5th Inf., 2020. Hillyer Place, N. W. First Lieut. R. E. Thompson, zo11 N street, N. W. Second Lieut. William D. Wright, 2220 G street, N. W. Second Lieut. Frank Greene, Signal Corps, 1932 Fifteenth street, N. W. Second Lieut. J. C. Walshe, 932 Twenty-third street, N. W. Second Lieut. B. M. Purssell, Signal Corps, 1525 Twenty-eighth street, N. W. Second Lieut. F. M. M. Beall, Signal Corps, 1336 Riggs street, N. W. John P. Finley, 1003 Twenty-fourth street, N. W. Second Lieut. F. R. Day, Signal Corps, 1710 Fifteenth street, N. W. Second Lieut, James Mitchell, 922 I street, N. W. Second Lieut. Frank W. Ellis, 1213 H street, N. W. Chief Clerk.—Alexander Ashley, 2012 G street. PUBLICATION OFFICE, WAR RECORDS. In charge—Lieut. Col. R. N. Scott, 1721 De Sales street, N. W. » On duty —Capt. Wyllys Lyman, 1341 L street, N. W. Lieut. Thomas T. Knox, 1907 I street, N. W. t Chief Clerk.—]John S. Moodey, 1925 I street, N. W. Agent for the collection of Confederate records.—Marcus J. Wright, 2028 G street, N. W, THE SOLDIERS’ HOME. v [See page 187.] NAVY DEPARTMENT. Secretary of the Nayy.— WILLIAM C. WHITNEY, 1731 I street, N. W. Chief Clerk.—John W. Hogg, The Clarendon, cor. Fourteenth st. and New York ave., N.W, Disbursing Clere.—F. H. Stickney, Hopeton, Seventh-street road. Registrar.—W. P. Moran, 2412 Pennsylvania avenue. Private Secretary and Stenographer.—B. W. Hanna, 2218 G street, N. W. BUREAU OF ORDNANCE (IST FLOOR). Chier of Bureau.—Commodore Montgomery Sicard, 1417 Massachusetts avenue, N. Ww. Chief Clerk.—Thad. K. Sailer, 1101 Fifth street, N. W. Assistant to Chief—Commander W. M. Folger, Twenty-eighth and Q streets, N. W. Lieutenant A. R. Couden, 918 Fifteenth street, N. W. Lieutenant N. E. Mason, 1120 Thirteenth street, N. W. Lieutenant W. W. Kimball, 1618 Rhode Island avenue, N. W. Lieutenant R. H. McLean, 1518 P street, N. W. Lieutenant C, A. Bradbury, 1110 Sixteenth street, N. W, 134 Congressional Directory. ; BUREAU OF EQUIPMENT AND RECRUITING (1sT FLOOR). | Chief of Bureau.—Commodore W. S. Schley, 1826 I street, N. W. | Chief Clerk.—A. W. Fletcher, 209 C street, S. E. | Lieutenant Wm. M. Irwin, 1221 G street, N. W, Ensign H. O. Dunn, 1221 G street, N. W. | BUREAU OF NAVIGATION (2D FLOOR). Chief of Bureau.—Commodore John G. Walker, The Everett, 1730 H street, N. W. Chief Clerk. —L. Waldecker, 414 M street, N. W. og | Special duty.—Commander W. B. Hoff, 1929 Jefferson Place. | Lieut. Geo. M. Storey, 2014 Hillyer Place. Assistant to Chief.—Commander B. H. McCalla, 2001 Massachusetts av., N. W. Lieutenant R. T. Mulligan, 1625 Massachusetts avenue. Paymaster H. T. Stancliff, The Clarendon, corner. Fourteenth street and New York avenue. Superintendent of Compasses—Lieutenant C. C. Cornwell, 2024 P street, N. W. Special duty, Compasses.—Lieutenant S. W. Diehl, 1233 New York avenue. BUREAU OF YARDS AND DOCKS (3D FLOOR). Chief of Bureau.—Commodore D. B. Harmony, 1623 Massachusetts avenue. Chief Clerk. —Augustus E. Merritt, 612 H street, N. W. bie Lieutenant-Commander C. H. Stockton, 1828 I street, N. W. | BUREAU OF PROVISIONS AND CLOTHING. Chief of Bureau. —Paymaster-General James Fulton, The Portland. Chief Clerk.—Louis E. Beall, 1816 I street, N. W. Paymaster John R. Carmody, 1220 Sixteenth street, N. W. Assistant Paymaster L. Hunt, 1466 Rhode Island avenue. BUREAU OF STEAM-ENGINEERING (3D FLOOR). 5 | Chief of Burean.—Engineer-in-Chief, C. H. Loring, 1334 Nineteenth street, N. W. ; Chief Clerk —W. H. H. Smith, 2112 H street. Assistant to Engineer-in-Chief. Wi Harris, Chief Engineer Bureau Steam Engineering, | 1307 K street, N. W. Passed Assistant fongtirer: —W. A. H. Allen, 219 Third street, N. W. Herschel Main, 2009 1Massachusetts avenue, N. W. W. H. Nauman, 1827 I street, N. W. | Henry Herwig, 918 Fifteenth street, N. W.° | A. M. Mattice 1702 F street, N. W. Assistant Engineer. —M. Bevington, 1221 G street, N. W. | Cadet EngineerJ. E. Byrne, 1510 H street, N. W. BUREAU OF MEDICINE AND SURGERY. : (First floor, south wing.) Chief of Bureau.—Surgeon-General F. M. Gunnell, 600 Twentieth street. | Assistant Chief of Bureau.—Wm. K. Van Reypen, 1021 Fifteenth street. ) Chief Clerk. —Chas. T. Earle, 515 Fourteenth street. | Special duty.—Passed Assistant Sugeon John C. Boyd, Ebbitt House. BUREAU OF CONSTRUCTION AND REPAIR. | (First floor, centre wing.) = | Chief of Bureau.— = ¥ In charge~Naval Constructor T. D. Wilson, 1631 Sixteenth steeet, N. W. Chief Clerk—Hugh Allen Goldsborough, 1916 G street, N. W. OFFICE OF THE JUDGE-ADVOCATE-GENERAL. (Second floor, centre wing, room 101.) | Judge-Advocate-General.—Colonel William B. Remey, United States Marine Corps, 1715 H street, N. W. Yi Lieutenant Adolph Marix, 1215 G street, N. W. Lieutenant Samuel C. Lemly, 1702 F street, N. W. Executive Departments. 135 | EE — ADMIRAL’S OFFICE. (At his house.) Admiral D. D. Porter, 1710 H street. Secretary to the Admiral—]. M. Allen, 1320 Nineteenth street, N. W. Aide to the Admiral —Lieutenant Chauncey Thomas, 1619 Thirteenth street, N. W. NAUTICAL ALMANAC. (Office, Navy Department, third floor.) Superintendent.—Professor Simon Newcomb, 941 M street, N. W. Assistants ~—E. J. Loomis, 1413 Stoughton street. G. W. Hill, 314 Indiana avenue. J. Morrison, 1913 N street, N. W. U.S. HYDROGRAPHIC OFFICE. . (Basement, Navy Department.) Hydrographer—Commander John R. Bartlett, 1836 Jefferson Place, N. W, Assistant to Hydyrographer.—Lieutenant G. L. Dyer, 1643 Nineteenth street, N. W. Division of Notices and Archives.—Lieutenant W. H. Parker, jr., 3012 Dunbartonav., N. W. Lieutenant D. L.. Wilson, 3315 Thirty-third street, N. W. Lieutenant W. S. Hughes, 834 Thirteenth street, N. W. Division of Meteorology.—Lieutenant E. B. Underwood, 1827 I street, N. W. Ensign N. J. L. T. Halpino, 2002 Twenty-first street, N. W. Division of Supply.—Lieutenant N. E. Niles, U. S. N., 2129 Sixteenth street, N. W. : Lieutenant C. F. Emmerick, 1704 F street, N. W. Division of Books.— Lieutenant R. G. Davenport, 1415 Twentieth street, N. W. Lieutenant F. H. Le Favor 1742 F street, N. W. Lieutenant F. E. Sawyer, 201 A street, S. E. Ensign H. W. Harrison, 2027 I street, N. W. Division of Issue.—Lieutenant G. A. Merriam, 1827 I street, N. W. Ensign Gilbert Wilkes, 1731 I street, N. W. ivision of Chart Construction—Ensign J. H. Fillmore, 1322 K street, N. W, Ensign T. Snowden, 1328 I street, N. W. BOARD OF INSPECTION AND SURVEY. (Basement, Navy Department.) Senior Member.—Rear-Admiral James E. Jouett, Sandy Spring, Montgomery County, Md. Captain C. S. Norton, Brooklyn, N. Y., 189 Prospect Place. Chief Engineer Philip Inch, 114 C street, S. E. Commander H. C. Taylor, Poughkeepsie, N.Y. Naval Constructor Philip Hichborn, 1720 H street, N. W. OFFICE OF NAVAL INTELLIGENCE. (Navy Department, fourth floor.) In charge— Lieutenant R. P. Rodgers, 1833 Jefferson Place. Lieutenant Seaton Schroeder, 723 Twentieth street, N. W. Lieutenant W. H. Beehler, The Woodmont, Iowa Circle and Thirteenth street. Lieutenant W. Kellogg, 1708 H street. Lieutenant W. H. Driggs, 2001 R street, N. W. Lieutenant C. G. Calkins, Summit street, Lanier Heights, N. W, Lieutenant J. C. Colwell, 1605 I street, N. W. Lieutenant A. Sharp, 1736 I street, N. W. Ensign W. I. Chambers, ¢“ The Clarendon.” Ensign W. L. Rodgers, 1733 N street, N. W. Ensign G. H. Stafford, 1827 H street. * Assistant Engineer Robert S. Griffin, 1303 Wallach Place. LIBRARY AND WAR RECORDS. (Navy Department, fourth floor.) Professor J. R. Soley, 1834 Jefferson Place. Lieutenant Richard Rush, 1831 Jefferson Place. Lieutenant J. C. Gillmore, 1922 Sunderland Place. Ensign P. J. Werlich, 1308 Connecticut avenue. MUSEUM OF HYGIENE. (Corner of Eighteenth and G streets.) Medical Director T. J. Turner, 1206 Fifteenth street, N. W. Surgeon C. H. White, southeast corner Eighteenth and G streets, N. W. Passed Assistant Surgeon George Arthur, 1906 G street, N. W. 136 Congressional Directory. | NAVAL DISPENSARY. | 3 (Corner of Eighteenth and G streets.) Medical Inspector N. L. Bates, special duty, 1233 Seventeenth street. : | Passed Assistant Surgeon C. G. Herndon, special duty, 927 Nineteenth street, N. W, | OFFICERS ON SPECIAL DUTY, SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION. ] Lieutenant T. Dix Bolles, 929 G street, N. W. | Passed Assistant Surgeon H. G. Beyer, 1207 Connecticut avenue. NAVAL EXAMINING BOARD. (Room No. 32, basement.) Commodore J. A. Greer, 2010 Hillyer Place. Commodore A. W. Weaver, 2819 N street, N. W. Captain F. M. Ramsay, 1514 Thirtieth street, West Washington. | NAVAL RETIRING BOARD. (Room No. 32, basement ) | Rear-Admiral J. L. Worden, 1428 K street, N. W. Commodore James A. Greer, 2010 Hillyer Place. Commodore A. W. Weaver, 2819 N street, N. W. | | Medical Medical Director Director J. M. Browne, The Portland. R. C. Dean, 1725 H street, N. W. | MEDICAL BOARD. | (Room No. 2, basement.) Medical Director James Suddards, Riggs House. it | Medical Director J. M. Browne, The Portland. i / Medical Director R. C. Dean, 1725 H street, N. W. i | STATE, WAR, AND NAVY DEPARTMENT BUILDING. I (Superintendent’s room, No. 141, third floor.) i Superintendent.—Henry L. Snyder, Chief Engineer, U. S. N., The Portland. A Assistant. —Passed. Assistant Engineer J. A. Tobin, 1415 G street, N. W. $ Clerk.—George W. Rouzer, 1137 Fifth street, N. W. i NAVY PAY OFFICE. (Corner Fifteenth street and New York avenue.) Pay Director.—Thos. H. Looker, 1312 Thirtieth street, N. W. Chief Clerk. —F. V. Walker, 1607 Sixteenth street, N. W. | ; NAVAL PAY OFFICE, U. S. COAST SURVEY. il (Room 127 Corcoran Building.) | Passsed Assistant Paymaster.—]. R. Stanton, 2009 Q street, N. W. Cleres—Henry C. Jordan, 8o7 I street, N. W. | John G. Hatton, 807 H street, N. W. NAVAL OBSERVATORY, ii | ( Twenty-third and E streets, N. W.) Superintendent. —Captain R. L. Phythian, at Observatory. Assistant Superintendent.—Commander Allan D. Brown, 1755 Q street, N. W. : i _ Lieutenant S. C. Paine, 2133 K street, N. W. | Lieutenant L. C. Heilner, 1203 New Hampshire avenue. Lieutenant H. W. Schaefer, 1511 Twenty eighth street, N. W. Lieutenant L. L. Reamey, 1825 I street, N. W. Lieutenant W. H. Allen, 2209 Pennsylvania avenue, N. W. | 4 Lieutenant James H. Sears, 1618 Sixteenth street, N. W. | Ensign A. G. Winterhalter, 610 Twenty-first street, N. W. : | Ensign A. N. Mayer, 1318 G street, N. W. i Ensign W. G. Richardson, Annapolis, Md. i Professor Asaph Hall, 2715 N street. i Professor William Harkness, Cosmos Club, corner H street and Madison Place. Professor J. R. Eastman, 1905 N street, N. W. Professor Edgar Frisby, 3006 P street. * Professor S. J. Brown, Annapolis, Md. I Assistant Astronomers.—A. N. Skinner, 932 O street. William C. Winlock, 718 Twenty-first street, N. W. | Clerk.—Thomas H. M. Paul, 109 First Harrison, 2723 N street. street, N. E. RRRe Executive Departinents. HEADQUARTERS U. S. MARINE CORPS. ( Eighth street, S. E.) Colonel Commandant.—Charles G. McCawley, headquarters. Adjutant and Inspector.—Major Aug. S. Nicholson, 1718 N street, N. W. Quartermaster —Major H. B. Lowry, 1105 Thirteenth street, N. W. Paymaster —Major Green Clay Goodloe, 1406 M street, N. Ww. MARINE BARRACKS, WASHINGTON, D. C. ( Eighth street, S. E.) J Major George Porter Houston, 729 Eighteenth street, N. W. Captain Francis H. Harrington, headquarters. - Surgeon A. N. Moore, 1626 Fifteenth street, N. W. NAVY-YARD, WASHINGTON. Captain R. R. Wallace, Navy-Yard. Commander W. Gibson, The Clarendon. Paymaster H. T. Wright, 1715 H street, N. W. Commander A. G. Kellogg, 1919 N street, N. W. Commander A. H. McCormick, Navy-Yard. Pay Director Richard Washington, 1606 K street, N. W. i Naval Constructor P. Hichborn, 1720 H street, N. W. | Civil Engineer A. G. Menocal, Navy-Yard. Chief Engineer C. D. De Nalin, 510 I street, N. W. Chief Engineer D. P. McCartney, 1220 G street, N. W. | Surgeon M. L. Ruth, Navy-Yard. | Passed Assistant Surgeon S. H. Dickson, The Milton, H street. Lieutenant Commander R. E. Impey, 329 Maryland avenue, N. E. | Lieutenant Commander E. W. Watson, Navy-Yard. Lieutenant Herbert Winslow, 812 Eighteenth street, N. W. I ; Lieutenant J. N. Hemphill, Navy-Yard. : Lieutenant -W. Swift, Navy-Yard. Lieutenant R. E. Carmody, Bellevue Magazine, Anacostia, D.C. Lieutenant A. G. Berry, Navy-Yard. 1 Lieutenant W. C. Cowles, 1702 F street, N. W. i Lieutenant Lieutenant Alfred Robert Reynolds, 1808 Sixteenth Platt, 411 B street, N. E. street, N. W. { Ensign Albert Gleaves, 1804 G street, N. W. | Ensign H. C. Wakenshaw, 1318 G street, N. W. | Chaplain H. H. Clark, 823 Vermont avenue, N. W. Passed Assistant Engineer R. D. Taylor, 505 E street, N. W. i Passed Assistant Engineer R. R. Leitch, 721 N. Gilmore street, Baltimore, Md Boatswain Alexander McCone, 714 Noith Carolina avenue, S. E. | Gunner George Fouse, 916 Pennsylvania avenue, S. E. Charles H. Venable, 916 Pennsylvania avenue, S. E. : Gunner William Walsh, 514 Eighth street, S. E. {| Acting Gunner John Westfall, 700 Sixth street, S. E. Acting Gunner Horace R. Yewell, 314 West Fayette street, Baltimore, Md. Gunner William Walsh, 514 Eighth street, S. E. ) Sailmaker S. W. Boutwell, 49 B street, S. E. ] Mate Samuel F. Lomax, 634 F street, S. W. i Mate J. A. H. Willmuth, 1008 Georgia avenue, S. E. Marine Guard. —Captain P. C. Pope, Navy-Yard. First Lieutenant C. C. Porter, Navy-Yard. First Lieutenant F. LL. Denny, Navy-Yard, First Lieutenant H. K. Gilman, Navy-Yard. ‘RECEIVING SHIP DALE. Commander Silas Casey, commanding, 2019 Hillyer Place. Lieutenant Commander W. W. Rhoades, 1537 I street, N. W. Paymaster L. G. Boggs, Hotel Richmond. Passed Assistant Surgeon C. W. Deane, 1410 M street, N. W, Mate James W, Baxter, 617 Virginia-avenue, S. E. Boatswain W. A. Cooper, 303 L street, S. E. Carpenter E. W. Craig, 629 E street, S. E. U. S. NAVAL HOSPITAL. (Pennsylvania avenue, between Ninth and Tenth streets, S. E.) Medical Inspector David Kindleberger, in charge, Naval Iospital. Passed Assistant Surgeon M. H. Crawford, Naval Hospital. 138 Congressional Directory. POST-OFFICE DEPARTMENT. OFFICE OF THE POSTMASTER-GENERAL. Postmaster-General.—WILLIAM F. VILAS, 1329 M street, N. W. Chief Clerk.—Thomas E. Nash, 3 Grant Place, N. W. Private Secretary.—John B. Minick, 936 Freach street, N. W. Assistant Attorney-General.—Edwin E. Bryant, 1813 Thirteenth street, N. W. di Law Clerk.—Joseph W. Nichol, 616 Twenty-second street, N. W. Appointment Clerk.—E. C. McLure, 1813 M street, N. W. Superintendent and Disbursing Clerk. —Perry C. Smith, 825 Fourteenth street, N. W. Chief Post-Office Inspector.—William A. West, 1325 K street, N. W. : Chief Clerk Division Mail Depredations— James Maynard, 1340 R street, N. W. Topographer.—W. L. Nicholson, 2109 G street, N. W. OFFICE OF THE FIRST ASSISTANT POSTMASTER-GENERAL. First Assistant Postmaster-General.—Adlai E. Stevenson, Hamilton House. Chief Clerk.—James H. Marr, sr., 1319 Eighth street, N. W.’ Superintendent Division of Post-Office Supplies—Morillo Noyes, 1 B street, N. W. Division of Free Delivery.Superintendent, J. F. Bates, 713 East Capitol — street. Chief of Division of Correspondence—James R. Ash, goo Fourteenth street, N. W. Chief of Division of Appointments—Edwin C. Fowler, 813, C street, S. W. Chiefof Division of Bonds and Commissions.—Thomas E. Roach, 80g L street, N. W. Chief of Division of Salaries and Allowances—Albert H. Scott, 532 Third street, N. W, OFFICE OF THE SECOND ASSISTANT POSTMASTER-GENERAL. Second Assistant Postmaster-General.—A. Leo Knott, 1522 Connecticut avenue. Chief Clerk.—George M. Sweney, 933 G street, N. W. Superintendent Railway Adjustments—A. B. Hurt, 111 C street, N. E. Duvision of Inspection.— Chief, John T. Goolrick, cor. Four-and-a-half st. and Missouri ave. Division of Mail Equipment.— Principal Clerk, Henry L. Johnson, 227 Thirteenth st., S. W, OFFICE OF THIRD ASSISTANT POSTMASTER-GENERAL. Third Assistant Postmaster-General.—Abraham D. Hazen, 629 G street, S. W. Chief Clerk.—Madison Davis, 316 A street, S. E. Finance Division.— Chief, George W. Wells, 306 H street, N. W. Postage-stamp Division.—Chicf, George A. Howard, 505 Twelfth street, N. W. Registered Letter Division.— Principal Clerk, W. L. S. Townshend, Hillman House. Division of Files, Mails, &c.— Principal Clerk, E. S. Hall, 1701 Thirteenth street, N. W. Postage-stamp Agent.—]. H. Dimmick, New York, N, Y. Postal Card Agent.—C. C. Lodewick, Castleton, N. Y. if Stamped Envelope Agent. —William L. Eaton, Hartford, Conn. | DEAD LETTER OFFICE. | Superintendent.—John B. Baird, Baltimore County, Maryland. Chief Clerk—W. T. Perry, 1410 Sixth street, N. W. | OFFICE OF THE GENERAL SUPERINTENDENT OF THE RAILWAY MAIL SERVICE. General Superintendent.—John Jameson, 515 Second street, N. W. Chief Clerk —Alex. Grant, go6 H street, N. W. ; OFFICE OF THE SUPERINTENDENTOF FOREIGN MAILS. Superintendent.—Nicholas M. Bell, Ebbitt House. Chief Clerk.—N. M. Brooks, 227 Second street, S. E. OFFICE OF THE SUPERINTENDENT OF THE MONEY-ORDER SYSTEM. Superintendent. —Charles F. Macdonald, 2016 Hillyer Place, N. W. Chief Clerk. —Wilking B. Cooley, 616 E street, N. W. Festal-Note Agent.—7. J. Halpin, New York City. Executive Departments. 139 ——if es DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR. Secretary of the Interior—Lucius Q. C. LAMAR, 1315 N street, N. W, First Assistant Secretary.—Henry L. Muldrow, Ebbitt House. Assistant Secretary.—David L. Hawkins, 1000 Ninth street, N. W. Chief Clerk.— Appointment Division.— Chief, John J. S. Hassler, 100 I street, N. W. Disbursing Division.— Chief, George W. Evans, 918 Nineteenth street, N. W. Lands and Railroads Division.— Chief, John McMurray, 313 D street, N. W. Indian Division.—Chief, Robert V. Belt, 1314 Tenth street, N. W. Miscellaneous Division.— Chief, Edward M. Dawson, 1330 Corcoran street, N. W. Stationery and Printing Division.— Chief, Amos Hadley, 1525 Eighth street, N. W. Document Division.— Superintendent of Documents, John G. Ames, 1600 Thirteenth street, NW, Census Division.— Chief, James H. Wardle, 413 B street, N. E. Private Secretary. —Lucius Q. C. Lamar, jr., 1315 N. street, N W. Custodian.— GENERAL LAND OFFICE. Commissioner.— William A. J. Sparks, Ebbitt House. Assistant CommissionerStrother M. Stockslager, 950 S street, N. — W. Chief Clerk—William Walker, 1103 G street, N. W Recorder.—Robert W. Ross, 512 E street, N. W. Principal Clerk of the Public Lands.—Frank J. Parke, 316 First street, S. E. Principal Clerk on Private Land Claims.—Douglas Tyler, 516 Thirteenth street, N. W. Principal Clerk of the Surveys—John A. Parsons, 918 H street, N. W. Railroad Division.— Chief, Cadmus M. Wilcox, 514 Thirteenth street, N. W. Pre-emption Division.— Chief, Henry O. Billings, 921 I street, N. W. Swamp-Land Division.— Chief, Levi J. Woollen, 226 Second street, N. W. Accounts Division.— Chief, Fletcher Johnston. Mineral Division.— Chief, Jacob Frolich, 436 M street, N. W. Special Service Division.— Chief, Bennett B. Simmes, 929 French street, N. W. Draughting Division.— Chief, George V. Mayo, 1104 Twelfth street, N. W. Receiving Clerk. —Granville N. Whittington, 1811 H street, N. W. PATENT OFFICE. Commissioner. —Martin V. Montgomery, 1315 Massachusetts avenue. Assistant Commissioner.—Robert B. Vance, 613 P street, N. W, Chief Clerk.—Schuyler Duryee, Falls Church, Va. Examiners-in-chief—R. L. B. Clarke, 216 New Jersey avenue, S. E. H. H. Bates, The Portland. R. J. Fisher, jr., 1017 Fifteenth street, N. W. Examiner of Interferences — Walter Johnson, 918 M street, 'N. W. Principal Examiners. Agricultural Implements. —O. C. Fox, Linden, Md. Agricultural Products —W. H. Blodgett, Washington Grove, Md. Builders Hardware and Surgery.—A. G. Wilkinson, 1526 K street, N. W. N Civil Engineering.—B. W. Pond, Falls Church, Va. Chemical.— Thomas Antisell, 1311 Q street, N. W. Household Furniture—~—QOscar Woodward, 726 Twentieth street, N. W. Designs and Sewing-Machines—P. B. Pierce, 1119 Seventeenth street, N. W. Electricity—A.—Charles J. Kintner, 1119 I street, N. W. Electricity—B.—George D. Seely, 2203 M street, N. W. Fine Arts, Music, and Photography. —William Burke, 1453 Corcoran street, N. W. Fire Arms and Navigation—Malcolm Seaton, 1918 F street, N. W. Gas, Metallurgy, Brewing, and Distillation.—Frank P. McLean, 1017 Fifteenth street, N. W. Harvesters.—John A. Goldsborough, 1226 B street, S. W. Lamps, Stoves, and Furnaces—Lewis B. Wynne, 1424 Chain street, College Hill Hydraulics—Frank T. Brown, 1007 H street, N. W. Land Conveyances.—H. P. Sanders, 635 I street, N. W. Leather-working Machinery and Products —]. P. Chapman, 1307 N street, N. W, Mechanical Enginecering.—~William L. Aughinbaugh, 1420 Sixth street, N. W, Metal Working.—]. W. Jayne, 1224 New York avenue, N. W. 140 ; Congressional Directory. Metal Working and Packing Vessels.—S. W. Stocking, 1114 G street, N. W. Milling and Thrasking and Brakes and Gins—Robert Mason, 911 French street, N. W. Plastics, Sugar, Salt, Glass, etc.—~Thomson J. Hudson, 1833 Fourteenth street, N. W. Preumatics—William W. Townsend, Kenesaw avenue, Mount Pleasant. Printing, Bookbinding, and Paper Manufactures—L. M. E. Cooke, gos Fifth street, N. W. Steam Engineering.—Francis Fowler, 1449 Q street, N. W. Zextiles.—Charles F. Randall, 1316 Riggs street. Trade-marks and Instruments of Precision.—F. A. Seely, g11 M street, N. W. Washing, Brushing, and Abrading—Charles G. Gould, 932 P street, N. W. Wood Working.First Assistant in charge, Fred M. Tryon, 922 I street, N. W. 0 — Assignment Division.— Chief, Albert J. Kelley, 1220 O street. F Drafting Division.— Chief, M. Gardner, Brightwood, D. C. Issue and Gazette Division.— Chief, T. W. Dick Bullock, 961 Rhode Island avenue. Financial Clerk—ILevi Bacon, 633 East Capitol street. Librarian.—Leonard D. Sale, 2410 Pennsylvania avenue. PENSION OFFICE. (New Pension Building, Judiciary Square.) Commissioner.—John C. Black, 1515 Rhode Island avenue, N. W. First Deputy Commissioner —William E. McLean, 1628 Fifteenth street, N. W. Second Deputy Commissioner. —Jos. J. Bartlett, 1319 Corcoran street, N. W. Chief Clerk.—Dominic I. Murphy, 614 M street, N. W. Assistant Chief Clerk. —William S. Brock, 940 K street, N. W. Medical Referee—John Campbell, 708 Tenth street, N. W. Assistant Medical Referee.— Philip H. Barton, 511 Fourth street, N. W. Board of Review.— Chief, J. R. Van Mater, 1417 Staughton street. Medical Division.—Medical Referee in charge. Special Examination Division.— Chief, W. McE. Dye, Thirteenth and T, N. W. Old War and Navy Division.— Chief, Jas. B. Coit, corner C and Four-and-half streets, N.W Eastern Division.— Chief, Fred Mack, 624 A street, S. E. Middle Division.— Chief, William P. Davis, Laurel, Md. Western Division.— Chief, Algernon A. Aspinwall, 1305 Riggs street. 3 Southern Division— Chief, David W. Wear, 113 G street, N. W. Record Division.— Chief, Chester R. Faulkner, 409 H street, N. W. i Certificate Division.— Chief, J. E. Smith, 1801 Thirteenth street, N. W. | Agents Division.— Chief, H. C. Bell, 16 Fifth street, S. E. Mail Division.— Chief, W. J. Hilligoss, Hillman House. Stationery and Accounts Division.—C. F. Gilliam, 1434 Q street, N. W. Army and Navy Division.— Acting Chief, Frank A. Butts, 1514 Kingman Place. Board of Re-review.—Acting Chief, F. W. Poor, 732 Seventeenth street, N. W. OFFICE OF INDIAN AFFAIRS. (Second National Bank Building, Seventh street, near E, N. W.) Commissioner—J. D. C. Atkins, 710 Tenth street, N. W. Assistant Commisstoner—Alexander B. Upshaw, 712 Tenth street, N. W, Indian School Superintendent.—John B. Riley, 922 I street, N. W. Finance Division.— Financial Clerk, Edmund S. Woog, 400 Myrtle avenue, Le Droit Park. Accounts Division.— Chief, Samuel M. Yeatman, 1354 B street, S. W. o Land Division.— Chief, Charles A. Maxwell, 612 Q street, N. W. Education Division.Chief, John A. Gorman, 1115 Seventh street, N. W. — Records and Files Division.—Chief, George H. Holtzman, 920 R street, N. W. OFFICE OF EDUCATION. (Northeast corner of Eighth and G streets, N. W.) Commissioner.—Nathaniel H. R. Dawson, Metropolitan Hotel. Chief Clerk.—William H. Gardiner, 29 Fifth street, N. E. OFFICE OF COMMISSIONER OF RAILROADS. (Northwest corner of Eighth and G streets, N. W.) Commissioner.— Joseph E. Johnston, 1023 Connecticut avenue. Book-feeper—Edward Herrick, 643 East Capitol street. Railroad Engineer.—Thomas Hassard, Clarendon Hotel, N, W, Executrve Departments. OFFICE OF THE GEOLOGICAL SURVEY. (Hooe Building, F street, between Thirteenth and Fourteenth, N. W.) Director —John W. Powell, g10 M street, N. W. Chief Clerk.—James C. Pilling, 918 M street, N. W. Chief Disbursing Clerk.—]John D. McChesney, 1611 Thirteenth street, N. W. BUREAU OF LABOR. (Kellogg Building, 1416 F street, N. W.) Commissioner. —Carroll D. Wright, 1416 F street, N. W. -Chief Cler’e.—Oren W. Weaver, 1229 L street, N. W. UNITED STATES PENSION AGENCY. (No. 308 F street, N. W.) Pension Agent.—Sidney L. Willson, 517 Fourth street, N. W. Chief Clerk. —Charles G. Love, 629 Ninth street, N. E. DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE. Attorney-General—AuGusTUs H. GARLAND, 1315 Rhode Island avenue. Solicitor-General—George A. Jenks, N ational Hotel. Assistant Attorney-General—William A. Maury, 302 C street, N. W. Ass’t Atl. Gen. (Dep. of the Interior).—Zach. Montgomery, 1003 K street, N. W. Assistant Altorney-General—Robert A. Howard, 1629 Rhode Island avenue. Ass't Att. Gen. (Post-Office Department). —Edwin E. Bryant, 1813 Thirteenth street, N. W., Solicitor of Internal Revenue ( Treasury Department). —Charles Chesley, 641 East Capitol st. Examiner of Claims (State Department).—Francis Wharton, 1607 I street, N. W. Law Clerk and Examiner of Titles—A. J. Bentley, 1116 Ninth street, N. W. Chief Clerk.—Cecil Clay, 1513 S street, N. W. General Agent.—Frank Strong, 1338 Q street, N. W. Appointment and Disbursing Clerk.—James M. Ewing, 912 H street, N. W. Clerk of Pardons.—Alexander R. Boteler, Metropolitan Hotel. OFFICE OF THE SOLICITOR OF THE TREASURY. (In the Treasury Department Building.) Solicitor.—Alexander McCue, 1021 Vermont avenue. Assistant Solicttor.—Felix A. Reeve, 1926 Fifteenth street, N. W. Chief Clerk.—Webster Elmes, 1712 I st.,, N. W. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE. Commissioner of Agriculture—NORMAN J. COLMAN, 2 Iowa Circle. Chief Clerk.—F. C. Nesbit, 2 Iowa Circle. Disbursing Clerfe.—DB. F. Fuller, 506 Maryland avenue, S. Ww. Statistician. —]J. R. Dodge, 1336 Vermont avenue. Chief of Bureau of Animal Indust;y.—D. E. Salmon, 12 Iowa Lire Entomologist.—C. V. Riley, 1700 Thirteenth street. Assistant "Entomologist. —L. O. Howard, 1507 Q street, N. W. * Botanist.—George Vasey, 2012 Fourteenth street, N. W. Chemist.—Harvey W. Wiley, 1314 Tenth street, N. W. Assistant Chemist —Clifford Richardson, 1827 Jefferson Place. Microscopist.—Thomas Taylor, 238 Massachusetts avenue, N. E. Chief of the Forestry Division.—B. E. Fernow, 200 Eighth street, S. W. Superintendent of Gardens and Grounds—William Saunders, 1605 Third street, N. W, Corresponding Clerk.—George A. Bacon, 2026 P street, N. W. Librarian.—Mrs. E. H. Stevens, 2012 Hillyer avenue, N. W. Chief of Seed Division.—William M. King, 1512 Ninth street, N. W Superintendent of Seed-Room. —H. R. Branham, 8og H street, N. W. Private Secretary. —0O. D. LaDow, 1444 Q street, N. W. 142 Congressional Directory. NATIONAL BOARD OF HEALTH. (Office, 30 Grant Place.) OFFICERS. President. —]JAMES L. CABELL, M. D., LL. D. Vice-President. —Stephen Smith, M. D. Secretary.—W. P. Dunwoody. MEMBERS. &* Preston H. Bailhache, M. D., U. S. M. H. S., Marine Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa. John M. Browne, M. D., Medical Director, U. S. Navy, The Portland. James L. Cabell, M. D., &c., University of Virginia. Stanford E. Chaillé, M. D., &c., New Orleans, La. William P. Dunwoody, 30 Grant Place, Washington, D. C. , Solicitor-General, Department of Justice. Robert W. Mitchell, M. D., Memphis, Tenn. Charles Smart, Major and Surgeon, U. S. Army, 2017 Hillyer avenue. Stephen Smith, M. D., &c., 574 Madison avenue, New York City. Tullio Verdi, M. D., &c., 815 Fourteenth street, N. W. UNITED STATES CIVIL SERVICE COMMISSION. (Offices, City Hall building.) Commissioners.— President, Alfred P. Edgerton, of Indiana, Willard’s Hotel. John H. Oberly, of Illinois, 1228 Fourteenth street, N. W. Charles Lyman, of Connecticut, 423 M street, N. W. Chief Examiner —William H. Webster, of Connecticut, 705 Eleventh street, N. W. Secretary.—John T. Doyle, Garfield avenue. : StenographerWilliam E. Morgan, 816 Fifteenth street, N. W. — GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE. Public Printer—TH. E. BENEDICT, 204 Delaware avenue, N. E. Chief Clerk. —G. H. Benedict, 204 Delaware avenue N. E. Clerk. ~—John Larcombe, 1817 H street, N. W. Clerk—W. H. Collins, 912 Pennsylvania avenue, S. E. Clerk. —William Briggs, 638 G street, S. E. Clerk —H. H. Twombly, 103 I street, N. W. PRINTING DEPARTMENT. Foreman of Printing.—Henry T. Brian, 34 I street, N. W. Assistant Foreman of Printing.—]. M. A. Spottswood, 70 I street, N. W. Assistant Foreman.—D. W. Beach, Hyattsville, Md. Assistant Foreman in charge of Treasury Branch ~—P. Louis Rodier, 319 Twenty-second st. Assistant Foreman in charge of Press-Room.—A. E. Sardo, 127 Indiana avenue. Assistant Foreman in charge of Executive Printing—]. E. Bright, 120 Seventh street, S. E. Assistant Foreman in charge of Patent-Office Printing.—E.W. Oyster, 1246 Eleventhst., N.W. Superintendent of Stereotype-Room.—P. M. Furlong, 820 First street, N. W. Superintendent of Folding-Room.—Thomas B. Penicks, 618 L street, N. W, CONGRESSIONAL RECORD. « In Charge—Geo. A. R. McNeir, 40 I street, N. W. Clerk. —Leslie Cullom, 1221 I street, N. W. BINDING DEPARTMENT. Loreman of Binding.—James W. White, 512 Third street, N. W. Assistant Foreman.—P. J. Byrne, 819 North Capitol street. ssistant.—Charles H. Welsh, Hyattsville, Md. Assistant.—John Walde, 1000 Seventh street, N. W. Department Duties. : 143 "DEPARTMENT DUTIES. THE DEPARTMENT OF STATE. THE SECRETARY OF STATE. The Secretary of State is charged, under the direction of the President, with the duties ap-pertaining to correspondence with the public ministers and consuls of the United States, and with the representatives of foreign powers accredited to the United States; and to negotiations of whatever character relating to the foreign affairs of the United States. He is also the me-dium of correspondence between the President and the chief executive of the several States of the United States; he has the custody of the great seal of the United States, and countersigns and affixes such seal to all executive proclamations, to various commissions, and to warrants for pardon, and the extradition of fugitives from justice. He is regarded as the first in rank among the members of the Cabinet. He is also the custodian of the treaties made with for-eign states, and of the laws of the United States. He grants and issues passports, and exe-quaturs to foreign consuls in the United States are issued through his office. He publishes the laws and resolutions of Congress, amendments to the Constitution, and proclamations declaring the admission of new States into the Union. He is also charged with certain annual reports to Congress relating to commercial information received from diplomatic and consular officers of the United States. : : THE ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF STATE becomes the Acting Secretary of State in the absence of the Secretary. Under the organiza-tion of tlie Department the Assistant Secretary, Second Assistant Secretary, and Third Assist-ant Secretary are respectively charged with the immediate supervision of all correspondence with the diplomatic and consular officers in the countries named in Divisions A, B, and C, of those bureaus, and of the miscellaneous correspondence relating thereto, and, in general, they are entrusted with the preparation of the correspondence upon any questions arising in the course of the public business that may be assigned to them by the Secretary. THE CHIEF CLERK. The Chief Clerk has the general supervision of the clerks and employés and of the business of the Department. BUREAU OF INDEXES AND ARCHIVES. The duty of opening the mails; preparing, registering, and indexing daily all correspond-ence to and from the Department, both by subjects and persons; the preservation of the ar-chives; answering calls of the Secretary, Assistant Secretaries, Chief Clerk, and chiefs of bureaus for correspondence, &c. DIPLOMATIC BUREAU. Diplomatic correspondence and miscellaneous correspondence relating thereto. Division A.—Correspondence with France, Germany, and Great Britain, and miscellaneous correspondence relating to those countries. : Division B.—Correspondence with Argentine Republic, Austria, Belgium, Brazil, Chili, Denmark, Greece, Italy, Netherlands, Paraguay, Peru, Portugal, Russia, and Uruguay, and miscellaneous correspondence relating to those countries. Division C.—Correspondence with Barbary States, Bolivia, Central America, Colombia, China, Ecuador, Egypt, Fiji Islands, Friendly and Navigator’s Islands, Hawaiian Islands, Hayti, Japan, Liberia, Madagascar, Mexico, Muscat, San Domingo, Siam, Society Islands, Turkey, Venezuela, and other countries, not assigned, and miscellaneous correspondence relat-ing to those countries. CONSULAR BUREAU. Correspondence with consulates, and miscellaneous correspondence relating thereto. There are three divisions, A, B, and C, with certain countries allotted to each, as in the Diplomatic Bureau. BUREAU OF ACCOUNTS. Custody and disbursement of appropriations under direction of the Department; charged with custody of indemnity funds and bonds; care of the building and property of the Depart-ment. 144 Congressional Directory. ROLLS AND LIBRARY. Custody of the rolls, treaties, &c.; promulgation of the laws, &c.; care and superintendence of the library and public documents; care of the revolutionary archives, and of papers relating to international commissions. STATISTICS. Preparation of the reports upon Commercial Relations. EXAMINER OF CLAIMS. [From the Department of Justice. ] The examination of questions of law and other matters submitted by the Secretary or the Assistant Secretary, and of all claims. | | THE TREASURY DEPARTMENT. THE SECRETARY OF THE TREASURY. The Secretary of the Treasury has charge of the national finances. He digests and prepares plans for the improvement and management of the revenue and support of the public credit; he superintends the collection of the revenue, and prescribes the forms of keeping and render-ing all public accounts, and making returns; grants all warrants for money to be issued from the Treasury in pursuance of appropriations by law; makes report and gives information of either branch of Congress, as may be required, respecting all matters referred to him by the Senate or House of Representatives, and generally performs all such services relative to the finances as he is directed to perform ; controls the erection of public buildings, the coinage and printing of money, the collection of commercial statistics, the marine hospitals, the revenue-cutter service, the life-saving service. Under his superintendence the Light-House Board dis-charges the duties relative to the construction, illumination, inspection, and superintendence of light-houses, light-vessels, beacons, buoys, sea-marks, and their appendages; makes provision for the payment of the public debt under enactments of Congress, and publishes statements con-cerning it, and submits to Congress, at the commencement of each session, estimates of the probable receipts, and of the required expenditures, for the ensuing fiscal year. The routine work of the Secretary’s office is transacted in the following offices: Division of Appointments; Division of Warrants, Estimates, and Appropriations; Division of Public Moneys ; Division of Customs; Division of Internal Revenue and Navigation; Division of Loans and Currency; Division of Revenue Marine; Division of Stationery, Printing, and Blanks ; Division of Special Agent; and two disbursing clerks pay the salaries and compen- sation of the officers and employés of the Department, and disburse upon the orders of the Secretary, such moneys as have been appropriated to be expended under the direction of the Department. : ASSISTANT SECRETARIES OF THE TREASURY. One of the two Assistant Secretaries has the general supervision of all the work assigned to ° the Divisions of Customs, Special Agents, Revenue Marine, Internal Revenue and Navigation, and to the offices of Supervising Architect, General Superintendent Life-Saving Service, Super- vising Surgeon-General of the Marine Hospital Service, Bureau of Statistics, and Supervising Inspector-General of Steamboats ; the signing of all letters and papers'as Assistant Secretary, or “by ordeér of the Secretary,” relating to the business of the foregoing divisions, that do not by law require the signature of the Secretary of the Treasury ; the performance of such other duties as may be prescribed by the Secretary or by law. The other Assistant Secretary has the general supervision of all the work assigned to the Divisions of Appointments, Warrants, Estimates, and Appropriations, Public Moneys, Station- ery, Printing and Blanks, Loans and Currency, Bureau of Engraving and Printing, and office of the Director of the Mint; signing of all letters and papers as Assistant Secretary, or “by order of the Secretary,” relating to the business of the foregoing divisions and bureau, that do net by law require the signature of the Secretary of the Treasury; the performance of such other duties as may be prescribed by the Secretary or by law. THE CHIEF CLERK. The Chief Clerk supervises, under the immediate direction of the Secretary and Assistant Secretaries, the duties of the clerks and employés connected with the Department. The superintendence of all buildings occupied by the Department in this city, the transmission of the mails ; the care of all horses, wagons, and carriages employed, the direction of engineers Department Duties. ; 145 machinists, firemen, or laborers. The expenditure ot the appropriations for contingent ex-penses of the Treasury Department; for furniture and repairs of same; fuel, lights, water, and miscellaneous items for buildings under the control of the Department; the distribution of the mail; the custody of the records and files and library of the Secretary’s Office, the answering of calls from Congress, and elsewhere, for copies of papers, records, &c. Super-vision of all the official correspondence of the Secretary’s Office, so far as to see that it is expressed in correct and official form ; the enforcement of the general regulations of the De-partment, and the charge of all business of the Secretary’s Office not assigned. ’ THE FIRST COMPTROLLER. All warrants issued by the Secretary of the Treasury, whether intended to cover public rev-enues into the Treasury, or to authorize payments of money trom the Treasury, or to accom-plish any other of the purposes for which warrants are used, require the counter signature of the’ First Comptroller. All accounts examined and stated by the First Auditor, except those trelating to receipts from customs, and all examined and stated by the Fifth Auditor, and by the Commissioner of the General Land Office, are re-examined and revised in this office, and the balances thereon certified ; and the First Comptroller is to superintend the recovery of all debts certified by him to be due to the United States. The requisitions issued in payment of drafts for salaries and expenses of ministers and consuls abroad are examined, certified, and reported on by this office, as also the requisitions of marshals, collectors of internal revenue, secretaries of Territories, and other disbursing-officers, for advances of public funds. Powers of attorney for the collection of drafts on the Treasury are examined here; and there are many other duties having reference to the adjustment of claims against the United States, which pertain to this office, but they are of too varied a character to be enumerated. THE SECOND COMPTROLLER. Accounts received from the Second, Third, and Fourth Auditors against the United States are examined, revised, and certified to, viz: Reported by the Second Auditor—for organizing volunteers, recruiting, pay of the Army, special military accounts, Army ordnance, the Indian service, the Army Medical Department, contingent military expenses, bounty to soldiers, the Soldiers’ Home, and the National Home for Disabled Volunteers. Reported by the Third Auditor—disbursements by the Quartermaster’s Department, the Subsistence Department, the Engineer Department, Army pensions, property taken by military authority for the use of the Army, and miscellaneous war-claims. Reported by the Fourth Auditor—disburse- ments for the Marine Corps, by the Navy paymasters for pay and rations, by the paymasters at the navy-yards, for Navy pensions at foreign stations, and the financial agent at London. These accounts are examined in Dzvzsions, devoted respectively to the affairs of Army Pay-masters, Army Quartermasters, Navy Paymasters and the Marine Corps, Army Pensions, Miscellaneous Claims, and Indivn Affairs. THE COMMISSIONER OF CUSTOMS. The Commissioner of Customs revises and certifies the accounts of revenues collected from duties on imports and tonnage ; of moneys received on account of the marine-hospital fund; fines, penalties, and forfeitures under the customs and navigation laws ; steamboat inspection; licenses to pilots, engineers, &c.; and from miscellaneous sources connected with customs matters, accounts of the importation, withdrawal, transportation, and exportation of goods under the warehouse system; for disbursements for the expenses of collecting the revenue from customs, revenue-cutter service, construction and maintenance of lights, marine hospitals, debentures, excess of deposits for unascertained duties, refund of duties exacted in excess, life-saving service, construction of custom-houses and marine hospitals; fuel, light, water, &ec., for custom-houses, &ec.; approves and files the official bonds given by customs officers, and transmits their commissions ; files the oaths of office of the persons paid in the accounts certi-fied by him; and prepares for the use of the law officers of the ‘Department the accounts of those in arrears under the heads above mentioned. The office is organized in four divisions, viz: Customs, Bookkeeper’s, Bond, and Miscellaneous, THE FIRST AUDITOR. It is the duty of the First Auditor to receive all accounts accruing in the Treasury Depart-nient, {oop those arising under the internal revenue laws,) and, after examination, to certify the balance, and transmit the accounts, with the vouchers and certificate, to the First Comp-troller or to the Commissioner of Customs, having respectively the revision thereof. The sub-ordinate divisions of his office are— . Customs Division.—Receipts and expenditures of the customs service, including fines, emol-uments, forfeitures, debentures, drawbacks, marine-hospital service, revenue-cutter service, &c., Judiciary Division.—Salaries of United States marshals, district attorneys, commissioners and clerks; rent of court-houses, support of prisoners, &c. Public Debt Division.—Redemption of the public debt, including principal, premium, and interest ; payment of interest ; redemption of certificates of deposit ; notes destroyed. 2D ED 10 146 Congressional Directory. | Warehouse and Bond Division.—Examination of accounts received from custom-houses. Miscellaneous Division.—Accounts of mints and assay offices ; Territories; Coast Survey | salaries and contingent expenses of the legislative, executive, and judicial departments of | { the Government ; construction, repair, and preservation of public buildings ; Treasurer of the | United States for general receipts and expenditures. | | THE SECOND AUDITOR. The Second Auditor examines, adjusts, and transfers to the Second Comptroller for his de-cision thereon all accounts relating to arrears of pay and bounties, the recruiting service, the-pay of the Army, medical and hospital accounts, ordnance accounts, pay of private physicians, contingent expenses of the military establishment, accounts of the National Home for Dis-abled Volunteer Soldiers and the Soldiers’ Home, and all accounts relating to Indian Affairs. + The Divisions are— Bookkeeper’s Division.—Accounts of all appropriations upon which requisitions are drawn, through the Second Auditor’s Office, by the Secretary of War and the Secretary of the Interior. Ledger accounts of all disbursing officers and claimants. Paymasters’ Division.—Army paymasters’ accounts and payments of stoppages and fines to the Soldiers’ Home. Ordnance, Medical, and Miscellaneous Division.—Accounts of the Ordnance and Medical Departments of the Army, contingent expenses, regular and volunteer recruiting, freedmen’s bounty and pay, publications of rebellion records, and accounts of the National Home for Dis-abled Volunteer Soldiers. Indian Division.—Disbursements for the Indians, money accounts and property returns ot Indian agents, and claims for goods supplied and services rendered. Pay and Bounty Division.—Examination and adjustment of claims of white and colored soldiers and their legal heirs for pay and bounty, accounts of Soldiers’ Home for moneys belonging to estates of deceased soldiers, and forfeitures by desertion. Investigation of Frauds Division.—Investigation of alleged cases of forgery, Wy over- payments, unlawful withholding of money, &c., in the payment of white and colored soldiers. Property Division.—The property accounts (clothing, camp, and garrison equipage) of offi- cers of the Army and volunteers. THE THIRD AUDITOR. The Third Auditor examines, adjusts, and reports to the Second Comptroller accounts relating to the Quartermaster Department, the Subsistence Department, the Corps of Engineers, and the Signal Service of the Army; the Military Academy, military prison, and those for the payment of Army pensions; also c/aims for Army supplies and Army transportation, for occu-pationof real estate for military purposes; lost horses; reimbursement of expenses incurred on last sickness and burial of deceased pensioners, and claims of States and Territories for aid in suppression of the rebellion, Indian hostilities, and border invasion. The Divisions are— Booktkeeper's Division.—Keeps ledger accounts of appropriations upon which requisitions are drawn by the Secretary of War and the Secretary of the Interior, through the Third Auditor’s Office, and of all disbursing officers’ accounts for handling funds so drawn. Military Division.— Accounts of Quartermasters for the transportation of the Army and its \ supplies; the purchase of clothing, camp and garrison equipage, horses, mules, forage, fuel, &c. ; the erection and repairs of quarters, barracks, hospitals, offices, and stables; payment to hired men and to soldiers on extra duty; the expenses incurred in the apprehension of de-serters; hire of escorts, expresses, interpreters, spies, and guides; the burial of officers and soldiers; the care of national cemeteries and all other authorized expenses of the Army not otherwise assigned; the support of the Military Academy and military prisons; accounts of Commissaries and acting Commissaries for the purchase, preservation, and distribution of pro-visions and stores necessary for the subsistence of the Army; accounts of Engineers for the construction and preservation of fortifications and breakwaters, the improvement of rivers and harbors, and for surveys on the coasts, lakes, and rivers; accounts of the Signal Service for Army signaling, the construction and repair of military telegraphs, and for the observation and report of storms for the benefit of commerce Army Pension Division.— Adjusts agents’ accounts for the payment of Army pensions through-out the United States, and conducts the correspondence and all other business in connection , therewith. Horse Claims Division.— Adjusts claims for compensation for losses of horses and equipage sustained by officers and enlisted men in the military service of the United States; also those of other persons for horses, mules, oxen, wagons, sleighs, and harness while the same was in the military service of the United States by impressment or contract. Miscellaneous Claims Division—Adjusts claims for supplies purchased or appropriated by the Army; for vessels, horses, cars, engines, and other means of Army transportation and railroad stock purchased or lost in the military service of the United States; for the occupa- . Department Duties. tion of real estate for military purposes; for court-martial fees, travelling expenses, &c.; those growing out of the various Indian wars; those of various descriptions under special acts of Congress; and those not otherwise assigned for adjudication. Collection Division.— Prepares transcripts of accounts of defaulting officers to be reported for suit; examines and reports on all cases for information from the files of the office in vari- ous matters, including reports on the evidence relating to claims for bounty land and pensions to soldiers of the war of 1812. Miscellaneous Division.—Adjusts, under section 4718, Revised Statutes, c/azms for expenses incurred on account of last sickness and burial of deceased pensioners; also records, com- pares, copies, indexes, and registers letters; copies and compares difference sheets and miscel- laneous papers, and has charge of the filing and care of settlements, &c., made by the Office. Claims of States and Territories filed under various acts of Congress for the reimbursement of expenses incurred by them in aiding in the suppression of the rebellion, Indian hostilities, and border invasions are adjusted under the immediate supervision of the Auditor. i THE FOURTH AUDITOR. The Fourth Auditor examines, adjusts, and transfers to the Second Comptroller all accounts concerning the pay, expenditures, pensions, and prize-money of the Navy and the accounts of the Navy Department. The subordinate divisions of the Bureau are— . Record Prize Division.—Adjusts the prize-money accounts and prepares tabulated state- ments called for by Congress. Navy Agents’ Division.—Examines the accounts of the disbursements by the navy agents at Portsmouth, Boston, New York, Philadelphia, Baltimore, Washington, and San Francisco. Paymasters Division.—Examines the accounts of paymasters, including mechanics’ rolls. THE FIFTH AUDITOR. The Fifth Auditor examines, adjusts, and transfers to the First Comptroller the diplomatic and consular accounts, the expenditures of: the: Department of State, including all inter- national commissions; the accounts of the internal revenue, the census, the Smithsonian In- stitution, and National Museum, and the contingent expenses of the Post-Office Department. There are three divisions: : : Diplomatic and Consular Division.—Adjustment is made of the expenses of all diplomatic missions abroad for salaries, contingencies, and loss by exchange; consular accounts for fees, salaries, loss by exchange, contingent expenses, emoluments, salaries of interpreters and marshals, consular courts and prisons; the relief and passage of American seamen ; the return of American seamen charged with crime; the rescuingof shipwrecked American seamen; estates of American citizens and seamen dying abroad ; accounts of the bankers of the United States at London; awards of commissions, and expenses of international exhibitions; com-missions, boundary-surveys, &c. Internal Revenue Division.—Accounts of collectors of internal revenue, including salaries, contingent expenses, and compensation of storekeepers. Miscellaneous Division.—All miscellaneous internal-revenue accounts, including salaries and expenses of agents, surveyors of distilleries, fees and expenses of gaugers, stamp agents’ accounts, counsel fees, drawbacks, taxes refunded, redemption of stamps, accounts for the manufacture of paper and stamps, and for ‘the salaries of: the office of the Commissioner of Internal Revenue; also accounts of the Census Office, Smithsonian Institution, and National Museum; contingent expenses of the Post-Office. Department, and sundry accounts of the Department of State and the Patent Office. THE SIXTH AUDITOR. The Sixth Auditor examines and adjusts all accounts relating to the postal service, and his decisions on these are final, unless an appeal be taken in twelve months to the First Comp-troller. He superintends the collection of all debts due the Post-Office Department, and all penalties imposed on postmasters and mail-contractors; directs suits and legal proceedings, civil and criminal, and takes all such measures as may be authorized by law to enforce the payment of moneys due to the Department. There are eight subordinate divisions, viz: Collecting Division.—The collection of balances due from all postmasters, late postmasters, and contractors; also the payment of all balances due to late and present postmasters, and the adjustment and final settlement of postal accounts. . Stating Division.—The general postal accounts of postmasters and those of late postmasters, until fully stated, are in charge of this division. Examining Division.—Receives and audits the quarterly. accounts-current of all post-offices in the United States. Itis divided into four subdivisions, viz, the opening-room, the stamp-rooms, the examining corps proper, and the error-rooms. ; Money-Order Division.— Accounts of money-orders paid and received are examined, assorted, checked and filed; remittances are registered and checked; errors corrected. 148 Congressional Directory. Foreign Mail Division.—Has charge of the postal accounts with foreign governments, and the accounts with steamship companies for ocean transportation of the mails. Registering Division.—Receives from the examining division the quarterly accounts-current of all the post-offices in the United States, re-examines and registers them, and exhibits in the register ending June 30 of each year the total amount of receipts and expenditures for the fiscal year. Pay Division—The adjustment and payment of all accounts tor the transportation of the mails, whether carried by ocean-steamers, railroads, steamboats, or any mail-carrier; the accounts of the railway postal service, railway postal clerks, route-agents, and local agents, mail-depredations, special agents, free-delivery system, postage-stamps, postal-cards, envel-opes, stamps, maps, wrapping-paper, twine, mail-bags, mail locks and keys, advertising, fees in suits on postal matters, and miscellaneous accounts. Bookkeeping Division.—The duty of keeping the ledger-accounts of the Department, em-bracing postmasters, late postmasters, contractors, late contractors, and accounts of a general, special, and miscellaneous character. --: THE TREASURER OF THE UNITED STATES. The Treasurer of the United States is charged with the custody ot all public moneys received into the Treasury at Washington, or in the sub-treasuries at Boston, New York, Philadelphia, Baltimore, Charleston, Cincinnati, Saint Louis, and San Francisco, or in the depositories and depository banks; disburses all public moneys upon the warrants of the Secretary of the Treas-ury, and upon the warrants of the Postmaster-General; issues and redeems Treasury notes; is agent for the redemption of the circulating notes of national banks, is trustee of the bonds held for the security of the circulating notes of national banks, and of bonds held as security for public deposits; is custodian of Indian trust funds; is agent for paying the interest on the public debt, and for paying the salaries of the members of the House of Representatives. The sub-ordinate divisions of the Treasury are— Issue Division.—Issues are made of legal-tender notes, currency, coin-certificates, &c. Redemption Division.—Coin-certificates, national-bank notes, fractional currency, &c., are redeemed, and generally destroyed by maceration. Loan Division.—Bonds are issued, purchased, retired, cancelled, or converted. Accounts Division.—The accounts of the Treasury, the sub-treasuries, and the national banks used as depositories are kept. National-Banlk Division.—Bonds held as security for national-bank circulation are examined, notes issued, redeemed, and cancelled. ; National-Bank Redemption Agencv.—Notes of banks are redeemed and accounted for. THE REGISTER OF THE TREASURY. The Register of the Treasury is the official bookkeeper of the United States, and prepares a statement which shows every receipt and disbursement of the public money, which state-ment is transmitted annually to Congress by the Secretary of the Treasury. He signs and issues all the bonds and sends to the Treasurer of the United States schedules showing the names of persons entitled to receive interest thereon. He registers all warrants drawn by the Secretary of the Treasury upon the Treasurer of the United States; transmits statements of balances due to individuals after the settlement of their accounts by the First Comptroller, or the Commissioner of Customs, upon which payment is made; signs all ships’ registers; records all marine documents issued to merchant vessels of the United States, and also prepares statements of the merchant vessels of the United States showing the number and tonnage of vessels built and of vessels lost at sea, wrecked, abandoned, and sold to foreigners. The work is distributed among five divisions, as follows: Loan Division.—In this division registered and coupon bonds are issued, embracing the transfer of all registered bonds; the conversion of coupon into registered bonds; the ledger accounts with holders of. registered bonds, and the preparation of schedules upon which interest on the registered bonds is paid. Receipts and Expenditures Division.—The great account books of the United States are kept in this division which show the civil, diplomatic, internal-revenue, miscellaneous, and public-debt receipts and expenditures; also, statements of the warrants and drafts issued and certified transcripts of the accounts of delinquent revenue officers for suit. Note and Coupon Division.—In this division redeemed bonds, paid interest-coupons, inter-est-checks, and interest-bearing notes are examined and registered. Currency Division—Treasury notes, legal-tenders, and fractional currency are examined, canceled, and the destruction thereof witnessed and recorded. Zonnage Division.—Accounts are kept in this division showing the outstanding tonnage of the country, divided into the different classes according to its nature and employment and also showing its annual additions and losses. Department Duties. THE COMPTROLLER OF THE CURRENCY. The Comptroller of the Currency has, under the direction of the Secretary of the Treasury, the control of the national banks. The divisions of this Bureau are— Issue Division.—The preparation and issue of national-bank circulation. Redemption Division.—The redemption and destruction of notes issued by national banks. Reports Division.—Examination and consolidation of the reports of national banks. Organization Division.—The organization of national banks. S THE DIRECTOR OF THE MINT. The Director of the Mint has general supervision of all mints and assay offices, reports their operations and condition to the Secretary of the Treasury, and prepares and lays before him the annual estimates for their support. He prescribes regulations, approved by the Secretary of the Treasury, for the transaction of business at the mints and assay offices, the distribution of silver coin, and the charges to be collected of depositors. He receives for adjustment the monthly and quarterly accounts of superintendents and officers in charge of mints and assay offices, superintends their expendi-tures, and the annual settlements of the operative officers, and makes such special examina-tions as may be deemed necessary. All appointments, removals, and changes of clerks, as-sistants, and workmen in the mints and assay offices are submitted for his approval. The pur-chase of sliver bullion and allotment of its coinage at the mints are made through the office of the Director, and transfers of public moneys in the mints and assay offices, and advances from appropriations for the mint service, are made at his request. The monthly coinage of mints is tested, and ores, bullion, and coins are assayed, at the As-say Laboratory under his charge. The values of the standard coins of foreign countries are annually estimated by the Director, and the collection of the statistics of the annual produc-tion of precious metals in the United States is assigned to him. THE SOLICITOR. The Solicitor of the Treasury is an officer in the Department of Justice, having a seal, and is required by law to take cognizance, under the direction of the Secretary of the Treasury, of all frauds or attempted frauds upon the revenue, and exercises a general supervision over all legal measures for their prevention and detection; also to establish regulations, with the approbation of the Secretary of the Treasury, for the observance of collectors of the customs; and, with the approbation of the Attorney-General, for the observance of United States attor-neys, marshals, and clerks respecting suits in which the United States is a party or interested. He is also empowered and directed to instruct the district attorneys, marshals, and clerks of the circuit and district courts in all matters and proceedings appertaining to suits in which the United States is interested, except those arising under the internal-revenue laws. He is required to examine reports of collectors and district attorneys upon bonds delivered for suit; to inform the President of false reports of bonds delivered for suit, and supervise statements from district attorneys concerning suits, and those from marshals relating to pro-ceedings on execution; also reports from clerks as to judgments and decrees; and is charged by the Attorney-General with all post-office litigation. He also has charge of the secret-service employés engaged in the detection of persons coun-terfeiting the coin, currency, and public securities of: the United States, and all other frauds on the Government. In addition to the duties prescribed by law, the Secretary of the Treas-ury refers to the Solicitor for opinion a very large number of cases arising in his Department relating to duties, remission of fines, penalties, and forfeitures, navigation and registry laws, steamboat-inspection acts, claims, &c. THE COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE. The Commissioner of Internal Revenue makes all assessments and superintends the collec tion of all taxes; preparation of instructions for special-tax stamps, (formerly licenses, ) forms and stamps of all kinds; and pays into the Treasury, daily, all moneys received by him. The business of the bureau is transacted in seven divisions, viz: Appointment Division.—Is charged with all matters pertaining to issuing ot commissions, leaves of absence, office-discipline, assorting and disposition of the mail, registry and copying of all letters, with the care of the general files; and all matters relating to messengers, labor-ers, office-stationery, printing, advertising, blanks, and blank books for the bureau. Law Division.—Is charged with all questions (except as hereinafter stated) relating to seizures, suits, abatement, and refunding claims, and those relating to special taxes, document-ary stamp-taxes, taxes on incomes, legacies, and successions, and on dividends, &c.; also lands purchased for the United States on distraint, and the extension of time on distraints. Tobacco Division.—Is charged with all matters (including special taxes) relating to tobacco, snuff, and cigars not in suit or in bond, stamp-tax on medicines and preparations. 150 Congressional Directory. Division of Accounts—IHas charge of the examination and reference of the revenue and disbursing accounts, the estimates of collectors and of their applications for special allowances, and other matters relative to advertising and the purchase of blank books, newspapers, and sta-tionery for collectors, revenue agents, &c.; also has charge of the examination and reference of the monthly bills of revenue-agents, gaugers, and distillery-surveyors, and of all miscella-neous claims presented to this bureau arising under any appropriation made for carrying into effect the various internal-revenue laws, (excepting claims for abatement, refunding, and drawback,) and the preparation of estimates for appropriations by Congress, together with the preparation of the statistical records of the bureau. Division of Distilled Spirits—This division is charged with the supervision of all matters pertaining to distilleries, distilled spirits, fermented liquors, wines, rectification, gaugers’ fees and instruments, approval of bonded warehouses, and the assignment of storekeepers. Stamp Division.—This division is charged with the supervision of the preparation, safe-keeping, issue, and redemption of stamps for distilled spirits, tobacco, snuff, and cigars, fer-mented liquors, special taxes, documentary and proprietary stamps, and the keeping of all accounts pertaining thereto, also the supervision of all business with Adams Express Company, and the preparation, custody, and issue of steel dies for cancelling stamps. Division of Assessments.—Is charged with the preparation of the assessment-lists, with the consideration of all reports and returns, except those received from distillers, rectifiers, and brewers, affording data from which assessments may be made; also, with keeping the bonded account, and with the consideration of claims for the allowance of drawback. Division of Revenue Agents.—Is charged with general supervision, under the direction of the Commissioner, of the work of revenue agents throughout the country, examination of their reports and accounts, and the measures taken for the discovery and suppression of violations of internal-revenue law. THE SUPERINTENDENT OF THE COAST AND GEODETIC SURVEY. The Coast and Geodetic Survey is charged with the survey of the coasts of the United States and rivers emptying into the ocean and the Gulf of Mexico, and with the interior trian-gulation of the country, including that of connecting the surveys of the Eastern and Western coasts, determining geographical positions in latitude and longitude, and furnishing points of reference for State surveys. a Besides the annual reports to Congress the Survey publishes maps and charts of our coasts and harbors, books of sailing directions, and annual tide tables, computed in advance, for all ports of the United States. SUPERVISING SURGEON-GENERAL, U.:S., (MERCANTILE,) MARINE-HOSPITAL SERVICE. The Supervising Surgeon-General is charged with the supervision of ¢ all matters connected with the Marine-Hospital Service and with the disbursement of the fund for the relief of sick and disabled seamen ’’ employed on the vessels of the mercantile marine of the oceans, lakes, and rivers, and of the Revenue-Cutter Service, the general superintendence of the Marine Hospitals, the purveying of supplies, the orders, details and assignment of medical officers, and the exam’nation of property returns. : SUPERVISING INSPECTOR-GENERAL OF STEAM-VESSELS. The Supervising Inspector-General superintends the administration of the steamboat inspec-tion laws, presides at the meeting of the Board of Supervising Inspectors, receives all reports and examines all accounts of inspectors. ! The Board of Supervising Inspectors meets in Washington annually, on the third Wednes-day in January, to establish regulations for carrying out the provisions of the steamboat inspec-tion laws. GENERAL SUPERINTENDENT OF THE LIFE-SAVING SERVICE. It is the duty of the General Superintendent to supervise the organization and government of the employés of the service; to prepare and revise regulations therefor as may be neces-sary; to fix the number and compensation of surfmen to be employed at the several stations within the provisions of law; to supervise the expenditure of all appropriations made for the support and maintenance of the Life-Saving Service; to examine the accounts of disburse-ments of the district superintendents, and to certify the same to the accounting officers of the Treasury Department; to examine the property returns of the keepers of the several stations, and see that all public property thereto belonging is properly accounted for; to acquaint him-self, as far as practicable, with all means employed in foreign countries which may seem to advantageously affect the interest of the service, and to cause to be properly investigated all plans, devices, and inventions for the improvement of life-saving apparatus for use at the sta. tions, which may appear to be meritorious and available; to exercise supervision over the se-lection of sites for new stations the establishment of which may be authorized by law, or for — fF - Sy Department Duties. —@C - old ones the removal of which may be made necessary by the encroachment of the sea or by other causes; to prepare,and submit to the Secretary of the Treasury estimates for the sup-port of the service; to collect and compile the statistics of marine disasters contemplated by the act of June 20, 1874, and to submit to the Secretary of the Treasury, for transmission to Congress, an annual report of the expenditures of the moneys appropriated for the maintenance of the Life-Saving Service, and of the operations of said service during the year. THE WAR DEPARTMENT. THE SECRETARY OF WAR. The Secretary of War performs such duties as the President may enjoin upon him concern-ing the military service, and has the controlling supervision of the purchase of Army supplies, transportation, &c., and of all expenditures made under the appropriations for the support of the Army, and for such of a civil nature as may by law be placed under his administration. He is required to provide for the taking of meteorological observations at the military sta-tions in the interior of the Continent, and at other points in the States and Territories; arranges the course of studies at the Military Academy; submits to Congress all estimates for public buildings and grounds in charge of the Chief of Engineers, and has supervision of all expend-itures of appropriations for repair or improvement of the public buildings and grounds in the District of Columbia in charge of the Chief of Engineers. He is charged with the purchase of such real estate as in his judgment is suitable and necessary for the purpose of carrying into effect the provisions for national cemeteries; has direction of the construction of piers or cribs by owners of saw-mills on the Mississippi River; has the management of and is required to keep in repair the Louisville and Portland Canal; makes rules respecting bids for contracts, and is required to cause sunken vessels obstructing navigation to be removed. Ie exercises supervision of the disbursements by Army officers; has the control and management of the National Park forming a part of Mackinac Island in the State of Michigan, and has direction of the expenditure of the appropriation for the Mississippi River Commission. He submits annually to Congress a statement of the appropriations for the preceding fiscal year for the Department of War under each specified head of appropriation, the amount ex-pended and remaining on hand, together with estimates of the probable demands that may remain on each appropriation. : He also submits to Congress at each session, in connection with reports of examinations and surveys of rivers and harbors, full statements of all facts tending to show the extent to which the general commerce of the country will be promoted by the several works of improvement contemplated by such examinations and surveys, together with numerous other reports relating to the various matters of which he has supervision. The Chief Clerk receives in the Secretary’s Office the public mail and correspondence; dis-tributes, records, and answers it; keeps the accounts of appropriations and estimates; is the medium of communication between the Secretary and officers of the Department, and has the general superintendence of the Department. MILITARY BUREAUS OF THE WAR DEPARTMENT. The chiefs of the military bureaus of the War Department are officers of the Regular Army of the United States, and a part of the military establishment, viz: The Adjutani-General promulgates the orders of the President and the General command-ing the Army, and conducts correspondence between the General and the Army, receives re-ports, issues commissions and resignations, superintends recruiting and the military prison at Leavenworth, has charge of the papers concerning the enlistment and drafting of volunteers. receives all muster-rolls, and furnishes consolidated reports of the entire Army, and has charge, under the General, of details affecting the discipline of the Army. The Inspector-General, with his assistants, inspect and report upon the personnel and the materiel of the Army, at all posts, stations, and depots, and give instruction relative to the correct interpretation of doubtful points of law, regulations, and orders, and upon other mooted questions regarding the proper performance of military duties; and they also inspect the money accounts of all disbursing officers of the Army. The Quartermaster-General, aided by assistants, provides quarters and transportation for the Army, clothing, camp and garrison equipage, horses and mules, forage, wagons, stoves, stationery, fuel, lights, straw, hospitals, and medicines; he pays the expenses of guides, spies, and interpreters, and veterinary surgeons; pays the funeral expenses of officers and men, and is in charge of the national cemeteries. The Commissary-General has administrative control of the Subsistence Department—of the disbursement of its appropriations; the providing of rations and their issue to the Army; the purchase and distribution of articles authorized to be kept for sale to officers and enlisted men; and the adjustment of accounts and returns for subsistence funds and supplies, preliminary to their settlement by the proper accounting officers of the Treasury. 152 Congressional Directory. The Surgeon-General, under the immediate direction of the Secretary of War, is charged with the administrative duties of the Medical Department; the designation of the stations of medical officers, and the issuing of all orders and instructions relating to their professional duties. He directs as to the selection, purchase, and distribution of the medical supplies of the Army. The Army Medical Museum and the official publications of the Surgeon-General’s Office are also under his direct control. The Paymaster-General and his assistants pay the Army, also Second Auditor’s Treasury certificates, and keep a record of said payments. : The Chief of Engineers commands the Corps of Engineers, which is charged with all duties relating to fortifications, whether permanent or temporary; with torpedoes for coast defence; with all works for the attack and defence of places; with all military bridges, and with such surveys as may be required for these objects, or the movement of armies in the field. It is also charged with the harbor and river improvements; with military and geographi-cal explorations and surveys; with the survey of the lakes; and with any other engineer work specially assigned to the Corps by acts of Congress or orders of the President. The Chief of Ordnance commands the Ordnance Department, the duties of which consist in providing, preserving, distributing, and accounting for every description of artillery, small-arms, and all the munitions of war which may be required for the fortresses of the country, the armies in the field, and for the whole body of the militia of the Union. In these duties are comprised that of determining the general principles of construction and of prescribing in ~ detail the models and forms of all military weapons employed in war. They comprise also the duty of prescribing the regulations for the proof and inspection of all these weapons, for main-taining uniformity and economy in their fabrication, for insuring their good quality, and for their preservation and distribution; and for carrying into effect the general purposes here stated large annual appropriations are made, and in order to fulfil these purposes, extensive operations are conducted at the national armories, arsenals, and ordnance depots. The Judge-Advocate General and his assistant receive, review, and have recorded the pro-ceedings of the courts-martial, courts of inquiry, and military commissions of the Armies of the United States, and furnish reports and opinions on such questions of law and other mat-ters as may be referred to the Bureau of Military Justice by the Secretary of War. The Chief Signal Officer superintends the instruction of officers and men in signal duties, supervises the preparation of maps and charts, and has the reports from the numerous sta-tions received at Washington consolidated and published. THE NAVY DEPARTMENT. THE SECRETARY OF THE NAVY. The Secretary ot the Navy performs such duties as the President of the United States, who is Commander-in-Chief, may assign him, and has the general superintendence of con-. struction, manning, armament, equipment, and employment of vessels of war. The Chief Clerk has general charge of the records and correspondence of the Secretary’s Office. NAVAL BUREAUS OF THE NAVY DEPARTMENT. : The chiefs of the naval bureaus of the Navy Department are officers of the United States Navy, and a part of the naval establishment, viz : The Chief of the Bureau of Yards and Docks has charge of the navy-yards and naval sta- tions, their construction and repair; he purchases timber and other materials. The Chief of the Bureau of Navigation supplies vessels of war with maps, charts, chronome- ters, barometers, flags, signal-lights, glasses, and stationery ; he has charge of the publication of charts, the Nautical Almanac, and surveys; and the Naval Observatory and Hydrographic Office at Washington are under the direction of this Bureau. The Chief of the Bureau of Ordnance has charge of the manufacture of naval ordnance and ammunition; the armament of vessels of war; the arsenals and magazines; the trials and tests of ordnance, small-arms, and ammunition ; also of the torpedo-service, and torpedo- station at Newport, and experimental battery at Annapolis. The Chief of the Bureau of Provisions and Clothing has charge of all contracts and pur- chases for the supply of provisions, water for cooking and drinking purposes, clothing, and small stores for the use of the Navy. ; The Chief of the Bureau of Medicine and Surgery superintends everything relating to medicines, medical stores, surgical instruments, and hospital supplies required for the treat- ment of the sick and wounded of the Navy and the Marine Corps. The Chief of the Bureau of Construction and Repair has charge of dry-docks and of all vessels undergoing repairs ; the designing, building, and fitting-out of vessels, and the armor of iron-clads. : Eres Department Duties. The Chief of the Bureau g Equipment and Recruiting has charge of the equipment of all vessels of war, and the supply to their sails, rigging, anchors, and fuel; also of the recruiting of sailors of the various grades. The Engineer-in-Chief directs the designing, fitting-out, running, and repairing of the steam marine-engines, boilers and appurtenances, used on vessels of war, and the workshops in the navy-yards where they are made and repaired. : The Judoe-Advocate-General receives, revises, and records the proceedings of courts-martial, ‘courts of inquiry, boards for the examination of officers for retirement and promotion in the naval service ; and furnishes reports and opinions on such questions of law and other mattess as may be referred to him by the Secretary of the Navy. THE DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR. THE SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR. The Secretary of the Interior is charged with the supervision of public business relating to patents for inventions; pension and bounty-lands; the public lands, including mines; the Indians; education; railroads; the public surveys; the census, when directed by law; the custody and distribution of public documents; and certain hospitals and eleemosynary institu-tions in the District of Columbia. He also exercises certain powers and duties in relation to the Territories of the United States. TIE ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR. The Assistant Secretary of the Interior performs such duties as are prescribed by the Sec-retary or required by law, aiding in the general administration of the affairs of the Depart-ment. In the absence of the Secretary, he acts as the head of the Department. The Chief Clerk has the general supervision of the clerks and employés, of the order of business, records and correspondence, and contingent expenditures in the Secretary’s Office, also the superintendence of the Interior Department Building. , ¥ COMMISSIONER OF PATENTS. The Commissioner ot Patents is charged with the administration of the patent-laws, and supervises all matters relating to the issue of letters-patent for new and useful discoveries, inventions, and improvements. He is aided by an Assistant Commissioner, three Examiners-in-Chief, an Examiner of Interferences, an Examiner of Trade-marks, and twenty-five Princi -pal Examiners. COMMISSIONER OF PENSIONS. The Commissioner of Pensions supervises the examination and adjudication of all claims arising under laws passed by Congress granting bounty-land or pension on account of service in the Army or Navy during the Revolutionary War and all subsequent wars in which the United States has been engaged. He is aided by two Deputy Commissioners and a Medical Referee. COMMISSIONER OF THE GENERAL LAND-OFFICE. The Commissioner of Public Lands is charged with the survey, management, and sale of the public domain, and the issuing of titles therefor, whether derived from confirmations of grants made by former Governments, by sales, donations, or grants for schools, railroads, mili-tary bounties, or public improvements. The Land-Office audits its own accounts. COMMISSIONER OF INDIAN AFFAIRS. The Commissioner of Indian Affairs has charge of the several tribes of Indians in the States and Territories. He issues instructions to, and receives reports from, Agents, Special Agents, and Traders; superintends the purchase, transportation, and distribution of presents and an-nuities; and reports, annually, the relations of the Government with each tribe. COMMISSIONER OF EDUCATION. The duties of the Commissioner of Education are to collect such statistics and facts as shall show the condition and progress of education in the several States and Territories, and to diffuse such information respecting the organization and management of schools and school systems, and methods of teaching, as shall aid the people of the United States in the establish-ment, and maintenance of efficient school systems, and otherwise promote the cause of educa-tion throughout the country. 154 Congressional . Directory. COMMISSIONER OF RAILROADS. The Commissioner of Railroads is charged with prescribing a system ot reports to be ren-dered to him by the railroad companies whose roads are in whole or in part west, north, or south of the Missouri River, and to which the United States have granted any loan of credit or subsidy in lands or bonds; to examine the books, accounts, and property of said companies, to see that the laws relating to said companies are enforced; and to assist the Government Directors of any of said railroad companies in all matters which come under their cognizance, * whenever they may officially request such assistance. DIRECTOR OF THE GEOLOGICAL SURVEY. The Director of the Geological Survey has charge of the classification ot the public lands, and examination of the geological structure, mineral resources, and products of the national domain. SUPERINTENDENT OF THE CENSUS. The Superintendent of the Census supervises the taking of the census of the United States every tenth year, and the subsequent arrangement, compilation, and publication of the statistics collected. THE POST-OFFICE DEPARTMENT. THE POSTMASTER-GENERAL. The Postmaster-General has the Svestion and management of the Post-Office Department. Ile appoints all officers and employés of the Department, except the three Assistant Post-masters-General, who are appointed by the President, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate; appoints all postmasters whose compensation does not exceed one thousand dollars; makes postal treaties with foreign Governments, by and with the advice and consent of the President, awards and executes contracts, and directs the management of the domestic and foreign mail service. THE FIRST ASSISTANT POSTMASTER-GENERAL. The First Assistant Postmaster-General has charge of the Appointment Office, which in- cludes five divisions, viz: Appointment Division.—The duty ot preparing all cases for the establishment, discontinu- ance, and change of name or site of post-offices, and for the appointment of all postmasters, agents, postal clerks, mail-messengers, and Department employés, and attending to all corre- spondence consequent thereto. Bond Division.—The duty of receiving and recording appointments ; sending out papers for postmasters and their assistants to qualify ; receiving, entering, and filing their bonds and oaths; and issuing the commissions for postmasters. Salary and Allowance Division.—The duty of readjusting the salaries of postmasters and the consideration of allowances for rent, fuel, lights, clerk hire, and other expenditures. Free Delivery.—The duty of preparing-cases for the inauguration of the system in cities, the appointment of letter-carriers, and the general supervision of the system. Blank Agency Division.—The duty of sending out the blanks, wrappihg-paper, and twine- letter-balanees, and cancelling stamps to offices entitled to receive the same. THE SECOND ASSISTANT POSTMASTER-GENERAL. The Second Assistant Postmaster-General has charge of the Contract Office, mail eqiupments, &c., including the following three divisions : Contract Division.—The arrangement of the mail service of the United States, and placing the same under contract, embracing all correspondence and proceedings respecting the fre- quency of trips, mode of conveyance, and times of departures and arrivals on all the routes, the course of the mails between the different sections of the country, the points of mail distribution, and the regulations for the government of the domestic mail service. It prepares the adver- tisements for mail proposals, receives the bids, and has charge of the annual and occasional mail lettings, and the adjustment and execution of the contracts. All applications for the es- tablishment or alteration of mail arrangements and for mail messengers should be sent to this office. All claims should be submitted to it for transportation service not under contract. From this office all postmasters at the end of routes receive the statement of mail arrangements pre- scribed for the respective routes. It reports weekly to the Auditor all contracts executed, and HL it { Department Duties. all orders affecting the accounts for mail transportation; prepares the statistical exhibits ot the mail service, and the reports to Congress of the mail lettings, giving a statement of each bid; also of the contracts made, the new service originated, the curtailments ordered, and the addi-tional allowances granted within the year. Inspection Division.—The duty of receiving and examining the registers of the arrivals and departures of the mails, certificates of the service of route-agents, and reports of mail failures; noting the delinquencies of contractors, and preparing cases thereon for the action of the Post-master-General, furnishing blanks for mail registers, reports of mail failures, and other duties which may be necessary to secure a faithful and exact performance of all mail service. Mail Equipment Division.—The issuing of mail locks and keys, mail pouches and sacks, and the construction of mail-bag catchers. THE THIRD ASSISTANT POSTMASTER-GENERAL. The Third Assistant Postmaster-General has charge of the Finance Office, &c., embracing the following four divisions: ; : Division of Finance.—The duty of issuing drafts and warrants in payment of balances re-ported by the Auditor to be due to mail contractors or other persons; the superintendence of the collection of revenue at depository, draft, and depositing offices, and the accounts between the Department and the Treasurer and Assistant Treasurers and special designated depositories of the United States. This division receives all accounts, monthly or quarterly, of the deposi-tory and draft offices, and certificates of deposit from depositing offices. Division of Postage-stamps and Stamped Envelopes—The issuing of postage-stamps, stamped envelopes, newspaper wrappers, and postal cards; also, the supplying of postmasters with en-velopes for their official use, and registered-package envelopes and seals. Division of Registered Letters—The duty of preparing instructions for the guidance of post-masters relative to registered letters, and all correspondence connected therewith; also, the compilation of statistics as to the transactions of the business. Division of Dead Lelters.—The duty of ascertaining and correcting errors of postmasters in the treatment of mail matter; examination and forwarding or return of all letters which have failed of delivery; inspection and return to country of origin of undelivered foreign matter; recording and restoration of all letters and parcels which are unmailable or un-claimed; care and disposition of all money, negotiable paper and other valuable artictes found in unclaimed matter; all correspondence relating to these subjects. The Superintendent of Foreign Mails has charge of all foreign postal arrangements, and the supervision of the ocean mail steamship service. The Superintendent of the Money-order System has the general supervision and control of the postal money-order system throughout the United States, and the supervision of the inter-national money-order correspondence with foreign countries. LJ] THE DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE. THE ATTORNEY-GENERAL. The Attorney-General is the head of the Department of Justice, and the chief law officer ot the Government. He represents the United States in matters involving legal questions; he gives his advice and opinion on questions of law when they are required by the President, or by the heads of the other Executive Departments on questions of law arising upon the ad-ministration of their respective Departments; he exercises a general superintendence and direction over United States Attorneys and Marshals in all judicial districts in the States and Territories; and he provides special counsel for the United States whenever required by any Department of the Government. He is assisted by a Chief Clerk and other clerks and employés in the executive management of the business of the Department. The Law Clerk, who is also an Examiner of Titles, assists the Attorney-General in the in-vestigation of legal questions and in the preparation of opinions. THE SOLICITOR-GENERAL. The Solicitor-General assists the Attorney-General in the performance of his general duties, and by special provision of law in the case of a vacancy in the office of Attorney-General, or in hus absence, exercises all these duties. Except when the Attorney-General in particular cases otherwise directs, the Attorney-General and Solicitor-General conduct and argue all cases in the Supreme Court, and in the Courtof Claims, in which the United States are interested; and, when the Attorney-General so directs, any such case in any courtof the United States may be conducted and argued by the Solicitor-General; and in the same way the Solicitor-General may be sent by the Attorney-General to attend to the interests of the United States in any Statec ourt, or elsewhere. 156 Congressional Directory. THE ASSISTANT ATTORNEYS-GENERAL. Two Assistant Attorneys-General assist the Attorney-General and the Solicitor-General in the performance of their duties. One assists in the argument of causes in the Supreme Court and in the preparation of legal opinions; the other is charged with the conduct of the defence of the United States in the Court of Claims. : Under the act of 1870 the different law officers of the Executive Departments exercise their functions under the supervision and control of the Attorney-General. They are: the Assis ant Attorney-General for the Department of the Interior ; the Assistant Attorney-General for the Post-Office Department; the Solicitor of the Treasury; and the Solicitor of Internal Revenue, Treasury Department; the Naval Solicitor, Navy Department; and the Examiner of Claims, State Department. THE DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE. THE COMMISSIONER OF AGRICULTURE. The Commissioner of Agriculture is required to collect and diffuse useful information on subjects connected with agriculture. He is to acquire and preserve in his office all informa-tion he can obtain concerning agriculture by means of books and correspondence, and by practical and scientific experiments, the collection of statistics, and other appropriate means; to collect new and valuable seeds and plants; to learn by actual cultivation such of them as may require such tests; to propagate such as may be worthy of propagation, and to distribute them among agriculturists. The Statistician.—He collects reliable information as to the condition, prospects, and results of the cereal, cotton, and other crops, by the instrumentality of four correspondents in each county of every State; this information is gathered at stated periods of each month, care-fully studied, estimated, tabulated, and published. The Entomologist.—He obtains information with regard to insects injuricus to vegetation; investigates the character of insects sent him, to point out their modes of infliction and the means by which their depredations may be avoided ; and arranges specimens of their injuries and nest architecture. The Botanist—He receives botanical contributions, and after making desirable selections for the National Herbarium, distributes the duplicate plants among foreign and domestic scientific societies, institutions of learning, and botanists; and answers inquiries of botanico-agricultural character. : The Chemist.—He makes analyses of natural fertilizers, vegetable products, and other ma-terials which pertain to the interests of agriculture. Applications are constantly made from all portions of the country for the analysis of soils, minerals, liquids, and manures. The Microscopist.—He makes original investigations, mostly relating to the habits of parasitic fungoid plants, which are frequently found on living plants and animals, producing sickly growth and in many cases premature death. The Propagating Garden.—Large numbers of exotic, utilizable, and economic plants are propagated and distributed. The orange family is particularly valuable, and the best com-mercial varieties are propagated and distributed to the greatest practicable extent. The Seed Division.—Seeds are purchased in this and foreign countries of reliable firms, whose guarantee of good quality and genuineness cannot be questioned ; they are packed at the Department, and distributed to applicants in all parts of the country. The Library—Exchanges are made, by which the library receives reports ot the leading agricultural, pomological, and meteorological societies of the world. The Bureau of Animal Industry.—Makes investigations as to the existence of contagious pleuro-pneumonia and other dangerous, communicable diseases of live stock, superintends the measures for the extirpation, and makes original investigations as to the nature and prevention, of such diseases. Has charge of the quarantine stations for imported neat cattle. Also reports on the condition and means of improving the animal industries of the country. The Forestry Division.—Experiments, investigates, and reports upon the subject of forestry, and distributes valuable economic tree seeds and plants, and answers inquiries in regard to desirable kinds for forest planting, their modes of propagation, and other forestry matter. The Ornithological Division.— Investigates the economic relations of birds and mammals, and recommends measures for the preservation of beneficial and destruction of injurious species. : | Supreme Court of the United States— Court of Claims. 157 SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES. [The * designates those whose wives accompany them ; the § designates those whose daughters ac-ind them; the || designates those having other ladies with them. ] % || || Mr. Chief-Justice Waite, 1415 I street, N. W. * Mr. Justice Miller, 1415 Massachusetts avenue, N. W. * Mr. Justice Field, 21 First street, N. E. * § Mr. Justice Bradley, 201 I street, corner New Jersey avenue. * Mr. Justice Harlan, Rockville, Md. Mr. -Justice Woods. * 2 ¢ 3 Mr. Justice Matthews, 1800 N street, corner Connecticut avenue, N. W. Mr. Justice Gray, 1721 Rhode Island avenue. * || || Mr. Justice Blatchford, 1432 K street, N. W. Resigned. * % ¢ Mr. Justice Strong, 1411 H street, N. W, OFFICERS OF THE SUPREME COURT. Clerfe.—James H. McKenney, 1523 Rhode Island avenue, N. W. Deputy Clerk. —Chas. B. Beall, 1621 Thirteenth street, N. W. . Marshal—John G. Nicolay, 212 B street, S. E. Reporter —]J. C. Bancroft Davis, 1621 H street, N. W. CIRCUIT COURTS OF THE UNITED STATES, First Judicial Circuit.—Mr. Justice Gray, of Boston, Massachusetts. Districts of Maine, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, and Rhode Island. Circuit Judge.—Le Baron B. Colt, Bristol. R. I. Second Judicial Circuit.—Mr. Justice Blatchford, of-New York City. Districts of Vermont, Connecticut, Northern New York, Southern New York, and Eastern New York. Circuit Judge. —William J. Wallace, Syracuse, New York. Third Judicial Circuit.—Mr. Justice Bradley, of Newark, New Jersey. Districts of New Jersey, Eastern Pennsylvania, Western Pennsylvania, and Delaware. Circuit Judge.—William McKennan, Washington, Pa. Fourth Judicial Circuit.—Mzr. Chief-Justice Waite, of Toledo, Ohio. Districts of Mary-land, West Virginia, Virginia, North Carolina, and South Carolina. Circuit Judge.—Hugh L. Bond, Baltimore, Md. Fifth Judicial Circuit:—DMr. Justice Woods, of Atlanta, Georgia. Districts of Northern Georgia, Southern Georgia, Northern Florida, Southern Florida, Northern Alabama, Middle Alabama, Southern Alabama, Southern Mississippi, Eastern Louisiana, Western Louisiana, Northern Texas, Eastern Texas, and Western Texas. Circuit Judge.—Don A. Pardee, of New Orleans, La. . Sixth Judicial Circuit.—Mr. Justice Matthews, of Cincinnati, Ohio. Districts of Northern Ohio, Southern Ohio, Eastern Michigan, Western Michigan, Kentucky, Eastern Tennessee, Middle Tennessee, and Western Tennessee. Circuit Judge.—Howell Edmunds Jackson, Nashville, Tenn. Seventh Judicial Circuit.—Mr. Justice Harlan, of Chicago, Illinois. Districts of Indiana, Northern Illinois, Southern Illinois, Eastern Wisconsin, and Western Wisconsin. Circuit Judge. __ Walter Q. Gresham, Indianopolis, Ind. Eighth Judicial Circuit.—Mr. Justice Miller, of Keokuk, Iowa. District of Minnesota, Northern District of Iowa, Southern District of Towa, Eastern District of Missouri, Western District of Missouri, Eastern District of Arkansas, Western District of Arkansas, District of Nebraska, District of Colorado, and District of Kansas. Circuit Judge.—David J. Brewer, Leavenworth, Kans. Ninth Judicial Circuit—Mzr. Justice Field, of San Francisco, California. Districts of Cal-ifornia, Oregon, and Nevada. Circuit Judge.— Lorenzo Sawyer, San Francisco, Cal. COURT OF CLAIMS. (1509 Pennsylvania avenue.) Chief-Justice William A. Richardson, 1739 H street, N. W. Judge Charles C. Nott,-826 Connecticut avenue, N. W., Judge Glenni W. Scofield, Riggs House. Judge Lawrence Weldon, 1401 K street, N. W. Judge John Davis, 1211 Connecticut avenue. Resigned. Chief Justice Charles D. Drake, 1416 Twentieth street, N. W. Judge Edward G. Loring, 1512 K street, N. W. Chief Clerk—Archibald Hopkins, 1826 Massachusetts avenue, N. W, Assistant Clerk. ~—John Randolph, 28 T street, N. W. Bailiff —Stark B. Taylor, 485 H street, 5. W. 158 Congressional Directory. FOREIGN LEGATIONS IN THE UNITED STATES. ARGENTINE REPUBLIC. Sefior Don Vicente G. Quesada, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, 1822 Jefferson Place. : Don Severo Ygarzabal, Secretary of Legation, 1824 H street. AUSTRIA-HUNGARY. Count William Lippe-Weissenfeld, Counsellor of Legation and Chargé d’Affaires ad in-terim, 1117 Seventeenth street. Baron Paumgartten, Chancellor, 1117 Seventeenth street. BELGIUM. Mr. de Bounder de Melsbroeck, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, 1015 Connecticut avenue. . Count Gaston d’Arschot, Counsellor of Legation, 1211 K street. BOLIVIA. . Doctor Casimiro Corral, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, ro17 Connec-ticut, avenue. Doctor Damaso Sanchez, Secretary of Legation, 709 Twelfth street. Sefior Daniel Lucero, attaché, 1211 I street. BRAZIL. Baron de Itajuba, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, The Arlington. - Sefior José Augusto Ferriera da Costa, Secretary of Legation. (Absent.) Mr. José Coelho Gomez, Second Secretary, 1331 N street. CHILI. Sefior Don Domingo Gana, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, 2024 G street. : Sefior Beltran Mathieu, Secretary of Legation, 1620 Nineteenth street. Sefior Manuel Freire, Second Secretary, 1620 Nineteenth street. CH.iNA. Mr. Chang Yen Hoon, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Dupont Circle, Mr. Shu Cheon Pon, First Secretary, Dupont Circle. Mr. Jui Yuan, Secretary, Dupont Circle. Mr. Liang Ting Tsan, Secretary, Dupont Circle. Mr. D. W. Bartlett, American Secretary, 1337 L street. Mr. Ho Shen Chee, Translator, Dupont Circle. Mr. Liang Shung, Translator, Dupont Circle. Mr. Koo Shune Ing, Student Interpreter, Dupont Circle. ' Mr. Pung Kwang Ju, Attaché, Dupont Circle. Mr. Tsien Kwang T4o, Attaché, Dupont Circle. Mr. Yow Jiar Shee, Attaché, Dupont Circle. Mr. Shue Chok, Attaché, Dupont Circle. Mr. Chang Cho Shing, Attaché, Dupont Circle. ° Mr. Li Chun Kwan, Attaché, Dupont Circle. Mr. Chun Kut Sing, Military Attaché, Dupont Circle. Mr. Ma Wang’ Yuan, Military Attaché, Dupont Circle. COLOMBIA. ‘ Sefior Don Ricardo Becerra, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. (Absent.) Sefior Don J.M. Hurtado, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, on Special Mission, 504 Fifth avenue, New York. Mr. F. Mutis Duran, Secretary of Legation, The Arlington. Sefior Don Luis Tanco, Attaché, New York. Sefior Don Francisco L. Becerra, Attaché, 1400 Massachusetts avenue, The Diplomatic Corps. 159 COSTA RICA. Sefior Don Manuel Ma. Peralta, Envoy Extraprdinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. (Absent.) Sefior Don Carlos Saenz, Attaché. (Absent.) DENMARK. Mr. P. L. E. de Lovendrn, Minister Resident and Consul-General. (Absent.) ECUADOR. Sefior Don Antonio Flores, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. (Absent.) FRANCE. Mr. Théodore Roustan, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, 1215 K street, Mr. le Comte Maurice Sala, First Secretary, 1214 K street. Captain Lottin, Military Attaché, 1214 K street. Mr. Jules Boeufvé, Chancellor, 813 Fifteenth street. GERMAN EMPIRE. Mr. H. von Alvensleben, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, 734 Fifteenth street. : Baron von Zedtwitz, Counselor of Legation, 922 Fifteenth street. Mr. M. Riicker Jenisch, Attaché, Welcker’s, 1710 Pennsylvania avenue. Mr. P. W. Biiddecke, Chancellor of Legation, 110 I street, N. W. GREAT BRITAIN. The Hon. Sir L. S. Sackville West, K. C. M. G. Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plen- potentiary, British Legation, Connecticut avenue. . The Hon. Henry Edwardes, Secretary of Legation, 1777 Massachusetts avenue. Captain Henry Coey Kane, R. N., Naval Attaché. (Absent.) Horace A. Helyar, Esq., Second Secretary, 1519 Rhode Island avenue. The Hon. Charles Hardinge, Second Secretary. (Absent.) E. B. Lehmann, Esq., Third Secretary, The Portland. Cecil A. Spring Rice, Esq., Acting Third Secretary, 1015 Connecticut avenue. GUATEMALA. Sefior Don Enrique Toriello, Chargé d’ Affaires, 339 Produce Exchange, New York. HAWAII. Mr. H. A. P. Carter, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, 1330 L street. HAYTI. Mr. Stephen Preston, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, 1505 H street. Mr. Charles A. Preston, Secretary of Legation, Spuyten Duyvil, N. Y. ITALY. Baron de Fava, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. Le Compte Albert de Foresta, Secretary of Legation. (Absent.) Mr. E. Ferrara Dentice d’Accadia, Second Secretary, 2416 K street. JAPAN. Mr. Jusanmi Riuichi Kuki, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, 1310 N st. Mr. Shiro Akabané, Secretary of Legation, 1514 K street. . Mr. Kamenosuki Misaki, Attaché, 922 K street. Lieutenant Makoto Saito, Naval Attaché, 1300 Vermont avenue. Mr. Kikujiro Saigo, Attaché, 17 Iowa Circle. Mr. Masakazu Noma, Attaché. (Absent.) 160 Congressional Directory. MEXICO. Sefior Don Matias Romero, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, 1418 K st, Sefior Don Cayetano Romero, First Secretary of Legation, 1232 Massachusetts avenue. Sefior Don Vicente Morales, Second Secretary, 922 Massachusetts avenue. Sefior Don Francisco de P. Pasalagua, Third Secretary, 1211 I street. Sefior Don Manuel Pacheco y Schiaffino, Third Secretary, 1009 G street. Sefior Don Enrique Santibanez, Attaché, The Hamilton. NETHERLANDS. Mr. G. de Weckherlin, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, 1301 K street. PORTUGAL. Viscount das Nogueiras, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, 1404 H street RUSSIA. Mr. Charles de Struve, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, 1705 K street. Mr. Alexandre Greger, Second Secretary, 1705 K street. SALVADOR. Sefior Don Miguel Velasco y Velasco, Minister Resident, 1301 K street. SPAIN. Sefior Don Emilio de Muruaga, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, 1447 Massachusetts avenue. Sefior Don Miguel de Florez Garcia, First Secretary of Legation, 708 Thirteenth street. Sefior Don Felipe Sagrario, Second Secretary, 1409 Corcoran street. Sefior Don Francisco Gordon Du Bosc, Third Secretary, 816 Thirteenth street Sefior Don J. de Pedroso y Scull, Attaché, 1726 Pendsylvania avenue. SWEDEN AND NORWAY. Mr. L. de Reuterskiold, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, 1202 Eighteenth street. Mr. Charles Woxen, Secretary of Legation, 1015 Connecticut avenue. Mr. Sigurd Ibsen, Attaché, 1214 K street. SWITZERLAND. Colonel Emile Frey, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, 2031 I street. Major Karl Kloss, Secretary of Legation, 2031 I street. a TURKEY. Hussein Tevfik Pacha, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. (Absent.) Rustem Effendi, Secretary of Legation, 1804 H street. URUGUAY. Sefior Don Carlos Farini, Secretary of Legation, Chargé d’ Affaires ad interim. (Absent.) VENEZUELA. Sefior Don A. M. Soteldo, Chargé d’ Affaires, 1333 Q street. Sefior Don Manuel F. Azpurna, Attaché, 826 Fourteenth street. The Diplomatic Corps. 161 UNITED STATES LEGATIONS ABROAD, ARGENTINE REPUBLIC. Bayless W. Hanna, Minister Resident and Consul-General, Buenos Ayres. AUSTRIA-HUNGARY. ; James Fenner Lee, Secretary of Legation ana Chargé d’Affaires ad interim, Vienna. BELGIUM. Lambert Tree, Minister Resident, Brussels. : BOLIVIA. William A. Seay, Minister Resident and Consul-General, La Paz. BRAZIL. Thomas J. Jarvis, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Rio de Janeiro. Charles B. Trail, Secretary of Legation, Rio de Janeiro. CENTRAL AMERICAN STATES. (Costa Rica, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua, and Salvador.) Henry C. Hall, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Guatemala City. D. Lynch Pringle, Secretary of Legation and Consul-General, Guatemala City. CHILI. William R. Roberts, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Santiago. Christian M. Siebert, Secretary of Legation, Santiago. CHINA. Charles Denby, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Peking. William W. Rockhill, Secretary of Legation, Peking. Charles Denby, jr., Second Secretary, Peking. Fleming D. Cheshire, Interpreter, Peking. COLOMBIA. Dabney H. Maury, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Bogota. V. O. King, Secretary of Legation and Consul-General, Bogota. COREA. Hugh A. Dinsmore, Minister Resident and Cousul-General, Sedul. DENMARK. Rasmus B. Anderson, Minister Resident and Consul-General, Copenhagen. FRANCE. Robert M. McLane, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Paris. Henry Vignaud, Secretary of Legation, Paris. Augustus Jay, Second Secretary of Legation, Paris. GERMAN EMPIRE. George H. Pendleton, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Berlin. Chapman Coleman, Secretary of Legation, Berlin. Frederick V. S. Crosby, Second Secretary of Legation, Berlin. I] GREAT BRITAIN. Edward J. Phelps, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, London. Henry White, Secretary of Legation, London. Charles P. Phelps, Second Secretary of Legation, London. HAWAIIAN ISLANDS. George W. Merrill, Minister Resident, Honolulu. 2D ED 11 4 | i Congressional Directory. HAYTI. John E. W. Thompson, Minister Resident and Consul-General, Port au Prince; also Chargé d’ Affaires to Santo Domingo. ITALY. John B. Stallo, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Rome. Charles A. Dougherty, Secretary of Legation, Rome. JAPAN. Richard B. Hubbard, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Tokei. Fred. S. Mansfield, Secretary of Legation, Tokei. Edwin Dun, Second Secretary of Legation, Tokei. Willis N. Whitney, Interpreter, Tokei. LIBERIA. (Vacant.) , Minister Resident and Consul-General, Monrovia. MEXICO. Thomas C. Manning, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Mexico. Thomas B. Connery, Secretary of Legation, Mexico. : THE NETHERLANDS. Isaac Bell, jr., Minister Resident, the Hague. y PARAGUAY AND URUGUAY, John E. Bacon, Chargé d’ Affaires, Montevideo, Uruguay. PERSIA. E. Spencer Pratt, Minister Resident and Consul-General, Teheran. PERU. Charles W. Buck, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Lima. Richard R. Neill, Secretary of Legation, Lima. PORTUGAL. E. P. C. Lewis, Minister Resident and Consul-General, Lisbon. ROUMANIA. Walker Fearn, Minister Resident and Consul-General, Athens; also Minnesota Resident and Consul-General to Greece and Servia. RUSSIA. George V. N. Lothrop, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, St. Petersburg. George W. Wurts, Secretary of Legation, St. Petersburg. SANTO DOMINGO. — a_i John E. W. Thompson, Chargé d’ Affaires, Santo Domingo. (See Hayti.) SIAM. Jacob T. Child, Minister Resident and Consul-General, Bangkok. SPAIN. Jabez L. M. Curry, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Madrid. Edward H. Strobel, Secretary of Legation, Madrid. SWEDEN AND NORWAY. Rufus Magee, Minister Resident, Stockholm. SWITZERLAND. Boyd Winchester, Minister Resident and Consul-General, Berne. TURKEY. , Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Constantinople. Pendleton King, Secretary of Legation, Constantinople. A. A. Gargiulo, Interpreter, Constantinople. VENEZUELA. Charles L. Scott, Minister Resident and Consul-General, Caracas. "ok a Et a - 163 Consuls and Consulates. CONSULATES-GENERAIL, CONSULATES, Commercial Agencies, Consular Agencies, and Consular Clerks, ALPHABETICALLY ARRANGED. [Corrected to January 31, 1887.] i Consular offices. Aberdeen, Scotland =~... Acapulco, Mexico oo ~ __-_ _____ Acca and Haifa, Syris o.oo Adelaide; Australian 7... .___.. Aden, Arabin ______SRE hE Adva Malaga, Spain...Li Adrianople, Turkey...__. Aguadilla, Porto Rico... .......... Agua Dulce, U. S. Colombia _._.______ Ainiah, Syria... ie SL Aix la Chapelle,Germany.__.________ Bo cei Alyab, Beneal o_o to or noon Albany, Australia... wo weve Alberton, Prince Edward Island _____ Albert Town, West Indies__ ________ Aleppo, Syria. oof. li Alexandretia, Syria. _.... _......... Alexandria, Eoypt. .. caves Almeria Malaga, Spain............... Atala Mexico ov o_ooan Amapala, Honduras... eeveemime Amberstburgh, Ontario... _.__ Ancomaaltaly. Lo Andakabe, Madagascar_____________ Anguilla, West Indies... .-__ Amabers, Germany... ___.___ Annapolis, Nova Scotia_____________ Antigua, WestIndies___._.._._.___ _. 10 net Ms a RL Ga Avoca, Brauil ee Arecibo, Porto Rico_-~. il7 0 Arendal, Norway. __ ~__ ' ~~ Anica, Chil or coe fee Asuncion, Parasia... -wemnen ev sm". Athens, Greece. sre Consular officers. Jon Ramsayi..__....... John A. Sutter, jr __=_ Victor Tink:= IL. W. Smit Augustus Ganslandt______ Henry Dickson. ........ T.C. Trowbridge. ........... Henry FE. Mewitt._....... Franz Bertram =... R.A. Towndes: ...__... Prank R.Dynes Geo. Howlan__. "= Howard H. Farrington ___ Yrederie Poche 7 Stephen]. Coidan ....... S.CoBEwinui oc Charles T. Grellet. ._.__.. Jom. Give... Herman F. Fischer ______ P.S: Rising...7 0 Theodore Kohncke ______ Josiah Turner... 0. Wm. Johnston... William S. Crowell ______ Francis Cass Victor F. W. Stanwood___ WagerRey ._.-... George B. Goodwin______ Henry H. Goodwin_____._ Yocob MM. Owen........... Chester E. Jackson_______ A. Fred. Archer... John Il. Stewart __........ Se eaine. Frederick Von Wrede. ___ Christion Fyde ~~ _= F, W. Dauelsberg......._. Rank. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consular agent. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Do. Consul. Vice-consua. Consul. Vice-consul. " a Ce Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consular agent. Do. Do. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul, Deputy consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Acting consular agent Consular agent. Do. Do. Consul. Consul general. Consul. Vice-consul. 164 Congressional Directory. Consular offices. Consular officers. Auckland, New Zealand..._. John T. Campbell... .... Bo br iy Francis R. Webb... _... Augsburg, Germany ............. G. Oberndorl. AnxCoves Hawt. Co.=. Thomas Dutton... -Azus, San Domingo ............. Joon Hardy..._._. Bahia, Brawil soo La John B. Weaver... ._._ II See a Re Ts HL 1 George ll. Duder_-__.:-. Bahia de Caraquez, Ecuador ________ Edward Thos. Goddard___| Ballymena, Ireland. __.._ _..__.._._ George Ballentine..... Bangkoks Siam. ___.... Jacobi. Child... |BRR RR SSSe aa Noah A. McDonald ______ BaniSaf Africa ol, Jom OQ. Stewart..._: Baracoa, Cuba fo eae DO PS Pablo FE Alayo.......... Barbadoes, West Indies______.______ Lewis G. Reed ~_ ________ Dol a oe ore D.C. DaCosta, jr... Barcelona, Spain...Y -Frederick H. Scheuch 0 ____| Ur pSee ne M.Cassacenmas'....... Barcelona, Venezuela... IonacioH. __ Balz_ Bari, lady, > 0 0c 0 Nee ees Emil Berner... Barmen, Germany _____.__ Joseph Falkenbach _. ____ Th Sn Sl Ee ee Emile Meyer -_______5. Barranquilla, U. S. Colombia________ Victor Vifquain _.____.__ De F, Ansoategul |. _....... Barrington, Nova Scotia ____________ Nehemiah McGray_______ Basle, Switzerland. -2 George Gifford... ..... .-..- An A, August Kauffmann_______ Dassen, India’. 0 5 = Walter W. G. Beatson____| __..-Bastia vanes: 77 oo cn a Simon Damiani... Batavigi Tava Fo 0 A Oscar Flogheld _-© Bote fr Peirus EB. W. Peels... Bathurst Avion o_o oe Lalel Henry C. Goddard... Bathurst, New Brunswick __________ Edward Hickson ________ Batoum, Poti, and Tiflis, Russia _____ Joseph C. Chambers______ Bayonne, Uvanee 0 70 0 Henry leon ec .._...._ Betral, Syria).on Erhard Bissinger. ow ........ dE A RAL wl a Percy Martindale... ...... Belfast, Ireland.~~ George W. + Savage... . LT Bn EE BL John M. Savage... Belorade, Sevvia or= 0 Walker Fearn... {Hea Le ae Sa a a ps Re a see a Belize, British Honduras ___________ Albert E.Morlan___._____ |eae SR Be John E. Muirie.._.......... Belleville, Ontario... 0... John M. Strong _____..__. |B ST ee Ch a William N. Ponton ______ Bergen,Norway. _ '* "oo. Fred. G. Gade. ~~. ei Johan C.Isdahl, jr... ___. ____--:. Raine_________ Berlin, Germany -= Frederick VL SICe Si William P. Tilghman____. Bermuda, WestIndies =~ Charles M. Allen ________ Do =k dyad aan JomestB. Heyl...= Berne, Switzerland... Boyd Winchester ...______ -.. Videial SE a John E. Hinnen........... Bilbag, Spain... ed Angel Urmazn =. Birmingham, England ..............__ Joseph B. Hughes ......... LR ee To Jos: FE. Brame... ... .| Bluefields, Nicaragua ........... weve. John S-Avgusiine Boca del Toro, U. S. Colombia ______ WilllamBrown______. Bogota, U. S. of Colombia __________ Y.O. Ring oi ai i I Sh Martin Boshell .......... Boloena, Thaly® nk CarloGardind _......= Rank. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Consul-general. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Commercial agent. Vice-commercial agent, Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Do. . Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul-general. Vice-consul-general. Consul. Vice-commercial agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul-general. Vice and dep. con. gen. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul-general. Vice and dep. con. gen, Consular agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consular agent. Do. Consul-general. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Consuls and Consulates. Consular offices. Consular officers. Rank. Bombay, India: 00. "1-0.oo Benj. F. Farnham. .......... Consul. Bonaeea, Honduras. _ =. .o_._._.. John T. Sinclair... --_ Consular agent. Bonaire, West Indies __....-..___. LeCrBoveu S. i .oiaas Do. Bone, Africa... 0 iii YL. Guirand -........... Do. Bordeanx, France ..............c.: George W. Roosevelt. ____ Consul. Do eeee aa Gregory Phelan... ....... Vice-consul. LE SR ol RR ERR Gregory Phelan...........: Deputy consul. Boulogne-sur-mer, France_______.___ Emil Flageollet ..........-Consular agent. Bradford, England ..... ........... Wm... F. Grinnell __.._._. Consul. LET RA he RR ER EE Thomas L. Renton_______ Vice and dep. consul. Brake and Nordenhamm, Germany___| Wilhelm Clemens________ Consular agent. Brava, Cape Verde Islands__e_______ J I Nummes; ...__..... Do. Bremen,jGermany cc... Albert Toening.......... Consul. 1 ee Leopold Strube............. Vice-consul. Bel i EE ES ap «-_} John H. Schnabel. ....... Deputy consul. Breslon, Germany ........ canes Henry Ditmar. ............. Consul. 02 Sha es ee Wm. H. Musselman______ Vice-consul. Brest, France...oui Allele aan Consular agent. ...co Bridgewater, Nova Scotia______..___. William H.Owen________ Do. Brighton, England... ........_.... LD. Warne... Do. Brisbane, New South Wales_________ George Havris _. _....... Do. Bristol, England _.........ccnaae Lorin A. Lathrop........... Consul. Dot ea nina Robert HH. Symes ....... Vice-consul. Brockville, Ontario mim WilllamOld Commercial ........cems __.._......-agent. 1B A PL W. Augustus Schofield____| Vice commercial agent. Bram, Austria... Cao Gustavus Schoeller_______ Consular agent. Brunswick,Germeny._..._.......... Williams C. Fox... ..... Consul. |B iid fed eR RE HomBoutler............. Vice-consul. Brussels, Belojum __ _____........-William Slade _--_ Consul. 18 Se Cl On i La a Adolph Stein. ___....._. Vice and deputy consul. Bucaramauga, Colombia ____________ Charles Keller. ......... Consular agent. Bucharest, Roumania ______________ Walker Fearn__......... Consul-general. BE a A el a SA A Wm. G.Boxshall _____._. Vice-consul-general. Buenos Ayres, Argentine Republic.__| Bayless W. Hanna_______ Consul-general. DO i 2260 anh naman Edward L. Baker... -.. Consul. ISR lel ER EL Edward H. Folmar______ Vice-consul. Bushive, Persia... oie ee ToC. Malcolm _......_.. Consular agent. Cadiz, Spall cnaiim vans Darius H. Ingraham _____ Consul. {Uri Ret oe SR Antonia Pirra ........... Vice-consul. Coglioriylialy. 2 oe eins Alphonse Dol... Consular agent. Cairo, Egypt... wt John Cardwell | ____ __._. Agent and con. gen. LREe ER Se Horatio G. Wood ________ Vice and dep. con. gen. Calnje, Prapce co 3 0 0 oo J.P. Vendroux. ____..__ Consular agent. Calcutin, Bengal, India... __.__ = Benjamin F. Bonham _____ Consul-general. Weil Sol raven Andrew J. Cobb.......... Vice and dep. con. gen, Caldera, Chili cc ainl cians John C. Morong.. ....... Consular agent. Collao, Perm. wiser fale H:M. Brent... ....... Consul. Do, emai inti® iad. James Panlkner. ........ Vice-consul. Camargo, Mexico... i... oveniol Julianlacaze. ........... Consular agent. Compeachy, Mexico ..........cco. Gasper Trneba ___....... Do. Cannes, Prange i 710s oo ‘Theo, D. Valcourt. _._.. Do. Conton, (China 000 oo. Chas, Seymour... Consul. OL ih i So on ws Gideon Nye Vice-consul. Cape Canso, Nova Scotia ___________ Aled We'Hart Consular agent. Cape Coast Castle, Liberia .......___ George E. Eminsang _____ Do. Cope Haytien, Haylee Stanislas Goutier_________ Consul. 18 RC a AR SINR Dh ie SE ale BREE Vice-consul. Cope Palmas, Jiberia ooops bli Casts Tai) fo in Consular agent. Cape Town, Africa... o.oo oe: Jos W. Siler...0 Consul. Bor ect rnin William J. Knight_______ Vice-consul. Cardenas, Cuba.....cnc.. James M. Churchill ______ Commercial agent. i. Do ——— ————— ———— ——————— Joseph H. Washington___{ Vice-commercial agent, 166 Congressional Directory. Consular offices. Consular officers. Rank. Carlisle, Send Semi ne Carrara, Yinly. ov.0 Carell, Spain, 0 dace eo Carlota, Colombia ...o.0n 0.0 Cltnie, Venezuela...2. 0 Casa-Blanca, Morocco. _.L Cir, Maly. ro Ceara Broglie ovo. Cebu, Philippine Islands .___..._.__ Cerro de Pasco, Peru Cette, France Ceylon, India Champerico, Guatemala Charleroi, Belalum Loc. oes Charlottetown, P. E. I Chaux de fonds, Switzerland Che Foo, China Cherbourg, France Chicoutimi, Quebec Chihuahua, Mexico Chitsonmintie oo~~ Christ Church, N. Z Christiania, Norway Do Clvita Vecchia, lfaly. _._..... Clarenceville, Quebec Clifton, Ontarig Coatzacoalcas, Mexico Cobourg, Ontario Collo, Algeria, Africa Cologne, Germany mn = D Dvan R.Jones .......... Wm.B. Lovie. J. Hewetson Brown______ Ulisse Boceacti... comme CoMoling. o.oo Robert Quesnel 7: Jom Cobb... ... .ocunes Alfred M. Wood. -_, James Drinkwater ______.. Albert Woodcock ________ Augustus Peratoner Pascal Decomis George Holderness G. E. A. Cadell M. C. McNulty L..S Nomens. = © = William Morey Edward Aitken Jerome Bddy _.. ..... Robert O. Smith O. A. Peyere "GeorgeH. Murphy ______ Emil Postel_. John;C. ‘Huston _._......... James H. Hayball ........ Alexander C. Jones .____. L.A. Beroholtz | ___lok Clement C. Ellis_ Joseph F. Ward Gerhard Gade -———— Ludwig Ahlberg_________ Henry A. Ehninger .____._ Juan B..Carbo.......... George F. Underhill John Hanceoek............. Frank W. Roberts Willis Roberts George J. Stephens______ John W. Tatem Marius Eyme a William D. Wamer -| Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consular agent. Do. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. ; Commercial agent, Vice-commercial agent, Consul. Vice and deputy consul, Consul. Vice-consul. Acting consular agent. Consular Agent. Do. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Commercial agent. Vice-commercial agent. Consular agent. Consul. Do. Vice and deputy consul. Consular agent. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consular agent. Do. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. 167 Consuls and Consulates. Consular offices. Coquimbe, Chilis... cao lll Corcubion, Spain... 3. cnueccnncns Corfu, Ionian Isles, Greece_________. Corinto, Nicaragua... ... ...cnueniil Cork (Queenstown), Ireland _________ D Corn Island, Nicaragua o.oo... Comwall, Ontario r=... 1 Cornwallis, Nova Scotia _____.-___._ Coro,Venemelay 50... | Coranna,t Spain... oan iil Cotean Landing, Quebec... .....-Courtwright, Ontario........cweee nal Cow Bay, Nova Scotia .............. Crefeld, Germany >... _....._ Cronstadt, Russia: oo...Jo Cucuta, Colombia vay 2"... 0) Cumang, Veneznelal =... i Curacao, West Indies. _._..___.__._: Damascus, Syrias...... ..... Dantzis, Germany. u...........0. Dordanelles, Turkey...__ ..& _ Dartmouth, England. .______.__.___ Demerara, British Guiana ___.__ __._ Deseronto, Ontario co... Pesterro, Brazil bin. oo. Dieppe, Franceico co. EC Digby, Nova Scotia... nanue-s Dominica, West Indies Dover, Englands. oo... Dresden, Germany Drontheim, Norway _ 2 2 — : Waa Dublin, Ireland Dunedin, New Zealand Dunfermline, Scotland Dunkirk, France Dunmore Town, West Indies Durango, Mexico Consular officers. Hiram Davis coo Harry B. Macdonell _.___. Robert K. Wright, jr... Brooks Carnes BD. Manton... ...... OC ames J. aia G-Harris Heap... ...... Do Stamatiades.___...___ Henry B. Ryder Olof Homsen............... Joseph ‘Grierson... H. Villanueva John: M. Thome.......... TWoodley: ........ _. HenryPalazio _._....... John J. Piatt... .... Roberti Seymour... YiCiRand i ..onlinae Ramon Seljasi.......conm-José de Carriéayie.. Eduarto de Carricarte ____ John A. D. Simpson Frederick W. Baby. ____. Charles Archibald _._____ Joseph EB. Potter... Rudolph Schneider Peter Vigias:_ oo. th Christian Anderson ______ José G. N..Romberg ....... Leonard B. Smith Jacob Wuister N. Meshaka Richard Kingston _______ David T. Bunker ___ _| James Thomson......... John D. Arquimbau______ Ambrose Bordehore "Raoulle Bourgeois _______ William B. Stewart William Stedman Joseph T. Mason William Knoop Claws Berg... Looe J L.-McCaskill... .... Thomas M. Mackenzie ___ Arthur B. Wood Wm. MeIntyre........ Henry W. Driver Lucien J. Walker James: Penmani............ Benjamin Morel Henry S. Higgs Frederick Dunn Rank. Commercial agent. Vice-commercial agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul-general. Vice-consul-general. Vice-consul.’ Consul-general. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Consul. Vice consul Consular agent. Do. Do. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. ~ Consular agent. Do Do. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Do. Do. Do. Do. Do. Consul. Vice and deputy consul, Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consular agent. Commercial agent. Vice-commercial agent. Consular agent. Do. Do.® Congressional Directory. we Consular offices. Consular officers. Rank. Dusseldorf, Germany. _-__...__.... DT. Pavtellol..__...L.h. Consul. En GRO Ri rae 2 Julius C. Eversmann _._._ Vice-consul. Fast London, Africa...o onil William H. Fuller... ____. Consular agent. Elberfeld, Germany cvs Charles Forster... Consul. Ie nL LURE CR ley) Herman Junker ......... Vice and deputy consul. Tisinore, Emerson, Denmark’. /.rocnvee=m Manitoba, B. N. A ________ Regner L. Ulstrup.......... CharlesS. Douglass______ Consular Do. agent. -— EP f Encenada, Mexicol il... oio...t Francis Andonaegui______ Do. : Essen, Germany! 0 LL. Richard Eichkoff ___..__. Do. Tien, Berni = wien aan Otto Barea'. ive Do. ’ | Fajardo, Porto Rico. 0s... .ccuinan Jom Volopes.......... Do. Yalmouth, England ____.......... Howard Fox. ............ Consul. Do..... SL EERIE George BH. Fox ......... Vice and deputy consul. Falmouth, Farnham, Jamaica, West Indies_____ Quebec... R.Nunes_ =. ioe. William L. Hibbard _____ Consular Do. agent. Faro, Perino C2... iat FW. L.flavares_.._....... Do. Payal, Azores... ol. oii vac Samuel W. Dabney ______ Consul. Do. 0 iia Jacintho M. da Silveira ___| Vice and deputy consul. Ferrel, Spal... acid ids NicasioPerez.._...... Consular agent. Fiome, Austria si 5 0c Loco L.A Francovich._.........; Do. Werence, Italy we = 0 Loh ed a Consul. IaER Ee ee Spivifo Bernardi... ...... Vice and deputy consul. Flores, Azores. vic (Lr James McKay, jr.......... Consular agent. Flushing, Netherlands... ............ Fogo, Cape Verde Islands __________ Peter Jero. Smith _._._...... die J. de S. Monteiro... Do. Do. : Foo-Chow, China ol... cin Joseph C. A. Wingate ____| Consul. ) 10 ie Se Re A le John P. Cowles, jr..........- Vice-consul. Fort Trie,Ondario. .............0... JomesWhelan Consul. y TeSC EU Charles W. Vahey.......... Vice-consul, © Fort de France, West Indies ________ Frankfort-on-the-Main, Germany _____ Hewry WT. Tabat_.._....: JocobiMueller. ............ Consular agent. Consul-general. A Po. tind Alvesto 8. Hogue... Vice and dep. con. gen. Fredericksted, West Indies _________ Wm. F.°Moere. .......... Consular agent. Fredericton, New Brunswick ________ Frelichsburg, Quebec... ..........0. Frederick Augustus B. Coleman ____ Barney ________ Do. Do. Freemantle, Australia __.___________ William Sandover ______._ Do. Frontera, Mexico: ln oo o.oo) Michael Girard -_.__.___ Do. . t Funchal, Madeira ©: 0...di Thomas'C. Jones _.___._.. Consul. y {RIM LieDRI REL John Hutchison ..._.____ Vice and deputy consul. i Firth, Germany. =. en oh LH Fredk. J. Hirschmann____| Consular agent. Gaboon, Africa iin do William C. Gault. Acting Commercial ag’t. Ihe Le RRR I a as BE Vice-commercial agent. Galashiels, Scotland’. ____...._..._ Richardilees ___._)\. Consular agent. Cananoque, Quebec. _........L. Garita Gonzales, Mexico... ___..i" EE. Abbot... oo. JomP Flynn... _...... Do. Do. 8| Garrncha, Spain...00) EnriqueiCalvet..._...... Commercial agent. : Consul. Chas. S. Le Boutellier____ Vice-consul. Geestemunde, Germany Gerhard Ihlder.......... Consular agent. . Geneva, Switzerland Lyell T. Adams Consul. i Peter Naylor... .... Vice-consul. | —— en ——_——————————— JamesiFletcher _.._.. 0... Consul. Georgetown, Prince Edward Island __ Frederico 'Scerni ......... A. J“ MacDonald... Vice-consul. Consular agent. Georgeville, Quebec Don Albert Bullock Do. Gera, Germany... _: >...Coon Charles Neuer Do. Ghent, Belgium Consul. D Vice-consul. Gibora, Cuba of os oo José Homobono Beola Consular agent. Gibraltar, Spain. 7. o.oo Horatio J. Sprague Consul. Gijon, 0 ClieSam A LL Eh Spain “Calisto Alvargonzalez ___. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Gioja, Italy EETr peppp——— L. Giffoni = Consular agent. Consuls Consular offices. Girgenti, Italy... ..coccnn is Girgheh, Boypt eeeaes Glace Bay, Nova Scola .......ccneme-Glasgow, Scotland... .....convces *Glauchan, Germany... .........uo.. Gloucester, England. ___........... Goderich, Ontorlors = -oot Gonaives, Flaytl_ J....cunsicans . Gorée-Dakar, Africa _. Governor’s Harbor, West Indies_____ Graciosa, Azovesiz oi . ._. G.0 Gramodn, Spain S00... Grand Bassa, Liberia. _........ Grand Canary, Canary Islands_______ Grand Manan, New Brunswick ______ Grao, Spain ate...) Greenock; Scotland o_o...i Green Turtle Cay, West Indies ______ Grenville, Ontario... .. 7... Guadeloupe y Calvo, Mexico________ Guanajuato, Mexico =... ....... GuantanamofiCuba' =._... 4 Guatemala, Central America ________ Guayama, Porto Rico-..........eoualin Guayaquil, Ecuador ........ cues Guernsey, Great Britain __.__.._.__.. Guerrero, Mexico or Ur oasisol Guysborough, Nova Scotia__________ Halifax, Nova Scotia.- Hanover, Germonysii i: oa. ah Harbor Grase, Newfoundland ______._ Havana, Cuba Lr SE ae Head St. Peter’s Bay, Pr. Edw’d Isl’d Helsingfors, Finland _ _____.____..... D Hemmingford, Quebec ._.......... Hereford, Quebeer. J ......n.n.ivn Hinchinbrook, Québec ....... ......... Hilo, Hawaiian Islands and Consulates. Consular officers. Eugenio Bottazzi ___.____ Abdel Noor Ekladios ____ David McKeen__________ Francis H. Underwood ___ William Gibson William Campbell _______ Ethéart Dupuy... vie Peter Strickland ......... Gustavus W. Schroeder___ CharlesiA. Bethel... José de.C. C. Mello. ....... PeteriAsMesa......... J R.yGonzales.______._ Joseph Lakeman. ____.___ Adolph Loewenstein _____ JohmCraiz. 0..._:_ Jabez Afowe __..... Alexi Pridham._ cc. William J. Thompson ____ Edward Williams________ John Frowilh. .. ........- D. Lynch Pringle........ Henvyillolke. zene J.C. McCormick... Owen MeGarr. ........... Martin Reinberg... .......... Alea Willand =. CharlesiB. Hale oo... Tames U.:Childs., ...... ........ GeorgeiA. Oxnard... ..... WilllamCarey ._.._..... Fal. Phelan... _.... William W,. Lang________ Charles H. Burke... ...... Albert: Roberts... c..... Charles M. Belknap______ Benjamin J. Franklin Joseph A. Springer ...... Ferdinand F. Dufais _____ Elbridge Gerry, jr... Johw:A. McLaine ............ John R. Nichols ........... HH. L. Beerworth ........ John A. Beckwith Rank. Consular agent. Do. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Commercial agent. Vice-commercial agent. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Do. Consul-general. Vice-consul-general. Consular agent. Consul-general. Vice-consul-general. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Consul-general. Vice consul-general. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Deo. Consul-general. Vice-consul-general. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Do. Do. 170 Congressional Directory. = |_ Consular offices. Consular officers. Rank. Hobart, Tasmaniaciogo:0 Alex. G. Webster________ Consul. Hochelaga and Longueuil, Quebec ___| Robert Miller _ __________ Consular agent. Hodeida, Arabia couse. coo Mav Reine. Lo Do. Holyhead, England uo._... 0. Johnilewes ec: = ..-. Do. Honda, U.S. Colombia... Henry Hallam... _.. Do. Honfleur, France ooo... 0... HemryM. Hardy... Do. : # Hong-Kong, China. -__.-__.....__.. Robert BE. Withers... _ Consul. Bol Sodio,Laie lag Robert E. Withers, jr ____| Vice and deputy consul. Honolulu, Hawaiian Islands ________ John H.Putmam........... Consul-general. Pos Frank P. Hastings ............ Vice and deputy con. gen. Horgen, Switzerland... ..... Wm. Rice. oo Consul. Don bainof os William Streuli ......__.. Vice-consul. Huddersfield; England ©. .___...__ CW. Whitman... Consular agent. Iuelva, Spaintec pv an John Broadfoot ............ Do. Hall, Bnglemd 0)... 0 | LC Ei A TT Tieopold Moore... ..... Anthony P. Wilson ______ Consul. Vice-consul. Huntingdon, Quebec: .______ Jom MeHugh';.......... Consular agent. Nlojfle, Philippine Islands. .......owe on ick uit aida ins Do. Yaquique, Chili. 0... ei Joseph W. Merriam __..___ Consul. IDR SN Maximo Rosenstock ._____ Vice-consul. Jacmel, Blasio oon 0 oo nl Jean Vitaliel. .. ones’ Consular agent. Nath, Syria oe peri oir LoL Jaffna, Ceylon, India. .............. E.Hordeggl |... vin, Frederick Mortimer ______ Do. Do. Jaluit, Marshall Islands. ................ AdCapelle sd oceans Do. Jeremie, Hoyland L. Trebaud Rouzier__ ____ Do. Jeres de la Froniera, Spain._...______ Jomes ART... ..c...... Do. Jersey, Great Briain... ....cos Thomas Renouf .._...... Do. Jerusalem, Syria: Con Henry:Gilllman..___.____ Consul. Pon tionon Frank C.Clavk.. Vice-consul. =B Kahului, Hawaiian Islands _________ August Frederic Hopke.__| Consular agent. Kanagawa, Tapani Clarence R. Greathouse __| Consul-general. Boddenooo ad George 'H.:Scidmore_____ Vice and dep. consul-gen. Karachi, India... ian oo JomesiCurrle ce... -.. Consular agent. Rehl, Germany. one. oo Edmund Johnson ________ Consul. Bos ol cinder to i Theodore Kruger......_.._ Vice-consul. Poin sda 0 Felix S..Johmson............... Deputy consul. Kempt, Nova Scotia co... viol Fred: A. Hobart... Consular agent. Kidderminster, England’. ._._._...-_ James Morton............ Do. Riel, Germany tei ig. August Sartori ....... .... Do. Kingston, Ontario ooo. i. = Marshall H. Twitchell____| Consul. | eb STee Sa Mathew H. Folger.......... Vice and deputy consul, Louis D: Beylard......... Consul. W. P. Forwood............ Vice-consul. Rivkeally, Scolland. vi; nunnes Consular agent. Konigsberg, Germany. ......cnvnene. Do. Ya Colle, Quebec. 5-0 = Henry Hoyle ._._....... Do. Lagan Nenezueloa, o.oo... i Winheld S. Bird... _____ Consul. Thomas D. Golding__..___ Vice-consul. Juan deiOjeda --.-.._... Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Lanzarotte, Canary | Islands J: C.Topham.. .... ocd Consular agent. La Paz, Mexico et James Viosen oo. oo Consul. James Viosea, jr -............... Vice-consul. William A:Seay ._._._..... Consul-general. S. Alexander ........... Vice-consul-general. Laraiche, Morocco Fliss Benatuil ...... ....... Consular agent. Yatakia, Syria. Cou Ll AT Dodds, uri. Do. La Union, San Salvador Do. Leeds, England Prancis HH. Wigfall ______ Consul. Do William Ward Vice and deputy consul, Consuls and Consulates. Consular offices. Consular officers. Rank. Leicester, Ered SRA IR PI Leipsic, Germany: oor oo Do Yibon, Bussinf ooo oo oy Yieatn, Jtaly 0 choosnol Lo TMe, France fous or Lima, Peracagea too. 0 Yimoges, France. _.c.c... ..o..... Y.ineboro’, Quebec...coves .. Lingan, NovaiScotia..........cconweue Lisbon, Fosg] ali ed Liverpool, Nova Scotia. . vee... Livingston, Guatemala ________.__._ Lianelly, Walesio dione London, Sngad os EO RRC LY Tubeek, Germanys. ot. o_o.i Yucemne, Switzerland 27 ..______.. Lunenburg, Nova Scotia... .......... Lungen Schwalbach, Germany _____. Yowgan, Trelandiai cL... vin s Taxon Bayh hen to aa a Toyons, Frances colo o.oo Macoris, San Domingo _____________ Madras, British Indian z:: ._. -_. Magdalen Islands, Canada __________ Magdalena Bay, Mexico... ....cnv--Magdeburg, Germany oui ..........cu Mahé, Seychelles Islands _______.___ Majonga, Madagascar____ _____ Malaga, Sra le Malmo, rr Malin, Malialslando ooo... Victor. A. Sartori... . Emilio Masi... oo... Joseph Barber Haxby __ __ Samuel R. Millar | __.._ Hugh C. Peacock... Andrews A. St. John _____ William H.Bruce________ Simop Schreiber... _____ CD. Gregoire... Chns'S, Rand. ~~ = John'R. Tinsley......... ... A. Jouhannoud. .......... 17.5: Beeches... 1B Wilber. ~~ James N. S. Marshall _____ John T. Anderson _______ Benj. Jones...5... ... Thomas M. Waller ______ Frederic C. Penfield Bel. Moor: cas... | Wm. de H. Washington__ Thomas J. Brooke _______ L.Sellier. [~~ YocobiMeyer,jr 0 oo Ernest Williams Frederick W. Magahan___ Aly Monvade oo. Edward H. Bryan .______ Neil McLeod Keating ____ Edward M. Legefie _.____ IL. Wo.Mellov............ James Rose Hunter J.G:B. Decker. .-. Robert Weichsel, Jr Sab Charles Dupny..... Chas, L.-Wisght............... Henry C. Marston... ...... Edward Loring... -Peter M.. Flensburg_______ John Worthington________ Charles B. Eynoud F.GoAlden i. HelB Tow 0. ois EidoHale ooo oo James C. Monaghan______ Joseph F. Monaghan _____ Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Commercial agent. Vice-commercial agent. Consular agent. Do. Do. Do. Do. Do. Deo. Do. Consul-general. Vice and dep. con. gen. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consular agent. Do. Do. Consul-general. Vice and dep. con. gen. Deputy consul-general. Commercial agent. Vice-commercial agent. Consular agent. Do. Do. Do. Do. Do. Do. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consular agent. Do. Do. Do. Do. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul / 172 Congressional Directory. Consular offices. Consular officers. Rank. Monta, Ecuador. 0 ical) Pedro A. Moreira........ Manzanillo; Guba>. =... W. Stakeman .........) Maracaibo, Venezuela__.____.__.. Eugene Plumacher.___ ___ H, Do: ¢ rn ad Otto Faber... cucucinn.t William Volger ......__. Mavanhao, Broil 0c oo J. 1. Tavares_........... Moresh, Turkey... . ooo. .0..00 Henry'Marden..._._.___ Marsala, Tally, ___ =... GeorgeRayson_:.__-_... Marseilles, France.... = Prank Hl. Mason .....__. John S. Martin,jr... ...... William A. Garesché_____ , EeDR aE NE RE Simon H.David......_._. Matamoros, Mexico. ______........ John E-Valls oc Prank Fl. Pierce..._ Henry Heidegger... Daniel D. Sargent... Herman Koenigsberger___ Tomes TH. Smith... Rudolph Kraussé Mazagan, Morocco... co. sl0k -Alfred Redman Mazailon, Mexico \: >..... McAdam Junction, New Brunswick ___ Medellin, U.S. Colombia... ..... James M. Morgan________ John Kane Smyth________ Mentone, France >" ov... .0 Nicolas'Viale _.......... Merida, Mexico. .... 0 Edward H. Thompson____ Jom M. Gilkey .........Meme SH" 777" "77 William Dawson ________ Messing, lialy 00 coo siden Wallace S.Tones-._._ Letterio Pirrone James W. Porch. ......... B.T. Tewrarder: :.: ... Mier, Mexico 0 0 doy Henry Vizeayo.-. c..._. Milan, Italy Henry C. Crouch :-:.. ... D Anthony Richman _______ Milage, lialy otoLn aE Piefvo'Sivacusa ==...__ Milford Haven, Wales. ____________ Henry Kelway Milk River, Jamaica, West Indies Ym. G. Prices ic. oo Minatitlan, Mexico Mivagoane, Hayii. 00 __.......... Mogador, Morocco MeyerCorcos oo... Mollendo, Peru NV. MacCord == = EPmiledeloth = _:=:3 “George McSweeney ______ Monganui, New Zealand Robert Wyles _--==... Monrovia, Liberia Montego Bay, Jamaica, West Indies __ Monterey, Mexico “Preston L. Bridgers _____. Thos. W. Howard .... Wendell A. Anderson James Redington OE i ————~ —. ———— James P. Whitney."__ EL Nl a SU Consular agent. ; Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Deputy consul. Consular agent. Do. Do. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul-general. Vice and dep. con. gen. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Commercial agent. Vice-commercial agent. Commercial agent. Vice-commercial agent. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul-general. Vice-consul-general. Consular agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul-general. Vice-consul-general.’ Consular agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consular agent. Do. Commercial agent. Vice and dep. com, agt. Consular agent. Consul-general. Vice-consul-general.. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul-general. Vice and dep. con. gem. Consular agent. Commercial agent. Vice and dep. com. agt. Consul. Consuls and Consulates. 173 Consular offices. Moscow, Russia: fuga dit 0 vile Moulmein, India..._______ i. Mozambique, Africa 0. vom Munich, orang DE ops i oh vis A a Ee Muscat, He Tanase Oe Se Sen Le Mytilene, Turkey...aes Nagasaki, Japan. oe. eee ox Ne RS CE Re RE Naguabo, Porto Rice. .....cvneecemenm Nantes, France. odoo sl So _ulooio O00 ih ro ST ws a A Napanee, Ontario... -ccoes Naples, aly oon sidaooea nha i eh Ame Nassay, West Indies... o_o. Nevis, WestIndies....._.........¢ Newcastle-upon-Tyne, England ME D Newcastle, New Brunswick _________ New Chwang, Chima. ................. Nouméa, New Caledonia -.______"__ Newport, Walesuc au. in. . verouant Nice, Franceie deanna Nogales, er TE A Norrkoping, Sweden... ....._.__ North Sydney, Nova Scotia____.__._. Nottingham, England... _.__. _. Old Yonero England...___..___ Oporto, Portueal___........... Orchilla Island, _._ Venezuela___. Orotava, Canary Islands __________ Oram, Algerio, Africas... o_o: Orilla,Ontario 0... Osaka, and Hiogo, Japan. =i] IT TS Ce ae Ostend, Beloium. _.o..= Ottawa, Ontario Pacasmayo, Peru Padang, Sumatra. _.¢ ~~. Pago Pago, Samoa Palermo, Italy D Palma Majorea, Spain... Panama, United States of Colombia Consular officers. in oN el oo C.-M. Somerville... ASE. B.Gorea 1 ASR EE eT Wm. Hummel ___________| Louis S. Maguire... .. Archibald Mackirdy______ M.M.Fottlon.--.-Jom M: Birch... TR OT i a a W.Haddoele.. =... H. A. Shackelford ...... | Hiram: D. Bennett ___ ____ Walter S. Williams______. Edward Camphausen_ ____ Robt. O’N. Wickersham__| Thomas J. McLain, jr____| Samuel P..Saunders__ Alex. J. OGCrady ......... Henry B. Hughes... _.. Jasper Smith... ..... Herbert Davy... Henry E. Stokes... Robert BR. Call... Frederick Bandinel._____. W.E.Morean ...__.._.. Wm. FE. Heard. ___..... Albert N. Hatheway _____ AlexanderVial __ W.F. Snyder... G. Steadman Williams __ __ William T. Cartwright____ William], Black... S..Dunkelsbiibler 3 Joaquin Sanchez............. Beckford Mackey. ______ G.L.Moyer.\.__...._. Thomas E. Heenan ______ John H. Volkmann____.__ Christian Nielson William Stuve D. R. Barrett Peter S. Reid * Benjamin A. Courcelle ___ Charles Carbould____.___ Thomas R. Jernigan _____ ¥.]. H. Nienstead._.____ A.J-Neutsz.... .... Thomas W. Hotchkiss____ Ed. King John Hl. Bromley Alfred H. Eilbracht______ Matthew Hunkin ________ Philip. Carroll ....conwene-C.Gologann Ernesto Canut Rank. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Acting consular agent. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Vice-commercial agent. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consvlar agent. Do. Do. Commercial agent. Vice-commercial agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Commercial agent. Vice-commercial agent. Consular agent. Do. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Consul-general. Vice-consul-general. 174 Congressional Directory. Consular offices. Consular officers. Rank. Para, Brazil. cov on on. >. Robert: T. Clayton. __.__ Consul. OE Richard ¥. Sears... Vice-consul. Paramaribo, DutchhGuiana Lo eae Consul. Do... .. CREEas Henry. Barnett... Vice-consul. Paris, Oniario ooo0. William R. Welch. _____. Consular agent. Paris, Bramee’, 00s... George Walker... ..... Consul-general. Do; Soiree.aang Robert M. Hooper. ...._. Vice and dep. con. 0 gen, Ho Er lr i SA Ee SB) Edward P. Mclean. ___._ Deputy consul-general. Parsboro’, Nova Scotia...ae Charles W. Young... _. Consular agent. Paso del Norte, Mexico... cco J. Harvey Brigham ........ Consul. : yin RL BarkerBumelli-Vice-consul. Paspebiac, Quebec. cio...fiiiou Consular agent. o.oo 700 VSL Patras, Greece. li... Edward Hancock________ Consul. Oh aN Frederick B. Wood ______ Vice-consul. Paw, France 2. aio... JMortig Post... Consular agent. Paysandu, Uruguay .. i... 7G. Hufnagle........... Do. ._......._ Payta, Pere. Lo 4 no xo in R.M.Columbus_...._... Do. Penang, India. .._............... Emil Huttenbach ......... Do. Penedoy Brazil. 0 Lil Lulz.Craveces, So... Do. Pernambuco, Brazil......_....: Henry 1. Atherion ...... ... Consul. .. {rl SRL TR a SOE Horace W. Forster ______ Vice-consul. Pesth, Hungary Henry Sterne... ..... Consul. Do Louis Gerster...-Vice-consul. Petit Gove, Hayii c= EaMerantie,. ...0. Consular agent. Philipopolis, Turkey Do. Picton, Ontario. i if.) oa Do. Pictou, Nova Scotia Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Bo nana dun oo on Vice-consul. Pirzeus, Greece Consular agent. PlurgyPeru. | ois 20 oo Do. Plymouth, England Consul. Do Vice-consul. Point de® Galle, India Consular agent. Point Levi: vd wile. ooo0 Ponce, Porto Rico:_. James B, Finlay . scouian. Port Antonio, Jamaica, W. I Peter A-Moodie........... Port Arthur, B. N. A Andrew A. Wylie... . Port au Prince, Hayti John E. W. Thompson ___ Consul-general. Do John B..Terres...........u.-Vice-consul-general. Port de Paix, Hayti__ HugoKainer .........0 Consular agent. Porto Alegre, Brazil oo... L.l0 A Edward ........-Do. Portof Marbells, Spain...:.. MigueliCalzado ............. Do. Port Elizabeth, South Africa John W. Philip... ae... Do. Port Hastings, Nova Scotia _________ W.M. Clowsh ........cic Do. Port Hawksbury and Mulgrave, N. S__ Alexander Bain .....-.... Do. Port Hope, Ontario JC. Dutcher tune Commercial agent. D John T. Montgomery_____ Vice-commercial agent. Port Joggins, Nova Scotia William Moffat .._......_... Consular agent. Port Limon, Costa Rica Do. Port Louis, Mauritius Consul. Vice-consul. Port-Mahon, Spain_o0 0.0 Consular agent. Port Morant, West Indies Do. Port Natal, South Africa Do. Porto Alegre, Brazil Do. Port Rowan, Ontario Commercial agent. Vice-commercial agent, Port Said, Boypt. ooo oo.l__ Consular agent. Port Sarnia, Ontario Consul. Charles B. Johnston Vice and deputy consul. i Porismouthy _ E. Consular England... C. McCheane agent. Portsmouth, West Indies Consular agent. Consuls and Consulates. Consular offices. Consular officers. Port Surly Falkland Islands ______ Hewy' So Tasarc coo CE a A Rn SEH C. Montague Dean ______| Port Sess and St. Thomas, Ontario_| Allen Francis ___________ William 'H, King... Potton, Oniagio oe ie Dorman .......... Shit:one Julins'S. Pozzwol, lialy 0 on0 0 Prague, Austria i. J. 0...lo] Charles Tonos... ..v con William Hilning ___.____ William C. Hall... James Buckley o-oo. Progresso, Mexico... ic Aguero... . i. Alfredo Puerto Cabello, Venezuela __________ David N.Burke oo... 1B sem LL Cl ee DT a Richard'Kelster. ....-... Puerto Cortez, Honduras o_o. Puerto Plata, San Domingo _________ Thomas Simpson________ DBs fe ni Sg William Lithgow ________ Pugwash and Wallace, Nova Scotia._ TE Seltere oonrio h Punta Arenas, Costa Rica Ere LnisTlernondez Quebec, Canada. 5... oo. 0a. Robert McD. Stocking ___ Raalune, New Britain _____________ George Bl. Stuart... Rabat, Meroccof fai don a Moses Bentay_ 01.__ Rangoon, Buormah_______ _.._...... Redditch, England. _.__. .._. H. C. Browning Reichenberg, Austria..._.. Jom B. Hawes... .... BY Rl CE Gustav Herrmann _______ Rennes, France, “0 ire oo edo Charles D. Huret:. Revel, Bussiare toi ool neni ii Eovon'Glebm oo. Rheims, France: co cne ial Fl. Keedy = nonin Samuel Frank Jaunay Riga, Russia} oo. coal Niels P. A. Bornholdt Rio de jeans, Bragil. wise i300 HH. Cloy Armstrong... Jom Br Miller 20 Rule Letcher _ Do Wm. August Prelle ; Rode Rio Hacha, UU. S.iColombia_~__ :.__ George N. Tllidge . ...... Ritzetiittel and Cuxhaven, Germany__ Heinrich Ténnies......... Rodi, Italy. ° LC T.idel'Giudiee .......... RARERTS Rome jltaly ldo cannes Charles Bistrop. 2 WillistE. Baker = = _ Augustus M. Barne Soe Rostoff and Taganrog, Russia _______ Jom Martin... ooo Rotterdam, Netherlands ____________ Richard Stockton... ..._.. John Visser . Coetr Phot 1h C. Powell __ Wm. C. Burchard. Philip S. Burchard Henry Stephenson Rutschuk, Tokay ena Saf, Morocco. ond ier “Jacob Benzacar___ Daniel M. Mullen Do Anthony Someillau ______ Sal, Cape Verde Islands... .... YJ]. Vera Cruz. Salonica, Turkey ol 0 aa PH. Lazaro ____ Salt Cay, WestiIndles. ....._...... Saltillo, Mexleo ater ln oo oi Jean M. Villain __ Edward G. Taylor Rank. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-commercial agent. Consular agent. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Acting consular agent. Consular agent. Do. Commercial agent. Vice commercial agent. Consular agent. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Consul-general. Vice consul-general. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Do. Consul-general. Vice and deputy con. gen. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Acting consular agent. Commercial agent. Vice-commercial agent. Consular agent. Consular agent. Do. Consul. Commercial agent. Vice-commercial agent, Consular agent. £76 Congressional Directory. Consular offices. Consular officers. Rank. San Benito, Mexico San Blas, Mexico San José and Cape St. Lucas, Mexico. San José de Gautemala............... San Juan de los Remedios, Cuba 10 EO Rn i a Uae San Juan del Sur, Nicaragua ________ Ban Juan, Porto Rico,u-.....eeic San Pedro Sula, Honduras SanRemoyltaly oo -oo 5 Santa Crnz, Cabs. ise ooo. Santa Cruz Point, Mexico Santa Cruz, West Indies..._ Santa Martha, U. S. of Colombia San Salvador San Sebastian, Spain Bander) Spain Savannah la Mar, West Indies -—————— Schiedam, Netherlands Scilly Islands, England Seonl, Corea... is Seville, Spain. oon i 00 Ll i Setubal, Portugal Shanghai, China Do Silvas Nova Scotia Sherbrooke, Quebec Do Sidon, Syria" Cie i Sierra Leone, West Africa Sivas, Turkey Sligo, lrelend. oc; Smyrna, Turkey Do Soderhamn, Sweden Sonneberg, Germany D -——— = = y= James W. Stephens Y.r.C.Henckel. Henry C.C. Astwood _. William A. Reed ___..__. J. Richard Wingfield William Bradway.________ Abraham Kurnitzky John Stuart Jemes 1. Springer. ...__ William A. Brown Edward Conroy Andres Crosas Albert Ameglio John C. Henke Gonrad Cloetta_...____.. Joseph L. Taylor Mul. Miers... Louis J. Du Pré José M. de Brunet Clodoniro Perez Modesto Pineiro Henry Pease. =. José P.. Borjas... ___._._ Otto E. Reimer Ci ks Dieta William B. Coty Ya Charles S. Farquharson Louis P. Hoener John Banfeld, yr... Hugh A. Dinsmore Samuel B. Caldwell Joaquim T. O’Neil John D. Kennedy Joni. Colley ............ Benjamin Folsom._______ Frederick F. Hibbert N. W. White _| S.aAbelacd i. cea. Judson A. Lewis Julian M. Burnett LR. Black, jr... Adolph G. Studer John Anderson...i: _ Henry M. Jewett Jobnfigne.. -Wm. C. Emmet Ezra J. Davee Pehr Sundh Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Commercial agent. Vice-commercial agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Do. Do. Do. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Consul-general. Consular agent. Do. Consul-general. Vice-consul-general. Deputy consul-general, Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. | Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Consuls and Consulates. 177 Consular offices. Consular officers. Rank. 1 Scerabaya, Java ._ ooo...ol. ad W. AZ. Rupé.......... Consular agent. Sorel, shes CIN be vedi na BP se seams Commercial agent. ] Souris, Do. iioisiduaa oleh Prince Edward Island _______ BaPelletier. coe. Caleb C. Carlton. ........... Vice and Consular dep. com. agent. agt. Southampton, England... oneal ationLL 00 Consul. i ! 40 St. St. St. Do. asia iblah...oonnseis Ann’s Bay, West Todies 0 Andrews, New Brunswick _______ Bartholomew, ‘West Indies... John H. Cooksey ......_.. Michael Solomons _______ Geo. F. Stickney _____.___ R. Burton Dinzey _______ Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Commercial agent. | 12 Ea Tie 1% § SEENIa J. Oscar Florandin_______ Vice-commercial agent. St. Catharines, Ontario... _.... Leonard H. Collard __.___.._ Consular agent. i St. Christopher,;West Indies ..__..__ Emile S. Delisle... Commercial agent. 1 St. Denis, Isle of Réunion__________ Anatole Langlois ________ Do. } Doi itbitihiitan cininnns Alcide Baran ......ccn oe Vice-commercial agent. ; St. Etienne, Frangesean oo. _....-. Daniel Coleman.______._.._ Commercial agent. i Po. eet a We Robert H. Thach........... Vice-commercial agent. { , St. Bustatins, West Indies ...........| GeorgeiDoyle . ........... Consular agent. | St. Galle, Switzerland ______________ Peter:Siaubas =... Consul. : Do. tiiiidein nisins IL. Dreftamer.....-._... Vice and deputy consul. St. George, Azores... fio iCordoza cues Consular agent. i St. George, New Brunswick _______. Hugh Tudpate .._....... Do. | " St. George's, Berramda coloni aan Commercial agent. |ER KT Ce al James A. Atwood _______. Vice-commercial agent. | : St. Helena (Islmdiofy. oc ccuacs James A. MacKnight_____ Consul. Do Ea sine Thomas E. Fowler. _.___._ Vice-consul. | St. St. Helen's, England... ...._.L Hyacinthe, Quebec... .....o...-- JomHammill_........... William T. Mitchell _____ Consular agent. Commercial agent. ~y St. HE eile tn RIE 8 A John, New Brunswick. _.____.__.._ gFrancis Bartels ......... James Murray. __________ Vice-commercial Consul. agent. | | : {yi TE SS $John Donaghy ........... Vice-consul. St. John’s, Newfoundland ________.___ Thomas N. Molloy_______ Consul. | | | St. IBLE Jos, eR) Quebec i. .._... Wm. L. Donnelly _______ Alexander Bertrand ______ Vice-consul. Consul. Do ee i ie il Albert: E. Simpson... Vice and deputy consul. St. Lucia, West Indies ___.._........0 William Peter... ........ Consular agent. St. Malo, Framce 0. oe aa Raymond Moulton_______ Do. St Mare, Toyth ws Jun. loocois Tvanlloyd:..._ ....... Vice-commercial agent. St. Martin, West Indies ________. D..C.VanRomondt.._..._. Consul. Doargsssnliindoo. in YewisH. Percival .._..___ Vice-consul. St. Michael'sjiAzores.. .___... Richard Seemann________ Consular agent. St. Nazaire, France... _._.... Henry PiSutton_......... Do. St. Paul de Loando, West Africa. BT LLAE nd 0 Edward Lic Bannister _______ Consul. Acting vice-consuv’ St. Pierre, Miquelon... coca JoPiPrecker............ Commercial agent. Do. .¥ oo... William F. McLaughlin. __| Vice-commercial agent. | St. Petersburg; Russia. co. Pierce M. B. Young__.__. Consul-general. : : St. BI TEASSC Stephen, New Brunswick. ________ George O. Prince.......... Willis VaiPateh. ........ Vice consul-general. Consul. | v St. Do. Thomas, -till naanaa West Indies ___________ Willard B. King... Mortimer A. Turner______ Vice and Consul. deputy consul. - St. St. Po sl ude amt LL ni Vincent, Cape Verde Islands _____ Vincent, WestiIndies............... Joseph Ridgeway, jr ____. John Randall, jr_________ William E. Hughes ______ Vice-consul. Consular agent. 2 Do, Stonbride: QuebeCr.. ........7 1 Herbert F. Bricham....... Commercial ageit. ) ane ons al AGE Ree G. M. Hastings... Viceand dep. com. agent, Soli s te, Prince Edward Island] Samuel H.Brown________ Consular agent. ! Stanstead, Quebec... i....... = Horace S. Haskell _______ Consular agent. Stavanger, Norway... coven. Thomas Falek. +...a. Dec. | Stetiin, Germanys...ol. Andrew FEiVay....... ... Consul. Po suso isis.iia. Julius Ditimer............... Vice and deputy consul, | Stockholm, Sweden... -...._. NereA.Eliwing. .... .... Consul. \ Bs En ee BB ts Gustaf S. Arfwidson _.... Vice-consul, ¢ 2D ED——12 - 178 Congressional Directory. Consular offices. Consular officers. Rank. Stratford, Ontarieos. oi.= 5g Stutigart, Germany ...........ouconca-Boas. Lotaanniys Loony Suez, Boyt ns nnn ont etaanc Summerside, Prince Edward Island __ Sunderland, England... _...._... Sundsvall, Sweden... =: i Sutton, Quebec. olive nnn Swansea, Wales...aso Swatow, China. soca sic Sydney, New South Wales. _________ BI PA EO Sydney, Nova Scotia... ..... Syra, Greece uuuniincna ennnsoun Syracuse, aly... cuit... oi Tahitl, Society Islands... ............ Te sphSL Tamsui and Keelung, China_________ Tangier, Morocco. cool...Labs Tarragons, Spal eov core nan aa... Tegucigalpa, Honduras.._............. Do... coca Wel de Tehuantepec and Salina Cruz, Mexico Teneriffe, Canary Islands ___________ EE ER a Terceira, Azores... oul lox Terranova, Maly ooo... Tetouan, North Africa... Three Rivers, Quebec Torrevieln, Spain.cccencn nnc no Towlon, Brance... Loui ili Townsville, New South Wales ______ Trapani, Waly. cucavnndi inns ows on Trebizond, Turkey. veeranne Trieste; Austria oo. a = —— Tripoli, Syrimeoocon oa Truxillo, Honduras Truxillo, Peru fPumbez Pern. Loos GL Tunstall, England Do Turin, Ttaly Tuxpan, Mexico”... J:iS~ Benedict... ......... Charles P. Kimball ______ M. Minotto...........cwvuene Finlay McNeill... ..... JamesiHoman............... Per A. A. Liljeqvist....... Melville B. Marsh ______._ J.-A. Thomas ............ JE. Burchell. ...........; Basil Padova... NaStalan es ooo James J. Young ....._ .... John F. Van Ingen John P.Campbell ..__.____ Richard M. Whitney _____ William R. Greathouse Neill E. Pressly . .......... T..G.Gowland _.._.__..._. Daniel W. Herring .____. George Bernard ._.___._.. L.Spencer Pratt... ..... Alfred B. Ketin Albert Langner. .______. Harrison B. McKay______ Philibert Lallier .____.__. Henrique de Castro _____. Antonias Nocera_________ Judah S.Levy........... James M. Rosse __..._._.. Alexander Houliston _____ Enoch J. Smithers ........ William N. Pethick..____. Charles W. Wagner______ C. A. Hirschielder _. Ceferino Talavera Jean Baptiste Marengo____ Henry W. Gilbert ______. Moses H. Sawyer____.__. Thomas M. Field _______. José P. y Magdaleno _____ Iralawis___._....... . Manuel J. Izagiurre ._____ Edward Gottfried________ Jacob Schoenhof..._...... Fredric W. Tomkinson____ St. Leger A. Touhay ..__. NW. Sawyer. ....... ... ohn W. Darrell John Drayton Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Deputy consul. Consul. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Do. Do. Do. Do. Do. Consul. * Vice-consul. Consular agent. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Consul. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul-general. Vice-consul-general. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Commercial agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. 8 - ARNE J is A XE av. | EC he Vice and deputy consul. Consular agent. Do. Do. * Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Consuls and Consulaies. : 179 L a Consular offices. Consular officers. Rank. Utila, Honduras. loo. Robert Woodville________ Consular agent. Valera, Venezuela, . ..............0 Adolph Reudtorff________ Do. Valparaiso, Chill mma naniuind James W. Romeyn_______ cubic Consul. 1 eRLe August Moller, jr ________ Vice-consul. \ Vatomandry, Madagascar___________ Aima V. Laborde. __.__.. Consular agent. Venice, Walyee © = 00 © oh Henry A. Johnson _______ Consul. tyke Do.ar ee Franklin R.'Grist_______ Vice-consul. ¢ VeraCruz, Mexico...t5 JosephiD.iHoff _ ~__ _._.. Consul. eSESR Abel:G. Alexander_______ Vice-consul. Verviers and Liege, Belgium_____.__ Gilbert D. Robertson____._ Consul. 10 Ee en Adolph Mullender .______ Vice-consul. Vevey, Switzerland oo. fo... Phileppe Genton_________ Consular agent, Victoria, British Columbia __________ Robert]. Stevens... ....| Consul. Pela anton FdgarMorvin. oo Vice-consul. Viequez, Porto Rico! .......L...... laneGarben | i... Consular agent. Vienna, Austria Jo. 7. Edmund Jussen _________ Consul-general. Dol fe aig ee Qito-Maoassi 40 oo i Vice-consul-general. De rh a Walter B. Scaife______.___ Deputy consul-general. i Viso,Spain. i cocauil oon. Camilo Nelins_ =... Consular agent. i Vivero, lo. ln Musiiz =... Spain... ciaooo. Joaquin Do. : Wakopa, Manitoba, B. N. A_________ Clarence 'W. Williams____ Do. i} Wallaceburg, Ontario... cocoa Isaac G. Worden... Commercial agent. Walton, NovaiSeotia. i... -BdwiniShaw: J... Consular agent. : Warsaw, Russias Loca Lu 0 00 Joseph Rawiecz. Consul. : Waterford, Trelond oe.or William H. Farrell. ______| Consular agent. Waterloo, Quebec oi oii Athur'S. Newell... .____ cio Do. b Waubaushene, Ontario _____________ Charles P. Fisher ___.____ Do. X Wellington, New Zealand _______.__ W.H.levin ..o......: Do. a Weymouth, England... __.. __ _. William Smith... .....-3 Do. "Sh Whithy, Ontario. cou oo George B. Yule... ..... Do. £ Windsor, Nova. Scotia... ........._.. Edward Young...3 Consul |B ei Ce Ta Charles E. Hobart... Vice and dep. consul. Windsor, Ontario... io John Devine: -._. Consul. Doge ciasloion. tun. Thomas A. Bonte Cana Vice-consul. Winnipeg, Manitoba, B. N. A_______ James W. Taylor _.__.3 Consul. { RE I Ee Se IR Sa | Vice-consul. ] Woodstock, N.B. oo to 00 i Walter T. Townshend____| Commercial agent. 0 ER Cn LR aE i Robert B. Sloat... .... Vice-commercial agent. Wolfville, Nova Scotia _____________ John W. Hamilton_______ Consular agent. 5 Wolverhampton, Fuglend..FORA JolmNewe. oo cL i Do. i Wybore, Russia...0: IndwigPacius 2. =. Do. Yarmouth, Nova Scotia________ Sak William H. Robertson____|{ Commercial agent. . Desi Robert S. Eakins ____..._. Vice-commercial agent \ Yuscaran, Honduras)... Jacob P. Imboden _______ Consul. : Zanzibar, Bast Africa.. ~vi Seth A Bratt... . 0.00 vi Boy 4 enc Se SR See Wi 15 RCTS ie a ae Vice-consul. i Zante, Greece......can-m-Sleiinn 2 Ail. Crowe... .... 0. Consular agent, i Zaza, Cuba... mnt tn ies Sinesio Ballesta _________ Do. Zurich, Switzerlond._ -.-; George L. Callin... _% Consul. Do. il. nade Ed. von Orelll ...... _..: Vice-consul. i |B rn ERR William Schneider_______ Deputy consul. kJ CONSULAR CLERKS, Authorized by the act of Congress approved June 20, 1864. Josu A. Sprimger_i oul ool Havana. George Puch Vest -oo cob Lyons. Chas. F. = =. Paris. William P. Tilghman... __:__.___ Thition..o%e Berlin. | Ed P. Maclean [nt oo... Paris. Ath H-Marks. 2 London. | Chorles M. Wood... .._..._. Rome. Horatio G-Wood...uo 7 Cairo George H. Seidmore.... ...... Kanagawa. | George H. Murphy ____________ Chemnitz. | Somel P.Brown__ io Bordeaux. Arthur W. Richardson _________ Honolulu. St. legerA. Touhay_ _.. __..__: Turin 180 Congressional Directory. THE DISTRICT GOVERNMENT. " COMMISSIONERS. : President.—William B. Webb, 18coF street, N. W. Samuel E. Wheatley, 1314 Thirtieth street, N. W. Colonel William Ludlow, U. S. A., Metropolitan Club. Secretary.— William Tindall, corner Oakland avenue and Connecticut avenue extended. Clerks.—James Campbell, 946 S street, N. W. Roger Williams, 18 Third street, N. W. = Frank H. Loving, 609 H street, N. W. : ga THE DISTRICT OFFICERS. Assistants to Engineer Commissioner. —Capt. Thomas W. Symons, 1727 De Sales street, Capt. Eugene Griffin, 2401 Pennsylvania avenue. Attorney. —A. G. Riddle, 1116 Thirteenth street, N. W.; office, 460 Louisiana avenue. Collector of Taxes.—John F. Cook, 1005 Sixteenth street, N. W. : Assessor—Robert P. Dodge, 1534 Twenty-eighth street, West Washington. Auditor—1. S. Tichenor, 1311 M street, N. W. Coroner.—De Witt C. Patterson, M. D., 919 I street, N. W. Surveyor.— William Forsyth, 1707 G street, N. W. Inspector of Buildings.— Thomas B. Entwisle, 3267 N street, N. W. THE POLICE COURT. : : Judge.—William B. Snell, 941 K street, N. W. Cierk.—Howard L. Prince, 419 Spruce street, Le Droit Park. Deputy —Joseph Harper, 113 Third street, N. E. | Assistant U. S. Attorney.—Fleming J. Lavender, 915 New York avenue, N. W. Special Assistant Attorney for D. C—]J. E. Padgett, 468 Louisiana avenue. Messenger.—N. C. Harper, 113 Third street, N. E. THE METROPOLITAN POLICE. Major and Superintendent.— William G. Moore, 1710 L street, N. W, Captain and Inspector. —M. A. Austin, 1251 Fourth street, N. W. Secretary and Property Clerke.—Richard Sylvester, 1313 Wallach Place. ES Clerk.—]. Arthur Kemp, 229 Tenth street, N. E. Folice Surgeons—Dr. S.A. H. McKim, corner Fifth and A streets, S. E.; Dr. G. L. Magruder, 815 Vermont avenue; C. H. A. Kleinschmidt, 3113 N street, N. W.; and J. W. Bayne, 116 Second street, S. E. : Sanitary Officer.—D. H. Teeple, 609 Tenth street, N. E. Hack Inspector —M. W. Quinlan, 814 Delaware avenue, N. E. Officer of Humane Society—C. W. O’ Neill. Police Headquarters.—501 D street, N. W. J. A. Swindells, Chief of Detectives. Station Houses.— First precingt, E street, between Four-and-a-half and Sixth streets, S. W.; Lieut. T. B. Amis. Second precinct, U street, between Ninth street and Vermont avenue, N. W.; Lieut. A. Greer. Third precinct, High street, Georgetown; Lieut. J. F. Guy. Fourth precinct, K street, between Twentieth and Twenty-first streets, N. W. ; Lieut. C. R. Vernon. Fifth precinct, Twelfth street, between C and D streets, N. W.; Lieut. J. E. Boteler. Sixth precinct, Fifth street, between M and N streets, N. W.; Lieut. J. F. Kelly. Seventh precinct, New Jersey avenue, between D and E streets, N. W.; Lieut. H. K. Redway. Eighth precinct, South Carolina ave., between Fifth and Sixth streets, S. E.; Lieut. J. E. Boteler. THE FIRE DEPARTMENT. Chief Engineer.—Joseph Parris, 1129 Nineteenth street, N. W. bo Assistant Chief Engineer (acting).—Louis P. Lowe, corner Twenty-sixth and N streets. § Assistant Chief Engineer (acting). —John F. Maddox, Truck A. Secretary. —Smith Thompson, jr., 1405 H street, N. W. Fire Marshal—Wm. O. Drew, 1337 Thirtieth street, N. W. Engine House—No. 1, K, between Sixteenth and Seventeenth streets, N. W.* No. 2, D, near Twelfth street, N. W. No. 3, Delaware avenue and C streets, N. I. : No. 4, Virginia avenue, between IFour-and-a-half and Sixth streets, S. W. No. 5, High street, High street, near Bridge, West Washington. No. 6, Massachusetts avenue, between Fourth and Fifth streets, N. W. No. 7, R street, between Ninth and Tenth streets, N. W. dh Truck A, North Capitol, near C street, N. E. Truck B, New Hampshire avenue and M street, N. W. Five-Alarm Stations. 18x THE FIRE-ALARM TELEGRAPH. [J First 12 . Second and D streets, N. W, 13. Second and B streets, N. W. 14. Third and G streets, N. W. 15. Mass. av. bet. 4th and 5th sts., N. W. 16. Sixth and B (B. and P. depot) Sts. N. W. “37. 4% et. Pa. av. and C st, N. W. 18. Pa. av. between 3d and 4 sts. N. W. 19. Police station, 1st and F sts., N. «WW. 121. Headquarters, Fifth and D. 123. Sixth and G streets, N. W. 124. Seventh and Louisiana avenue, N. W. 125. Seventh and E streets, N. W. 126. General post-office. 127. Sevenih and I streets, N. W. 129. Ninth and D streets, N. W. 131. Ninth and F streets, N. W. 132. Ninth and H streets, N. W. Second 21. New Jersey av. and K street, N. W. 23. Fourth st. and New York av., N. W. 24. Fourth and O streets, N. W. 25. Sixth st. and New York avenue, N. W. 26. Fifth and N streets, N. W. 27. Fifth st. and Rhode Island av., N. W. 212. Seventh and M streets, N. W, 213. Seventh and R streets, N. W. 214. Seventh and Boundary streets, N. W. 215. Ninth and L streets, N. W. 216. Tenth and N streets, N. W. 217. Ninth and P streets, N. W. 218. Police W bet. gth and 10th, N. station, W. 219. Eng. House No. 7, R bt. gth & 10th, N.W. 236. Eleventh and O streets, N. W. Third 31. Seventeenth, bet. F and G streets, N. W. 32. G, between 17th and 18th streets, N. W. 34. K, between 16th and 17th’streets, N. W. 35. Sixteenth and M streets, N. W. 36. Nineteenth and F streets, N. W. 37. Nineteenth st. and Penn. ave., N. W. 38. Police station, K, near 20th street, N.W. 39. Nineteenth and L streets, N. W. 312. Twenty-second and E streets, N. W. Fourth 41. Maryland avenue and 4% street, S. W. 42. Virginia ave., bet. 414 and 6th sts., S. W. 43. Four-and-a-half and H streets, S. W. 45. Four-and-a-half and N streets, S. W. 46. Arsenal guard-house. 47. Police station, E, near 424 street, S. W. 412. Seventh street and Maryland ave., S. W. 413. Seventh and F streets, S. W. 415. Seventh and K streets, S. W. 416. Twelfth and Water streets, S. W. Fifth 51. U.S. Coast Survey, N. J. avenue, S. E. 52. Second and East Capitol streets, S. E. 53. Second and C streets, S. E. 54. Third and L streets, S. E. 56. Police Station, Fifth and S.C.ave., S. E. 57. Fifth and I streets, S. E. 512. Seventh and East Capitol streets, S. E. 513. Seventh and Pennsylvania avenue, S. E. 514. Navy-yard gate, S. E. District. 134. Medical Museum, oth street, N. W. 135. Eleventh andG streets, N. Ww. 136. Twelfth and L streets, N. Ww. 137. Cor. 1oth and New York ave., N. W. | 141. Pension Office, Pa. av. and 21st st. 142. Thirteenth and F streets, N. W. | 143. Thirteenth and I streets, N. W. 145. Ebbitt House. 146. Riggs House. 147. Fifteenth and I streets, N. W. 148. Fourteenth and Vermont av., N. W. 149. L bet. 15th and 16th streets, N. W. 151. D bet. 12th and 13th streets, N. W. 152. Tenth and C streets, N. W. 153. Thirteenth and B streets, N. W. 154. Fifteenth and E streets, N. W. District. 237. Twelfth and Q streets, N. W. 238. Twelfth and S streets, N. W. | 239. Twelfth and V streets, N. W. | 241. Fourteenth st. and R. I. av., N. W. 243. Fourteenth and Corcoran streets, N. W, 245. Fourteenth and U streets, N. W. 246. Fourteenth and Boundary streets, N. W, 247. Sixteenth and P streets, N. W. 248. W bet. 12th and 13th streets, N. W. 249. Fifteenth near S street, N. W. 251. R bet. 16th and 17th streets, N. W. 253. Sixteenth and T streets, N. W. | 254. Nineteenth and R streets, N. W. | 256. Columbia road and Oakland avenue. 257. Fourteenth street, cor. of W street. District. | 314. Twenty-first and H streets, N. W. | 315. New Hampshire ave. and M sts., N. W. | 318. Cor M st. and Connecticut ave, N. W. 319. Twentieth and P streets, N. Ww. 321. Twenty-fourth and G streets, N. W. 324. Penn. ave., bet. 23d and 24th sts., N. W. | 325. United States Observatory. 327. Twenty-sixth and I streets, N. W, 328. Twenty-fifth and M streets, N. W. District. | 417. Fourteenth and C streets, S. W. | 421. National Museum. 423. Eleventh st. and Maryland ave., S. W. 425. C, between Second and Third sts., S. W. 426. First and N streets, S. W. | 427. Sixth, near M street, S. W. | 431. Thirteenth and C streets, S. W. 432. Fourteenth and B streets, S. W. | 435. Ninth and H streets, S. W. | 436. Tenth street and Virginia avenue, S. W, District. | 516. Third and B streets, S. E. 517. Third and D streets, S. E. 518. Eighth and G streets, S. E. 521. Eleventh and B streets, S. E. | 523. Eleventh and I streets, S. E. 524. Thirteenth and E streets, S. E. | 526. Eleventh and M streets, S. E. O | 527. Almshouse. 528. Insane Asylum. 182 Congressional Directory. Sixth District. 61. No. 3. Eng. H., Del. ave. and Csts., N. E. | 621. Tenth and H Streets, N. E. 62. Government Printing Office. 623. North Capitol and F streets, N. E. 63. Delaware avenue and K street, N. E. 625. North Capitol and P streets, N. E. 64. Deaf and Dumb Asylum. 627. Eighth and Maryland avenue, N. E. 65. TruckA House, North Capitol st., N. E. | 628. 14th and H streets, N. E. 67. H, between Second and Third sts., N. E. | 631. Sixth and A streets, N. E. 68. Fifth and L streets, N. E. 632. Ninth and A streets, N. E. 612. Fourth and C streets, N. E. 634. Eleventh and B streets, N. E. a. 613. Sixth and H streets, N. E. Seventh District. 71. Thirtieth and M sts., W. Washington. 714. Thirty-first and O streets, W. Wash. 72. Thirty-eighth and O sts., W. Wash, 721. No. 5 Engine, M near 32d, W. Wash. 73. Thirty-second and Q sts., W. Wash. 731. Thirtieth and K streets, W. Wash. 76. Industrial Home School, W. Wash. 732. Water and Potomac streets, W. Wash. 712. Thirty-fourth and O streets, W. Wash. 735. P street car stables, West Washington. 713. Frederic and Seventh sts., W. Wash. THE HEALTH DEPARTMENT. (Office, Department Building, 503 D street, N. W.) qi Health Officer.—Smith Townshend, M. D., 221 Four-and-a-half street, N, W. Chief Clerk.—]J. C. McGinn, 225 Four-and-a-half street, N. W. | Sanitary Inspectors—W. A. Short, 720 Thirteenth street, N. W. E. H. Hume, 225 North Capitol street. Thomas M. Shepherd, 609 Sixth street, N. W. | C. H. Welch, 3316 N street, N. W. | A. J. Heird, Brightwood, D. C. | B. G. Pool, 1422 Eleventh street, N. W. Food Inspectors—W. B. Moore, 126 Eleventh street, S. E. i 1 J. R. Mothershead, 926 C street, N. W. | 1 Inspector of Marine Products.—Gwynn Harris, 218 Eighth street, S. W. Pound Master.—Samuel Einstein, 221 Four-and-a-half street. : | Physicians to the Poor—R. A. Pyles, Anacostia, D. C. Henry Darling, Brightwood, D. C. C. R. Collins, 1005 Ninth street, N, W. J. H. Yarnall, 3120 N street, N. W. | : R. A. Neale, 1909 Pennsylvania avenue N. W. Ii D. P. Hickling, 221 Third street, N. W. i Louis K. Beatty, 610 East Capitol street. R. T. Holden, 802 Sixth street, S. W. J. K. P. Gleeson, 1316 R street, N. W. | W. E. Handy, 300 A street, S. E. Charles F. Goodell, g2o B street, S. W. | I PLACES OF AMUSEMENT. | New National Theatre—E street, between Thirteenth and Fourteenth streets. | Ford’s Opera House—Ninth street, below Pennsylvania avenue. i Washington Theatre Comigque—Eleventh street west and C street north. iA | Odd-Fellows’ Hall.—Seventh street west, between D and E streets north. hd Masonic Hall. —Corner F street north and Ninth street west. 1 Willard Hall—TF street, rear of Willard’s Hotel. “ Talmadge Hall —TF street, between Ninth and Tenth streets. Knights of Honor Hall—Corner of Ninth and F streets. : Albaugh’s Opera House—Fifteenth street, between Pennsylvania avenue and D street. | District Courts— Benevolent Institutions. 183 THE DISTRICT JUDICIARY. 3 SUPREME COURT OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA. CRIMINAL COURT—DISTRICT COURT—COMMON-LAW COURT——EQUITY COURT. Chief-Justice David K. Cartter, 1505 IH street, N. W. Associate Justice Arthur MacArthur, 1201 N street, N. W. Associate Justice Alexander B. Hagner, 1818 H street, N. W. Associate Justice Walter S. Cox, 1636 I street, N. W. Associate Justice Charles P. James, 1824 Massachusetts avenue. Associate Justice William M. Merrick, 1716 N street, N. W. Clerk—R. J. Meigs, 302 New Jersey avenue, S. E. , DISTRICT ATTORNEY’S OFFICE. U. S. District Attorney.—Aug. S. Worthington, 2015 Massachusetts avenue, N. W. Assistant U. S. Dist. Att.—Hugh T. Taggart, 3249 N street, N. W. Assistant U. S. Dist. Att—Randolph Coyle, 2803 Q street, N. W. Assistant U. S. Dist. A¢#t.—Fleming J. Lavender, 915 New York avenue, N. W. UNITED STATES MARSHAL’S OFFICE. United States Marshal.—Albert A. Wilson, 2000 G street, N. W. 0. S. Deputy Marshal—G. W. Phillips, No. 2 Cook Terrace, Georgetown. REGISTER OF WILLS’ OFFICE. Register of Wills—Dorsey Clagett, 1911 N street, N. W. Assistant. —M. J. Griffith, 1401 Fifth street, N. Ww. RECORDER’S OFFICE, Recorder of Deeds.—]ames C. Matthews, 2119 K street, N. W. BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS Children’s Hospital, Thirteenth and W streets, N. W. Columbia Hospital for Women, Pennsylvania avenue and Twenty-fourth street, N. W. Columbia Institution for the Deaf and Dumb, at Kendall Green. Emergency Hospital and Free Dispensary, Tenth street near D, N. W. Epiphany Church Home, H near Thirteenth street, N. W. Freedman’s Hospital, Seventh street near Boundary, NW. Garfield Memorial Hospital, Fourteenth street and Boundary, N. W. German Orphan Asylum, Good Hope road. Home for the Aged, Third and H streets, N. E. Home for Destitute Colored Women and Children, Fighth street and’ Boundary, N. W. Homeopathic Hospital, corner of N and second streets, N. W. Homeopathic Free Dispensary, corner of N and Second streets, N. W. Hospital for the Insane, on the banks of ‘the Eastern Branch. Industrial Home School, West Washington. Louise Home for reduced gentlewomen, Sixteenth street and Massachusetts avenue, N. Ww Providence Hospital, Second and D street, S. E. Reform School, about 3 miles northeast of the Capitol. Society for Prevention of Cruelty to Animals. St. Ann’s Infant Asylum, Twenty-fourth and K streets. N. W. St. John’s Male Orphan Asylum, Ninth and H streets, N. W. St. Vincent’s Female Orphan Asylum, Tenth and G streets, N. W, Washington City Orphan Asylum, S and Fourteenth streets, N. W. Women’s Christian Association, ¢ The Home,” Thirteenth street, between R and S streets. Woman’s Christian Temperance Union, Temple Hotel, Ninth street. 184 Congressional Directory. | THE SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION. Presiding officer, ex officio—GROVER CLEVELAND, President of the United States. Chancellor—Morrison R. Waite, Chief-Justice of the United States, 1415 I street. Secretary of the Institution.—Spencer F. Baird, 1445 Massachusetts avenue Assistant Secretary.—S. P. Langley, in charge of exchanges, publication, and library. Assistant Secretary.—]. Brown Goode, in charge of National Museum. Chief Clerk. —William J. Rhees, Spring street, near Fourteenth street, Mount Pleasant. Corresponding Clerk.—Daniel Leech, 2024 I street, N. W. Editor.—William B. Taylor, 306 C street, N. W. Accountant.—W. W. Karr, 1333 L street, N. W. Exchange Clerk.—G. H. Boehmer, 331 Seventh street, N. E. Executive Committee— James C. Welling, of: Washington. Henry Coppee, of Bethlehem, Pa. M. C. Meigs, of Washington, D. C. REGENTS OF THE INSTITUTION. Morrison R. Waite, Chief-Justice of the United States. Vice-President of the United States. J. S. Morrill, member of the Senate of the United States. Samuel B. Maxey, member of the Senate of the United States. S. M. Cullom, member of the Senate of the United States. 0. R. Singleton, member of the House of Representatives. W. L. Wilson, member of the House of Representatives. W. W. Phelps, member of the House of Representatives. Asa Gray, citizen of Massachusetts. (Cambridge.) Henry Coppée, citizen of Pennsylvania. (Bethlehem.) Noah Porter, citizen of Connecticut. (New Haven.) James C. Welling, citizen of Washington. M. C. Meigs, citizen of Washington. J. B. Angell, citizen of Michigan. (Ann Arbor.) MEMBERS EX OFFICIO OF THE INSTITUTION. ] Grover Cleveland, President of the United States. ; = Vice-President of the United States. . Morrison R. Waite, Chief-Justice of the United States. Thomas F. Bayard, Secretary of State. Daniel Manning, Secretary of the Treasury. William C. Endicott, Secretary of: War. | William C. Whitney, Secretary of the Navy. L. Q. C. Lamar, Secretary of the Interior. | William F. Vilas, Postmaster-General. Augustus H. Garland, Attorney-General. Martin B. Montgomery, Commissioner of Patents. THE NATIONAL MUSEUM. (Near the Smithsonian Institution.) Director —Spencer F. Baird, 1445 Massachusetts avenue. Assistant Director.—G. Brown Goode, Summit avenue, Lanier Heights. Curators.—Tarleton H. Bean, C. Bendire, H. G. Beyer, F. W. Clarke, J. W. Collins, W. H. Dall, F. P. Dewey, R. E. Earll, Romyn Hitchcock, W. H. Holmes, O. T. Mason, G. P. Merrill, Richard Rathbun, Charles Rau, Robert Ridgway, C. V. Riley, R. E. C. Stearns, F. W. True, L. F. Ward, Charles A. White, C. D. Walcott, J. E. Watkins, H. C. Yarrow. Librarian.—Frederick W. True, 1335 N street, N. W. : Chief Clerk. —W.V. Cox, 611 H street, N. W. Registrar.—S. C. Brown, 716 North Carolina avenue. Superintendent of Buildings—H. Horan, 319 C street, S. E. UNITED STATES FISH COMMISSION. (Office, 1443 Massachusetts avenue.) Commissioner.—Spencer F. Baird, 1445 Massachusetts avenue. Assistant Commissioner.—T. B. Ferguson, 2 Thomas Circle. Disbursing Clerk.—Herbert A. Gill, 1608 Q street, N. W. In Charge of Distribution.—Marshall McDonald, 1515 R street, N. W. Secretary.—Edward Hayes, 107 I street, N. W. Superintendent of Carp Ponds.—Rudolph Hessel, 1113 K street, N. W. ) = crm) 7 Scientific Institutions. THE CORCORAN GALLERY OF ART. BOARD OF TRUSTEES. ! i & : President.—]James C. Welling, President of Columbian University, 1302 Connecticut Vice-President.—Charles M. Matthews, 1403 Thirtieth street, West Washington. Secretary and 1reasurer.—Anthony Hyde, 1319 Thirtieth street, West Washington. J. C. McGuire, 614 E street, N. W. Spencer F. Baird, Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution. Edward Clark, Architect of the United States Capitol. Samuel H. Kauffmann, 1000 M street, N. W. Frederick B. McGuire, 614 E street. Walter S. Cox, Associate Judge of the Supreme Court D. C,, 1636 I street, N. W. avenue CURATOR. William MacLeod, 1223 Thirteenth street. ASSISTANT CURATOR AND LIBRARIAN. F. S. Barbarin, 1312 Thirty-first [ street, West Washington. THE WASHINGTON NATIONAL MONUMENT. THE WASHINGTON NATIONAL MONUMENT SOCIETY. - President, ex-officio.—Grover Cleveland, President of the United States. First Vice-President.—W. W. Corcoran, 1611 HH street, N. W. Second Vice-President.—Hon. Robert C. Winthrop, Boston, Massachusetts. Treasurer.~J. B. H. Smith, Baltimore, Maryland. Secretary.—Horatio King, 707 H street, N. W. Clerk—F. L. Harvey, jr., 1123 Seventeenth street, N. W. JOINT COMMISSION FOR THE COMPLETION OF THE WASHINGTON MONUMENT. President of the United States—Grover Cleveland. Supervising Architect of the Treasury Department.—M. E. Bell, 1338 Architect of the Capitol. —Edward Clark, 417 Fourth street, N. W. . Chief of Engineers of the U. S. Army. —Bvt. Maj. Gen. John Newton, First V. P. Washington Nat. Mon. So.—W. W. Corcoran (chairman), ° Vermont avenue. 920 Fourteenth st. 1123 Seventeenth st. ENGINEER OFFICE, JOINT COMMISSION FOR THE COMPLETION OF THE WASHINGTON MONUMENT. (612 Seventeenth street, N. W.) Engineer in Charge.—Col. Thos. Lincoln Casey, Corps of Assistant. —B. R. Green, 1738 N street, N. W Clerkes.—F. L. Harvey, jr., 1123 Seventeenth street, N. W. G. M. Thomas, 1316 I street, N. W. Engineers, 1419 K st., N. W. THE UNITED STATES NAVAL OBSERVATORY. (Twenty-third and E streets.) I= Superintendent.—Captain R. L. Phythian, at the Observatory. Assistant Superintendent —Commander Allan D. Brown, 1755 Q street, N. W. Clerk.—Thomas Harrison, 2723 N street, N. W. For a full list of officers see Navy Department. . 186 Congressional Directory. THE COLUMBIA INSTITUTION AND DUMB. FOR THE DEAF OFFICERS OF THE CORPORATION. Patron, ex officio.—~GROVER CLEVELAND, President of the United President.—Edward M. Gallaudet; Kendall Green. Secretary. —Robert C. Fox, 1018 Vermont avenue, N. W. Zreasurer.—Lewis J. Davis, 1411 Massachusetts avenue, N. W. States. : : % : DIRECTORS. Edward C. Walthall, Senator from Mississippi: J. Randolph Tucker, Representative from Virginia. Thomas Ryan, Representative from Kansas. Henry L. Dawes, citizen of Massachusetts. William E. Niblack, citizen of Indiana. Byron Sunderland, citizen of Washington. James C. McGuire, citizen of Washington. William W. Corcoran, citizen of Washington. William McKee Dunn, citizen of Washington. [In its educational work the institution is divided \ into two departments, as follows :] I. THE NATIONAL DEAF-MUTE COLLEGE. FACULTY: Edward M. Gallaudet, President, and Professor of Moral and Political Science. Samuel Porter, Emeritus Professor of Mental Science and English Philology. Edward A. Fay, Professor of History and Languages. John W. Chickering, jr., Professor of Natural Science. Joseph C. Gordon, Professor of Mathematics and Chemistry. J. Burton Hotchkiss, Assistant Professor of History and English. Amos G. Draper, Assistant Professor of Mathematics and Latin. John J. Chickering, Instructor in Gymnastics. Arthur D. Bryant, Instructor in Drawing. w II. THE KENDALL SCHOOL. Principal— James Denison. Assistant Instructors.—Melville Ballard. Mary T. G. Gordon Theodore! A: Kiesel. Sarah H. Porter. [in articulation]. OFFICERS OF THE DOMESTIC DEPARTMENT. John B. Wight, Supervisor. Alexander VY. P. Garnett, Attending Physician. Nathan S. Lincoln, Consulting Physician. Ellen Gordon, Matron. : Margaret Allen, Assistant Matron. Almon Bryant, Master of Shop. H. M. Van Ness, Steward. Visitors admitted on Thursdays. 3 = THE BUREAU OF ETHNOLOGY. (Office, in the Hooe Building, 1330 F street.) Director.—John W. Powell, g1o M street, N. W. Chief Clerk.—James C. Pilling, 918 M street, N. W. } ’ The Soldiers’ Home— The Washington Fress. : 18% nA THE SOLDIERS HOME. BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS. (Office 1704 G street.) President of the Board.—The General Commanding the Army. The Commissary-General of Subsistence, U. S. Army. The Adjutant-General, U. S. Army. The Judge-Advocate General, U. S. Army. The Quartermaster-General, U. S. Army, The Surgeon-General, U. S. Army. The Governor of the Soldiers’ Home. Clerk of the Board —Oliver W. Longan, 222 Eleventh street, N. E. OFFICERS OF THE HOME. (Residence at the Home.) Governor. —Brevet Major-General H. J. Hunt, U. S. Army (retired). Deputy Governor.—Captain R. Catlin, U. S. Army (retired). Secretary and Treasurer—~Brevet Major B. F. Rittenhouse, U. S. Army (retired). Attending Surgeon. —Brevet Lieut.-Col. Charles C. Byrne, U. S. Army. THE WASHINGTON PRESS. The American Interests, published weekly, room 17 Pacific Building. The American Orangeman, published monthly, 209 D street, N. W. The American Protestant, published monthly, 209 D street, N. W. 1/e Army and Navy List (Hudson’s), monthly, 1420 Pennsylvania avenue. Zhe Army and Navy Register, published weekly at 1420 Pennsylvania: avertue. The Capital, published every Sunday morning at 1420 Pennsylvania avenue. The Chronicle, published every Sunday morning at 432 Ninth street, N. W. The Court Record, published daily at 519 Seventh street, N. W. The Craftsman, published every Saturday morning at 505 D street, N. W. The Critic, published every afternoon, except Sunday, at 941 D street, N. W. The Gazette, published every Sunday morning at 935 D street, N. W. The Gazette of the Patent Qffice, published every Tuesday at the Patent-Office. The Hatchet, published every Sunday morning at 407 Tenth street, N. W. The Herald and National Intelligencer, published every Sunday at 409 Tenth street, N. W. The Law Reporter, published every Tuesday morning at 631 F street. The Mechanics’ (1. O. M.) Advocate, published monthly at 617 Massachusetts avenue, N. W. The National Free Press, every Wednesday and Sunday, 490 Louisiana avenue. The National Republican, every morning, except Sundays, corner Tenth and D streets. The National Tribune, published weekly at 1405 G street, N. W. The National View, published weekly at 207 Four-and-a-Half street, N. W. The Patent and Court Record, published monthly at the Le Droit Building, F street, N. W. The Pilgrim Press, published monthly at §29 Seventh street The Post, published every morning at the corner of Tenth and D streets. The Program, published daily at 632 D street, N. W. The Public Opinion, published every Saturday at goo Pennsylvania: avenue. The Republic, published every Sunday morning at 432 Ninth street, N. W. The Scientific Record, published at 604 F street, N. W. Ze Sentinel, published every Saturday at 516 Tenth street, N. W. The Star, published every afternoon, except Sundays, at 1101 Pennsylvania avenue. The: Temperance Anvil, published every Saturday at 934 F street. The Traveller, published weekly at 723 Twelfth street. | The United States Gazette, published monthly at 719 Market space. The Vedette, published monthly at 339 Pennsylvania avenue, N. W. The Volks 1ribun, published every Saturday at 804 E street, N. W. The Washington Journal (German), daily, corner of Seventh and G streets, N. W, 188 Congressional Directory. PLACES OF DIVINE WORSHIP, HEBREW SYNAGOGUE. Washington Hebrew Congregation, Eighth street, between H and I north. Service Fri-day evening at sundown, and Sabbath [Saturday] morning at 9 o’clock. L. Stern, minister. Adas Israel Cong@gation (orthodox), 602 Sixth street. Services Friday evening at sunset, and Saturdays at 8 o’clock a. m. . iCATHOLIC. 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. John Whelan, assistant. St. Peter’s Church, Capitol Hill, corner of Second and C streets, S. E. Pastor, Rev. G. W. Devine; Revs. Sullivan and Donahue, assistants. St. Matthew’s Church, corner of Fifteenth and H streets. Rev. P. L. Chapelle, D. D., ; pastor ; Rev. James Mackin, Rev. Thomas J. Kervick. St. Mary’s Church (German), Fifth street, near H. Rev. Francis Tewes, pastor. St. Dominic’s Church, on the Island, Sixth street west and I street south. Rev. E. Donnelly, pastor ; Rev. Father Logan, Rev. Father Rickab, Rev. Spalding, assistants. St. Aloysius Church, North Capitol and I streets. Rev. E. McGurk, Rev. James Noonan, S. J., and others, assistants. Church of the Immaculate Conception, Eighth and N streets. Rev. S. Ryan, pastor; Rev. P. Ryan, D. D., assistant. St. Stephen’s Church, Pennsylvania avenue and Twenty-fifth street. Rev. John McNally, pastor; Rev. C. F. Thomas, assistant. St. Augustine’s Church (for colored people), Fifteenth street, near L street north. Rev. M. T. Walsh, pastor; Rev. Father D. Hurley, assistant. / St. Joseph’s Church (German). Rev. Father De Ruyter, pastor, Rev. Val. Schmidt. Trinity Church, Georgetown. Rev. Stephen Kelly, pastor; Rev. A. Roccofort, assistant. St. Teresa’s Church, Anacostia. Rev. Thomas M. Hughes, pastor. ’ g P * PROTESTANT EPISCOPAL. St. Paul’s Church, Twenty-third street, south of Washington Circle. Rev. W. M. Barker St. Mark’s Church, Third street, near A street, S. E. Rev. A. Floridus Steele. Christ Church, G street, bet. Sixth and Seventh streets, S. E. Rev. Charles D. Andrews. St. John’s Church, H street, opposite the White House. Rev. William A. Leonard, D. D.; Rev. F. B. Reazor and Rev. W. Holden, assistants. Trinity Church; Third and C streets, N. W. Rev. Thomas G. Addison, D. D. Church of the Epiphany, G street, near Fourteenth street, N.W. Rev. Samuel H. Giesy, D D., Rev. I. McElroy, and Rev. E. M. Mott. Epiphany Chapel and Mission House, 1216 Maryland avenue, S. W. Church of the Ascension, Massachusetts avenue and Twelfth street, N. W. Rev. John H. Elliott, S. T. D., and the Rev. Green Shackelford. Church of the Incarnation, N street, corner of Twelfth, N. W. Rev. I. L. Townsend. Grace Church, D and Ninth streets, S. W. Rev. J. W. Phillips, rector. St. Paul’s Church, Rock Creek Parish, near Soldiers’ Home. Rev. James A. Buck. St. Luke’s Church (for colored people), Fifteenth and Samson streets. Rev. Alexander Crummell, D. D. Church of the Holy Cross, Massachusetts avenue, N. W. Rev. J. A. Harrold, M. D. St. Andrew’s Church, corner of Fourteenth and Corcoran streets. Rev. J. B. Perry Christ’s Church, Georgetown, corner Congress and Beall streets. Rev. Albert R. Stuart, D St. John’s Church, Georgetown, corner Second and Potomac streets. Rev. John S. Lindsay, Grace Church, High street, north of Georgetown, Rev. S. H. Griffiih. St. Albans Church, Georgetown, Rev. Neilson Falls. St. John’s Chapel, Twenty-third street and Virginia avenue. St. Mary’s Chapel (St. John’s parish), Twenty-third street, near G. St. James’ Church, Rev. J. W. Clark, Eighth street, between B and C streets, N. E. METHODIST EPISCOPAL. Bishop Edward G. Andrews, D. D., LL. D., 1329 N street, N. W. Rev. J. McK. Reiley, D. D., Presiding Elder, Washington District, 3318 O street, West Washington. Metropolitan, corner of Four-and-a-half and C streets. Rev. J. P. Newman, D. D. Fourth Street Church, Fourth street southeast. Rev. M. F. B. Rice. & - Churches and Pastors. 189 Foundry Church, corner of G and Fourteenth streets. Rev. H. R. Naylor, D. D. Wesley Chapel, corner Fifth and F streets. Rev. R. Norris. McKendree Chapel, Massachusetts avenue, near Ninth street. Rev. C. H. Richardson. Fletcher Chapel, corner New York avenue and Fourth street. Rev. W. H. Laney, M. D. Union Chapel, Twentieth street, near Pennsylvania avenue. Rev. C. W. Baldwin. Ryland Chapel, Tenth street, corner of D, S. W. Rev. W. H. Chapman. Gorsuch Chapel, L street south, corner of F'our-and-a-half street. Rev. E. D. Owen, D. D. Waugh Chapel, A street north, corner of Third street east. Rev. R. N: Baer. North Capitol street church, corner K street, N. E. Rev. C. T. Weed. Hamline Church, corner of Ninth and P streets north. Rev. J. A. Price. Grace Church, corner Ninth and S streets, N. W. Rev. W. T. L.. Weech. Mount Zion, corner Sixteenth and R streets, N. W. Rev. J. H. Dashiel, D. D. Twelfth Street Church. Rev. Thomas Myers. Dunbarton Street, Georgetown. Rev. W. S. Edwards, D. D. Anacostia, Uniontown. Rev. C. O. Cook. ° METHODIST EPISCOPAL, SOUTH. Mount Vernon Place Church, corner of Ninth and K streets. Rev. Dr. Haddaway. METHODIST PROTESTANT. Methodist Protestant Church, Ninth street, between E and F. Rev. J: L. Mills, D. D. Sunday services I11 a. m. and 7.30 p. m. Sunday-school 9.30 a. m.; prayer meeting, Thurs-day at 7.30p Yethpdist ] Church, North Carolina avenue, corner of Eighth street (Capitol Protestant Hill). Rev. J. Wesley Trout, pastor. Residence, 226 Ninth street, S. E. Services, Sabbath, at 11 a. m. and 7 30 p m. Sabbath-school at 9.30 a. m.; young peoples’ meeting on Monday at 7.30 p. m.; general prayer meeting on Friday at 7. 30 p-m. First Methodist Protestant Church, corner of Virginia avenue and Fifth street, S. E. Rev. S. B. Tredway, pastor. Sunday services at IT a.m. and 7.30 p. m.; Sunday-school at 9.15 a. m.; prayer meeting on Thursday evening, at 7.20 p. m. Seats free, and all invited. Parsonage, 500 Virginia avenue, S. E Mount Tabor Methodist Protestant Church, intersection Thirty-second and Fayette streets. Rev. Bradley W. Kindley, pastor. Sunday services, 11 a.m. and 7.30 p.m. Prayer meeting every Thursday evening, 7.30. Sunday-school, 3 p. m. Georgetown Methodist Protestant Church, Congress street, L. W. Bates, D. D. Sunday Services IT a. m. and 7.30 p. m. CONGREGATIONAL. First Congregational Church, corner of Tenth and G. Rev. J. E. Rankin, D. D. Services at 11 a. m. and 7.30 p.m. Sabbath-school, 9.45 a. m. Mission sohoals, 3 p.m. Weekly meeting, Thursday evening. Young people’s meeting, Tuesday, 6.45p Lincoln Memorial, Eleventh street, corner of R, N. W. Rev. G. Ww. hou. Services at II a.m. and 7.30 p. m. Mission Sunday-school, 3.30 p. m. Plymouth, Catholic Hall, Eighteenth street, N. W., between I, and M streets. Rev. WET. Peel. Services at 11 a. m. and 7.30 p. m. Sunday-school, 9.45 a. m. BAPTIST. First Church, Thirteenth street, between G and H. Rev. J. H. Cuthbert, D. D. Second Church, Virginia avenue, corner Fourth street, S. E. Rev. E. H. Swem. E Street Church, a square east from the General Post-Office. Rev. D. W. Faunce, D. D. Fifth Church, D street south. * Rev. C. C. Meador. Calvary Church, corner of H and Eighth streets. Rev. S. H. Greene. North Church, Fourteenth street, between R and S streets. Rev. N. Ii Wheeler. Metropolitan Church, corner of Sixth and B streets, N. E. Rev. W. H. Young. Gay Street Church, Georgetown. Kev... L. Lodge, D:D. Anacostia Church, Uniontown. Rev. O. Ellyson. East Capitol Street Church. © Rev. O. M. Miller. CHRISTIAN. Christian Church, Vermont avenue, between N and O streets, N. W. Rev. Frederick I, Power. Services on Sunday at 11 a. m. and 7.30 p. m. and Thursdays at 7.30 p. m. PRESBYTERIAN. First Church, Four-and-a-half street, between C and D. Rev. Byron Sunderland, D. D. New York Avenue Church, New York ave. and H street, N. W. Rev. W. A. Lz tlett, D. I. Fourth Church, Ninth street, N. W., between G and H. Rev. J. T. Kelly. Assembly Church, corner of Fifth and I streets, N. W. Rev. Geo.ge 0. Little Sixth Church, Sixth street, S. W., near Maryland avenue. Rev. ¥ K. a Jick 190 . Congressional Directory. Western Church, H street, N. W., near Nineteenth. Rev.T. S. Wynkoop. Metropolitan Church, Fourth and B streets, S. E. Rev. John Chester, D. D. Westminster Church, Seventh street, S. W., between D and E.. Rev. B. F. Bittinger, D. D. North Church, N street, N. W., between Ninth and Tenth. Rev. C. B. Ramsdell. Fifteenth Street Church, Fifteenth street, N. W., between I and K. Supplied by Rev. Dr. H. A. Bulkley. : Eastern Church, Eighth street, N. E.,.between IF and G. Rev. Eugene Peck. Central Church, Third and I streets, N. W. Rev. A. W. Pitzer, D. D. West Street Church, P:street, near Thirty-first. Rev. Thos. Fullerton, D. D. Unity Church, corner Fourteenth and R streets, N. W. Rev. George B. Patch Church of the Covenant, corner of N and Eighteenth streets, N. W. Rev. T. S. Hamlin UNITARIAN. All Souls Church, Fourteenth street, corner of L street. Morning services at 11 o’clock; vespers at 7% p. m. Rev. Rush R. Shippen, 1722 Thirteenth street, corner of Riggs. UNIVERSALIST. Church of Our Father, 13th and L streets, N. W. Services at 11 a. m. and 7.30 p. m. Sunday-school, 9.45 a. m. Rev. Alex. Kent, pastor. FRIENDS’ MEETING-HOUSE. ‘Meeting-House (Hicksite), 1811 I street. Meeting at 11 o’clock a. m. (Orthodox) lecture-room of the Y. M. C. A. Meeting at 11 o’clock a. m. NEW JERUSALEM. Temple on North Capitol street, between B and C streets. Services at 11 o’clock a.m, Rev, E. D. Daniels. LUTHERAN. N German Evangelical Congregation of Trinity, Unaltered Augsburg Confession, Fourth street west, corner of E street north. Rev. W. C. H. Luebkert. German Evangelical, St. John’s Church, Four-and-a-half street. Rev. Leanardt. St. Paul’s Church, corner of Eleventh and IH streets, N. W. Rev. Samuel Domer, D. 1). Memorial Church, corner of N and Fourteenth streets. Rev. J. G. Butler, D. D. Church of the Reformation, Pennsylvania avenue and Second, S. E. Rev. W. E. Parson. Church of .the Fatherland, Sixth and P streets, N. W. Rev. A. Homrighaus. Church at Georgetown. Rev. George A. Nixdorf. Grace Lutheran Chapel, Thirteenth street, near Corcoran, N. W. (English). Rev. E. G. Tressel. Church of Our Redeemer, Eighth street, N. W., and Grant avenue. Rev. D. E. Wiseman, pastor. EVANGELICAL LUTHERAN CHURCH. Concordia, G street north, corner of Twentieth. Rev. Louis H. Schneider. GERMAN REFORMED CHURCH. First Reformed Church, corner of Sixth and N streets, N. W. Rev. A. Guenther. German service on Sunday morning at 11 o'clock. Grace Reformed Church, corner of Fifteenth and O streets, N. W. Rev, Charles F. » Sontag. Services every Sunday at 11 o “clock a. m., and 7.30 p. m., Religious Associations— Washington City Post-Office. | 191 RELIGIOUS ASSOCIATIONS. J | EB h b Carroll Institute, 602 F street, N. W. Library and reading rooms.open every night from 6 o’clock to 10 o'clock, and literary and musical entertainments every Thursday evening at 8 : o’clock. A free might school for working boys is connected with the Institute. President, Edmond Mallet; First Vice-President, Thomas J. Sullivan; Second Vice-President, George Bogus; Recording Secretary, Joseph B. Crowe; Corresponding Secretary, Andrew J. Schwartz; Treasurer, Charles L. Clarke; Librarian, William Richards; Assistant Librarian, Dennis M. Kennedy; Editor, Charles M. Scanlan; Associate members of ‘the Board of Directors, John Bingham, R. E. White, J. A. Watts, William H. Manogue, Gregory I. Ennis. Tabernacle Society. Rooms at the Carroll Institute Building, 602 F street, N. W. Open daily from 10 a. m. to 4 p. m., except Saturdays and Sundays. The Washington City Bible Society. Organized in 1828. The board of managers consists of the pastors of the several churches of the city ex officio, life directors and ministers of the gospel who are life members; and the following gentlemen elected at the last annual meeting: -President, Rev. A. W. Pitzer, D. D.; ‘Secretary, J. V. A. Shields; Treasurer and Depositary, William Ballantyne, 428 Seventh street, N. W. The Sunday School Union of the Districtof Columbia meetsthe second Monday of every month in the Chapel of the Y. M. C. A. President, W. H. H. Smith, Bureau Steam Engineering, Navy Department; Secretary, Henry K. Simpson, 320 B street, S. E. Women’s Christian Association. Home on Thirteenth street, between R and S, N. W. President, Mrs. Justice Strong; Secretary, Mrs. C. A. Weed; Treasurer, Miss Josephine Chester; Register, Mrs. C. B. Jewell; Medical Advisers: Consulting, Dr. Jos. Tabor Jonn-son; attending, Dr. Mary Parsons, Mrs. Dr. Spachman; Matron, Miss C. R. Bent. Young Men's Christian Association. Organized June, 1852. 1409 and 1411 New York avenue, N. W. Open daily from g a. m. to 10 p. m. President, Charles Lyman; Recording Secretary, J. L. Ewin; General Secretary, T. A. Harding; Treasurer, E. S. Wescott. Women’s Christian Temperance Union, Districtof Columbia. Headquarters, Masonic Tem-ple, go7 F street, N. W. Meeting, Sabbath, 3 p. m. President, Mrs. Clara L. Roach; Cor-responding Secretary, Mrs. R. E. Hartwell; Recording Secretary, Mrs. Lydia Tilton; Treas-urer, Mrs. Sarah D. La Fetra. Business headquarters, Temple Hotel, Ninth street. WASHINGTON CITY POST-OFFICE. Postmaster. ~FRANK B. CONGER, 1746 N street, N. W. Assistant Postmaster.—Henry Sherwood, 1017 East Capitol street. Cashier.—Seymour W. Tullock, 940 French street, N. 'W. Superintendent of Miscellaneous Division.—George H. Plant, jr., 918 M street, N. W. Assistant Supt. of Miscellaneous Division.—William B. Turpin, 1314 S street, N. W. Superintendent of Mailing Division.—Horace P. Springer, 730 Eighth street, N. 'W. Assistant Superintendent of Mailing Division.—Robert C. Griffin, 719 Fourth street, S. E. Superintendent of City Delivery Division.—James E. Bell, 602 D street, N. W. Assistant Supt. of City Delivery Division.—Charles E. Hartung, 1003 K street, N. W. Superintendent of Registry Division.—H. J. Hanford, 2012 M street, N. W. Assistant Superintendent of Registry Division.—James H. Parish, 1310 Twelfth street, N. W. Superintendent of Money-Order Division.—Simeon H. Merrill, 916 P street, N. W. Supt. of Branch Office at Georgetown Station.—Huldah W. Blackford, 3156 P st., N. W. Supt. of Branch Office, East Capitol Station.—F. A. Grant, 228 A street, S. E. Supt. of Branch Office, Station C.—Thomas A. Brown, jr., 1413 F'street, N. W, Supt. of Branch Office, Station D.—George A. Bentley, Corcoran street, N. W. Supt. of Branch Office, Station E.—Charles S. Price, 426 Seventh street, S. 'W. Supt. of Branch Office, Station F.—B. F. Whiteside, 1926 Pennsylvania avenue, N. W. CITY DELIVERY. Main Office, Louisiana Avenue, near Seventh Street. Delivery by carriers on five-trip routes, 8 and 10 a. m., 12:m,, 2.and 4 p.m Delivery by carriers on four-trip routes, 8 a.m., 12 m,, 2.and 4.p. m. Delivery by carriers on three-trip routes, 8 a. m., 12 m., and 4 p. m. Delivery by carriers on two-trip routes, 8 a. m..and 3p. m. Delivery by carriers to the Departments, 8 a. m., 12 m.,and 3 p.m. Delivery by carriers to hotels, 8 and 10 a. m., 12 m,,4,7,and 10 p.m. Collections commence at 5 and 8 a. m., 4 and 7 p. m., and on each delivery trip by carriers. Sundays at § p.m. 192 Congressional Directory. Georgetown Station. Mail received at 5.55, 7.10, ||8, and 10.30 a. m., 1, 3.30, ||5,and 6.30 p.m. Mail closes at 6 and9 a.m,, || 10, 11.45a. m., 1.20, 4.15, 7, and 8 p. m. Delivery by carriers on three-trip routes, 8 and 11 a. m., 1.30 and 4 p.m. Delivery by carriers on two-trip routes, 8 a.m. and I. 25 p.m. Collections commence at 4 a.m. and 6 p-m.,and on each delivery trip by carriers. . Sun- days at 5 p. m. East Capitol Station. Mail received at 6.05, 7.20, ||7.50, and 10.20 a. m., 12.20, 4.10, ||5.20, and 6.40 p. m. Mail closes at 6.10, 8, [10 and 10.40 a. m., 12 m., 3.10, 6, 17. 10, and 8 p.m. Delivery by carriers on four-trip routes, 8 and 11 a. m., I and 4.15 p.m. Delivery by carriers on three-trip routes, 8 a. m., I and 4.15 p.m. Collections commence at 5 and 9.15 a.m.,7 p. _m., and on each delivery-trip by carriers. Sundays at 5 p. m., Sunday only. ; Station C (No. 1413 F Street, N. W.). Mail closes at 8.45, 9.15, and 10.30 a. m., 12.05, 1.15, 2.15, 3.20, 4.30, and 6 p.m. Station D (Fourteenth and Corcoran Streets). Mail closes at 8 and 9.45 a. m., 2, 4.45, 5.45, and 7 p. m. Station E (No. 426 Seventh Street, S. W.). Mail closes at 10.45 a. m., I, 4.30, 6.30, and 7 p. m. Station F (No. 1921 Pennsylvania avenue, N. W.). Mail closes at 9 and 11.45 a. m., 1.30, 4.30, ||7.30 p. m. ARRIVAL AND DEPARTURE OF MAILS. Alexandria.—Close, 5.30, 8.30, 8.55, 10.30, and 10.45 a. m., 1.30, 4.05,5.30 p. m. Arrive 8.25, 11 a. m,, 3.30, 5.35, 7.30, 9.52p. m. Annapolis. _ Close, 6.10, 11.40, a. m., 4.10 p. m. Arrive, 8.30 a. m., 1.50, 5.25 p. m. Atlanta, Northern Georgia, and Alabama. —Close, 8.30a.m., 10. 30p.m. + Arrive, 8.30 a. m., 30 3i. Seovinet, and Eastern Georgia.—Close, 5.30, 10.30 a. m., 4.05 p. m. Arrive, Ita. m, I1p.n ae, 4.30, 6.10, 7, 8, 9.10, 10.45 a. m., 12.55, 1.30, 4.10, 5, 6.10, 9.30, 10.50 p. m. Arrive, 5.40, 8.30, 9.35, 9.48, 11.15 a. m., 1.50, 3.35, 6.37, 8.45, 10 p. m. Boston.—Close, 10.30 a. m., 1.30, 3.30, 5.30, 9.30, 10.50 p. m. Arrive, 5.40, 8, 10.50 a. m, 4.05, 10.47 p. m. California, Minnesota, Nevada, and Manitoba.—Close, 11.45 a. m., 3, 8.25, 9.40 p. m. Arrive, 6.20 a. m., 1.30, 5.50, 6.30p. m Charleston and Eastern. South Carolina. —Close, 5.30, 10.30 a. m., 4.05 p. m. Arrive, II 2. m., 11 LE ond Northern Ohio.—Close, 11.45 a. m., 8.25 p.m. Arrive, 7.20 a. m., 5.50 p. m. ering and Southern Ohio.—Close, 9.30 a. m., 3, 9.40 p. m. Arrive, 6.20 a. m., 1.30, 8.30p Cohembia and Western South Carolina. —Close, 8.30 a. m., 10.30 p. m. Arrive, 8.30a. m., -30 p.m ¥ ot imiuis and Western Okio—Close, 4.30 a. m., 6.40, 9.30 p. m. Arrive, 7.20 a. m., 5.50, 6.30 p. m. Eastern Tennessee, via Virginia Midland Railroad. —Close, 8.30 a.m.,10.30 p.m. Arrive, 8.30a.m.,, 3.30 p. m New Orleans. “Close, 8.30, 10.30 a. m., 10.30 p. m. Arrive, 8.30 a. m., 3.30, II p. m. New York City.—Close, 6.45, 9.10, 10.45 a. m., 1.30, 3.30; 5.30, 9.30, 10.50 p. m. Arrive, 5.40,8, 10.50a. m., 4, 8, 8.55, 10.47 -m, Philadelphia. Clon, 6.45, 9.10, IO.0.45 a. m., 1.30, 3.30, 5.30, 9.30, 10.50 p m. Arrive, 5.40, 8, 10.50a. m., 1.30, 4, 8.55 p Raleigh, Eastern North Tr, ne Florida. —Close, 5.30, 10.30 a. m., 4.05 p. m. Arrive, II a.m. II a Sine. .30, 10.30 a. m., 4.05 p. m. Arrive, IT a. m., 3.40, II p. m. Western North Carolina.—Close, 8.30a. m., 10.30 p. m. Arrive, 8.30 a. m., 3.30 p. m. Western Tennessee.—Close, 9.30 a. m., 3, 9.40 p. m. Arrive, 6.20 a. m., 1.30, 6.30 p. m. | Sunday only. ~— The Mails— United States Postal Regulations. < RATES OF COMMISSION CHARGED FOR DOMESTIC MONEY-ORDERS. -For sums not exceeding #5 _____.___ $o o5 | Over $40 and not exceeding #50_. _. _ po 25 3 Over #5 and not exceeding #10___._. 08 | Over $50 and not exceeding $60_____ 30 9 Over $10 and not exceeding $15_____ 10 | Over $60 and fot exceeding $70_____ 35 Over $15 and not exceeding $30_____ 15 | Over $70 and not exceeding $80_____ 40 Over $30 and not exceeding $40___ __ 20 | Over $80 and not exceeding $1oo_.___ 45 RATES OF COMMISSION IN UNITED STATES CURRENCY CHARGED FOR ISSUING ALL INTER- oo NATIONAL MONEY-ORDERS. To Algeria, Austria, Azores, Belgium, Canada, Denmark, France, German Empire, Grea-Britain and Ireland, Hungary, India, Italy, Jamaica, Leeward Islands, Luxembourg, Nether-lands, New South Wales, Newfoundland, Madeira, New Zealand, Norway, Tasmania, Portu-gal, Sweden, Switzerland, Victoria, Hawaiian Islands, Queensland and Cape Colony, Wind-ward Islands, Japan, Constantinople, Turkey, Hong-Kong, China, Egypt. Onorderamot exceeding B10. o.oo os neonneian aaa Sa $o 10 Over Ztoandnotexceeding S20. . Loi. oi Ne o_o ea 20 Overf2oandnotexceeding $30 oo oo 2 Lo dee Ea 5 na 30 “Over Ssoand not exceeding B40 o_o ae a 40 Over $qoandnotexceeding 850: = A 50 Postal notes of from 1 cent to $4.99 are issued for a fee of 3 cents each, and can be paid at any money-order office in the United States. ® { UNITED STATES POSTAL, REGULATIONS. on RATES OF POSTAGE. | First-Class Matter.— Letters, matter wholly or partly in writing, drawings, and matter which is sealed against inspection, are first-class matter, and subject to the postage rate of fwo cents for eaclk ounce or fraction thereof. ; : | On local or drop letters two cents for eack ounce or fraction thereor. : / H Postal cards having anything attached, or having writing or printing on the face, other than the address, are subject to letter rates of postage. Second-Class Matter.—Embraces all newspapers and other periodical publications which are issued at stated intervals, and as frequently as four times a year. On newspapers and periodi-cal publications of the second class, when sent by others than the publisher or news agent, the postage shall be prepaid at the rate of one cent for each four ounces or fractional part thereof. Third-Class Matter —Embraces books, circulars, photographs, proof-sheets, corrected proof-sheets with manuscript copy accompanying the same, and postage shall be paid thereon at the { rate of one cent for each two ounces or fractional part thereof. Fourth-Class Matter—Embraces labels, patterns, playing cards, visiting cards, ornamented § paper, and all other matter of the same general character, the printing upen which is not de-signed to instruct, amuse, cultivate the mind or taste, or impart general information. This class also includes merchandise, and samples of merchandise, models, samples of ores, metals, minerals, seeds, etc., and any other matter not included in the first, second, or third classes, and which is not liable to destroy or otherwise damage the contents of the mail bag. Postage rate thereon, one cent for each ounce or fractional part thereof. ins MAIN OFFICE. Money-order division open from 9 a. m. to 6 p. m. Registry division open from 8.30 a. m. to 6 p. m. General-delivery window never closed. Stamps can be purchased at any time, day or night. Money-order and registered-letter business transacted at all of the branch post-offices in this city. SPECIAL DELIVERY MESSAGES. Special-delivery messengers can be obtained from the Senate and House of Representatives post-offices, or any of the branch stations of the Washington City Post-Office. 2D ED 13 194 The Congressional Directory. WASHINGTON CITY DIRECTORY. ’ Executive Mansion.—Pennsylvania avenue, between Fifteenth and Seventeenth streets. State Department.—Corner Seventeenth street and New York avenue. Treasury Department.—Fifteenth street west, opposite F street north. Navy Department. —Seventeenth street west, opposite I¥ street north. War Department.—Seventeenth street, opposite I street north. Interior Department.—F street north, between Seventh and Ninth streets. Post-Office Department—E street north, between Seventh and Eighth streets. Department of Justice.—Freedman’s Bank building, 1507 Pennsylvania avenue. Department of Agriculture—South Washington, opposite Thirteenth street. Commissioner of Public Buildings.—Office corner of Seventeenth street and Pennsylvania ave. Government Printing Office.—Corner of North Capitol and IT street north. Supreme Court of the United States.—At the Capitol, in the old Senate Chamber. Court of Claims.—1509 Pennsylvania avenue. District Courts.—At the City Hall, Four-and-a-half street. 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. Arsenal —Southern extremity of Four-and-a-half street west. Coast Survey Buildings—New Jersey avenue, south of the Capitol. Smithsonian Institution. —South Washington, opposite Tenth street. National Musenum.—South Washington, near the Smithsonian Institution. Congressional Cemetery.—One mile east of the Capitol. Washington Monument.—On the Mall, near the Potomac. United States Botanic Garden.—Between First and Third streets west. Masonic Hall.—Corner of Ninth and I” streets. Scottish Rite Masonic HHall.—Corner of Seventh and D streets. Supreme Council Headgquarters.—Corner of Third and E streets. Odd-Fellows’ Hall—Seventh street west, between D and E streets north. Odd-Fellows’ Hall (Navy Yard) —Eighth street east, south of Pennsylvania avenue Providence Hospital—Corner of Second street east and D street south. Childyer’s Hospital—Corner of Thirteenth and W streets. Columbia Hospital for Women. —Pennsylvania avenue, corner of Twenty-fifeh street. Government Hospital for the Tnsane—Across the N avy-Yard Bridge. Reform-School for Boys—On the turnpike to Bladensburg. i Young Men's Christian Association.—New York avenue. Grand Army of the Republic Halls—Ninth and D and Seventh and L streets. Corcoran Art Building —Corner of Seventeenth street west and Pennsylvania avenue. a wf ot a a Hs Washington Gas-Lig oht Company. —Office, 472 Tenth street west. Arlington Hotel. — Vermont avenue, between IH and I streets. Willard's Hotel—Corner of Fourteenth street west and Pennsylvania avenue. Ebbitt House —F street north, between Thirteenth and Fourteenth streets west. Riggs House.—Corner of G and Fifteenth streets. Metropolitan. Hotel.—Pennsylvania avenue, between Sixth and Seventh streets west. National Hotel—Corner of Sixth street west and Pennsylvania avenue. Hamilton House.—Corner of Fourteenth and I streets. St. James Hotel—Corner of Pennsylvania avenue and Sixth street west. Chamberlin’s Restaurant.—825 Fifteenth street. ; Wormley’s Hotel—Corner of H and Fifteenth streets. Portland Flats—Corner of Fourteenth street and Vermont avenue, Lexington Hotel. —Corner of New York avenue and Fifteenth street. St. Marc Hotel —Corner of Pennsylvania avenue and Seventh street west. Welcker's Hotel.—727 Fifteenth street. Congressional Hotel—Capitol Hill, southeast of Capitol. Cleveland House. — Bridge street, Georgetown. Osborne Flats, 80g Fourteenth street, N. W. Woodmont Flats, Towa Circle. Presidential Vole— Census— The Territories. 195 1880. THE PRESIDENTIAL ELECTIONS. 1884. pal Ll nk it cmt nt Tl HE To CE 1884. 1880. States. Cleveland. | Blaine. St. John. Butler. Garfield. | Hancock. Alabama. ovina as 92,973 59,444 610 762 56,221 91,185 Arkansas ................... 72,927 505805 |. cianLh 1,844 42,436 60,775 California. «cok 88,307 100,816 2,640 1,975 0,37 80,417 Colorado .................00 27,627 36,277 750 1,957 27,450 24,647 Comnecticut. ...... 7. 67,199 65,923 2,305 1,088 67,071 64,415 Delaware. 0 ci. ila 17,054 12,778 55 6 144133 15,275 Florida... oi ees 31,769 28,039 1 RE 0 23,632 27,022 Georgia... ... ineen 04,567 47,964 184 125 54,086 102,470 Hinois,.... lens. old, 312,355 337,474 12,074 10,010 318,037 277,321 Indiang. i a be sage 244,002 238,480 3,01 , 71 232,164 225,522 owas. es ek *177,286 197,089 XAT 183,927 105,845 Kansas ood niio 90,030 153,396 4,273 17,044 121,549 59,801 Kentucky.'..........0.. an 152,757 118,674 3,10 1,655 106, 30! 149,068 Louisiana o.oo aL 62,450 46,347 366 110 38,016 65,067 Maine... 0 Len 52,140 72,209 2,160 3,053 74,030 65,161 Manyland lo... 000, oo, 96,032 85,609 2,794 531 78,515 94,706 Massachusetts... ........... 122,352 146,724 9,923 24,382 165,205 111,960 Michigan ..... .....c.ue.ie *189,361 192,669 18,403 763 185,341 131,597 Minnesota RS I 3 Soh 70,144 111,923 + 4,001 3,537 93,903 53,315 Mississippi... ... RR Ee, 78,547 i rR RR a LE 34,854 75,750 Missouri... .c..v.veens 235,072 *202,261 | . 28500]. alt 153,567 208, hte Nebraska ........nde vn 54,354 76,877 2385800... 54,979 28,523 000 Nevadac la 7,189 VE TF Pi REICR Bie 10,445 11,215 New Hampshire ............ 39,166 43,166 1,573 552 44,852 40,794 New: Jersey. ...:........ui 127,784 123,432 ,I55 3,494 120,555 122,565 New York............ Dit 563,154 562,005 25,006 17,004 555,544 534,51 North Carolina .............. 142,071 YB DH oS TS 115,874 124,208 hionid io. Cg LR 368,280 400,082 11,269 5,170 375,048 340,821 Oregon... i.ciivanaodite 24,593 26,852 488 723 20,619 19,855 a Pennsylvania. .......0.0, 393,510 474,268 15,306 16,992 444,704 407,428 Rhodelsland................. 12,438 19,029 041 . 425 18,195 10,779 South Caroling.................. 69,890 EE AE re i 58,071 112,312 TenhesSee.. 0... fn. 133,270 124,090 I,I31 957 107,677 129,569 Aha RS ER 223,208 88,353 3251 3,321 53,29 156,528 Vermont. o.oo uatuui so 17,331 39,514 1,752 © 785 45,567 18,316 Virgin 000 000 a8 145,497 130,350 43 lt aR 84,020 128,586 West Virginia... .... oi 67,317 *63,006 080 [ise thiamin 46,243 57,391 Wisconsin.................. 146,454 161,147 7,640 4,597 144,400 114,649 Total huti ia 4,913,247 | 4,840,825 150,134 134,028 | 4,450,921 4,447,388 : * Fusion. ' CENSUS OF THE UNITED STATES. TLE I Yas i Fe SER A 3,929,328 Goh: aSdov ns loaTae Vata 17,069,453 AR B00 i hist hide an vt 5,305,025 4 Tats 1 RRL Ten SI a Te a 23,191,876 LI CS HER hs SNR SR LE 7,239,814 Bhi x80. nh Ra sae ate 31,443,321 ha8ee. oo aa 0,038,331 [i “othe vr 8ro Con ii LL 38,558,371 sth. 2830 a dS SE Ra a 12,866,026 || roth. 2880 Lu. ii aaa, 50,152,866 THE TERRITORIES. | Territories. Organized. Se Territories. -| Organized. Spare New Mezxico..:........... 1850 1215201 ||“ Montana... cou. HSL 1864 143,776 Oiah ea 1850 84,470: "Wyoming... i ve san 1868 ic.v. 97,833 Washington. :.......:.... 1853 69,004 |[Indian oo a as 1834 68,091 Dakota... cuba 1861 150,032 {Alaska .... ln 1868 577,390 Arlzona. lL ins, 1863 113,916 || District of Columbia..... 1790 . 64 eb Ey LO 1863 86,204 The whole area of the States and Territories, including water surface of lakes and rivers, is nearly equal to four milliéns of square miles. Congressional Directory. 196 SOUTHERN LOBBY COAT ROOM COAT ROOM ND | SENATOR'S LOBBY || A my . Phi ee pir rn Ge Nu3.Lsv3 A8907 7 DIRECTORY OF THE SENATE, |V. P., Vice-President. S., Secretary. L. C., Legislative Clerk. C. C., Chief Clerk. M. C., Minute Clerk. S., Sergeant-at-Arms. * D., Doorkeeper and Assistants. R., Official Reporters.) sz. Aldrich; N. W., Rhode Island. 9. Frye, William P., Maine. 23. Palmer, Thomas W., Michigan. 30. Allison, W. B., Iowa. 38. George, James Z., Mississippi. 59. Payne, Henry B., Ohio. 37. Beck, James B., Kentucky. 58. Gibson, Randall Lee, Louisiana. 3. Platt, Orville H., Connecticut. 18. Berry, James H., Arkansas. 35. Gorman, Arthur P., Maryland. 56. Plumb, Preston B., Kansas. 40. Blackburn, Joseph C. S., Kentucky. 41. Gray, George, Delaware. 66. Pugh, James L., Alabama. 19. Blair, Henry W., New Hampshire. 21. Hale, Eugene, Maine. 32. Ransom, Matt. W., North Carolina. Ny 72. Bowen, Thomas M., Colorado. 77. Hampton, Wade, South Carolina. 53. Riddleberger, H. H., Virginia. NS 10. Brown, Joseph E., Georgia. 15. Harris, Isham G., Tennessee. 20. Sabin, Dwight M., Minnesota. RN 12. Butler, M. C., South Carolina. 25. Harrison, Benjamin, Indiana. 65. Saulsbury, Eli, Delaware. & 39. Call, Wilkinson, Florida. 2. Hawley, Joseph R., Connecticut. 52. Sawyer, Philetus, Wisconsin. S 62. Camden, J. N., West Virginia. 27. Hoar, George F., Massachusetts. 54. Sewell, William J., New Jersey. IS 4. Cameron, J. D,, Pennsylvania. 29. Ingalls, John James, Kansas. 26. Sherman, John, Ohio. : 2 45. Chace, Jonathan, Rhode Island. 33. Jones, Charles W., Florida. 75. Spooner, John C., Wisconsin. X 73. Cheney, P. C., New Hampshire. 17. Jones, J. K., Arkansas. 43. Stanford, Leland, California. Ne 13. Cockrell, Francis Marion, Missouri. 50. Jones, John P., Nevada. 46. Teller, Henry M., Colorado. 3 14. Coke, Richard, Texas. 63. Kenna, John E., West Virginia. 64. Vance, Zebulon B., North Carolina. . 76. Colquitt, Alfred H., Georgia. 24. McMillan, S. J. R., Minnesota. 55. Van Wyck, Charles H., Nebraska. 48. Conger, Omar D., Michigan. 61. McPherson, John Roderic, New Jersey. 34. Vest, George Graham, Missouri. 8. Cullom, Shelby M., Illinois. 6. Mahone, William, Virginia. 36. Voorhees, Daniel W., Indiana. 31. Dawes, Henry L., Massachusetts. 74. Manderson, Charles F., Nebraska. 67. Walthall, E. C., Mississippi. 22. Dolph, Joseph N., Oregon. 16. Maxey S. B., Texas. 68. Whitthorne, of Tennessee. 7. Edmunds, George F., Vermont. 28. Miller, Warner, New York. 70. Williams, A. P., California. 60. Eustis, James B., Louisiana. 71. Mitchell, John H., Oregon. . 42. Wilson, Ephraim K., Maryland. 44. Evarts, William M., New York. 49. Mitchell, John I., Pennsylvania. 1. Wilson, James F., Iowa. 57. Fair, James G., Nevada. 11. Morgan, John T., Alabama. 6g. ———, . Farwell, Charles B., Illinois. 5. Morrill, Justin S., Vermont. 4 0 ~3 g61 YeIEE ey NH3IL1SIM 4000 4s.Hi & 2G oe REPORTERS Ea Py MO TH = Fil 139] [108 [18] [4] E6 [Los] Wis 138 Le slea fe ie dies 5a 52 [107] [138 [727 [108 [106] [137 ol 12] 138] He = ir 105 oo sel 32 [15] I 1105 oll LJ N Amma LES ST Ta _,TysT,yy ks: 4000 NY3.1SsVY3 JVUOISSIASUO)) “LLOPIDAYT -& 2 / a \ DIRECTORY OF THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES. a WEST SIDE. EAST SIDE. ror Adams, George E. 152 Farquhar, John M. 37 Allen, Charles H. 23 Felton, Charles N. 1 Anderson, John A. 6o Fleeger, Geo. W. 144 Atkinson, Louis E. 153 Fuller, Wm. E. 112 Baker, Charles S. 165 Funston, E. H. 163 Lindsley, James 19 Little, John. 20 Long, John D. 110: Loutitt, J. A. 124 Lyman, Joseph. G. 158 Sessions, Walter R. 107 Skinner, Thomas G. 118 Smalls, Robert. 68 Spooner, HenryJ. s1 Steele, George W. 52 Adams, John J. 149 Davidson, A. C. 166 Allen, John M. 164 Davidson, R. H. M. 39 Anderson, C. M. 72 Dibble, Samuel. 55 Bacon, Henry. 27 Dockery, A. M. 12 Ballantine, John G. 160 Dougherty, C. 78 King, J. Floyd. 138 Kleiner, John J 38 Laffoon, Polk. 102 Lanham, S. W. Te 6 Lawler, Frank. 70 Sayers, Joseph D. 139 Scott, William L. 66 Seney, George E. | 118 Seymour, E. W. 58 Shaw, [Frank T. 33 Barbour, John S. 102 Gallinger, Jacob H. 100 Markham, H. H. 149 Stephenson, Isaac. 16 Barksdale, E. 2 Dunn, Poindexter. 9 Le Fevre, B. 63 Singleton, Otho R. 99 Bayne, Thomas M. 136 Geddes, Geo. W. 87 Bean, Curtis C. 150 Gifford, Oscar S. 24 Bingham, H. H. 8 Gilfillan, John B. or Bound, Franklin. 67 Goff, Nathan, jr. 127 Boutelle, C. A. 63 Grosvenor, C. H.-62 Brady, James D. 148 Grout, Wm. W. 47 Browne, T. M. 59 Guenther, Richard. 130 Brown, Charles E. 140 Hailey, John. 78 Martin, John M. 154 Stewart, John W. 125 McComas, L. E. 49 Stone, Eben F. 123 McKenna, Joseph. 54 Stone, Wm. J., Mo. 5 io W., jr. 85 Strait, Horace B. 133 Millard, Stephen C. 76 Struble, Isaac S. 126 Milliken, Seth L. 17 Swinburne, John. 96 Moffatt, Seth C. 74 Symes, George D. 114 Morrill, Edmund N. 145 Tarsney, Tim. E. 116 Barnes, George T. 10 Eden, John R. 77 Lore, Charles B. 123 Snyder, Charles P. 137 Barry, F. G 86 Eldredge, N. B. 5 Lovering, H..B 34 Sowden, William H. 4 Belmont, Perry. 156 Ellsberry, W. W. 154 Lowry, Robert. 33 Spriggs, J. Thomas. 80 Bennett, Risden T. 57 Ermentrout, D. 128 Mahoney, Peter P. 92 Springer, Wm. M. 95 Blanchard, N. C. 20 Findlay, John V.L. 142 Matson, C. C 44 Stahlnecker, W. G. 73 Bland, Richard P. 112 Fisher, Spencer O. 8g Maybury, Ww. C. 53 Stewart, Charles. 03 Bliss, Archibald M. 82 Foran, Martin A. 19 McAdoo, William. 146 St. Martin, Louis. 97 Blount, James H. 120 Ford, George. 141 McCreary, J. B. 22 Stone, W. J., of Ky. 73 6 22 70 Brown, W. W, 117 Hanback, Lewis. 42 Morrow, Wm. W. Brumm, Charles N. 10 Harmer, Alfred C. 9 Negley, James S. Buchanan, James. 31 Hayden, E. D. 7 Nelson, Knute. Buck, John R. 155 Haynes, Martin A. 64 O’Donnell, James. 88 93 75 61 Taylor, Ezra B. Taylor, Isaac H. Taylor, Zach. Thomas, John R. 26 147 68 69 Boyle, Charles E. Bragg, Edward S. Breckenridge, C.R. Breckenridge,Wm. 62 152 94 42 Forney, William H. 37 Frederick, B. T. 67 Gay, Edward J. 157 Gibson, Charles H. 161 McMillin, Benton. 25 Storm, John B. McRea, Thomas C. 61 Swope, John A. Merriman, T. A. 7 Taulbee, W. P. Miller, James F. so Taylor, John M. 27 Bunnell, Frank C. 132 Henderson, D. B. 86 O'Hara, James E. 13 Thomas, Ormsby B.|| 122 Burnes, James N. 132 Gibson, Eustace. 115 Mills, Roger Q. 71 Throckmorton,J.W. 156 Burleigh, Henry G. 71 Henderson, T. J. 116 O'Neill, Charles. go Thompson, A. C. go Cabell, George C. 48 Glass, P. T. 148 Mitchell, Chas. L. 100 Tillman, George D. 12x Burrows, Julius C. 159 Hepburn, W. P. 28 Osborne, Edwin S. 44 Van Schaick, I. W. || 143 Caine, John T. 8 Glover, J. M. 163 Morgan, J. B 1 Townshend, R. W. 164 Butterworth, Benj. 135 Herman, Binger. 34 Outhwaite, J. H. 109 Voorhees, Chas. S. || 29 Caldwell, A. J. 119 Green, Wharton J. 43 Morrison, Wm. R. 83 Toole, Joseph K. 82 Bynum, Wm. D. g2 Hiestand, John A. 43 Owen, William D. 97 Wade, William H. || 158 Campbell, Felix. 104 Hale, John B. 109 Muller, Nicholas. ¢6 Trigg, Connolly F. 77 Campbell, J. E. 147 Hires, George S. 45 Parker, A. X. 72 Wadsworth, W. H.|| 117 Candler, Allen D. 121 Hall, Benton J. 133 Murphy, J. H. 135 Tucker, John R. 80 Campbell, J. M. 128 Hiscock, Frank. 131 Payne, Sereno E. 119 Wait, John T. 145 Carleton, Ezra C. 151 Halsell, John E. 129 Neal, John R. 134 Turner, Henry G. 14 6g Campbell, T. J. Cannon, J. G. _ 134 52 Hitt, Robert R. Holmes, A. J. 21 113 Payson, Perkins, Lewis Bishop E. 81 W. 98 Wakefield, J. B. Warner, William. 163 Catchings, T. C. || 111 Clardy, Martin L. 46 87 Hammond, N. Harris, Henry J. R. 136 98 Neece, William Norwood, Thos. H. 108 M. 54 Van Eaton, H. S. Viele, Egbert L. 9s Carey, Joseph M. 151 Hopkins, A. J. 103 Peters, Samuel R. 35 Weaver, A. J. 30 Clements, J. C. 85 Hatch, William H. 28 Oates, William C. 59 Wallace, N. D, 29 Caswell, Lucien B. 160 Houk, Leonidas C. 30 Pettibone, A. H. 111 Weber, John B. 46 Conger, Edwin H. 138 Hudd, Thomas R. 2 Phelps, W. W. 12 West, George. 89 Cooper, Wm. C. 41 Jackson, Oscar L. 24 Plumb, Ralph. 167 White, Alex. C. 4 Cutcheon, B. M. 11 James, Darwin R. 126 Ranney, A. A. 115 White, Milo. 84 Davenport, Ira. 57 Johnson, F. A. 129 Reed, Thomas B. 36 Whiting, William. 66 Davis, Robert T. 65 Johnson, James T. 58 Rice, William W. 18 Woodburn, Wm. 141 Dawson, Wm. 48 Kelley, W. D. 162 Rockwell, F. W. 26 Dingley, Noh 56 Ketcham, John H. 143 Romeis, Jacob. 122 Dorsey, G.W. E. 166 La Follette, R. M. 142 Rusk, H. W. 157 Dunham, R. W. 39 Laird, James. 94 Rowell, J. H. so Ely, Fred. D. 108 Landes, Silas Z. 104 Ryan, Thomas. 40 Evans, 1. Newton. 146 Lehlbach, Herman, 161 Sawyer, John G. 16 Everhart, James B. 15 Libbey, Harry. 38 Scranton, Joseph A. 56 Cobb, Thomas R. 105 Heard,J. T. 130 O’Ferrall, C. T. 32 Ward, James H. 35 Collins, Patrick A. 65 Hemphill, John J. 153 O'Neill, John J. 64 Ward, Thomas B. 159 Compton, Barnes. 79 Henderson, John S. 1 Peel, A. W. 21 Warner, A. J. 88 Comstock, C. C. 47 Henley, Barclay. 99 Perry, William H. 31 Weaver, J. B. 126 Cowles,W. H. H. 131 Herbert, Hilary A. 15 Pidcock, James W. 17 Wellborn, Olin. 49 Cox, S. S. 124 Hill, William D. 106 Pinder, John S. 113 Wheeler, Joseph. 125 Cox, William R. 24 Holman, Wm. S. 40 Randall, Samuel J. 3 Wilkins, Beriah. 101 Crain, William H. 165 Howard, Jonas G. 162 Reagan, John H. 127 Willis, Albert S. 13 Crisp, Charles F. 81 Hutton, John E. 110 Reese, Seaborn. 23 Wilson, W. L. 11 Croxton, Thomas. 155 Irion, Alfred B. 36 Richardson, J. D. 84 Winans, Edwin B. 114 Culberson, D. B. 60 Johnston, T. D. 76 Riggs, James M. 41 Wise, George D. 167 Curtin, Andrew G. 144 Jones, James H. 140 Robertson, T. A. 18 Wolford, Frank L. 107 Daniel, John W. 75 Jones, James T. 45 Rogers, John H, 57 Worthington, N. E. 74 Dargan, G. W. gr Joseph, Antonio. 150 Sadler, Thomas W. po o \ VmSIQUVIUISIAFIY][010yvIOTT JEL 200 Congressional Directory. UNOFFICIAL LIST SENATORS, REPRESENTATIVES, AND DELEGATES ™ THE. FIFFITTH CONGRESS, : WITH THEIR POST-OFFICE ADDRESSES. [Corrected to February 5, 1887.] | { ALABAMA. SENATORS. John T. Morgan, D¥*____Selma, |* James 1. Pugh, D*__._.. Eufaula. REPRESENTATIVES. 1. James T. Jones, D¥*__Demopolis. 5. James E. Cobb, D ___Tuskegee. 2. H. A. Herbert, D*___Montgomery. 6. J. H. Bankhead, © __Fayette C. H. 3. Wm. C. Oates, D¥* __ _Abbeville. 7. W. H. Forney, D*___Jacksonville. 4. A.C. Davidson, O¥*__Uniontown. 8. Joseph Wheeler, D*_ Wheeler. ARKANSAS. SENATORS. James K. Jones, D* ____Washington, | James H. Berry, D*____Bentonville. REPRESENTATIVES. 1. Poindexter Dunn, D%*___Forest City. 4. John H. Rogers, D*___Fort Smith. 2. C. R. Breckinridge, O%_Pine Bluff. 5. Samuel W. Peel, O*___Bentonvilie. 3. Thomas C. McRea, D¥_Prescott. CALIFORNIA. SENATORS. Leland Stanford, 2% ___San Francisco. | George Hearst,’ D.____ San Francisco. REPRESENTATIVES. 1. T. I. Thompson, 2 ._Santa Rosa. 4. W. W. Morrow, £* __San Francisco. 2. Marion Biggs, OD ____Gridley. 5. Chas. N. Felton, 2%__San Mateo. 3. Joseph McKenna, £%_Suisun. 6. Wm. Vandever, £ ___Los Angeles. COLORADO. SENATORS. Thos. M. Bowen, 2% ____Del Norte. | Henry M. Teller, £% ___Central City. REPRESENTATIVE. 1. George G. Symes, £%_Denver. | 202 Congressional Directory. REPRESENTATIVES. : - 1. Alvin P. Hovey, £__Mount Vernon. | 8. Jas. T. Johnston, £%_ Rockville. 2. John H. O’Neall, _Washington. | 9. J. B. Cheadle, #____Frankfort. 3. J. G. Howard, D*___Jeffersonville. 10. Wm. D. Owen, R2*__Logansport. 4. Wm. S. Holman, 2% _Aurora. | 11. Geo. W. Steele, 2% __Marion. 5. C. C. Matson, D*___Greencastle. | 12. James B. White, £Z__Fort Wayne. 6. T. M. Browne, 2% __Winchester. | 13. Benj. F. Shively, D__South Bend. 7. Wm. Bynum,Indianapolis. | D. 2% IOWA. om SENATORS. Wm. B. Allison; £ * Dubuque. James F. Wilson, £% _ Fairfield. REPRESENTATIVES. I. John H. Gear, Z____Burlington. 7. E. BH. Conger, B* __Adel. 2. Walter I. Hayes, 2 _Clinton. 8. A.R. Anderson, /nd_Sidney. - 3. D.B. Henderson, Z*_Dubuque. 9. Joseph Lyman, £2%__Council Bluffs. 4. Wm. E. Fuller, 2%__West Union. | 10."A. J. Holmes, £%___Boone. ! 5. Daniel Kerr, £_____Grundy Centre. 11. Isaac S. Struble, £*_Ie Mars. 6. J. B. Weaver, D*___Bloomfield. | KANSAS. . SENATORS. John J. Ingalls, £%__Atchison. | Preston B. Plumb, £% Emporia. REPRESENTATIVES. 1. E. N. Morrill, #*___ Hiawatha. | 5 I. A Anderson, £%__Manhattan. ia 2. E. H. Funston, 2%__Iola. 6, E.']. Turner, 2 |, .. Kenneth. 3. B. W. Perkins, £* __Oswego. 7. Sam’l R. Peters, £%_Newton. 4. Thomas Ryan, £* __Topeka. KENTUCKY. SENATORS. James B. Beck, Dr ____ Lexington. | Jos. C. S. Blackburn, D* Versailles. REPRESENTATIVES. 1. William J. Stone, D*_Eddyuville. 7. Wm. C. P. Breckin- 2. Polk Laffoon, D*____Madisonville. ridoe, B%__ Lexington. 3. W. G. Hunter, 2 __.__Burkesville. 8. J. B. McCreary, O*_Richmond. 4. A.B. 0 _Elizabethtown. 9. Geo. M. Thomas, Z_Vanceburg. Montgomery, 5. Asher G. Caruth, D__Louisville. 10. W. P. Taulbee, D* _Salyersville. 5. John G. Carlisle, D*_ Covington. 11. H. F. Finley, £ ____Williamsburgh. LOUISIANA. SENATORS. a Randall Lee Gibson, 2% _New Orleans. | James B. Eustis, D*____New Orleans. REPRESENTATIVES. . T. S. Wilkinson, 2__New Orleans. | 4. N. C. Blanchard, D¥_Shreveport. -. M.D. lagan, DD. ___. New Orleans. 5: C. Newton, D._..._.. Basttrop. | . Edward J. Gay, D*__Plaquemine. | 6. E. W. Robertson, 2__Baton Rouge. | | [ | | GON = Fiftieth Congress. 203 MAINE. SENATORS. Eugene Hale, 2%. ___.. Ellsworth. | William P. Frye, £%____Lewiston. REPRESENTATIVES. 1. Thos. B. Reed, R%*___Portland. 3. Se th I. Milliken, 2% _ Belihst 2. N. Dingley, jr., R* __Lewiston. | 4. C. A. Boutelle, %___Bangor. MARYLAND. / SENATORS. Arthur P. Gorman, D%__Taurel. | Ephraim K. Wilson, D*_Snow Hill. REPRESENTATIVES. 1. Chas. H. Gibson, DO* Easton. : | 4. Isidor Raynor, 2____ Baltimore. 2. Frank T. Shaw, D*__Westminster. | 5. Barnes Compton, O*_Laurel. 3. Harry W. Rusk, 2 ___Baltimore. | 6. L. E. McComas, £%__Hagerstown. MASSACHUSETTS. . SENATORS. Henry L. Dawes, &%___Pittsfield. | George F. Hoar, R%____Worcester. REPRESENTATIVES. 1. Robert T. Davis, 2% _Fall River. | 7. W. Cogswell, R____Salem. 2. John D. Long, 2% ___ Hingham. | CH Allen, 2%.___ Lowell. 3. Lebpold Morse, 2D ___ Boston. | 9. BE. Burnett, 4)... Southborough. 4. Patrick A. Collins, 2O* Boston. | Io. John E. Russell, D__Leicester. 5. E. D. Hayden, R*___Woburn. | 11. W. Whiting, 2%____Holyoke. 6. Henry C. Lodge, £__Nahant. | 12. F. W. Rockwell, R%_ Pittsfield. MICHIGAN. SENATORS. | Thomas W. Palmer, R%_Detroit. | Francis B. Stockbridge, £2 REPRESENTATIVES. I. J. Logan Chipned, D__Detroit. | 7. J. R. Whiting, 2 ___Saint Clair. 2. Edward P. Allen, Z___VYpsilanti. 8. T. E. Tarsney, D*__East Saginaw 3. James O’Donnell, 2%__Jackson. [... 1435 K street, NW © = 52 fy Mavey, SB ... 0 Baris, Tex ~~ = 413 Fourth street, N. W __ 87 i ® Miller, Warner... Herkimer, N. V._______ 1303 XK street, N.W.__..= 57 | 2D ED 2 i 210 Congressional Directory. Name. | | Post-office. | | City address. Page. | Spe | *Z Mitchell, John HX _.___..... | Portland, Oreg-. ..:.. | The Richiwond ___._..... 72 Mitchell, Jom 1. ov = Wellsboro), Pa... | 13 Pirst street, N.E ____. 73 Moroom,Jolm T=" 2. 7 |: Washington, D.C _____ | 113 Fist street, NE ____ 5 ® Morrill, Tustin S........... | Strafford, Vt... l“w Thomas Circle... 90 Palmer, Thomas W ____- .___ "Detroit, Mich = _ 1435 K street, N. W__ 43 ¥|| Payne, Hemxy B _.... Sa Cleveland, Ohio. | 1122 Vermont avenue ____ 67 % Pott Orville TT... 0 2) | Meriden, Conn. | Addington Hotel...= 12 Plumb, Preston B _.___._._. .} Emporia, Kans... ..... | 612 Fourteenth st., N. W__ 28 ReTDuch,James L. ............ Evfaula, Ala. oi... ' 1513 Rhode Island avenue. 5 Ransom, Matte Riddleberger, W.. Harrison II ___| Weldon, N.C. = = | Woodstock, Va________| Metropolitan Metropolitan Hotel Hotel __ ___________ 64 oI * || || Sabin, Dwight M________ Stillwater, Minn_______ | 1 Jowa Circle, NNW _____ 45 Soulsbury, Eli...0 Dover, Deli0 | 610 Fourteenth st., N. W_ 13 X2Sawyer, Philetus. Oshkosh, Wis. =. “1820 Lsiree;, N.W 2° 95 Sewell, William J.__._...... Camden, N. J. coi The Richmond...5, 55 % Spooner, John C... u..... Hudson, Wis...| Lig Bstreet, N.W J. _..._ 95 *|| Stanford, Leland .._._.._. San Francisco, Cal =. 1701 KK street, N. Wii 9 ¥ileller, Henry M. 0 10 ©. Central City, Colo’. 1013 M street, N.W__ II ¥Wance, Zebulon Bo... ¥Van Wyck, Charles H.__.___ Chorlotte, Nebraska N.C. ia. City, Nebr____| 1627 1800 Massachusetts ave__. Massachusettsave ___ 64 52 % Vest, George G_.___.0. J. Kansas City, Mo_______ 1204. P street, N. WW: 49 Voorhees, Daniel W __._.___. Terre Haute, Ind 5. CL: 3315. P street, N.W._ © 18 22 Sl Walthall, 30. C_.. C...i.. Grenada, Miss______ ._. Welcker’s Hotel _________ 47 awhitthorne,W.C....o._& Columbia, Tenn..." Ebbiit House ©. 5 84 *Williams, A. Pi San Francisco, Cal. Homilion House 9 * Wilson, Ephraim K________ %*4 Wilson, James F__.______ Snow Hill, Md Fairfield, Iowa ________ | 1327 Nistreet 0. 623 Thirteenth st., N. W__ 37 25 "REPRESENTATIVES. : Name. | Post-office. City address. Page. # CARLISLE, JOHN G., olor Covington, Ky ........ Ricos House. ......ve. 31 * Adams, Adams, George E__________ Jom I. ool... } Chicago, TIL... Tiiub New York, N.Y -..___ Arlington Hotel _____.___ 8o12 Connecticut ave_ ____ 18 58 Aiken, D. Wyatt... cen Cokethure, 8S. Coll olin ndash 82 ®* Allen, Charles T9. _. ...i.. | Allen, John Mo... co. | Lowell, Tupelo, Mass ______ «--| Miss......c... Arlington Hotel... __.__ 216 Second street, N.E __ 41 47 * Anderson, Charles M ______ | Greenville, Ohio_______ 813 Twelfth street, N. W__ 68 Anderson, Jom A... ... | Manhattan, Kans ______ 1333 G street, NW _____ 29 Atkinson, Louis Ee. onc lO («Mifflintown, Pa___ | 617 Eleventh street, N. W_ 77 Bacon, Henry... ool ii... } Goshen, N. Y._......./ The Woodmont .._ioo. 60 * Baker, Charles Sooo i Rochester, N. Y____.... | 623 Thirteenth st., N. W _ 63 Ballentine, Jom G-.__.._.__. | Pulaski, Tenn. .__.._ /Ebbitt House ......... 86 {{ Barbour, Johm'S.._ ......... «Alexandria, Va... 144 B street, N.E _______ 93 Barksdale, Ethelbert -. * Barnes, George T ___....... |: | Jackson, Angusta, Miss... Ga... .... 000 937 New York avenue ___ Metropolitan Hotel ______ 48 17 Ua Barry, I Geta Tabak West Point, Miss... Metropolitan Hotel ._____ 48 fp, of * Bayne, Thomas M ________. Robella, Pa: oc. ios Arlington Hotel .__..._... 79 Da Belmont, Perry... 0 Bennett, Risden TT ._...__._. Bingham, Henry H _________ Babylon, N.. V. _...... 1701 Rhode Island avenue. Wadesborough, N. C ___| Metropolitan Hotel ______ Philadelphia, Pa. oeln oo clo tiie os 57 66 74 Blanchard, Newton C _______ Shreveport, 1a........ Metropolitan Hotel ______ 34 y X*Bland, Richard P___.__. _ .: Lebanon, Mo oi... 1132 Twelfth street, N. W 5I 5 Bliss, Archibald M__________ *2| Blount, James H________ Brooklyn, N.Y ....... Macon, Ga... 4. =. Arlington Hotel ......... National Hotel -= _ 58 16 ! § ®*Bound, Franklin _____._.__ Milton, Ba © 212 Fourth street, S.E ___ 76 \ ! Home and City Residences. 2IT a Name. Post-office. City address. Page. A *¥2 Boutelle, Charles A______. Bangor,Me. 1 i Hamilton House_______ FY 36 | %¥Boyle, Charles Uniontown, Pa _______. Willard’s Hotel ci 78 Brady, JamesiD=_ io. Petersburg, Va... 403 G street, NN. W-___=__ 92 Bragg, Edward So © Fond dulac, Wis... Ebbitt House .__..c...._ 96 ; * Breckinridae, Clifton R.____{ Pine Bloff, Avk >... 218 North Capitol street __ 8 - *¢2 Breckinridge, William C. P| Lexington, Ky ._______ Riggs House... ___1__ 32 fg $4 Brown, Charles E________ Cincinnati, Ohio. ______ Hillman House... . 68 *¢ Brown, William W _______ Bradford, Pa: 2.2: Hamilton House__ =. __ 77 Browne, Thomas M___.______ Winchester Ind cd pi fos 0 oo dora ae 23 *Bramm, Charles N _ Minersville, Pa’ ~~ 808 Nineteenth street, N.W. 76 ¥ Buchanan, *2lll|| Buck, James__________ John R ________ Trenton, N. J ..o...oo... Hartford, Comn ..... 2130 IX siveet, Arlington Hotel NOW _ .. =... 55 12 *2Bomnell, Frank C_ oi. Tunkhannock, Pa_--... National Hotel. = 1 _ 77 Burleigh, Henry CG... __..___ Whitehall, N. VY... ¥517 1 street, NeW, _.___ 61 Burnes, James N ._._....0; Saint Joseph, Mo._____. Willard’s Hotel ___c_..2 50 *Burrows, Julius C _.__:'[ Kalamazoo, Mich. 2 i. National Hotel © Zr = 43 *% Butterworth, Benjamin ____| Cincinnati, Ohio ______ 407 Maple av., L.. D. Park_ 67 * Bynum, William D ________ Indianapolis, Ind ______ 1103 G street, NNW ._____ 23 Cabell, George C=+ = = Danville, Va i5- 525 Sixth street, N. W____ 92 Caldwell, Andrew J.......... Nashville, Tenn._ .___ 410 Sixth street, N. W ___ 86 Campbell, Peli i 1 too Brooklyn; N.V 2 Alington Hotel. ...._..... 57 Campbell, Jacob M *|| Campbell, James __.___ E_______ Johnstown, Pa.___..... Hamilton, Ohio _______ 612 Fourteenth st., N. W __ 1013 Connecticut avenue__ 77 68 } | Campbell, Timothy J________ Candler, Allen D_._..._ .. New York City, N. Y __| Gainesville, Ga________ Congressional Hotel .____ Metropolitan Hotel ______ 58 17 ~ ¥22 Cannon, Joseph G ___..__ Danville, 11) 2. = Willard's Hotel... 20 *2Carleign, Ezra C._ ...._ ~ Port Huron, Mich National Hotel = _._.___: 44 Caswell, TuclenB = *Catchings, Thomas = C ______ Port Atkinson, Wis. ___| Vicksburg, Miss _______ 21 Grant Place... ___ Metropolitan Hotel ______ 96 48 *Clardy, Mortin I...: Farmington, Mo _______ 1210.G street, N.W 51 #*Clements, Judson C. ___.__. La Fayette, Ga. 1. Metropolitan Hotel _____._ 16 Cobb, Thomas R =» © Vincennes, Ind__.____ | 307 Cistreet, N.W.__ 22 #Collins, Patrick A. .~ 2. Boston, Mass... __.:.. |'Rigos Housel. 40 Compton, Barnes _~___ © Annapolis, Md.__.__....['Taurel, Maryland... 38 *Comstock, Charles C.__.___ Grand Rapids, Mich ___| 210 North Capitol street __ 44 A *Conger, Edwin HH © | ~~ Adel, Towa. ot «0 0d 25. Jowa Circle nein. 26 i { Cooper, William C_.__... * Cowles, William H. H_____ Co Br Si i Cox, Wiliam R..___.._7 Mount Vernon, Ohio ___| Wilkesborough, N.C___| New York, N.Y ...... Raleigh, N.C. .._._.. 1105 F street ___________ National Hotel __________ Riggs House Annex _____ Riggs House Annex _____ 69 66 59 65 A Crain, William Hl": ___..__ Cuero, Tex..." ine 123 Bstrect,S. E20 1 89 a Crisp, Charles BB . . © Americus, Ga... Metropolitan Hotel. ______ 15 RS Croxton, Thomas... ¥¢Culberson, David B ____ __ Tappahannock, Va_____ Jelterson, Tex. __._. 525 Sixth street, N. W ___ Metropolitan Hotel ______ © 91 88 *4 || Curtin, Andrew G ._____ Bellefonte, Pa... 1513 K street, NoW:. 78 * Cutcheon, Byron M________ Manistee, Mich. _._ | 1409 Massachusetts ave __ 44 Donel, Jom W............+ Dargan, George W. ~~ Tynchburg, Darlington, Va.__.__ S. C_.__= 1700 Nineteenth st., N. W. 504. F street, NNW ____© 92 83 | Davenport, Tra... Bath, No. Vo. 0 ay 1606 Twentieth street____ 63 * 9 Davidson, Alexander C ___| Uniontown, Ala _______| National Hotel ______ aii 6 Davidson, Robert H. M _____ Quincy, Fla __:47 | | National Hotel ._____.___ 14 %Davis,, Robert T.._= _~ Fall River, Mass ___ 1325 KK street, N.W.. __ 39 Be \d HIN : Dawson, William ___________ %®2 Dibble, Samuel. *¢ Dingley, Nelson, jr... ___ New Madrid, Mo______ Orangeburg, S.C... = Lewiston,Me ..._.= 224 Third street, S.£ Metropolitan Hotel ___ ____ Hamilton House______.__ 52 82 36 ’ 4 * Dockery, Alexander *Dorsey, George W. E M _*. _-| ______ Gallatin, Fremont, Mo_.__._.___. *Williard’s Hotel..." Nebr ________ | 1406 G street, N.W______ 50 53 A iN Te Dougherty, Charles... *¥Dunham, Ransom W_______ Bunn, Poindexter... Eden, Jom R=! i Daytona, Fla: I: ai: | National Hotel . i! Chicago, I~_ © [31325 Gsiveet, NNW ivi © | Forest City, Ark... 223 East Capitol street -_ _ Sullivan, TH oc * Metropolitan Hotel ______ 14 18 8 21 : : Eldredge, Nathaniel B_ ______ Adrian, Mich ____ {10g First street, N.B___ __ 43 212 Congressional Directory. Name. Ellsberry, William W _______ %% Bly, Frederick’ D ___-__. * Ermentrout, Daniel ___ ____ * 2 Evans, I. Newton________ Everhart, James B .____._~__ * Farquhar, John M_________ Pelion, Charles N.__.__-__: ¥ Findlay, Jom V. L.._... .. * Fisher, Spencer O _________| Fleeger, George W ___...... Foran, Martin A -*Vord, George _ _o. _.__. Forney, William H _________ 2% Frederick, Ben. To... Fuller, William E _v.__._ .._ Funston, Edward H.______.. % Gallinger, Jacob H_._._____ *Gay, Edward J ........... * Geddes, George W ________ Gibson, Charles H __________ *|| || Gibson, Eustace ._______ Gilillan, Jem B._............ * I Glass, P.Xou ool ai Glover,Jom'M. ..... ...... *Goff, Nathan, jr............ Green, Wharton J. __...___._ * 2 Grosvenor, Charles HL _____ Grout, William W __________ Guenther, Richard... _.__.___ Hale, Jom B o_o. .... %M all, Benton J... 2 Halsell, Ton BE... _... _ Hammond, Nathaniel J______ Hanback, lewis...2. .: %Harmer, Alfred C _______.__ Harris, Henry R=.0 0 *2 Hatch, William H ______. *Hayden, Edward D....__.. * Haynes, Martin A. __. __._ %Heard, John To. ..2...... Hemphill, John J ........... Henderson, David B ________ *3Henderson, John S____ ____ *Henderson, Thomas | ______ ¥% Henley, Bavelay. 0 0 Hepburn, William P ________ gi Herbert, Hilary A... Herman, Binger__._. Hiestand, John A... __ Fl Wiliam DY. 00 Hives, George... os ® Hiscock, Pyanke oi. Fis, Robert R05. *2 9 Holman, William S _____ Holmes, Adoniram J ________ Hoping, A. J .-oo-0 Houk, Leonidas C..... . Howard, Jonas G._._..__.._ Hudd, Thomas R.__:. __..__. Hutton, John EB... ivion, Alfred B_......0 Jackson, Oscar'L...o. 0 %2 James, Darwin R___. ___ Post-office. City address. Page Georgetown, Ohio _____ 117 Bstreet, NW __._.. 69 Dedham, Mass ________ 1011 Thirteenth st., N. W_ 41 Reading, Pa... ..o. 215 East Capitol street. __ 75 Hatboro, Pa....o.. 815 Twelfth street, N. W _ . 75 West Chester, Pa __...__. 1421 K sireet, NN. W ____-75 Bufhlo, N. Yi... 813 Twelfth street, N. W _ 63 San Mateo, ic. 1508 H sireet, N. W_____ 10 Cal... Baltimore, Md 000 [us on lig 38 West Bay City, Mich___| 1707 Rhode Island avenue. 45 Butler, Pa... 2... oon 22% Four-and-a-half street. 79 Cleveland, Ohio = _ 617 Eleventh street, N. W_ 72 South Bend, Ind _..__. 1101 Kistreet, N.W .___. 25 Jacksonville, Ala ______ 1116. G street, N. W ___._ 7 Marshalltown, Iowa ____| 1201 F street, N. W _____ 26 West Union, Towa _____ 20 Grant Place” «=»: 26 Jola, Kang. 7.0.) 714 Thirteenth street, N.W. 28 Concord, No. Fil ___ National Hotel... _.__. 55 Plaquemine, fa ....... 1426'K street, N.W.____-34 Mansfield, Ohio _____._ 523 Sixth street, N. W___ 71 Easton, Md __ + yu _ Willard’'s Hotel. 37 Huntington, W. Va ____| 216 North Capitol street __ 95 Minneapolis, Minn ____| The Portland __________. 46 Ripley, Tenn__.__.__.. Metropolitan Hotel _.____ 86 Saint Louis, Mo... -1310 Connecticut avenue.__ 51 Clarksburg, W. Va____. Ebbitt House. ~~~ 94 Fayetteville, N.C __.__ National Hotel... .... 65 Athens, Ohio... ... 1308 EF street, N.W___, 70 Barton, Vt io. oo 614 Thirteenth st.,N. W __ 90 Qshkosh, Wis____.____ The Riggs Annex _______ 97 Carrollton, Mo....__ Willard's Hotel..." 49 Burlington, Towa _____._ 1325 G street, NoW 25 Bowling Green, Ky ____| 211 North Capitol street __ 3I Atlanta, Ga... Metropolitan Hotel ______ 16 Salina, Kans... ____._ 225 Four-and-a-half street _ 29 Philadelphia, Pa._ 519 Sixth street N. W ____ 75 Greenville, Ga ___. ____ Natioml Hetel _.._.. 16 Hannibat,Mo. _-_.____ 1322 G street, Na. W. = . 49 Woburn, Mass _..___.| Wormley’'s Hotel ______ I 40 loke Village, N. 17... | National Hotel ........._._ 54 Sedalia, Mo « ...a....c Clarendon Hotel. ........ 50 Chester, S.C...5 1325 G street, N.W _ ~~ 83 Dubuque, Towa_______._ 1007 Thirteenth st., N. W_ 26 Salisbury, N.C.__....__ Metropolitan Hotel ______ 66 Princeton, 11. 52B street, N. BE... 19 Santa Rosa, Cal... _._ Welcker’s Hotel _________ 10 Clarinda, Towa: 1305 R street, N. Wo. _ 27 Montgomery, Ala______ Riges House... 6 Roseburg, Oreg _______ 724 Twelfth street, N. W _ 73 Tancaster; Pa. 1327 Estreet, N, W...__. 75 Defiance, Ohio ___.____ 108 Fifth street, N. E.____ 68 Salem, NoJ.....0. Willard’s Hotel 55 Syracuse, N.Y. _-. Arlington Hotel -62 Mount Morris, I11______ ¥507 K street, N. W_ I9 Aurora, Ind... __..... Hamilton House...) 23 Boone, Towa. vo. 721 Twelfth street, N. W _ 27 Anvora, Tl. 0 Hotel Windsor ____.____.. 18 Knoxville, Tenn. __ 505 Twelfth street, N. W__ 85 Jeftersonville, Ind ______ 1005 E street, N. W _____ 22 Green Bay, Wis ___ 1303 R street, N. W.. ~~ 96 Mexico, Moa ooo 307 C street, N.W_ = _ = 51 Marksville, To... 214 North Capitol street __ 35 New'Casile,Pa___ 613 Thirteenth street, N.-W 79 Brooklyn, N.Y___._ 1412 I street, N.W___' __ 57 Home and City Residences. 213 olf, Name. Post-office. City address. Page Johnson, Frederick A________ *Tohnston, James" T0 =. _ Glens Falls, N. V___._ Rockville, Ind _."___.._ Hamilton House ________ 1023 Vermont avenue ____ 61 23 *Johnston, Thomas Jones,Jomes® ___ D _______ Asheville, N.C___.._.. Henderson, Tex....____ 616 F street, 709 Eleventh N. W street. ______ __ ____ 67 88 Ril Jones, James Toi... Demopolis, Ala... __.__ Metropolitan Hotel ______ 5 Kelley, William D____.___.. Philadelphia, Pa_______ Riggs Annex _____....... 74 EXetcham, Jom HH -_____. Dover Plains, N. Y____| 1320 K street, N.W._._____ 60 King, J. Floyd GR hp Vidalia, La... -2:i0 Arlington Hotel 0... 34 Reiner, Jom]... .... Evansville, Ind____.___ 225 A street, NB 22 Yaffoon; Polk “0.a Madisonville, Ky __.___ 221 East Capitol street___ 30 * La Follette, Robert M______ Madison, Wis. __ 810 Twelfth street, N. W__ 96 Yaivd,Jomes. «0 Hastings, Nebr________ Ricos House © = 53 Landes, Slag? / oi. Mount Carmel, 111 __ ___ 134 Bsiveet, N.E__-_ 21 * Lanham, Samuel W. T_____ Weatherford, Tex_____._ 931% New York av. ,N.W 90 2Llawler, Frank ©...|. Chicago, TN... .. Willwd’s Hotel... ___. 18 LeFevre,Benjamin.__ ¥chlbach, Herman: Sidney, Ohlo.......... Newarle, N. J... 1508 Sixteenth street. __ Congressional Hotel __ ____ 68 56 Yibbey, Harry _ 0... old Point Comfort, Vai. Bae i 91 Iindsley, James G_.......... Rondout, N. VY... __ Hamilton House... 61 Title, John... ®22jLong, Jom D.........._. Xenia, Ohio ea er Hingham, Mass _______ 718 Tenth street, N. W___ Hamilton House. ________ 69 39 f%Z2).ore,CharlesB._ = == Wilmington, Del _____. 814 Fifteenth street, N. W. 13 Ponitit, 1. A... . oa. Stockton, Cali x... 0.0 Congressional Hotel _____. 10 Lovering, HemyB. ._.__.... 8nn, Mass.C . National Hotel... ... 40 ®Z1owry, Robert ..0___. Lyman, Joseph... oo... Fort Wayne, Ind ______ Council Bluffs, Towa ___| 100 Bstreet, 1305 R street, N.E 2. NW ______ 24 27 % McAdoo, William ............. Jersey City, N. J ....... Riggs House...._. 56 Al *|| McComas, McCreary, IonisE_....._. James B .____. Hagerstown, Md ______ Richmond, Ky ________ Rigos Riggs House... _-L..._. House... _..___. 38 32 XMcKenna, Joseph... Suisun, Cal. 00 816 Fifteenth street, N. W_ 10 * McKinley, William, jr _____ Canton, Ohio _-2____:- Ebbitt: House... wa McMillin, Benton _- _~. ~~ Corthage, Tenn... Riggs House...__. 85 McRae, Thomas C__________ Prescott, Ark... 015 M street. RY Ry 8 Mahoney, Peter *Markham, HH. H __ -__ .___. ___ Brooklyn, N.Y ......-Los Angeles, Cal _____. Arlington Hotel .__.____. 23Jowa Circle... 58 II *| | Martin, JomN Birmingham, Ala______ 1332 I street, N. W.__.___ 7 Matson, Courtland C ________ Greencastle, Ind._ 1224 Fourteenth st., N. W 23 Maybury, Willlam CC: ~" Merriman, Truman A _______ *Millard, Stephen C ....___. Detroit, Mich New York, Binghamton, N.Y N. Y_____ Nationol Hotel: iiss0: 222 D streef, N. W_____. Arlington Hotel ____© ___ 43 59 62 Miller, James’ FB __..0.-..¢ Gonzales, Tex....} 1114 Gstreet, N.W______ 89 ¢Milliken, Seth... ____ __. Belfast, Me... ro15 Thirteenth st., N. W_ 36 *Mills, Roger Q__..._0 Corsicana, Tex =I: 1115 G street, N. W_. 89 % Mitchell, Charles I... New Haven, Conn_____ 3 DuPont Circle! Lu 0 12 Moffatt, Seth C=.2 = Grand Traverse, Mich__| Willard’s Hotel _________ 45 Morgan, I.B: Hernando, Miss _______ 218 Third street, N.W ___ 47 Morrill, Edmund N_________ Hiawatha, Kans_______ 1331 G street, NW. 28 * Morrison, William R_______ Waterloo, TI...© Willard’s Hotel |___. 21 Morrow, William W-________ San Francisco, Cal_____ Hamilton House __._____ 10 Muller, Nicholas = ___ "~~ Murphy, Jeremiah H________ Nealigflomm BR... New York, N.Y ______ Davenport, Towa ______ Rhea Springs, Tenn____| Willaxd’s Hotel _________ Ebbitt House ........... 222 Third street, N. W ___ 58 25 85 *Neece, William H_________ %Negley,Jomes'S......._._._ Macomb, 111 ¢ Pittsburgh, Pa_____ 130 Maryland avenue, N. E. Willard’s Hotel. __ oc 20 78 # Nelson, Norwood, Bnute -__ = Thomas M _ 1. _______ Alexandria, Minn______ Savannah, Ga’ ~~ 704 Fourteenth st.,_______ 223 Indiana avenue.__..___ 46 15 *Oates, William C___ _____. Abbeville, Ala ________ National Hotel _________._ 6 O'Donnel, James... ___ Jackson, Mich pt [ins Hamilton House ________ 43 #1 O' Ferrall, Charles T._.... Harrisonburg, Va ______ 810 Twelfth street _______ 93 %|O Hara, James BE. ______.. Enfield, N.C... 1724 Fourteenth st., N. W_ 65 O'Neill, Charles... Philadelphia, Pa_.__._ 1326 New York avenue___ 74 ONeill, John]..... Saint Louis, Mo. _____ 421 Sixth street, N. W____ 51 *Oshorne,EdwinS ____ Wilkes-Barre, Pa ______ 941 K street, N. W____.. 73 Name. * Outhwaite, Joseph H_______ *Owen, WilliamD__ ___.__.. Parker, Abraham X! _ooo0 *li Bayne, Sereno Bc... ® Payson, Lewis: BE... _...: Peel, Somuel W 10 unr % Perkins, Bishop W .._____. Perry, William HW ___..____..._. F* Peters, Samuel R._ ._..._.. Pettibone, Augustus H_______ * Phelps, William W__.____. Pidcoek, James N .___._.__. Pindar, John S._ Plomb, Ralph..._.: Price, HHL,oan 0 *2 Randall, Samuel J________ *¢ ¢ Ranney, Ambrose A_____ ReReagon, Jom H.___ __. _ ¥Reed, Thomas B.. ......... Reese, Seaborn. 2... *Rice, William W_. ...._.__ gg Richardson, J.D. _...____ GRiges, James M_...__.___._ Robertson, Thomas A _______ ~Rockwell, Francis W________ *l Rogers, Jom H........... Romeis, Jacob... .. J... .L... * Rowell, Jonathan H _._____. * Rusk, Harry Welles: RBRyom, Thomas... .......C Sadler, Thomas W-.. Sawyer, Jom ._ G__.... * Sayers, Joseph D...... 0... ¥éa Scott, William 1... _...__ * ¢ Scranton, Joseph A_ _.____ %Seney, George BE __. * Sessions, Walter R ________ * Seymour, Edward W_. _____ Shaw, Frank [5.0 Singleton, Otho RL. % Skinner, Thomas G..___.__ Smalls, Rebert: 50-0 ov Snyder, Charles Pe.= * 8 Sowden, William H ______ %Spooner, Hemry J... *4 Spriggs, J. Thomas___.___ *|| Springer, William M______ * Stablnecker, William G ____| %Steele,George W_.-____ = * Stephenson, Isaac . _.___.__ Stewart, Charles... Stewart, John W. .__.-. Ste Martin, Louis... *2éStone, Eben F.. _.. Stone, William J... * Stone, William J... XeStorm, John B 1... Strait, Horace ... B._....... Struble, sane So ou ini0 *Swinburne, John... ....0 *%2Swope, Jon A. ....... ¥Symes, GeorzeG........... Tarsney, Timothy E ......... Congressional Directory. Post-office. City address. Page. Columbus, Ohio... Willard’s Hotel ____.___. 70 Logansport, Ind _______ 340. C street, N.W._..._\. 24 Potsdam, N.Y... i 220 North Capitol sireet __ 62 Auburn, N.Y... Portland...i... 62 The _ Pontiac, Tl ~ i oofas 1115 G street, N. We _ 19 Bentonville, Ark_______ 708 East Capitol street ___ 9 Oswego, Kans ._____._. Hamilton House _______. 29 Greenville, S. Co Metropolitan Hotel _____. 83 Newton, Kans 2 =~... Ebbitt House’... ___-. 30 Greenville, Tenn ______ 471 C street, N.-W. 1: 84 Englewood, N. J ____. _| Arlington Hotel _____ sells 56 White House Station,N.J| National Hotel _. ______ 56 Cobleskill, N. V_._ _... 1004 Twenty-sixth st.,N.W 62 Streator, TN... i 1320 Fourteenth st.,N. W_ I9 Black River Falls, Wis _| 209 East Capitol street ___ 97 Philadelphia, Pa_____.. 120 C street, S. E__ 74 Boston, Mass .__.___.. Arlington Hotel... 40 Palestine, Tex...__ | 222 Third street, N. W.___ 88 Portland, Me... __._.__ HamilionHouse. © =" 35 Sparta, Ga oh sie l Metropolitan Hotel ______ 16 Worcester, Mass_______ Ig4r Yistreet ar ox 41 Murfreesboro’, Tenn____| National Hotel __________ 86 Winchester, 1111+: © 134 Bistreet, N.E _...... 20 Hodgensville, Ky_____ 601 Thirteeth street, N. W_ 31 Pittsfield, Mass ©. Ricos House, = cx.a 42 Fort Smith, Ark. :___.. 1509 R street, N. W_____. 9 Toledo, Ohio_ > Congressional Hotel ___. . 69 Bloomington, T11_______ 910 1 street, N. W ©, 20 Baltimore, Md 5 hoihorary oem:ea 37 Topeka, Rang: 1 o Nationa] Hotel oo =, = 209 Prattville, Ala. 1005 G street, N. W______ 6 Alblon, N. VV... 24 Grant Place.-1 63 Bastrop, Tex. 3.0 710 Eleventh street, N. W_ 89 Ure Pa oo or cond) 1703 K street, NNW _____ 8o Scranton, Pa. i The Hamilton Annex ____ 76 Tiffin, Ohio... 1333 G street, NW... | 69 Jamestown, N.Y... 1316 Rhode Island avenue 64 Litchfield, Conn_ ._.._. Arlingion Hotel © & 1° 13 Westminster, Md ______ National Hotel: 202 -_ _ = 37 Forest, Miss... 1620 Fifteenth street, N. W. 48 Hertford, N.C. Metropolitan Hotel ______ 64 Beaufort, S.C... 1433 1 street, NNW ____ 83 Charleston, W. Va _____ National Hotel > = 7 7 95 Allentown, Po: 945 K street, N.W ______ 76 Providence, Ri 1 ..._.. Riggs Howse... ...... 8o Utica, NoY ciligoon ol 0 ion 0 62 Springfield, I: __ a3 B street, S.E___. .._. 20 Yonkers, N.Y ________ The Woodmont _____ ____ 60 Morion, Ind. 20.0. Rigos Houser |. [ov0 24 Marinette, Wis________ 1216 G street, NNW. _____ 97 Houston, Tex... __. 1114 G street, N.W __ 87 Middlebury, Vi..... Arlington Hotel. __..___ 90 New Orleans, La ______ 1712 B sree, NW __ 33 Newburyport, Mass ____| 1401 Hstreet_.___...__.. 41 Fadyville,Ky.......... National Hotel _ J... 30 Nevada, Mo ..-... 238 North Capitol street __ 51 Stroudsburg, Pa’. ~...... National Hotel 76 Shakopee, Minn ____. ..| 909 New York avenue____ 46 LeMars, Towa... 909 New York avenue____ 27 Albany, N. V i... The Belvidere...ic or Gettysburg, Pa i... 234 Astree!, SS Eo. oc. 78 Denver, Colo. .1.. | 835 Vermont avenue _____ II East Saginaw, Mich_. __| National Hotel _._________ 44 Lome and City Residences. 215 Name. Post-office. City address. “Page. i hss Tobe, W.P__._... os. gTlaylor,Esra B_____ ____ *Taylor, Issac EH... .....2 FPaylor, Joh M..._.._._. | Taylor, Zachary... ._...___ oo *TThomas,JonR......_.__~ Tay Thomas, Ormsby B _________ *Thompson, Albert C ____.__ Throckmorton, James W_____ 7 Tillman, George DL __........ Ne * Townshend, Richard W ____| Tr Mrige, Connally ¥ _____._ \ * 2 Tucker, John Randolph. _.. Turner, Hemy CG... | %* Van Eaton, Henry S..__.._ S *|| || Van Schaick, Isaac W___| Xi Viele, Eobert I. -_: _.___ Wade, William Hl _._._..___. *3 Wadsworth, W. H________ Walt, Jom: To Wakeiicld, Jomes B___.._.__. Wallace, N. D-._J. ln *Ward, Jomes H _...._..... *9 9 4 Ward, Thomas B______ Warmer, AJ on Warmer, William. _.___._... Weaver, Archibald J ......__ || Weaver, James B .___.... ’ *e Weber, Jom B'_____. __. 5 MWellborn, Olin. o = fo. 0 Th a West, George 0 LoL f yw % 2 Wheeler, Joseph ........_. ! White, Alexander C_._______ N White, Milo = 2 0 A Whiting, William... ....... AN Wilkins, Beriah__.____.___ r FWillis, Albert. Sto ol Wilson, W. 1... Winans, Edwin B- _______. Wise, George D__........___ \ & Wolford, Frank IL. _-___._._© “Woodburn, William _________ io” "Worthington, Nicholas E ____| \ AN or Name. o: X2e%| Bean, Curtis C.....___ Pa id #Caine, Ton T . 0. Xl Carey, Joseph M __= __ AN *Gifford, Oscar S.-i. = r Hailey, John... ..... LRA | *Toseph, Antonio............. v7 "Poole, Joseph 1X... nae... A Voorhees, Chorles S... ..... SK Saylersville, Ky _______ Warren, Ohio ___.__._ Carrollton, Ohio______. Lexington, Tenn . ....._ Covington, Tenn ..____ Metropolis, TH ._....... Prairie du Chien, Wis__| Portsmouth, Ohio______ McKinney, Tex. _. Edgefield, S.C... __ Shawneetown, I11 ______ Abingdon, Va... _____. Lexington, Vania Quitman, Ga... Woodville, Miss _______ Milwaukee, Wis _______ New York, N.V ..._.... Springfield, Mo. .______ Maysville, By... __..__ Norwich, Comn.......... Blue Earth City, Minn__| New Orleans, La____.. Chicago, l........... La Fayette, Ind... .... Marietta, Ohio ____ .___ Kansas City, Mo ___.__ Falls City, Nebr... Bloomfield, Iowa ______ Buflo, N.V. Dallas, Tex: oi oir Ballston, N.2V = = Wheeler, Ala... .... Brookville, Pa :._ =: Chatfield, Minn _______ Holyoke, Moss _. .___._ Urichsville, Ohio ______ Louisville, Ky «= Charleston, W.Va _____ Hamburg, Mich _._____ Richmond, Va .___ Columbia, Ky. Virginia City, Nev_____ Peoria, II ___________._ DELEGATES. Post-office. Prescot, Aviz> Salt Lake City, Utah ___| Cheyemme, Wyo'_______ Canton, Dak... Boisé City, Idaho______ Ojo Caliente, N. Mex___| Helena, Mont _: Colfax, Wash ~~ \ 1108 22d street, N. W____| 32 1746 M sireet, NNW. __.__ 71 1325: G sireet, N.W 21 National Hotel... 86 yo A'street, S. BE... 87 1333 L street, N.W.______ 21 702 Tenth street, N. W___ 97 National Hotel ____.______ 70 6or E street, N. W.______ 88 {i412 Sixthstreet _..__ 82 Riggs House... 21 Clarendon Hotel .__.___. 93 TheClarendon =. =. __ 93 717 Fourteenth street, N. W 15 916 Sixteenth street, N.W_ 48 812 Twelfth street, N. W _ 96 1828 Jefferson Place______ 60 830 Twelfth street, N. W__ 52 1332 New York avenue __ 32 Hamilton House ________ 13 704 Fourteenth street, N. W 46 1703 H street, NW ______ 33 Willard's Hotel .. ....... 18 327 East Capitol street ___ 24 National Hotel cco “1 Willard’s Hotel .__._ ._.. 50 oz: M street, N.W.___... 52 1012 Fourteenth st., N. W_ 26 721 Eleventh street, N. W_ 64 1316 Thirteenth street ____ 89 512 Thirteenthst., N. W __ 61 Arlington Hotel ...._.____ 7 1016 Tenth street, N. W__ 79 412 Sixth street, N. Wi ___ 45 Ricos House... 42 Welcker’'s Hotel .________ 71 Metropolitan Hotel ______ 31 1008 N street, N. W _____ 94 52 Bstveet, S. E______ 44 1323 Gstreet, NN. W_____ 91 o15 Gstreet, NNW _______ 32 1321 G street, N. W_.___ 54 413 Sixth street, N.E____ 19 : City address. Page. | 1420 Fourteenth st., N. W_ 98 11 Grant Place, N.W ____ 99 1403 H street, N.W ..____ 99 1103 G street, N. W _____ 08 1103 Thirteenth st., N. W_ 98 130 Maryland avenue ____ 98 513 Thirteenth N. W 98 street, 1633 L street, NW. ____ 99 he8 City Hall and Court-House. 33 Statue of McPherson. fie 9 Arsenal. 34 Statue of Rawlins. 20 Navy-Yard. 35 Statue of Emancipation. 21 Marine Barracks. > 36 Botanical Garden. 22 Naval Hospital, 37 Congressional Burial Ground. 38 Judiciary Park. 39 Mount Vernon Square. 40 Baltimore and Potomac Depot. 41 Baltimore and Ohio Depot. 42 Jail, 43 City Asylum, a 2% ey HE BET EenIEEE SE © EL 7 SE | 2 HBS ze] "REFERENCES. 6 7 fea INGE NS SEE UN Raa al pias i [2] JERE A I BEF Hite Sa 1Oe fab ai 1 The Capitol. 2 President’s House. 3 State, War, and Navy Dep’ts. 4 ‘Treasury Department. 5 Interior Department. 6 Post-O fice De artment, 7 Department of Justice, Corcoran Art Gallery. 31 Statue of Farragut. City Post-Office. 32 Statueof Du Pont. an =] N PETERS Photo Lithographer. Washington. D.C