1{ FORTY-FIFTH CONGRESS. [ THIRD SESSION. | (CONGRESSIONAL Direcrory. COMPILED FOR THE USE OF CONGRESS By BEN: PERLEY POORE, CLERK OF PRINTING RECORDS first Eoprrion. CORRECTED TO DECEMBER 9, 1878. WASHINGTON: GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE. 1878. ENTERED ACCORDING TO ACT OF CONGRESS, IN THE VEAR 1873. By BEN: PERLEY -POORE, IN THE OFFICE OF THE LIBRARIAN OF CONGRESS, AT WASHINGTON. Tre CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY was published as a private enterprise from 1820 until 1864, inclusive, and copies were sold to Congress and to the Departments. It was sometimes two months after the commencement of a session before the first edition of the Directory was ready for delivery, and the work did not contain much of the varied information given in similar publications at the capitals of some of the States and at the seats of government in Europe. 3 At the commencement of the second session of the Thirty-eighth Congress, a joint resolution was passed unanimously ordering the compilation and publication of the Congressional Directory, under the direction of the Joint Committee on Public Printing. The joint committee, urged by Senators and Representatives to give additional value to the work, examined upward. of twenty publications of a similar nature, and adopted several features—among them statistical sketches of members of Congress. The form of these statistical sketches, which met the approval of the joint committee, was that which they found in a publication entitled the ‘ House of Commons,” which has been published annually at London, in its present shape, since 1852, and it has since been used as a model in the compilation of the Congressional Directory. The statistical sketches give the Senator, Representative, or Delegate’s full name ; home post-office address ; place and time of birth ; early education ; collegiate education, if any, with date of graduating ; professional studies ; profession or business; all public offices held, with dates of holding them ; their vote on their last election to Congress ; the .name of their opponent ; the politics of each, and the vote of each when the election was by the people. t This information has been supplied by the raembers of Congress, in response to circulars sent them by direction of the Joint Committee on Public Printing, as it could not be obtained in any other way. No biographical work has ever given the politics of Congressmen, the names of their opponents when elected, or the votes given to each, although they have appeared at the close of each year in the valuable news-paper almanacs. Any person can obtain a copyright for a work by depositing a copy of the title-page with the Libra-rian of Congress and paying the stated fee. No attempt can be made to defend, under the copyright act, the plan of this Congressional Directory, as it is based on numerous European publications of a sim-ilar nature, some of them dating back many years ; neither is the collection of biographies of a class of public men an original idea, as scores of such collections have been published within the present century. But for the statistical sketches, obtained from original sources by the compiler, the protection of the copyright act can be claimed. It will, however, only be invoked when this original matter is repub-lished imperfectly for gain. It was to preventthis that the Joint Committee on Public Printing directed the compiler to secure a copyright. TABLE OF CONTENTS, . Tage. slendardar elnino EeSe le a Sl na A 4 Senators and Representatives, by States, alphabetically arranged. ........................ 5-74 oo... [Benritonial Pelegatel ci old a aac es at aie Sa nia ein in pel al nial Tals iis sie atte (ee RT Standing, Select, and Joint Committees of the Senate... . 0 lou tian asi es raises eensialanns a sien 77-80 Standing, Select, and Joint Committees ef the House... ...... addsdo een 81-86 Officers of the Senate and Senate Commitee Clerks. .......... oc. ives uve senenrns vsesis savant 87-88 Officers of the House and House Committee Clerks............. Ae ER ReSe 89-91 Official Reporters. Library of Congress. Government Telegraph. Placesof Amusement........ Io} 4 Members of the Press having seats in the Reporters’ Galleries. oun cnadu Wy .................c.ih 92-93 United States Postal Regulations. Washington City atid Post-Office............cccoviiiieenn 94 The Capitol. The Architect of the Capitol. The Botanical Garden.................LLL » . .L...... 05 Dincramsiof tHeiCapioli,. iia dain. shan sali UE a a RE A iBhe Executive Mansion. The Beparimentof State....... Ihe inersury-Department. ch tui ol et en The War Department........ GA ee a TE Cl {The Navy Department .......... hb dR shes sn bisaie el Suistals nina miele sired i .L. ci 00d ihiue. ee en ai LS hn Be IE ee RR fhe Post-Office Department... Li. cee tvheianatisvsisivi ss nvm aiwiiaihe ohh ihelInterion Department... ocr. ha hs deities Saati si alah The Department of Justice. The Department of Agricuiture. Bepartment Duties. The Deparimentiof State ........ coin lev The Treasury. Depdriment: =. The War Department. ol. iC ala. The Navy Department... so liad. The InteriorDepartmenti... ... 0 oo. The Post-Office Department. ai. Lo ooh The BR CIM TR VE nanan sath a hs vista slate st 9H~101 102 hu dl, 103 a luiaty vale’ omnis sats a Ep els Government re i et be iy 103-106 I ie a 106-108 ER RR 108-110 oisaiolols sists las ainlsialeie I10-TII ib ie cmeloate +s TTT=TT3 Printing-Office. 113 su foe obinisateininets IT4 eel ts 115-119 hn i a as 119-120 ie vides pass ssimaishisnivisstivaio. 120-121 oy ooo Se Sh 121-122 clit oil aii vas Auli abil s 122-123 The Department of Justices... dee. ania iui nn ln, Boar 123-124 ‘The Department of Agriculture... ........c.ccoiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiians 124 International Exhibition at Paris. Southern Claims Commission .............. Bees 124 The Supreme Court. The Court of Claims .......c.oieiiiniinnrinerne feetenseitensnsnssineensnns 125 Foreign Legations in the United States .........oouiiiiiiiii iii 126-127 United States Legations abroad. sonesesannsons. .......c.cc.eetreesssssvsssnstanssaienssdesoecne 128-129 Joint COMMISSION. ........00 cere eiis iiss vanishnsbimnsinabs aise nimeistesiole siainisinitioinis s sisisissis sie aisle isis cowie 129 Consulates, Consulates-General, Commercial Agencies,and Consular Clerks......... ............ 130-144 The District Government, The Washington Monument ctv. aaiavauvaba. te, ................... 144 The District Judiciary. The Capitol Police.........c.iuiiiniiiiiiiiiein iia, 145 The Smithsonian Institution. Corcoran Gallery of Art... ... ...civitiiiiiiniinnieeeenivecenenes 146 Places of Divine Worship .....cueueereinnreiiieranriotarsnurententersestessestvarenorsasronsennas 147-148 Cons DE MEEA ER RA Oe eR 149 Diagram of the Senate and Location of Senators............cooeeiuiiniiiiiinien heen ieee. 150-151 Diagram of the House and Location of Members. ..............cccoiiiiiineen.. a pe rR 152-153 Senators and their residences at home and in Washington. .........oeeveiriiiiieieanincnnes aaiakes vk 154-155 Representatives and their residences at home and in Washington............ooeiiiiiiiiaiinn.... 155-160 Delegates and their residences at home and in Washington...... ....... o.ooiain 160 CALENDAR FOR 18573. JANUARY. JULY. Sun. M.| T.|W | T. | F. Sat. |Sm| M.| T. | W.| T. F. | Sat SEE ER 2 lead as dou fron glvahigilow | 6 6.f | 3] 9110] v1 {32 71-81 gl vol 11 12 {113 §3 (14 (15 16] 17 | 38 [19 1a | 35 {116 | 37 18: vg | 20 gol ov 22 | 23 fga'tas (26 2v [23 {m3 24] 25 | 262 g7 1.28 bag | 30 gt |..a-tnon li2B soni 30 38 fs infer A Se RE ELE Se aie RIB DL ER Se | ¥7 013 10. zo fi2n 22. 23 | v8 | 19 | 20 | av | 22. | 23 24 gaits linbiliay (val lu fila [26 [oy [a8 29 | 30 | 31 MARCH SEPTEMBER : I 2 STE aR al gol 51 (az | 13:14. f 35,36 {| 35 | 16 35 ( 18.| 70 | 20 lio} 7 {13 | 1920 ("an | 23l'23 122 [agi 24 | 25 |26| 27 {28 { 24. ze 26 | a% [28] 29.1 30 |. 20 30 ig | 3%] ae APRIL | OCTOBER He i lal 3 4] 50 6)--tl el ul 41.8 gti 8S lLiolao lax las fag l 6f 7 8] 9! 0d 11 32 14 [is [16 [17 v8. 3g | zo 33 laa lag | 16°) 17 [183 | 10 av {222324 25126] 2730 | 21 22 | 25 24 | 25 | 20 ¥2 (13 v4 agin pay a8 five [11 412) v3 aq as | 16 19 | 20 | 21 (20d anil on fax vy [98 | 1g (20 {27 | 22 | 23 p6il 27 108 [29 30 [gv]... .l 2a. (i 25| 26°) 27 | 28] 29 | 30 | ol vo lyr x2 33 | 14 33 (9536) 171718 [v0 50] 38 16 {x7 | 183 39 loo li2n lez na (23: 24 | 25206 | 27] 28 GONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY, MEMBERS OF THE FORTY-FIFTH CONGRESS. ALABAMA. SENATORS. GEORGE E. SPENCER, of Decatur, was born in Jefferson County, New York, November I, 1836; was educated at Montreal College, Canada; was admitted to the bar in Iowa in 1857; was Secretary of the Iowa Senate of 1856; entered the Army as Captain, Assistant * Adjutant-General of Volunteers, in 1862; recruited and rsised the First Alabama Cavalry, United States Volunteers, in 1863; commanded a brigade of cavalry on Sherman’s grand march; was brevetted Brigadier-General for ¢¢ gallantry on the field ;” resigned position in the Army July 4, 1865; was appointed Register in Bankruptcy for the fourth district of Alabama in May, 1867; was elected to the United States Senate as a Republican, and took his seat July 25, 1868, and was re-elected in 1872. His term of office will expire March 3, 1879. Journ T. MORGAN, of Selma, was born at Athens, McMinn County, 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, Cahawba Rifles, and when that company was assigned to the Fifth Alabama Regiment, under Col. Robert E. Rodes, he was elected Major and after-ward 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, Democrat, and took his seat March 5, 1877. His term of service will expire March 3, 1883. : REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. Counties —Choctaw, Clarke, Marengo, Mobile, Monroe, and Washington. JAMES TAYLOR JONES, of Demopolis, was born at Richmond, Virginia, in 1832, and has resided since 1834 in Marengo County, Alabama; was educated at Princeton College, New Jersey, and having graduated in the Law School of the University of Virginia, has since practised law; enlisted in April, 1861, in the Confederate service as a private in the Fourth Alabama Regiment, and in 1862 was promoted to be Captain of his company; was a Delegate in 1865 to the Constitutional Convention of Alabama, and was elected to the Forty-fifth Con-gress as a Democrat, receiving 10,582 votes against 8,771 votes for F. G. Bromberg, Inde-pendent. : SECOND ‘DISTRICT. Counties. —Baldwin, Butler, Conecuh, Crenshaw, Covington, Escambia, Montgomery, and Pike. HirArRY 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 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; con-tinued the practice of the law at Greenville, Alabama, until 1872, when he removed to Mont-gomery, where he has since practised; was elected a Representative from Alabama in, the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 11,435 votes against 9,394 votes for Gerald Hall, Republican. Re-¢lected, Congressional Directory. THIRD DISTRICT. Counties.—Barbour, Bullock, Coffee, Dale, Geneva, Henry, Lee, and Russell. JEREMIAH N. WILLIAMS, of Clayton, was born in Barbour County, Alabama; received a liberal education, graduating at the University of South Carolina; studied law, was admitted to the bar, and has since practised; entered the Confederate Army in Janu-ary, 1861, with the rank of Captain, and on the organization of the First Regiment of Ala-bama Infantry was elected Major; served a year, and was then forced to retire on account of ill-health; was elected to the State Legislature of Alabama in 1872, but not permitted to take his seat; was elected to the Forty-fourth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Con-gress as a Democrat, receiving 14,089 votes against 3,896 votes for W. H. Betts, Republican. FOURTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Dallas, Hale, Lowndes, Perry, and Wilcox. CHARLES M. SHELLEY was born in Sullivan County, Tennessee, December 28, 1833; re-moved to Alabama with his father in 1836; received but a limited education; was brought up to the trade of an architect and builder, and has ever since followed that business; he entered the Confederate service in February, 1861, as Lieutenant, and was stationed first at Fort Morgan, and was afterwards attached to the Fifth Alabama Regiment; after further service he was commissioned Brigadier-General, and served under Generals Joseph E. Johnston and Hood ; after the war he returned to his occupation, and now resides in Selma, Dallas County, Alabama; he was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 9,685 votes against 8,675 votes for Jere Haralson, Republican, and 7,236 votes for James T. Rapier, Re-publican. Re-elected. FIFTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Autauga, Bibb, Chambers, Chilton, Clay, Coosa, Elmore, Macon, and Talla-poosa. RoBERT F. Li1GON, of Tuskegee, was born in Clarke County, Georgia; received an aca-demic education ; removed to Alabama before his majority; studied law, was admitted to the bar, and 1s now a practising lawyer and planter ; was engaged in the war with Mexico as Captain of a volunteer company; was a member of the State House of Representatives in 1849-50, and of the State Senate in 1860; and re-elected in 1863; served in the Confeder-ate Army as Captain; was Lieutenant-Governor of Alabama in 1874, and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 13,107 votes against 6,821 votes for D. B. Booth, Republican. SIXTH, DISTRICT. Counties.—Fayette, Greene, Jefferson, Marion, Pickens, Sanford, Sumter, Tuscaloosa, Walker, and Winston. GorpsMITH W. HEWITT, of Birmingham; was born in Jefferson County, Alabama, Feb-ruary 14, 1834; received an academic education; studied law, was admitted to the bar in 1856, and has since practised; entered the Confederate Army in 1861, and served until severely wounded at the battle of Chickamauga in 1863; was elected to the State House of Represent-atives in 1870, and to the State Senate in 1872 and ’74, but resigned when he was elected to the Forty-fourth Congress; was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, with-out opposition, receiving 13,634 votes. SEVENTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Blount, Calhoun, Cherokee, Cleburne, De Kalb, Etowah, Marshall, Randolph, Saint Clair, Shelby, and Talladega. WiLriaM 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 Zlabama 1859-’60; entered 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 Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, without opposition, receiving 14,319 votes. Re-elected. > EIGHTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Colbert, Franklin, Jackson, Lauderdale, Lawrence, Limestone, Madison, and Morgan. WiLLiaM W. GARTH, of Huntsville, was born in Morgan County, Alabama, October 28, 1827; educated at LaGrange, and at Emory and Henry College, Virginia ; studied law at the University of Virginia; and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 14,529 votes against 8,910 votes for McClellan, Independent Democrat. o Senators and Representatives. y ARKANSAS. SENATORS. STEPHEN W. DORSEY, of Helena, was born at Benson, Vermont, February 28, 18425 received an academical education; removed when a boy to Oberlin, Ohio ; was one of the first to volunteer in the Union Army, in which he served under General Grant at Shiloh, General Buell at Perryville, General Rosecrans at Stone River and Chattanooga, and General Thomas at Mission Ridge ; in 1864 he was transferred to the Army of the Potomac, and took part in the battles of the Wilderness and of Cold Harbor, serving until the close of the war; returning to Ohio, he resumed business as an employé of the Sandusky Tool Company, and was soon chosen its President; on the same day he was elected, without his knowledge, President of the Arkansas Central Railway Company; removing to Arkansas, he was chosen Chairman of the Republican County and State Committees, was offered a seat in Congress by the Republi-cans of the first district, but declined, and was elected almost unanimously to the United States Senate as a Republican, and took his seat March 4, 1873. His term of service will expire March 3, 1879 Avucustus H. GARLAND, of Little Rock, was born in Tipton County, Tennessee, June 11, 1832; in 1833 his parents removed to Arkansas; was educated at Saint Mary’s College and Saint Joseph’s College, in Kentucky; studied lawand was admitted to practice in 1853 at Wash-ington, Arkansas, where he then lived; in 1856 he removed to Little Rock; was a Delegate to the State Convention that passed the ordinance of secession in 1861; was a member of the Provisional Congress that met at Montgomery, Alabama, in May, 1861, and subsequently of the Confederate Congress, serving in both Houses, and being in the Senate when the war closed ; was elected to the United States Senate from Arkansas for the term beginning March 4, 186%, but was not admitted to his seat; made the test-oath case as to lawyers in the Supreme Court of the United States, and gained it, [See Garland ex parte, 4 Wallace; ] followed the practice of law until the fall of 1874, when he was elected Governor of Arkansas, without opposition; was elected in January, 1876, by the Legislature of Arkansas, without opposition, to the United States Senate, as a Democrat, to succeed Powell Clayton, Republican, and took his seat March 5, 1877. His term of service will expire March 3, 1883. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. Counties.—Arkansas, Clay, Crittenden, Craighead, Cross, Desha, Green, Independence, Jackson, Lee, Lawrence, Lonoke, Mississippi, Monroe, Phillips, Poinsett, Prairie, Randolph, Saint Francis, Woodruff, and White. Lucien C. GAUSE, of Jacksonport, was born in Brunswick County, North Carolina, De-cember 25, 1838; removed with his father to Lauderdale County, Tennessee, when young; received his primary education at the private schools there, and was subsequently at the University of Virginia; studied law at Cumberland University, Tennessee, graduated there, and commenced practice at Jacksonport, Arkansas, in 1859; entered the Confederate Army in 1861, and served throughout the war, attaining the rank of Colonel; resumed practice at Jack-sonport in 1865; was elected a member of the State Legislature in 1866; was appointed one of the Commissioners to represent the State government at Washington; was elected to the Forty-third Congress, but his competitor was permitted to occupy the seat without any action on the case; was elected to the Forty-fourth Congress and re-elected to the Forty-fifth Con-gress as a Democrat, receiving 15,841 voles against 404 scattering votes. SECOND DISTRICT. Counties.—Ashley, Bradley, Calhoun, Chicot, Columbia, Dorsey, Dallas, Drew, Grant, Hempstead, Howard, Jefferson, Lafayette, Lincoln, Little River, Miller, Nevada, Ouachita, Sevier, and Union. g WirLrtiam F. SLEMONS, of Monticello, was born in Weakley County, Tennessee, March 135; 1830; was educated at Bethel College; removed to Arkansas in 1852; studied law, was admitted to the bar in 1855, and practised until 1861; was a member of the Arkansas State Convention in 1861; entered the Confederate Army in July, 1861, and served through the war, after which he resumed the practice of law; was elected District Attorney in 1866, and recon-structed out of office in 1868; was elected to the Forty-fourth Congress, and re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 15,566 votes against 14,159 votes for O. P. Snyder, Republican. . Re-elected. THIRD DISTRICT. Counties.—Clark, Crawford, Faulkner, Franklin, Garland, Hot Spring, Johnson, Logan, Montgomery, Perry, Pike, Polk, Pulaski, Saline, Sebastian, Scott, and Yell. JorDAN E. CRAVENS, of Clarksville, was born at Fredericktown, Madison County, Missouri» November 7, 1830; his father moved to Arkansas the following year, and since then he has 8! Congressional Directory. resided in that State; received a common-school education, studied law, was admitted to the bar in 1854, and has since then continuously practised; was a member of the State House of Representatives in 1860; entered the Confederate Army in 1861 as a private, was promoted to a colonelcy in 1862, and continued in service until the close of the war; was a member of the State Senate in 1866; was a Presidential Elector on the Greeley ticket in 1872; and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 8,277 votes against 8,016 votes for John McClure, Republican, 5,925 votes for H. B. Stuart, Democrat, 681 votes for M. L. Rice, Greenback candidate, and 180 votes for V. Dell, Republican. Re-elected. FOURTH DISTRICT. « Counties.—Baxter, Benton, Boone, Carroll, Conway, Fulton, Izard, Madison, Marion, Newton, Pope, Stone, Searcy, Sharp, Van Buren, and Washington. - THOMAS M. GUNTER, of Fayetteville, was born in Middle Tennessee, September 18, 1826; received a classical education, graduating at Irving College in 1850; studied law, was ad-mitted to the bar, and commenced practice at Fayetteville in 1853; was a: Delegate from Washington County in the Arkansas State Convention of May, 1861; served in the Confed-erate Army as Colonel of the Thirteenth Arkansas Volunteers; was elected Prosecuting At-torney for the fourth judicial circuit in 1866, and held the office until his official position was terminated by the reconstruction of the State in 1868; contested the seat of W. W. Wilshire in the Forty-third Congress, and the House declared that he was entitled to it June 16, 1874; was re-elected to the Forty-fourth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 12,355 votes against 4,167 votes for J. H. Huckleberry, Repub-lican, and 54 scattering. Re-elected. CALIFORNIA. SENATORS. AARON A. SARGENT, of Nevada City, was born at Newburyport, Massachusetts, Septem-ber 28, 1827; was a printer and editor in early life; emigrated to California in 1849; studied law and came to the bar in 1854; was District Attorney of Nevada County, California, in 1855 and 1856; received the degree of M. A. from the College of California in 1865; was elected to the Thirty-seventh and Forty-first Congresses; was re-elected to the Forty-second Con-gress as a Republican, receiving 18,065 votes against 15,378 votes for J. W. Coffroth, Demo-crat; and was subsequently elected to the United States Senate as a Republican, to succeed C. Cole, Republican, and took his seat March 4, 1873. His term of office will expire March 3, 1879. NEWTON BooTH, of Sacramento, was born at Salem, Indiana, December 25, 1825; grad-uated at the Asbury University in 1846; studied law at Terre Haute; was admitted to the bar in 1850, and. removed to California, where he temporarily abandoned his profession and engaged in mercantile pursuits at Sacramento; returning to Terre Haute in 1857, he prac-tised law there in 1860, when he again went to California; was elected to the State Senate of California in 1863; was elected Governor of California in 1871, and served until March, 1874, when he resigned, having been elected to the United States Senate as an Anti-monopo-list, to succeed Eugene Casserly, Democrat, (whose unexpired term had been filled by the election of John S. Hager, Anti-monopolist,) and took his seat March 9, 1875. His term of service will expire March 3, 1881. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. County and city of San Francisco. HoRrACE Davis, of San Francisco, was born at Worcester, Massachusetts, in 1831; was educated in the public schools of Worcester, and graduated at Harvard University in 1849 ; studied law in the Dane Law School, but abandoned professional pursuits by reason of fail- ing health ; removed to California in 1852, and has since resided at San Francisco, engaged in flour-mills ; held no office, civil or military, until elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 22,114 votes against 19,363 votes for W. A. Piper, Democrat. SECOND DISTRICT. Counties.—Alameda, Alpine, Amador, Calaveras, Contra Costa, El Dorado, Nevada, Placer, Sacramento, San Joaquin, and Tuolumne. Horack FraNcCIS PAGE, of Placerville, was born in Orleans County, New York, October 20, 1833; received a public-school education; emigrated to California in 1854; is a stage-proprietor and mail-contractor; was unanimously nominated for the State Senate by the Re-publican Convention of El Dorado County in 1869, and defeated ; and was elected to the Forty-third and Forty-fourth Congresses, and re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 20,815 votes against 15,916 votes for G. J. Carpenter, )emocrat. Senators and Representatives. THIRD DISTRICT. Counties.—Butte, Colusa, Del Norte, Humboldt, Klamath, Lake, Lassen, Marin, Mendo-cino, Napa, Plumas, Shasta, Sierra, Siskiyou, Solano, Sonoma, Sutter, Tehama, Trinity, Yolo, and Yuba. JouN K. LUTTRELL, of Santa Rosa, was born near Knoxville, Knox County, Tennessee, June 27, 1831, but has resided in California twenty-two years; was self-educated ; studied and practised law, and is a farmer; was elected to the Legislature of California in 1863, and served in the sessions of 1865-’66, 1871-"72; was elected to the Forty-third and Forty-fourth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 19,846 votes against 18,990 votes for Joseph M. Kenna, Republican. FOURTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Fresno, Inyo, Kern, Los Angeles, Mariposa, Merced, Mono, Monterey, San Mateo, San Luis Obispo, San Francisco, San Diego, San Bernardino, Santa Barbara, Santa Clara, Santa Cruz, Stanislaus, and Tulare. PETER DINWIDDIE WIGGINTON, of Merced, was born at Springfield, Illinois, September 6, 1839; was educated in private and common schools and at the University of Wisconsin studied law with L. M. Strong, of Wisconsin, and has since been engaged in practice; was District Attorney of Merced County from March, 1864, to March, 1868; was elected to the Forty-fourth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiv-ing 19,097 votes against 19,093 votes for R. Pacheco, Republican. The certificate of election was given to Mr. Pacheco, but the House decided that Mr. Wigginton was elected, and he took his seat February 7, 1878. COLORADO. SENATORS. JEROME B. CHAFFEE, of Denver, was born in Niagara County, New York, April 17, 1825; received an academic education; is a banker, and also largely engaged in mining operations ; was elected to the Legislature of Colorado in 1861, 1862, and 1863, and served as Speaker of the House; was elected by the State Legislature of the proposed State of Colorado in 1865 as one of the United States Senators; was elected Delegate from Colorado to the Forty-second Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-third Congress; was elected to the United States Senate (on the admission of Colorado as a State) as a Republican, and. took his seat Decem-ber 4, 1876. His term of service will expire March 3, 1879. 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) as a Republican, and took his seat December 4, 1876, and was re-elected December 11, 1876. His term of service will expire March 3, 1883. REPRESENTATIVE, “THE STATE AT LARGE, THoMAS M. PATTERSON, of Denver, was born November 4, 1840, in the County of Carlow, Ireland; commenced the practice of the law in Indiana in 1868, and removed from Indiana to Colorado in 1872; was elected Delegate to the Forty-fourth Congress from the Territory of Colorado in 1874 as a Democrat, over H. P. H. Brownell, Republican, and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress from the State of Colorado in 1876, as a Democrat, over James B. Belford, Republican; the certificate of this last election was awarded to Mr. Belford, but Mr. Patterson contested his right to the seat, and upon December 13, 1877, he was, by vote of the House, declared the legally-elected Representative. CONNECTICUT. SENATORS. WiLrLiaM W. EAToN, of Hartford, was born at Tolland, Connecticut, October 11, 1816; was educated in the public schools and by private tutors; studied law, was admitted to the bar, and was actively engaged in practice until elected to the Senate; was Clerk of the Superior and Supreme Courts of Tolland and Hartford Counties ; was for several years one of the Judges of the Hartford City Court, and for four years Recorder of Hartford; was a memberof the State House of Representatives of Connecticut in the sessions of 1847, 48, ’53, ’63, 68, ’70, 71, ’73, and ’74, and Speaker of the House in 1853 and 1873; a member of was the State Senate of Connecticut in the session of 1850; was elected to the United States Senate as a Democrat to succeed William A. Buckingham, Republican, for the term to com- Io Congressional Directory. mence March 4, 1875, and upon the death of Senator Buckingham, in February, 1875, was appointed to fill the vacancy, taking his seat February 13, 1875. His term of service will expire March 3, 1881. . WiLriam H. BARNUM, of Lime Rock, was born in Columbia County, New York, Sep- tember 17, 1818; received a public-school education ; is extensively engaged in the manufacture of Salisbury pig-iron and car-wheels, and in the mining and iron interests of Lake Superior; was a Delegate to the Democratic Conventions of 1868, ’72, and ’76 ; was elected a member of the National Democratic Committee in 1872; has been a member of the Executive Committee since that time, and since May, 1877, has been Chairman of the Committee ; was a member of the State Legislature in 1851-’52; was elected a Representative from Connecticut in the Fortieth, Forty-first, Forty-second, Forty-third, and Forty-fourth Congresses, and was elected to the United States Senate as a Democrat to fill the vacancy occasioned by the death of Orris S. Pon Republican, and took his seat May 22, 1876. His term of service will expire March 3, 1079. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. Counties.—Hartford and Tolland, including the city of Hartford. GEORGE M. LANDERS, of New Britain, was born at Lenox, Massachusetts, February 22, ’ 1813; received a public-school education; removed to Hartford County, Connecticut, in 1829, and engaged in hardware manufacturing ; was a member of the State House of Representatives in 1851, ’67, and ’74, and of the State Senate in 1853, 69, and ’73; was appointed State Bank Commissioner in 1874 for three years, and resigned in 1875; was elected to the Forty-fourth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress, receiving 15,530 votes against 15,382 votes for Joseph R. Hawley, Republican. SECOND DISTRICT. Counties.—Middlesex and New Haven, including the city of New Haven. James PHELPS, of Essex, was born at Colebrook, Connecticut, January 12, 1822; received a thorough academic education; was a student in the Law Department of Yale College; was { y4 admitted to the bar in 1845, and practised until 1863, during which time he was several years i Judge of Probate; was a member of the State House of Representatives in 1853, ’54, and ’56, and of the State Senate in 1858 and ’59; was elected Judge of the Superior Court of Connec- ticut in 1863 for a term of eight years, and re-elected for a similar term in 1871; was elected Judge of the Supreme Court of Errors in 1873, and held that office until he resigned in 1875, when elected to the Forty-fourth Congress; was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 19,500 votes against 16,777 votes for S. W. Kellogg, Republican, and 268 votes for Cummings, Prohibitionist. Re-elected. THIRD DISTRICT. Counties.—New London and Windham, including the cities of New London and Norwich. JouN 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 practice at Norwich, 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- Governor 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 Lin- coln and Johnson ticket; was a member of the State Senate in 1865 and ’66, serving the last year as Presidentpro fem. ; was a member of the State House of Representatives in 1867, "71, and ’73, serving as Speaker the first year and subsequently declining that position; was an unsuccessful candidate for Lieutenant-Governor on the Republican ticket in 1874, receiving the highest vote on the ticket; was elected to the Forty-fourth Congress, (to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Hon. H. H. Starkweather,) and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Con- gress as a Republican, receiving 11,283 votes against 9,535 votes for Thomas M. Waller, Democrat, and 175 votes for Elisha H. Palmer, Prohibitionist. Re-elected. FOURTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Fairfield and Litchfield, including the city of Bridgeport. LEVI WARNER, of Norwalk, was born at Wethersfield, Connecticut, October 10, 1831; received a public-school education; studied law at the Yale Law School and at the Dane Law School, Cambridge, Massachusetts ; was admitted to the bar in January, 1859, and has since been engaged in the practice of law in Fairfield County, Connecticut; was never a candidate for or held any office until elected to the Forty-fourth Congress, (to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of W. H. Barnum, elected Senator;) was elected to the Forty-fifth Con- gress as a Democrat, receiving 17,238 votes against 15,469 votes for Robert Hubbard, Repub- lican. Senators and Represenatives. 13 DELAWARE. SENATORS. THOMAS FRANCIS BAYARD, of Wilmington, was born at Wilmington, Delaware, October 29, 1828; was chiefly educated at the Flushing School, established by Rev. Dr. F. L. Hawks, and although his early training was for a mercantile life, he studied and adopted the profession of law; he came to the bar in 1851, and, excepting the years 1855 and 1856, when he resided in Philadelphia, he has always practised in his native city; in 1853 he was appointed United States District Attorney for Delaware, but resigned in 1854; was elected to the United States Senate as a Democrat to succeed James A. Bayard, (his father,) took his seat March 4, 1869, and was re-elected in 1875. He was a member of the Electoral Commission of 1876. His term of service will expire March 3, 1881. {etl i 1 '\ Ly) bi i 3 ELI SAULSBURY, of Dover, was born in Kent County, Delaware, December 29, 1817; attended 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 1854; and ‘was elected to the United States Senate as a Democrat, to succeed Willard Saulsbury, Democrat. Took his seat March 4, 1871, and was re-elected in 1876. His term of service will expire March 3, 1883. REPRESENTATIVE, THE STATE AT LARGE. {L : | i 11 James WiLLiams, of Kenton, was born at Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, August 4, 1825; educated at the private schools in Philadelphia; removed to Delaware in 1844, and engaged in agricultural pursuits ; was a member of the State Legislature of Delaware in 1856 and 1862, and of the State Senate in 1866-71, serving the last two years as Speaker; was a member of the National Democratic Convention at Baltimore in 1872; was elected to the Forty-fourth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 13,169 votes against 10,592 votes for Levi C. Bird, Republican. FLORIDA. Ld -SENATORS. be ot fi be ‘ SIMON B. CONOVER, of Tallahassee, was born in Middlesex County, New Jersey, September 23, 1840; received a liberal preliminary education, and was graduated as a Doctor of Medicine in 1863 ; was soon afterward appointed Assistant Surgeon in the Army of the Cumberland, and stationed at Nashville, Tennessee; after several promotions in the Medical Corps of the Army, he was ordered to Lake City, Florida, in 1866, and shortly afterward resigned his commission ; has been a Republican since he cast his first vote for Abraham Lincoln ; was a member of the Con-vention which framed the Constitution in 1868; was appointed State Treasurer by Governor Reed ; was a meml er of the Chicago Convention which nominated General Grant in 1868, and was at that time appointed a member of the National Republican Committee, on which he served for four years; he was also a member of the State Ixecutive Republican Committee of Florida; on retiring from the position of State Treasurer at the expiration of his term of office, he was elected a member of the House of Representatives of the State Legislature from the county of Leon, and was chosen to preside over that body; he was elected to the United States Senate as a Republican, in place of T. W. Osborn, Republican, and took his seat March 4, 1873. His term of office will expire March 3, 1879. CHARLES W. JONES, of Pensacola, was born in Ireland, in 1834; immigrated to the United States in 1844, and, after residing temporarily in different parts of the South while working a 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 Conven-tion 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 Abijali Gilbert, Republican, and took his seat March 5, 1875. His term of service will expire March 3, 1881. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. Counties.~—Calhoun, Escambia, Franklin, Gadsden, Hernando, son, Jefferson, Lafayette, Leon, Levy, Liberty, Manatee, Monroe, Taylor, Wakulla, Walton, and Washington. Hillsboro’, Polk, Santa Holmes, Jack-Rosa, Sumter, | . RogerT H. M. DAVIDSON, of Quincy, was born in Gadsden County, Florida, Septem-ber 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 Senate and entered the Confederate Army as Captain of Infantry, and became Major and then Congressional Directory. Lieutenant-Colonel of the Sixth Florida Infantry; was a member of the Constitutional Conven-tion of the State in 1865; was a candidate for Elector on the Greeley and Brown ticket in 1872, and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Conservative Democrat, receiving 13,163 votes against 12,623 votes for W. J. Purman, Republican. Re-elected. SECOND DISTRICT. Counties.—Alachua, Baker, Brevard, Bradford, Clay, Columbia, Dade, Duval, Hamilton, Madison, Marion, Nassau, Orange, Putnam, Saint John’s, Suwannee, and Volusia. HorATiO BISBEE, of Jacksonville, was born at Canton, Maine, May 1, 1839; graduated at Tufts College, Massachusetts, in 1862; was a private soldier in Company F, Fifth Massa-chusetts Regiment of Volunteers, under the first call for Union troops in April, 1861; after-wards was Captain, Lieutenant-Colonel, and Colonel of the Ninth Maine Regiment of Vol-unteers ; was United States District Attorney for the Northern District of Florida from Jan-uary, 1869, to February, 1873, and Attorney-General of that State from February to June, 1872, and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 11,470 votes against 11,452 votes for Jesse J. Finley, Democrat. Re-elected. GEORGIA. SENATORS. JouN B. GORDON, of Atlanta, was born in Upson County, Georgia, February 6, 1832; was educated at the University of Georgia; was admitted to the bar, but practised law only a short time; at the beginning of the war entered the Confederate Army as Captain of Infantry, and was promoted Major, Lieutenant-Colonel, Colonel, Brigadier-General, Major-General, and to the command of the Second Army Corps; commanded one wing of General Lee’s army at Ap-pomattox Court-House; was wounded in battle eight times; was the Democratic candidate for Governor of Georgia in 1868, and his party claimed his election by a large majority, but his opponent, Rufus H. Bullock, was declared elected; was a member of the National Democratic Convention of 1868 from Georgia; was a Delegate from the State at large to the National Demo-cratic Convention of 1872; was elected Presidential Elector for the State at large on the Seymour and Blair ticket in 1868, and the Greeley and Brown ticketin 1872; was elected to the United States Senate as a Democrat, to succeed Joshua Hill, Republican, and took his seat March 4, 1873.. His term of service will expire March 3, 1879. BENJAMIN HARVEY HILL was born in Jasper County, Georgia, September 14, 1823; re-ceived a classical education, graduating at the University of Georgia, at Athens, in 1844; studied law, was admitted to the bar in 1845, and commenced practice at La Grange, Georgia ; was a member of the State House of Representatives in 1851, ’59, and ’60; was de-feated as the American candidate for Congress in 1855, receiving 6,813 votes against 6,883 votes for H. Warner, Democrat; was defeated as the American candidate for Governor of Georgia in 1857, receiving 46,889 votes against'57,631 votes for J. E. Brown, Democrat; was a Presidential Elector on the Bell and Everett ticket in 1861; was a Delegate to the State Con-vention of 1861, and advocated the Union until the secession ordinance had been adopted ; was a Delegate from Georgia to the Confederate Provisional Congress, and’ subsequently a Senator from Georgia.in the Confederate Congress; was arrested in 1865 and imprisoned in Fort Lafayette; was elected a Representative from Georgia in the Forty-fourth Congress, (to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Garrett McMillan,) and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress, but resigned, having been elected a United States Senator from Georgia. He took his seat March 5, 1877, and his term of service will expire March 3, 1883. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. Counties.—Appling, Bryan, Bullock, Burke, Camden, Charlton, Chatham, Clinch, Echols, Effingham, Emanuel, Glynn, Liberty, MacIntosh, Pierce, Scriven, Tatnall, Ware, and Wayne. JuLIiAN HARTRIDGE, of Savannah, was born at Savannah, Georgia; received a collegiate education ; attended law-school at Cambridge, Massachusetts; practises law; has been Solicitor-General of the Eastern Judicial Circuit of Georgia ; member of the Legislature of Georgia ; Delegate to the Charleston Democratic Convention in 1860; was in the Confederate Army during first year of the war; was a member of the Confederate Congress; was Chair-man of Executive Committee of the Democratic party of Georgia in 1871; Delegate for the State at large to National Democratic Convention in 1872; elector for the State at large on the Democratic ticket in 1872; was elected to the Forty-fourth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 11,465 votes against 5,922 votes for John E. Bryant, Republican. SECOND DISTRICT. Counties.—Baker, Berrien, Brooks, Calhoun, Clay, Colquitt, Decatur, Dougherty, Early, Lowndes, Miller, Mitchell, Quitman, Randolph, Terrell, Thomas, and Worth. WiLLiaM E. SMITH, of Albany, was born at Augusta, Georgia, March 14, 1829; received an academical education; studied law, was admitted to the bar in May, 1848, under a special Senators and Representatives. ; act of the Legislature, and has since practised; is also a planter; was elected Ordinary of Dougherty County, Georgia, in 1853; was elected Solicitor-General of the Southwest Circuit in 1858, and the same year was appointed by Gov. Brown to fill the unexpired tefm of John W. Evans; was nominated as the candidate of the Union party in Dougherty County for the State Convention in 1860, but declined in favor of Hon. Lott Warren; entered the Confederate Army as a volunteer in the Fourth Georgia Volunteers, after the State seceded; was elected Captain in April, 1862; lost a leg in the defence of Richmond, at King’s School-house, June 25, 1862; was elected to the Confederate Congress in 1863; was tendered the office of Circuit Judge, in 1874, by Gov. Smith, but declined; was elected to the Forty-fourth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 13,627 votes against 8,015 votes for R. H. Whiteley, Republican. Re-elected. THIRD DISTRICT. Counties.—Coffee, Dodge, Dooly, Irwin, Lee, Macon, Montgomery, Pulaski, Schley, Stewart, Sumter, Taylor, Telfair, Webster, and Wilcox. PuiLip Cook, of Americus, was born in Twiggs County, Georgia, July 31, 1817; was partially educated at Oglethorpe University, Georgia; read law at the University of Virginia, and has continued the practice; was elected to the State Senate of Georgia in 1859, ’60, and ’63; was elected a member of the State Convention of 1865, called by President John-son ; entered the Confederate service in April, 1861, as a private; was commissioned First Lieutenant, Lieutenant-Colonel, Colonel, and, in August, 1863, Brigadier-General; was elected to the Thirty-ninth Congress, but not allowed to take his seat; was elected to the Forty-third and Forty-fourth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress, receiving 10,684 votes against 4,280 votes for W. P. Pierce, Republican. Re-elected. FOURTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Campbell, Coweta, Chattahoochee, Carroll, Douglas, Harris, Heard, Marion, Meriwether, Muscogee, Talbot, and Troup. Henry R. HARRIS, of Greenville, was born at Sparta, Georgia, February 2, 1828; 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 and Forty-fourth Congresses,and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 13,797 votes against 5,785 votes for H. W. Hilliard. FIFTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Clayton, Crawford, De Kalb, Fayette, Fulton, Henry, Houston, Milton, Mon-roe, Pike, Spalding, and Upton. MirtoN A. CANDLER, of Atlanta, was born in Campbell County, Georgia, January II, 1837; received a classical education, graduating at the University of Georgia in 1854; studied law, was admitted to the bar in 1856, and commenced practice at Decatur, Georgia; was a member of the State House of Representatives in 1861-63; of the State Constitutional Con-vention in 1865; and of the State Senate in 1868-72; was elected to the Forty-fourth Con-gress, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress, receiving 18,083 votes against 8,720 votes for William Markham, Republican. SIXTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Baldwin, Bibb, Rutts, Jasper, Jones, Laurens, Newton, Putnam, Rockdale, Twiggs, Walton, and Wilkinson. James H. BLoUNT, of Macon, was elected to the Forty-third and Forty-fourth Congresses: and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 12,996 votes against 4,578 votes for Samuel G. Gove, Republican. Re-elected. SEVENTH DISTRICT, Counties.—Bartow, Catoosa, Chattooga, Cherokee, Cobb, Dade, Floyd, Gordon, Haralson, Murray, Paulding, Polk, Walker, and Whitfield. Wirriam H. FELTON, of Cartersville, was born in Oglethorpe County, Georgia, June 19 1823; graduated at the University of Georgia, at Athens, in August, 1842; graduated at the Medical College of Georgia, at Augusta, in March, 1844; is a farmer by profession and prac-tice; was a member of the State House of Representatives of Georgia, from Cass (now Bartow) County, in 1851; was elected to the Forty-fourth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as an Independent Democrat, receiving 13,269 votes against 10,807 votes for W. H. Dabney, Democrat. Re-elected. EIGHTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Columbia, Elbert, Glascock, Greene, Hancock, Hart, Jefferson, Johnson, Lin-coln, McDuffie, Oglethorpe, Richmond, Taliaferro, Warren, Washington, and Wilkes. ALEXANDER HAMILTON STEPHENS, of Crawfordville, was born in that part of Wilkes County, Georgia, which now forms a part of Taliaferro County, February 11, 1812; gradu- Congressional Directory. ated at the University of Georgia, at Athens, in 1832; taught school eighteen months; was admitted to the bar at Crawfordville in 1834; was a member of the House of Representatives of the Georgia Legislature from Taliaferro County in 1836, ’37, ’38, ’39, '40, and ’41; and was a member of the State Senate from Taliaferro County in 1842; was run as a Presi-dential Elector for the State at large in Georgia on the Douglas and Johnson ticket in 1860; was elected to the Secession Convention of Georgia in 1861; opposed and voted against the ordinance of secession in that body, but gave it his support after it had been passed by the Convention against his judgment as to its policy; was elected by that Convention to the Con-federate Congress which met at Montgomery, Alabama, February 4, 1861, and was chosen Vice-President under the Provisional Government by that Congress; was elected Vice-Presi-dent of the Confederate States for the term of six years under what was termed the perma-nent government, in November, 1861; visited the State of Virginia on a mission under the Confederate Government in April, 1861, upon the invitation of that State ; was one of the Com-missioners on the part of the Confederate Government at the Hampton Roads conference in February, 1865; was elected a Representative to the Twenty-eighth, Twenty-ninth, Thirtieth, Thirty-first, Thirty-second, Thirty-third, Thirty-fourth, and Thirty-fifth Congresses, when he declined a re-election; was elected to the Senate of the United States in 1866, by the first Legislature convened under the new Consfitution, but was not allowed to take his seat; was elected to the Forty-third Congress, (to fill the vacancy occasioned by the death of Ambrose R. Wright,) was re-elected to the Forty-fourth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Jeffersonian Democrat, receiving 14,471 votes against 1,273 votes for Tennelle. Re-elected. NINTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Banks, Clarke, Dawson, Fannin, Forsyth, Franklin, Gilmer, Gwinnett, Haber-sham, Hall, Jackson, Lumpkin, Madison, Morgan, Pickens, Rabun, Towns, Union, and White. : Hiram P. BELL, of Cumming, was born in Jackson County, January 27, 1827; received an academic éducation; taught school for two years, during which time he read law, was ad-mitted to the bar November 28, 1849, and has practised since; was a candidate for Presidential Elector on the Bell and Everett ticket in 1860; was a Delegate to the Secession Convention in 1861 and opposed the secession ordinances; was appointed by the Convention a Commis-sioner to the State of Tennessee, to ask the co-operation of that State in the formation of a Southern Confederacy; was a State Senator in 1861, resigning to enter the Confederate Army in March, 1862; raised a company, of which he was elected Captain; was elected Lieutenant-Colonel on the organization of the Forty-third regiment, and afterwards promoted to the colonéley of the regiment; was dangerously wounded at Chickasaw Bayou, Mississippi, De-cember 29, 1862, and disabled from further service; was a Representative from Georgiain the Second Confederate Congress in 1864 and ’65; was a member of the Democratic State Ex-ecutive Committee, 1868-71; was elected a Representative from Georgia in the Forty-third Congress ; was a Delegate to the National Democratic Convention at Saint Louis that nominated Tilden and Hendricks; is a member, from the State at large, of the National Democratic Ex-ecutive Committee, and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, (to fill the vacancy caused by the election of B. H. Hill to the Senate,) receiving 5,173 votes against 3,734 votes for Emory Speer, Independent, and 1,614 votes for Martin R. Archer, Republican. ILLINOIS. SENATORS. RICHARD J. OGLESBY, of Decatur, was born in Oldham County, Kentucky, July 25, 1824 ; settled in Illinois, at Decatur, in 1836; received less than a common-school education ; was a carpenter for two years; studied law in 1844, and was admitted to the bar in 1845; served one year in the Mexican war ; worked two years in the mines in California; was elected to the State Senate of Illinois in 1860, served one session, and resigned to enter the volun-teer service in 1861, at the commencement of the war for the suppression of the rebellion; was chosen Colonel, afterwards appointed Brigadier-General, and in 1863 (to take rank from November, 1862) a Major-General ; resigned in 1864, and was elected that year Governor of Illinois for the term which expired in January, 1869; was re-elected Governor of Illinois in November, 1872, entered upon the duties of his office January 13, 1873, and on the 21st of the same month was elected to the United States Senate as a Republican, to succeed Lyman Trumbull, Liberal. His term will expire March 3, 1879. DAVID DAVIS, of Bloomington, was born in Cecil County, Maryland, March 9, 1815; received a classical education, graduating at Kenyon College, Ohio, in 1832; studied law at Lenox, Mas-sachusetts, and at the New Haven Law School; was admitted to the bar and commenced prac-tice in Illinois in the fall of 1835, locating in 1836 at Bloomington ; was a member of the State House of Representatives in 1844; was a Delegate to the State Constitutional Convention in 1847; was elected in 1848 a Judge of one of the Circuit Courts in Illinois, and held the office by repeated elections until he resigned it in October, 1862; was a Delegate to the National Re-publican Convention at Chicago in 1860; was appointed by President Lincoln a Judge of the Senators and Representatives. 15 Supreme Court of the United States in October, 1852, and served until March 5, 1877, when he resigned to take his seat as United States Senator from Illinois, having been elected the previous January, by the votes of Independents and Democrats, to succeed John A. Logan, Republican. His term will expire March 3, 1883. ; REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. Counties.—The first six wards of the city of Chicago, thirteen townships of Cook County, and all of Du Page County. WiLLiAM ALDRICH, of Chicago, was born at Greenfield, New York, in January, 1820; re-ceived a common-school education, with a private tutor one term in the higher branches of math-ematics and surveying, and one term at an academy; was reared on a farm; taught school; en-gaged in mercantile pursuits in 1846; removed to Wisconsin in 1851, and, in addition to mer-chandising, engaged in the manufacture of lumber, woodenware, and furniture; was for three years Superintendent of Schools; was Chairman of the County Board of Supervisors one year; was a member of the State House of Representatives in 1859; removed to Chicago in 1860, and has since been in the wholesale grocery business there; was chosen Alderman from the third ward of Chicago in the spring of 1876, and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 16,578 votes against 14,101 for John R. Hoxie, Democrat. Re-elected. SECOND DISTRICT. County.—Part of Cook, (wards 7 to 14, inclusive, of the city of Chicago.) CARTER H. HARRISON, of Chicago, was born in Fayette County, Kentucky, February 13, 1825; received a classical education, graduating at Yale College in 1845; studied law, but was a farmer in his native county until 1855, when he graduated at Transylvania Law School, Lexington, Kentucky, and removed to Chicago; was elected a Cook County Commissioner in 1871, and served until December, 1874; was elected to the Forty-fourth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 14,732 votes against 14,090 votes for George R. Davis, Republican. THIRD DISTRICT. Counties.—Part of Cook, and Lake. LORENZO BRENTANO, of Chicago, was born at Mannheim, Grand Duchy of Baden, Germany, November, 4, 1813; received a classical education; studied jurisprudence at the Universities of Heidelberg and Freiburg, and graduated as LL.D. ; practised before the Supreme Court of Baden, and was the leading counsel for the defence in the celebrated state trial against Herr Von Struve for high treason; was elected, on attaining the legal age, to the Chamber of Deputies, where he joined the Liberal or opposition party, of which he finally became one of the leaders; was elected in 1848 to the Frankfort Parliament, and when in 1849 the Grand Duke of Baden had fled in consequence of the revolution, he became President of the Provisional Republican Government; after the defeat of the revolutionary army under Generals Miroslawski and Sigel, he was in contumaciam sentenced to imprisonment for life, but he had found an asylum in this country, where he first settled in Kalamazoo County, Michigan, as a farmer; in 1859 he removed to Chicago and was admitted to the bar, but soon became editor-in-chief and princi-pal proprietor of ‘The Illinois Staats-Zeitung;”’ was a member of the State Legislature in 1862; was for five years President of the Chicago Board of Education; was a Presidential Elector on the Grant and Colfax ticket in 1868; a general amnesty having been granted to those who participated in the revolution, he revisited his native land in 1869, returning to Chicago after the great fire; was appointed United States Consul at Dresden in 1872, and served until April, 1876; and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiv-ing 11,843 votes against 11,435 votes for J. V. Le Moyne, Democrat. FOURTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Boone, De Kalb, Kane, McHenry, and Winnebago. Wirriam LaTtHrOP, of Rockford, was born in Genesee County, New York, April 17, 1825; received a common-school education ; studied law, was admitted to the bar, and has practised at Rockford since 1851; was elected a member of the General Assembly of Illinois in 1856; and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 13,241 votes against 5,991 votes for S. A. Hurlbut, Republican, and 8,140 votes for J. F. Farnsworth, Democrat. FIFTH DISTRICT. Counties.— Carroll, Jo Daviess, Ogle, Stephenson, and Whitesides. Horatio C. BURCHARD, of Freeport, was born at Marshall, Oneida County, New York, September 22, 1825; graduated at Hamilton College, New York, 1850; studied and prac-tised law; was engaged in mercantile business; was School Commissioner of Stephenson County, Illinois, from 1857 to ’60; was a member of the Legislature of the State of Illinois from 1863 to ’66; was elected to the Forty-first, the Forty-second, the Forty-third, and the Forty-fourth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 15,824 votes against 10,602 votes for J. Pattison, Democrat. Congressional Directory. SIXTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Bureau, Henry, Lee, Putnam, and Rock Island. TroMAS J. HENDERSON, of Princeton, was born at Brownsville, Haywood County, Tennessee, 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 Commission-ers’ 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, for gallant services in the Georgia and Tennessee campaigns, especially at the battle of Franklin, Tennessee, November 30, 1864; was elected a Presidential Elector for the State at large on the Republican ticket in 1868; was elected to the Forty-fourth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 15,560 votes against 9,821 votes for Charles Dunham, Democrat. Re-elected. SEVENTH DISTRICT, Counties.—Grundy, Kendall, La Salle, and Will. 3 PuiLip C. HAYES, of Morris, was born at Granby, Connecticut, February 3, 1833, and removed with his father’s family to La Salle County, Illinois, during the summer of the same year; spent the first twenty years of his life on a farm; received a collegiate education ; served in the Union Army, having been commissioned successively Captain, Lieutenant-Colonel, and Colonel, and brevetted Brigadier-General; since the war has followed the pro-fession of journalism, and is one of the publishers of ¢ The Morris Herald;” was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 14,849 votes against 13,313 votes for Alexander Campbell, Independent. Ae-clected. EIGHTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Fort, Iroquois, Kankakee, Livingston, Marshall, and Woodford. GREENBURY L. Fort, of Lacon, was born in Ohio, October 17, 1825; removed with his parents to Illinois in April, 1834; was admitted to the bar, and practised law ; was an officer in the Union Army from April 22, 1861, to March 24, 1866; was elected to the Forty-third and the Forty-fourth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 15,001 votes against 12,211 votes for George W. Parker, Democrat. Re-elected. NINTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Fulton, Knox, Peoria, and Stark. THOMAS A. BoyD, of Lewiston, Illinois, was born in Adams County, Pennsylvania, June 25, 1830; received a classical education, graduating at Marshall College, Mercersburg, Penn-sylvania, in 1848; studied law in Chambersburg, Pennsylvania; was admitted to the bar, and commenced practice at Bedford, Pennsylvania; removed to Illinois in 1856, and continued in the profession until 1861 ; enlisted in the Seventeenth Illinois Infantry in 1861, and held the position of Captain; was elected a State Senator in 1866 and re-elected in 1870, and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 14,548 votes against 14,001 votes for G. A. Wilson, Democrat, and 678 for H. M. Matthews, Independent. Re-clecte. TENTH DISTRICT, Counties.—Hancock, Henderson, McDonough, Mercer, Schuyler, and Warren, BENJAMIN F. MARSH, of Warsaw, was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 14,252 votes against 13,496 votes for JohnH. Hungate, Democrat. Re-elected. ELEVENTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Adams, Brown, Calhoun, Greene, Jersey, and Pike. RoBERT M. KNAPP, of Jerseyville, is by profession a lawyer; was a member of the Forty-third Congress, and was again elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 17,949 votes against 12,622 votes for Joseph Robins, Republican. TWELFTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Cass, Christian, Menard, Morgan, Sangamon, and Scott. 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 Congress and re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 17,409 votes against 13,714 votes for David L. Phil-lips, Republican. Re-clected. LTT —— Sp Ce eo oR Le £8 % Senators and Representatives. THIRTEENTH DISTRICT, Counties.—De Witt, Logan, Mason, McLean, and Tazewell. Tuomas F. TiproN, of Bloomington, was born in Franklin County, Ohio, August 29, 1833, and has been a resident of McLean County, Illinois, since he was ten years old; studied law and was admitted to the bar in 1854; was State’s Attorney for the Eighth Judicial District of Illinois from January, 1867, to December, 1868; was elected Circuit Judge of the Eighth Judicial Circuit in 1870, and on the reorganization of the Circuit Court under the new Con-stitution was re-elected Circuit Judge of the Fourteenth Judicial Circuit; and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 15,229 votes against 14,977 votes for Adlai E. Stevenson, Independent Reformer. FOURTEENTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Champaign, Coles, Douglas, Macon, Piatt, and Vermillion. Joseru G. CANNON, of Danville, was born at Guilford, North Carolina, May 7, 1836; is a lawyer ; was State’s Attorney in [llinois from March, 1861, to December, 1868; was elected to the Forty-third and Forty-fourth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 17,796 votes against 16,404 for C. F. Black, Democrat. Re-elected. FIFTEENTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Clark, Crawford, Cumberland, Edgar, Effingham, Jasper, Lawrence, Moul-trie, and Shelby. Jou~ R. EDEN, of Sullivan, was elected to the Forty-third and Forty-fourth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 18,714 votes against 13,768 votes for George D. Chaffee, Republican. SIXTEENTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Bond, Clay, Clinton, Fayette, Marion, Montgomery, and Washington. Wirriam A. J. SPARKS, of Carlyle, was born near New Albany, Indiana, November 19, 1828; his parents removed to Illinois in 1836, and shortly thereafter died ; he, in early boyhood, dependent upon his own exertions, labored on a farm, and at intervals attended country schools, subsequently taught school, and graduated at McKendree College, Illinois, in 1850; studied law, was admitted to the bar in 1851, and has since practised, except when engaged in official duties; was appointed by President Pierce, in 1853, United States Land Receiver for the Ed-wardsville, Illinois, Land-Office, and held that office until 1856; was elected Presidential Elector in 1856; was elected to the State House of Representatives of Illinois in 1856 and ’57, and to the State Senate, from the Fourth Senatorial District, 1863 and 64; was a Delegate to the National Democratic Convention, at New York, in 1868; was elected to the Forty-fourth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 14,591 votes against 12,763 votes for E. M. Ashcraft, Republican. Re-elected. SEVENTEENTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Macoupin, Madison, Monroe, and Saint Clair. 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 Speakerof the Illinois House of Representatives; was elected to the Thirty-eighth, Forty-third, and Forty-fourth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, re-ceiving 17,036 votes against 13,029 votes for Henry S. Baker, Republican. Re-elected, EIGHTEENTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Alexander, Jackson, Johnson, Massac, Perry, Pope, Pulaski, Randolph, Union, and Williamson. WiLLiAM HARTZELL, of Chester, was born in Stark County, Ohio, February 20, 1337; re- moved with his parents to Illinois in 1840, and thence to the then Republic of Texas in 1844,where he remained until 1853, when he removed to Randolph County, Illinois, where he has since resided; was reared on a farm; graduated at McKendree College, Lebanon, Illinois,in June, 1859; studied law, was admitted to the bar in June, 1864, and has since practised ; was a Democratic nominee for the Forty-second Congress; was elected to the Forty-fourthCongress, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 14,691 votes against 14,671 votes for B. L. Wiley, Republican. NINETEENTH DISTRICT. Counties. —Kdwards, Franklin, Gallatin, Hamilton, Hardin, Jefferson, Richland, Saline, Wabash, Wayne, 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 edu-cated 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, 2 Congressional Directory. and has since practised; was Clerk of the Circuit Court of Hamilton County 1863-68; was Prosecuting Attorney for the Twelfth Judicial Circuit 1868-'72; removed in 1873 from McLeansboro’ to Shawneetown, where he was an officer of the Gallatin National Bank ; was a member of the Democratic'State Central Committee of Illinois 1864, 1865, 1874, and 1875; was a Delegate to the National Democratic Convention at Baltimore in 1872; and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 12,722 votes against 8,516 votes for Edward Bonham, Republican, and 7,523 for W. B. Anderson, Independent. Re-elected. INDIANA. SENATORS. JosepH E. McDonNALD, of Indianapolis, was born in Butler County, Ohio, August 29, 1819; was taken to Indiana in 1826; was apprenticed to the saddler’s trade at La Fayette; was two years in college, but did not graduate ; studied law, and was admitted to the bar in 1843, and commenced practice; was Prosecuting Attorney in 1843-47; was elected to the Thirty-first Congress from the Eighth District of Indiana; was elected Attorney-General of Indiana in 1856 and re-elected in 1858; removed to Indianapolis in 1859; was the unsuc-cessful Democratic candidate for Governor of Indiana in 1864; was elected to the United States Senate as a Democrat, to succeed Daniel D. Pratt, Republican, and took his seat March 5, 1875. His term of service will expire March 3, 1881. DANIEL W. VOORHEES, of Terre Haute, was born in Fountain County, Indiana, September 26, 1828; graduated at the Indiana Asbury University in 1849; studied law and commenced its pracice 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 defeated 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, and took his seat November 12, 1877. His term of office will expire with the next meeting of the Legislature of Indiana. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. Counties. —Gibson, Perry, Posey, Spencer, Vanderburg, and Warrick. BENONI S. FULLER, of Boonville, was born in Warrick County, Indiana, November 13, 1825, and brought up on a farm, receiving a common-school education; when twenty-one years of age he became a school-teacher; was elected Sheriffin 1856, and re-elected in 1858; was a member of the State House of Representatives in 1866 and ’68, and of the State Senate in 1862; 70, and ’72; was unanimously nominated by the Democratic party as President of the State Senate in 1873; was elected to the Forty-fourth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 14,727 votes against 13,158 votes for C. A. De Bruler, Republican, and 1,400 votes for T. F. De Bruler, Independent. \ SECOND DISTRICT. Counties.—Crawford, Daviess, Dubois, Greene, Knox, Martin, Orange, Pike, and Sullivan. TaoMASs 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 ractice ; 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 nominated Tilden and Hendricks in 1876; and was elected to the Forty fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 18,8388 votes against 13,519 votes for Rev. Lewis Loveless, Republican. Re-elected. THIRD DISTRICT. Counties.—Bartholomew, Brown, Clarke, Floyd, Harrison, Jackson, and Washington. GEORGE AUGUSTUS BICKNELL, of New Albany, was born and bred at Philadelphia, Penn-sylvania; is A. B. and A. M. of the University of Pennsylvania, and LL. D. of the Uni-versity of Indiana; he studied law at the Law School of Yale College; removed to Scott County, Indiana, in 1846; was elected Fence-viewer in 1847, County Prosecutor in 1848, Cir-cuit Prosecutor in 1850, and Judge of the Second Judicial Circuit in 1852, holding the last-named position twenty-four years by four successive re-elections; was Professor of Law at the Uni-versity of Indiana 1861-’70; and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, re-ceiving 17,225 votes against 11,570 votes for Newsom, Republican, and 1,034 votes for George W. Carr, Independent. Re-elected. Senators and Representatives. FOURTH DISTRICT, Counties.—Decatur, Jefferson, Jennings, Ohio, Ripley, Rush, Scott, and Switzerland. LEONIDAS SEXTON, of Rushville, was born at Rushville, Indiana, May 19, 1827; received a classical education, graduating at Jefferson College, Cannonsburg, Pennsylvania, in 1847; studied law at Rushville with A. W. Hubbard, and at the Cincinnati Law School in the winter of 1848-49, while William Groesbeck, William Green, and Charles Telford were the pro-fessors ; was admitted to the bar in 1850, and has since been in constant practice at Rushville ; was a member of the State House of Representatives in 1856; was Lieutenant-(rovernor of Indiana from January, 1873, to January, 1877; and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 14,902 votes against 14,507 votes for Lewis J. Woolen, Democrat, and 378 votes for William L. Bright, Independent Greenback. FIFTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Dearborn, Fayette, Franklin, Randolph, Union, 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; assisted 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 ; was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 15,598 votes against 14,069 votes for William S. Holman, Democrat. Re-elected. SIXTH DISTRICT. Countizs.—Delaware, Grant, Hancock, Henry, Johnson, Madison, and Shelby. MiLroN S. ROBINSON, of Anderson, was born at Versailles, Indiana, April 20, 1832; re- ceived a common-school education ; studied law with his father at Greensburg, Indiana, and commenced practice at Anderson in 1851; was a Presidential Elector on the Republican ticket in 1856; was appointed Director of the Northern Indiana State Prison in 1861, but resigned after a brief term of service; entered the Union Army in September, 1861, as Lieu-tenant-Colonel of the Forty-seventh Indiana Volunteer Infantry; was promoted Colonel of the Seventy-fifth Indiana Volunteer Infantry in 1862, and was subsequently brevetted Brigadier-General ‘“for gallant and meritorious services ’’ in many of the battles and skirmishes of the war; was elected State Senator 1866-"70; was a Delegate to the National Republican Con-vention at Philadelphia in 1872; was elected to the Forty-fourth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 17,403 votes against 17,127 votes for Chambers, Democrat. SEVENTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Hendricks, Marion, Morgan, and Putnam. JouN HANNA, of Indianapolis, was born in Marion County, Indiana, September 3, 1827; was educated at Indiana Asbury University, graduating June, 1850; studied law, was admitted to the bar, and commenced practice at Greencastle; was Mayor of Greencastle 1851-"54; removed to Kansas, and was a member of its Territorial Legislature in the winters of 1857 and 1858 from the then county of Lykins, now known as Miami; returned to Indiana; was Presidential Elector on the Lincoln and Hamlin ticket in 1860; was appointed United States District Attorney for the district of Indiana by President Lincoln in 1861, and re-appointed by him in 1865, but when the breach occurred between President Johnson and the Republican party his denunciation of the policy of the administration was followed by his removal ; he has since devoted his time exclusively to the practice of law at Indianapolis, and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 19,634 votes against 18,236 votes for Franklin Landers, Democrat. EIGHTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Clay, Lawrence, Monroe, Owen, Parke, Vermillion, and Vigo. MorToN C. HUNTER, of Bloomington, was born at Versailles, Indiana, February 5, 1825; was educated at the Indiana State University, from the Law Department of which he was grad-uated in 1849; was elected a member of the House of Representatives of Indiana, from Mon-roe County, in 1858; was Colonel of the Eighty-second Regiment of Indiana Volunteer In-fantry, and commanded it until the fall of Atlanta; was brevetted Brigadier-General for gallant and meritorious services;”” commanded the First Brigade, Third Division, Fourteenth Army Corps, from the fall of Atlanta until the close of the war; was in Sherman’s “ march to the sea,” and participated in the great review at Washington after the termination of hostil-ities ; was elected to the Fortieth and Forty-third and Forty-fourth Congresses; and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 14,265 votes against 13,165 votes for McLean, Democrat. Congressional Directory. NINTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Benton, Boone, Clinton, Fountain, Montgomery, Tippecanoe, and Warren. M. D. WHITE, of Crawfordsville, was born in Clark County, Ohio, September 8, 1827; removed with his parents to Tippecanoe County, Indiana, in 1829; was raised on a farm, and on arriving at the age of twenty-one years removed to Crawfordsville, his present residence; was educated in common schools and at Wabash College ; studied law and commenced prac-tice; was elected Prosecuting Attorney in 1854, and served two years; was elected State Senator in 1860, and served four years ; and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Repub-lican, receiving 16,090 votes against 15,576 votes for George McWilliams, Democrat, and 3,349 votes for Leroy Templeton, Independent. TENTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Carroll, Jasper, La Porte, Lake, Newton, Porter, Pulaski, Saint Joseph, Starke, and White. ; Wirriam H. CALKINS, of La Porte, was born in Pike County, Ohio, February 18, 1842; studied law, was admitted to the bar, and has since practised; served in the Union Army from May, 1861, to December, 1865, with the ‘exception of about three months in 1863, belonging to the Fourteenth Iowa Infantry and the Twelfth Indiana Cavalry; was State’s Attorney for the Ninth Indiana Judicial Circuit 1866-’70; was a member of the State House of Represent- atives in 1871; was defeated for Congress in 1874, and elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 16,439 votes against 15,390 votes for W. S. Haymond, Democrat, and 33 votes scattering. Re-elected ELEVENTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Cass, Fulton, Hamilton, Howard, Miami, Tipton, and Wabash. James L. Evans, of Noblesville, was born in Harrison County, Kentucky, March 27%, 1825; received a common-school education; removed to Hancock County, Indiana, in 1837, and. to Noblesville, his present residence, in 1850; is by occupation a miller and general trader; was elected to the Forty-fourth Congress and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 17,930 votes against 10,482 votes for A. F. Armstrong, Democrat. TWELFTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Adams, Allen, Blackford, Huntington, Jay, Wells, and Whitley. ANDREW H. HAMILTON, of Fort Wayne, was elected to the Forty-fourth Congress and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 19,142 votes against 12,777 votes for Bonham, Republican. THIRTEENTH DISTRICT. Counties.—De Kalb, Elkhart, Kosciusko, La Grange, Marshall, Noble, and Steuben. Joun H. BAKER, of Goshen, was born in Parma Township, New York, February 28, 1832; removed at an early age with his parents to the present County of Fulton, Ohio, where he assisted in such farm-labor as is incident to early pioneer life, until less than a year before attaining his majority; his early education while at home was limited to the brief winter terms of a new and sparsely-settled country; he afterward taught school and attended the Wesleyan University at Delaware, Ohio, completing the first two years of the college course; studied law at Adrian, Michigan; was admitted to the bar, and commenced practice in 1857 at Goshen, Indiana; has been constantly engaged in practice until his election to Congress, having pre-viously held no office; was elected to the Forty-fourth Congress and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 18,481 votes against 16,273 votes for Freeman Kelly, Democrat. Re-elected. : IOWA. SENATORS. WiLriamMm B. AriisoN, of Dubuque, was born at Perry, Ohio, March 2, 1829; was edu-cated 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 organ-izing volunteers in the beginning of the war for the suppression of the rebellion ; was elected a Representative 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. His term of service will expire March 3, 1885. SAMUEL J. KIrRkwooOD, of Towa City, was born in Harford County, Maryland, December 20, 1813 ; received a limited education at the Academy of John McLeod, in Washington City; removed to Richland County, Ohio, in 1835, and studied law there; was admitted to the bar in 1843; was elected Prosecuting Attorney in 1845 and again in 1847; was in 1850-’51 a member of the Convention that formed the present Constitution of the State of Ohio; removed to John-son County, Iowa, in 1855; was elected to the State Senate in 1856; was elected Governor in 1859 and again in 1861; was in 1863 nominated by President Lincoln and confirmed as Minister to Denmark, but declined the appointment ; was in 1866 elected to the United States Senate to Senators and Representatives. 21 fill the unexpired term of Hon. James Harlan; was in 1875 again elected Governor of Iowa and resigned that office January 31, 1877; was elected in January, 1876, to the United States Senate as a Republican to sucgeed George G. Wright, Republican. His term of service will expire March 3, 1883. \ REPRESENTATLVES. FIRST DISTRICT. Counties.—Des Moines, Henry, Jefferson, Lee, Louisa, Van Buren, and Washington. JoseEPH C. STONE, of Burlington, was born at Westport, New York, July 30, 1829; removed to the Territory of Iowa in 1844; received a limited education at the public schools; studied medicine, graduating at the Medical Department of the Saint Louis University, Missouri, in 1854; enlisted as a private soldier in the First Iowa Cavalry in June, 1861; was made Adju-tant of the regiment; was promoted Captain and Assistant Adjutant-General of volunteers ir 1862; was promoted and brevetted in 1864-65, and served to the close of the war; has since practised his profession; was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 17,188 votes against 14,814 votes for Wesley C. Hobbs, Democrat, and several hundred votes for the Greenback candidate. SECOND DISTRICT. Counties.—Cedar, Clinton, Jackson, Jones, Muscatine, and Scott. HiraM PRICE, of Davenport, was born in Washington County, Pennsylvania, January Io, 1814; received a common-school education; was for some time a merchant’s clerk, then for a few years a farmer, and then a merchant in a small way on his own account; removed to Daven-port, Iowa, in 1844; was elected President of the State Bank of Iowa in 1859, and continued in that position until 1866, when the several branches were changed to National Banks, and he closed up their business without the loss of a dollar; when the war of the rebellion broke out, and the State had no available funds, he quartered and subsisted about five thousand in-fantry and cavalry for several months, at the request of the Governor, from his individual means; was appointed Paymaster-General, the only officer of that rank the State has ever had; was elected to the Thirty-eighth Congress as a Republican by over 3,000 majority over Thayer, Democrat; re-elected to the Thirty-ninth Congress by over 5,000 majority over Parker, Demo-crat, and re-elected to the Fortieth Congress by about 7,000 majority over Cook, Anti-monopoly and Democrat; declined to be a candidate for the Forty-first’ Congress; was President of the Davenport and Saint Paul, now the Davenport and Northwestern, Railroad Company, and re-signed after a little over two years’ service; spent some time in Europe; was nominated con-trary to his expressed wish for the Forty-fifth Congress and elected as a Republican, receiv-ing 16,439 votes against 14,683 votes for J. H. Murphy, Democrat. Re-elected. THIRD DISTRICT. Counties.—Allamakee, Buchanan, Clayton, Delaware, Dubuque, Fayette, and Winneshiek. THeoDORE WELD BURDICK, of Decorah, was born at Evansburg, Crawford County, Pennsylvania, October 7, 1836; received a common-school and academic education ; removed in 1853 with his parents to Decorah, Iowa; was appointed in 1854 Deputy Treasurer and Recorder of Winneshiek County, and occupied those positions until 1857, when, having reached his majority, he was elected Treasurer and Recorder, and was twice re-elected, serving until 1862, when he resigned, to recruit a company of cavalry for the Union Army; was elected and commissioned Captain, and assigned to the Sixth Regiment of Iowa Volunteer Gavalry, in which he served for three years, in the Department of the Northwest; after the regiment was mustered out in 1865, he returned to Decorah, entered into business pursuits, and was chosen Cashier of the First National Bank of Decorah,. which position he has since held; and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 17,423 votes against 16,100 votes for Jeffrey M. Griffith, Democrat. FOURTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Black Hawk, Bremer, Butler, Cerro Gordo, Chickasaw, Floyd, Franklin, Grundy, Hancock, Hardin, Howard, Mitchell, Winnebago, Worth, and Wright. NATHANIEL C. DEERING, of Osage, was born at Denmark, Oxford County, Maine, Sep-tember 2, 1827; was educated at the common school and at North Bridgeton Academy; was elected a member of the Legislature from Penobscot County in 1855, and re-elected in 1856; removed to Osage, Iowa, in 1857; was for several years a clerk of the United States Senate, but resigned in 1865; later in 1865 was appointed Special Agent of the Post-Office Department for the District of Minnesota, Iowa, and Nebraska, and served until 1869, when he resigned; was appointed National Bank Examiner for the State of Iowa in 1872, which position he held until February, 1877; was elected as a Republican to the Forty-fifth Con-gress, receiving 20,770 votes against 9,339 votes for Cyrus Foreman, Democrat. Re-elected. FIFTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Benton, Iowa, Johnson, Linn, Marshall, Poweshiek, and Tama. Rusu CLARK, of Towa City, was born at Schellsburg, Bedford County, Pennsylvania, October 1, 1834; received a common-school education at his birthplace, attended the academy Congressional Directory. at Ligonier, Pennsylvania, and was a student at Jefferson College, Pennsylvania, graduating there in 1853; studied law, was admitted to the bar at Iowa City in the fall of 1853, and commenced practice there; was a member of the General Assembly of Iowa 1860-64, serving the two last years as Speaker of the House; was on the staff of the Governor of Iowa in 1861 and ’62, aiding in the organization of olunteers from Iowa; was a member of the Board of Trustees of the Towa State University 1862-66 ; was re-elected to the General Assembly of 1876; and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 19,274 votes against 11,154 votes for N. Worley, Democrat, and 1,200 for G. W. Rutherford, Greenbacker. Re-elected. SIXTH DISTRICT, Counties.—Appanoose, Davis, Jasper, Keokuk, Mahaska, Marion, Monroe, and Wapello. EZEKIEL S. SAMPSON, of Sigourney, was born in Huron County, Ohio, December 6, 1831; received his early education at public schools, later at a private school at Mount Pleasant, Towa, and at Knox College, Illinois ; studied law, was admitted to the bar, and commenced practice at Sigourney, Iowa, in 1856; was Prosecuting Attorney in 1856, ’57, and ’58; entered the Union Army as Captain in the Fifth Iowa Infantry in 1861, and was Lieutenant-Colonel in the same regiment when mustered out in 1864; was a member of the State Senate of Iowa in 1866; was Judge of the Sixth District of Iowa from January, 1867, until January, 1875; was elected to the Forty-fourth Congress and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 18,778 votes against 14,719 votes for H. B. Hendershott, Democrat. SEVENTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Adair, Clarke, Dallas, Decatur, Guthrie, Lucas, Madison, Polk, Warren, and Wayne. HENRY J. B. CUMMINGS, of Winterset, was born at Newton, New Jersey, May 21, 1831; received his education in the public schools of Pennsylvania; at the age of nineteen became a newspaper editor in Schuylkill County, Pennsylvania; studied law ; wasadmitted to the bar at Williamsport, Pennsylvania; soon after emigrated West, reaching Iowa January 1, 1856, and went directly to Winterset, where he has since resided ; in August, 1856, was elected Prose-cuting Attorney for his county, (Madison,) which office he held two years and three months, when it was abolished by the new Constitution; continued the practice of law until July, 1861, when he entered the Union Army as a member of Company F, Fourth Iowa Infantry, and was elected its Captain, serving until September, 1862, when he was commissioned Colonel of the Thirty-ninth Iowa Infantry, which he commanded until 1865, when he returned home; in 1869 he entered the newspaper business again, as editor and proprietor of ‘‘ The Winterset Madison-ian,” which he still edits and publishes; was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Repub-lican, receiving 19,496 votes against 11,684 votes for Samuel J. Gilpin, Democrat, and 2,156 votes for Andrew Hastie, Independent ; was unanimously nominated by the Republican Con-vention of his district for re-election to the Forty-sixth Congress, but by the combination of the Democratic and National parties in the selection of an opposing candidate he lost the election by 928 votes. EIGHTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Adams, Audubon, Cass, Fremont, Harrison, Mills, Montgomery, Page, Potta wattamie, Ringgold, Shelby, Taylor, and Union. WiLLiaM FLETCHER SAPP, of Council Bluffs, was born at Danville, Ohio, November 20, 1824; received a public-school and academical education; studied law at Mount Vernon, Ohio, with Columbus Delano and W. R. Sapp; was admitted to the bar in June, 1850, and commenced practice at Mount Vernon; was elected Prosecuting Attorney of Knox County in 1854 and re-elected in 1856; removed in 1860 to Omaha, Nebraska; was appointed in 1861 Adjutant-General of Nebraska Territory, and was subsequently elected a member of the Territorial Legis-lative Council ; entered the Union Armyin 1862 as Lieutenant-Colonel of the Second Nebraska Cavalry and served until it was mustered out; removed to Council Bluffs, Iowa, where he has since practised law; was a member of the State House of Representatives in 1865; was ap-pointed by President Grant United States District Attorney for the District of Towa in 1869, serving until 1873; and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 19,358 votes against 15,236 for Lemuel R. Bolter, Democrat and Greenbacker. Re-elected. NINTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Boone, Buena Vista, Calhoun, Carroll, Cherokee, Clay, Crawford, Dickinson, Emmett, Greene, Hamilton, Humboldt, Ida, Kossuth, Lyon, Monona, O’Brien, Osceola, Talo Alto, Plymouth, Pocahontas, Sac, Sioux, Story, Webster, and Woodbury. ADDISON OLIVER, of Onawa, was born in Washington County, Pennsylvania; received a classical education, graduating at Washington College in 1850; taught school for two years in Arkansas; returned to Pennsylvania, studied law with Hon. William Montgomery, was admitted to the bar, and commenced practice in Western Iowa in 1857; was a member of the State House of Representatives in 1863, and of the State Senate in 1865; was elected Judge of the Fourth Judicial Circuit in 1868, and twice re-elected to the same position, which he resigned when elected to the Forty-fourth Congress; and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress, receiving 19,503 votes against 10,583 votes for Samuel Rees, Democrat. Senators and Representatives. 23 KANSAS. SENATORS. JouN JaMEs INGALLs, of Atchison, was born at Middleton, Massachusetts, December 29, 1833; graduated at Williams College, Williamstown, Massachusetts, in the class of 1855; studied law, was admitted to the bar in 1857, and has since been engaged in the practice of law ; removed to Kansas in October, 1858; was a member of 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; editor of ‘“ The Atchison Champion’ in 1863, ’64, and ’65; defeated as ¢“anti-Lane”’ candi-date for Lieutenant-Governor in 1862, and again in 1864; was elected to the United States Senate as a Republican, to succeed S. C. Pomeroy, Republican, and took his seat March 4, 1873. His term of office will expire March 3, 1879. PRESTON B. PLUMB, of Emporia, was born in Delaware County, Ohio, October 12, 1837; receiveda common-school education; learned the art of printing, and afterwards aided in establishing ‘‘Tlte Xenia News; removed to Kansas in 1856; established ¢ The Emporia News; ”’ was a member of the Leavenworth Constitutional Convention in 1859; was admitted to the bar in 1861; was elected to 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. Having relinquished the practice of the law on account of failing health, he became President of the Emporia National Bank in January, 1873; was elected to the United States Senate as a Republican to succeed James M. Harvey, Republican, and took his seat March 4, 1877. His term will expire March 3, 1883. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT, Counties.—Atchison, Brown, Clay, Cloud, Davis, Dickinson, Doniphan, Ellsworth, Ellis, Jewell, Jackson, Jefferson, Lincoln, Leavenworth, Marshall, Mitchell, Nemaha, Norton, Ottawa, Osborn, Pottawatomie, Phillips, Russell, Republic, Rooks, Riley, Saline, Smith, and Washington. WiLLiaM A. PHILLIPS, of Salina, was bern at Paisley, Scotland, January 14, 1826; immi-grated to the United States with his father in 1838; practised law and edited a newspaper until 1855; went to Kansas on the staff of ¢“ The New York Tribune;”’ was a Delegate to the National Republican Convention at Chicago in 1860; entered the Union Army as Major in 1861, was promoted to the rank 6f Colonel, and commanded a Division, including the Indian and other regiments serving in the West; was a member of the State Legislature of Kansas at different times; was elected to the Forty-third and Forty-fourth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 29,352. votes against 15,642 votes for Thomas P. Fenton, Democrat. SECOND DISTRICT. Counties.—Allen, Anderson, Bourbon, Cherokee, Crawford, Douglas, Franklin, Johnson, Labette, Lynn, Miami, Montgomery, Neosho, Wilson, and Wyandotte. Duprey C. HASKELL, of Lawrence, was born at Springfield, Vermont, March 23, 1842; received a classical education at Easthampton, Massachusetts, and took a special course at Yale College; engaged in mercantile pursuits; removed to Kansas in 1855; was a member of the State House of Representatives in 1872, ’75, and ’76, serving the last term as Speaker of the House; was nominated for Governor by the Temperance party in 1874, and declined ; and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 22,088 votes against 17,518 votes for John R. Goodin, Democrat. Re-elected. THIRD DISTRICT. Counties—Barton, Butler, Chase, Chautauqua, Coffey, Cowley, Ford, Greenwood, Harvey, Lyon, Marion, McPherson, Osage, Pawnee, Reno, Rice, Sedgwick, Shawnee, Sumner, Wabaunsee, and Woodson. 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 T'opeka, Kansas, where he has since resided; received an academic education; entered the Voluntzer 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 admittedto the practice of law in 1861; was County Attorneyin Kansas for eight successive years; was Assistant United States Attorney for Kansas from 1873 to 1877; and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Repubitenn, receiving 25,171 votes against 11,634 votes for Samuel J. Crawford, Democrat. Xe-elected, \ Congressional Directory. EENTUCKY. SENATORS. THomAs C. McCREERY, of Owensboro’, was born in Kentucky; was elected to the Senate in place of James Guthrie, resigned; took his seat February 27, 1868, and served until March 3, 1871; was re-elected as a Democrat, in place of W. B. Machen, and took his seat March 4, 1873. His term will expire March 3, 1879. James B. BECK, of Lexington, was born in Dumfriesshire, Scotland, February 13, 18225 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, and took his seat March 5, 1877. His term of service will expire March 3, 1883. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. Counties.—Ballard, Caldwell, Calloway, Crittenden, Fulton, Graves, Hickman, Livingston, Lyon, Marshall, McCracken, and Trigg. ANDREW R. BOONE, of Mayfield, was born in Davidson County, Tennessee, April 4, 1831, and removed with his parents in 1833 to Graves County, Kentucky, where he has since resided; received a limited English education; studied law, and was admitted to the bar in October, 1851; was elected Judge of the Graves County Court in 1854 for four years, and was re-elected in 1858; resigned as County Judge in 1861, and was elected to the Kentucky Legislature in that year, but resigned that position in the same year; was elected Circuit Judge for the First Judicial District of Kentucky in 1868, for six years; was elected to the Forty-fourth Congress, and ‘was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiv-ing 10,994 votes against 7,540 votes for Oscar Turner, Independent Democrat, and 5,835 votes for Henry M. Houston, Republican. SECOND DISTRICT. Counties. —Christian, Daviess, Hancock, Henderson, Hopkins, Muhlenburg, McLean, Ohio, Union, and Webster. James A. McKENZIE, of Long View, was born in Christian County, Kentucky, August i, 1840; was educated in the common schools of. Christian County and at Centre College, Dan-ville, Kentucky ; read law and received license to practise; is by occupation a farmer; was a member of the Kentucky Legislature 1867-71 ; was Democratic Elector for the State at large in 1872; was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 17,557 votes against 9,374 votes for James Z. Moore, Republican. Re-elected. THIRD DISTRICT. Counties.—Allen, Barren, Butler, Clinton, Cumberland, Edmonson, Logan, Metcalfe, Mon-roe, Simpson, Todd, and Warren. JouN WiLL1AM CALDWELL, of Russellville, was born at Russellville, Logan County, Ken-tucky, January 15, 1838; entered the Confederate Army September 20, 1861, as Captain; was promoted to Major, Lieutenant-Colonel, and Colonel of the Ninth Kentucky Regiment of In-fantry, General John C. Breckinridge’s brigade, and served with that brigade during the entire civil war; was elected in 1866 County Judge of Logan County, Kentucky, and re-elected in 1870; was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 13,285 votes against 10,590 for E. L. Motley, Republican, and 709 for B. L. Guffy, Greenback. Re-clected. FOURTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Breckinridge, Bullitt, Grayson, Green, Hardin, Hart, Larue, Marion, Meade, Nelson, Spencer, and Washington. J. Proctor KNOTT, of Lebanon, was born near Lebanon, Kentucky, August 29, 1830; studied law, removed to Missouri in May, 1850, and was admitted to the bar in 1851; was elected to the State House of Representatives of Missouri in 1857, and resigned in August, 1859; was appointed Attorney-General of Missouri in the same month; was unanimously nominated for the same position by the Democratic Convention and elected in August, 1862; returned to Kentucky and commenced the practice of law in Lebanon in 1863; was a mem-ber of the Fortieth, Forty-first, and Forty-fourth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress, receiving 15,735 votes against 6,982 for John W. Lewis, Republican. Ze-elected. FIFTH DISTRICT, Counties.— Jefferson and Oldham. 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 the practice of his profes- Senators and Representatives. 2% sion; 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-fitth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 15,046 votes against 5,567 for Walter Evans, Repub-lican. Re-elected. SIXTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Boone, Campbell, Carroll, Gallatin, Grant, Harrison, 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 afterward 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 1850-’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 assistant Presidential Elector for the State at large in 1876; and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiv-ing 16,482 votes against 8,230 votes for J. J. Landram, Republican. Re-elected. SEVENTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Bourbon, Clarke, Fayette, Franklin, Henry, Jessamine, Owen, Scott, Shelby, and Woodford. 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 Forty-fourth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 18,884 votes against 11,348 votes for T. O. Shackelford, Republican. Re-elected. EIGHTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Adair, Anderson, Boyle, Casey, Garrard, Lincoln, Madison, Mercer, Pulaski Russell, Taylor, and Wayne. MirToN J. DURHAM, of Danville, was born in Mercer County, Kentucky, May 16, 1824; now resides in Boyle County, which formed a part of Mercer County; received his primary education in the common schools of the neighborhood ; entered Asbury University, Indiana, in January, 1841, and graduated in 1844; studied law with the Hon. J. F. Bell in Danville; graduated at the law-school in Louisville, Kentucky, in March, 1850; practised law until 1861; was appointed Circuit Judge in that year for the eighth judicial district; was elected to the Forty-third and Forty fourth Congresses, and re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 15,484 votes against 12,654 votes for W. O. Bradley, Republican. NINTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Bell, Breathitt, Clay, Elliott, Estill, Floyd, Harlan, Jackson, Knox, Laurel, Lee, Letcher, Magoffin, Menifee, Montgomery, Morgan, Owsley, Perry, Pike, Powell, Rockcastle, Whitley, and Wolfe. Tromas TURNER; of Mount Sterling, was born at Richmond, Kentucky, September 10, 1821; was educated at the Richmond Academy and at Centre College. Danville, where he graduated in September, 1840; studied law with his father, Hon. Squire Turner, at Richmond, and at the Law Department of Transylvania University, at Lexington, Kentucky, where he graduated in March, 1842; commenced practice at Richmond ; removed in November, 1854, to Mount Sterling, Kentucky, where he has since continued the practice of law ; was appointed Commonwealth’s Attorney in March, 1846, and resigned in 1849; was a member of the State House of Representatives in 1861-63; and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 13,103 votes against 12,710 for Robert Boyd, Republican. Re-elected. TENTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Bath, Boyd, Bracken, Carter, Fleming, Greenup, Johnson, Lawrence, Lewis, Martin, Mason, Nicholas, Robertson, and Rowan. Joun B. CLARKE, of Brookville, was born near Augusta, Bracken County, Kentucky, April 14, 1833; was educated at Augusta ; studied law, and was admitted to the bar in April, 1854; was elected County Attorney for Bracken County in August, 1858, for the term of four years; was elected to the State Senate of Kentucky in August, 1867, from the Twenty- | sixth Senatorial District, composed of the counties of Bracken, Pendleton, and Grant, and was elected to the Forty-fourth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Dem-ocrat, receiving 14,409 votes against 10,561 votes for O. S. Deming, Republican. EY | Congressional Directory. LOUISIANA. SENATORS. Wu. Pitt KELLOGG, of New Orleans, was born December 8, 1831, at Orwell, Vermont; was educated at Norwich University; removed to Illinois in 1848; studied law at Peoria, Illinois ; and was admitted to the bar in 1853, commencing practice in Fulton County; served as Presidential Elector in 1860; was appointed Chief Justice of Nebraska by Mr. Lincoln in 1861; afterwards resigned and accepted the Colonelcy of the Seventh Illinois Cavalry; served under General Pope in Missouri, and commanded General Granger’s Cavalry Brigade until the evacuation of Corinth; was in April, 1865, appointed Collector of the port of New Orleans ; was elected to the United States Senate as a Republican, serving from July 17, 1868, to Novem-ber 1, 1872, when he resigned; was Governor of Louisiana from January 5, 1873, to January 5, 1877; was again elected to the United States Senate as a Republican, and was admitted to his seat December 1, 1877. His term of service will expire March 3, 1883. 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 854; was admitted to the bar in 1856, and practised at New Orleans ; entered the Confederate service at the commence-ment of hostilities as Judge-Advocate on the staff of General Magruder, and after one year’s serv- + ice 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 Legislature prior to the reconstruction acts; was one of the committee sent to Washington to confer 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 Repre-sentatives in 1872; was elected a member of ‘the State Senate for four years in 1874; was elected a United States Senator as a Democrat to succeed William Pitt Kellogg, Republican, (the seat having been vacant since 1873,) and took his seat December 10, 1877. His term of service will expire March 3, 1879. : REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. : Parishes.—That 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. RANDALL LEE GIBSON, of New Orleans, was born September 10, 1832, at Spring Hill, Woodford County, Kentucky, the residence of Nathaniel Hart, his grandfather, where his parents were on a visit from their home, in Terre Bonne Parish, Louisiana; was educated by private tutor at “Live Oak Plantation,” his father’s homestead; at Yale College, where he graduated in 1853; at the University of Louisiana, from the Law Department of which he received a diploma in 1855; and in Europe, where he was engagd in study and travel for three years; was a planter when the civil war began in 1861; joined the Confederate Army as a private soldier, and was promoted to the command of a company, regiment, brigade, and division ; after the war he began and continues the practice of law in the city of New Orleans, and is also a sugar-planter; was elected to the Forty-third Congress from the second district by a large majority, but was counted out by the ‘Lynch board,” and was elected to the Forty-fourth Congress from the First District, (which had been extended to embrace his residence, ) and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 14,876 votes against 11,978 votes for W. M. Burwell, Republican. Re-elected. SECOND DISTRICT. Parishes —That portion of the parish of Orleans above Julia street, including the 1st, 2d, roth, 11th, 12th, 13th, 14th, 16th, and 17th wards of the city of New Orleans, and the parishes of Jefferson, Saint Charles, Saint James, and Saint John the Baptists E. Joun ELLs, of New Orleans, was born at Covington, Louisiana, October 15, 1841 ; received his early education at Clinton, Louisiana; entered the freshman class at Centenary College, Jackson, Louisiana, in 1855, and withdrew when in the junior class,.in 1858; entered the Law Department of the University of Louisiana; graduated in March, 1861; joined the Confederate Army five days afterward, and served throughout the war; was admitted to the bar of Louisiana in 1866, and has practised in New Orleans since 1867; never held a public office of any kind until elected to the Forty-fourth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 14,145 votes against 11,515 votes for H. C. Dibble, Republican. Re-elected. THIRD DISTRICT. Parishes.—Ascension, Assumption, Calcasieu, Cameron, Iberville, Iberia, La Fayette, La Fourche, Saint Martin, Saint Mary, Terre Bonne, and Vermillion. Josep HAYES ACKLEN, of Pattersonville, was. born at Nashville, Tennessee, May 20, 1850, though his parents were citizensof Louisiana at the time; was educated partly by a pri- Senators and Representatives. 27 vate tutor at ¢‘ Belmont,” the summer-home of his parents at Nashville, then at Burlington College, and finally graduated successively at two foreign universities; returning to America, he graduated in the Law Department of Cumberland University, at Lebanon, Tennessee; commenced and continued for some years the practice of law at Nashville, and later at Mem-phis, Tennessee; abandoned the practice of law to personally superintend his sugar plantations in Louisiana; was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Conservative Democrat, receiving 15,204 votes against 14,879 votes for C. B. Darrall, Republican, and, after a contest, was ad-mitted to his seat February 20, 1878. Re-elected. FOURTH DISTRICT. Parishes.—Bossier, Caddo, De Soto, Natchitoches, Rapides, Red River, Sabine, Vernon, Webster, and Winn. JosepH B. ErAM, of Mansfield, was horn in Hempstead County, Arkansas, June 12, 1821 ; removed with his father to Natchitoches, Louisiana, in 1826, and has since resided there; studied law; was admitted to the bar at Alexandria. Louisiana, in October, 1843, and has since practised ; served two terms in the Louisiana Legislature from the parish of Sabine, preceding his removal to the parish of De Soto in 1851; was elected in 1861 a delegate from De Soto Parish to the State Constitutional Convention, and signed the Ordinance of Secession ; was elected and served two terms in the Legislature, one term as Speaker, during our civil war ; was re-elected in 1865, and served until the passage of the reconstruction legislation by Congress ; was re-elected in 1872, but the McHenry Legislature had been counted out by the Returning Board; was elected to the State Senate in 1874, and counted out again; and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 12,136 votes against 11,540 votes for George L. Smith, Republican. Re-elected. FIFTH DISTRICT. Parishes.—Caldwell, Catahoula, Fast and West Carroll, Claiborne, Concordia, Franklin, Jackson, Lincoln, Madison, Morehouse, Ouachita, Richland, Tensas, and Union. SIXTH DISTRICT. Parishes.—Avoyelles, East and West Baton Rouge, East and West Feliciana, Livingston, Point Coupee, Saint Helena, Saint Landry, Saint Tammany, Tangipahoa, and Washington. EDWARD WHITE ROBERTSON, of Baton Rouge, was born near Nashville, Davidson County, Tennessee, June 13, 1823; removed in 1825 with his parents to Iberville Parish, Louisiana; was educated at country schools and the preparatory department of Centenary College, Louis-iana ; entered Augusta College, Kentucky, in 1842, and then entered the Nashville Univer-sity, Tennessee, leaving before graduating in 1844; commenced the study of law in 1845; served in the war with Mexico in 1846 as Orderly Sergeant of the Second Louisiana Vol-unteers, a six-months’ regiment; was a member of the State House of Representatives in 1847-49; entered the Law Department of the University of Louisiana, and graduated in 1850; practised law in Iberville Parish; was again elected to the State House of Representatives in 1853; was elected State Auditor of Public Accounts in 1857, re-elected in 1858, and held the office until 1862; entered the Confederate service in March, 1862, as Captain of a company which he had ‘raised for the Twenty-seventh Louisiana Infantry; participated in the bom-bardments, engagements, and siege at Vicksburg from May 18, 1862, to the surrender, and also served in the battle of Baton Rouge, August 5, 1862, as Volunteer Aid to General Rug-gles ; was captured at Vicksburg July 4, 1863, and the regiment was not afterwards in active service; after the war resumed and continues the practice of law at Baton Rouge; and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Conservative Democrat, receiving 15,520 votes against 11,147 votes for Charles E. Nash, Republican. Re-elected. MAINE. SENATORS. HANNIBAL HAMLIN, of Bangor, was born at Paris, Maine, August 27, 1809; was prepared for a collegiate education, but was obliged by the death of his father to take charge of his home farm until he was of age; was a year in a printing-office as a compositor; studied law, and was admitted to the bar in 1833, continuing in active practice until 1848; was a member of the Legislature of Maine in 1836, 37, ’38, ’39, ’40, and ’47, presiding as Speaker of the House in 1837, ’39, and ’40; was a Representative from Maine in the Twenty-eighth and Twenty-ninth Congresses; was elected to the United States Senate in 1848, for four years, to fill a vacancy occasioned by the death of John Fairfield; was re-elected for a full term in 1851, but resigned in 1857 to act as Governor of the State of Maine; was re-elected to the Senate in 1857, and served until he resigned in January, 1861; was elected Vice-President of the United States on the ticket with Abraham Lincoln, and presided over the Senate from March 4, 1861, to March 3, 1865; was ex officio a Regent of the Smithsonian Institution during that time; was appointed Collector of the port of Boston in 1865, but resigned in 1866; was again elected to the United States Senate, and was re-elected in 1875; was chosen a Regent of the Smithsonian Institution in 1870, and has held the position since then. His term of serv-ice as Senator will expire March 3, 1881. Congressional Directory. JaMmEs G. BLAINE, of Augusta, was born in Washington County, Pennsylvania, January 31, 1830; graduated at Washington College, Pennsylvania; adopted the editorial profession, and went to Maine, where he edited “The Portland Advertiser” and ‘The Kennebec Journal;” was a member of the Maine Legislature in 1859, ’60, ’61, and ’62, serving the last two years as Speaker of the House; was elected to the Thirty-eighth, Thirty-ninth, Fortieth, Forty-first, Forty-second, and Ferty-third Congresses, (serving in the Forty-first, the Forty-sccond, and the Forty-third as Speaker;) was re-elected to the Forty-fourth Congress as a Republican; was elected to the United States Senate to fill the vacancy occasioned by the resignation of Lot M. Morrill, appointed Secretary of the Treasury, and was elected for the ensuing term, which will expire March 3, 1883. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. Counties.—Cumber land and York. 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-"72 ; and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 16,235 votes against 15,143 votes for John M. Goodwin, Democrat. Re-clected. SECOND DISTRICT. Counties.—Androscoggin, Franklin, Oxford, and Sagadahoc. WiLrLiaMm P. FRYE, of Lewiston, was born at Lewiston, Maine, September 2, 1831; grad-uated at Bowdoin College, Maine, in 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, and re-elected in 1876; was elected to the Forty-second, Forty-third, and Forty-fourth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 13,683 votes against 10,223 votes for S. C. Belcher, Demo-crat, and 550 votes for Solon Chase, Greenback candidate. Ae-elected. THIRD DISTRICT. Counties.— Kennebec, Lincoln, Somerset, and half of Knox. STEPHEN D. LINDSEY, of Norridgewock, was born at Norridgewock, Maine, March 3, 1828; received an academic education ; studied law, was admitted to the bar, and commenced practice in 1853; was Clerk of the Judicial Courts in Somerset County 1857-60; was a member of the State House of Representatives in 1856, and of the Senate in 1868-’70, and President of the Senate in 1869; was a Delegate to the National Republican Conventions of 1860 and 1868 ; was a member of the Executive Council of Maine in 1874; and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republica, receiving 15,741 votes against 12,788 votes for Edward K. O’Brien, Democrat. Re-elected. \ FOURTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Aroostook, Penobscot, and Piscataquis. LLEWELLYN POWERS, of Houlton, Maine, was born at Pittsfield, Maine, in 1838 ; was educated at Colby University and at the Law Department of Albany University ; was admitted to the bar in 1861, and commenced practice at Houlton; was Prosecuting or County Attorney 1864 71; was Collector of Customs for the District of Aroostook 1868-72; was a member of the State House of ' Representatives in 1874, ’75, and ’76 ; and was elected to the Forty-fifth Con-gress as a Republican, receiving 12,880 votes against 10,069 votes for John P. Donworth, Democrat, and 968 votes for Lyndon Oak, Moral Reformer. FIFTH DISTRICT. Counties.— Hancock, Waldo, and Washington Counties, and Appleton, Camden, Hope, Rock-land, South Thomaston, and Islesborough, in Knox County. EUGENE HALE, of Ellsworth, was born at Turner, Oxford County, Maine, June 9, 1836; received an academic education; studied law; was admitted to the bar in 1857, and com-menced practice; was for nine successive years County Attorney for Hancock County; was a member of the Legislature of Maine in 1867 and ’68; 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 Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 10,695 votes against 8,226 votes for Charles A. Spofford, Democrat; was tendered a Cabinet appointment by President Hayes, and declined ; was Chairman of the Republican Congressional Committee for the Forty-fifth Congress. Senators and Representatives. 29 MARYLAND. SENATORS. GEORGE R. DENNIS, of Kingston, Maryland, was born at White Haven, Somerset County, Maryland, April 8, 1822; was graduated at the Polytechnic Institute of Troy, New York, and then entered the University of Virginia; studied medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, being graduated in that institution in 1843; practised his profession for many years, but retired, and has since devoted his attention principally to agricultural pursuits ; is President of the East-ern Shore Railroad ; was a Delegate from the State at large to the National Whig Convention which nominated Fillmore, at Philadelphia, in 1856, and also to the Democratic National Con-vention at New York, in 1868, serving as one of the Vice-Presidents of that body; was elected to the State Senate of Maryland in 1854, to the House of Delegates in 1867, and again to the Senate in 1871; and while filling this position was elected to the United States Senate as a Democrat, to succeed George Vickers, taking his seat March 4, 1873. His term of office will expire March 3, 1879. W. PiNkNEY WHYTE, of Baltimore, was born in that city August 9, 1824; was educated ~ at Baltimore College and by private tutors; served for eighteen months in the banking house of George Peabody; studied law at the Harvard Law School, and was admitted to the Baltimore bar in 1846; was a member of the Legislature of Maryland in 1847-48 ; was Judge-Advocate of a Court-Martial at the Naval Academy in 1848; was a Democratic candidate for Congress in a Whig district in 1851, and beaten by 119 votes ; was elected Comptroller of the State of Maryland in 1853, and declined a re-election in 1855; was again a Democratic can-didate for Congress in 185% against the Know-Nothings, and contested the seat, but was defeated in the House by a small majority ; refused to claim any pay as a contestant, although the report of the Committee on Elections was against the sitting member; was a Delegate to the Democratic National Convention in 1868; was appointed to the United States Senate by the Governor of Maryland to fill the vacancy occasioned by the appointment of Reverdy John-son as Minister to Great Britain; took his seat July 14, 1868, and served until March 4, 1869, [ Mr. Johnson’s successor had been elected by the Legislature in January, 1868;] was elected Governor of Maryland for four years in November, 1871, and resigned the office to enable the Legislature to elect his successor on his having been elected to the United States Senate as a Democrat, to succeed W. T. Hamilton, Democrat; he received the degree of LL. D. in June, 1874, from the University of Maryland; he took his seat in he Senate March 4, 1875, and his term of service will expire March 3, 1881. REPRESENTATIVES, FIRST DISTRICT. Counties.—Caroline, Dorchester, Kent, Queen Anne’s, Somerset, Talbot, Wicomico, and Worcester. DanieL M. HENRY, of Cambridge, was born near that town, in Dorchester County, Mary-land, February 19, 1823; was educated at Cambridge Academy, and at Saint John’s College, Annapolis ; studied law, and was admitted to the bar in 1844; has since been engaged in the practice of his profession; was elected a member of the Hcuse of Delegates of Maryland in 1846 and again in 1849; was elected a member of the State Senate in 1869; and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 15,287 votes against 11,904 votes for Thomas A. Spence, Republican. Re-elected, SECOND DISTRICT. Counties.—Carroll, Cecil, Harford, and 2d, 3d, 4th, 5th, 6th, 7th, 8th, 9th, 10th, 11th, and 12th districts of Baltimore County. : CHARLES B. ROBERTS, of Westminster, was born in Carroll County, Maryland, April 19, 1842; graduated at Calvert College, New Windsor, Maryland, in 1861; studied law, and was admitted to the bar in 1864; was a Presidential Elector on the Seymour and Blair ticket in 1868; was elected to the Forty-fourth Congress and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Con-gress as a Democrat, receiving 15,033 votes against 11,984 votes for J. Morrison Harris, Republican. THIRD «DISTRICT. City.—1st, 2d, 3d, 4th, 5th, 6th, 7th, 8th, and gth wards of the city of Baltimore. WiLriam KIMMEL, of Baltimore, was born at Baltimore, Maryland; was educated at its best schools and at St. Mary’s and Baltimore Colleges; studied law, and is a member of the Baltimore bar ; has devoted much, time to agricultural pursuits and to the study of the com-mercial and manufacturing interests of the country; was a State director in the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, and a stockholder director in the Canton Company of Baltimore; is a director in the Union Railroad Company and in the Western Maryland extension; was a member of the State Democratic Committee from 1862 to 1866; was a Delegate to the National Democratic Convention which nominated George B. McClellan for President in 1864 ; was a candidate for Congress in 1864; served in the Maryland State Senate from 1866 to 1871; and was elected as a Democrat to the Forty-fifth Congress, receiving 14,251 votes against 8,592 votes for W. E, Goldsborough, Republican. Re-elected. : Congressional Directory. FOURTH DISTRICT. \ City.—1oth, 11th, 12th, 13th, 14th, 15th, 16th, 18th, 19th, and 2oth wards of the city of Baltimore. s THOMAS SWANN, of Baltimore, was born at Alexandria, Virginia; educated at Columbian College and the University of Virginia; studied law with his father at Washington, and was appointed Secretary of the Neapolitan Commission; in 1834 settled in Baltimore, and two ‘years afterward was chosen a Director of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Company; in 1847 was chosen its President, which he resigned in 1853; was also President of the Northwest- _ ern Virginia Railroad Company; after a sojourn in Europe, was, in 1856, elected Mayor ot Balt more, and re-elected in 1858; in 1864 was elected Governor of Maryland; in 1866 was elected a United States Senator, but declined to leave the executive chair; he was elected to the Forty-first, Forty-second, Forty-third, and Forty-fourth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 15,259 votes against 12,728 votes for J. H. But-ler, Republican. FIFTH DISTRICT. Counties.—ist and 13th districts of Baltimore County, 17th ward of the city of Baltimore, Anne Arundel, Calvert, Charles, Howard, Prince George’s, and Saint Mary’s Counties. Ev1 JoNES HENKLE, of Brooklyn, was born in Baltimore County, Maryland, November 24, 1828; received an academic education ; taught school three years; studied medicine and grad-uated at the University of Maryland in 1850; has devoted his attention ¢hiefly to the practice of his profession and to fruit-culture; was a Trustee and also Professor of Anatomy, Physi-ology, and Hygiene in the Maryland Agricultural College; is President of the Board of Visitors of Washington University of Baltimore, and a Director in the Baltimore and Potomac Railroad Company ; was elected to the House of Delegates in 1863; was a member of the State Con-stitutional Convention of 1864; was elected to the State Senate in 1866 and again in 1867, serving in 1867, 768, and 70; was again elected to the House of Delegates in 1871 and ’73; was a Dele-gate to the National Democratic Convention in 1872; was elected to the Forty-fourth Con-gress, and was re-elected to the Forty fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 14,436 votes against 11,705 votes for J. H. Seilman, Republican. Re-elected. SIXTH DISTRICT, Counties.— Alleghany, Garrett, Frederick, Montgomery, and Washington. WiLrLiam WaLsH, of Cumberland, was born in Ireland, May 11, 1828; emigrated to Vir-ginia in 1842; was educated at Mount Saint Mary’s College, Emmittsburg, Maryland, which conferred the degree of LL.D. on him in 1874; studied law partly at Ballston Spa, New York; was admitted to the bar in Virginia in 1850, and commenced practice at Cumberland, Maryland, in February, 1852; was chosen a Presidential Elector on the Democratic ticket in 1860 and ’72; was a member of the State Constitutional Convention of 1867; was elected to the Forty-fourth Congress, and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 15,727 votes against 15,713 votes for Lewis E. McComas, Republican. \ MASSACHUSETTS. ‘ SENATORS. HENRY L. DAWES, of Pittsfield, 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 Representa-tives of Massachusetts in 1848, 49, 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 can-didate for election to the Forty-fourth ; he was elected to the United States Senate as a Repub-lican, to succeed Charles Sumner, (whose unexpired term had been filled by William B. ‘Washburn, ) and took his seat March 4, 1875. His term of service will expire March 3, 1881. 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 elected to the United States Senate as a Republican, to succeed George S. Boutwell, and took his seat March 5, 1877. He was a member of the Electoral Commission of 1876. His term of service will expire March 3, 1883. owing 1 md (D (DD tee Senators and Representatives. is REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. Counties.—Barnstable, Dukes, and Nantucket, with.parts of Bristol and Plymouth. WiLLiaM WALLACE CRAPO, of New Bedford, was born at Dartmouth, Massachusetts, May 16, 1830; was educated in the public schools of New Bedford, at Phillips Academy, Andover, and graduated at Yale College in 1852; studied law at Dane Law School, Cambridge, and with Hon. John H. Clifford, of Massachusetts; admitted to the bar, and has since practised; was a member of the State Legislature in 1857; and was elected to the Forty-fourth Congress, (to fill the vacancy occasioned by the death of Hon. James Buffinton,) and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 14,151 votes against 6,179 votes for Joseph M. Day, Democrat. Re-elected. SECOND DISTRICT. Counties.—Norfolk, with parts of Bristol and Plymouth. BENJAMIN W. HARRIS, of East Bridgewater, was born at East Bridgewater, Massachu-setts, November 10, 1823; received an academic education; studied law, graduating at the Dane Law School, Cambridge, in 1849, and was admitted to the bar at Boston in April, 1850; commenced practice at East Bridgewater in July, 1850, and has been constantly engaged in it since; was a member of the State Senate from Plymouth County in 1857, and a Repre-sentative in the State Legislature from East Bridgewater in 1858; was District Attorney for the Southeastern District of Massachusetts from July 1, 1858, until June 30, 1866; was Collector of Internal Revenue for the second district of Massachusetts from June 20, 1866, until March I, 1873, when he resigned; was elected to the Forty-third and Forty-fourth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 15,550 votes against 9,75, votes for Edward Avery. Re-elected. THIRD DISTRICT. County.— Part of Suffolk, comprising wards 13, 14, I5, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, and 24 of the city of Boston. : BENjAMIN DEAN, of Boston, was born at Clitheroe, England, August 14, 1824; came to this country at an early age and resided at Lowell, Massachusetts; received a classical educa-tion at the public schools of Lowell, and at Dartmouth College; studied law with Judge Thomas Hopkinson, at Lowell, and at the Cambridge Law School ; was admitted to the bar in 1845; practised at Lowell and subsequently at Boston; was a member of the Massachu-setts Senate in 1862, 1863, and 1869; was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving (as the House subsequently determined) 9,315 votes against 9,295 votes for Wal-bridge A. Field, Republican. Mr. Field received the certificate of election by a recount made by a committee of the Board of Aldermen of the city of Boston, and took the seat, but Mr. Dean contested it, and was declared entitled to it March 28, 1878, from which day he served. FOURTH DISTRICT. County.—Part of Suffolk, comprising wards 1, 2, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, and 12 of the city of Boston, the city of Chelsea, and towns of Revere and Winthrop. LreoroLD MORSE, of Boston, was born at Wachenheim, Bavaria, August 15, 1831; received a common-school education at Wachenheim; came to the United States in early life; is a merchant; was twice elected a Delegate to the National Democratic Convention ; was twice a candidate for Congress in the Fourth District against Hon. Samuel Hooper ; was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 10,249 votes against 9,215 votes for Rufus S. Frost, Republican. Ae-clected. FIFTH DISTRICT. Counties—Fourteen towns in Middlesex, the city of Lynn and three towns in Essex, and wards 3, 4, and 5 of the city of Boston, in Suffolk. NATHANIEL P. BANKS, of , Waltham, was born at Waltham, Massachusetts, January 3o, 1816; received a public-school education; was a factory operative ; became a newspaper edi-tor, and afterward studied law; was a member of the Massachusetts Legislature in 1849, '50 ’51, and ’52, and was two years Speaker of the House; was elected to the State Senate in 1851, but, being a member of the House, declined; was a member of the Constitutional Con-vention of Massachusetts in 1853, and was chosen its President; held the office of Governor of Massachusetts in 1858, ’59, and ’60; entered the Union Army in 1861 as Major-General of Volunteers, and served throughout the war for the suppression of the rebellion; was elected to the Thirty-third and Thirty-fourth Congresses, serving during the latter as Speaker of the House ; was re-elected to the Thirty-fifth Congress, and resigned his seat January 1, 1858, to fill the office of Governor; was elected to the Thirty-ninth Congress for the unexpired term of D. W. Gooch, resigned ; was elected to the Fortieth, Forty-first, Forty-second, and Forty-fourth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 13,325 . votes against 12,317 votes for Richard Frothingham, Democrat. Congressional Directory. SIXTH DISTRICT. Counties.—The cities of Gloucester, Haverhill, Newburyport, Salem, and twenty-two towns in Essex. : . GEORGE BAILEY LORING, of Salem, was born at North Andover, Massachusetts, November 8, 1817; was fitted for college at Franklin Academy in that town; was graduated at Harvard University in 1838 ; received the degree of M. D. at the Harvard Medical College in 1842; was appointed Surgeon of the Marine Hospital at Chelsea, Massachusetts, in 1843; was Surgeon of the Seventh Regiment M. V. M. in 1842, ’43, and '44; was appointed Commissioner to Revise the United States Marine Hospital System in 1849 ; was appointed Postmaster of Salem, Massachusetts, in 1853; was a member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives in 1866 and ’67 ; was President of the Massachusetts Senate in 1873, 74, ’75, and '76 ; was a Dele-gate to the Republican National Conventions of 1868, ’72, and ’76; was appointed United States Centennial Commissioner for Massachusetts in 1872; and was elected to the Forty-fifth Con-gress as a Republican, receiving 12,119 votes against 11,003 votes for Charles P. Thompson, Democrat. Re-elected. SEVENTH DISTRICT. Counties.—The city of Lawrence and parts of Essex, Middlesex, and Worcester Counties. BENJAMIN F. BUTLER, of Lowell, was born at Deerfield, New Hampshire, November 5, 1818; graduated at Waterville College, Maine; ‘studied law and commenced its practice in Lowell, Massachusetts; was a member of the State House of Representatives in 1853, and of the Convention of the same year to revise the Constitution of Massachusetts; was a member of the State Senate of Massachusetts in 1859; entered the Union Army in 1861 as Brigadier-General ; was soon promoted to the rank of Major-General, and served through the war for the suppression of the rebellion; was elected to the Fortieth, Forty-first, Forty-second, and Forty-third Congresses, and was again elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 12,100 votes against 9,379 votes for John K. Tarbox, Democrat. EIGHTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Parts of Middlesex, Norfolk, and Worcester, and wards 22, 23, and 25 of the city of Boston, in Suffolk. WiLLiaAM CLAFLIN, of Newton, was born at Milford, Massachusetts, March 6, 1818; was educated at the public schools and at Brown University ; engaged for many years in the shoe and leather business at St. Louis, Missouri, and afterwards Boston; was a member of the State House of Representatives 1849-52, of the State Senate 1860 and 1861, serving the last year as President of the Senate; was a member of the Republican National Executive Committee from 1864 to 1875, serving as Chairman from 1868 to 1872; was Lieutenant-Gov-ernor of Massachusetts 1866-’69 ; was Governor of Massachusetts 1870-772 ; and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 14,245 votes against 12,497 votes for W, W. Warren, Democrat. Re-elected. NINTH DISTRICT. Counties.—The city of Worcester ‘and parts of Worcester and Norfolk Counties. WiLLiam W. Rick, 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 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; and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 13,890 votes against 10,248 votes for George F. Verry, Democrat. Re-elected. TENTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Franklin and Hampshire, with parts of Worcester and Hampden. AMAsA NORCROSS, of Fitchburg, was born in Rindge, New Hampshire, January 26, 1824; received an academic education; studied law, and was admitted to the bar in 1847; has since been engaged in practice; was a member of the State House of Representatives of the Massa-chusetts Legislature in 1858, 1859, and 1862, and of the State Senate of Massachusetts in 1874; was Assessor of Internal Revenue for the Tenth Congressional District from August, 1862, until May, 1873, when the office was abolished ; was Mayor of the city of Fitchburg in 1873 and 1874, and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 15,779 voles against 8,928 votes for S. O. Lamb, Democrat. Re-elected. ; Senators and Representatives. 1°33 ELEVENTH DISTRICT, Counties.—Berkshire, and all of Hampden, except the city otf Holyoke. GEORGE D. RoBINSON, of Chicopee, was born at Lexington, Massachusetts, January 20, 1834; prepared for college at Hopkins Classical School, Cambridge, Massachusetts; grad-uated at Harvard College in 1856; was principal teacher at the Chicopee High School 1856-’65 ; studied law with Hon. Charles Robinson, jr.; was admitted to the bar at Cambridge, Massachusetts; commenced practise at Chicopee in 1866; was a member of the Massachu-setts House of Representatives in 1874, and of the State Senate in 1876; and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 11,922 votes against 9,760 votes for Ches-ter W. Chapin, Democrat, = Ae-clected. MICHIGAN. SENATORS. TroMAs W. FERRY, of Grand Haven, was born at Mackinaw, Michigan, June 1, 1827; received a public-school education; has been engaged in business pursuits; was a member of the House of Representatives of Michigan in 1850; was a member of the State Senate in 1856; was Vice-President for Michigan in the Chicago Republican Convention of 1860; was appointed in 1864 to represent Michigan on the Board of Managers of the Gettysburg Soldiers’ National Cemetery, and was re-appointed in 1867; was elected to the Thirty-ninth, Fortieth, and Forty-first Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-second Congress, but did not take his seat, having subsequently been elected to the United States Senate, to succeed Jacob M. Howard, Republican. He took his seat in the Senate March 4, 1871, was chosen Presidentpro tempore March 9 and 19, and again December 20, 1875, and by the death of Vice-President Wilson he became acting Vice-President, serving as such until March 4, 1877. He was re-elected Sen-ator January 17, 1877, and was re-elected President pro zempore of the Senate March 5, 1877, February 26, 1878, and April 17, 1878. His term of service will expire March 3, 1883. Isaac P. CHRISTIANCY, of Lansing, was born at Caroga, (then Johnstown,) New York, March 12, 1812; received an academic education at the Johnstown and Ovid Academies; studied law with Hon. John Maynard until 1836, when he removed to Monroe, Michigan, where he completed his legal studies with Hon. Robert McClelland ; was admitted to the bar, and practised until called to the bench of the Supreme Court in 1858 ; was Prosecuting Attor-ney 1841-46; was a Delegate to the National Free-Soil Convention at Buffalo in 1848; was a member of the State Senate of Michigan from January 1, 1850, until January 1, 1852; was elected a Judge of the Supreme Court of Michigan from January 1, 1858, until February 27, 1875, (Chief Justice from January, 1872, until January 1, 1874 ;) and was elected to the United States Senate as a Republican, to succeed Z. Chandler, Republican. He took his seat March 4, 1875. Mis term of service will expire March 3, 1831. ! REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. County.—Wayne, city of Detroit. ALPHEUS S. WILLIAMS, of Detroit, was born at Saybrook, Connecticut, September 20, 1810; graduated at Yale College in 1831; was a student in the Yale Law School in 1832 and ’33; travelled in Europe in 1834, ’35, and ’36; removed to Michigan in 1836, and commenced the practice of law; was Judge of Probate for Wayne County, 1840-44; Alderman of Detroit in 1843, and Recorder of the city in 1844; was proprietor and editor of the ¢¢ Detroit Daily Advertiser” in 1843-48; was Lieutenant-Colonel of the First Michigan Volunteer Infantry Regiment in the Mexican War, 1847-48; was Postmaster of Detroit, 1849-53; was a member of the Detroit Board of Education 1856-’57; entered the Union Army by ap-pointment of the President as Brigadier-General of volunteers in August, 1861; commanded the Twelfth Corps in the battles of South Mountain, Antietam, and Gettysburg, and the Twentieth Corps in the siege of Atlanta, on Sherman’s ‘march to the sea,” and in the cam-paign of the Carolinas, and was mustered out of service in January, 1866; was appointed in August, 1866, by the President, one of the Commissioners to adjust ‘the military claims of Missouri; was the Democratic candidate for Governor in November, 1866; was Minister Resident to the Republic of Salvador, 1866-69; was elected to the Forty-fourth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 14,471 votes against 12,417 votes for Henry M. Daffield, Republican, and 1,736 votes for John V. Renkle, Green-back candidate. SECOND DISTRICT. Counties.—Hillsdale, Lenawee, Monroe, and Washtenaw. EpwiN WiLLiTs, of Monroe, was born at Otto, -Cattaraugus County, New York, April 24, 1830; removed to Michigan in September, 1836; graduated at the Michigan University in June, 1855; located at Monroe in April, 1856; studied law with Senator I. P. Christiancy, was admitted to the bar in December, 1857, and has practised law ever since at Monroe; was 3 ED 34 Congressional Directory. : : : Sa tv elected Prosecuting Attorney of Monroe County in 1860, and held the office till December 31, | 1862; was elected a member of the State Board of Education in 1860, and was re-elected in | 1866, holding the position twelve years; was on the Commission to revise the Constitution of © the State in 1873; was appointed Postmaster of Monroe, January 1, 1863, by Abraham Lin-| coln, and was removed by Andrew Johnson, October 15, 1866; was Editor of ‘The Monroe Commercial” from 1856 to 1861; and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republi-| can, receiving 19,211 votes against 17,024 votes for John J. Robison, Democrat, Granger, and Greenbacker. HKe-elected. THIRD DISTRICT. ie Counties.—Barry, Branch, Calhoun, Eaton, and Jackson. Jonas H. McGowan, of Coldwater, was born in the township of Smithtown, Mahoning (then Columbiana) County, Ohio, April 2, 1837; in 1854 removed with his parents to Orland, Steuben County, Indiana; in 1857 he entered the University of Michigan, and graduated in | June, 1861; taught in the city schools of Coldwater, Michigan, for one year, and then enlisted as a private in the Fifth Michigan Cavalry Volunteers ; was afterward promoted to a Captaincy ; raised a company for the Ninth Michigan Cavalry, and went into active service with that reg-iment in the spring of 1863; by reason of injuries received in a cavalry charge, he was dis-abled, and resigned his commission in February, 1864, returning to Coldwater, where he studied | law with the Hon. C. D. Randall, and was admitted to the bar in 1867; from 1868 to 1872 he was Prosecuting Attorney; served one term as State Senatof, and seven years as Regent of the University of Michigan, resigning to take his seat in the Forty-fifth Congress, to which he was elected as a Republican, receiving 19,878 votes against 17,223 votes for Fidus Liver-| more, Democrat. [Re-electea. FOURTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Berrien, Cass, Kalamazoo, Saint Joseph, and Van Buren. EpwiN WILLIAM KEIGHTLEY, of Constantine, was born in Van Buren Township, La Grange County, Indiana, August 7, 1843; received a common-school education, and for one year was a student atthe Valparaiso Collegiate Institute ; entered the Law Department of the University of Michigan, graduated in March, 1865, and commenced practice in Saint Joseph’s County, Michigan; was elected, in 1872, Prosecuting Attorney of the county for two years, commencing January I, 1873; was appointed Judge of the Fifteenth Judicial Circuit ot Michigan to fill a vacancy; in April, 1875, was nominated by both parties and elected Circuit Judge of the Fifteenth Judicial District for the term of six years, beginning May 1, 1876; and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 18,716 votes against 16,330 votes for Henry Chamberlain, Democrat and Greenback candidate. FIFTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Allegan, Ionia, Kent, Muskegon, and Ottawa. Jou~N W. STONE, of Grand Rapids, was born at Wadsworth, Medina County, Ohio, July 18, 1838; received an academic education; removed to Allegan County, Michigan, in 1856; commenced the study of law in 1859; was elected County Clerk of Allegan County in 1860; -was admitted to the bar in January, 1862; was re-elected County Clerk in 1862; was elected Co tm Prosecuting Attorney in 1864, and re-elected twice, holding the office six years; was elected President of Allegan Village in 1872; was elected Circuit Judge of the Twentieth Judicial Circuit of Michigan in April, 1873, which office he held until November 1, 1874, when he resigned, and removed to Grand Rapids to enter upon the practice of law; has continued in the practice of the profession ever since; was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Repub-lican, receiving 21,908 votes against 18,546 votes for Myron Harris, Democratic and Green-back candidate, and 50 votes for a Temperance candidate. Re-elected. f SIXTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Clinton, Genesee, Ingham, Livingston, Oakland, and Shiawassee. {! MARK S. BREWER, of Pontiac, was born October 22, 1837, in Addison, Oakland County, Michigan; worked on a farm until 1860, when he read law with Ex-Governor Wisner and Hon. M. E. Crofoot, and in 1864 was admitted to the bar at Pontiac, where he has ever since resided; was City Attorney of Pontiac in 1866-’67; was elected to the State Senate of Mich-igan in 1872 and served two years; and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Repub-lican, receiving 23,356 votes against 21,615 votes for George H. Durand, Democrat. Re-elected. SEVENTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Huron, Lapeer, Macomb, Sanilac, Saint Clair, and Tuscola. 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, and in 1848 engaged in the practice of law at Port Huron, | Michigan, where hehas 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 \ Senators and Representatives. 35 pid : : I, elected President pro tempore of the Senate in 1859; was elected in 1866 a member of the n fit Constitutional Convention of Michigan; was a Presidential Elector on the Republican ticket of 1 | in 1864; was elected to the Forty-first, Forty-second, Forty-third, and Forty-fourth Con- 1- § gresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 15,818 votes e | against 13,177 votes for Anson E. Chadwick, Democrat. Xe-elected. Yd | EIGHTH DISTRICT. . 2A Counties.—Alcona, Alpena, Bay, Cheboygan, Clair, Emmett, Gladwin, Gratiot, Tosco, Isa- bella, Midland, Montcalm, Montmorency, Presque Isle, Roscommon, and Saginaw. { CHARLES C. ELLSWORTH, of Greenville, was born at Berkshire, Franklin County, Vermont, ¢¥ January 29, 1824; received a common school and academical education; is a lawyer by pro- S - fession and practice’; was appointed by Governor Barry Prosecuting Attorney of Livingston 1, County, Michigan, in 1850; removed to Montcalm County, Michigan, in 1851; was a mem- iis ber of the State House of Representatives 1852-1854; was elected Prosecuting Attorney ot ! Montcalm County at two successive elections ; was appointed by the President of the United > States a Paymaster in the Union Army in 1862, and served until the close of the war; and was ¢ >= | elected to the Forty fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 16,093 votes against 15,760 votes for Frederic H. Potter, Democrat. 72 NINTH DISTRICT. nt Counties.—Antrim, Benzie, Charlevoix, Chippewa, Delta, Grand Traverse, Houghton, h Kalkaska, Keweenaw, Lake, Leelenaw, Mackinac, Manistee, Manitou, Marquette, Mason, r- | Mecosta, Menomonee, Missaukee, Newaygo, Oceana, Ontonagon, Osceola, Schoolcraft, Wex- ford, Otsego, and Crawford. Jay A. HUBBELL, of Houghton, was born at Avon, Michigan, September 15, 1829; grad- uated at the University of Michigan in 1853; was admitted to the practice of law in 1855; ry removed to Ontonagon, Michigan, in November, 1855; was elected District Attorney of the 5 Upper Peninsula in 1857, and again in 1859; removed to Houghton, Michigan, in February, 4 1860; was elected Prosecuting Attorney of Houghton County in 1861, in ’63, and in 65 ; ’ was engaged in the practice of law until 1870, and has been identified with the development : of the mineral interest of the Upper Peninsula; was appointed by the Governor of Michi- or gan in 1876 State Commissioner to the Centennial Exhibition, and collected and prepared the At State exhibit of minerals; was elected to the Forty-third and Forty-fourth Congresses, and a was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 18,224 votes against ol30 § 12,656 votes for John H Kilbourne, Democrat. Re-elected. 2 ! MINNESOTA. { SENATORS. ly | WirLiam WinDpoM, of Winona, was born in Belmont County, Ohio, May .10, 1827; received >; | an academic education; studied law at Mount Vernon, Ohio; practised his profession in that 05; | State and in Minnesota until 1859; was elected Prosecuting Attorney for Knox County in 1852; d | removed to Minnesota in 1855; was a Representative in the Thirty-sixth, Thirty-seventh, e Thirty-eighth, Thirty-ninth, and Fortieth Congresses ; was appointed by the Governor of Min- al | nesota, in July, 1870, to fill the unexpired term of Hon. Daniel S. Norton, deceased, in the ie Senate of the United States; was subsequently elected as a Republican, and was re-elected In { in 1877. His term of service will expire March 3, 1883. >-u] SAMUEL J. R. McMILLAN, of :Saint Paul, was born at :Brownsville, :Pennsylvania, Febru- A ary 22, 18526; received a classical education, graduating at Duquesne College, Pittsburgh, in { 1846; studied law with Hon. Edwin M. Stanton, was admitted to the bar in 1849, and com- | | menced practise 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 after- Y> nd « ward re-elected Chief United States Senate, Justic: of the Supreme Court, and resigned when as a Republican, to succeed Alexander Ramsey, he was elected to the Republican, and took oe || bis seat March 4, 1875. His term of service will expire March 3, 1881. A==1 b- 4 REPRESENTATIVES. od. { FIRST DISTRICT. ht Counties.—Blue Earth, Cottonwood, Dodge, Faribault, Fillmore, Freeborn, Houston, [' Jackson, Martin, Mower, Murray, Nobles, Olmsted, Pipestone, Rock, Steele, Waseca, Wa- d, | tonwan, and Winona. Vic ! MARK H. DUNNELL, of Owatonna, was born in Buxton, Maine, July 2, 1823; graduated e; || at Waterville College, Maine, in 1849; for five years was the Principal of Norway and er | Hebron Academies; in 1854 was a member of the Maine House of Representatives, and mn, | in 1855 a member of the State Sé&nate; during the years 1855, 57, '58, and ’59 was State 0, {i Superintendent of Common Schools; in 1856 was a Delegate to the National Republican as | Convention at Philadelphia; in 1860 commenced the practice of the law at Portland; in Congressional Directory. 1851 entered the Union Army as Colonel of the Fifth Maine Infantry; in 1862 was United S:ates Consul at Vera Cruz, Mexico; in January, 1865, became a citizen of Minnesota; was a member of the Minnesota House of Representatives in 1867; was State Superintendent of Public Instruction from April, 1867, to August, 1870; was elected to the Forty-second, Forty-third, and Forty-fourth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 26,010 votes against 16,005 votes for E. C. Stacey, Greenback, Tem-perance, and Democratic candidate. Re-elected. SECOND DISTRICT, Counties.—Brown, Carver, Chippewa, Dakota, Goodhue, Kandiyohi, Le Sueur, Lincoln, Lyons, McLeod, Nicollet, Redwood, Renville, Rice, Scott, Sibley, Swift, and Wabasha. HoRACE B. STRAIT, of Shakopee, was born in Potter County, Pennsylvania, January 26, 1835; received a commion-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 Hos-pital for the Insane since 1866; since the close of the war has been engagedin mercantile, man-ufacturing, and banking business, and is now President of the First National Bank of Shakopee; was elected to the Forty-third and Forty-fourth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 19,730 votes against 14,990 votes for E. T. Wilder, Democrat. THIRD DISTRICT. Counties.—Aitkin, Anoka, Becker, Beltrami, Benton, Big Stone, Carlton, Cass, Chisago, Clay, Crow Wing, Douglas, Grant, Hennepin, Holcombe, Isanti, Itasca, Kanabec, Lac qui Parle, Lake, Meeker, Mille Lacs, Monongalia, Morrison, Otter Tail, Pembina, Pine, Polk, Pope, Ramsey, Saint Louis, Sherburne, Stearns, Stevens, Todd, Traverse, Wadena, Wash-ington; Wilkin, Wright, and Yellow Medicine. Jaco H. STEWART, of Saint Paul, was born at Clermont, Columbia County, New York, January 15, 1829; removed when very young with his parents to Peekskill, New York ; re-ceived an academic education at the Peekskill Academy; studied medicine and graduated at the University Medical College of New York City March, 1851; practised his profession at Peekskill and his present place of residence, to which he removed in April, 1855; was a member of the State Senate of Minnesota of 1858-’59; was Surgeon-General of Minnesota 1857 to 1863; was appointed Surgeon of the First Minnesota Volunteer Infantry April 17, 18601 ; was taken prisoner at the first battle of Bull Run, paroled, and allowed to care for his wounded at Sudley Church Hospital until they were able to be removed to Richmond, when he was permitted to return home without exchange ¢¢ for voluntarily remaining on the battle-field in the discharge of his duty;”’ was Mayor of Saint Paul in 1864, 1868, 1872, 1873, and 1874; was Surgeon of the Board of Enrollment 1864 and 1865; was Postmaster of Saint Paul 1865 to 1870; was President of .the Minnesota State Medical Society’ 1875 and 1876 ; was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 22,823 votes against 20,727 votes for W. W. McNair, Democrat. MISSISSIPPI. SENATORS. BrancuE K. BrUCE, of Floreyville, was born in Prince Edward County, Virginia, March 1, 1841; received a limited education; became a planter in Mississippi in 1869; was a member of the Mississippi Levee Board, and Sheriff and Tax-Collector of Bolivar County from 1872 until his election to the: United States Senate February 3, 1875, as a Republican, to succeed Henry R. Pease, Republican, and took his seat March 4, 1875. His term of service will expire March 3, 1881. Lucrus Q. C. LAMAR, of Oxford, was born in Putnam County, Georgia, September 17, 1825; was educated at Oxford, Georgia, and graduated at Emory College, Georgia, in 1845; studied law at Macon, Georgia, under the Hon. A. H. Chappell, and was admitted to the bar in 1847; moved to Oxford, Mississippi, in 1849; was elected Adjunct Professor of Mathe-matics in the University of the State, and held the position as assistant to Dr. A. T. Bledsoe, (editor of “The Southern Review,’’) which he resigned in 1850, and returned to Covington, Georgia, where he resumed the practice of law; was elected to the Legislature of Georgia in 1853; in 1854 moved to his plantation in La Fayette County, Mississippi, and was elected to the Thirty-fifth and Thirty-sixth Congresses of the United States, and resigned in 1860 to take a seat in the Secession Convention of his State; in 1861 entered the Confederate Army as Lieutenant-Colonelof the Nineteenth Regiment, and was promoted to the colonelcy; in 1863 was intrusted by President Davis with an important diplomatic mission to Russia; in 1866 was elected Professor of Political Economy and. Social Science in the University of Missis-sippi, and in 1867 was transferred to the professorship of law ; was elected to the Forty-third Congress of the United States, and was re-elected to the Forty-fourth Congress; and was elected to the United States Senate as a Dempcrat, to succeed James Lusk Alcorn, Independ-ent, and took his seat March 5, 1877. His term of service will expire March 3, 1883. Senators and Representatives. 37 REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. Counties.—Alcorn, Chickasaw, Clay, Itawamba, Lee, Lowndes, Monroe, Oktibbeha, Pon-totoc, Prentiss, and Tishemingo. Henry LowNDES MULDROW, of Starkville, was born in Lowndes County, Mississi pi; grad-uated at the University of Mississippi, and received the degree of A. B. in the year 1856, and the degree of L. B. in 1858; was admitted to the bar as attorney and soli itor in 1859, and is now a lawyer by profession; entered the Confederate Army in 1861, and held various posi-tions in the line, and at the close of the war surrendered at Forsyth, Georgia, as a colonel of cavalry; held the position of District Attorney for the Sixth Judicial District of Mississippi from 1869 to ’71; was elected to the State Legislature in 1875; and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 20 597 votes against 6,420 votes for James W. Lee, Republican. Re-elected. \ SECOND DISTRICT. Counties.—Benton, De Soto, La Fayette, Marshall, Panola, Tallahatchie, Tate, Tippah, Union, and Yalabusha. VAN H. MANNING, of Holly Springs, was born in Martin County, North Carolina, July 26, 1839; removed to Mississippi in 1841; received a classical education at Horn Lake Male Academy, De Soto County, Mississippi, and at the University of Nashville; removed to Ar-kansas in 1860; studied law and was admitted to the bar; served in the Confederate Army as Captain and subsequently as Colonel of the Third Arkansas Infantry and Second Arkansas Battalion in General Lee’s army; held no public office; and was elected to the Forty-fifth Con-gress as a Democrat, receiving 20,329 votes against 12,598 votes for Thomas Walton, Repub-lican, Re-elected, THIRD DISTRICT. Counties.— Attala, Calhoun, Carroll, Choctaw, Grenada, Kemper, Le Flore, Montgomery, Neshoba, Noxubee, Sunflower, Winston, and Sumner. HERNANDO DE SoT0 MONEY, of Winona, was born in Holmes County, Mississippi, August -26, 1839; educated at the University of Mississippi, at Oxford ; studied law, and is by profession an editor; was elected to the Forty-fourth Congress, and re-elected to the Forty fifth Con-gress as a Democrat, receiving 17,953 votes against 6,320 votes for W. W. Chisholm, Repub-lican, Re-elected. FOURTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Clarke, Holmes, Jones, Lauderdale, Leake, Madison,. Newton, Scott, Smith, Wayne, and Yazoo. Oro R. SINGLETON, of Canton, 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; re-moved to Mpa 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 ticket in 1852; was a Representative from Mississippi in the Thirty-third, Thirty-oi, and Thirty-sixth Congresses of the United States, retiring January 12, 1861 ; was a Representative from 1Mississippi in the Confederate Congress from 1861 until 1865 ; was elected to the Forty-fourth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Dem-ocrat, receiving 19,130 votes against 4,547 for W. M. Hancock, Republican. Re-elected. FIFTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Amite, Copiah, Covington, Franklin, Greene, Hancock, Harrison, Hinds, Jack-son, Jasper, Lawrence, Lincoln, Marion, Pearl, Perry, Pike, Rankin, and Simpson. CHARLES E. HOOKER, of Jackson, was born in Union District, South Carolina ; graduated at the Cambridge Law School; removed to Jackson, Mississippi, and entered upon the prac-tice of his profession; was elected District Attorney of the River District in 1850; was elected to the Mississippi Legislature in 1859, and resigned his scat to enter'the Confederate Army ; was wounded during the siege of Vicksburg; promoted to the rank of colonel of cavalry, and assigned to duty on the military court attached to General Polk’s command; was elected At-torney-General of the State of Mississippi in 1865, and re elected in 1868, and, in common with the other civil officers of the State, was removed by the military authorities ; was elected to the Forty-fourth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 19,858 votes against 8,646 votes for Michael Shaughnessy, Republican, Re-elected. SIXTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Adams, Bolivar, Claiborne, Coahoma, Issaquena, Jefferson, Quitman, Sharkey, Tunica, Warren, Washington, and Wilkinson. James RonNALD CHALMERS, of Vicksburg, Mississippi, (son of Hon. Jos. W. Chal-mers, former United States Senator from Mississippi,) was born in Halifax County, Vir- 38 : Congressional Directory. ginia, January 11, 1831; removed to Mississippi in May, 1839; attended school at Holly Springs, Mississippi, and graduated at South Carolina College, Columbia, in December, 1851 ; studied law and was admitted to the bar in 1853; was elected District Attorney of the Seventh Judicial District of Mississippi in 1858; was a member of the Secession Convention of Missis-sippi in 1861 ; entered the Confederate service as a Captain in March, 1861; was elected Colonel of the Ninth Mississippi Regiment in‘April, 1861; was promoted Brigadier-General in February, 1862 ; was transferred to the cavalry service in 1863; surrendered in May, 1865, in command of the First Division of Forrest’s Cavalry Army Corps, composed of Armstrong’s, Adams’, and Starke’s Brigades; was a member of the State Senate of Mississippi in 1876 and 1877, and was electedto the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 15,788 votes against 12,386 votes for John R. Lynch, Republican, Re-elected. 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, and took his seat March 4, 1875. His term of service will expire March 3, 1881. DavID H. ARMSTRONG, of Saint Louis, was born in Nova Scotia, October 21, 1812; re-ceived an academic education at the Maine Wesleyan Seminary, Readfield, Maine, and fol-lowed for eighteen years the profession of a teacher ; he removed to Missouri in 1837, open-ing and conducting in Saint Louis in 1838 the first public school established under the laws of that State; as a Democrat, he was appointed Comptroller of that city in 1847, and re-appointed in 1848 and 1849; he was appointed Postmaster of Saint Louis by President Pierce in 1854 ; and was appointed to the United States Senate as a Democrat, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Lewis V. Bogy, whose term of service would have expired March 3, 1879. REPRESENTATIVES, FIRST DISTRICT. County and city.—Wards 1, 2, 3, and 4 of the city of Saint Louis, Carondelet, and part of Saint Louis Township in Saint Louis County. ANTHONY ITTNER, of Saint Louis, was born at Lebanon, Warren County, Ohio, October 8, 1837; received a common-school education; is a bricklayer and builder; served as a private in Company G, National Guards, E. M. M., called into service during Price’s raid in 1864 ; was elected a member ot the City Council of Saint Louis in April, 1867, and was re-elected in April, 1868; was elected a member of the lower house of the General Assembly of Missouri in the fall of 1868, of the State Senate in 1870, and re-elected to the latter body in 1874; and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 7,043 votes against 6,824 votes for E. C. Kehr, Democrat. SECOND DISTRICT. City and towns.—Wards 5, 6, 7, and 8 of the city of Saint Louis, Bonhomme, Central, Meramec, and part of Saint Louis Townships. NATHAN COLE, of Saint Louis, was born in that city July 26, 1825; received a common-school education, followed by a partial course at Shurtleff College, Illinois; engaged in mer-cantile pursuits in early manhood, and has successfully continued in them; is Vice-President of two leading banking institutions at Saint Louis, and Director of a number of insurance and other corporations; was Mayor of the city of Saint Louis, 1869-"71; was President of the Merchants’ Exchange, 1876; and was elected to the Forty-ffth Congress as a Republican, receiving 7,474 votes against 7,160 votes for Erastus Wells, Democrat, and 3,399 votes for A. W. Slayback, Democrat. THIRD DISTRICT. County and city.—Wards 9, 10, 11, and 12 of the city of Saint Louis, Saint Ferdinand, and part of Saint Louis Townships. LYNE SHACKELFORD METCALFE, of Saint Louis, was born in Madisonville, Kentucky, April “21, 1822; received a common-school education, followed by a partial course at Shurtleff and Illinois Colleges ; left Kentucky for Illinoisin 1838, and in 1844, at Alton, Illinois, engaged in mercantile pursuits; was a member of the Board of Aldermen for several years, and after- ward Mayor of that city; entered the United States service at commencement of the late civil war as Assistant Quartermaster with rank as Captain, and was promoted to a colonelcy; re- moved to Saint Louis in 1863, (since 1866 has been engaged in manufacturing, ) and has served as a member of the City Council of that city; and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 8,091 votes against 3,072 for R. M. Frost, Democrat. Senators and Representatives. 39 FOURTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Bollinger, Butler, Cape Girardeau, Carter, Dunklin, Iron, Madison, Mississippi, New Madrid, Oregon, Pemiscot, Perry, Reynolds, Ripley, Scott, Saint Francois, Saint Gene-vieve, Stoddard, Washington, and Wayne. ROBERT A. HATCHER, of Charleston, was born in Buckingham County, Virginia, Febru-ary 24, 1819; was educated at private schools in Lynchburg, Virginia; studied law, and was licensed to practise in Kentucky; removed to New Madrid, Missouri, in 1847, and has there followed the practice of his profession ever since; was for six years Circuit Attorney of the Tenth Judicial Circuit of Missouri; was a member of the State Legislature in 1850 and ’51 ; a member of the State Convention in 1862, and a member of the Confederate Congress in 1864-65; was elected to the Forty-third and Forty-fourth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 21,389 votes against 3,953 votes for L. Davis, Republican, and 1,737 votes for Ww. Ballentine. FIFTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Crawford, Dent, Douglas, Franklin, Gasconade, Howell, Jefferson, Laclede, Maries, Osage, Ozark, Phelps, Pulaski, Shannon, Texas, and Wright. RicHARD PARKS BLAND, of Lebanon, was born near Hartford, Kentucky, August 19, 1835; received an academic education; removed to Missouriin 1855, thence to California, and thoes 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 and Forty-fourth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 14,599 votes against 11,424 votes for J. G. Thompson, Republican. Re-elected . SIXTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Barry, Barton, Cedar, Christian, Dade, Greene, Jasper, Lawrence, McDonald, Newton, Polk, Stone, Taney, Vernon, aand Webster, CHARLES HENRY MORGAN, of Lamar, was born in Allegany County, New York; was educated in Wisconsin at common schools and at the High School at Fond du Lac; enlisted in the Union Army as a private in the First Wisconsin Infantry upon the first call for troops in 1861, and was Sergeant and Sergeant-Major of that regiment; was promoted in August, 1862, to be Second Lieutenant in the Twenty-first Wisconsin Infantry, and. was subseq uently promoted to be First Lieutenant and Captain, holding the last rank when the regiment was mustered out at the close of the war; studied law and graduated at the Albany, New, York, Law School, in 1866; was Prosecuting Attorney; was a member of the State Legislature of Missouri in 1873 and ’74; was elected to the Forty-fourth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 18,081 votes against 17,357 votes for H. E. Havens, Republican. SEVENTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Benton, Camden, Cole, Cooper, Dallas, Henry, Hickory, Johnson, Miller, Mon-iteéau, Morgan, Pettis, and Saint Clair. TromAs T. CRITTENDEN, of Warrensburg, was born in Kentucky; removed to Missouri in 1857; and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 18,700 votes against 15,353 votes for John H. Stover, Republican. EIGHTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Bates, Cass, Clay, Jackson, and Platte. BENJAMIN J. FRANKLIN, of Kansas City, was born in Mason County, Kentucky; was educated at private schools, and at an early age entered Bethany College, now West Virginia, remaining there only two years; taught school twelve months; studied law, and commenced practice at Leavenworth, Kansas; removed to Missouri in 1860, and has since resided there; entered the Confederate Army as a private, was promoted Captain, and served throughout the war; was elected Commonwealth’s Attorney of the Twenty-ee Judicial Circuit of Mis-souri in March, 1871; was elected to the Forty-fourth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 15,229 votes against 7,160 votes for D. S. Twitchell, Republican. NINTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Andrew, Atchison, Buchanan, Clinton, De Kalb, Gentry, Holt, Nodaway, an 9 Worth. DAviD REA, of Savannah, was born in Ripley County, Indiana, January 19, 1831; re-ceived an academic education ; removed to Missouri in 1842; studied law, was admitted to the bar in 1862, and has since practised his profession; was elected to the Forty-fourth Con-gress, and re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 12,593 votes against 10,395 votes for Benjamin F. Loan, Republican. Congressional Directory. TENTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Caldwell, Chariton, Daviess, Grundy, Harrison, Linn, Livingston, Mercer, Putnam, and Sullivan. HeNrRY M. PorrarD, of Chillicothe, was born at Plymouth, Windsor County, Vermont, . June 14, 1836; received a common-school and academic education, graduating in 1857 at the Scientific Department of Dartmouth College ; served in the Union Army during the war, in the Eighth Regiment of Vermont Volunteers; located in Chillicothe in the fall of 1865, and has since resided there, practising law; and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Re-publican, receiving 16,582 votes against 15,802 votes for R. A. De Bolt, Democrat. ® ELEVENTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Boone, Carroll, Howard, La Fayette, Randolph, Ray, and Saline. JouN B. CLARK, Jr., of Fayette, was born at Fayette, Missouri, January 14, 1831; at-tended the common schools ; entered Missouri University at the age of fifteen, but remained there only two years; studied law under General John B. Clark, of Missouri, and afterward graduated in the Law Department of Harvard University, at Cambridge, Massachusetts ; prac-tised law from 1855 until the commencement of the late war, when he entered the Confederate Army as a Lieutenant, and was promoted successively to be Captain, Major, Colonel, and Briga-dier-General ; since the war has followed various pursuits, being State and County Collector of Howard County; was elected to the Forty-third and Forty-fourth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 21,671 votes against 9,9I3 votes for M. L. De Motte, Republican. Re-elected. TWELFTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Adair, Clarke, Knox, Lewis, Macon, Marion, Schuyler, Scotland, and Shelby. _ JouN MONTGOMERY GLOVER, of La Grange, was born in Mercer County, Kentucky, Sep-tember 4, 1824; received a regular course of collegiate education, but left college in his senior year, before graduatinig; studied law, and was admitted to the bar, but practised but a short time; was appointed a Colonel of Cavalry by President Lincoln, and was subsequently com-missioned by the Governor of Missouri Colonel of the Third Missouri Volunteer Cavalry, with a commission to date from September 4, 1861; resigned in 1864, on account of impaired health; was appointed in July, 1866, Collector of Internal Revenue for the third district .of Missouri, and performed the duties of that office from November, 1866, until March 3, 1867; was elected to the Forty-third and Forty-fourth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 16,153 votes against 11,646 votes for J. T. K. Hay-ward, Republican. THIRTEENTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Audrain, Callaway, Lincoln, Monroe, Montgomery, Pike, Ralls, Saint Charles, and Warren. AVLETT HAWES BUCKNER, of Mexico, was born at Fredericksburg, Virginia; was educated at Georgetown College and at the University of Virginia; taught school and studied law ; emigrated to Missouri in 1837 y was elected in 1841 Clerk of the County Probate Court of Pike County; in 1850 removed to Saint Louis and practised his profession; was elected Attorney for the Bank of the State of Missouri in 1852; in 1854 was appointed Commis-sioner of Public Works by Gov. Sterling Price; in 1857 was elected Judge of the Third Judicial Circuit; in 1861 was selected by the General Assembly of the State as one of RY IRS STARR * the Delegates to the Peace Congress; was elected to the Forty-third and Forty-fourth Con-gresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 22,573 votes against 5,491 votes for Francis Kechel, Republican, 4,715 votes for T. B. Robinson, and 695 votes for S. Clarkner. Re-elected. : : NEBRASKA. SENATORS. ALGERNON S. PADDOCK, of Beatrice, was born at Glen’s Falls, Warren County, New York, in 1830; educated at Glen’s Falls Academy, taking the regular Union College course; studied law ; removed to Omaha, Nebraska, in the spring of 1857; candidate for the Terri-torial Legislature in 1858; member of the first Territorial Republican Convention of Nebraska in 1859; member of the National Republican Convention at Chicago in 1860; appointed Secretary of Nebraska in April, 1861, by Abraham Lincoln, which office he held until admis-sion of the State in 1867, acting as Governor a considerable part of this period ; member of the National Republican Convention at Baltimore in 1864 ; Independent Republican candi-date for Congress in 1866; strongly supported for United States Senator in Republican caucus same year ; appointed Governor of Wyoming Territory in 1868, and declined ; elected as a Republican to the United States Senate to succeed Thomas W. Tipton, receiving all votes, Republican and Democratic, in joint convention, but twelve; took his seat in March, 1875. His term of service will expire March 4, 1881. Senators and Representatives. : ~ ALVIN SAUNDERS, of Omaha, was born in Fleming County, Kentucky, July 12, 1817; received a common-school and academic education; removed to Mount Pleasant, Iowa, (then a part of Wisconsin Territory,) in 1836; was Postmaster at that place for seven years, during which time he studied law with Isaac Van Allen, then United States District Attorney for Towa, but never entered upon its practice, preferring to engage in mercantile and banking pursuits; was a member of the Constitutional Convention under which Iowa was admitted into the Union as a State; was a member of the State Senate for eight years; was a member of the first Republican Convention ever held in Towa; was a Delegate to the Republican National Convention at Chicago which nominated Lincoln and Hamlin in 1860; was one of the Commissioners appointed by Congress to organize the Pacific Railroad Company; was appointed Governor of the Territory of Nebraska by President Lincoln in 1861, and held the office until the State was admitted into the Union in 1867; was a Delegate to the Republican National Convention at Chicago, in 1868, which nominated Grant and Colfax; was elected to the United States Senate as a Republican, to succeed Phineas W. Hitchcock, Republican, and took his seat March 5, 1877. His term of service will expire March 3, 1883. REPRESENTATIVE. THE STATE AT LARGE. THOMAS J. MAJORS, of Peru, was born in Jefferson County, Iowa, June 25, 1841; was edu-cated in the common and select schools of his native place and the Nebraska State Normal School ; he went to Nebraska in 1860; was engaged in mercantile pursuits before and since the war; is now a large land-owner and farmer ; entered the Union Army in June, 1861, as First Lieutenant Company C, First Nebraska Infantry, and served successively as Captain, Major, and Lieutenant-Colonel of that regiment ; his regiment, while on veteran leave in 1864, was ordered on the plains'to aid in suppressing Indian outbreaks, where he served with it until mustered out June 15, 1866; was a member of the last Territorial Couucil of Nebraska; was elected and served as a member of the first State Senate; re-elected to the same position and served until appointed Assessor of Internal Revenue for the District of Nebraska in 1869, which office he held until by act of Congress the office of collector and assessor was merged into one; was elected contingent (or additional) member of Congress in 1876, and was re-elected in 1878; was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Hon. Frank Welch, .as a Republican, receiving 28,221 votes against 21,124 votes for Alex. Bear, Democrat and Greenbacker. Re-elected. NEVADA. SENATORS. JouN 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 27D in farming and > in one of bl engaged S mining the inland 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, and took his seat March 4, 1873. His term of service will expire March 3, 1879. _ WILLIAM SHARON, of Virginia City, was born at Smithfield, Ohio, January 9, 1821; was raised on a farm; entered Athens College in 1842, and remained there two years; studied law with Edwin M. Stanton, was admitted to the bar at Saint Louis, and commenced prac-tice; his health failing, he engaged in mercantile pursuits at Carrollton, Illinois; in 1849 he removed to California, and commenced business at Sacramento; in 1850 he went to San Francisco, where he operated in real estate; in 1864 removed to Nevada, as the manager of a branch of the Bank of California, and became largely interested in mines. He was, elected to the United States Senate as a Republican, to succeed W. M. Stewart, Republican. His term of service will expire March 3, 1881. , REPRESENTATIVE. THE STATE AT LARGE. TuaoMAS WREN, of Eureka, was born at McArthurstown, Ohio, January 2, 1826; received a common-school education ; studied and practised law ; was deputy County Clerk of El Dorado County, California,in 1855, ’56, and ’57; was City Attorney of Austin, Nevada, in 1874, ’75, and ’%76; was a member of the State Legislature of Nevada in 1875; and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 10,241 votes against 9,330 votes for A. C. Ellis, Democrat. Congressional Directory. NEW HAMPSHIRE. SENATORS. ? BAINBRIDGE WADLEIGH, of Milford, was born at Bradford, New Hampshire, January 4, 1831; received an academical education; studied law, was admitted to the bar in February, 1850, and has been in practice since; was a member of the State House of Representatives in 18535, ’56, ’59, 60, ’69, ’70, *71, and '72; was elected to the United States Senate as a Repub-lican, to succeed J. W. Patterson, Republican, and took his seat March 4, 1873. His term of service will expire March 3, 1879. : EpwarD H. RoLuINS, of Concord, was born October 3, 1824, in that portion of Somers-worth, New Hampshire, which is now Rollinsford; received an acalemic education, and engaged in mercantile pursuits; was Chairman of the Republican State Committee of New Hampshire at its original organization, and for many succeeding yeirs; was a mzmber of the State Legislature in 1855, '56, and ’57, serving the two last years as Spzaker of the House; was Chairman of the New Hampshire Delegation at the National Republican Convention at Chicago, in 1860, which nominated Lincoln and Hamlin; was a Representative from New Hampshire in the Thirty-seventh, Thirty-eighth, and Thirty-ninth Congresses; was elected Secretary of the Union Pacific Railroad Company in May, 1859, and Treasurer in April, 1871, resigning those positions before taking his seat in the Senate; was elected to the United States Senate as a Republican, to succeed Aaron ‘H. Cragin, Republican, and took his seat March 5, 1877. His term of service will expire March 3, 1883. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. Counties—Belknap, Carroll, Rockingham, and Strafford. FRANK JONES, of Portsmouth, was born at Barrington, September 15, 1832; removed to Portsmouth in 1849, and has since been engagedin mercantile pursuits ; was elected Mayor of Portsmouth in 1868, and re-elected in 1869; was elected to the Forty-fourth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 13,924 votes against 13,881 votes for Gilman Marston, Republican. Declined a re-election. SECOND DISTRICT. Counties.—Hillsborough and Merrimack. James F. Brices, of Manchester, was born at Bury, Lancashire, England; received a common-school and academic education; studied law ; was admitted to the bar in 1851; prac- tised at Hillsboro’, New Hampshire, until 1871, at which time he removed to Manchester, where he is in practice at the present time; was elected a member of the State Legislature in 1856, ’57, 58, and ’74, and a member of the State Senate in 1876; in 1877 was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 13,209 votes against 12,111 votes for A. W. Sulloway, Democrat, and 73 scattering votes. Re-elected, THIRD DISTRICT. Counties.—Cheshire, Coos, Grafton, and Sullivan. HENRY W. BLAIR, of Plymouth, was born at Campton, New Hampshire, December 6, 1834 ; received a common-school and acadepiic 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 Representatives‘in 1866, and of the State Senate in 1867-'68; was elected to the Forty-fourth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 12,683 votes against 11,824 votes for Henry O. Kent, Democrat, and 78 scattering votes, Declined a re-election. NEW JERSEY. + SENATORS. THEODORE F. RANDOLPH, of Morristown, was born at New Brunswick, New Jersey, June 24, 1826; received an ordinary education at Rutgers Grammar School; is by occupation a merchant; was elected to the House of Assembly of the State Legislature in 1859; to the Senate of New Jersey in 1862, (short term,) and re-elected in 1863, (full term ;) was elected Governor of the State of New Jersey in 1869, serving until 1872; was elected to the United States Senate as a Democrat, to succeed John P. Stockton, Democrat, and took his seat March 4, 1875. His term of service will expire March 3,. 1881. Joun RHODERIC MACPHERSON 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 ; is a farmer and dealer in live stock; 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 ° | | | I Ld Senators and Representatives. Lae 1868-69 ; was elected President of the Central Stock-Yard and Transit Company in 18%3, and continues to occupy that position; 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 United States Senator, as a Democrat, to succeed F. T. Frelinghuysen, Republican, and took his seat March 5, 1877. His term of service will expire March 3, 1883. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. Counties.—Camden, Cape May, Cumberland, Gloucester, and Salem. CLEMENT H. SINNICKSON, of Salem, was born in Salem County, New Jersey, September 16, 1834 ; graduated from Union College, Schenectady, New York, in 1855; studied law with Hon. William L. Dayton, at Trenton; was admitted to the bar in 1858, and has since prac-tised at Salem; entered the Union Army in 1861 as Lieutenant, and was elected Captain in the Fourth New Jersey Volunteer Infantry, in which he served for the period of its enlistment ; was elected to the Forty-fourth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 17,362 votes against 15,472 votes for Simmerman, Democrat. SECOND DISTRICT. Counties.— Atlantic, Burlington, Mercer, and Ocean. JouN HowARrD PUGH, of Burlington, was born in Chester County, Pennsylvania, June 23, 1827; received an academic education ; studied medicine, and graduated at the University of Pennsylvania in 1852; commenced the practice of medicine in Burlington in 1854, where he has since resided; is President of the Mechanics’ National Bank of Burlington, to which posi-tion he was elected in 1869; was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiv-ing 16,015 votes against 15,485 votes for Hezekiah B. Smith, Democrat. THIRD DISTRICT. Counties.—Middlesex, Monmouth, and Union. MiLEs Ross, of New Brunswick, was born in Raritan Township, Middlesex County, New Jersey, April 30, 1828; received a practical English education; was for many years engaged with his father in the vessel business, but is at present a wholesale coal-merchant, and is also largely interested in vessel property; has filled nearly all of the local positions of his neigh-borhood, and was for two years a member of the State Legislature of New Jersey; was elected to the Forty-fourth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 18,525 votes against 15,359 votes for Atherton, Republican. Re-elected. FOURTH DISTRICT, Counties.—Hunterdon, Somerset, Sussex, and Warren. ALvAH A. CLARK, of Somerville, was born at Lebanon, New Jersey, September 13, 1840; prepared for college, then commenced the study of law ; was admitted as an attorney, &c., in November, 1864, and as counsellor in February, 1867; never was a candidate for any position until nominated for Congress, and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 17,351 votes against 11,910 for Rynier H. Veghte, Independent. Re-elected. FIFTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Bergen, Morris, and Passaic. Avcustus W. CUTLER, of Morristown, was born at Morristown, New Jersey, October 22, 1827; his early life was passed upon a farm; studied law with Gov. Daniel Haines; was admitted as an attorney in 1850, and as a counsellor in 1853; was Prosecutor of the Pleas in 1856-61; was President of the Board of Education 1871-’76; was elected a Manager of the State Geological Board in 1872 and still is a member; was a member of the Constitutional Convention of New Jersey in 1873; was State Senator 1871-"74; was elected to the Forty-fourth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 15,034 votes against 13,882 votes for Alfred Mills, Republican. SIXTH DISTRICT, County of Essex. THOMAS B. PEDDIE was born at Edinburgh, Scotland, and came to America in 1833; he located in Newark, New Jersey, and is now one of the most extensive manufacturers in that city ; he was elected a member of the State Legislature in 1863, and re-elected in 1864 ; he was twice Mayor of the city of Newark, serving in that office during the years 1865, ’66, ’67, 68; was President of the Newark Board of Trade in 1873; and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 17,565 votes against 16,041 votes for William A. Righter, Democrat. SEVENTH DISTRICT. County of Hudson. : AucusTUs A. HARDENBERGH, of Jersey City, was born at New Brunswick, New Jersey, May 18, 1830; heentered Rutgers College in 1844, but was only enabled to continue his studies through the freshman year, as he was called upon to act as amanuensis for his father, Cor-nelius L. Hardenbergh, LL.D., who had been stricken with blindness; in 1846 he entered a Congressional Directory. counting-room in New York and took up his residence in Jersey City; in 1852 he became connected with the Hudson County Bank, and has been its cashier since 1858; in 1853 he was elected to the House of Assembly of the State Legislature; in 1855-56 was a member of the Board of Education ; he was an Alderman of Jersey City in 1857-58, 59, and ’60, serving the latter year as President of the Board of Aldermen; he was re-elected a member of the Board in 1862; in 1863 he removed to the city of Bergen, and was elected as Councilman; in 1868 was elected State Director of Railroads by the Legislature in joint convention; in 1868 he removed to the county of Bergen, and represented that district in the Baltimore National Democratic Convention of 1872; in 1873 he removed back to Jersey City, in Hud-son County, where he has since resided; in 1874 he was elected President of the Northern Railroad of New Jersey, and declined a re-election ; was elected to the Forty-fourth Congress as a Democrat, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress, receiving 17,260 votes against 11,391 for Leonard J. Stiastny, Republican. Declined a renomination. NEW YORK. SENATORS. Roscoe CONKLING, of Utica, New York, was born at Albany, October 30, 1829; received an academic education ; studied and practised law; removed to Utica in 1846; was District Attorney for Oneida County in 1850; was elected Mayor of Utica in 1858; was a Representa-tive in the Thirty-sixth, Thirty-seventh, and Thirty-ninth' Congresses, and was re-elected a Rep-resentative in the Fortieth Congress, but was immediately afterward elected to the Senate of the United States as a Union Republican, to succeed Ira Harris, Republican; took his seat in the Senate in March, 1867, and was re-elected, taking his seat March 4, 1873. His term of service will expire March 3, 1879. Francis KERNAN, of Utica, was born at Tyrone, New York, January 14, 1816; finished his education at Georgetown College, District of Columbia; studied law at Utica with Joshua H. Spencer, was admitted to the bar, and became Mr. Spencer’s partner; was Reporter of the Court of Appeals; was elected a member of the General Assembly of the State Legislature in 1861; was elected to the House of Representatives of the United States in 1862; was a memberof the State Constitutional Convention in 1867-68; was the Dem-ocratic and Liberal candidate for Governor of New York in 1872; was elected to the United States Senate as a Democrat, to succeed R. E. Fenton, Liberal, and took his seat March 4, 1875. His term of service will expire March 3, 1881. REPRESENTATIVES. : PIRST DISTRICT. Counties.—Suffolk, Richmond, and Queens. James W. CoveRT, of Flushing, was born at Oyster Bay, New York, September 2, 1842; studied law with Hon. James Maurice, at New York City, and with Benjamin W. Downing, Esq., at Flushing; was admitted to the bar in 1863, and since then has practised his profes-sion at Flushing, Long Island; was elected School Commissioner of his Assembly District in 1867 and held the position three years, during which time he also acted as Assistant District Attorney of his county; was elected Surrogate of Queens County for the term commencing 1870, and held the position four years; and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 20,145 votes against 14,122 for John A. King, Republican. Re-elected. SECOND DISTRICT. City of Brooklyn. —1st, 2d, sth, 6th, 8th, 1oth, 12th, and 22d wards. WiLLiAM D. VEEDER, of Brooklyn, was born at Guilderland, Albany County, New York, May 19, 1835; received an academic education; studied law at Albany with Peter Cagger and Nicholas Hill; was admitted to the bar in March, 1858, and commenced practice at Brooklyn ; was a member of the State Assembly in 1865 and 1866; was a member of the Democratic State Committee in 1876, and has since been annually chosen; was a member of the New York State Constitutional Convention 1867-68; was Surrogate of Kings County, New York, 1867-277; and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 17,016 votes against 10,630 votes for James Cavanagh, Republican. THIRD DISTRICT. City of Brooklyn.—3d, 4th, 7th, 11th, 13th, 19th, 20th, and 21st wards. SIMEON B. CHITTENDEN, of Brooklyn, was born at Guilford, Connecticut, March 29, 1814; received an academic education; entered a store in early life at New Haven, Connecticut ; removed to New York in 1843, where he has since been engaged in mercantile pursuits ; was Vice-President of the New York Chamber of Commerce from 1867 to 1869; was a Presidential Elector in 1872; was one of the first Directors in the Continental Bank and in the Continental Fire-Insurance Company; is a trustee of the United States Trust Company; is a Director in the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western and other railroads ; is President of the New Haven Senators and Representatives. 45 and New London Shore-Line Railroad of Connecticut; was elected to the Forty-third and Forty-fourth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, re-ceiving 18,110 votes against 17,858 votes for Thomas S. Dakin, Democrat. Re-elected. FOURTH DISTRICT. City and towns.—oth, 14th, 15th, 16th, 17th, 18th, and 24th wards of the city of Brooklyn, and the towns of Flatbush, Flatlands, Gravesend, New Lots, and New Utrecht. : ArcHIBALD M. BLiss, of Brooklyn, was born at Brooklyn, New York, January 25, 1836; received an academic education; was engaged for many years in mercantile pursuits; was an Alderman of Brooklyn in 1864, ’65, 66, and ’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 Republican Conventions at Baltimore in 1864, at Chicago in 1868, to the Liberal National Convention at Cincinnati in 1872, and to the National Democratic Convention at Saint Louis in 1876; was a 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 ot New York ; has been President and Vice-President of the Bushwick Railroad Company since 1868 ; is a Director of the New York and Long Island Bridge Company ; was elected to the Forty-fourth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-hfth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 18,506 votes against 11,492 votes for Solomon Spitzer, Republican. Re-elected. FIFTH DISTRICT. City of New York.—1st, 2d, 3d, 4th, 5th, 6th, 8th, and 14th wards. NicHOLAS MULLER, of New York, was born in the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg, Novem- ber 15, 1836; received a common-school education in the cities of Luxembourg and Metz, and afterward attended the Luxembourg Atheneum ; has been engaged in business as a Railroad Ticket-Agent for over twenty years; was one of the promoters and original directors of the Germania Bank in the Bowery, New York; was a member of the State Assembly in 1875 and 76; and of the State Central Committee in 1875; and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 15,259 votes against 4,755 votes for James Kerrigan, In- dependent. Re-elected. SIXTH DISTRICT. City of New York.—7th, 11th, and 13th wards. 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 Dele- gate to the Chicago and the New York Democratic National Conventions of 1864 and 1868 ; is the author of several works, and a constant contributor to the press and periodicals ; was elected from the Columbus (Ohio) district to the Thirty-fifth, Thirty-sixth, Thirty-seventh, and Thirty-eighth Congresses; removed to New York City on the 4th of March, 1865 ; was elected to the Forty-first Congress, was re-elected to the Forty-second Congress, and was the can- didate of the Democrats and Liberal Republicans jor 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 Zem. June 19, 1876, serving until he vacated the office June 24, 1876; and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Con- gress as a Democrat, receiving 17,098 votes against 41 votes for A. J. IH. Duganne, Repub- lican. Re-elected. ; SEVENTH DISTRICT. City of New York.—1Ioth and 17th wards, and that part of the 18th ward west of Third avenue. ANTHONY EICKHOFF, of New York, was born in Westphalia, Germany, September 11, 1827; studied philology; sailed for America in 1847; pursued the study of the law at Saint Louis, Missouri; adopted the editorial profession, and edited newspapers successively at Saint Louis, Dubuque, Louisville, and finally at New York, where he has resided since 1852; was appointed in 1863 Commissary-General of Subsistence of the State of New York, and subse-quently elected a member of the State House of Representatives; was elected Coroner of the city of New York in 1873; and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiv-ing 13,199 votes against 6,051 votes for Wallace P. Groom, Republican and Greenbacker. EIGHTH DISTRICT. City of New York.—oth, 15th, and 16th wards, and that part of the city bounded by Four-ecenth and Twenty-sixth streets, and Fourth and Sixth avenues. ANsoN G. McCook, of New York City, was born at Steubenville, Ohio, October Io, 1835 ; received a common-school education ; in the spring of 1854 crossed the plains to Cali-fornia; returned in the autumn of 1859, and at the outbreak of the rebellion was engaged in the study of the law; entered the Union Army as Captain in the Second Regiment of Ohio Infantry, and was at the first battle of Bull Run; on the reorganization of the regiment was 2 ; | Congressional Directory. commissioned Major and afterward promoted to Lieutenant-Colonel and Colonel, serving with the regiment in the Army of the Cumberland; at-the muster-out of the regiment was commissioned Colonel of the One hundred and ninety-fourth Ohio Infantry, and at the close of the war was brevetted Brigadier-General ; was appointed Assessor of Internal Revenue in the seventeenth Ohio district in November, 1865; removed to New York in May, 1873, and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 13,221 votes against 12,408 votes for Elijah Ward, Democrat. Re-elected. NINTH DISTRICT. City of New York.—2oth and 22d wards, embracing all that part of the city lying between West Twenty-sixth and West Eighty-sixth streets, west of Sixth avenue. FERNANDO WooD, of New York, was born of Quaker parentage in the city of Philadel-phia, June 14, 1812; his father removed to New York in 1820, where Mr. Wood has since resided ; when nineteen years of age he commenced business as a shipping-merchant, in which occupation he was entirely successful, retiring with an ample fortune in 1850; he was three times elected Mayor of New York, serving in that office during the years 185s, ’56, ’57, ’61, and ’62. He was earlier a member of the House of Representatives than any other member of the present House, having served as such in the years 1841, ’42, and 43; he was elected to the Twenty-seventh, Thirty-eighth, Fortieth, Forty-first, Forty-second, Forty-third, and Forty-fourth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Dem-ocrat, receiving 14,280 votes against 8,217 for George W. De Cunha, Republican. Re-elected. TENTH DISTRICT. City of New York.—Commencing at the East River at Fourteenth street, thence along the north side of Fourteenth street to Fourth avenue, thence along Fourth avenue to Twenty-sixth street, thence along Twenty-sixth street to Third avenue, thence along Third avenue to Eighty-sixth street, thence along Eighty-sixth street to the East River, thence along the East River to Fourteenth street, and including Blackwell’s Island. ABRAM STEVENS HEWITT, of New York, was born at Haverstraw, New York, July 31, 1822; received his elementary education at the public schools of New York City, where he received a prize scholarship to Columbia College, whence he graduated at the head of his class in 1842; was acting Professor of Mathematics in 1843; studied law, and was admitted to practice in the State Supreme Court in October, 1845; his eyesight failing, he engaged in the iron business, and, under the firm of Cooper & Hewitt, established extensive iron-works, mainly in New Jersey and Pennsylvania; was appointed one of the ten United States Sci-entific Commissioners to visit the French ¢¢ Exposition Universelle’”’ of 186%, and made a re-port on ‘“Iron and Steel,” which was published by Congress, and has been translated into most foreign languages; has organized and managed the ‘Cooper Union for the Advance-ment of Science and Art,” designed especially for the education of the working-classes; was elected to the Ferty-fourth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Demccrat, receiving 17,136 votes against 6,805 votes for Babcock, Republican. ELEVENTH DISTRICT. City of New York.—Part of the 20th ward between Sixth and Seventh avenues, part ot the 21st ward between Third and Sixth avenues, part of the 22d ward between Sixth and Eighth avenues, part of the 19th ward between Third and Sixth avenues, part of the 12th ward between Third and Eighth avenues south of Eighty-sixth street, and between Eighth avenue and the East River north of Eighty-sixth street. BENJAMIN A. WILLIS, of New York, was born of Quaker parentage at Roslyn, New York, March 24, 1840; graduated at Union College; Schenectady, New York, in 1861 ; studied law at the National Law School, Poughkeepsie, and with William M. Ingraham, Esq., at Brooklyn; was admitted to the bar in 1861, commenced practice and continued until June, 1862, when he entered the Union Army; was Captain and afterwards Major of the One hundred and nineteenth Regiment New York State Volunteers, and subsequently Colonel of the Twelfth Regiment New York State Volunteers, participating in the battles of Chancellorsville, Gettys-burg, Wauhatchie, and Chattanooga; resumed practice in 1864; had never held public office when elected to the Forty-fourth Congress, and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 12,519 votes against 12,092 votes for Levi P. Morton, Republican. TWELFTH DISTRICT. County.— Westchester. CLARKSON NorT POTTER, of New Rochelle, was born at Schenectady, New York, in 1825; graduated at Union College and at the Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute; for a short time was engaged in surveying in the Northwest; studied law, and on coming to the bar com-menced practice in the city of New York; argued the causes in the Supreme Court of the United States in which the legal-tender act was held to be unconstitutional, and was sub-sequently selected by that court to discuss that question when it was reheard; received the degree of Doctor of Laws from Columbia College, New York, in 1872; never held any office but that of Representative in Congress; was elected to the Forty-first Congress, re-elected to the Forty-second and Forty-third Congresses, declined an election to the Forty-fourth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 16,178 votes against 11,160 votes for George B. Brandreth, Republican. 4 \ ¥ | Senators and Representatives. 47 THIRTEENTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Columbia, Dutchess, and Putnam. JouN H. Ke1cHAM, 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 1855; was a member of the State Assembly of New York in 1856 and 1857; was a member of the State Senate of New York in 1860 and 1861; entered the Union Army as Colonel of the One hundred and fiftieth Volunteers in October, 1862, and was appointed Brigadier-General, serving until he resigned, in March, 1865, to take the seat in Congress to which he had been elected; he was afterward 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 the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 18,225 votes against 16,113 votes for J. M. Davies, Democrat. Ke-clected. : FOURTEENTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Orange, Rockland, and Sullivan. GEORGE M. BEEBE, of Monticello, was bornat New Vernon, New York, October 28, 1836; received an academic education, studied law at the Law University at Albany, graduated in 1857, and commenced practice; removed to Kansas in 1859; was a member of the Territorial Council, Secretary of the Territory, and Acting Governor; removed to Nevada in 1863; was appointed Collector of Internal Revenue in 1865, but declined; returned to Monticello, New York, and edited ‘¢The Republican Watchman;”’ was President of the State Democratic Conventions of New York in 1873 and ’74; was elected to the Forty-fourth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 17,732 votes against 14,666 votes for Halstead Sweet, Republican. ; FIFTEENTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Greene, Ulster, and Schoharie, STEPHEN L. MAYHAM, of Schoharie, was born at Blenheim, Schoharie County, New York, October 8, 1825; received an academic education; studied law at Ithaca, New York; was admitted to the bar in 1848, and has since continued to practise ; was Superintendent of Public Schools at Schoharie, 1852-57, and Supervisor 1857-'60; was elected District Attorney of his county in 1859 and held that office until 1863, when he was elected a member of the New York State Assembly from Schoharie County; was elected in 1867 a Representative in the Forty-first Congress from the Fourteenth District of New York, composed of the counties of Albany and Schoharie, and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 20,498 votes against 16,267 votes for Thomas H. Tremper, Republican. SIXTEENTH DISTRICT. County.— Albany. Joan M. BAILEY, of Albany, was born:at Bethlehem, New York, August 24, 1838; graduated at Union College in 1861; studied law with Messrs. Cagger & Porter at Albany; entered the Army in the fall of 1862 as Second Lieutenant and was Adjutant of the One hun-dred and seventy-seventh New York State Volunteers, serving in the Department of the Gulf; in 1864 commenced the practice of the law, in which he has since been engaged; was Assistant District Attorney of Albany County in 1865, ’66, and ’67; was appointed and served as Collector of Internal Revenue for four years; was elected District Attorney of Albany County in 1874 and served for the term of three years; was elected to fill a vacancy in the Forty-fifth Congress (caused by the death of T. J. Quinn, deceased) as a Republican, receiving 12,199 votes against 12,004 for Francis H. Woods, Democrat. = Re-elected. SEVENTEENTH DISTRICT, Counties.—Rensselaer and Washington. MARTIN I. TOWNSEND, of Troy, was born at Hancock, Massachusetts, February 6, 1810; graduated at Williams College, Massachusetts, in 1833, and removed from Williamstown to Troy, where he has since resided; studied law, was admitted to the bar in 1836, and con-tinues to practise; was District Attorney for Rensselaer County in 1842-45; was a member of the Constitutional Convention for the State at large in 1867-’68 ; 1s now a Regent of the University of the State of New York; was elected to the Forty-fourth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 19,689 votes against 17,448 votes for Roswell A. Parmenter, Democrat. Declined a renomination. EIGHTEENTH DISTRICT, Counties.—Clinton, Essex, and Warren. ANDREW WILLIAMS, of Plattsburg, was born at Ormstown, Canada, August 27, 1828; received a common-school education until he was thrown upon his own resources at fifteen years of age; arrived in the United States in October, 1848; commenced business as a man-ufacturer of bloom-iron .in 1855; is a merchant and manufacturer of iron and lumber; was elected to the Forty-fourth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty fifth Congress as a Ré-publican, receiving 13,177 votes against 10,246 votes for Platt, Democrat. : a m | Congressional Directory, NINETEENTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Frank lin and Saint Lawrence. AMAZIAH B. JAMES, of Ogdensburg, was born at Stephentown, New York, July 1, 1812; received an academic education ; removed in 1814 to Sweden, Monroe County ; studied law at Ogdensburg ; was admitted to the bar in January, 1838, and commenced practice at Ogdens burg; was elected a Justice of the Supreme Court in 1853, and resigned in 1876 ; was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 17,275 votes against 8,756 votes for Daniel Magoue, jr., Democrat. Re-elected. iil TWENTIETH DISTRICT. Counties.—Fulton, Hamilton, Montgomery, Saratoga, and Schenectady. JouN H. STARIN, of Fultonville, was born at Sammonsville, Fulton County, (then a part of Montgomery,) August 27, 1825; received an academic education; commenced the study of medicine in 1842 ; established and conducted the drug and medicine business at Fultonville from 1845 to 1858; from 1848 to 1852 was Postmaster at Fultonville, New York ; from 1856 to the present time has been largely engaged in the transportation business through the city, river, and harbor and waters of Long Island Sound, and its accessories of vessel-building, &ec.; is at present a Director of the North River Bank, New York City, and the Mohawk River National Bank ; is greatly and personally interested in agriculture and stocking; was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 19,142 votes against 18,089 votes for Nicolas H. Decker, Democrat. Re-elected. TWENTY-FIRST DISTRICT, Counties—Chenango, Delaware, and Otsego. SoLoMON BUNDY, of Oxford, was born at Oxford, Chenango County, New York, May 22, 1823; was educated at Oxford Academy, and thereafter taught school for several years ; studied law at Oxford with James W. Glover, Esq. ; was admitted to the bar in 1859, and has since practised law at Oxford; was District Attorney of Chenango County 1862-65; and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 18,825 votes against 17,056 votes for Tompkins H. Matteson, Democrat. TWENTY-SECOND DISTRICT. Counties.—Herkimer, Jefferson, and Lewis. GEORGE A. BAGLEY, of Watertown, was born at Watertown, Jefferson County, New York, July 22, 1826; received an academic education; studied law, was admitted to the bar in 1847, and practised for six years, when he engaged in the manufacture of iron, which he still con-tinues ; was President of the village of Watertown in 1866, and Supervisor of the town of Watertown in 1865, ’66, ’67, and ’68; was elected to the Forty-fourth Congress, and was. re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 18,608 votes against 15,995 votes for George W. Smith, Democrat. TWENTY-THIRD DISTRICT. County.—Oneida. ! WiLLiAM JOHNSON BACON, of Utica, was born at Williamstown, Massachusetts, February 18, 1803; removed to Utica in 1814; graduated at Hamilton College in 1822; commenced , the study of the law the same year in the office of General Joseph Kirkland, at Utica, and completed it at the Litchfield Law School in 1824; was appointed Counsel to the Corporation of the city of Utica in 1837; was a member of the New York House of Assembly in 1850; in 1853 was elected a Justice of the Supreme Court for eight years, and in 1861 was re-elected, without opposition, for another term of eight years; left the bench in 1870 and has not since resumed his profession; was elected a Trustee of Hamilton College in 1851; and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 13,779 votes against 13,069 votes for Scott Lord, Democrat. TWENTY-FOURTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Madison and Oswego. WiLLiam IH. BAKER, of Constantia, was born at Lenox, New York, January 17, 1827; removed with his father to Oswego County, New York, in 1829; received a common-school education; studied law, was admitted to the bar in 1851, located at Constantia, and has since practised there ; was elected District Attorney in 1852 and re-elected in 1366, acting as Dis-trict Attorney of Oswego County from January, 1863, to January, 1870; was elected to the Forty-fourth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiv-ing 16,555 votes against 11,708 votes for Orzo M. Bond, Temperance and Democratic candi- date. 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 practice at Tully, Onondaga County; was elected District Attorney of Onondaga County, serving 1860— ’63; was a member of the State Constitutional Convention in 1867; and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 18,425 votes against 13,834 votes for Daniel Pratt, Democrat. Xe elected. Senators and Representatives. 49 TWENTY-SIXTH DISTRICT, Counties.—Cayuga, Seneca, and Wayne. Joun H. Camp, of Lyons, was born at Ithaca, New York, April 14, 1840: received an academic education ; studied law, was admitted to the bar in 1860, and has since practised ; was District Attorney of Wayne County in 1867-"70; and was elected to the Forty-fifth Con-gress as a Republican, receiving 19,036 votes against 14,879 votes for Peter H. Van Auken, Democrat. Re-elected. TWENTY-SEVENTH DISTRICT, Counties.—Livingston, Ontario, and Yates. ELBRIDGE G. LAPHAM, of Canandaigua, was born at Farmington, New York, October 18, 1814; was brought up on a farm, attending the winter public schools, and was subsequently at the Canandaigua Academy, where he was a classmate of Hon. Stephen A. Douglas; studied civil engineering, and was employed on the Michigan Southern Railroad Line; afterward studied law, was admitted to the bar in 1844, and has since practised at Canandaigua; was a member of the Constitutional Convention of New York in 1867; was elected to the Forty-fourth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 14,726 votes gainst 11,852 votes for Harlow L. Comstock, Democrat. Re-elected. TWENTY-EIGHTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Broome, Schuyler, Tioga, and Tompkins. JEREMIAH W. DWIGHT, of Dryden, was born at Cincinnatus, Cortland County, New York; was reared as a farmer and mechanic; received his education at district schools and a village high school; went early into mercantile pursuits; is engaged in farming and real estate operations, including important transactions in pine lands in Wisconsin, and city property in Jersey City, and in the manufacture and sale of lumber; was elected Supervisor of the town of Dryden in 1857 and '1858, and was both years Chairman of the Board; was a member of the State Assembly in 1860 and 1861; was appointed by Governor Morgan a member of the Sena-torial District War Committee in 1861, and served during the continuance of the committee; was a delegate to the Republican National Convention at Chicago in 1868; was a Director, member of Executive Committee, and Vice-President of the Southern Central Railroad for many years; and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 18,839 votes against 15,662 votes for I. F. Jones, Democrat. Re-elected. TWENTY-NINTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Allegany, Chemung, and Steuben. Jorn N. HuNGERFORD, of Corning, was born at Vernon, Oneida County, New York, December 31, 1825; graduated at Hamilton College in 1846; engaged in the business of bank-ing in 1848, and has since continued in it; was a Delegate to the National Republican Con-vention at Philadelphia, in 1872, which nominated Grant and Wilson; and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 21,087 votes against 17,973 votes for E, D. Loveridge, Democrat. THIRTIETH DISTRICT. Counties.—Monroe and Orleans. E. KirkE HART, of Albion, was born at Albion, Orleans County, New York, April &, 1841; was educated at Albion Academy; has been connected with the banking business since February 10, 1860, and is now Cashier of the Orleans County National Bank; was a member of the State Assembly in 1872; and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 17,797 votes against 17,138 votes for John M. Davy, Republican. THIRTY-FIRST DISTRICT. Counties.—Wyoming, Genesee, and Niagara. CHARLES B. BENEDICT, of Attica, was born at Attica, Wyoming County, New York, Febru-ary 7, 1828 ; received a common-school and academic education; studied law, and was ad-mitted to the bar in 1856; engaged in the business of banking at Attica, May 1, 1860, and has since continued in it; was for five years a member of the Board of Supervisors of Wyo-ming County; was a member of the Democratic State Committee in 1875; was a Presidential Elector on the Tilden and Hendricks ticket in 1876; and was elected to the Forty-fifth Con-gress as a Democrat, receiving 12,251 votes against 11,847 votes for George G. Hoskins and 2,327 votes for Thomas T. Flugler, Republicans. THIRTY-SECOND DISTRICT. County.— Erie. DanNierL NewroN Lockwoop, of Buffalo, was born at Hamburg, Erie County, New York, June 1, 1844; graduated at Union College, Schenectady, New York, in 1865; studied law, was admitted to the bar of the Supreme Court in May, 1866, and has practised since at Buffalo; was elected District Attorney for Erie County in 1874, for the term of three years ; and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 20,125 votes against 19,716 votes for Elbridge G. Spaulding, Republican. 4 I a { Congressional Directory. THIRTY-THIRD DISTRICT. Counties.—Cattaraugus and Chautauqua. GEORGE WASHINGTON PATTERSON, of Westfield, was born at Londonderry, New Hamp-shire, November 11, 1799; received an academic education; taught school one season; re-moved to Livingston County, New York, in 1818, thence to Warsaw, New York, in 1822, and thence, in 1825, to Leicester, New York, where he carried on a farm and was engaged in the manufacture of agricultural implements; was Commissioner of Highways, School Commis-sioner, Justice of the Peace, Brigade Paymaster, and Supervisor of Leicester; was a member of the State Assembly eight years, the last two of which, 1839 and 1840, he was Speaker of the House; removed to Westfield, New York, in 1841, to take charge of the Chautauqua Land-Office, and continues to hold that position; was appointed Basin Commissioner at Albany by Governor Seward, Harbor Commissioner at New York by Governor Clark, and Quarantine Commis-sioner for the port of New York by Governor Morgan; was a Delegate to the National Re-publican Convention that nominated John C. Fremont for President, and to the National Re-publican Convention that renominated Abraham Lincoln for a second Presidential term; has been Supervisor of Westfield three years; represented Chautauqua County in the State Con-stitutional Convention in 1846; was elected Lieutenant-Governor of the State of New York in 1848; and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 16,910 votes against 10,001 votes for James Freland, Democrat. NORTH CAROLINA. SENATORS. Mart 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 from the State of North Carolina to the Congress of Southern States at Commissioner Montgomery, Alabama, in 1861 ; entered the Confederate Army, serving as Lieutenant-Colonel, Colonel, Brigadier-General, and Major-General, and surrendered at Appomattox; was elected to the United States Senate as a Democrat in January, 1872, and took his seat April 24, 1872, and was re-elected in 1876. His term of service will expire March 3, 1883. AUGUSTUS SUMMERFIELD MERRIMON, of Raleigh, was born in Buncombe (now Tran-sylvania) County, in North Carolina, September 15, 1830; he received a common-school education ; studied law, was admitted to the bar in 1851, and is a practising lawyer; was often elected County Attorney in several counties; was a member of the Legislature of North Carolina in 1860-61; was Solicitor of the eighth judicial district of North Carolina from 1861 to 1865 ; was elected by the Legislature a Judge of the Superior Courts in 1866, and con-tinued to hold that office until August, 1867, when he resigned his office rather than obey a military order sitting as a civil judge; he was elected to the United States Senate as a Dem-ocrat, to succeed John Pool, Republican, and took his seat March 4, 1873. His term of serv- ice will expire March 3, 1879. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. Counties.—Beaufort, Bertie, Camden, Chowan, Currituck, Dane, Gates, Hertford, Hyde, Martin, Pamlico, Pasquotank, Perquimans, Pitt, Tyrrell, and Washington. JEssE J. YEATES, of Murfreesborough, was born in Hertford County, North Carolina, May 29, 1829; received a collegiate education; is a lawyer; was elected Solicitor of Hertford County from 1855 to 1860; was elected a member of the House of Commons of North Carolina in 1860, as a Whig; served in the Confederate Army and was Major of the Thirty-first Regiment North Carolina Troops; was Solicitor of the First Judicial Circuit of North Carolina from 1861 to ’66; was elected to the State Constitutional Convention from Hert-ford County in 1871; was elected to the Forty-fourth Congress, and was re-elected to. the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 15,466 votes against 14,278 votes for D. McD. Lindsay, Republican. SECOND DISTRICT. Counties.—Craven, Edgecombe, Greene, Halifax, Jones, Lenoir, Northampton, Warren, Wayne, and Wilson. Curtis Hooks BROGDEN, of Goldsboro’, was born in Wayne County, North Carolina, and was raised on the farm; he received a common-school education, studied law, and was admitted to the bar ; he presided for several years as a Justice of Wayne County Court ; he was first elected by an almost unanimous vote in his native county as a member of the House of Commons in 1838, before he had ever voted in any civil election, and was elected continuously to either House of the General Assembly of North Carolina until the session of 1856, when he was Senators and Representatives. 51 - elected by the General Assembly, while he was a member of the Senate, as Comptroller of North Carolina; he was elected to that office continuously by the General Assembly for ten years from January 1, 1857, to January 1, 1867; he was again elected to the State Senate in 1868, and again in 1870; he was elected by the Republican party of North Carolina in 1872 as Lieutenant-Governor, and presided as President of the Senate till he became Governor in 1874, which office he held till January 1, 1877; he was Elector on the Grant and Colfax ticket in 1868, and was President of the Electoral College which cast the vote of North Caro-lina for Grant and Colfax; he was appointed without his solicitation, in 1869, by President Grant, as Collector of Internal Revenue for the Second Collection District of North Carolina, which appointment he declined to accept; he has held the principal offices in the State Militia from Captain to Major-General; he has been Trustee of the University of North Carolina, and has held several local offices, such as Town Commissioner and Railroad Director; he was elected, in 1876, while he was Governor of North Carolina, to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 21,060 votes against 11,874 for W. J. Greene, Democrat. Re-elected. THIRD DISTRICT. Counties.—Bladen, Brunswick, Carteret, Columbus, Cumberland, Duplin, Harnett, Moore, New Hanover, Onslow, and Sampson. ; ALFRED MOORE WADDELL, of Wilmington, was born at Hillsborough, North Carolina, Sep-tember 16, 1834; educated at Bingham’s School and Caldwell Institute, at Hillsborough, and graduated at the University of North Carolina in the class of 1853; studied law and «practises the profession; was Clerk of a Court of Equity from 1858 until 1861; was a Delegate to the National Conservative Convention at Baltimore in 1860 which nominated Bell and Everett; owned and edited ‘The Wilmington Daily Herald’ from May, 1860, to May, 1861; served in the Confederate Army as Lieutenant-Colonel of Cavalry; was elected to the Forty-second, Forty-third, and Forty-fourth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 17,534 votes against 15,796 votes for W. P. Canada, Republican. FOURTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Chatham, Franklin, Granville, Johnston, Nash, Orange, and Wake. Joseru J. Davis, of Louisburg, was born in Franklin County, North Carolina, April 13, 1828; was educated at the Louisburg Academy; studied law at Chapel Hill, receiving the degree of Bachelor of Laws in 1850, and has since been engaged in practice; served in the Confederate Army as Captain; was a member of the State Legislature in 1866-67; was elected to the Forty-fourth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 16,822 votes against 15,229 for Isaac J. Young, Republican. Re-elected. FIFTH DISTRICT, Counties—Alamance, Caswell, Davidson, Guilford, Person, Randolph, Rockingham, and Stokes. i ALFRED MOORE ScALES, of Greensborough, was born in Rockingham County, North Carolina, November 26, 1827; is not a graduate but received a classical education at the Cald-well Institute in Greensborough, and at the University of North Carolina; studied law, was admitted to the bar in 1851, and still prosecutes his profession; was elected County Attorney of Rockingham County; was a member of the Legislature of North Carolina in 1852, ’53, and in 1856, ’57; was a member of the House of Representatives in the Thirty-fifth Congress of the United States; volunteered at the beginning of the late civil war as a private in the Confederate Army, was afterward promoted and served as Captain, Colonel, and Brigadier-General, and for the war; was elected to the Forty-fousth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 13,246 votes against 11,001 votes for James E. Boyd, Republican. Re-elected. . SIXTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Anson, Cabarrus, Catawba, Gaston, Lincoln, Mecklenburg, Montgomery, Rich-mond, Robeson, Stanly, and Union. WALTER LEAK STEELE, of Rockingham. was born at Steele’s Mills, (now Little’s Mills,) Richmond County, North Carolina, April 18, 1823; was educated partly at Randolph-Macon College, at Wake Forest College, and then at the University of North Carolina, where he graduated in 1844; was elected a member of the State House of Commons in 1846, 48, 50, and ’54, and of the State Senate in 1852 and ’58; is a member of the legal profession; was a Delegate to the National Democratic Conventions at Charleston and Baltimore in 1860; was the Secretary of the State Convention of 1861 which passed the ordinance of secession; was the Democratic candidate for Presidential Elector in the Sixth District in 1872; and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 17,256 votes against 10,283 votes for Allen Jordan, Republican, Re-clected. SEVENTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Alexander, Alleghany, Ashe, Davie, Forsyth, Iredell, Rowan, Surry, Wautauga Wilkes, and Yadkin. WiLLiaM M. RoBBINS, of Statesville, was born in Randolph County, North Carolina, and is forty-eight years of age; was educated at Trinity College, North Carolina, and Randolph­ Congressional Directory. Macon College, Virginia, at which latter he graduated in 1851 with the first distinction; is by profession a lawyer; was an officer in the Confederate Army during the whole war, par-ticipating in nearly all the battles in Virginia, Maryland, and Pennsylvania, from Bull Run to Appomattox; was elected to the Senate of North Carolina in 1868, and re-elected in 1870; was a Presidential Elector on the Seymour and Blair ticket in 1868, and carried his district by a large majority although the State was lost; was elected to the Forty-third and Forty-fourth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 13,724 votes against 9,549 votes for Thomas J. Dula, Republican. : EIGHTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Buncombe, Burke, Caldwell, Cherokee, Clay, Cleveland, Haywood, Henderson, Jackson, Macon, Madison, McDowell, Mitchell, Polk, Rutherford, Swain, Transylvania, and Yancey. ? . RoBERT BRANK VANCE, of Asheville, was born in Buncombe County, North Carolina, April 24, 1828; was educated in English studies only, in the ordinary schools of the country; is by occupation a farmer; was Clerk of the Court of Pleas and Quarter Sessions from 1848, to 1856; was elected Captain of a company in the Confederate service in 1861, was twice elected Colonel of the Twenty-ninth North Carolina Regiment, and was appointed Brigadier-General in 1863; was elected to the Forty-third and Forty-fourth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 15,868 votes against 7,426 votes for Erastus R. Hampton, Republican. Re-elected. OHIO. SENATORS. ALLEN G. THURMAN, of Columbus, was born at Lynchburg, Virginia, November 13, 1813; removed to Ohio in 1819; received an academic education ; studied law, and was admitted to the bar in 1835; was a Representative from Ohio in the Twenty-ninth Congress; was elected a Judge of the Supreme Court of Ohio in 1851; was Chief-]Justice of that court from 1854 to 1856; was the Democratic candidate for Governor of Ohio in 1867; was elected to the United States Senate as a Democrat, in place of Benjamin F. Wade, Republican, took his seat March 4, 1869, and was re-elected in 1874. He was a member of the Electoral Commission of 1876. His term of service will expire March 3, 1881. STANLEY MATTHEWS, of Glendale, was born at Cincinnati, Ohio, July 21, 1824; received an academic education at Woodward High School, and graduated at Kenyon College in 1840; studied law, was admitted to the bar, and has since practised at Cincinnati; was elected Judge of the Court of Common Pleas of Hamilton County in 1851, and resigned January 1, 1853; was elected to the State Senate in 1853 ; was appointed United States Attorney for the Southern District of Ohio in 1858, and resigned in March, 1861; was commissioned Lieutenant-Colonel of the Twenty-third Ohio Volunteer Infantry in June, 1861, and Colonel of the Fifty first Ohio Volunteer Infantry in November, 1861 ; was elected Judge of the Superior Court of Cincinnati in April, 1863, and resigned in July, 1864; was a Presidential Elector on the Lincoln and Johnson ticket in 1864, and the Grant and Colfax ticket in 1868; was the Republican candi-date for Congress in October, 1876, in the second district of Ohio, against H. B. Banning, who was returned elected by 75 votes; and was elected to the United States Senate as a Repub-ican, March 20, 1877, to fill the vacancy occasioned by the resignation of John Sherman. His term of service will expire March 3, 1879. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. City and townships.—1st, 2d, 3d, 4th, 5th, 6th, 7th, 8th, gth, 10th, 11th, and 18th wards of Cincinnati, and the townships of Anderson, Columbia, Spencer, Symmes, and Sycamore; the corporations of Reading and Avondale, and the northeast and southeast precincts of Mill Creek Township. ; MILTON SAYLER, of Cincinnati, was born at Lewisburg, Preble County, Ohio, November 4, 1831; graduated at Miami University in 1852, and afterward at the Cincinnati Law School; practised law at Cincinnati; was a member of the State Legislature of Ohio in 1862 and ’63, and of the City Council of Cincinnati in 1864 and ’65; was elected to the Forty-third and Forty-fourth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Dem-ocrat, receiving 14,144 votes against 13,474 votes for Force, Republican. SECOND DISTRICT. City and townships.—The 12th, 13th, 14th, 15th, 16th, 17th, 19th, 20th, 21st, 22d, 23d, 24th, and 25th wards of the city of Cincinnati, and the townships of Springfield, Colerain, Green, Delhi, Miami, Whitewater, Harrison, and Crosby ; the corporations of Harrison, Clifton, Riverside, and Glendale, as they are now constituted, and the western precinct of Mill Creek Township. HexrY B. BANNING, of Cincinnati, was born at Mount Vernon, Ohio, November 10, 1834; received a common-school and academic education; studied and practised law at Mount Bc Senators and Representatives. 53 ~¥ Vernon, Ohio, until April, 1861, when he ‘enlisted as a private soldier, and was promoted, successively, to the rank of Captain, Major, Lieutenant-Colonel, Colonel, Brevet Brigadier-General, and Brevet Major‘General ; represented Knox County in the Ohio Legislature in 1866 and ’67; removed to Cincinnati in the year 1869, where he resumed the practice of the law; was elected to the Forty-third and Forty-fourth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 14,133 votes against 14,058 votes for Stanley Matthews, Republican. THIRD DISTRICT. Counties.—Butler, Clermont, Clinton, Fayette, and Warren. MirLLs GARDNER, of Washington Court-House, was born in Russellville, Brown County, Ohio, January 30, 1830; has always lived in the State of Ohio, and in Fayette County since 1854; received a common-school education; studied law; was admitted to the bar in 18535, and has practised the profession since; was prosecuting attorney of Fayette County for four years; was a member of the State Senate of Ohio in 1862-64; was a Presidential Elector on the Lincoln ticket in 1864; was a member of the State House of Representatives in 1866-68 ; was a member of the State Constitutional Convention of Ohio in 1873; and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 16,549 votes against 16,098 votes for John S. Savage, Democrat. FOURTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Darke, Greene, Montgomery, and Preble. JouNn A. McMAHON, of Dayton, was born in Frederick County, Maryland, February 19, 1833; was educated at Saint Xavier’s College, Cincinnati, graduatingin 1849 ; began the study of law in January, 1851, at Dayton, with Hon. Clement L. Vallandigham, was admitted to the bar in June, 1854, and has practised at Dayton ever since; was a Delegate at Large to the National Democractic Convention at Baltimore in 1872; was elected to the Forty-fourth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 18,557 votes against 18,461 votes for Howard, Republican. /Ae-¢lected. FIFTH DISTRICT. . Counties.—Allen, Auglaize, Defiance, Mercer, Paulding, Putnam, Shelby, and Van Wert. AMERICUS V. RICE, of Ottawa, was born at Perrysville, Richland (now Ashland) County, Ohio, November 18, 1835; educated at the common schools and at Antioch College, Yellow Springs, Ohio; graduated at Union College, Schenectady, New York, in 1860; was a law student until April 12, 1861, when he enlisted as a private soldier in the Union Army; was promoted to Second Lieutenant and Captain in the Twenty-first Ohio Volunteers, and served under General Cox in West Virginia until the expiration of his term of enlistment, in August, 1861; immediately raised a company, and parts of others, for the Fifty-seventh Ohio Volun-teers, and was successively promoted to Captain, Lieutenant-Colonel, and Colonel of that regiment, and Brigadier-General of United States Volunteers; discharged the service Jan-uary, 1866, and has since been manager of the private banking-house of C. H. Rice & Co., Ottawa, Ohio; was a Delegate to the Democratic National Convention at Baltimore in 1872; was elected to the Forty-fourth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 20,543 votes against 12,645 votes for Long, Republican. SIXTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Fulton, Henry, Lucas, Ottawa, Williams, and Wood. Jacos D. Cox. of Toledo, was born at Montreal, Canada, October 27, 1828, of parents both natives of the United States, who were making a merely temporary sojourn in Canada, and whose home was in the city of New York; his boyhood was spent in the last-named city, where he fitted for college ; entered Oberlin College, Ohio, and graduated in 1851; studied law, settled at Warren, Trumbull County, Ohio, was admitted to the bar in 1853, and practised the profession ; was elected to the Ohio Senate in 1859; was commissioned Brigadier-General of Ohio Volunteers April 23, 1861; was commissioned Brigadier-General of United States Vol-unteers May 14, 1861, and served in the campaign of South Mountain and Antietam, 1862, commanding the corps in the latter engagement, and was promoted to be Major-General for services in that campaign, but, the number of appointments by Mr. Lincoln to that grade being in excess of that fixed by law, could not be confirmed, and he resumed service as a brigadier ; commanded the District of West Virginia in 1863; was assigned to a division of the Twenty-third Army Corps in the fall of that year; joined Sherman’s Army in the spring of 1864, with that corps; served in the campaign of Atlanta, and under General Thomas, in the cam-paign of Franklin and Nashville, in the former of which engagements he commanded the Twenty-third Corps; was again promoted to be Major-General for this campaign in December, 1864; was transferred with his command to the coast of North Carolina in February, 1865, and assigned by the President to the permanent command of the corps, and at the surrender of General Johnston was assigned to the duty of receiving the arms and paroling the troops ; was elected Governor of Ohio in October, 1865, and declined a renomination in 1867; removed to Cincinnati, Ohio, and resumed the practice of the law; was appointed Secretary of the In-terior in President Grant’s first Cabinet, March, 1869, and resigned in December, 1870; re-turned to Cincinnati and legal practice ; was made President of the Wabash Railroad in Octo-ber, 1373, and removed to Toledo, Ohio, to take charge of that property; and was elected to the \ Congressional Directory. Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 17,276 votes against «5,361 votes for Frank H. Hurd, Democrat. \ SEVENTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Adams, Brown, Highland, Pike, and Ross. HENRY L. DIcKEY, of Greenfield, was born in Ross County, Ohio, October 29, 1832; re-ceived an academical education ; studied civil engineering and subsequently the law, and is = lawyer by profession ;. was a member of the Ohio House of Representatives in 1861 and of the Ohio Senate in 1867-68, and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, re-ceiving 14,859 votes against 13,518 votes for A. Brown, Republican. EIGHTH DISTRICT. Counties—Champaign, Clarke, Logan, Madison, and Miami. Josep WARREN KEIFER, of Springfield, was born in Bethel Township, Clarke County, Ohio, Tanuary 30, 1836; was reared on a farm, and educated in common schools and at Antioch Col- ¢ lege: commenced the study of law at Springfield in 1856; was admitted to the bar January 12, , 1858, and commenced practice at Springfield, continuingit until April 19, 1861, when he enlisted in the Union Army; was commissioned Major of the Third Ohio Volunteer Infantry April 27, 1861; was promoted Lieutenant-Colonel of the same regiment February 12, 1862; was ap-pointed Colonel of the One hundred and tenth Ohio Volunteer Infantry September 30, 1862; was severely wounded at the battle of the Wilderness May 5, 1864; was appointed Brigadier-General by brevet November 30, 1864, ¢* for gallant and meritorious services in the battles of Opequan, Fisher’s Hill, and Cedar Creek, Virginia;’’ was assigned to duty by President Lincoln as Brigadier-General December 29, 1864; was appointed, July 1, 1865, Major-General of Volunteers by brevet ¢¢ for gallant and distinguished services during the campaign endingin the surrender of the insurgent army under General R. E. Lee;” was mustered out of service June 27, 1865, (having been in the Army four years and two months, and four times wounded ;) resumed practice at Springfield in July, 1865; was appointed Lieutenant-Colonel of the Twenty-sixth United States Infantry November 30, 1866, but declined; was a member of the State Senate in 1868-’69; was Commander of the Department of the Ohio, Grand Army of the Republic, 1868-"70; and was elected Vice-Commander-in-Chief of that organization May §, 1872; was a Trustee of the Ohio Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Orphans’ Home from April 16, 1870, to March 5, 1878; has been a Trustee of Antioch College since June, 1873; was a Delegate at Large from Ohio to the National Republican Convention at Cincinnati in June, 1876; and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 17,728 votes against 14,012 votes for George Arthur, Democrat, and 183 votes for William Pollard, Prohi-bitionist. Re-elected. : NINTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Delaware, Hardin, Knox, Marion, Morrow, and Union. JouN S. JoNEs, of Delaware, was born in Champaign County, Ohio, February 12, 1835; graduated in the scientific course at the Ohio Wesleyan University in 1855, and received the degree of M. A., pro honore, from that institution in 1875; studied law with Powell & Van-derman, and was admitted to the bar June 15, 1857; was elected Prosecuting Attorney for Delaware County in 1860; resigned and enlisted as a private in Company C, Fourth Ohi» Infantry, April 16, 1861; was soon after e'ected First Lieutenant; was recommissioned First Lieutenant in the three years’ service June 4, 1861; was promoted Captain September 5, 1862; was mustered out at the expiration of the term of service of his regiment June 21, 1864; was nominated by acclamation for the State Legislature in 1864, but resigned to accept the command of the One hundred and seventy-fourth Ohio Infantry, tendered him by Gov-ernor John Brough, and was commissioned Colonel of that regiment September 21, 1864; was commissioned Brigadier-General by brevet June 2%, 1865, for ¢ gallant and meritorious conduct during the war,” and was mustered out with his command July 7, 1865; resumed the practice of law; was elected Mayor of Delaware by unanimous vote in April, 1866; was elected Prosecuting Attorney of Delaware County for three successive terms, serving from 1866 until 1872, when he declined a re-election; was a member of the Board of Managers of the Ohio Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Orphans’ Home from its organization in 1870, until its re-or-ganization by the Democratic Legislature in 1874; was a Trustee of the Wesleyan Female College at Delaware from 1865 until 1875, when he resigned for want of time to attend to its duties ; was a Presidential Elector on the Grant and Wilson ticket in 1872; and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 15,978 votes against 15,175 votes for Early F. Poppleton, Democrat, and 308 votes for Levi L.. Benson, Prohibitionist. TENTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Erie, Hancock, Huron, Sandusky, and Seneca. CHARLES FOSTER, of Fostoria, was born in Seneca County, Ohio, April 12, 1828; was educated at the common schools and the academy at Norwalk, Ohio; engaged in mercantile and banking business ; never held any public office until he was elected to the Forty-second, Forty-third, and Forty-fourth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress, re-ceiving 17,324 votes against 17,053 votes for Hudson, Democrat. : Senators and Representatives. gs ELEVENTH DISTRICT. b Counties.—Gallia, Hocking, Jackson, Lawrence, Scioto, and Vinton. HENRY S. NEAL, of Ironton, was born at Gallipolis, Ohio, August 25, 1828; graduated at Marietta College in 1847; studied law and was admitted to the bar in 1851; was elected to the State Senate in 1861, and re-elected in 1863; was appointed Consul to Lisbon, Portugal, in 1869; by the resignation of the Minister Resident, became Chargé d’Affaires in December, 1869; in July, 1870, resigned and returned to Ohio; was elected Delegate to the Ohio Consti-tutional Convention in 1873; and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 15,213 votes against 14,639 votes for John L. Vance, Democrat. AKe-elect.d. TWELFTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Fairfield, Franklin, Perry, and Pickaway. THOMAS EWING, of Lancaster, was born at Lancaster, Ohio, August 7, 1829; graduated at Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island, 1854; a lawyer; was a member of Peace Conference from Kansas in 1860; was Chief-Justice Supreme Court of Kansas 1861-’62 ; served in the Union Army as Colonel Eleventh Kansas Infantry Volunteers, August, 1862; Briga-dier-General United States Volunteers, September, 1863; Brevet Major-General United States Volunteers, March, 1865; was a member of Constitutional Convention of Ohio, 1873-74, and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 19,628 votes against 14,541 votes for Nash, Republican. Re-elected. THIRTEENTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Coshocton, Licking, Muskingum, and Tuscarawas. MirLToN I. SOUTHARD, of Zanesville, was born in Licking County, Ohio, October 20, 1836 ; received a collegiate education, graduating at Denison University, at Granville, Ohio, in 1861 ; studied law, was admitted to the bar in 1863, and has been engaged in the practice continuously since ; was elected Prosecuting Attorney for Muskingum County in 1867, re-elected in 1869, and again in 1871; was elected to the Forty-third and Forty-fourth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 17,706 votes against 14,642 votes for J. H. Barnhill, Republican. FOURTEENTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Ashland, Crawford, Holmes, Richland, and Wyandot. EBENEZER R. FINLEY, of Bucyrus, was born at Orville, Wayne County, Ohio, July 31, 1833; studied law, was admitted to practice in June, 1862, and has since followed his profes-sion at Bucyrus; served in the Union Army in the late war as First Lieutenant in the Sixty-fourth Ohio Infantry; and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 16,654 votes against 11,067 votes for Peter G. Gross, Republican, and 48 votes for Martin Deal, Prohibitionist. Re-elected. N FIFTEENTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Athens, Meigs, Monroe, Morgan, and Washington. NELsoN H. VAN VorHES; of Athens, was born in Washington County, Pennsylvania, January 23, 1822; removed to Athens County, Ohio, in 1832, and worked on a farm nine months of the year to obtain the means of attending the winter public schools; entered the printing-office of his father in 1836, and served a six years’ apprenticeship, qualifying him-self for the business of editing and publishing a newspaper, which he followed until 1861 ; was elected a member of the State Legislature in 1850, and re-elected five times, the last in 1872, giving him twelve years of service in that body, during four years of which he was Speaker of the Lower House; was elected Probate Judge in 1854, but soon afterward resigned; was the Whig candidate for Congress in 1858, and was defeated by 277 votes, although he ran largely ahead of his ticket; was a Delegate to the National Republican Convention at Chicago which nominated Mr. Lincoln; entered the Union Army in 1861 as a private; was commissioned as First Lieutenant in the Third Ohio Volunteers; was Quartermaster of the Eighteenth Ohio Volunteers, and was Colonel of the Ninety-second Ohio Volunteers, with which he served in the Army of the Cumberland until prostrated by pneumonia at Nashville ; he has since filled numerous public positions in civil life at Athens; was elected to the Forty-fourth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth' Congress as a Republican, receiving 14,620 votes against 14,116 votes for Poston, Democrat. SIXTEENTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Belmont, Guernsey, Harrison, Jefferson, and Noble. LORENZO DANFORD, of Saint Clairsville, was born in Belmont County, Ohio, October 18, 1829; received a common-school education, and attended college two years at Waynesburg, Pennsylvania; studied and practised law at Saint Clairsville, Ohio; was elected rrosecuting Attorney of Belmont County in 1857 and again in 1859; entered the Union Army as a private at the breaking out of the rebellion, and served as private, Lieutenant, and Captain until Au-gust, 1864, when he resigned on account of sickness; was a Presidential Elector in the Electoral College which gave the vote of Ohio to Abraham Lincoln in 1864; was elected to the Forty-third and Forty-fourth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Re-publican, receiving 16,089 votes against 13,837 votes for Lawrence, Democrat. Declineda Yenomination, Congressional Directory. SEVENTEENTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Carroll, Columbiana, Mahoning, and Stark. > WiLLiamM McKINLEY, Jun., 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; was Prosecuting Attorney of Stark County, Ohio, 1869—"71; and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 16,489 votes against 13,185 votes for L. L. Sanborn, Democrat, and 2,441 votes for John R. Powell, Greenback candidate. Re-elected. EIGHTEENTH DISTRICT, Counties.—Lorain, Medina, Summit, and Wayne. JAMES MONROE, of Oberlin, was born at Plainfield, Connecticut, July 18, 1821; received his early education at the common school and at Plainfield Academy ; graduated at Oberlin Col-lege in 1846, and afterward pursued a course of theological study there; was a Professor in Oberlin College from 1849 until 1862; was a member of the House of Representatives of the State of Ohio in 1856, ’57, ’58, and ’59, and of the Ohio Senate in 1860, 61, and ’62; was chosen President pro tempore of the Ohio Senate in 1861, and again in 1862 ; resigned his seat in the Senate in October, 1862, to accept the position of United States Consul at Rio de Janeiro, tendered him by President Lincoln; held the office of Consul at that capital from 1863 to 1869, serving for some months of 1869 as Chargé d’Affaires ad interim ; was elected to the Forty-second, Forty-third, and Forty-fourth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 16,906 votes against 12,772 votes for John Hall, Democrat. Re-elected. NINETEENTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Ashtabula, Geauga, Lake, Portage, and Trumbull. James A. GARFIELD, of Mentor, was born in Orange, Cuyahoga County, Ohio, November 19, 1831; graduated at Williams College, Massachusetts, in 1856; was President ofa literary institution for several years; studied and practised law; was a member of the State Senate of Ohio in 1859-60; entered the Union Army in 1861 as Colonel of the Forty-second Ohio Volunteers; was promoted to the rank of Brigadier-General January 10, 1862; was appointed Chief of Staff of the Army of the Cumberland, and was promoted to the rank of Major-General September 20, 1863 ; was elected to the Thirty-eighth, Thirty-ninth, Fortieth, Forty-first, Forty-second, Forty-third, and Forty-fourth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Con-gress as a Republican, receiving 20,012 votes against 11,349 votes for J. S. Casement, Demo-cratic nominee. He was a member of the Electoral Commission of 1876. Re-elected. : TWENTIETH DISTRICT. County.—Cuyahoga. Amos TOWNSEND, of Cleveland, Ohio, was born in Fayette County, Pennsylvania, in 1831 ; removed at an early age to Ohio, and became a citizen of Cleveland, with whose commercial interests he has been identified during the past twenty years; was for ten years a member of the City Council, serving seven of those years as its President; was a member of the State Constitutional Convention in 1873; and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republi-can, receiving 17,891 votes against 14,521 votes for H. B. Payne, Democrat. Re-elected. OREGON. SENATORS. JouN H. MiTtcHELL, 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 continued his 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 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 Uni-versity, at Salem, Oregon, in 1867, and served in that position nearly four years; was elected to the United States Senate as a Republican, to succeed Henry W. Corbett, Republican, and took his seat March 4, 1873. His term of service will expire March 3, 1879. LA FAYETTE GROVER, of Salem, was born at Bethel, Oxford County, Maine, November 29, 1823; was primarily educated at Gould’s Academy, Bethel; was two years a student at Bowdoin College; pursued his studies to a liberal course at Philadelphia, where he also studied law, and was admitted to the bar in 1850; removed to Oregon; was elected by the Territorial -Legislature Prosecuting Attorney for the Second Judicial District, and as Auditor of Public Accounts for the Territory, 1851-’52; was elected a member of the Legislature in 1853; was appointed by the Department of the Interior as a Commissioner to audit the spoliation claims growing out of the Rogue River Indian war in 1854; was again elected a member of the Leg- by = Senators and Representatives. 57 slature in 1855, at which session he served as Speaker of the House; was appointed by the Secretary of War as a member of the board of commissioners to audit the Indian war expenses of Oregon and Washington in 1856; was a Delegate to the Convention which framed the present Constitution of Oregon in 1857; was Representative from Oregon in the Thirty-fifth Congress; was Chairman of the Democratic State Central Committee 1866-’70; was elected Governor of Oregon in 1870 for the term of four years, re-elected in 1874, and served until February 1, 1877, when he resigned, having been elected to the United States Senate as a Democrat, to succeed James K. Kelly, Democrat, and took his seat March 8, 1877. His term of service will expire March 3, 1883. : REPRESENTATIVE. THE STATE AT LARGE. Ri1cHARD WILLIAMS, of Portland, was born at Findley, Hancock County, Ohio, November 15, 1836; removed to Oregon in 1851; was educated at the Willamette University; studied law; was admitted to the bar in 1858, and has since practised; and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 15,347 votes against 14,239 votes for La Fayette Lane, Democrat. : PENNSYLVANIA. SENATORS. WiLriaM A. WALLACE, of Clearfield, was born in Huntingdon County, Pennsylvania; received an academic education; read law, and is a practising attorney; was a member of the State Senate of Pennsylvania 1862-75, having been elected five times in succession, and was Speaker of the Senate in 1871; was a member of the National Democratic Convention of 1864, and Senatorial Delegate and Chairman of the Pennsylvania delegation in the National Demo-cratic Convention of 1872; was Chairman of the Democratic State Committee of Pennsylvania for five years; was in 1874 a member of the commission to suggest amendments to the Constitu-tion of Pennsylvania; was elected to the United States Senate as a Democrat, to succeed John Scott, Republican, and took his seat March 4, 1875. His term of service will expire March 3, 1881. James DoNALD CAMERON, of Harrisburg, was born at Middletown, Pennsylvania, in 1833; received a classical education; was a student at Princeton College; entered the Middletown Bank as Clerk, and became its Cashier; was President of the Northern Central Railway Com-pany, of Pennsylvania, 1866-74, when the road was leased to the Pennsylvania Railroad Com-pany; was Secretary of War under President Grant from May 22, 1876, to March 3, 1877; was a Delegate to the National Republican Convention at Cincinnati in 1876; was elected a United States Senator from Pennsylvania (to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of his father, Hon. Simon Cameron) in March, 1877, and took his seat October 15, 1877. His term of service will expire March 3, 1879. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. City of Philadelphia.—1st, 2d, 7th, 26th, and 3oth wards. CHAPMAN FREEMAN, of Philadelphia, was born at Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, October 8, 1832; was educated at public and private schools, graduating at the Philadelphia High School in July, 1850; commenced the study of the law, but became engaged in mercantile pursuits until after the breaking out of the late civil war; entered the United States Navy as Acting Assistant Paymaster in 1863, and was attached to the East Gulf and North Atlantic Squad-rons; was attached to the United States steamer Iron Age at the time of her destruction at Lockwood’s Folly Inlet, off the coast of North Carolina, and afterward on special duty in Eastern Carolina during the attack on New Berne, Little Washington, and Plymouth, in February, 1864; resigned in consequence of impaired health in 1864, resumed the study of the law, was admitted to the bar in 1867, and has since practised at Philadelphia; was one of the Commissioners on behalf of the Centennial from the city of Philadelphia to Vienna, Austria, in 1873; was elected to the Forty-fourth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 15,021 votes against 11,231 votes for John S. Thack-ara, Democrat. Declined to be a candidate for renomination. SECOND DISTRICT. City of Philadelphia.—8th, gth, 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; studied and practised law; was a member of the House of Representa-tives 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, and Forty-fourth Congresses, and was re elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as . a Republican, receiving 15,201 votes against 11,881 for C. H. Gibson, Democrat. Re-elected. Congressional Directory. THIRD DISTRICT, City of Philadelphia.—3d, 4th, 5th, 6th, 11th, 12th, and 16th wards. SAMUEL J. RANDALL, of Philadelphia, was born at Philadelphia, October 10, 1828; re- ceived 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 18538 and ’59; was elected to the Thirty-eighth, Thirty-ninth, Fortieth, Forty-first, Forty-second, Forty-third, and Forty-fourth Congresses, (serving as Speaker during the last session of the Forty-fourth Congress,) was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, re-ceiving 11,751 votes against 8,989 votes for Benjamin L. Barry, Republican, and was chosen Speaker. Re-elected. : FOURTH DISTRICT. City of Philadelphia.—15th, 21st, 24th, 27th, 28th, and 29th wards. _ WirLiam 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 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, and Forty-fourth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 18,820 votes against 12,432 votes for John T. School, Democrat. Re-elected. FIFTH DISTRICT. City of Philadelphia.—18th, 19th, 22d, 23d, and 25th wards, and that part of the 17th ward lying east of Second street. : ALFRED C. HARMER, of Germantown, was born in Germantown, (now part of the city of Philadelphia,) Pennsylvania, August 8, 1825; was educated at public schools and at German-town Academy; commenced business as a shoe manufacturer at twenty years of age; became a wholesale dealer, and retired from business in 1860; has been identified with railroad enter-prises, and is now engaged in the shipping and wholesale coal business; was elected a member of the City Councils of Philadelphia in 1856, and served four years ; was elected Recorder ot Deeds for Philadelphia in 1860, and served three years ; was a Delegate to the National Repub-lican Convention at Chicago in 1865; was elected to the Forty-second Congress, and re-elected to the Forty-third Congress; was defeated as the Republican candidate for the Forty-fourth Congress, receiving 9,098 votes against 10,228 votes for John Robbins, Democrat, and 7,579 votes for Leonard Myers, Independent ; and was again elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 17,973 votes against 14,722 votes for Jacob S. Duval, Democrat and Independent. Re-elected. SIXTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Chester and Delaware. WiLL1AM WARD, of Chester, was born at Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, January 1, 1837; was educated at Girard College, Philadelphia; learned the art of printing in the office of ‘¢ The Delaware County Republican,” at Chester, serving there four years; studied law; was ad-mitted to the bar in August, 1859, and has since been engaged in the practice of law, convey-ancing, land-business, and banking; has been a member of the City Council of Chester and City Solicitor, but has never held any other public offices; and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 15,220 votes against 9,717 votes for William D. Hart-man, Democrat. AKe-clected. . SEVENTH DISTRICT. Counties —Montgomery and all that part of Bucks not included in the Tenth District. I. NEwroN 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, Maine, in 1851, and the Jefferson Medical College, of Phila-delphia, in 1852; has followed his profession since that time to the present at Johnsville, Bucks County, and Hatboro’, Montgomery County; is a member of the Pennsylvania State Medical Society and the American Medical Association ; is President of the Hatboro’ National Bank; and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 15,765 votes against 14,247 votes for Abel Rambo, Democrat. EIGHTH DISTRICT. County.—Berks. HIESTER CLYMER, of Reading, was born in Caernarvon Township, Berks County, Novern-ber 3, 1827; received his primary education in the schools of Reading, and graduated at Prince-ton College, New Jersey, in 1847; studied law and was admitted to the bar in Berks County in 1849; pursued his profession in that county until the autumn of 1851, when he removed to Pottsville, Schuylkill County, and there practised until 1856, when he returned to Reading, and soon acquired an extensive practice; in January, 1860, by appointment of the Judges of the Court of Common Pleas, he represented Berks County in the Board of Revenue Commis= Senators and Representatives. 59 sioners of the State, and in the same year he represented his district in the National Demo-cratic Convention which held its sessions at Charleston and Baltimore; was a member of the State Senate of Pennsylvania from October, 1860, until he resigned when nominated, in March, 1866, as Democratic candidate for Governor of Pennsylvania; in 1868 he again represented his district in the National Democratic Convention which met at New York; in 1870 he was appointed by Govérnor Geary a member of the State Board of Public Charities; visited Europe in 1870-71; was President of the Democratic State Convention which met at Read-ing in May, 1872; was elected to the Forty-third and Forty-fourth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 15,239 votes against 6,213 votes for Henry D. Markley, Republican. Ae-elected. NINTH DISTRICT. County.—lLancaster. : A. HERR SMITH, of Lancaster, was born in Manor Township, Lancaster County, March 7, 1815; graduated at Dickinson College in 1840; studied law with John R. Montgomery, in Lancaster ; was admitted to the bar in 1842, and has since followed his profession; was elected to the House of Representatives of the State of Pennsylvania in 1843, and re-elected in 1844 ; in 1845 was elected to the State Senate ; was elected to the Forty-third and Forty-fourth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 17,419 votes against 9,574 votes for George Nauman, Democrat. Re-elected. ; TENTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Northampton and Lehigh, and the townships of Durham, Milford, Springfield, Richland, Rockhill, Haycock, Nockamixon, and Tinicum, and the borough of Quakertown, n the county of Bucks. SAMUEL AUGUSTUS BRIDGES, of Allentown, was born at Colchester, New London County, Connecticut, January 27, 1802; received an academic education at Bacon Academy, Colchester, and entering Williams College, Massachusetts, in 1822, graduated in 1826; removed to Easton, Pennsylvania, in October, 1826; studied law with Hon. James Madison Porter and Hon. Robert May Burke, and was admitted to the bar in 1829 ; commenced practice at Doylestown, Pennsylvania, and remained there until March 13, 1830, when he removed to Allentown, where he continued practice until his retirement a few years since; was Deputy Attorney-General of the State for Lehigh County for seven years; was a member of the Democratic State Conven-tion in 1841; was elected to the Thirtieth and Thirty-second Congresses, and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 20,119 votes against 12,266 votes for How-ard J. Reeder, Republican. ELEVENTH DISTRICT Counties.—Carbon, Columbia, Montour, Monroe, Pike, and the townships of Nescopeck, Black Creek, Sugar Loaf, Butler, Hazel, Foster, Bear Creek, Bucks, Roaring Brook, Salem, Hollenbach, Huntingdon, Fairmount, Spring Brook ; that part of the city of Scranton south of Roaring Brook Creek and east of Lackawanna River; and the boroughs of Dunmore, New Columbus, Goldsboro’, White Haven, Jeddo, and Hazleton, in Luzerne County. Francis D. CoLLINS, of Scranton, was born at Saugerties, Ulster County, New York, March 5, 1844 ; was educated at Saint Joseph’s College, in Susquehanna County, and Wyoming Seminary, at Kingston, Pennsylvania; studied law, was admitted to the bar of Luzerne County in 1866, and has since practised the profession; was elected District Attorney of the Scranton Mayor’s Court District in 1869; was elected to the State Senate of Pennsylvania in 1872, ’73, and ’74; was elected to the Forty-fourth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Con-gress as a Democrat, receiving 18,548 votes against 10,172 votes for Waller, Republican. TWELETH DISTRICT. County.—All that portion of Luzerne County not included in the Eleventh District. HEeNDRICK B. WRIGHT, of Wilkes-Barre, was born at Plymouth, Luzerne County, Pennsyl-vania, April 24, 1808; received his primary education at the Wilkes-Barre grammar-school ; graduated at Dickinson College in 1829; studied law, was admitted to the bar in November, 1831, and commenced practice ; was appointed District Attorney for Luzerne County in 1834, by Attorney-General George M. Dallas; was a member of the State House of Representatives in 1841, 42, and ’43, serving the last year as Speaker; was a Delegate at large to the National Democratic Convention at Baltimore in 1844 which nominated Polk and Dallas, serving as temporary and permanent chairman; was a Delegate to the subsequent National Democratic Conventions which nominated Cass, Pierce, Buchanan, Douglas, Seymour, and Tilden; was elected to the Thirty-third and Thirty-seventh Congresses; is the author of a *‘ Practical Treatise on Labor,” published in 1871, and ¢ Historical Sketches of Plymouth, Pennsyl-vania,”’ published in 1873; and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiv-ing 13,557 votes against 12,101 votes for H. B. Payne, Republican. Re-elected. THIRTEENTH DISTRICT. County. — Schuylkill. ; James B. REILLY, of Pottsville, was born in Schuylkill County, Pennsylvania, August 12, 1845; was educated at the Pottsville High School, graduating June 1, 1862; studied law, was admitted to the bar January 11, 1869, and commenced practice; was elected District 6o ! Congressional Directory. Attorney of Schuylkill County October 8, 1871, and served until January 1, 1875, having been elected, while holding that position, to the Forty-fourth Congress; was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 10,107 votes against 10,026 votes for Nutting, Republican. FOURTEENTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Dauphin, Lebanon, and Northumberland. Joun W. KILLINGER, of Lebanon, was born September 18, 1825; graduated from Marshall College, Pennsylvania, in 1843; studied law and was admitted to the bar in January, 1846; was Prosecuting Attorney for Lebanon County until 1849; was elected to the House of Rep-resentatives of Pennsylvania for the sessions of 1850 and ’51; was elected to the State Senate in 1854, serving three years; was elected to the Thirty-sixth, Thirty-seventh, Forty-second, and Forty-third Congresses, and was again elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Repub-ican, receiving 16,454 votes against 13,720 votes for W. B. Wilson, Democrat, Re-elected. FIFTEENTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Bradford, Susquehanna, Wayne, and Wyoming. EDWARD OVERTON, Jr., of Towanda, was born at Towanda, Pennsylvania, February 4, 1836; graduated at Princeton College, New Jersey, in 1856; was admitted to the bar in May, 1858; entered the Union Army in September, 1861, as Major of the Fiftieth Regiment of Pennsylvania Volunteers; was promoted to Lieutenant-Colonel in 1863, and from that time commanded the regiment until mustered out October, 1864 ; served as Register in Bankruptcy from 1867 until elected in 1876 to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 16,954 votes against 14,958 votes for Joseph Powell, Democrat. Re-elected. : SIXTEENTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Cameron, Lycoming, McKean, Potter, Sullivan, and Tioga. + JouNn 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; was admitted to the bar in 1864, and has since practised law; was elected Dis-trict Attorney of his native county in 1868, serving three years ; edited ¢ The Tioga County Agitator’ during the year 1870; was a member of the State House of Representatives five years, from 1872 to 1876 inclusive, and served as Chairman of the Judiciary General and Ways and Means; and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 13,595 votes against 12,097 votes for Henry White, Democrat, and 1,530 votes for J. F. Davis, Independent Greenback. Re-elected. SEVENTEENTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Bedford, Blair, Cambria, and Somerset. Jaco 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 1842 to 1847 was engaged ‘in steamboating on the Lower Mississippi River and its tributaries; in 1850 was gold-mining in California; 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 in 1861 ; was a Delegate to the first Republican National Convention in 1856; in April, 1861, entered the military service as First Lieutenant of Company G, Third Pennsylvania Volunteers ; in the fall * of 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 of Pennsylvania in 1865 for a term of three years, and re-elected in 1868; was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 14,608 votes against 14,148 votes for John Reilly, Democrat. EIGHTEENTH DISTRICT. Counties,—Franklin, Fulton, Huntingdon, Juniata, Perry, and Snyder. WILLIAM S. STENGER, of Chambersburg, was born at Loudon, Franklin County, Penn-sylvania, February 13, 1840; graduated at Franklin and Marshall College, Lancaster, Penn-sylvania, in July, 1858; studied law, was admitted to the bar in August, 1860, at Chambers-burg, where he has since practised; was District Attorney of Franklin County from 1862 to 1871, having been twice re-elected; was elected to the Forty-fourth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 15,301 votes against 15,232 votes for Thaddeus M. Mahon, Republican. : NINETEENTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Adams, Cumberland, and York. Levi MarsH, of York, was born in Conewago Township, York County, Pennsylvania, November 22, 1837; was educated at common schools and subsequently at the York County Academy, working on a farm when not at his studies; was apprenticed in 1854 to a machinist, and remained with him two years; recruited a company for the Union Army in 1862, and Senators and Representatives. 61 with it joined the One hundred and thirtieth Pennsylvania Infantry, of which he was soon promoted to be Lieutenant-Colonel; he was wounded at the battle of Antietam, was promoted Colonel after the battle of Fredericksburg, and was again wounded while leading his regiment at the battle of Chancellorsville; after having been mustered out with his regiment at the ex-piration of its term of service, he attended lectures in the Law Department of the University of Pennsylvania, and was admitted to the bar in 1864; he was a member of the State House of Representatives in 1867 and ’68 ; was appointed by the Legislature in 1872 one of a com-mission to re-examine and re-audit the accounts of certain public officers of York County ; was elected to the Forty-fourth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 18,932 votes against 13,898 votes for C. H. Bressler, Republican. TWENTIETH DISTRICT. Counties.—Centre, Clearfield, Clinton, Elk, Mifflin, and Union. L. A. MAckEY, of Lock Haven, was born in White Deer Township, Union County, . Pennsylvania, November 25, 1819; when he was about ten years of age he removed with his parents to Milton, Pennsylvania; he received an academic education under Rev. David Kirkpatrick, and graduated from Union College, Schenectady, in 1837, with the highest honors of a class of one hundred and eight, of which he was the youngest member; studied law with Ex-Governor James Pollock, and then at the Law School of Dickinson College, at Carlisle, where he was admitted to the bar in 1840; he commenced practice at Lock Haven, Pennsylvania, in 1841, and continued it with success until 1855, when, upon the organization of the Lock Haven Bank, he was elected its first President, and has held the position since; he was a Delegate to the Whig National Convention at Baltimore which nominated General Scott in 1852; was the Democratic candidate for Congress in his district in 1868, but was defeated by W. H. Armstrong; was the first Mayor of Lock Haven on its organization as a city in 1870; was a Delegate to the National Democratic Convention at Baltimore in 1872, and was one of those who voted against the nomination of Horace Greeley; is President of the Bald Eagle Valley Railroad Company, and of several other corporations; was elected to the Forty-fourth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 16,229 votes against 11,193 votes for j. S. Lincoln, Republican. TWENTY-FIRST DISTRICT. Counties.—Fayette, Greene, and Westmoreland. Jaco TURNEY, of Greensburg, was born at Greensburg, Pennsylvania, February 18, 1825; was educated at Greensburg Academy; served while a boy in a printing-office; studied law, and was admitted. to the bar in 1849; was elected District Attorney for Westmoreland County in 1850 and re-elected in 1853; was a Presidential Elector on the Buchanan ticket in 1856; was elected to the ‘State Senate of Pennsylvania in 185% for three years, and elected Speaker in 1859; was defeated for State Senator in 187I by a reduced majority in a strong Republican district; was elected to the Forty-fourth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 16,962 votes against 12,763 votes for Jacob Rush, Republican. TWENTY-SECOND DISTRICT. City of Pittsburg.—Four boroughs and thirteen townships of Allegheny County. RusseLL ERRETT, of Pittsburg, was born in New York, in 1817; was self-educated ; removed to Pennsylvania in 1829; is by profession an editor; was elected Comptroller of Pittsburg in 1860; served as Clerk of the Pennsylvania Senate in 1860-61, and in 1872-76; was appointed Additional Paymaster in the United States Army in 1861, and served until mus- tered out in 1866; was elected to the State Senate of Pennsylvania in 1867; was appointed Assessor of Internal Revenue in 1869 and served until 1873; and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 14,561 votes against 12,913 votes for James H. Hopkins, Democrat. Re-elected. ] TWENTY-THIRD DISTRICT. County.— Allegheny. TroMAs M. BAYNE, of the city of Allegheny, was born in that city June 14, 1836; was educated at 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 defeated by Alexander G. Cochrane, Democrat, and Samuel A. Purviance, Independent Republican; and was electel to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 12,506 votes against 8,326 votes for Alexander G. Cochrane, Democrat. Re-elected. TWENTY-FOURTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Beaver, Lawrence, and Washington. WiLLiAM S. SHALLENBERGER, of Rochester, was born at Mount Pleasant, Westmoreland County, Pennsylvania, November 24, 1839; was educated at public schools and at Lewisburg Congressional Directory. University; was engaged in mercantile pursuits before and since the late war; entered the Union Army in 1862 in the One hundred and fortieth Regiment of Pennsylvania Volun-teers, and was soon afterward appointed Adjutant of the regiment; was wounded in the battles of Chancellorsville, Gettysburg, and the Wilderness, and was mustered out of service in October, 1864, on account of disability from wounds received; was Chairman of the Beaver County Republican Committee in 1872 and 1874; and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 13,151 votes against 10,648 votes for R. B. McComb, Democrat and Greenback, and 106 votes for J. D. Glenn, Temperance. Re-elected. TWENTY-FIFTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Armstrong, Clarion, Forest, Indiana, and Jefferson. HARRY WHITE, of Indiana, was bornin Indiana County, Pennsylvania, January 12, 1834; received a collegiate education, graduating in 1854; studied law with Hon. Thomas White; was admitted to the barin June, 1855; commenced practice at Indiana, Pennsylvania, and con-‘tinued until the commencement of hostilities in 1861 ; entered the Union Army as Major of the Sixty-seventh Pennsylvania Infantry; was elected, while sé€tving in the Army, a State Sena-tor, serving in the winter of 1862-63; returned to his command, and at the battle of Win-chester, in June, 1863, when Lee was on his Gettysburg campaign, was captured; the fall election of 1863 made a tie in the State Senate without his vote, and active efforts were made to secure his exchange, but without success, the Confederate Government refusing, and sent him to solitary confinement at Salisbury, North Carolina; before he left Libbey prison, how-ever, he sent his resignation as State Senator clandestinely to Pennsylvania, concealed ina Testa-ment, by a surgeon; he remained in prison sixteen months, and made his escape, reaching the Federal lines near Atlanta; in October, 1864, he returned to his command and served until the end of the war, having meanwhile been promoted to the colonelcy of his regi-ment and brevetted Brigadier-General ; was re-elected to the State Senate in the fall of 1865, for three years; was re-elected in 1868 for three years, and in 1871 for three years, serving as Speaker of the Senate at the close of the term of 1871; was nominated in 1872 as Congressman * at Large, and Delegate at Large to the Constitutional Convention, but declined the congressional nomination, but was elected to that convention; since that time has actively practised his pro-fession ; and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 15,136 votes against 13,397 votes for George A. Jenks, Democrat. Re-elected. TWENTY-SIXTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Butler, Crawford, and Mercer. Jorn M. THOMPSON, of Butler, was born in Butler County, Pennsylvania, January 4, 1829; was educated in the common schools and at the Witherspoon Institute; studied law, was ad-mitted to the bar in 1854, and has since practised; onthe breaking.out of the war, he entered the Union Army, and closed his services as Lieutenant-Colonel of the One hundred and thirty-fourth Pennsylvania Volunteers, having participated in various battles, and received serious wounds at the battle of Fredericksburg; served two terms in the Pennsylvania Legis-lature, the last as Speaker of the House; was elected to fill a portion of the Forty-third Con-gress, and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 18,511 votes against 16,486 votes for James Sheakley, Democrat. TWENTY-SEVENTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Erie, Venango, and Warren. Lewis F. WATSoN, of Warren, was born in Crawford County, Pennsylvania, April 14, 1819; received an academic education ; engaged in mercantile pursuits, and for the past fifteen years has been an extensive operator in lumber and in the production of petroleum ; was elected President of the Warren Savings-Bank at its organization in 1870,a position which he still holds; was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 15,640 votes against 12,093 votes for William L. Scott, Democrat; 327 votes for Samuel Axtell, Prohibition, and 249 votes for C. C. Camp, Greenback. RHODE ISLAND. SENATORS. HENRY B. ANTHONY, of Providence, was born in Coventry, Rhode Island, April 1, 1815; graduated at Brown University, Rhode Island; assumed the editorial charge of ‘The Provi-dence Journal;”’ was elected Governor of Rhode Island in 1849; re-elected in 1850, and de-clined a re-election ; was elected to the United States Senate as a Union Republican to succeed Philip Allen, Democrat, and took his seat in 1859; was re-elected in 1864, was again re-. elected in 1870, and was again re-elected in 1876. He was elected President of the Senate pro tempore March 23, 1869, and was re-elected March 10, 1871. His term of service will expire March 3, 1883. AMBROSE E. BURNSIDE, of Providence, was born at Liberty, Indiana, May 23, 1824; entered West Point in his nineteenth year, and graduated ‘in 1847; served in the Mexican and Indian wars, and resigned in 1852 to manufacture a breech-loading rifle of his own inven= Senators and. Representatives. 63 tion; removed to Illinois when appointed Treasurer of the Illinois Central Railroad in 1858; entered the Union Army in April, 1861, as Colonel of the First Rhode Island Volunteer Infantry; commanded a brigade at the first battle of Bull Run; was promoted Brigadier and Major General; commanded successively the expedition to North Carolina in 1862, the left wing of the Union Army at Antietam, the Army of the Potomac, and the Ninth Army Corps, resigning in April, 1865; was elected Governor of Rhode Island in 1866, 67, and ’68; visited Europe in 1870, and was admitted within the German and French lines in and around Paris, acting as a medium of communication between the hostile nations in the interests of conciliation ; was elected to the United States Senate as a Republican, to succeed William Sprague, Independent, and took his seat March 4, 1875. His term of service will expire March 3, 1881. ’ REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. Cities and fowns.—Providence, Newport; Barrington, Bristol, East Providence, James-town, Little Compton, Middletown, New Shoreham, Pawtucket, Portsmouth, Tiverton, and Warren. BeNnjaMIN T. EAMES, of Providence, was born at Dedham, Massachusetts, June 4, 1818; graduated at Yale College in 1843; studied law, was admitted to the bar, and has practised at Providence since 1845; was a member of the House of Representatives in the General Assembly of Rhode Island in 1859, ’68, and ’69, serving the lastyear as Speaker, and was a member of the State Senate in 1854, ’55, 56, ’59, and ’63; was a Delegate to the National Republican Convention at Chicago in 1860; was elected to the Forty-second, Forty-third, and Forty-fourth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 8,516 votes against 5,063 votes for Edward W. Brunson, Democrat. Declined a renomination. SECOND DISTRICT. Zowns.—Burrillville, Charlestown, Coventry, Cranston, Cumberland, East Greenwich, Exeter, Foster, Gloucester, Hopkinton, Johnston, Lincoln, North Kingston, North Provi-dence, North Smithfield, Richmond, Scituate, Smithfield, South Kingston, Warwick, West-erly, West Greenwich, and Woonsocket. LaTiMER W. BALLOU, of Woonsocket, was born at Cumberland, Rhode Island, March 1, 1812; received his education at the public schools and academies in the vicinity; removed to Cambridge, Massachusetts, in 1828, and learned the art of printing at ¢‘The University Press;” established ¢The Cambridge Press’ in 1835, and continued in the business until 1842, when he removed to Woonsocket, Rhode Island, and engaged in mercantile pursuits; was chosen in 1850 Cashier of the Woonsocket Falls Bank, and Treasurer of the Woonsocket Institution for Savings, which positions he has retained for twenty-five years; was active in the organization of the Republican party, and was President of the Fremont Club in Woon-socket in 1856; was Presidential Elector on the Lincoln and Hamlin ticket in 1860; was a Delegate to the National Republican Convention which nominated Grant and Wilson, at Philadelphia, in 1872; was elected to the Forty-fourth Congress, and was re-elected to the ° Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 7,179 votes against 5,295 votes for Charles H. Page, Democrat. Re-elected. SOUTH CAROLINA. SENATORS. Joun JAMES PATTERSON, of Charleston, was born at Waterloo, Juniata County, Pennsyl-vania, August 8, 1830; graduated at Jefferson College, Pennsylvania, in 1848; was editor of ‘The Juniata Sentinel” in the Scott presidential campaign of 1852, and for ten years after-ward was editor of ‘“ The Harrisburg Telegraph ;”’ was engaged in banking and in the man-agement of railroads; was a member of the State Legislature of Pennsylvania in 1858, ’59, ’60, and ’61; removed to South Carolina in 1869 ; served in the Union Army on the staff of Gen-eral Williams, of Pennsylvania; was elected to the Senate of the United States, as a Republican, to succeed Frederick A. Sawyer, Republican, and took his seat March 4, 1873. His term of service will expire March 3, 1879. M. C. BUTLER, of Kdgefield, was born near Greenville, South Carolina, March 8, 1836; received a classical education at the academy at Edgefield, and entered the South Carclina College in October, 1854; left this institution before graduating, and studied law at Stonelands, the residence of his uncle, Hon. A. P. Butler, near Edgefield Court-Hause; was admitted to the bar in December, 1857; practised at Edgefield Court-House ; was elected to the Legis-lature 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, and was admitted to his seat December 2, 1877. His term will expire March 3, 1883. Congressional Directory. REPRESENTATIVES, | FIRST DISTRICT, { : Counties.—Chesterfield, Darlington, Georgetown, Horry, Marion, Marlboro’, Sumter, and \ Williamsburg. | Josep H. RAINEY, of Georgetown, was born at Georgetown, South Carolina, (where both of his parents were slaves, but by their industry obtained their freedom, ) June 21, 1832. Although debarred by law from attending school, he acquired a good education, and further Ha improved his mind by observation and travel. His father was a barber, and he followed that occupation at Charleston till 1862, when, having been forced to work on the fortifications of the Confederates, he escaped to the West Indies, where he remained until the close of the war, | when he returned to his native town. He was elected a Delegate to the State Constitutional | Convention of 1868, and was a member of the State Senate of South Carolina in 1870, resigning ua when elected to the Forty-first Congress as a Republican to fill the vacancy caused by the non-reception of B. F. Whittemore; was elected to the Forty-second, Forty-third, and Forty- fourth Congresses; was a Presidential Elector in 1876, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth | Congress as a Republican, receiving 18,180 votes against 16,661 votes for J. S. Richardson, || Democrat. SECOND DISTRICT. Counties.—Charleston, Clarendon, Lexington, and Orangeburg. : A RicHARD H. CAIN, of Charleston, was born in Greenbrier County, Virginia, April 12, 1825; removed to Ohio in 1831, and settled in Gallipolis; received a limited education; entered the ministry at an early age; became a student at Wilberforce University, at Xenia, Ohio, in 1860; removed to Brooklyn, N. Y., where he discharged ministerial duties for four years; was sent as a missionary to the freedmen in South Carolina; was chosen a member of the Constitutional Convention of South Carolina; was elected a member of the State Senate and served two years; edited a newspaper from 1868; was elected to the Forty-third Congress as a Republican, receiving 21,385 votes against 16,071 votes for M. P. O’Connor, Democrat. THIRD DISTRICT. Counties.—Abbeville, Anderson, Laurens, Newberry, Oconee, Pickens, and Richland. \ 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 7849; 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 ; was elected Colonel of the same when re-organized at the expiration of their term of service; was relieved from service by reason of wounds received on the 17th of September, 1862, at Antietam; 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 six years; was a Delegate to the National Democratic Convention at Saint Louis that nominated Tilden and Hendricks; and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 21,479 votes against 15,553 votes for L. Cass Carpenter, Republican. Re-elected. FOURTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Chester, Fairfield, Greenville,» Kershaw, Lancaster, Spartanburg, Union, and York, = -Jou~ H. EvINS, of Spartanburg, was born in Spartanburg District, (now cdunty,) South -Carolina, July 18, 1830; entered South Carolina College in December, 1850, and graduated in 1853; studied law, and was admitted to practice in 1856; was an officer in the Confederate service, serving first as a First Lieutenant in the Fifth South Carolina Regiment, and after-wards as a Captain in the Palmetto Sharpshooters ; was wounded, and being disabled from active service in the field was appointed Lieutenant-Colonel, and assigned to duty in his own State; was a member of the Legislature of South Carolina for two terms; and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 21,875 votes against 16,071 votes for A. S. Wallace, Republican. Re-elected. FIFTH DISTRICT. Crntiori=Alln, Barnwell, Beaufort, Colleton, and Edgefield. KOBERT 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 seafaring life; 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, 1363, and placed in es Senators and Representatives. 65 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 elected to the Forty-fourth Congress, and re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 19,954 votes against 18,516 votes for G. D. Tillman, Democrat. TENNESSEE. SENATORS. James E. BAILEY, of Clarksville, was born in Montgomery County, Tennessee, August 15, 1822; was educated at the Clarksville Academy and the University of Nashville; was admitted to the bar at Clarksville, Tennessee, in 1843; was a member of the State House of Repre-sentatives in 1853; and was elected to the United States Senate (to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Andrew Johnson, which had been filled by appointment by D. M. Key) as a Democrat, taking his seat January 29, 1877. His term of service will expire March 3, 1881. IstAM G. HARRIS, of Memphis, was born in Franklin County, Tennessee, in 1818; was educated at the academy at Winchendon; studied law, was admitted to the bar, and commenced practise 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 tp Memphis, and there resumed the practice of his professicn; was a Presidential Elector for the State at large in 1856; was elected Governor of Tennessee as a Democrat in 185%, 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 engaged in it when elected to the United States Senate, as a Democrat, (defeating Judge L. L. Hawkins, Re-publican,) to succeed Henry Cooper, Democrat, and took his seat March 5, 1877. His term of service will expire March 3, 1883. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. Counties.—Carter, Claiborne, Cocke, Grainger, Greene, Hamblen, Hancock, Hawkins, Johnson, Sullivan, and Washington. James HENRY RANDOLPH, of Newport, was born in Jefferson County, Tennessee, October 19, 1825; was educated at Holston College, Newmarket, Tennessee; read law, and com-menced practise in 1850; was elected to the State Legislature for 1857 and ’58, and again in 1860-61 ; was elected to the Senatein 1865 ; was elected Judge of the Second Judicial Circuit of Tennessee in 1869, and re-elected after the Constitutional Convention in 1870, which office he held until he resigned to become a candidate for the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 12,349 votes against 11,215 votes for William McFarland, Democrat. SECOND DISTRICT. Counties.—Anderson, Blount, Campbell, Jefferson, Knox, Loudon, Monroe, Morgan, Roane, Scott, Sevier, and Union. i Jaco M. THORNBURGH, of Knoxville, was born at Newmarket, East Tennessee, July 3, : 1837, and there educated at Holston College ; studied law, and was admitted to the bar in 1861 ; in May, 1862, joined the Federal Army in Kentucky under General George W. Morgan as a private, and was promoted until he became Colonel of the Fourth Tennessee Cavalry, in June, 1863 ; served under Generals Rosecrans, Sherman, Thomas, and Canby until the close of the war, when he returned to. Jefferson County, East Tennessee, and resumed the practice of law ; in 1867 he removed to Knoxville, where he was appointed by Governor Brownlow Attorney-General of the Third Judicial District of Tennessee, and was elected to the same position in 1869, and again in 1870; he was elected to the Forty-third and Forty-fourth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 14,326 votes against 9,603 votes for W. Cullom, Democrat. THIRD DISTRICT. Counties. —Bledsoe, Bradley, Cannon, Cumberland, DeKalb, Grundy, Hamilton, James, Marion, McMinn, Meigs, Polk, Rhea, Sequatchie, Van Buren, Warren, and White. GEORGE (. DIBRELL, of Sparta, was born in White County, April 12, 1822; received a good common-school education ; is a farmer ; was a member of the Legislature of Tennessee in 1861; was a member of the State Constitutional Convention in 1870; held several local offices; was a Brigadier-General in the Confederate Army; was elected to the Forty-fourth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 13,132 votes against 8,218 votes for G. M. Drake, Republican. Re-elected. 5 Congressional Directory. FOURTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Clay, Fentress, Jackson, Macon, Overton, Putnam, Robertson, Smith, Sumner, Trousdale, and Wilson. HAvywooD YANCEY RIDDLE, of Lebanon, was born at Van Buren, Hardeman County, Tennessee, June 20, 1834; graduated at Union University, Murfreesboro’, Tennessee, in July, 1854, and at the Lebanon Law School in June, 1857; was Clerk and Master of the Chancery Court at Lebanon, Tennessee, from August, 1865, to December, 1875, when he was elected to the Forty-fourth Congress, (to fill the vacancy caused by the death of S. M. Fite,) and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 11,957 votes against 3,545 votes for R. A. Cox, Democrat, and 1,437 votes for R. F. Patton, Republican. FIFTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Bedford, Coffee, Franklin, Lincoln, Marshall, Moore, and Rutherford. JoHN MORGAN BRIGHT, of Fayetteville, was born at Fayetteville, Tennessee, January 20, 1817; received his early education at Fayetteville, and at Bingham’s School, Hillsborough, North Carolina; graduated from Nashville University, Tennessee, in September, 1839, and from the Law Department of Transylvania University, Lexington, Kentucky, in March, 1841; practised law; was a member of the Legislature of Tennessee in 1847-48; received the de-gree of LL.D. from the Nashville University ; was elected to the Forty-second, Forty-third, and Forty-fourth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 15,094 votes against 5,309 for Galbraith, Republican. Re-elected. SIXTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Cheatham, Davidson, Dickson, Houston, Humphreys, Montgomery, and Stewart. JouN F. Housg, of Clarksville, was born in Williamson County, Tennessee, January 9, 1827; received his early education at a grammar-school, taught by Edwin Paschal, sr., in Williamson County, Tennessee; afterward entered Transylvania University, Lexington, Kentucky, but did not graduate there, having left at the end of the junior year; studied law and graduated at the Lebanon Law School, Tennessee, in 1850, and has since continued to practise his profession; was a member of the Tennessee Legislature in 1853-54; was Presi-dential Elector on the Bell and Everett ticket in 1860; was a member of the Provisional Con-gress of the Confederate States from Tennessee; at the expiration of his term of service in said body he entered the Confederate Army, and continued therein until the close of the war, and was paroled at Columbus, Mississippi, in June, 1865; was a Delegate from Tennessee to the National Convention of the Democratic party that nominated Seymour and Blair in 1868 ; was a member of the State Constitutional Convention of Tennessee in 1870; was elected to the Forty-fourth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 15,719 votes against 8,087 votes for W. F. Prosser, Republican. Re-elected. SEVENTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Giles, Hickman, Lawrence, Lewis, Maury, Wayne, and Williamson. 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 afterward 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 to the Forty-second, Forty-third, and Forty-fourth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 12,237 votes against 3,767 votes for Cliff, Republican. Re-elected. EIGHTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Benton, Carroll, Decatur, Hardin, Henderson, Henry, Madison, McNairy, and Perry. Joun D. C. ATKINS, of Paris, was born in Henry County, Tennessee, June 4, 1825; re ceived a good early education, and graduated at the East Tennessee University in 1846 ; studied law; is a farmer; was elected a member of the Tennessee House of Representatives in 1849 and in 1851; was elected to the State Senate of Tennessee in 1855; was chosen a Presidential Elector in 1856; was elected a member of the House of Representatives in the Congress of the United States in 1857; was on the Breckinridge electoral ticket in 1860 ; was Lieutenant-Colonel of the Fifth Tennessee Regiment in the Confederate Armyin 1861; was elected to the Confederate Provisional Congress in August, 1861 ; was re-elected in Novem-ber, 1861, and again elected in November, 1863; was elected to the Forty-third and Forty-fourth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 13,112 votes against 8,095 votes for S. W, Hawkins, Republican. Re-elected. | 1 { { i Senators and Representatives. 67 NINTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Dyer, Gibson, Haywood, Lake, Lauderdale, Obion, Tipton, and Weakley. WirLLiaM P. CALDWELL, of Gardner, was born at Christmasville, Carroll County, Ten-nessee, November 8, 1832; was educated at McLemoresville, Tennessee, and at Princeton, Kentucky; attended law-school at Cumberland University, and commenced the practice of law at Dresden, Tennessee, in 1855; was a member of the Tennessee Legislature in 1857 and in 1870; served on the Douglas electoral ticket in 1860; was a Delegate to the National Dem-ocratic Convention in 1868; and was elected to the Forty-fourth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 14,799 votes against 6,509 votes for Folk, Independent Democrat. TENTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Fayette, Hardeman, and Shelby. CASEY YOUNG, of Memphis, is a lawyer by ‘profession ; was elected to the Forty-fourth Congress, and re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 12,803 votes against 11,966 votes for William M. Randolph, Republican. Re-elected. TEXAS. SENATORS. SAM 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 1357, 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 as a Democrat, to succeed James W. Flanagan, Republican, and took his seat March 5, 1875. His term of service will expire March 3, 1881. 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 Confederate Army as private and afterward as Captain; was appointed District Judge in June, 1865; was nomi-nated 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 impedi-ment 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, and took his seat March 4, 1877. His term of service will expire March 3, 1883. REPRESENTATIVES, FIRST DISTRICT. Counties.—Anderson, Angelina, Chambers, Cherokee, Hardin, Henderson, Houston, Jasper, Jefferson, Nacogdoches, Orange, Panola, Polk, Rusk, Sabine, San Augustine, Shelby, Smith, Trinity, and Tyler. jonN 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 1839-743; 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 ap-pointed Postmaster-General of the .Provisional Government of the Confederacy March 6, 1861, was re-appointed on the permanent organization of the Confederate Government in 1862, and occupied the position until the close of the war; was also appointed Acting Secre-tary 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 Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 13,697 votes against 6,416 for S. W. Cooper, Republican, Re-elected. 68 Congressional Directory. SECOND DISTRICT. Counties.—Bowie, Cass, Delta, Fannin, Gregg, Harrison, Hopkins, Hunt, Lamar, Marion, Rains, Red River, Titus, Upshur, Wood, and Van Zandt. 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 Adjutant-General, with the rank of Colonel, of the State of Texas; was elected to the State Legislature in 1864 ; was elected to the Forty-fourth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 17,326 votes against 9,130 votes for S. H. Russell, Republican. Re-elected. THIRD DISTRICT. Counties.—Archer, Baylor, Callahan, Clay, Collins, Cooke, Dallas, Denton, Eastland, Ellis, Erath, Grayson, Hardeman, Haskell, Hill, Jack, Johnson, Jones, Knox, Kaufman, Montague, Palo Pinto, Parker, Rockwell, Shackelford, Stephens, Tarrant, Taylor, Throck-morton, Wichita, Wilbarger, and Young. 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 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 to the Forty-fourth Con-gress, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 24,118 votes against 1,283 votes for J. C. Bigger, Republican. FOURTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Bell, Bosque, Brazos, Comanche, Coryell, Falls, Fort Bend, Freestone, Ham-ilton, Harris, Leon, Limestone, Madison, McLennan, Montgomery, Navarro, Robertson, San Jacinto, Walker, and Waller. ROGER Q. M1LLs, of Corsicana, was elected to the Forty-third and Forty-fourth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress, receiving 20,731 votes against 8,839 votes for J. P. Osterhout, Republican. Re-elected. \ FIFTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Austin, Bastrop, Brazoria, Burleson, Burnet, Coleman, Colorado, Concho, Fayette, Galveston, Lampasas, Lavaca, Matagorda, McCulloch, Milam, Runnels, San Saba, Travis, Washington, Wharton, and Williamson. DE Wirt C. GIDDINGS, of Brenham, was born in Susquehanna County, Pennsylvania, July 18, 1827; received an academic education; studied law at Honesdale, Pennsylvania, and, re-moving to Texas, was admitted to the bar there in 1852; practised at Brenham until the com-mencement of hostilities; entered the Confederate service and served until the close of the war; was a member of the State Constitutional Convention of 1866; was elected to the Forty-second and Forty third Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Demo-crat, receiving 15,286 votes against 13,237 votes for G. W. Jones, Independent. SIXTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Aransas, Atascosa, Bandera, Bee, Bexar, Blanco, Caldwell, Calhoun, Cameron, Comal, Dimmit, De Witt, Duval, Edwards, El Paso, Encinal, Frio, Gillespie, Goliad, Gon-zales, Guadalupe, Hays, Hidalgo, Jackson, Karnes, Kendall, Kerr, Kimball, Kinney, Llano, La Salle, Live Oak, Mason, Maverick, McMullen, Medina, Menard, Nueces, Pecos, Presidio, Refugio, San Patricio, Starr, Uvalde, Victoria, Webb, Wilson, Zapata, and Zavalla. GUSTAVE SCHLEICHER, of Cuero, was born at Darmstadt, Germany, November 19, 1823; was educated at the University of Giessen, in the Grand Duchy of Hesse-Darmstadt; was engaged as a Civil Engineer in the construction of several European railroads; emigrated to Texas in 1847, and, after passing some time on the frontiers, located at San Antonio in 1850; was a member of the State House of Representatives in 1853 and 54, and of the State Senate, 1859-'61; was elected to the Forty-fourth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 11,951 votes against 2,711 votes for J. P. Newcomb, Republican, Re-elected, ; " ! Senators and Representatives. 69 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, serving 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, re-elected for the term ending in 1875, and re-elected for the term ending in 1881. He was a member of the Electoral Commission of 1876. His term of service will expire March 3, 1881. JusTIN S. MORRILL, of Strafford, was born at Strafford, Vermont, April 14, 1810; received an academic education; was a merchant, and afterwards engaged in agricultural pursuits; was a Representative in the Thirty-fourth, Thirty-fifth, Thirty-sixth, Thirty-seventh, Thirty-eighth, and Thirty-ninth Congresses; was elected to the United States Senate as a Union Republican, to succeed Luke P. Poland, Union Republican, and took his seat March 4, 1867; and was re-elected in 1872. His term of service will expire March 3, 1879. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. Counties.—Addison, Bennington, Rutland, and Washington. CHARLES I. Jovce, of Rutland, was born near Andover, England, January 30, 1830; was educated at Waitsfield Academy and Newbury Seminary; studied law, and was admitted to the bar; was two years State Librarian; two years District Attorney for Washington County ; served in the Union Army as Major and Lieutenant-Colonel of the Second Vermont Volunteers ; was a member of the House of Representatives in 1869, '70, and ’71, and was Speaker of the House in 1870 and '71; was elected to the Forty-fourth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 14,496 votes against 7,057 votes for Childs, Democrat. Re-elected. : SECOND DISTRICT. Counties.—Caledonia, Orange, Windsor, and Windham. DubpLEY CHASE DENISON, of Royalton, was born at Royalton, Vermont, September 13, 1819; received a classical education, graduating at the University of Vermont in 1840; studied law, was admitted to the bar in 1844, and has practised since; was a member of the State Senate of Vermontin 1853 and ’54, and of the State House of Representatives in 1861, ’62, and ’63; was State’s Attorney, 1858-60; was United States District Attorney for the District of Vermont; was elected to the Forty-fourth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 14,430 votes against 5,739 votes for Dickey, Democrat. THIRD DISTRICT. Counties.—Chittenden, Essex, Franklin, Grand Isle, Lamoille, and Orleans. GEORGE WHITMAN HENDEE, of Morrisville, was born at Stowe, Vermont, Novembel 30, 1832; received an academic education; studied law, was admitted to the bar, and has been in practice since; was Prosecuting Attorney in 1858-59; was a member of the Vermont House of Representatives in 1861 and ’62; was a member of the State Senate of Vermont in 1866, ’67, and ’68, and President pro tempore the last year; was Lieutenant-Governor of Vermont in 1869 ; was Governor of Vermont in 1870; was elected to the Forty-third and Forty-fourth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 11,974 votes against 5,367 votes for Edwards, Democrat. VIRGINIA. SENATORS. Jonn W. JouNSTON, of Abingdon, was born at Panicello, near Abingdon, September 9, 1818; was educated at the Abingdon Academy and the South Carolina College, at Columbia, South Carolina; studied law at the University of Virginia; was licensed in 1839, and has since actively practised his profession; was Commonwealth’s Attorney for Tazewell County two years; was a member of the Senate of the State of Virginia in 1846-47 and 1847-48; was Judge of the Circuit Court of Virginia for a year; was elected United States Senator from Virginia as a Conservative, and took his seat January 24, 1870; he was re-elected in 1871, and again re-elected in 1875. His term of service will expire March 3, 1883. RoBERT E. WITHERS, of Wytheville, Virginia, was born in Campbell County, Virginia, -September 18, 1821; graduated in the Medical Department of the University of Virginia in Congressional Directory. 1841 ; practised his profession in his native county until 1858, when he removed to Danville, Virginia, where he prosecuted his practice until the commencement of the civil war; was a Whig in politics, and a Union man until the passage of the ordinance of secession by Virginia; entered the Confederate Army as Major of Infantry in April, 1861, and during the same year was promoted Colonel of the Eighteenth Virginia Regiment, which he commanded until retired in consequence of numerous disabling wounds, and appointed to command the post at Danville, Virginia, which position he held until the close of the war; removed in January, 1866, to Lynchburg, Virginia, and established a daily political paper, devoted to the interests of the Conservative party, which he continued to edit until 1868, when he was nominated for Governor by the Conservative Convention at Richmond, and canvassed the State in opposi-tion to the Underwood constitution, which the military authorities refused to submit to a vote of the people; in 1869 he withdrew in favor of Gilbert C. Walker, nominated for Governor by the Liberal Republicans; he was appointed Elector for the State at large on the Greeley ticket in 1872; in 1873 was elected Lieutenant-Governor as a Conservative, receiving 27,546 majority over his Republican competitor, C. P. Ramsdell ; was elected to the United States Senate as a Conservative, to succeed John F. Lewis, Republican, and took his seat March 4, 1875. His term of service will expire March 3, 1881. : REPRESENTATIVES, FIRST DISTRICT. Counties.—Accomack, Essex, Gloucester, King and Queen, King George, King William, Lancaster, Matthews, Middlesex, Northampton, Northumberland, Prince William, Richmond, Spottsylvania, Stafford, Westmoreland, and the town of Fredericksburg. ; BEVERLY B. DoUGLAS, of Ayletts, was born in New Kent County, Virginia, December 21, 1822 ; received an academic and collegiate education ; studied law, was graduated from the Law School of Judge Beverly Tucker, William and Mary College, 1843, and was admitted to the bar in 1844 ; was a member of the Constitutional Convention to amend the State Constitution in 1850-51; was a member of the State Senate for twelve years; was a Presidential Elector on the Breckinridge and Lane ticket in 1860; entered the Confederate Army as First Lieu-tenant in Lee’s Rangers, and was successively promoted to the rank of Major of the Fifth Virginia Cavalry; was chosen a Delegate to the Democratic National Convention, at New York, which nominated Seymour and Blair, but was unable to attend; was elected to the Forty-fourth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiv-ing 14,228 votes against 10,940 votes for L. C. Bristow, Republican. SECOND DISTRICT. Counties.—Charles City, Elizabeth City, Isle of Wight, James City, Nansemond, New Kent, Norfolk, Prince George, Princess Anne, Southampton, Surry, Sussex, Warwick, York, and the cities of Norfolk, Portsmouth,and Williamsburg. Joan Goobg, Jr., of Norfolk, was born in Bedford County, Virginia, May 27, 1829; attended the New London Academy in early life, and graduated at Emory and Henry College in 1848; studied law with Hon. John W. Brockenbrough at Lexington, was admitted to the bar in April, 1851, and has practised since; was elected to the Virginia House of Delegates in 1851 and ’56 ; was on the Democratic ticket as Presidential Elector in 1852 and ’56; was elected in 1860 a member of the State Convention of Virginia which passed the ordinance of secession ; was twice elected a member of the Confederate Congress, and served in that capacity from February 22, 1862, until the close of the war; was appointed a member of the National Democratic Executive Committee in 1868, and re-appointed in 1872 for four years ; was elected to the Forty-fourth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 16,885 votes against 14,989 for Joseph Segar, Republican. Re-elected. THIRD DISTRICT. Counties.—Caroline, Chesterfield, Hanover, Henrico, Louisa, and the cities of Richmond and Manchester. GILBERT CARLTON WALKER, of Richmond, was born at Binghamton, New York, August I, 1833; was educated at Binghamton Academy, Williams College, Massachusetts, and Hamilton College, New York, graduating from the latter institution in July, 1854; studied law, was admitted to the bar in September, 1855, and practised in New York and Chicago until 1864, when he removed to Norfolk, Virginia, and engaged in the business of banking; was elected in July, 1869, Governor of Virginia, over H. H. Wells, Republican, by a majority of over 18,000, and retired from that office in January, 1874; elected to the Forty-fourth Con-gress, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 15,536 votes against 13,430 votes for C. S. Mills, Republican. ; FOURTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Amelia, Brunswick, Charlotte, Cumberland, Dinwiddie, Greenville, Lunen-burg, Mecklenburg, Nottoway, Powhatan, Prince Edward, and the city of Petersburg. JosEpH JORGENSEN, of Petersburg, was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, February 11, 1] Senators and Representatives. 71 1844 ; graduated at the Medical Department of the University of Pennsylvania; was Assist- ant Surgeon United States Army from 1865 to 1868; was elected to the Legislature of Vir- ginia from Prince Edward County in November, 1871 ; was appointed Postmaster of Peters- burg, and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 13,896 votes against 12,492 votes for W. E. Hinton, jr., Democrat, and 383 votes for M. R. DeMortie, Independent. Re-elected. FIFTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Carroll, Floyd, Franklin, Grayson, Halifax, Henry, Patrick, Pittsylvania, and the town of 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 University 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; participated 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 Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 15,146 votes against 9,842 votes for D. S. Lewis, Republican. Re-elected. SIXTH DISTRICT. Counties.— Alleghany, Amherst, Appomattox, Bedford, Botetourt, Buckingham, Campbell, Nelson, Rockbridge, and the city of Lynchburg. : JouN 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 Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress, receiving 16,425 votes against 11,127 for George H. Burch. Re-elected. SEVENTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Albemarle, Augusta, Bath, Fluvanna, Goochland, Greene, Highland, Page, Rockingham, Shenandoah, and the city of Staunton. Joun T. HARRIS, of Harrisonburg, was born in Albemarle County, Virginia, May 8, 1825 ; studied law and practises the profession; was Attorney for the Commonwealth from 1852 to 1859; was Presidential Elector on the Buchanan ticket in 1856; was a member of the Thirty-sixth Congress of the United States; was a member of the Confederate Legislature from 1863 to 1865; was Judge of the Twelfth Judicial Circuit of Virginia from 1866 to 1869; was elected to the Forty-second, Forty-third, and Forty-fourth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 17,143 votes against 6,250 votes for Everett W. Early, Republican. Re-elected. EIGHTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Alexandria, Clarke, Culpeper, Fairfax, Fauquier, Frederick, Loudoun, Madi-son, Orange, Rappahannock, Warren, and the cities of Alexandria and Winchester. Eppa HUNTON, of Warrenton, was born in Fauquier County, Virginia, September 23, 1823 ; his early education was limited; studied and practised law ; was Commonwealth Attor-ney for the county of Prince William from 1849 up to 1862; was elected to the State Conven-tion of Virginia which assembled at Richmond in February, 1861; served through its first session, and then entered the Confederate Army as Colonel of the Eighth Virginia Infantry ; was promoted after the battle of Gettysburg, and served through the residue ot the war as Brigadier-General, succeeding Brigadier-General Garnett; was captured at Sailor’s Creek, April 6, 1865, and was released from Fort Warren in July, 1865; was elected to the Forty-third and Forty-fourth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 16,660 votes against 10,175 votes for J. C. O'Neal, Republican. He was a member of the Electoral Commission of 1876. Re-elected. NINTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Bland, Buchanan, Craig, Giles, Lee, Montgomery, Pulaski, Roanoke, Russell, Scott, Smyth, Tazewell, Washington, Wise, and Wythe. AUBURN LORENZO PRIDEMORE, of Jonesville, was born in Scott County, Virginia, June 27, 1837; was brought up on a farm, receiving a very limited education until, by his own exer-tions, alternately teaching and going to school, he attained a fair English education ; in August, 1861, he raised a company of volunteer infantry, and served as its Captain until June, 1862, Congressional Directory. when he was promoted Major of the Twenty-first Battalion of Virginia Infantry; was again promoted in December, 1862, to Lieutenant-Colonel of Infantry, and in October, 1863, to Col-onel of Cavalry, and commanded the Sixty-fourth Virginia Cavalry until the close of the war was elected a member of the Virginia House of Delegates in March, 1865, but the close of the war prevented him from taking his seat; commenced the study of law in 1865, was ad-mitted to the bar, and has since practised at Jonesville; was a member of the Virginia State Senate 1871-75; and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 15,127 votes against 4,791 votes for George T. Egbert, Republican. WEST VIRGINIA. SENATORS. HENRY G. Davis, of Piedmont, was born in Howard County, Maryland, November 16, 1823; received a country-school education; lived and worked upon a farm until 1843; was in the employ of the Baltimoreand Ohio Railroad Company for fourteen years ; commenced bank-ing and mining coal at Piedmont in 1858; is now President of the Piedmont National Bank, and is engaged in mining and shipping coal, manufacturing lumber, &c.; was elected to the House of Delegates of West Virginia in 1865; was a member of the National Democratic Conventions at New York in 1868 and at Baltimore in 1872; was elected to the State Senate of West Virginia in 1868 and ’70; was elected to the United States Senate as a Democrat, to succeed W. T. Willey, Republican, and took his seat March 4, 1871; and was re-elected in 1877. His term of service will expire March 3, 1883. FRANK HEREFORD, of Union, was born in Fauquier County, Virginia, July 4, 1825; grad-uated in 1845; studied law and practised his profession; was District Attorney of Sacramento County, California, from October, 1855, to October, 1857; was Presidential Elector on the Democratic ticket for the State at large in 1868; was elected a member of the House of Representatives in the Forty-second, Forty-third, and Forty-fourth Congresses. Was elected to the United States Senate to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Allen Taylor Caperton. His term of service will expire March 3, 1881. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. Counties.—Brooke, Calhoun, Doddridge, Gilmer, Hancock, Harrison, Lewis, Marshall, Ohio, Pleasants, Ritchie, Tyler, Wetzel, Wirt, and Wood. BENJAMIN WILSON, of Wilsonburg, was born in Harrison County, Virginia, (now West Virginia,) April 30, 1825; was educated at the Northwestern Virginia Academy at Clarks-burg; attended law school at Staunton; was admitted to the bar in 1848, and has since practised; was Commonwealth’s Attorney for Harrison County 1852-’60; was a member of the State Constitutional Convention of Virginia in 1861; was Presidential Elector on the Democratic ticket for the State at large in 1868; was a member of the State Constitutional Convention of West Virginia in 1871; was one of the Delegates from the State at large to the National Democratic Convention at Baltimore in 1872; was elected to the Forty-fourth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 17,902 votes against 16,067 votes for Charles F. Scott, Republican. Re-elected. . SECOND DISTRICT. Counties.—Barbour, Berkeley, Grant, Hampshire, Hardy, Jefferson, Marion, Mineral, Monongalia, Morgan, Pendleton, Pocahontas, Preston, Randolph, Taylor, Tucker, Upshur, and Webster. BeNJAMIN F. MARTIN, of Pruntytown, was born in Marion County, Virginia, October 2, 1828; lived and worked upon a farm until he was twenty-one years of age; was chiefly edu- cated at Allegheny College, Meadville, Pennsylvania, where he graduated with college honors in June, 1854; returned home, taught school at Fairmount, Marion County, for eighteen months ; studied law, was admitted to the bar, and commenced practise in March, 1856, re- moving in the following November to Pruntytown, where he has since resided; was a mem- ber of the Constitutional Convention of West Virginia in 1872 ; was a Delegate to the National Democratic Convention at Baltimore in 1872, and voted against the nomination of Mr. Greeley, but yielded him active and earnest support in the campaign; was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 18,156 votes against 14,283 votes for Ward H. Lamon, Republican. Re-elected. THIRD DISTRICT. . Counties.—Boone, Braxton, Cabell, Clay, Fayette, Greenbrier, Jackson, Kanawha, Lincoln, Logan, Mason, Mercer, Monroe, McDowell, Nicholas, Putnam, Raleigh, Roane, Summers, Wayne, and Wyoming. Joun E. KENNA, of Kanawha, was born at,Valcoulon, Virginia, (now West Virginia,) April 10, 1848; lived and worked on a farm ; entered the Confederate Army as a private soldier; Senators and Representatives. was wounded in that service in 1864, and was surrendered at Shreveport, Louisiana, in 1865 ; afterwards attended Saint Vincent’s College, Wheeling; studied law with Miller and Quarrier at Charleston; was admitted to the bar June 20, 1870, and has continued to practise 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 respective counties under statutory provision to hold the Circuit Courts of Lincoln and Wayne; and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 20,192 votes against 12,719 votes for B. J. Redmond, Republican. Re-elected. ’ WISCONSIN. SENATORS. TimoTHY O. HOWE, of Green Bay, was born at Livermore, Maine, February 24, 1816; received an academic education ; studied law and was admitted to the bar; was a member of the Legislature of the State of Maine in 1845, in the latter part of which year he removed to Wisconsin; was elected a Judge of the Circuit and Supreme Courts of Wisconsin in 1850, and held the office until he resigned in 1855; was elected to the United States Senate as a Union Republican to succeed Charles Durkee, and took his seat in 1861; was re-elected in 1867, and again re-elected in 1873. His term of service will expire March 3, 1879. ANGUS CAMERON, of La Crosse, was born at Caledonia, Livingston County, New York, July 4, 1826; received an academic education, studied law at Buffalo, New York, and grad-uated at the National Law School, Ballston Spa; removed to La Crosse, Wisconsin, in 1857; was a member of the State Senate of Wisconsin in 1863, 64, ’71, and ’72; was a member of the Legislative Assembly of Wisconsin in 1866 and ’6%, and was Speaker in 1367; was a member of the National Republican Convention at Baltimore in 1864 ; was one of the Regents of the University of Wisconsin 1866-75; was elected to the United States Senate by the votes of Republicans, Democrats, and Liberals, to succeed Matthew H. Carpenter, and took his seat March 4, 1875. His term of service will expire March 3, 1881. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. Counties.— Kenosha, Racine, Rock; Walworth, and Waukesha. CHARLES G. WILLIAMS, of Janesville, was born at Royalton, New York, October 18, 1829; received an academic education, and studied law at Rochester, in that State; removed to Wis-consin in 1856, and entered upon the practice of his profession; was Presidential Elector in 1868, and elected to the State Senate in that year; was re-elected to the State Senate in 1870, and twice chosen President pro tempore of that body ; was elected to the Forty-third and Forty-fourth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 18,206 votes against 12,478 votes for H. G. Winslow, Democrat. Re-elected. SECOND DISTRICT. Counties.—Columbia, Dane, Jefferson, and Sauk. LucieEN 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, was admitted to the bar in 185I, and has practised since; was elected District Attorney in 1855 and 56; was a member of the Legislative Assembly of Wisconsin in 1863, ’72, and ’74 ; was Commissioner of the Second District Board of Enrollment from September, 1363, to May 5, 1865; was a Delegate to the Republican National Convention at Chicago in 1868; was elected to the Forty-fourth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 15,073 votes against 14,745 for H. S. Orton, Democrat. Re-elected. THIRD DISTRICT. Counties.—Crawford, Grant, Green, Iowa, La Fayette, and Richland. GEORGE C. HAZELTON, of Boscobel, was born in Chester, Rockingham County, New Hampshire, January 3, 1833; graduated at Union College, Schenectady, New York, in 1858; studied law ; was admitted to the bar in the State of New York, and settled in Boscobel, Wis- consin, in 1863, where he has since practised his profession; was elected District Attorney of Grant County in 1864, and re-elected in 1866; in 1867 was elected State Senator, and chosen President pro tempore of the Senate, and was re-elected to the Senate in 1869; and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 15,582 votes against 13,034 votes for P. A. Orton, Democrat. Re-elected. FOURTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Milwaukee, Ozaukee, and Washington. WiLLiaAM P. LYNDE, of Milwaukee, was born at Sherburne, Chenango County, New York, December 16, 1817; graduated at Yale College in 1838; studied law, was admitted to the bar in New York in 1841, and removed the same year to Wisconsin, where he has practised Congressional Directory. ~ since ; was appointed Attorney-General of Wisconsin in 1844; was appointed United States District Attorney for the District of Wisconsin in 1845 ; was elected a Representative in the Thirtieth Congress, serving from December 6, 1847, to March 3, 1849; was elected Mayor of Milwaukee in 1860; was a member of the Legislative Assembly of Wisconsin in 1866, and a member of the State Senate in 1868 and ’69; was elected to the Forty-fourth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 17,653 votes against 11,952 votes for W. E. Smith, Republican. FIFTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Dodge, Fond du Lac, Manitowoc, and Sheboygan. EpwArRD S. BrAGG, of Fond du Lac, was born at Unadilla, New York, February 20, 1827; attended district school and academy, and completed his education at Geneva College; studied law, was admitted to the bar in New York in 1848, and commenced practice at Fond du Lac, Wisconsin, in 1850; was elected District Attorney in 1854; was a Delegate to the Charleston Convention in 1860; entered the Union Army, as a Captain, in 1861; was pro-moted, and held, successively, the rank of Major, Lieutenant-Colonel, Colonel, and Brigadier-General, and was mustered out of service in October, 1865; was appointed Postmaster at Fond du Lac by President Johnson in 1866; was elected to the State Senate and served in the years 1868 and ’69 ; was Delegate to the Baltimore Convention in 1872 ; was supported as the Demo -cratic candidate to succeed Matt. H. Carpenter, in 1875; was elected to the Forty-fifth Con-gress as a Democrat, receiving 19,544 votes against I4,I31 votes for George W. Carter, Republican. Re-elected. SIXTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Brown, Calumet, Door, Green Lake, Kewaunee, Outagamie, Waupaca, Wau-shara, and Winnebago. GABRIEL Bouck, of Oshkosh, was born at Fulton, Schoharie County, New York, Decem-ber 16, 1828; graduated at Union College in 1847 ; is by profession a lawyer; settled in Wis-consin in 1848; was Attorney-General of the State in 1858 and 1859; was a member of the State Assembly in 1860 and 1874, serving the last year as Speaker; was Democratic candidate for Congress in 1874; was Delegate to the National Democratic Conventions of 1868 and 1872; entered the military service in the war for the Union, as Captain, in 1861, and was promoted to Colonel in 1862; and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 20,623 votes against 17,847 votes for A. M. Kimball, Republican. Re-elected. SEVENTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Buffalo, Clark, Eau Claire, Jackson, La Crosse, Monroe, Pepin, Pierce, Saint Croix, Trempealeau, and Vernon. HerMAN L. HuMPHREY, of Hudson, was born at Candor, Tioga County, New York, March 14, 1830; received a public-school education, with the addition of one year in Court- “land Academy; became a merchant’s clerk at the age of sixteen in Ithaca, New York, and remained there for several years; studied law in the office of Walbridge & Finch, was admitted to the bar in July, 1854, and removed to Hudson, Wisconsin, where he commenced practice in January, 1855; was soon after appointed District Attorney of Saint Croix County, to fill a vacancy ; was appointed by the Governor County Judge of Saint Croix County to fill a vacancy ; in the fall of 1860 and in the spring of 1861 was elected for the full term of four years from the following January; was elected to the State Senate for two years, and in February, 1862, resigned the office of County Judge ; was elected Mayor of Hudson for one year ; was elected in the spring of 1866 Judge of the Eighth Judicial Circuit, and was re-elected in 1872, serving from January, 1867, until March, 1877; and was elected a Representative from. Wisconsin in the Forty-fifth Congress as-a Republican, receiving 20,702 votes against 13,220 votes for Martin R. Gage, Democrat, and 1,429 votes for Reuben May, Independent. Re-elected. EIGHTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Adams, Ashland, Barren, Bayfield, Burnett, Chippewa, Douglas, Dunn, Juneau, Marathon, Marquette, Oconto, Polk, Portage, Shawanaw, and Wood. THADDEUS C. POUND, of Chippewa Falls, was born at Elk, Warren County, Pennsylvania, December 6, 1833; received an academic education at Milton Academy, Wisconsin, and Rush-ford, Allegany County, New York; removed to Rock County, Wisconsin, in May, 1856, and has since resided there, engaged mainly in the manufacture of lumber and the mercantile busi-ness, being President of the Union Lumbering Company and of the Chippewa Falls and West-ern Railway; was a member of the Legislative Assembly of Wisconsin in 1864, 766, '67, and ’69, serving the last year as Speaker pro tempore ; was Lieutenant-Governor of Wisconsin 1870 and ’71; was a Delegate to the Republican National Convention at Philadelphia in 1872; and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 14,838 votes against 13,860 votes for George W. Cate, Democrat. AKe-elected. Territorial Delegates. TERRITORIAL DELEGATES. ARIZONA. ; H. S. STEVENS, of Tucson, was born at Weston, Vermont, m 1832; received a common-school education there; removed to New Mexico in 1851, and in 1856 located in that part of New Mexico now known as Arizona; was a member of the Territorial Legislature of Arizona 1868-73; was elected to the Forty-fourth Congress as an Independent candidate, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress, receiving 1,412 votes against 1,076 votes for Bean, Independent, and 638 votes for Smith, Independent. Contests the election. DAKOTA. JEFFERSON P. KIDDER, of Vermillion, was born at Braintree, Vermont, where he received a common-school education; was trained to agricultural pursuits, and taught school; prepared for college at the Orange County Grammar School; graduated at the Norwich University and was a tutor therein; received, in 1848, the degree of Master of Arts from the University of Vermont ; studied and practised law; was a member of the State Constitutional Convention of Vermont in 1843; was State’s Attorney in 1842, ’43, ’44, ’45, ’46, and 47; was a member of the State Senate of Vermont in 1847-48; was Lieutenant-Governor of Vermont in 1853-"54; removed to Saint Paul, Minnesota, in 1857; was elected a Provisional Delegate from Dakota Territory while visiting there in 1859; was a member of the Minnesota House of Repre-sentatives in _1861, 63, and ’64 ; was appointed in 1865 an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court for Dakota Territory, and removed there; was re-appointed in 1869 and again in 1873, and resigned after having discharged the duties of that office for ten years, on being elected to the Forty-fourth Congress; and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 6,199 votes against 2,413 votes for S. L. Spink, Democrat. IDAHO. STEPHEN S. FENN, of Mount Idaho, was born at Watertown, Litchfield County, Connect-icut, March. 28, 1820; his parents removed to Niagara County, New York, in 1824, where he received a common-school education; removed to Jackson County, Iowa, in 1841, and there held several county offices; in 1850 removed to California, and engaged in mining, merchandising, and ranching; again removed in 1862 to that part of Washington Territory which became a part of the Territory of Idaho upon its organization in 1863; there mined and practised law ; was elected a member of thé Legislative Council in 1864 and re-elected in 1865 ; was elected District Attorney for the First Judicial District in 1869; was again elected -a member of the Legislative Assembly in 1872, and served as Speaker of the House of Rep-resentatives ; is now by occupation a farmer; was elected to the Forty-fourth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Democrat, receiving 2,674 votes against 2,284 votes for John Clark, Republican. MONTANA. MARTIN MAGINNIS, of Helena, was born in Wayne County, New York, October 27, 1840; removed with his parents to Minnesota at an early age; received an academic education and was a student of Hamline University, but left to take charge of a Democratic newspaper ; enlisted as a private in the First Minnesota Volunteer Infantry on the 18th day of April, 1861; was made Second Lieutenant after the first battle of Bull Run, promoted to First Lieutenant in Septem-ber, 1862, and to Captain in July, 1863 ; served in the line of his regiment in all the campaigns and nearly all the battles of the Army of the Potomac until September, 1864, when he was appointed Major of the Eleventh Minnesota Volunteers, and ordered to join the Army of the Cumberlfind, where he served, under command of General Thomas, until mustered out with his regiment in July, 1865; he removed to Montana the next year ; engaged in mining and subse-quently in publishing and editing ‘The Helena Daily Gazette ;”’ was elected to the Forty-third and Forty-fourth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Dem-ocrat, receiving 3,827 votes against 2,980 votes for E. D. Leavitt, Republican. Re-elected. NEW MEXICO. TRINIDAD ROMERO, of Las Vegas, was born at Santa Fé, New Mexico, June 15, 1835 ;. received a common-school education; became interested in merchandise and stock-raising; was a member of the Territorial House of Representatives in 1863; was elected Probate Judge of San Miguel County in 1867, serving until he resigned; and was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 9,591 votes against 7,418 votes for Pedro: Valdez, Democrat. : Congressional Directory. UTAH, GEORGE Q. CANNON, of Salt Lake City, was born at Liverpool, England, January 11, 1827; at an early age emigrated with his parents to the United States; received a careful edu-cation ; learned the art of printing; is an editor by profession; was one of the first settlers of the Great Salt Lake Basin, since organized as Utah Territory; when steps were taken by the people of Utah, in 1862, to have the Territory admitted into the Union as a State, was elected United States Senator; was elected a member of the Legislative Council of the Territory of Utah for the years 1865 and ’66, 1869 and ’70, and 1871 and ’72; was elected in 1865, and regularly since then, a member of the Board of Regents of the Deseret University and has occupied the position of Chancellor since 1878; at a Constitutional Convention held at Salt Lake City in the months of February and March, 1872, was elected a Delegate to present the constitution and memorial to Congress for the admission of the Territory into the Union as a State; was elected to the Forty-third and Forty-fourth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress, receiving 21,531 votes against 3,842 for R. U. Baskin. Re-elected. WASHINGTON. ORANGE JACOBS, of Seattle, was born in Genesee County, New York, in 1829; removed to the new Territory of Michigan in 1832, where he received his education; is a lawyer; removed to the new Territory of Oregon in 1852, remaining there until 1859; was appointed one of the Associate Justices of Washington Territory in the spring of 1869, and held that office for nearly a year; was then appointed Chief Justice of the Territory, and re-appointed at the expiration of -four years, which position he occupied when elected to the Forty-fourth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving a majority of 238 votes over John P. Judson, Democrat. WYOMING. WiLriaM W. CorLETT, of Cheyenne, was born in Concord, Ohio, April 10, 1842; received an academic education ; studied law at the Michigan University at Ann Arbor, Michigan, and at the Ohio State and Union Law College, at Cleveland, Ohio, graduating at the latter institu-tion in June, 1866; was admitted to the bar the same year, and has practised law continuously since that time; was appointed Postmaster at Cheyenne, Wyoming, in August, 1870; was elected a member of the Council of the Legislative Assembly of Wyoming Territory in 1871; was elected Prosecuting Attorney for Laramie County, in said Territory, in 1872; was re-elected in 1873, and again in 1875; was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress as a Republican, receiving 3,864 votes against 2,760 votes for William R. Steele, Democrat. Senate Committees. 7% COMMITTEES "OF THE SENATE. STANDING COMMITTEES. Committee on Privileges and Elections. Bainbridge Wadleigh, of New Hampshire. John J. Ingalls, of Kansas. John H. Mitchell, of Oregon. | Eli Saulsbury, of Delaware. Angus Cameron, of Wisconsin. | Augustus S. Merrimon, of North Carolina. Samuel J. R. McMillan, of Minnesota. | Benjamin H. Hill, of Georgia. George F. Hoar, of Massachusetts. Committee on Foreign Relations. Hannibal Hamlin, of Maine. Thomas C. McCreery, of Kentucky. Timothy O. Howe, of Wisconsin. William W. Eaton, of Connecticut. Roscoe Conkling, of New York. John W. Johnston, of Virginia. Stanley Matthews, of Ohio. J. T. Morgan, of Alabama. S. J. Kirkwood, of Iowa. Committee on Finance. Justin S. Morrill, of Vermont. Thomas F. Bayard, of Delaware. Henry L. Dawes, of Massachusetts. Francis Kernan, of New York. Thomas W. Ferry, of Michigan. William A. Wallace, of Pennsylvania. John P. Jones, of Nevada. \ D. W. Voorhees, of Indiana. William B. Allison, of Iowa. Committee on Appropriations. William Windom, of Minnesota. Henry G. Davis, of West Virginia. Aaron A. Sargent, of California. Robert E. Withers, of Virginia. William B. Allison, of Iowa. James B. Beck, of Kentucky. Stephen W. Dorsey, of Arkansas. William A. Wallace, of Pennsylvania. James G. Blaine, of Maine. , Committee on Commerce. Roscoe Conkling, of New York. John B. Gordon, of Georgia. George E. Spencer, of Alabama. George R. Dennis, of Maryland. Samuel J. R. McMillan, of Minnesota. Matt W. Ransom, of North Carolina. John J. Patterson, of South Carolina. Theodore F. Randolph, of New Jersey. John P. Jones, of Nevada. Committee on Manufactures. Edward H. Rollins, of New Hampshire. John W. Johnston, of Virginia. Ambrose E. Burnside, of Rhode Island. J. R. McPherson, of New Jersey. J. D. Cameron, of Pennsylvania. Committee on Agriculture. Algernon S. Paddock, of Nebraska. Henry G. Davis, of West Virginia. William Sharon, of Nevada. John B. Gordon, of Georgia. George F. Hoar, of Massachusetts. Committee on Military Affairs. George E. Spencer, of Alabama. Theodore F. Randolph, of New Jersey. Ambrose E. Burnside, of Rhode Island. Francis M. Cockrell, of Missouri. Bainbridge Wadleigh, of New Hampshire. Samuel B. Maxey, of Texas. P. B. Plumb, of Kansas. M. C. Butler, of South Carolina. J. D. Cameron, of Pennsylvania. Committee on Naval Afairs. Aaron A. Sargent, of California. | William Pinkney Whyte, of Maryland. Henry B. Anthony, of Rhode Island. J. R. McPherson, of New Jersey. Simon B. Conover, of Florida. Charles W. Jones, of Florida. James G. Blaine, of Maine, Congressional Directory. Committee on the Fudiciary. | George F. Edmunds, of Vermont. David Davis, of Illinois. Roscoe Conkling, of New York. Allen G. Thurman, of Ohio. Timothy O. Howe, of Wisconsin Joseph E. McDonald, of Indiana. Isaac P. Christiancy, of Michigan. Committee on Post-Offices and Post-Roads. Thomas W. Ferry, of Michigan. Ambrose E. Burnside, of Rhode Island. Hannibal Hamlin, of Maine. Eli Saulsbury, of Delaware. Algernon S. Paddock, of Nebraska. Samuel B. Maxey, of Texas. Simon B. Conover, of Florida. James E. Bailey, of Tennessee, - S. J. Kirkwood, of Iowa. Committee orn Public Lands. Richard J. Oglesby, of Illinois. Joseph E. McDonald, of Indiana. Algernon S. Paddock, of Nebraska. Charles W. Jones, of Florida. Newton Booth, of California. L. F. Grover, of Oregon. Jerome B. Chaffee, of Colorado. A. H. Garland, of Arkansas. y| P. B. Plumb, of Kansas. | Committee on Private Land-Claims. Allen G. Thurman, of Ohio. Isaac P. Christiancy, of Michigan. Thomas F. Bayard, of Delaware. L. F. Grover, of Oregon. George F. Edmunds, of Vermont. Committee on Indian Affairs. William B. Allison, of Iowa. Thomas C. McCreery, of Kentucky. Richard J. Oglesby, of Illinois. Richard Coke, of Texas. John J. Ingalls, of Kansas. James B. Eustis, of Louisiana. A. Saunders, of Nebraska. Committee on Pensions. John J. Ingalls, of Kansas. : Robert E. Withers, of Virginia. Blanche K. Bruce, of Mississippi. James E. Bailey, of Tennessee. S. J. Kirkwood, of Iowa. D. W. Voorhees, of Indiana. W. P. Kellogg, of Louisiana. . Committee on Revolutionary Claims. John W. Johnston, of Virginia. Henry L. Dawes, of Massachusetts. Charles W. Jones, of Florida. Samuel J. R. McMillan, of Minnesota. Benjamin H. Hill, of Georgia. Committee on Claims. Samuel J. R. McMillan, of Minnesota. Francis M. Cockrell, of Missouri. John H. Mitchell, of Oregon. Frank Hereford, of West Virginia. Angus Cameron, of Wisconsin. I. G. Harris, of Tennessee. Henry M. Teller, of Colorado. J. T. Morgan, of Alabama. George F. Hoar, of Massachusetts. Committee on the District of Columbia. Stephen W. Dorsey, of Arkansas. Augustus S, Merrimon, of North Carolina. George E. Spencer, of Alabama. William H. Barnum, of Connecticut. John J. Ingalls, of Kansas. 1. G. Haris, of Tennessee. E. H. Rollins,of New Hampshire. Committee on Patents. Newton Booth, of California. Francis Kernan, of New York. Bainbridge Wadleigh, of E. J. F. N. Wilkinson, go1 E street, S. W. ) THE GOVERNMENT TELEGRAPH. SENATE MANAGER. HOUSE MANAGER. | Wm. L. Ives, 807 Ninth . street, N. W. R. C. Heebner, Washington House PLACES OF AMUSEMENT x National Theatre —E street, between Thirteenth and Fourteenth streets. Ford's Opera flouse.—Ninth street, below Pennsylvania avenue. Washington 1'heatre Comique.— Eleventh street west and C street north. Odd- Fellows’ Hall.—Seventh street west, between D and E streets north Masonic [Hall.—Corner F street north and Ninth street west. Lincoln FHall.—Northeast corner [) street north and Ninth street west. Willard [Hall.—F street, rear of \Willard’s Hotel. Talmadge Hall. —F street, between Ninth and Tenth streets. Congressional Directory. MEMBERS OF THE PRESS, Name. Papers represented. Office. Residence. Bom jogos 3 | New York World. ........... 515 Fourteenth street.. 1204 K street, N. W, Adler,F | Washington Journal.. 309 Eighth street, N. Ww 410 L street, N.W, | New Y ork Clipper | 608 Thirteenthst.,N.W. |: ICansas City Times : _.|"483 Pennsylvania . i : ..%.....5 av New York Spirit of the Times| | 722 Tenth street, N.W, Babbitt, George F ..... | Boston Post...) inias. | | Riggs House. Babcock, Louis M ..... National News Bureau ...... Tremont House. Bailhache, W. H.. .... Wiscensin State Journal. ..... 1110 M street, N. W. Barr, J.C. hn t Pittsburgh Post. Lei.5. 0 Barr, MW Ed. Washington Critic 1227 New York av | Pittsburgh Telegraph a 1442 Corcoran street. Bickley, Charles’... i... | Galveston, Texas, News. .... 105 Second street, W. Bickford, F. T New York Tribune Rib aE Al, 1335 I street, No-W..... 1420 T street, N. W. Boiseaun, RB." F......... | Corcoran Building .... 1415. Q street, N. W. Bouton, Mask W-...... | Genii street: . wo. ivy 217 A street, N. E. Boyle, John... 5... 212 Four-and-a-half st. Boyce, Silas... ........ | Washington Anvil ........... | og4-F street whi. | 934 F street. Boynton, HAV sl (tCincinnati Gazette ............ srr Fourteenth street. . 1312 R street, N. W. Brace; E.:C............ New York Herald... .......... 7o1 Fifteenth street. | 1221 H street. Briggs, Mise ok { Maple Square, S. C. av. Brookings, B. J ......7: Kennebec, Me., Journal 607 M stree i, NAV. 607 M street, N.'w. Brooks. Bd: P.....0.0 | National Republican. hare 1302 P ennsyly ania av. . Buell, AoC....... 8.0... Washinoton ‘Post... ..:-ui... 339 Pennsylvania av.. | Riggs House. Buns, J T0000 Savannah News. ............. Burritt, Lid. oes Editor Washington Herald.. | 935 D street, N.W... .| 635 East Capitol street. Butler, ©. 17; | Baltimore Gazette........:... 23 Corcoran Building. . | i312 F street, N. W, Byington, A. Homer... | Norwalk, Conn., Gazette..... GS a | 2311 H street. Carne, William ¥-.. ,.. | Alexandria Gazette .......... ER 169 King st., Alex’, New York Times ........5.0 | 1330 Fstreet 5. ..0n. Arlington Hotel. New York Times. oi... 7 | 1330 F street, N.W....| 1026 17th st., N.W., Cassey, D. C Little Rocks Gazette ....... | Ed. Washington Republican. | | g27 G street, N. W. Clark, W. Ts dail ny Atlanta Republican ai Clarke, W. Harry...... National Associated Press.. 1803 G street, N. W. Clarke. Sam MM ..on Keokuk Gate City ........ Ebbitt House. Wilmington Commercial Commagdre, Frank V .. Army and Navy Gazette | s13 Fourteenth street. | 2308 M street. Cone, Buffalo, N. Y., Commercial . 1305 Fi streets... ... -..| 74 1 street, N. W, Copeland, Wop ho New York Bulletin.......... | 8 Corcoran Building. .. | 1729 I street. Corkhill, George Bi Washington Law Reporter. . | 7343 FF street......... Ingleside. Mt.Pleasant. Cowles, Eugene H. .... Cleveland Leader............ s15 Fourteenth street. . 913 E street, N. W, Coyle, Hugh........J.. Washington Telegram | 408 Tenth street, N. W 711 Sixth street, N. W. Crawiord, F.C ........ Chicago Times. .....:. 5... | 1304 FW street ..i.;.-. | 1303 F street. Correspondent. ..........%-618 Eleventh street. Cromwell, S.C. na National Standard......... (5652 ‘Fistreet.... oi. o, | 110 E street, N. W, Curtis, WE: Chicago Inter Ocean...... 13 Corcoran Building . 1745 F street, N. W, Darling, John A........ Phila. Evening Herald 1336 I street. , Davidson, N-..... 0 | National Associated Press.... 118 F street... 1213 T street, N.W. DeGraw, P.V ........ New York Associated Press. . Corcoran Building. . East Capitol street. De Land, Theodore L.. Aurora, Ill. y. BEACON: J. | 126 Seventh st., N. E. Douglas, George....... Ww ashington Capital ....... g27 D street, N. W.... Alexandria. Biot, H.-R. Croll New York Evening Post ¥330.0 street ......... 1214 I$ street, N."W, Elliot Jared L......... Philadelphia Presbyterian. ok 1222 H street. Farden,J. A ........... | Chillicothe Register..........| | Imperial Hotel. Cincinnati Commercial 1915 H street, N.W, ("Washington Post......... ... | 222 Third street. Chicago Journal .....%..... Imperial Hotel. | St. Louis Republican ..... Metropolitan Hotel. Fivoh Bow | Pittsburgh Chronicle...... "| 1016 Seventeenth street. PBiozpatrick, 1. C........ | New York Herald......... ‘701 Fifteenth street. ... 1316 S street Romine, |Edwin ....... NewYork Jour. of Commerce 1314 F street ..... *-1205 Eleventh st., N.W, Forne | Forney’s Sunday Chronicle. . Go3 Pennsylvania av. . a 24 Grant Place. French, | Illyria’ Re gblican. ov. a . 156 A street, N. W. Chicago TIMES... itary z304 FF Street ..\..1..... 708 Eleventh street. | New NorkSm. | 10 Corcoran Building... | 1342 Corcoran street. | Richmond Dispatch....... | 605 Pennsylvania av..| 605 Pennsylvania av. New York Associated Press. . | Corcoran Building .... 100g Ninth street,N. W. Washington Post............. o14 Pennsylvania av. ..| 405 Twelfth street. Handy, WAG The Richmond State . ........ Imperial Hotel. Harris, oO. KB. National Associated Press.. [ram Fistreet' . ..... cs. 439 K street, N. WW. Hart, Charles Burdett..| Philadelphia North American | 23 Corcoran Building. . 621 Thirteenth st. yN.W Hardacre, Mrs. E (Chicago Times... \.... ..0.0. | National Hotel. Hayes, HG New York Associated Press.. | Corcoran Building . .I'110:C street, S. E. Hodges, 'F............. | ‘Washington Star ...... =... | 1100 Pennsylvania av. .| 1409 Rhode Island av. Holland, James G....... New York Associated Press. . | Corcoran Building .... 1107 G street, N. W. Hudson, Edmund ...... Boston Herald. .....000. Fourteenth . 513 Fourteenth street, ... s13 street. | Hudson,TT. T...... dri] Detroit Evening News 215 Sixth streel..... 0.| 504 Maine avenue. | Ed. Washington Post ........ Riggs House. Kansas Commonwealth . 492 BE street. | Syracuse Standard 1228 Twelfth street. Sacramento Record Union... sete testa nes saan asaal | Ebbitt House. Members of the Press. . Name. | Papers represented. Office. | | Residence. d | Jewell, BoP, = 0h . Washington Critic. ........... | str: Ninth’ street... ..\. | 10 E street, N. W, Johnston, Mrs. A.D.... | Rochester, Ne, Democmat Ln opr nn ian ny [ Johnston, BH. Av... 0. Dramatic MICIOT «ssee | 1008 N street. Keim, De B. IX....... Pa. Press, St. I’s Globe-Dem | 1418 F . street......... Kennan, George....... | New York Associated Press..| Corcoran Building .... Kennedy, L. W..... ... Washington Republic........ | 11or Pennsylvania av..| 113 Maryland av.,N. E. Roel, Wo ..ii 00a Washington Journal. ...:.... 309 Fight sigeet, 2 3 #01, Sree Ww. Lacey. RS, ui. viv. orrespondence Bureau ..... 529 Seventh street, N.W| 32 TI street, N. E. Lonaurt Richard...... | San KFae Bxening Post. | ie oi i on 1303 F street. Lauson, G.D........... Washington Republic........ 1ror Pennsylvania av..| 125 F street, N. W. Lincoln, Mrs. M.D. .... Cleveland Plath Dealer... | Lidiyanines | 612 A street oS. BE. Luther, BH... Boston Globe 0.0... Gio 9 Corcoran Building. r[Moyopoling Hotel. MacBride, W CC... ... Cincinnati Enquirer.......... 9 Corcoran Building ..| 1005 Eighth st., N. W. Mann Miss ME I Cue. LL a a a es me a a 922 E street, N. W. McCann, Miss J. V..... Nowristown Dally Herald. fae. .os aloha, | 413 Sixth street, N.w McCarthy, ].B...... ... Watford limes: 00 an fran a is re, ors Fifteenth st. JN. W, McCarthy, H, M....... Bliabethtown News. «|... Parkinson no, House. McCarthy, W. P....... Richmond Enquisericis onal.viii canis ois McKee, D.R........».. New York Associated Press.. Corcoran Building..... 34 B street, N. E. MeNall, Lunas... ....: Yockport Journal, vv 0 ols aan LR 619 F street. Moore, Boa... Milwankee Eve Wisconsin. {00 as, 122 East Capitol street Morris, John...00 Ed. Washington Gazette. .... | ogz D street 00000 102 Third street, N. W, Muda AF 2 Hon Yoo sociated Press .| Corcoran Building ....| 810 R. I. av., N. W. Neagle B.D... .......... Washington Press.... ....... bisa aL i nitinol Noah 3. RE | New York Sunday Times... i sean NE 1230 Fourteenth street. Noyes, Crosby S14 Ed. Washington Star ......... | 1102 Pennsylvania av..| 1104 M street, N. W, Ogden. GoM. ......... New York World. .......... | 515 Fourteenth street .| 806 Twelfth street. OysterJB We ico | Congressional Record .......| Gov't Printing Office.. 77 H street, N.W. Portsmouth Times | 483 Pennsylvania av. Painter, OU. H ......5. Philadelphia Inquirer....... eTSTR a [900 Fourteenth street. Peake, JH... cob Yipee (Nebr.) Press ef al..| A street, N. E . A street, N. B. Peters if, Tn. aaah Washington Critic ........... siz Ninth street... .. 2 Boon H street, S. WW. Phillips, W. P =... New York Associated Press. . Corcoran Building ... St. James Hotel. Pilsbury, Charles A ... Mobile Register | 1327 G street. Poore, Ben: Perley ....| Boston Journal an 1310 Fl streel.,;..... . 6or E street. Preston, H. A (150... New York Herald... ... 7or Fifteenth street....| 1515 S street Ramsdell, H. J. ..0... Philadelphia Times ..,....... | 60s Fourteenth street. .. Vermont av. & Towa c. Redfield, H..V......... Cincinnati Commercial. ...... | 14 Corcoran Building . | 1335 © street. Reese, A;, W.-..... i ..y Macon, Ga., Telegraph ...... aR Ra Ys Imperial Hotel. Renaud, Edward ...... National Standard, ........... Baz. TF street... iis 81g E street. Richardson, FL A...... name Sun, co hens 1514 PF street. 00 1308 Vermont avenue, Roberts, WE... [cEbbitt House ......... Ebbitt House. Robertson, Wm. M . Boil Post, ii ahiasany | 339 Pennsylvania av . 209 Maryland avenue. Robinson, Mary Gay . [New York Witness... ... ..... A TN ea | 515 Twelfth street. Romney, Mrs. C. W. Bostorv Post... non | Arlington Hotel. Rudd, John A......... | Sedalia Daily Democrat Sailer, Mol fbi. New York Meroury. i. asianfaeh ovis 1101 street. Sonsnt Fifth Sarvis, JM Chicago Pest... 0 vw..... 1418 of street, N. W., 1419 G street, N. W." Schade, Louis. Ee Ed. Washington Sentinel ....| 935 E street, N. Ww. s12 Tenth street, N.W. Scudder, WH Boston Herald ...... ....... | 513 F ourteenth street. | 708 Thirteenth Street. Shannon, Mrs. Mary.. New Orleans Pleayune J, Chi Siling ale oon Shaw, B Boston Transcript. ........... RL 1016 Vermont avenue, Boston: Traveller: -tod | 134 F street, N. W. so7 Le Droit Park. Snead, Miss Austine. ... Bostow Herald 7 onl ais pd tl as Riggs House. Snead, Mrs. F Louisville Courier-Journal... | Riggs House. Soteldo, A; M., ix ...... Baltimore American .......... siz Fourteenth street. . | 806 Twelfth st., N. W. Soule, J.B...ol U.S. Record and Gazette... .| 1301 Pennsylvania av.. 1110 New York. avenue. Spencer, Mrs. SarahJ. A. New North West'............ fo i heen Stevenson, James ...... Denver News 1303 P street, N.W, Stapleton, 1 RET | 508 Twelfth st., N. WwW. Steineslet, Emily R.. St. Louis Republlean. o.oo loi vs ives tains paheaihs | 1828 Eleventh street. Stewart, T, T..0......} Vi Expressand Standard. ...[.. a... clo | 1118 Ninth st., N.W. Stocking, William... ... Detrolf Post andi Tribune... . 0... Sh Lon a National Hotel. Stone, M.C............ Baltimore Daily News Stowell, Mrs. Nellie S..| Washington Post ............ | 339 Pennsylvania ay 1203 Eleventh street. Street, Sy [New Orleans Posty. oii hs de atid hie airs vs oie Talcott, AaB. anon | Washington Republican... .... 1302 Pennsylvania av. . o16 Righth street, N.W Taylor, Noa ins Albany Press and Wo, Presslt i. oo 0 Lala 820 First street, N. W. Thomson, Mrs. G.W. .. Syracuse Journal... ........ | oeitann, Sie 913 Twelfth street. Townsend, George A...) Cincinnati Enquirer.......... Tracy, L-X..... | St. Louis Dispatch | 316:C street. Walker, John Brisben. . 1221 Tenth st., N. W. Warden, Clifford ...... Cincinnati Commercial. ......| 28 Corcoran Building | | 1442 S street, N W, Wardman, George. .... | Pittsburgh Dispatch. ......... Sed a Dn 1314 1 street, N. W. Washington, L Quinton| New Orleans Picayune. ..... | 1418 F street, N. W... 1027 N.W. Ninthstreet, West, H, rad {Washington Post ...0........ | 339 Pennsylvania av .. West, ALE Washington Critic ............. sit Ninth street, N.-W | 929 E street, N. W. White, Z. Lo. .......0.0. New York Tribune......... | 1322 F street, N. 'wW.. 125 Maryland av.,N. KE. Wight, BE.B.......0.... Chicago Tribune....»....... 1319 F street, N W.. 1319 HF street, N W. Williams, Talcott ...... | San Francisco Chronicle ..... 10 Corcoran Building. 1923 H street. Young, James R ..... Philadelphia Evening Star... |... ..0 0. ode lh 1112 Tenth st., N.W. Congressional Directory. UNITED STATES POSTAL REGULATIONS. FIRST CLASS MAIL MATTER. LETTERS.— This class includes letters and anything of which the postmaster cannot ascer-tain the contents without destroying the wrapper, or anything unsealed which may be wholly or partly in writing, except-book manuscript, correc ed proofs passing between authors and publishers, and postal cards. Postage, 3 cents each half ounce, or for each fraction above half an ounce. On local or drop letters, at free-delivery offices, 2 cents. At offices where no free-delivery by carrier, I cent. Postalecards, 1 cent. Registered letters, 10 cents in addition to the proper postage. The Post-Office Department or its revenue is not by law liable for the loss of any registered mail matter. SECOND CLASS. REGULAR PuBLicAaTIONS.This class includes all newspapers, periodicals, or matter ex- — clusively in print and regularly issued at stated perinds from a known office of publication or news agency. Postage, on daily or weekly issues, 2 cents a pound or fraction thereof. On periodicals issued less frequently than once a week, 3 cents a pound or fraction thereof. . THIRD CLASS. Mail matter of the third class is divided as follows : One cent jor two ounces.—Almanacs, books (printed), calendars, catalogues,-corpected proofs, hand-bills, magazines, when not sent to regular subscribers, maps (lithographed or engraved), music (printed sheet), newspapers, when not sent to regular subscribers, occa-sional publications, pamphlets, posters, proof-sheets, prospectuses, and regular publications designed primarily for advertising purposes, or for free circulation, or for circulation at nominal rates. 7 One cent jor each ounce.—Blank books, blank cards, book manuscript, card-boards, and other flexible material, chromo-lithographs, circulars, engravings, envelopes, flexible patterns, letter-envelopes, letter-paper, lithographs, merchandise, models, ornamented paper, postal cards, when sent in bulk and not addressed, photographic views, photographic paper, printed blanks, printed cards, sample cards, samples of ores, metals, minerals, and merchandise, seeds, cuttings, bulbs, roots, and scions, stereoscopic views. ; All packages of matter of the third class must be so wrapped or enveloped, with open sides or ends, that their contents may be readily examined by postmasters without destroying the | Wrappers. : oy or ; Matter of the second and third classes, containing any writing whatever, will be charged with letter-postage, except as follows : The sender may write his name or address therein, or on the outside, with the word from ”’ preceding the same, or may write briefly on any package the number and names of * the articles inclosed. WASHINGTON CITY POST-OFFICYH: Postmaster.— James M. Edmunds, 1220 Twelfth street, N. W. Assistant Postmaster and Cashier.— Thomas L. Tullock, 121 B street, S. E. Chief Clerk.—William T. Turpin, 227 Massachusetts avenue, N. W. Assistant Chief Clerk.—Everett T. Getchell, 719 Market Space, N. W. Superintendent of Mailing and Distribution.—Horace P. Springer, 630 I street, N. W. Superintendentof City Delivery.—James E. Bell, 225 B street, N. W. Assistant Superintendent of City Delivery.—George H. Plant, jr., 918 M street, N. W. Superintendent of Registry Division.—Solomon KR. Kilby, 1439 Corcoran street. Superintendent Money-Order Division.—Simeon H. Merrill, 916 P street, N. W, Clerk in charge of Branch Office at the Capitol.—Sidney S. Baker, 639 F street, S. W. Clerk in charge of Branch Office at Georgetown.—]. A. Jefferds, 123 Greene st., Georgetown. The general-delivery window is not closed, day or night, except on Sunday; on that day it is closed between the hours of 10 a. m ‘and 6 o’clock p. m. The letter-carriers’ window is open from 7 to 8 p. m. The money-order division is open from 9 a. m. to 4 p. m. The registered-letter department is open from 8 a. m. to 4 p. m. Letters of especial im- portance may be registered as late as 7 p. m. : In the central and business portions of the city, deliveries by carriers will be made at 8.30 and II a. m., at 2 and 4 p. m. In the outside districts, deliveries are made at 8.30 a. m. and 2D. M. Detain: and collections are made at the hotels for the arrival and departure of each mail. The Capitol fronts the east, and stands on a plateau ninety feet above the level of the Potomac, in latitude 38° 55’ 48 north and longitude 77° 1’ 48" west from Greenwich. The southeast cornerstone of the original building was laid ou 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 H. Hallett, James Hoban, Geo. Hadfield, and afterwards of B. H. Latrobe, architects. The north wing was finished in 1800 and the south wing in 1811, a wooden passage-way con-necting them. On the 24th of August, 1814, the interior of both wings was destroyed by British incendiaries, but they were immediately rebuilt. In 1818 the central portion of the building was commenced under the architectural superintendence of Charles Bulfinch, and the original building was finally completed in 1827. Its cost, including the grading of the grounds, alterations, and repairs, up to 1827, was $2,433,844.13. : The corner-stone of the extensions to the Capitol was laid on he 4th of July, 1851, by President Fillmore, Daniel Webster officiating as orator of the day. Thomas U. Walter was architect, and subsequently Edward Clark, under whose direction the work was completed in November, 1867.. The material used for the extensions is white marble from the quarries at Lee, Massachusetts, with white marble columns from the quarries at Cockeysville, Maryland. The dome of the original central building was constructed of wood, but was removed in 1856 to be replaced by the present stupendous structure of cast iron, which was completed in 1865. The entire weight of iron used is 8,909,200 pounds. The main building is three hundred and fifty-two feet four inches long in front and one hundred and twenty-one feet six inches deep, with a portico one hundred and sixty feet wide, of twenty-four columns on the east, and a projection of. eighty-three feet on the west, em-bracing a recessed portico of ten coupled columns. The extensions are placed at the north and south ends of the main building, with connecting corridors forty-four feet long by fifty-six feet wide, flanked by columns. Each extension is one hundred and forty-two feet eight inches in front, by two hundred and thirty-eight feet ten inches deep, with porticcs 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 fect eleven inches; the height from the top of the balustrade of the building is two hundred and seventeen feet eleven inches ; and the greatest diameter at the base is one hundred and thirty-five feet five inches. The rotunda is ninety-five feet six inches in diameter, and its height from the floor to the top of the canopy is one hundred and eighty feet three inches. The Senate chamber is one hundred and twelve feet in length, by eighty-two feet in width, and thirty feet in height. Its galleries will accommodate one thousand persons. The Representatives’ Hall is one hundred ana thirty feet in length, by ninety-three feet in width, and thirty feet in height. : The Supreme Court room was occupied by the Senate until December, 1860, the court having previously occupied the room beneath, now used as a law library. : The Library of Congress was burned by the British in 1814, and was partially destroyed by an accidental fire in 1851. The present center hall was finished in 1853, and the wing halls were finished in 1867. 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. SENIVINERE | 51 No ss N 52 153 51 Ry 5] 3 S\N NSN N BN 5 y : : EAN5 N Eee llS NATE = & of ad A 1% Neoron BTR ez el621°§ a 63 FE hla i q 8 zzz 2D jz Jal / Dh Cid Za 2 PN65 EE § Se : SN ESS NHM RZ TITTY 7 erirrilf2 ] ](zzz N EN) EEE BASEMENT AL0I240( JVUOISS2.45 UO) HOUSE WING, MAIN BUILDING. SENATE WING. Room. Room. Room. ; 2 1. House Committee on Invalid Pensions. si. Court of Claims, and offices thereof. 24. Senate Committee on the District of Columbia. 2. House Committee on Claims. 52. House Committee on the Revision of the Laws. 25. Senate Committee on the Revision of the Laws. 3. House Committee on Agriculture. House Committee on Expenditures in the Navy De- 26. Senate Committee on the Library. House Committee on Manufactures. partment. | 27. Senate Committee on Military Affairs. House Committee on Expenditures in Post-Office De- 3. House Committee on Mines and Mining. 28. Senate Committee on Naval Affairs. partment, 55. House Committee on Education and Labor. | 29. Senate Committee on the Judiciary. 4. House Book-Room. 56. Court of Claims. | 30. Closets. 5. House Committee on War-Claims. 57. Territorial Delegates’ Room. | 31. Elevator. 6. House Newspaper and Index Room. 58. Court of Claims. | 32. Senate Committee on Indian Affairs. 7. Doorkeeper House of Representatives. 56. Court of Claims. | 33. Senate Committee on Rules. - 8. House Committee on Public Expenditures. 60. Court of Claims. | 34. Senate Committee on Manufactures. House Committee on Private Land-Claims. 6x. Chief of the Capitol Police. | 35. Senate Refectory. J 9. House Committee on Territories. 62. House Document-Room. 36. Senate Restaurant. N 10. House Committees on Expenditures in the War De- 63. Senate Bath-Room. | 37 Senate Store-Room. He partment and on the Library. 64. The Supreme Court—Consultation Room. | 38. Senate Committee on Public Lands. = 11. House Official Reporters of Debates. 65. The Supreme Court—Consultation Room. 39. Senate Committee on Education and Labor. A 12. House Committee on Public Buildings and Grounds. 66. Congressional Law Library, formerly the Supreme | 40. Senate Committee on Pensions. BN House Committee on Expenditures in the Treasury Court Room. 41 Senate Committee on Territories. 5 Department. 67. Congressional Law Library of Congress. 42. Senate Stationery-Room. xX 13. House Post-Office. 3 63. House Document-Room. 43. Senate Committee on Agriculture. a 14. House Committee on the Post-Office and Post-Roads. | 70. Superintendent of the House Folding-Room. 44. Senate Committee on Contingent Expenses. 3 15. House Store-Room. 45. Superintendent of the Senate Folding-Room. 16. Closets. : 46. Senate Committee on Foreign Relations. 17. House Box-Room. ; 47. Senate Committee on Patents. 18. House Restaurant. 48. Senate Committee on Post-Offices and Post-Roads. 19. House Bath-Rooms. 20. House Refectory. 21. House Committee on Printing. 22. House Committee on Indian Affairs. 23. House Committee on Accounts. O ~ THE PRINCIPAL, STORY OF THE CAPITOL. A W NN HH O© ON OU HOUSE WING. MAIN BUILDING. SENATE WING. Roomz. Room. Room. . Office of the Clerk of the House. 33. House Document-Room. 16, Office of the Secretary of the Senate. . Chief Clerk of the House. 34. House Stationery-Room. 17, Executive Clerk of the Senate. . Engrossing Clerks of the House. 35. House Committee on Banking and Currency. 18. Financial Clerk of the Senate. . Journal and Printing Clerks of the House. 36. House Committee on Banking and Currency. It 19. Chief Clerk of the Senate. . House Committee on Naval Affairs. was in this room, then occupied by the Speaker of 20. Engrossing and Enrolling Clerks of the Senate. . Closets. the House, that ex-President John Quincy Adams 21. Senate Committee on Appropriations. . Room of tue Speaker of the House. died, two days afterhe fcll at his seat in the House, 22. Closets. . Speaker’s Reception-Room. February 23, 1848. ; 23: Senate Committee on Enrolled Bills. . Office of the Sergeant-at-Arms of the House. 37. Office of the Clerk of the Supreme Court. 24. Senate Chamber Cloak-Rooms. ro. House Official Reporters of Debates. 38. Robing-Room of the Judges of the Supreme Court. 25 The President of the United States Room. 11. House Hall Folding-Room. 39. Withdrawing-Room of the Supreme Court. 26. The Senators’ Withdrawing-Room. 12. House Cloak-Rooms. 40. Office of the Marshal of the Supreme Court. 27. The Vice-President’s Room. 13. House Committee on Appropriations. The Supreme Court, formerly the Senate Chamber. 28. Senate Committee on Finance. 14. House Committee on Ways and Means. The Old Hall of the House of Representativesis now 29. Senate Official Reporters of Debates. 15. House Committee on Military Affairs. used as a statuary hall, to which each State has 30. Senate Reception-Room. House Committee on the Centennial Celebration. been invited to contribute two statues of its most 31. Senate Post-Office. distinguished citizens. 32. Office of the Sergeant-at-Arms of the Senate. The Congressional: Library contains 314.000 vol-umes. O O THE ATTIC STORY OF THE CAPITOL. HOUSE WING. MAIN BUILDING. SENATE WING. Room. . Room. Room. 1. House Committees on Pacific Railroad and Revolu- | 27. Senate Library. 14. Senate Committee on Public Buildings and Grounds. tionary Pensions. 5 28. Senate Library—Librarian’s Room. 15. Senate Committee on Transportation Routes. 2. House Committee on Elections. 29. Senate Library. 16. Senate Committee on Railroads. 3. House Committee on Roads and Canals. 30. Senate Committee on Civil Service. 17. Senate Committee on Privileges and Elections. House Committee on Patents. 31. Senate Document-Room. 18. Senate Committee on Commerce. 4. House Committee on the District of Columbia. 32. Senate Document-Room. 19. Senate Committee on Engrossed Bills. 5. House Committees on Mileage, the Militia, and Ex- . Senate Document-Room. 20. Lobby. penditures in the Interior Department. 34. Superintendent of the Senate Documents. 21. Correspondents’ Room. Western Union Telegraph. House Committee on Expenditures in the Department | 35. House Library. 22. Ladies’ Retiring-Room. of Justice. 36. House Document-Room. 23. Senate and Joint Committees on Public Printing. 6. Lobby. 37. House Document-Room. 24. Senate Committee on Revolutionary Claims. 7. Western Union Telegraph Office. . | 38. House Document-Room. 25. Senate Committee on Claims. 8. Correspondents and Journalists’ Room. 39., House Document-Room. 26. Senate Committee on Private Land-Claims. 9. Correspondents and Journalists’ Withdrawing-Room. 40. Electrician’s Room. 10. Ladies’ Retiring-Room. 11. House Committee on Public Lands. 12. House Committee on Commerce. 13. House Committee on Foreign Affairs. House Committee on Expenditures in the State De- partment. 14. House Committee on the Judiciary. 10098) 24} fo suvgy = o b= Congressional Directory. WASHINGTON CITY DIRECTORY. Executive Mansion.—Pennsylvania avenue, between Fifteenth and Seventeenth streets. il lh State Department.—Corner Seventeenth street and New York avenue. Treasury Department.—Fifteenth street west, opposite F street north. Navy Department.—Seventeenth street west, opposite F street north. : : War Department.—Corner of Seventeenth street west and Pennsylvania avenue. Cal Interior Department.—F street north, between Seventh and Ninth streets. Post-Office Department.—E street north, between Seventh and Eighth streets. Department of Fustice.—Freedman’s Bank building, 1507 Pennsylvania avenue. . Departmentof Agriculture.—On the Island, opposite Thirteenth street. Bureaw of Education.— Pennsylvania avenue, corner of Tenth street. Commissioner of Public Buildings.—Office corner of Seventeenth and F streets. Government Printing Office.—Corner of North Capitol street and H street north. Supreme Court of the United States.—At the Capitol, old Senate Chamber. Court of Claims.—At the Capitol, basement story. Criminal Court.—At the City Hall, Fourth-and-a-half street. District Court.—At the City Hall, Fourth-and-a-half street. Common Law Court.—At the City Hall, Fourth-and-a-half street : { Equity Court.—At the City Hall, Fourth-and-a-half street. | Probate Court.—At the City Hall, Fourth-and-a-half street. i National Observatory.—Epstreet 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 Fourth-and-a-half street west. : Coast Survey Buildings.—New Jersey avenue, south of the Capitol. Smithsonian Institution.—On the Island, opposite Tenth street. Congressional Cemetery.—One mile east of the Capitol. | Washington Monument.—On the mall near the Potomac. : i United States Botanic Garden.—Between First and Third streets west. * 0dd-Fellows’ Hall.—Seventh street west, between D and E streets north. ad Odd-Fellows’ Hall, (Navy-Yard. )—Eighth street east, south of Pennsylvania avenue. Providence Hospital.—Corner of Second street east and D street south. Children’s Hospital.—8o4 E street, N W. Columbia Hospital for Women.—Pennsylvania avenue, corner of Twenty-fifth street. ! Columbian Institution for the Deaf and Dumb and the Blind.—Kendall Green. Government Hospital for the Insane.—Across the Navy-Yard Bridge. Reform-School for Boys.—On the turnpike to Bladensburg. Young Men's Christian Association.—Ninth street, corner of D street. United States Agricultural Society.—1319 IF street. Grand Army of the Republic Hall.—Corner of Ninth and D streets. Corcoran Art Building.—Corner of Seventeenth street and Pennsylvania avenue, N. W, Washington Gas-Light Company.—Office, 472 Tenth street west. Arlington Hotel.—Vermont avenue, between H 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 K streets. St. James Holtel.—Corner of Pennsylvania avenue and Sixth street west. # Continental Hotel.—Pennsylvania avenue, between Third and Fourth-and-a-half streets. Washington House.—Corner of Third street west and Pennsylvania avenue. Owen House.—1413 Pennsylvania avenue. Wormley’s.—Corner of H and Fifteenth streets. Imperial Hotel. —E street, between Thirteenth and Fourteenth, tacing Pennsylvania avenue, 7 St. Marc Hotel. —Corner of Pennsylvania avenue and Seventh street. : Welcker's.—"27 Fifteenth street. 7 Congressional Hotel.—Capitol Hill, southeast of Capitol, / Globe House.—1202 F street. “ West End Hotel. —Bridge street, Georgetown. Executive Departments. : 103 ~ THE EXECUTIVE, EXECUTIVE MANSION. Presidentof the United States. —RUTHERFORD B. HAYES, Executive Mansion. Private Secretary.—W. K. Rogers, 1749 F street (601 Eighteenth street). Assistant Private Secretary. . > Executive Clerks.— William H. Crook, gog O street, N. W. Charles L. Chapman, 1417 G street, N. W. Commissionerof Public Buildings.—Bvt. Col. T. L. Casey, 1419 K street, N. W." DEPARTMENT OF STATE. Secretary of State.—WiLLIAM M. EVARTS, 1507 K street, N. W. Assistant Secretary.— Frederick W Seward, 1021 Connecticut Avenue. Second Assistant Secvetary.—William Hunter, 70 First street, Georgetown. Third Assistant Secretary.— Charles Payson, 1439 K street. Chief Clerk.—Sevellon A. Brown, 1205 M street. Chiefof the Bureau of Archives and Indexes.—John H. Haswell, 1219 O street. Chief of the Diplomatic Bureau.—Alvey A. Adee, 1019 Fifteenth street. Chief of the Consular Burean.— Arthur B. Wood, 1205 M street. Chief of the Bureau of Accounts.—Robert C. Morgan, 812 Eighteenth street. Chief of the Bureau of Rolls and Library.— Passport Clerk.—N. Benedict, 1205 M street. Dispatch Agents. —Radcliffe Baldwin, 72 Broadway, New York. B. F. Stevens, 4 Tr afalgar Square, London, England. TREASURY DEPARTMENT. Secretary of the Treasury.—JOHN SHERMAN, 1323 K street, N. W, Assistant Secretary.—John B. Hawley, 808 Twelfth street, N. W. Assistant Secretary.—Henry F. French, 137 East Capitol street. Chief Clerk.—]. K. Upton, 1534 I street, N. W. Appointment Division.— Chief, Wilson J. Vance, 1327 Lexington Place. Warrant Division.— Chief, J. T. Power, Chapin street, College Hill. Independent Treasury Division.— Chief, Eugene B. Daskam, 1425 R street, N. W, Customs Division.— Chief, H. B. James, 1528 Sixteenth street. Navigation Division.— Chief, Darius Lyman, 1 Grant street. Life-Saving Service.— Chief, S. 1. Kimball, 1437 Corcoran street. ] 157 2 lark, Woodley Road. Stationery Division.— Chief, A. L. Sturtevant, Howard avenue, Mount Pleasant. Loan Division.— Chief, Supervising Special Agent.—A. 2. T ingle, Spri ing street, a Supervising Inspector-Gene Disbursing Clerk.—Bushrod Birch, rE Heo, Disbursing Clerk.—Thomas J. Hobbs, 1662 H street. Private Secretary to Secretary of the Treasury.—E. J. Babcock, 810 Twenty-second st., N. W. SUPERVISING ARCHITECT'S OFFICE. Supervising Architect.—]. G. Hill, 1209 O street, N. W. Chief Clerk.—H. G. Jacobs, 1218 O street, N. W. BUREAU OF ENGRAVING AND PRINTING. Chief of Bureau.—O. H. Irish, 1907 Harewood avenue, Le Droit Park. Assistant Chicf.—Daniel W. Wilson, Imperial Hotel. Chief Accountant.—T. J. Sullivan, 1213 Ninth street, N. W. Engraving Division.— Superintendent, George W. Casilear, 78 Gay street, Georgetown. : Congressional Directory. I: BUREAU OF STATISTICS. { ; J ; (Young’s Building, 3 407 Fifteenth street, 3 N. . W.). Chief of Burean.—Joseph Nimmo, jr., Hamilton House. Chief Clerk.—]. N. Whitney. Examining Division.— Chief, E. J. Keferstein, 216 High street, Georgetown: Compiling Division.—Acting Chief, William Burchard, 716 Twelfth street, N. W, Vessel-Numbering Division.— Chief, J. B. Parker, goo Twenty-second street, N. W. Tonnage and Immigration Division.—Chief, James Ryan, 1636 Q street, N. W. k Stationery, Pay, and Property Division.— Chief, J. D. O’Connell, 1611 Tenth street, N. W, ( ) Internal Commerce.— Chief, Lucien J. Barnes, 933 K street, N: W. | Libravian.—Lester F. Ward, 1466 Rhode Island avenue. MINT. | Director of the Mint.—H. R. Linderman, 510 I street, N. W. = A FIRST COMPTROLLER’S OFFICE. Comptroller.—A. G. Porter, Riggs House. Deputy.—Jonathan Tarbell, Washington House. Fudicial-Accounts Division.— James Auld, 813 Thirteenth street, N. W. Loreign-Intercourse Division. —J. Ad. Thompson, 1112 G street, N. W. Internal-Revenue Division.—Silas C, Clarke, 501 Stanton Place, C street, N., E. Book-tkeepers’ Division.—S. W. Saxton, Mount Pleasant. SECOND COMPTROLLER’S OFFICE. Comptrolley.— William W. Upton, Metropolitan Hotel. ! Deputy —Jas. S. Delano, Mount Pleasant. Army Paymaster Division.— Jerome Lee, 1427 R street, N. W. Navy Paymasters’ Division.—C. C. Stevens, 1223 Eleventh street, N. W. Quartermasters’ Division.—Benjamin S. Pike, 913 Nineteenth street, N. W. Indian Division.—]J. D. Terrill, 9go8 Fiench street, N. W. Miscellaneous Division.—Alfred Thomas, 1606 Fourteenth street, N. W, COMMISSIONER OF CUSTOMS. Commissioner.—Henry C. Johnson, Riggs House. ? Deputy —H. A. Lockwood, Alexandria County, Virginia. Customs Division.— Chief, Albert Miller, 202 High street, Georgetown. i Bookkeepers’ Division.— Chief, Charles W. Bradbury, 1753 Pennsylvania avenue. REGISTER OF THE TREASURY. Register.—Glenni W. Scofield, Riggs House. i Assistant Register.—W. P. Titcomb, 1402 Sixteenth street, N. W, | Coupon and Note Division.— Chief, Lewis D. Moore, 727 Eighteenth street, N. W, Fractional Currency Division.— Chief, Charles Neale, 913 O street, N. W, Loan Division.— Chief, H. Jenison, 416 B street, S. E. Receipts and Expenditures Division.— Chief, J. H. Beatty, 128 Eleventh street, S. E. Tonnage Division.— Chief, N. B. Walker, 1015 L street, N. W, FIRST AUDITOR. { Auditor .—Robert M. Reynolds, 1121 Fourteenth street, N. W. i Deputy.—Henry K. Leaver, 1528 Sixteenth street, N. W. { Customs Division.— Chief, William P. Marsh, 1427 Eighth street, N. W, : Sudiciary Division.— Chief; Thaddeus Sturgis, 608 Sixth street, N. W. # Public Debt Division—Chicf, John P. Bentley, 915 L street, N. W. Warehouse and Bond Division. Chief, A. F. McMillan, 1317 Riggs street. SECOND AUDITOR. 743 (Winder’s Building, west ot War Department.) Auditor.—Ezra B. French, 722 Thirteenth street, N. W, Deputy.—Charles F. Herring, 330 Missouri avenue, S. W. Paymasters’ Division.— Chief, Thomas C. Bailey, 103 West street, Georgetown. Bookkeepers’ Division — Chief, Thomas Rathbone, 301 Sixth street, N. E. Indian Division.— Chief, Ambrose F. Wight, 1641 P street, N. W. Pay and Bounty Division.—Chief, Henry A. Whallon, Arlington, Virginia. Investigation of Frauds Division.— Chief, Henry C. Harmon, Mount Pleasant, D. C. Executive Departments. : 3 THIRD AUDITOR. Awuditor.—Horace Austin, 112 Eleventh street, S. E. Deputy.—A. M. Gangewer, 2618 K street, N. W. Bookkeepers’ Division.—Chief,J. F. Jones, 9go4 Fourteenth street, N. W. Quartermasters’ Division.— Chief, Isaac S. Tichenor, 1311 M street, N. W. Subsistence Division.— Chief, Andrew Cauldwell, 2202 Fourteenth street, N. W. Pension Division.— Chief, William H. Whitney, 200 E street, N. W, k Claims Division.— Chief; W. S. Stetson, 1412 Sixth street, N. W. ) : FOURTH AUDITOR. # f Auditor.—StephenJ. W. Tabor, 1309 Fourteenth street, N. W. ! Deputy.—William B. Moore, 126 Eleventh street, S. E. i Record Prize Division.— Chief, Benj. P. Davis, Mount Pleasant, D.C. FS Navy Agents’ Division— Chief, William F. Stidham, Meridian Hill. Paymasters’ Division.— Chief, George L. Clark, gos R street. Pension Division.— Chief, Richard Goodhart, 124 Eleventh street, S. E. Claim Division.— Chief, Robert Kearon, 614 M street, N. W. Bookkeepers’ Division.— Chief, P. H. Folsom, Brightwood, D. C. FIFTH AUDITOR. Auditor—]. H. Ela, 515 Twelfth street, N. W. Deputy.—]. B. Mann, 20 Grant Place. Diplomatic and Consular Division.— Chief, George Cowie, 600 Seventh street, S. W, Internal Revenue Collectors’ Division.— Chief, R. B. Detrick. SIXTH AUDITOR. Auditor.—J. M. McGrew, 1113 M street, N. W: Deputy.—F. B. Lilley, 1313 Thirteenth street, N. W, Disbursing Clerk.—Zabina he 47 H street, N. W, Collecting Division.— Chief, E. J. Evans, Alexandria, Virginia. Stating Division. Chief, W. i ‘Gunnison, 937 O street, N. W, 1+ Examining Division.— Chief, B. Lippincott, Hamilton House. * Money-Order Division — Chief, John Lynch, 202 D street, N. W. Foreign Mail Division.— Chief, Robert S. Widdecombe, Prince George’s County, Md. \ Registering Division.— Chief, Joseph B. Will, 1512 Ninth street, N. W. | 1 Pay Division.— Chief, Robert F. Crowe:l, 495 Pennsylvania avenue. Bookkeeping Division.— Chief, James T. Smith, 1112 Eleventh street, N. W., TREASURER OF THE UNITED STATES. { Treasurer.—James Gilfillan, 724 Twelfth street, N. W. Assistant Treasurer.—A. U. Wyman, 910 French street. Chief Clerk.—Charles Lyman, 222 A street, S. E. Cashier.—]J. W. Whelpley, 8oo East Capitol street. Assistant Cashier.—H. A. Whitney, 1503 Vermont avenue, N. W. Paying Teller—F. W. Moffatt, 64 West street, Georgetown, Receiving Teller—E. R. True, 926 New York avenue, N. W. Assistant 7Teller.—William H. Gibson, 2417 Pennsylvania avenue, N. W. ie Assistant Teller.—A. R. Quaiffe; 1016 Fifteenth street, N. W. Redemption Division.— Chief, Charles H. Davidge, 917 G street, N. W. Loan Division.—Chief, William Wirt Wilson, 1415 G street, N. W. { Accounts Division.— Chief, D. W. Harrington, 1114 H street, N. W. ; . $e National-Bank Division.— Chief, Jerome C. Bur nett, 708 Eleventh street, N. W. Principal Bookkeeper.—]. F. Meline, Assistant Bookkeeper.—Ferdinand Weiler, 1316 V street, N. W. National Bank Redemption Division. — Sup ZB. 0, Graves, 1700 Fourteenth st. COMPTROLLER OF THE’ CURKENCY. Comptroller.—]John Jay no, 1127 Tenth street, N. W. Deputy Comptroller. rthy, 1309 Riggs street. Issue Division. hitom Xe F. Bates, bor K street, N. W. Redemption Division.— Chief, J. D. Patten, te 118 West street, Georgetown Reports Division.—Chief, J. W., Magruder, 100 West street, Georgetown. Organization Division.—Chief, E dward Wolcott, 314 Indiana avenue. Bond Clere.—]. W. Griffin, 1430: Corcoran street, N. Congressional Directory. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE. Commissioner.—Green B. Raum, 1343 Q street, N. W. Deputy—H. C. Rogers, 1538 I street, N. W. Chief Clerk and Appointment Division.—Alex. H. Holt, 1015 K street, N. W, Law Division.—Assistant Solicitor, William H. Armstrong, 1313 New York avenue. Tobacco Section.— Chief, Israel Kimball, 119 Maryland avenue, N. E. Section in charge of frauds, &c.—Chief, O. F. Dana, 117 C street, S. E. Stamp Division.— Chief, E. R. Chapman, 62 West street, Georgetown. Assessment Division.— Chief, C. A. Bates, 1431 S street, N. W, Division of Distilled Spirits.— Chief, T. A. Cushing, 803 G street, N. W, Division of Revenue Agents.—F. D. sewall, 1231 New York avenue. LIGHT-HOUSE BOARD. Chairman.—Rear-Admiral John Rodgers, Observatory. Naval Secretary.—Commander George Dewey, U. S. N., 826 Fourteenth street. Engineer Secretary.—Maj. Peter C. Hains, U. S. A., 1444 N street, N. W. Chief Clerk.—Arnold B. Johnson, Le Droit Park. UNITED STATES COAST SURVEY. (Coast Survey Building, south of the Capitol.) Superintendent.—Carlisle P. Patterson, Brentwood. Assistant in Charge of Office —]. E. Hilgard, 1313 N street, N. W, Hydrographic [nspector.— Commander, Edward P. Lull, U.S. N., 2032 G street, N. W, Disbursing Agent.—]. W. Porter, 1534 I street. MARINE-HOSPITAL SERVICE (Supervising Surgeon-General’s Office, 1421 G street, N. W.) Supervising Surgeon-General.—John M. Woodworth, M. D., Riggs House. Chief Clerk and Acting Medical Purveyor.—Oscar Oldberg, 408 Fourth street, S. E. WAR DEPARTMENT. Secretary of War.—GEORGE W. MCCRARY, 1724 I street, N. W, Chief Clerk.—H. T. Crosby, 2013 G street. Disbursing Clerk.—E. M. Lawton, 1143 Twenty-fourth street, N. W. Correspondence Division.— Chief, John Tweedale, gor R street, N. W. Record Division.— Chief, Samuel Hodgkins, 342 Pennsylvania avenue, N. W, Publication Office, War Records. —Bvt Col. R. N. Scott, 1321 Q street, N. W, Officers on Duty.—Bvt. Col. Henry Goodfellow, 1707 De Sales street. Bvt. Capt. Thomas H. Bradley, 927% E street, N. W. HEADQUARTERS OF THE ARMY. General William T. Sherman, Ebbitt House. Aidks-de-Camp.—Bvt Maj. Gen. William D. Whipple, Chicago, Illinois. Col. Jos. C. Audenried, 1023 Vermont avenue. Col. John E. Tourtellotte, 704 Fourteenth street, N. W. Col. John M. Bacon, Ebbitt House. Bvt. Brig. Gen. Orlando M. Poe, 1507 Rhode Island avenue. Bvt. Maj. Gen. A. McD. McCook, 1515 Rhode Island avenue. AD] UTANT-GENE RAL’S DEPARTMENT. Adjutant-General.—Bvt. Maj. Gen. E. D. Townsend, 2011 I street, N. W. Assistants. —Bvt Brig. Gen. R. C. Drum, 2003 I street, N. W. Bvt. Brig. Gen. Samuel Breck, 1339 Q street, N. W. Bvt. Lt. Col. S. N. Benjamin, 1309 L street, N. W. Maj. George G. Huntt, 1412 G street, N. W. Chief Clerk.—Raphael P. Thian, 91 Fayette street, Georgetown. Executive Departments. 107 x : { INSPECTOR-GENERAL’S DEPARTMENT. | Inspector-General.—Bvt. Maj. Gen. Randolph B. Marcy, 1328 New York avenue, N. W. Assistant Inspector-General.—Lt. Col. Roger Jones, 2207 Pennsylvania avenue, N. W. QUARTERMASTER’S DEPARTMENT. Quartermaster-General.—Bvt. Maj. Gen. M. C. Meigs, 1239 Vermont avenue, Assistants.—Bvt. Maj. Gen. Stewart Van Vliet, 819 Fifteenth street, N. W. X Bvt. Brig. Gen. Judson D. Bingham, 1210 N street, N. W. ( Lt. Col. H. C. Hodges, 1017 Fifteenth street, N. W. “ Bvt. Lt. Col. J. M. Moore, 1605 I street, N. W, Chief Clerke.—George K. Finckel, 1223 T street, N. W. | Depot Quartermaster and rT. Office of National Cemeteries, ial Lt. Col. A. F. Rockwell, 1317 Corcoran street, SUBSISTENCE DEPARTMENT. (Offices, 17 Fifteenth-and-a-half street.) Commissary-General.—Brig. Gen. Robert Macfeely, 2015 TI street, N. W. Assistants —Bvt. Brig. Gen. Thomas J. Haines, 1728 I street, N. W. Bvt. Brig. Gen. John W. Barriger, 1743 F street, N. W. Bvt. Brig. Gen. Edward G. Beckwith, 2005 I street, N. W. Ctief Clerf.—Richard M. Hanson, 616 North Carolina avenue, N. E. Depot Commissary.—Bvt. Brig. Gen. Thomas Wilson, 60 West street, Georgetown. MEDICAL DEPARTMENT. Surgeon-General—DBvt. Maj. Gen. Joseph K. Barnes, 1723 H street, N. W. Assistants.—Bvt. Brig. Gen. Charles H. Crane, 1905 F street, N. W. Bvt. Lt. Col. Joseph J. Woodward, 620 F street, N. W. Bvt. Lt. Col. John S. Billings, 84 Gay street, Georgetown. \ Bvt. Lt. Col. George A. Otis, 1325 Corcoran street. Chief Clerk.—Samuel Ramsey, 2110 H street, N. W. 4. Chief Medical Purveyor.—Col. J. H. Baxter, 1504 H street, N. W, » Attending Surgeon.—Bvt. Col. Basil Norris, 1829 G street, N. W. PAY DEPARTMENT. (Office, 1214 F street, N. W.) Paymaster-General.—Brig. Gen. Benjamin Alvord, 1211 N street, N. W. Assistant.—Bvt. Lt. Col. Charles T. Larned, 2026 G street, N. W, Chief Clerke.—G. D. Hanson, 1228 Massachusetts avenue. Army Paymasters,—Maj. Charles W. Wingard, 1533 H street, N. W. Sl Maj. G. W. Candee, 1329 Q street, N. W, Bvt. Lt. Col. A. B. Carey, 1315 Corcoran street. Maj. Thomas C. H. Smith, 2027 G street, N. W. ' | -Chief of Engineers.—Bvt. Maj. Gen. Andrew A. Humphreys, 1822 I street, N. W. Assistants.—Bvt. Col. Thomas Lincoln Casey, 1419 K street, N. W. Bvt. Maj. Gen. John G. Parke, 16 Lafayette Square. Maj. George H. Elliot, 1518 H street, N. W. Chief Clerk.—William J. Warren, 1234 Massachusetts avenue. Secretary to Light-House Board.—Bvt. Lt. Col. Peter C. Hains, 2100 H street, N. W PUBLIC BUILDINGS AND GROUNDS. (Office corner Seventeenth and F streets, N. W.) In charge.—Bvt. Col. Thomas Lincoln Casey, Corps of Engineers, 1419 K street, N. W. 7] 4 Assistants, Washington Aqueduct.—T. B. Samo, 53 Second street, Georgetown. State, War, and Navy Building.—B. R. Green, 1307 Riggs street. Chief Clerke.—E. F. Concklin, 418 B street, S. E. Public Gardener.—G. H. Brown, 634 B street, S. W. U. S. GEOGRAPHICAL SURVEYS WEST OF THE IOOTH MERIDIAN. (Office, 1813 F street, N. W.) First Lieut. George M. Wheeler, Corps of Engineers, 12 Lafayette Square. 108 Congressional Directory. ORDNANCE DEPARTMENT. Chief of Ordnance.—Brig. Gen. Stephen V. Benét, 1717 I street, N. W. | Assistant.—Bvt. Lt. Col. S. C. Lyford, 723 Eighteenth street, N. W. Chief Clerk.—N. McNally, Ebbitt House. . BUREAU OF MILITARY JUSTICE. Fudge-Advocate-General.—Brig. Gen. W. McKee Dunn, 25 First street, N. E. Assistants.—Bvt. Col. William Winthrop, 1100 Vermont Avenue. Bvt. Col. H. P. Curtis, 1731 De Sales street. Chief Clerk.—Thomas Duke, 2304 I street, N. W. SIGNAL-OFFICE. Chief Signal-Officer.—Bvt. Brig. Gen. Albert J. Myer, 1627 I street, N. W, | Assistants.—First Lieut. John P. Story, 4th Artillery, 1607 H street, N. W. A First Lieut. Charles E. Kilbourne, 2d Art., 1712 L street, N. W. ] First Lieut. Henry H. C. Dunwoody, 1423 I street, N. W, : First Lieut. Robert Craig, 1008 I street, N. W. Bvt. Capt. Henry W. Howgate, 1833 Fourteenth street, N. W. Chae Clerk.—Alexander Ashley, 2012 G street. NAVY DEPARTMENT. Secretary of the Navy.—R. W. THOMPSON, 1739 I street, N. W., Chief Clerk.—John W. Hogg, No. 1413 Columbian College Hill. Disbursing Clerk.—F. H. Stickney, Hopeton, Seventh street road. Acting Fudge-Advocaté.—Captain William B. Remey, United States Marine Corps, 1406 G street, N. W. BUREAU OF YARDS AND DOCKS. Chief of Bureau.—Captain R. L Law, 2022 G street, N. W. Chief Clerk.—Augustus E. Merritt, 612 H street, N. W. Q Civil Engineer.—William P. S. Sanger, 78 Prospect street, Georgetown, D. C, =DF : BUREAU OF NAVIGATION. : » Chiefof Bureau.—Commodore W. D. Whiting, 1221 K street, N. W. Superintendentof Compasses.—Prof. B. F. Greene, 162 West street, Georgetown, Chief Clerk.—L. Waldecker, 1207 Sixth street, N. W, : BUREAU OF ORDNANCE. Chief of Bureau.—Commodore William N. Jeffers, 1800 F street, N. W. Chief Clerk.—S. T. Ellis, 1008 New Jersey avenue, S. E. BUREAU OF PROVISIONS AND CLOTHING. rt ————— Er g— Chief of Bureau.—Paymaster-General George F. Cutter, 1414 K street, N. W. Chief Clerk.—]John F. Denson, 491 Missouri avenue. Laymaster.—Chas. P. Thompson, zoo1 I street, N. W, BUREAU OF MEDICINE AND SURGERY. Chief of Bureau.—Surgeon-General J. Winthrop Taylor, Hamilton House. Assistant Chief of Bureau.—Surgeon J. B. Parker, Hamilton House. Chief Clerk.—D. Carrigan, 224 A street, S. E. BUREAU OF STEAM-ENGINEERING. Chief of Bureau.—Engineer-in-Chief William H. Shock, 1412 I street, N. W. Chief Clerk.—W. H. H. Smith, 2112 H street. Chief Engineer.—Henry W. Fitch, 1322 G street, N. W. Passed Assistant Engineer —E. T. Phillippi, 1313 H street, N. W. W. A. H. Allen, 219 Third street, N. W. C. R. Roelker, 17 Bridge street, Georgetown. Harrie Webster, 32 First street, Georgetown. J. D. Ford, Navy Department. Assistant Engineer.—1. S. K. Reeves, No. 3 Grant Place. J. A. Henderson, No. 3 Grant Place T. F. Burgdorff, 1214 K street, N. W. R. R. Leitch, 1707 Pennsylvania avenue. H. Herwig, 1707 Pennsylvania avenue. xR = Executive Departments. BUREAU OF CONSTRUCTION AND REPAIR. Chief of Bureanu.—Chief Constructor John W. Easby, 2018 F street, N. W. Chief Clerk.—Hugh Allen Goldsborough, 1916 G street, N. W. BUREAU OF EQUIPMENT AND RECRUITING. Chief of Burean.—Commodore Earl English, Hamilton House. Chief Clerk.—S. Henriques, 2007 I street, N. W. ADMIRAL’S OFFICE. (At his house.) Admiral D. D. Porter, 1710 H street. Secretary to the Admiral.—]. M. Alden, 1223 Thirteenth street. NAVY-YARD, WASHINGTON. Commodore John C. Febiger, Navy-Yard. Captain J. C. P. DeKrafft, Navy-Vard. Commander H. L. Howison, Navy-Yard. Lieutenant-Commander H. C. Taylor, Navy-Yard. Lieutenant M. B. Buford, Hamilton House. Lieutenant W. W. Reisinger, Bellevue Magazine. Lieutenant J. N. Hemphill, National Hotel. Lieutenant E. C. Pendleton, 1220 F street, N. W. Lieutenant T. C. McLean, 1340 Massachusetts avenue, N. W. Lieutenant J. R. Selfridge, 2106 Pennsylvania avenue, N. W. Lieutenant G. B. Harber, 1027 Vermont avenue, N. W. Lieutenant John C. Wilson, 1027 Vermont avenue, N. W. Master Nathan Sargent, 129 East Capitol street. Master Charles A. Foster, 418 Tenth street, N. W. Ensign R. F. Nicholson, 304 C street, N. W. ‘Mate J. W. Baxter, 1011 Virginia avenue, S. E. Mate Samuel Lomax, 634 F street, S. W. Medical Director F. M. Gunnell, Naval Hospital. Surgeon C. J. Stuart Wells, 2119 H street, N. W. Passed Assistant Surgeon R. C. Persons, go4 Pennsylvania avenue, S. E. Passed Assistant Surgeon L. G. Heneberger, Naval Hospital. Pay-Inspector W. W. Williams, 530 Twenty-first street, N. W. . Paymaster A. W. Bacon, I street, N. W. Chief Engineer John W. Moore, Navy-Yard. Chief Engineer Philip Inch, 114 C street, S. E. Chief Engineer R. L. Harris, 1230 Fourteenth street, N. W, Chief Engineer David Smith, Riggs House. Passed Assistant Engineer D. P. McCartney, 723 Fourteenth street, N. W, Passed Assistant Engineer Absalom Kirby, 405 C street, S. E. Passed Assistant Engineer George E. Tower, 420 C street, S. E. Chaplain John B. Van Meter, 1222 Eleventh street, N. W. Naval Constructor William L. Mintonye, 456 C street, N. W. Civil Engineer A. G. Menocal, Navy-Yard. Boatswain William A. Cooper, 303 L street, S. E. Gunner. George Dunn, 524 Eleventh street, S. E. Gunner Samuel Cross, Naval Magazine. Gunner John Russell, 405 Eighth street, S. E. Carpenter George W. Conover, 714 Seventh street, S. E Sailmaker Nicholas Lynch, 725 Eighth street, S. E. Marine Guard, Captain George W. Collier, Navy-VYard. Second Lieutenant John T. Brodhead, 1311 Fourteenth street, N.W. Second Lieutenant George T. Bates, 301 Delaware avenue, N. E., Second Lieutenant Jesup Nicholson, 1709 De Sales street. NAVY PAY-OFFICE. (Office, corner of Fifteenth street and New York avenue.) Pay-Inspector.—W. W. Williams, 1405 H street, N. W. HEADQUARTERS MARINE CORPS. Commandant.—Colonel Charles G. McCawley, Headquarters. Adjutant and Inspector.—Major A. S. Nicholson, 1709 De Sales street. Quartermaster.—Major William B. Slack, 704 Eighteenth street, N. W. Paymaster.—Major Green Clay Goodloe, 204 Pennsylvania avenue, S. E. Fudge-Advocate.—Captain H. A. Bartlett, Headquarters. II0 Congressional Directory. MARINE BARRACKS. Maj. and Brevet Lieutenant-Colonel Charles Heywood, 9o7 Thirteenth street, N. W, Captain Norval L. Nokes, Marine Barracks. ~ Passed Assistant Surgeon U. S. N. A. M. Owen, Marine Barracks. : : Second Lieutenant Leroy C. Webster, 2109 I street, N. W. y NAVAL OBSERVATORY. Superintendent. —Rear-Admiral John Rodgers, at the Observatory. \ Lieutenant-Commander George W. Pigman, 213 D street. { A Lieutenant E. Longnecker, Willard’s Hotel. it) Lieutenant George E. Ide, 516 Twelfth street. 6’ Lieutenant Thomas Perry, 613 Thirteenth street. Ni Lieutenant T. Dix Bolles, 929 G street. Professor Asaph Hall, 18 Gay street, Georgetown. Professor William Harkness, 1415 G street. ¥ Professor Joseph E. Nourse, 10 Stoddert street, Georgetown. Professor John R. Eastman, 24 Gay street, Georgetown. Professor Edward S. Holden, 1923 H street. Professor Edgar Frisby, 138 Dunbarton street, Georgetown. / Assistant Astronomers.—A. N. Skinner, 1726 Tenth street. : H. M. Paul, 15 Grant Place. H. S. Pritchett, 18 Gay street, Georgetown. Secretary.—Thomas Harrison, 26 Gay street, Georgetown. NAUTICAL ALMANAC. (Office, 96-102 Corcoran Building.) ‘ Superintendent.—Professor Simon Newcomb, 1336 Eleventh street, N. W. Lieutenant William H. Everett, 512 Thirteenth street. Master J. P. J. Augur, Hamilton House. Master Chauncey Thomas, 1408 ( orcoran street. Master W. M. Irwin, 720 Fourteenth street. s Assistants.—E. J. Loomis, 611 Thirteenth street. G. W. Hill, 18 Gay street, Georgetown. D. P. Todd, 1336 Eleventh street. John Meier, 1020 Eighteenth street. J. O. Wiessner, 1138 Twelfth street. SIGNAL-OFFICE. (Navy Department.) Commodore John C. Beaumont, in charge, 734 Seventeenth street, N. W, Lieutenants William H. Turner and John H. Moore. HYDROGRAPHIC OFFICE. (Corner of Eighteenth street and New York avenue.) | Hydrographer—Captain Samuel R. Franklin, Ebbitt House. Assistant Hydrographer.—Commander A. V. Reed, 1333 Corcoran street, N. W Lieutenant-Commander H. C. Taylor 324 Indiana avenue. Lieutenant-Commander Thomas Nelson, 1419 Q street, N. W. Lieutenant-Commander John McGowan, jr., 1101 Thirteenth street, N. W. Lieutenant T. A. Lyons, 1328 I street, N. W. Lieutenant William W. Mead, 1316 G street, N. W. Lieutenant Thomas C. Terrell, 1400 Massachusetts avenue. Lieutenant Edwin S. Jacob, 122 Third street, S. E. Lieutenint John E. Pillsbury, 1400 Massachusetts avenue. Lieutenant Lewis E. Bixler, 1305 F street, N. W Master Horace P. McIntosh. Master Julius C. Freeman, Imperial Ho el. Clerk.—Thomas T. Thurlow, 8o1r Ninth street, N. W, / -~ord od POST-OFFICE DEPARTMENT. Postmaster-General.—DAVID M. KEy, Ebbitt House. Chief Clerk.—W. A. Knapp, 926 New York avenue. Private Secretary.—T. B. Kirby, 717 Fourteenth street. Appointment Clerk.—]ames A. Vose, 705 Fifteenth street, N. W. Executive Departments. OFFICE OF FIRST ASSISTANT POSTMASTER-GENERAL. First Assistant Postmaster-General.—James N. Tyner, Ebbitt House. Chief Clerk.—]James H. Marr, sr., 1319 Eighth street, N. W. Superintendent Blank-Agency.—D. W. Rhodes, 1428 Q street, N. W. Appointment Division.— Principal Clerk, E. C. Fowler, 408 Seventh street, S. W. Bond Division.— Principal Clerk, Chauncey Smith, Washington House. Free-Delivery Division, Superintendent.—Revere W. Gurley, 145 West street, Georgetown. Salary and Allowance Division.— Clerk in Charge, A. S. Lynch, 32 Grant Place. Correspondence Division.— Principal Clerk, Thomas E. Roach, 447 P street, N. W. OFFICE OF SECOND ASSISTANT POSTMASTER-GENERAL. Second Assistant Postmaster-General.—Thomas J. Brady, 227 East Capitol street. Chief Clerk.—]John L. French, 36 I street, N. W. Superintendent Railway Classifications.—Isaac C. Slater, 440 New Jersey avenue, S. E. Superintendent Railway Mail Service.—William B. Thompson, 935 H street, N. W. Inspection Division.— Chief Clerk, Samuel M. Lake, 706 L street, N. W. Mail Equipment Division.— Principal Clerk, Henry L. Johnson, 22% Thirteenth st., S. W OFFICE OF THIRD ASSISTANT POSTMASTER-GENERAL. Third Assistant Postmaster-General.—Abraham D. Hazen, 616 G street, S. W. Chief Clerk.—William M. Morton, 1210 N street, N. W. Finance Division.— Principal Clerk, Hannibal D. Norton, 2021 Massachusetts ave., N.W. Postage-Stamp Division.— Chief, Madison Davis, 535 Seventh street, S. E. Registered-Letter Division.— Principal Clerk, S. R. Stratton, 530 Sixth street, S. E. Dead-Letter Division.— Chief, E. J. Dallas, 1205 Eleventh street, N. W. Division of Files, Mails, &c—Principal Clerk, E. S. Hall, 1203 M street, N. W. Postage-Stamp Agent.—H. Clay Hopkins, New York City. Postal-Card Agent.—George N. Tyner, New York City. Stamped-Envelope Agent.— Henry F. Sperry, Hartford, Conn. OFFICE OF FOREIGN MAILS. Superintendent.— Joseph H. Blackfan, 1130 Twelfth street, N. W. Chief Clerk.—James S. Crawford, 1423 Fifth street, N. W. LAW. OFFICE. 3 Assistant Attorney-General for Post-Office Department—Alfred A. Freeman, Mt. Pleasant. Law Clerk for Post-Office Department.—A. H. Bissell, 1916 Ninth street, N. W. MONEY-ORDER OFFICE. Superintendent of Money-Order System.—Charles F. Macdonald, 1326 L street, N. W. Chief Clerk.—David Haynes, 14 Grant Place, N. W. DIVISION OF MAIL DEPREDATIONS AND SPECIAL AGENTS. Chief of Division.—Charles Cochran, jr., Baltimore, Md. ChiefSpecial Agents.—David B. Parker, 926 New York avenue. of TOPOGRAPHER’S OFFICE. Zopographer.— Walter L. Nicholson, Congress street, Georgetown Heights. Principal Assistant.—Charles H. Poole, 940 P street, N. W. SUPERINTENDENT'S OFFICE. Superintendent and Disbursing Officer.—]. O. P. Burnside, 927 O street, N. W. INTERIOR DEPARTMENT. Secretary of the Interior.—CARL SCHURZ, 1719 H street, N. W. Assistant Secretary.—Alonzo Bell, gog M street, N. W. Assistant Attorney-General.—E. M. Marble, 515 Eleventh street, N. W. Chief Clerk.—George M. Lockwood, 1327 F street, N. W. Disbursing Clerk.—R. Joseph, 1102 Thirteenth street, N. W, Superintendentof Documents.—John G. Ames, 9o3 Sixteenth street, N. W. Appointment Division, Chi¢f.—]John B. Clark, 506 Maine avenue, N. W, Land and Railroad Division, Chief.—Z. B. Sturgus, 216 I street, N. W. Pension and Miscellaneous Div., Chief.—George Ewing, 429 Ninth street, N. W. Indian Division, Chief.—Thomas Mitchell, Imperial Hotel. Stationery and Printing Division, Chief.—Amos Hadley, 1228 N street, N. W. GENERAL LAND-OFFICE. Commissioner.— James A. Williamson, 215 East Capitol street. Chief Clerk.—]. M. Armstrong, 1010 Tenth street, N. W. 112 Congressional Directory. Recorder.—Seth W. Clark, 1416 Corcoran street, N. W. Principal Clerk of Public Lands.—M. E. N. Howell, 810 M street, N.W. Principal Clerk of Private Lands.— Walter R. Irwin, 326 Four-and-a-half street N. W, Principal Clerk of Surveys.—S. J. Dallas, 1134 Twelf h street, N. W. Divisionof Mineral Claims, Chief.—Curtis W. Holcomb, Linden, Md. Division of Railroad Lands, Chief.—Willis Drummond, jr., 412 Spruce st., Le Droit Park. Swamp-Land Division, Chief.—S. L. Crissey, 1210.1 Massachusetts avenue, N. W Pre-emption Division, Chief.—D. K. Sickels, 144 C street, N. E. Division of Accounts, Chief. —B. T. Reilly, 806 Seventeenth street, N. W. PENSION-OFFICE. (Pennsylvania avenue, corner Twelfth street.) Commissioner.—John A. Bentley, 1224 Fourteenth street, N. W, Chief Clerk.—O. P. G. Clarke, 400 New Jersey avenue, S. E. Medical Referee.—T. B. Hood, 1009 O street, N. W. Division of Records and Accounts.—Frank Moore, 1344 Rhode Island avenue. Invalid Division, Chief.—]. H. Hobbs, 1105 H street, N. W. Widows’ Division, Chief.—Charles L. Whelpley, 608 Fourteenth street, N. W. Special-Service Division, Chief.—]. Tolbert Lanston, Stoddart street, Georgetown. Mail Division.—D. L. Gitt, 1455 S street, N. W, Navy, Old War, and Bounty-Land Division, Chicf.—W. H. Webster, 1321 Riggs street. PATENT-OFFICE. Commissioner.—H. E. Paine, 204 A street, S. E. ‘ Assistant Commissioner.—W. H. Doolittle, 1108 New York avenue. Chief Clerk.—F. A. Seely, 941 Massachusetts avenue, N. W. Examiners-in-chief.—R. L. B. Clarke, 216 New Jersey avenue, S. E. V. D. Stockbridge, 1342 R street, N. W. - H. H. Bates, 1313 R street, NW, Examiner of Interferences.—Zenas F. Wilber, 320 Indiana avenue. Examinerof Trade-Marks.—]. E. M. Bowen, 1536 Ninth street, N. W, Examiners.— Thomas Antisell, 1311 Q street, N. W. William H. Appleton, 1314 G street, N. W. W. A. Bartlett, 1351 E street, S. E. William Burke, 704 L street, N. W. B. R. Catlin, 1515 Twelfth street, N: W. . P. Chapman, 1300 Tenth Lito N. W. 1: B. Church, 210 E street, N. W. JB: Durnall, 1433 ey str eet, N. W. RG. Dyrenforth, 1418 N street, N. W. Oscar C. Fox, 1325 Eleventh street, N. W. F. IL. Freeman, 1331 G street, N. W, Francis Fowler, 1213 M street, N. W. B. S. Hedrick, 68i First street, Georgetown. J. W. Jayne, 814 Twelfth street, N. W. B. W. Pond, Falls Church, Virginia. Joseph G. Parkinson, 1821 G street, N. W. H. P. Sanders, 635 I street, N.-W, Albin Schoepf, Hyattsville, Maryland. S. W. Stocking, 1115 G street, N. W. H. C. Townsend, 910 R street, N. W, A. G. Wilkinson, 1526. K street, N. W. Finance Clerk.—1L.evi Bacon, 633 East Capitol street. Librarian.— Weston Flint, 610 H street, N. W, INDIAN-OFFICE. Commeassioner.— Ezra A. Hayt, Ebbitt House. Chief Clerk.—William M. Leeds, New York Avenue Hotel. Finance Division, Chicf.—Jos. 7 Bender, 1702 Ninth street, N. W. Account Division, Chief—P. W Roberts, Seventh street, above Boundary. Land Division, Chief.—E. J. Brooks. Civilization Division, Chief.—Ezra L. Stevens, 224 Maryland avenue, N. E Records and Files Division, Chief.—G. W. Terflinger, 625 A street, S. E. CENSUS-OFFICE. Superintendent.—Francis A. Walker, New Haven, Connecticut. Chief foe D. Harrington, 303 M street, N. W. RAILROAD ACCOUNTS. i: in Auditor. me, French, 1422 S street, N. W, Executive Departments. I13 Cs BUREAU OF EDUCATION. (Corner of Eighth and G streets ) . Commissioner of Education.—John Eaton, 712 East Capitol street. Chief Clerk.—Charles Warren, 1208 N street, N. W. ; Transiator.—C. H. Pluggé, 1207 Pennsylvania avenue, N. W. UNITED STATES PENSION AGENCY. (Office, 509 Seventh street.) Pension Agent.—John S. Witcher. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY OF THE TERRITORIES. First Division.—F. V. Hayden in charge, 509 Seventh street. Second Division.—]. W. Powell in charge, Department of Interior Building. DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE. Attorney-General. —CHARLES DEVENS, 826 Fourteenth street. Solicitor-General.—Samuel F. Phillips, 1119 K street. Assistant Attorney-General.—Edwin B. Smith, 601 Thirteenth street. Assistant Attorney-General.—Thomas Simons, 1409 L street. Assistant Att. Gen., Dep. of the Interior.— Edgar M. Marble, 912 I street, N. W. Assistant Att. Gen., Post-Office Dep.—A. A. Freeman, Moun Pleasant. Solicitor of Internal Revenue, Treasury Department.—Chas. Chesley, 1015 K street. Naval Solicitor, Navy Department.— Examiner of Claims, State Department.—Henry O’Conner, 1213 O street, N. W. Chief Clerk.—George C Wing, 1109 Fourteenth street, N. W. Law Clerk and Examiner of [itles.—A. J. Bentley, 1116 Ninth street. Solicitor of the Treasury, Treasury Department.— Kenneth Rayner, Metropolitan Hotel. Assistant Solicitor.— Joseph H. Robinson, 1317 Thirteenth street, N. W. Chief Clerk—Webster Elmes, 1720 F street. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE. Commissioner of Agriculture.—WILLIAM G. LE Duc, 918 Seventeenth street, N, W, Chief Clevk.—E. A. Carman, 315 Eleventh street, S. W. Disbursing Clerk.—B. F. Fuller, 506 Maryland avenue, S. W. Statistician.—Charles Worthington, Frederick street, Georgetown, D. C. Entomologist.—C. V. Riley, 1700 Thirteenth street, N. W. Botanist.—Dr. George Vasey, 301 Eleventh street, S. W. Chemist.—Peter Collier, 1423 S street, N. W. Assistant Chemist.—Charles Wellington, 1107 F street, N. W. Microscopist.—Thomas Taylor, 238 Massachusetts avenue, N. E. Superintendentof Garden and Grounds.—William Saunders, 1605 Third street, N. W. Librarian.—Mrs. E. H. Stevens, 613 Thirteenth street, N. W. Superintendent of Seed Division.—Andrew Glass, 1354 C street, S. W. THE GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE, Public Printer.—JoHN D. DEFREES, 1229 N street, N. W, Chief Clerk.—A. F. Childs, 203 H street, N. W. Clerk.—John Larcombe, 1817 H street, N. W. Clerk.—H. H. Twombly, 103 1 street, N. W. Clerk.—]. R. Offley, 4 Stoddert street, Georgetown. Clerk.—Charles B. Hough, 1423 Sixth street, N. W. Clerk.—W. H. Collins, go6 Pennsylvania avenue, S. E. Clerk.—A. H. Post, 139 D street, S. E. Telegraph Operator. Tiavid Nicholson, 707 East Capitol street. Foreman of Printing.—A. H. S. Davis, 435 O street, N. W. Assistant Foreman, of Printing.—]J. M. A. Spottswood, 34 I street, N. hs Assistant Foreman in charge of Press-Room.—O. H. Ry 1216 S street, W. Assistant Foreman in charge of Executive Printing.—O H. Nealy, 104 ih st., N..E, Assistant Foreman in charge of Congressional Record.—E. W. Oyster, 77 H street, N. W. Assistant Foreman in charge of Patent-Office Printing.—J. D. fi 1419 Columbia st. Superintendent of Folding-Room. —Thomas B. Penicks, 618 L street, N. W. toreman of Binding.—]. H. Roberts, 1022 Lighth street, N. W, Assistant Foreman of Binding.—]. W. White, B11 First street, N. W, v8 114 Congressional Directory. DEPARTMENT DUTIES; 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 de-claring 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 the Department the Assistant Secretary, Second Assistant Secretary, and Third As-sistant Secretary are respectively charged with the immediate supervision of all correspond-ence 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 gen-eral, 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 employees 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 archives; 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 Austria, Belgium, Denmark, France, Germany, Great Britain, Netherlands, Portugal, Spain, Sweden and Norway, and Switzerland, and miscella-neous correspondence relating to those countries. Division B.—Correspondence with Argentine Republic, Brazil, Central America, Chili, Greece, Hawaiian Islands, Hayti, Italy, Liberia, Mexico, Paraguay, Peru, Russia, San Do-mingo, Uruguay, and Venezuela, and miscellaneous correspondence relating to those countries. © Division C.— Correspondence with Barbary States, China, Egypt, Friendly and Naviga-tor’s Islands, Japan, Madagascar, Muscat, Siam, Society Islands, Turkey, and other coun-tries, not assigned, and miscellaneous correspondence relating 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. BUREAU OF ROLLS AND LIBRARY. Custody of the rolls, treaties, &c.; promulgation of the laws, &c.; care and superintend-ence of the library and public documents; care of the revolutionary archives, and of papers relating to international commissions. BUREAU OF 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. ; Department Duties. THE TREASURY DEPARTMENT. THE SECRETARY OF THE: TREASURY. The Secretary of the Treasury has charge of the national finances. He digests and pre- pares 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 rendering 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 in- formation to 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 discharges the duties relative to the construction, illumination, inspec- tion, and superintendence of light-houses, light-vessels, beacons, buoys, sea-marks, and their appendages ; makes provision for the paynient of the public debt under enactments of Con- gress, and publishes statements concerning 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 Life-Saving Service and Revenué Marine ; Division of Sta- tionery, Printing, and Blanks ; Division of Special Agents; and two disbarsing-clerks pay the salaries and compensation of the officers and employes of the Department, and disburse, upon the orders of the Secretary, such moneys as have been appropriated to be expended under lhe direction of the Department. ASSISTANT SECRETARIES OF THE TREASURY. One of the two Assistant Secretaries (now Hon. John B. Hawley) has the general super- vision of all the work assigned to the Divisions of Appointments, Public Moneys, Revenue Marine, Stationery, Printing and Blanks, Loans and Currency, Bureau of Engraving and Printing, and office of the Director of the Mint ; the signing of all letters and papers as Assist- ant Secretary, or ‘by order of the Secretary,” relating to the business of the foregoing di- visions and bureau, 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 (now Hon. H. F. French) has the generat supervision of all the work assigned to the Divisions of Customs, Special Agents, Internal Revenue and Navi- gation, Warrants, Estimates, and Appropriations, and to the offices of Supervising Architect, Supervising Surgeon-General of the Marine Hospital Service, Bureau of Statistics, and Super- vising Inspector-General of Steamboats; the signing of all letters and papers as Assistant Secretary, or “by order of the Secretary,” relating to the business of the foregoing divi- sions, that do not by law require the signature of the Secretary of the Treasury; and the signing, instead of the Secretary, of certain warrants under section 246 of the Revised Stat- utes ; the performance of such other duties as may be prescribed by the Secretary or by law. THE FIRST COMPTROLLER. The First Comptroller countersigns all warrants issued by the Secretary of the Treasury covering the public revenues into the Treasury, and authorizing payments therefrom. All accounts examined by the First Auditor, except those which go to the Commissioner of Customs, and all examined by the Fifth Auditor, and accounts of Registers and Receivers of land-offices examined by the Commissioner of the General Land-Office, are re-examined and revised in the First Comptroller’s Office. Here, also, are examined and reported on the drafts for salaries and expenses drawn by ministers and consuls abroad, and the requisitions for advances drawn by marshals, collectors of internal revenue, secretaries of the Territories, and other disbursing-officers. Powers of attorney for the collection of drafts on the Treasury are examined; and many other duties, having reference to the adjustment of claims against the United States, per-tain to the office, but 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. 6 Congressional Directory. These accounts are examined in Dzvisions, devoted respectively to the affairs of Army Pay-masters, Army Quartermasters, Navy Paymasters and the Marine Corps, Army Pensions, Miscellaneous Claims, and Indian Affairs. THE COMMISSIONER OF CUSTOMS The Commissioner of Customs revises and certifies the accounts of revenue 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, &c., for custom-houses, &c. ; 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, bookkeepers, bond, and miscellaneous. THE FIRST AUDITOR. It is the duty of the First Auditor to receive all accounts accruing in the Treasury Depart-ment (except 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. SFudiciary 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. 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 all accounts relating to bounties, the recruiting service, the pay and clothing of the Army, the subsistence of officers, medical and hospital accounts, the pay of private physicians, and the expenses of the War Department, contingent disbursements of the Army, and all accounts relating to Indian Affairs. The Divisions are— Paymaster’s Division.—Army paymasters’ accounts and payments to the Soldiers’ Home and the National Home for Disabled Volunteers. Miscellaneows Claims Division.—Accounts of the Ordnance and Medical Departments of the Army, contingent expenses, Army Medical Museum and publications, regular and volun- - Ce RRR teer recruiting, freedmen’s bounty and pay. Indian Affairs Division.—Disbursements for the Indians, money accounts and property returns of Indian agents, and claims for goods supplied and services rendered. s Pay and Bounty Division.—Examination and adjustment of claims of white and colored soldiers and their legal heirs for pay and bounty. Investigation of Frauds Division.— Investigation of alleged cases of forgery, fraud, over-payments, unlawful withholding ot money, &c., in the payment of white and colored soldiers. Bookkeeper’s Division.—Accounts of the numerous requisitions drawn by the Secretaries of War and Interior, examined and charged to various appropriations. THE THIRD AUDITOR. The Third Auditor examines, adjusts, and transfers to the Second Comptroller all accounts relating to the Quartermaster-General’s Department, the Engineer Corps,'and the Commis- sary-General’s Department of the Army; claims for lost horses, accounts of unpaid pensions, State war-claims, and the claims of States for organizing, arming, and equipping volunteers after 1861. The Divisions of the Third Auditor’s Office are— Bookkeeper’s Division.—Accounts of the numerous requisitions drawn by the Secretary of War and of the Interior, examined and charged to various appropriations. Quartermaster’s Division.— Accounts of disbursements for ris and quarters, hospitals, offices, stables, and transportation.of supplies; the purchase of clothing, camp and garrison equipage, horses, fuel, forage, straw, bedding, and stationery ; payments of hired men and of extra duty men ; expenses incurred in the apprehension of deserters; for the burial of officers and soldiers; for hired escorts, expresses, interpreters, spies, and guides; for veterinary sur- Department Duties. eh | { | i | geons and medicines for horses; for supplying posts with water; and.for all other authorized outlays connected with the movements of the Army not expressly assigned. "Subsistence and Engineer Division.—~Accounts of all commissaries and acting commissaries in the Army, whose duties are to purchase the provisions and stores necessary for its sub-sistence, and to see to their proper distriQution; also, accounts of officers of the Corps of Engineers who disburse money for the expenses of the Military Academy, the improvement of rivers and harbors, the construction and preservation of fortifications, the surveys on the coasts, the surveys of lakes and rivers, and the construction and repair of breakwaters. State War and Horse Claims Division.—The settlement of all claims of the several States and Territories for the expenses incurred by them for enrolling, subsisting, clothing, arming, paying, and transporting their troops while employed by the Government in aiding to sup-press the recent insurrection against the United States; also, the settlement of claims for the loss of horses and equipages sustained by officers and enlisted men while in the military serve ice, and for horses, mules, &c., lost while in service by impressment or contract. Miscellaneous Claims Division.—The adjustment of claims for the appropriation of stores, the purchase of vessels, railroad stock, horses, and other means of transportation; the occupation of real estate, court-martial fees, travelling expenses, &c.; claims for compensation for vessels, cars, engines, &c., lost in the military service; claims growing out of the Oregon and Wash-ington war of 1855 and 1856, and other Indian wars; claims of various descriptions under special acts of Congress, and claims not otherwise assigned for adjudication. Collection Division.— Prepares accounts for suit against defaulting officers ; answers all calls for information from the files of the office; examines all claims for bounty-land and pensions granted to the soldiers of 1812, and certifies them to the Commissioner of Pensions. 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 and the Bureau ot Internal Revenue. There are two Divisions : : Diplomatic and Consular Division.—Adjustment is made of the expenses of all missions abroad for salaries, contingencies, and loss by exchange; consular-fees, salaries, and emolu-ments; consular courts and prisons; the relief of American seamen; the return of American seamen charged with crime; the expenses of claims, commissions, boundary-surveys, &e. Internal-Revenue Division.Accounts for assessing and of collecting the internal revenue, — including the salaries, commissions, and allowances of the assessors and collectors, their con-tingent expenses, &c.; the cost of revenue-stamps ; the accounts for salaries and expenses of supervisors, agents, and surveyors of distilleries ; the fees and expenses of gaugers; counsel fees, and taxes refunded. 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 postmas-ters, 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. It is 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. 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 for the transportation of the 118 Congressional Directory. 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, peostage-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 of all public moneys received into the Treasury at Washington, or in the sub-treasuries at Boston, New York, Philadelphia, Baltimore, Charleston, Cincinnati, St. Louis and San Francisco, or in the depositories and de-pository 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 issted, 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-Bank Division.—Bonds held as security for national-bank circulation are examined, notes issued, redeemed, and cancelled. « National-Bank Redemption Agency.—Notes of banks are redeemed and accounted for. THE REGISTER OF THE TREASURY. The Register of the Treasury has charge of the great account-books of the United States, which show every receipt and disbursement, and from which statements are annually made for transmission to Congress. He signs and issues all bonds, Treasury notes, and other secu-rities; registers all warrants drawn by the Secretary upon the Treasurer; transmits statements of balances due to individuals after their settlement by the First Comptroller, on which pay-ji ment is made; issues ships’ registers, licenses, and enrolments; prepares annual returns of all vessels built, lost, or destroyed; and also prepares statements of the tonnage of vessels in which importations and exportations are made, with the various articles and their values. These duties are attended to in five Divisions, viz : Coupon and Note Division.—Bonds, interest-coupons, gold-certificates, certificates of de-posit and of indebtedness are examined, registered, and issued or redeemed. Note and Fractional Currency Division.— Treasury notes, notes of national banks which have ‘gone into liquidation, and mutilated fractional currency are examined, cancelled, and destroyed. Loan Division.— Registered and coupon bonds are issued, embracing the transfer of all registered bonds ;» the conversion of coupon into registered; the ledger accounts with hold-ers of registered bonds, and schedules made out upon which interest on sameis paid. Receipts and Expenditures Division.—The ledgers of the United States are kept, showing the civil, diplomatic, internal-revenue, miscellaneous, and public-debt receipts and expenditures ; also, statements of the warrants and drafts registered. Tonnage Division.—Accounts are kept showing the registered and the enrolled and licensed tonnage, divided into different classes, and exhibiting what is annually built and what is en-gaged in the fisheries of different kinds. 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. 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. RE a Department Duties. 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 Depart-ment relating to duties, remission of fines, penalties, and forfeitures, navigation and registry aws, 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 of commissions, leaves of absence, office-discinline, assorting and disposition of the mail, registry and copy- ing of all letters, with the care of the general files; and all matters relating to messengers, laborers, 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. Zvbacco 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. Division of Accounts.—Has 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 Com-pany, 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. SUPERINTENDENT OF THE COAST SURVEY. The Coast Survey is continuing the hydrographical survey of the Atlantic, Pacific, and lake coasts, with the topography of the shores, tidal operations, &c.; drawings of charts are made and published ; and the publication of the Atlantic Coast Pilot has been commenced. ‘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 WAR DEPARTMENT. THE SECRETARY OF WAR. The Secretary of War performs such duties as the President of the United States, who is Commander-in-Chief, nay enjoin upon him concerning the military service, and has the super-intendence of the purchase of Army supplies, transportation, &c. The Chief Clerk receives in the Secretary’s Office the public mail and correspondence; dis- ributes, records, and answers it; keeps the accounts of appropriations and estimates; is the 120 Congressional Directory. 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: Zhe Adjutant-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 volun-teers, 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 matériel 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 eulisted 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. 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 du-ties. 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 Fudge-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 of 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. Go Department Duties. 121 . 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 Chiefthe Bureau of Navigation supplies vessels of war with maps, charts, of 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. The Chief of the Bureaw of 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 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; pensions and bounty-lands; the public lands, including mines; the Indians; education; the census, when directed by law; the custody and distribution of pub-lic documents ; and certain hospitals and eleemosynary institutions in the District of Columbia. He also exercises certain powers and duties in relation to the Territories of the United States. THE 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 order of business in the Secretary’s Office, which is transacted in divisions, viz: Appointment Division, Disbursement Division, Land and Railroad Division, Indian Division, Pension and Miscellaneous Division, Document Division, Stationery Division and Returns Office. COMMISSIONER OF PATENTS. The Commissioner of 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-two Prin-cipal Examiners. Each Principal Examiner directs the examinations in one or more distinct classes of inventions. The divisions of the office are, Accounts and Property, Draughtsman’s, Application, Gazette, Assignment, and Patent Issue. 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. The divisions of the office are entitled the Invalid, Widows’, Old War and Bounty-Land, Records and Accounts, Special Service, and Mail. 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: ’ Congressional Directory. grants made by former governments, by sales, donations, or grants for schools, railroads, military bounties, or public improvements. The Land-Office audits its own accounts. The divisions of the office are, the Recorder’s, Public Lands, Private Land-Claims, Surveys, Railroad-Lands, Pre-emption Claims, Bounty-Lands, Swamp-Lands, Accounts, Mineral ~ Claims, and Timber Depredations. 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, Inspectors, Superin-tendents, Agents, and Traders; superintends the purchase, transportation, and distribution of presents and annuities; and reports, annually, the relations of the Government with each tribe. The divisions of the office are: the Finance, Land, Accounts, Civilization, and Edu-cation, 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. The divisions of the office are designated Correspondence and Documents, Statistics, Translation, and Abstracts. SUPERINTENDENT OF THE CENSUS. L] The Superintendent of the Census supervises the taking of the census ot the United States every tenth year, and the subsequent arrangement, compilation, and publication of the statis-tics collected. THE POST-OFFICE DEPARTMENT. THE POSTMASTER-GENERAL. The Postmaster-General has the direction and management of the Post-Office Department. He appoints all officers and employés of the Department, except the three Assistants Post-master-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 of 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. : Sacary and Allowance Division.—The duty of re-adjusting 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, wrapping-paper, and twine, etter-balances, and canceling-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 equip-ments, &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 fre- the 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 distri-‘bution, and the regulations for the government of the domestic mail service. It prepares the advertisements for mail proposals, receives the bids. and has charge of the annual and occa-sional mail lettings, and the adjustment and execution of the contracts. All applications for the establishment or aiteration of mail arrangements and for mail messengers should be sent to this office. All claims shouid be submitted to it for transportation service not under con- . Department Duties. tract. From this office all postmasters at the end of routes receive the statement of mail arrangements prescribed for the respective routes. It reports weekly to the Auditor all con-tracts executed, and all orders affecting the accounts for mail transportation; prepares the statistical exhibits of 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 curtail-ments ordered, and the additional 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 reported 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 be-tween 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 depository and draft offices, and certificates of deposit from depositing offices. Division of Postage-Stamps and Stamped FEnvelopes.—The issuing of postage-stamps, stamped envelopes, newspaper-wrappers, and postal cards ; also, the supplying of postmas-ters with envelopes for their official use, and registered-package envelopes and seals. Division of Registered Letters.—The duty of preparing instructions for the guidance of postmasters relative to registered letters, and all correspondence connected therewith; also, the compilation of statistics as to the transactions of the business. Division of Dead Letters—The examination and return to the writers of dead letters, and all correspondence relating thereto. ; The Superintendent of Foreign Mails has charge of all foreign postal arrangements, and the supervision of the ocean mail-steamship service. The Superiritendentof 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 interna-tional money-order correspondence with foreign countries. DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE. THE ATTORNEY-GENERAL. The Attorney-General is the head of the Department of Justice, and the chief law-officer of 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 inves-tigation 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 his 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 Court of Claims, in which the United States are interested; and, when the Attorney-General so directs, any such case in: any court of 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 State court, or elsewhere. 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 124 Congressional Directory. 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 4ssise-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 Interna. Revenue, Treasury Department; the Naval Solicitor, Navy Department; and the Zxaminer 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 dis-tribute 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 injurious 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 a 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 of the leading agricultural, pomological, and meteorological societies of the world. INTERNATIONAL EXHIBITION AT PARIS, * (Office in the Department of State.) Commissioner General.—Richard C. McCormick. SOUTHERN-CLAIMS COMMISSION. (Office, Iron Building, 1330 F street, N. W.) Commissioners.—Asa O. Aldis, of Vermont, 1616 Rhode Island avenue, N. W. ’ James B. Howell, of [owa, Ebbitt House. Orange Ferriss, of New York, Gray’s Hotel. Clerf.—Charles F. Benjamin, 433 First street, N. W. Reporter.—James L. Andem, 418 Second street, N. W. Messenger.—Thomas W. Phipps, 1332 F street, N. W. ou Supreme Court.— Circuit Courts. 125 ‘SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES. [The * designates those whose wives accompany them ; the § designates those whose daughters accom® -@any them ; the | designates those having other ladies with them. ] * § || Mr. Chief-Justice Waite, 1717 Rhode Island avenue, N. W. * Mr. Justice Clifford, National Hotel. * § || Mr. Justice Swayne, 1303 K street, N. W. * § Mr. Justice Miller, 1415 Massachusetts avenue, N. W. * || Mr. Justice Field, 21 First street east, Capitol Hill. *§ || Mr. Justice Strong, 1411 H street, N. W. *-§ || Mr. Justice Bradley, 201 I street, corner of New Jersey avenue. * Mr. Justice Hunt, 10 Lafayette Square, west side. * § Mr. Justice Harlan, 1500 I street, N. W. OFFICERS OF THE SUPREME COURT. Clerf.—D. W. Middleton, 214 New Jersey avenue, S. E. Marshal.—John G. Nicolay, 119 B street, S. E. Reporter.—William T. Otto, 931 K street, N. W, CIRCUIT COURTS OF THE UNITED STATES. First Judicial Circuit.—Mr. Justice Clifford, of Portland, Maine. Districts of Maine, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, and Rhode Island. : Circuit Judge. — Second Fudicial Circuit.—Mr. Justice Hunt, of Utica, New York. Districts of Vermont, ‘Connecticut, Northern New York, Southern New York, and Eastern New York. Circuit Judge.—Samuel Blatchford, New York City. Third Fudicial Circuit.—Mr. Justice Strong, of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Districts of New Jersey, Eastern Pennsylvania, Western Pennsylvania, and Delaware. Circuit Judge.—William McKennan, Washington, Pa. : Fourth Judicial Circuit.—Mr. Chief-Justice Waite. Districts of Maryland, West Virginia, Virginia, North Carolina, and South Carolina. Circuit Judge.—Hugh L. Bond, Baltimore, Md. : Fifth Judicial Circuit.—Mr. Justice Bradley, of Newark, New Jersey. Districts of Georgia, Northern Florida, Southern Florida, Northern Alabama, Southern Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, Eastern Texas, and Western Texas. Circuit Judge.—William B. Woods, Montgomery, Ala. Sixth Judicial Circuit.—Mr. Justice Swayne, of Columbus, Ohio. Districts of Northern «Ohio, Southern Ohio, Eastern Michigan, Western Michigan, Kentucky, Eastern Tennessee, and Western Tennessee. Circuit Judge.—John Baxter, Knoxville, Tenn. Seventh Fudicial Circuit.—Mr. Justice Harlan, of Louisville, Kentucky. Districts of Indiana, Northern Illinois, Southern Illinois, and Wisconsin. * Circuit Judge.—Thomas Drummond, Chicago, Ill. Eighth Fudicial Circuit.—Mr. Justice Miller, of Keokuk, Towa. Districts of Minnesota, Towa, Eastern Missouri, Western Missouri, Kansas, Eastern Arkansas, Western Arkansas, and Nebraska. Circuit Judge.—John F. Dillon, Davenport, Iowa. Ninth Fudicial Circuit.—Mr. Justice Field, of San Francisco, California. Districts of California, Oregon, and Nevada. : Circuit Judge.—Lorenso Sawyer, San Francisco, Cal. UNITED STATES COURT. OF CLAIMS, Chief-Justice Charles D. Drake, 2117 G street, N. W. Judge Charles C. Nott, 826 Connecticut avenue. Judge William A. Richardson, 924 McPherson Square. Judge J. C. Bancroft Davis, 1621 H street, N. W. Judge William H Hunt, 1466 Rhode Island avenue. Chief Clerk.—Archibald Hopkins, 1744 G street, N. W, Assistant Clerf.—]John Randolph, 28 I street, N. W, Bailiff.—Stark B. Tavlor, 485 H street. S. W. Messenger.——Richard F. Kearney, Union Town. Congressional Directory. FOREIGN LEGATIONS IN THE UNITED STATES. ARGENTINE REPUBLIC. Sefior Don Manuel Rafael Garcia, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. (Absent.) Senior Don yeti Perrié, Secretary of Legation and Chargé d’Affaires ad interim. AUSTRIA-HUNGARY. Chevalier Ernest von Tavera, Secretary of Legation, and Chargé d’Affaires ad interim, 1528 I street. Mr. E. Blithdorn, Secretary of Legation. (Absent.) BELGIUM. Mr. Maurice Delfosse, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, 1714 Pennsyl- vania avenue. Mr. Léon van den Bossche, First Secretary of Legation, 2015 G street. BRAZIL. Councillor A. P. de Carvalho Borges, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, 1701 K' street. Senhor Dom Benjamin Franklin Torredao de Barros, Secretary of Legation, 1632 Pine street, Philadelphia. Senhor Dom Joaquim Nabuco, Attaché. (Absent.) CHINA. Chen Lan Pin, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, 1925 F street. Mr. Yung Wing, Assistant Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, 1343 L st. Yung Tsang Siang, Secretary of Legation, 1925 F street. Mr. D. W. Bartlett, Secretary of Legation, 1337 L street. 5 Hwang Tah Kuen, Interpreter and Translator, 1925 F street. Tsai Sih Yung, Interpreter and Translator, 1925 F street. Yung Kai, Attaché, 1925 F street. COSTA RICA. Sefior Don Manuel M. Peralta, Minister Resident. (Absent.) | DENMARK. | Mr. J. H, de Hegermann-Lindencrone, Minister Resident, 1745 Pemiavhiain avenue. hs FRANCE. Mr. Max Outrey, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, 1025 Connecticut avenue. Summer residence, Newport. Mr. Millon de la Verteville, First Secretary of Legation, 1017 Connecticut avenue, Mr. Francois de Corcelle, Secretary of Legation. (Absent.) Count de Suzannet, Attaché. (Absent.) Mr. Léonce Laugel, Attaché, 826 Fourteenth street. Mr. Paul Dejardin, Chancellor, 826 Fourteenth street. GERMAN EMPIRE. Mr. Kurd von Schlézer, Envoy and Minister Plenipotentiary, 734 Fifteenth street. Baron Max von Thielmann, Secretary of Legation, 734 Fifteenth street. Mr. P. W. Biiddecke, Chancellor of Legation, 72 Defrees street. GREAT BRITAIN. . The Right Hon. Sir Edward Thornton, K. C. B., Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, British Legation, Connecticut avenue. Rear-Admiral William Gore Jones, C. B,, Naval Attaché, Wormley’ S. Mr. Victor Arthur Wellington Drummond, Secretary of Legation, 814 Seventeenth street. The Honorable Power Henry Le Poer Tr ench, Second Secretary. (Absent.) Mr. Henry Howard, C. B., Second Secretary, 1617 I street. Mr. Maurice de Bunsen, Attaché, 1709 H street. GUATEMALA. [See also Salvador. Sefior Don Vicente Dardon, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, 49 East Twenty-third street, New York. Sefior DonJ. Saborio, Secretary of Legation. (Absent.) HAWAII. Mr. Elisha H. Allen, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, 251 Beacon street, Boston. ;i 1 i b A§g The Diplomatic Corps. 127 / HAYTI. Mr. Stephen Preston, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, 66 Broadway, New York. : Mr. Charles A. Preston, Secretary of Legation, 66 Broadway, New York. ITALY. Baron Albert Blanc, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Wormley’s. Count Litta, First Secretary of Legation, 1017 Connecticut avenue, JAPAN. Jushie Yoshida Kiyonari, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. (Absent.) Shorukui Yoshida Djiro, Secretary of Legation and Chargé d’Affaires ad interim, 1i22 Vermont avenue. Mr. Asada Yasunori, Second Secretary. (Absent.) Mr. Amano Koziro, Attaché, 612 Fourteenth street. MEXICO. Sefior Don Manuel M. de Zamacona, 1418 K street. Senior Don José T. de Cuellar, First Secretary of Legation, 1421 Q street. Senior Don Cayetano Romero, Second Secretary, 1612 Seventh street. Lieutenant Don Francisco H. Garcia, Attaché, 12 Waverley Place, New York. Sefior Don Manuel M. Zamacona, Attaché, 1418 K street. NETHERLANDS. Mr. de Pestel, Minister Resident. (Absent.) PARAGUAY. Dr. Don Benjamin Aceval, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. (Absent.) Senior Don José Tomas Sosa, Secretary of Legation. (Absent.) PERU. No Representative, PORTUGAL. Viscount das Nogueiras, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, 1804 H street. RUSSIA. Mr. Nicolas Shishkin, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, 1804 H street. Mr. Grégoire de Willamov, Secretary of Legaticn, 1017 Connecticut avenue, Mr. Wladimir de Meissner, Second Secretary, 1014 Seventeenth street. SALVADOR. [See also Guatemala. ] Sefior Don Vicente Dardon, Minister Plenipotentiary, 49 East Twenty-third street, New Y ork. Sefior Don J. Saborio, Secretary of Legation. (Absent.) SPAIN. / Sefior Don José Brunetti, First Secretary and Chargé d’Affaires ad interim, 1714 Rhode Island avenue. Sefior Don José de Soto, Second Secretary of Legation, 1028 Seventeenth street. Senor Don Luis Polo de Bernabé, Third Secretary of Legation, 729 Fifteenth street. Senor Don José Llaveria, Attaché, 1916 F street. Sefior Don Julian del Arroyo, Attaché, 1340 I street. Com. Don Juan Montojo, Naval Attaché, 4305 Walnut street, Philadelphia. Office of the Legation, 1916 F street. SWEDEN AND NORWAY, Count Carl Lewenhaupt, ‘Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, 2015 G street. Mr. de Bildt, Secretary of Legation, 1337 K street. TURKEY. Grégoire Aristarchi Bey, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, 1404 H street. Baltazzi Effendi, Secretary of Legation, 16 East Fortieth street, New York. Rustem Effendi, Second Secretary of Legation, 1404 H street. VENEZUELA. Sefior Don Juan B. Dalla Costa, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Worm- ley’s. Sefior Don Andres S. Ibarra, Secretary of Legation. (Absent.) Senior Don Bernardino Mosquera, Attaché, 3715 Walnut street, Philadelphia. Congressional Directory. UNITED STATES 1LEGATIONS ABROAD. ARGENTINE REPUBLIC. Thomas O. Osborn, Minister Resident, Buenos Ayres. AUSTRIA-HUNGARY. John A. Kasson, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Vienna. John F. Delaplaine, Secretary of Legation, Vienna. BELGIUM. William C. Goodloe, Minister Resident, Brussels. BOLIVIA. 'S. Newton Pettis, Minister Resident and Consul-General, La Paz. BRAZIL. Henry W. Hilliard, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Rio de Janeiro. John C. White, Secretary of Legation, Rio de Janeiro. } CENTRAL AMERICAN STATES. (Costa Rica, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua, and Salvador.) George Williamson, Minister Resident, Guatemala City. CHILI. ‘Thomas A. Osborn, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Santiago. CHINA. \ ‘George F. Seward, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Peking. ‘Chester H. Holcombe, Secretary of Legation and Interpreter, Peking. COLOMBIA. Ernest Dickman, Minister Resident; Bogota. DENMARK. M. J. Cramer, Chargé d’Affaires, Copenhagen. FRANCE. Edward F. Noyes, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Paris. R. R. Hitt, Secretary of Legation, Paris. Henry Vignaud, Second Secretary of Legation, Paris. NT pr GERMAN EMPIRE. Bayard Taylor, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Berlin. H. Sidney Everett, Secretary of Legation, Berlin. Chapman Coleman, Second “Secretary of Legation, Berlin. " GREAT BRITAIN. John Welsh, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, London. William J. Hoppin, Secretary of Legation, London. E. 5. Nadal, Second Secretary of Legation, London. : GREECE. J. Meredith Read, Chargé d’ Affaires, Athens. HAWAIIAN ISLANDS. J. M. Comly, Minister Resident, Honolulu. HAYTI. John M. Langston, Minister Resident and Consul-General, Port au Prince. ITALY. George P. Marsh, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Rome. ‘George W. Warts, Secretary of Legation, Rome. United States Legations. 129 fi JAPAN. John A. Bingham, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Tokei. Durham W. Stevens, Secretary of Legation, Tokei. David Thompson, Interpreter, Tokei. LIBERIA. John H. Smyth, Minister Resident and Consul-General, Monrovia. ; MEXICO. John W. Foster, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Mexico. Daniel S. Richardson, Secretary of Legation, Mexico. THE NETHERLANDS. James Birney, Minister Resident, the Hague. PARAGUAY AND URUGUAY. John C. Caldwell, Chargé d’ Affaires, Montevideo, Uruguay. \ PERU. Richard Gibbs, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Lima. PORTUGAL. Benjamin Moran, Chargé d’Affaires, Lisbon. RUSSIA. Edwin W. Stoughton, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, St. Petersburg. Wickham Hoffman, Secretary of Legation, St. Petersburg. James Russell Lowell, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Madrid. , Dwight T. Reed, Secretary of Legation, Madrid. SWEDEN AND NORWAY. John L. Stevens, Minister Resident, Stockholm. SWITZERLAND. { Nicholas Fish, Chargé d’Affaires, Berne. | 7 TURKEY. Horace Maynard, Minister Resident, Constantinople. | G. Harris Heap, Consul-General and Secretary of Legation, Constantinople. A. A. Gargiulo, Interpreter, Constantinople. } VENEZUELA. Jehu Baker, Minister Resident, Caracas. AMERICAN AND SPANISH JOINT CLAIMS COMMISSION. (Office in Department of State.) | Arbitrator on the part of the United States.—Joseph Segar. Arbitratoron the part of Spain.— Marquis de Potestad Fornari. @ Umpire.—Baron Blanc. . i 4 Counsel on the part of the United States.—Thomas J. Durant, Ye ; Counsel on the part of Spain.—John D. McPherson. Secretary to the Commission.—Eustace Collett. 9 130 Congressional Directory. CONSULATES-GENERAL, CONSULATES, COMMERCIAL AGENCIES, AND CONSULAR AGENCIES, ALPHABETICALLY ARRANGED. Consular offices. Consular officers. Rank. Aberdeen, Scotland... .. -.. o-oo.oo John Romsey... ..:. >... Acapulco, Mexico .oomnner oan faint John A. Sutter, iv..vnc-- Ul A. Danproolff ..-......... Adelaide, Australia... ..-c vue nna TW. Somth: 0. 0. .C Adra, Maldon... 0... ov. ee. ei Ramon Medina ..---:-.. f Aguadilla, Porto Rico ...--------..---Yd. Koppisch:-:-...-..-Agua Dulce .......oooocniiiiiioon. Henry Dickson ......... Aintab, Syvia.... nmol T. C. Trowbridge....... Aixla Chapelle ................~... James F. Dubois... Bot cc oe Ferdinandnels 0 : Akyab, Bengal...ooo ole Wm. A.C. Hardie ... -..... Albany, Australia............-....:. William J. Gillam. ...... Aleppo, Syria... ---cece Drederic Poche --.-.. Alexandretta, Syria. -.., .cs---one Yo Vane oo on loo oo Algeeiras. ... ccc nite no enesavinies of He Sprague... ica. Almiers 0 . ...o. Ce a On oko. ine le Sen Sn Chas. Thirion........ Alexandrian, Egypte.n..oo. | C. M. Salvago.......... .... Alicante, Spain... onizale sl S00 | William L. Gire....... o.hicas .. Do. vielen | John 1. Givo...... Trias Amapala..............-----c | A. K. Moris... non George I RS AN A SR he YeteriJubl soo voiiin Almeria, Malaga... :..........2 era HF. Fischer... -.._._. Amherstburgh ooo 0.0 a. ons | Charles W. Baxter ........ dans Sina A SE | Joseph J. Henderson .... A ei SS lle Sr UNE | Norman C. Stevens ..... Amster eg Netherlands... Sie. coi F-DavidiBcketein.. oo sl. he SO CA VUmlie on ooan Ancona, lialy. oc... ca | AP. Tomassini........ Annapolis, Nova Scotia... -.-:.-c-tn | Jacob'M. Owen. ........ Antigua, West Indies......-.......-... [ Chester E. Jackson. .'...: | el Ar Ce Ne RN en Wm. Dougal}. ......... Antwerp, Belgium... .....c..6 a Jas. Riley Weaver Rit a a John C. Marsily. .. ...---Apia, Navigator’s Islands. ....-....... | Thomas M. Dawson. .... Posy ea: AEE SES Med pa La altoid Archangel, Russia... ..............._.. Bo Brandl. ones. rea. | ER I An LT Pr [Arecibo Porio Rico... .-vo. doses | TF. Eernandez. .. nus cous Arichat, Cape Breton...-.....-.-..... James G. McKeen...... Aspinwall, United States of Colombia. ..| James Thorington....... Or ERR NO SA Sea Jack T horington LE Auckland... ..... is ey ene | George W. Rosevelt . iL ER HE I ei | John Leonard Williams ... Aveshirg.. o.oo as sie, | Max Obermayer neste ........ Aux Cayes, Hoyt SAE Lo Thomas Duiten...-----. Azuni tate Henry Chandruc.....-.-. Bahia, road a SR Richard A. Fides ...___.. OL Ch hs ne si George HH. Duder. ....... Ballymena 2... pe on sia s unin von | George Ballentine. <..... Bangkok, Slam .:.. 3s -nsisn oman --io | David B. Sickels........ Do... .. Ee re hy ay oa I. W. Torey. ......00 GeGa Datus E. Cobn.... ven] Bashadoes r.-3. cc Baus onobiisnnnn ee Woodbury H. Pollys i ....| : A ER D. C. DaCosta, jr...--.-i Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. 0. Commercial ¢ agent. Vice-commercial agent. Consular agent. Coral Vice-consul Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Consul. Vice-commercial agent, Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Commercial agent. Vice-commercial agent. Consul. Vice-consul., Consular agent. Do. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Commercial agent. Consul. Vice-consul. et Consuls and Consulates. 131 Consular offices. Consular officers. Rank. Barcelona, Venezuela .--......... ....| Napoleon Dominici ..::-Consular agent, Barcelona, Spain. ovis nies Frederick H. Scheuch... ios. Consul. Bod. niet nienies Sanden NL agnlemas iis hein. Vice-consul. a cs ed Sa eda ee Giacomo Gottorno ...... Consular agent. Barmen, Germany cao. odie Dan Edgar Stanton .---------Consul. |Er Se IE SA IR Corl Penien. on ooo inn. Vice-consul. Barrington, Nova:Scotia--.--. -...--%. Gabriel Robertson ...... Consular agent, Basle, Switzerland oc... iti John A. Campbell. -..__. Consul. |v l ER Ce aa He Gordon Grant... ...... Vice-consul. Bassein, Indians... er LT John M. Anderson. .... Consular ...0 agent. Batavia, Vaya. con nolo. on ling P. M. Nickerson... .... Consul. | DR CG a ee Peirus B, W. Peles... Vice-consul. Bathmrsts Alien con ono sls a aa : Consul. OI a ee David W. E. Brown..... Vice-consul. Payenue Loh nana ll ta Ley Gersam leona iano. Consular agent. Delran iSyia. oC SLL Li John'l. Edgar... Soe Consul. DR iE ad Henry L. Van Dyck. .... Vice-consul. BelempPortagal cr. oo c-io aide, 0. M. DBesony....... Consular agent. Belfast, Ireland oo... oon vvn soi snes James M. Donnan ...... Consul. |DT Rl el ES Wm. Simms... .-.-... Vice-consul. Belize, Honduras i o.com AsalC, Prindle.......:.. Commercial agent. | I ee SREeR John BE. Mute. .......-agent EE Vice-commercial Belleville cConndn 0. ie oi vue dius William D. Fuller... .....| agent. oiuinhiio Consular Benisowel, Boypifl tooo. Loo. oh icnistin Nosralla Luen io 25 Do. Bergen, Norway.-ou. ll ooo coat. Alberti Gran... io olin Consul. | LC I ES A S. 0. Rasmussen ....... Vice-consul. Berlin, Germany. -o i... co. iia Il. Kreismann.........0 Consul-general. Doth. co ihiba iio. vo team Baas Charles:Sander .-........... Vice-consul-general. Bermuda, West Indies... ..c-uecesai. Charles: M. Allen ....... Consul. EI Se Jemes B: Hegel... ....-. Vice and deputy consul. Berne or oi ae Ralph L. Doere. .>..-Consular annidiintl agent. Bilan, Spain... soles Jo vena nn Edward Aznar ......nsss Consul. Bivminghom io ous iol Yuhene Schuyler......... Vice-consul. Er ES Sh Josiah ‘BB. Brahm... -... t Consular agent. Bizertes Panis. io oan 0 ool BAN. Spisgiching. ooo Consular agent. Bluefields, Nicaragua. .. co -ati inion. Chas. 1D. Seo nis. Do. Boca del Toro iii. on vicas Dosa. Frank Fl. Smith -....... Do. Bogota, United States of Colombia. .... Bendix Koppel ... 5... Consul. 10 ee De Cen OR ee DES SUA Oe NL eT Vice-consul. Bombay, Bengal. cc oooiii, [ Benj. FE. Farnham. ...... Consul. Doe ci i ee Vice-consul. Bonoire, West Indies... oi... J toioll JB CaBave nai.0 Consular agent. Bordeaux, France. to. coitus canon | Benj, Gerrish, jr. ...-:. Consul. | EEE ie a Ca Se lil copold A. Price .~.. -... Vice-consul. Bradford, England... .. ...C 00 is | Chas. 0, Shepard... ..... Consul. Ln AreeNe ; ---{«Robert Richardson ......-Vice-consul. Brake, Germany lon san ia iT--0 Gross: oo. ara Consular agent. oo... Brava, Cape Verde Islands..........--| Jo]. Nunes: So cna. Do. Bremen; Germany... hc somone orien Wilson King... ........ Consul. Dott eee Jnl on onsitedans Justus Gruner ...... -0-. Vice-consul. Breslow ir. nil eer ene | Henry Dithmae... oe... Consul. Baier OI a SL | Wilhelm O. Fraenkel ... Vice-commercial agent. Brash Brancel... vue vies vans SEE Tx Vienne. boosbu .. Consular agent. Bridgewater, Nova Scotia. ---..-..--..] William H. Owen. ...... Do. Brisbane, New South Wales.......... George Harris -... ......" Do. Bristol, England .~. .....0ccdeeJon Theodore Canisius Consul. was. --.-.. | Ee EN TS Mee Le a William M. Gibson... -.. Vice-consul. Betsliame cl coe La Alfred Vittery aio. Consular agent. Brockville, Comadla oo o.oo con So oo. Edward A. Buckman.... Do. Brann, Austria: sol aie laa se saan Gi Schoeller. onan Do. Brunswick, ‘Germany. ....ccvee vanes: Williams C. Fox ..av.-. Consul. Bo nah Se os So AM. Simon o..a ee Vice-consul. Brussels, Belolum oe enavasso duvnian.l John Wilson sooo. oa x: Consul. |e A CB Arthur T. Brereton ..... Vice-consul. Bucharest... oc. bit onan halo Jia Aldoph Stern. won Commercial agent. Budaspesth: Soloha Sanaa lay Alex. Maday. ...o... Consular agent. gE f{ Congressional Directory. Consular offices. Consular officers. Rank. Busnaveniam ARSE Se REA Ts Oscar Tompkins ---. --.-| Commercial agent. Vice-consul. ‘Buenos ie Argentine Republic. .... Edward L. Baker....... Consul. |r Ue EEE LN ER Cr A ep Henry S. Yeatman ..-. -. Vice-consul. Cadiz, Spain. on nolLwl see a AledND Duffie vs Consul. | Eat eC RN I Ee Benjamin Hayness...... | Vice-consul. Cagliari, Ttaly. oi orn. loi ia Eugene Pernis..........]| | Consular agent. Care, Bovpt oot no hale Elbert BE. Farman... Agent and consul-gen’l. lento -... Bo. 0) an ND. Comanos =... wus. | Dep. and vice-con.-gen. 2@aluds, France. viun ove cuuhainie, LIF Vendroux .oa0ii., Consular agent. Crlewtin, Bengal... on. coi. alibi | Allyne C. Litchfield. ... .. | Consul-general. | Vice-consul-general. Caldera, Chiat SE ra SE J.C. Morongo... ond Consular agent. Callao, NS Robert 1. Clayton.....-Consul. |GH ET Fh en Wm. FB. Clayion....-..-Vice-consul. Camargo, Mexico... ...-....oiua Lucius Avery... Commercial agent. |IGE SEE SN Se EC Clement de Lassaulx .... | Vice-commercial agent. Campeachy i. riot ess ay do ee JRE Re | Commercial agent. 1 EGSa LSD Vice-commercial agent. a | @ammes = one ull aie Theo. de Valcourt -...-.. | Consular agent. Canton, China... oonead cli Chas. PB. Lincoln.-»..... | Consul. rEa RE CN Tred RB. Talbot... io] | Vice-consul. Cape Cansa ... 0 i tui onl ies | Thos. Ci Coolio ils Consular agent. Gape Haytlen, Hayti. i... ...c i 0 | :Stanislas Goentier..----.. | Consul. |Be Bal Ee he i ma he an I ee Vice-consul. @ape Town. li.i ae, W. W. Edgecomb... --. Consul. Wer doecsiiye co dod vias Tames Murison, je ou. Vice-consul. Cardenas Cuba. 0. 0 sad Joseph H. W ashington Sit Consular agent. Cardiff Wales... i SAL William W. Sikes. ........ Consul. Hd neRN SE A John W. Vachell ........ Vice-consul. Carlisle, Bnsland ys. ool ooo oo. aha J. Hewet-on Brown..... Consular agent. Carrara, Ttaly ST CR AEN Franklin Tor POY Sue .oike Consul. Bai dob vont ag CoPollima o.oo nena. Vice-consul. Commill ons nn i TonisePour. ilo on., | Consular agent. Carthageny, Spain’. un ooo. coc 500s LC. Molina ooo cu-ceonaais | Consul. Boll coe oo niin uel Alberto Molina. un Vice-consul. Carthagena, United States of Colombia.| Albert Mathieu -... .... | Consular agent. Casa-Blanca, Moregeo oo. Al ula JohnCobb ............. Do. Castelamare, Tally. 02 too iontous Alfred M. Wood ...~ ...-| Commercial agent. Casenmpee. coo Shel LL Geo. Howland ---.-----:| Consular agent. Catania, Maly... 0 0 oiinidn A. Peratoner. .....c cues) Do. Goyenne ttl es Pascal Decomis. .....-.. Consul. na RE Se Re a DLR HL ee eC Vice-consul. @eava, Brazil... oven. vinsivannsuds L. S. de Vasconcellos....| Consular agent. Cebu... loi oi Cornelius ROB. Pickiord., | Do. €ecimbra, Portugal... illu oY lope. own vanon Do. @ephalomia:. .o) 0. on ons Spiridion A. R. Lucato.. . | Do. Cette, TTONCE. Lich soos vein dna L. S. Nahmens........-. Do. Ceylon, Indin.. io. Lo ova. iiuih. William Morey .......... Consul. do. sition Louis Edward Altleen Loco ai | Vice-consul. Champerco salsa A Tollikoler . . io... Consular agent. ca Charleroi... on aisee eas Charles Vander Elst ....| Do. Charlotteltown, B. Bil ..u.ciasievase [David M. Dunn .... .... | Consul. eeRl Se PS. Macgowan ........ | Vice-consul. Chatham, Ontario... cnaial iil | Ww Hien I. McCutcheon. | Consular agent. @he Poo, China... .. cunesiicavensvais AM. Bolsford 0 he. | Do. Chemnitz, Saxony. :......c..c..ouais Nathan K. Driggs. ...... Consul. Dodo. ue on le iin nin Sane Wamohe Uns Vice-consul. @herbonrg, France... oii 0 EmilPostel ......0.... | Consular agent. Chihuahua, Mexico... .... oo luc... Lionts Fl. Scott. loli. Consul. Of endl Le, John €. Huston. ........ | Vice-consul. Chin Kiang, China... ..i..0.id. ee iL FU ENE Consul, Da oe I Ie Albert FE. Salter io... | Vice-consul. Chittagong, India 2. io...bug, Charles W. Robertson. .. agent. iu Consular Chulstchueh, Nol... ons vais avnwin nny Co Be Baylor 1. 2. o ii Do. Christiania, NOIWAY vee rueecass snnnss Gerhard Gade ...... ...: | Consul. SE A A I Consuls and Consulates. Consular offices. Consular officers. Rank. | ; Christiania, Nexway.......... 00... | ‘Lawritz F. Brown. ...... Vice-consul. Christiansand, Norway. ....e csvuivnws HO, CC. Reinlinrdt ... 0... Consular agent. Christionsiad Lo. ieee aa oe: | Ludwig Ahlberg... ..-.-. Do. Slonfuoges, Cuba ..oooomninn De Wilt Stearns. ........| Consul. Fe SB ESP dl Be | William W. Cross. ......| Vice-consul. Ciudad a aR ea aah i John Dalton... .... Consul. Tt Rr REE William Henderson. ....| Vice-consul. Civitas Veechin, lialy..... .... cnc... G. Marsanick. ...... .... Do. @lavencevilles ci ar. Waa Renne | Edmund Macomber ..... Do. Clifton, Canals I AL en SRD | Robt. S. Chilton... ...:] | Consul. aust Sel a Gal Joseph E. Whitman. ....| Deputy consul. i Conticore, Conada...o- lc ovina ve | Edwin Vaughan ........| Consul. rn AR RRC EE CIC BR | Joseph T. Woodward....| Vice & deputy consul. Coban or coi lildae | Francis C. Sarg... .-.---| Consulariagent, @oblga. cotinl Clahta L Frank B. MeDonald..... Commercial agent. Cobourg, Canadan... «o.ce mavnivimsnmans George J. Stephens... ..| | Consular agent. Cognac, France con -ou muons woibimm ins Thomas P.Smith........ Do. Cologne, Germany -........-...i----. | | George E. Bullock ...... Consul. Mota susan. Solent | F rederick A. Herbertz. ..| Vice-consul. Colonia, Urnguay . x weavesen vaveisnas B.D. Manton'.........- | Consul. A SN i Se Le Rol ert Gifford.... . ...-| Jero. J. de S. Monteiro .. Do. Boo-Chow, China . 00 vail Milton M. De Lano.....| 1... Consul Mo Ua ee San ED. Cheshire. tJ. 5. Vice-consul. Bort Brie, Canada... 0... 5.0.00 Andrew. C. Phillips... _.. Consul. Ol enRI Daniell Derst coool. Jnl Vice-consul. Portde France. oc ondnoi Yienyy 0 5 Consular-agent. 00. Sabato... Frankfort-on-the-Main, Germany .. .... Alfred B, lee... 2 | Consul-general. Dog: wr lor ven 20 TWellte ole duet | Vice consul-general. Bredericlested wu oon Sas) J. Alexander Moore... ... | Consular agent. Fredericton, New Brunswick ......---.. Julius I. Inches ...-...0 | Do Frelichsburg, Canada 0. .: George R. Marvin... .... | ............ Do. Hunehal, Madeira oo iinouil, Thomas BB. Reid ...0 i... | Consul. ho... {A RRSR Oe John Hutchison... ..... | Vice-consul. Gaboon, Africa 2-0 00 oto aol Albert Bushnell ......... | Commercial agent. et Ate he Ma he SH Maurphy..--.--... | Vice-commercial agent. Goalate, Moldavin-o_o... dais: Timothy C: Smith... .. | Consul. ReEe pe Alex. Hepites.....__... | Vice-consul. Gananogue, P.O... LF He ANTE SSa | Consular agent. @Gmpuehey. Cor. ie LL Enrique Calvert. ..-.-| Commercial agent. {Wonk baleen a es Sd Rs i a a a | Vice commercial agent. Gaspé Basin, Canada... ..0. 00 George BL. Holt =.=.2. | Consul. A Rl CEE EEL fT el RE | Vice-consul. Geestemmider >. LLL Lo Wolfgan Schoenle....... | Commercial agent. Dart odorinane BW. Crambry coy... | Vice-commercial agent. \ a Gefle, Sweden. C0 olLi he Gustav Hard..... ......| Consular agent. Geneva, Switzerland... .... .........C.. J. Eglinton Montgomery. Consul. || Old Tin a Se A Re | Vice-consul. Genoa, Italy cob ool iir na L000 John F. Hazelton... ..... | Consul. AE ATE ERE SAE P. M. Bauvmberger...-.. | Vice-consul. Georgetown, Prince Edward Island ....| A. A. MacDonald... ....| Consular agent. Georgeville. a. nu0 Ll RA George W. Fogg... Do. Ghent, Beloinm.... _. L......oe.0. James Millward.......:: | Consul. Po cate deara Alfred Lefebvre. ..4..... | Vice-consul. Gibraltar, Spain... ol. 0 aL Horatio}. Spragne.:..--| Consul. Por os i John Lewis Sprague..... | Vice-consul. Gllon. 9. 0 oooll dn Se Acebal Shh Soon | Consular agent. SHE SE ES A Gillont ov ee Do. Gingentie. 0. a GC. Gauge! ov ooo LL Do. Girgheh, Egypt ..--......... Mishrihi Hayat... ....:.-Do. Glasgow, Scotland. -~ ... oo. lL Samuel ‘F. Cooper-....-: Consul. Bo... a lov oii, William Gibson... ..-.-Vice-consul. Glace Bay, Nova: Scotia... o..........[ David McKeen ......... Consular agent. Gloucester, England.................%.. John R. Haviland... .... Do. Goderich. ro 0c ce Geovge J. Abbot. -<..L.. Commercial agent. ren er iL lS LR ES George M. Myer... Vice-commercial agent. Gonoives, Hoyti.....-...... Cio, John D. Metzger. .......| Consular agent. Gottenbure, Sweden... -vec seeavorn=-Ernest L. Oppenheim ...| Consul. Dolla vests ton. an, Corliidbeels on. aii Vice-consul Governors Harbor. ...-sx Jocee.’n uuu. Charles A. Bethel -.-.-.. Consular agent. Consuls and Consulates. 133 Consular cffices. Consular officers. Rank. Graciosa, Azores. ioi. ol Lene ce enis José de C. C. e Mello....| Consular agent. Granada =n EL Seedada Peter A. «Mesa... ..... Do. Grand Bassa, liberia... --. -ceennsione Henry A. Williams...... Commercial agent. he HE EERO ESE BR ee LE Sl a Vice-commercial agent. Grand Comany =... . once cme deine J. R.¥. Gonzales... ..... Consular agent. Grand Rloman. oi. oan William F. Alexander -.. Do. o-oo... GraooaSpaini.. ve coi nse cde es Richard Loewenstein .. .. Do. Greenock So coo boll a aa Emangel Nuel.......... Do. Grenville lionaa George Schneider . .. .... Do. one Green Turtle icon coil 0s vb Cay. Vu. Samnders....:.-Do Guadaloupe, West Indies ..........c.. Charles Bartlett... :-.. .| Consul. | ERSR Me RA W.S. Hinclidey~.... Vice-consul. Guantanamo, Cuba: =. ic aden William F. Allison .... .| Consular agent. Guaatenwmla o-oo aie, J. Francisco Medina ....| Consul. {IO rR IR Lt sie Cla Se ELL Vice-consul. Guayama, Porto. . ccnvevintnn | McCormick. Consular agent. Rico... Arthur ..... Googe, Bewador -5i-...odunny, {Phaner M. Eder. :--... Consul. MELISS ee SSE SR EEN Alcides Destruge .......| Vice-consul. Busvi Meddenrt on. iduvii Alex. Willard. JLocov.. conse Consul. DIO de es nLeen i sano Lol Vice-consuk Guelph, Canada... ...... co. | Warren A. Worden . .... Consular agent. Guernsey, Grear Byitain ~.......... Albert Carey... Do. =... Guerrero, Mexico il: nbhrin. wich Henry My Stille. ot Commercial agent. Dol oe ee William A. Cook...> :. Vice-commercial agent, Guysborough, Nova Scotia... ........ E-H. FEranchville....... Consular agent. el en ee EEE De Capel | Jacob Schumacker ...... Do. Hakodadi i coi. ilo. Soli ioe rai [0h sabia sha a Do. Halifax, Nova Scotia. inonando il Mortimer M. Jackson....| Consul. ven |Ea aan he ee ET 32% Phelan oon. mo. Vice-consul. Hamburg, Germany... -...cconsioniias Jom M, Wilson =... Consul. 13 teh Se SR CRE SIE PauliMbller on... os. Deputy consul. Do'.wc.: Ea James R. McDonald -...| Vice-consul. Hamilton, RR Frank Leland -. =... Consul. Bobet Wm. M. Mitchell... Vice-consul. Hankow China. oor. ive. Vath avis Isaac F. Shepard... ...-Consul. | ase Oe LE ei Wm. O. Howland .._-.. Vice-consul. Harbor Grace, Newfoundland ......... P: Devereux. ..:.-..-...| Consulariagent. Havana, Guba... oo... cians Henry tC. Hall. ........ Consul-general. |Dm Ee Ramon O. Williams . .... Vice-consul-general. EN eS SRR BE eS SE bl DR Se Vice-commercial agent. Havre, France: lo cote n John A. Bridgland ...... ooo. Consul. Poli biioiiiiio.tation Alfred Morch..-:.....-. ci Vice-consul. Elsiungioos, Einland ol. ooocaosaweidaln R.Frenckell’. .. L..0nn. Consul. 1 EST on SME el SSE Woldemar Dobrowolsky .| Vice-consul. Hemminglord, Canada................ J. BE. Corbi...0. Consular agent. Hereford oo inn. ova an 0k John R. Nichols....~ Do. Vi bile Ee ee MLS SRI ERS Thomas Spencer... -= =x + Do. Hobart Town, Tasmania...) .......... Alex. G. Webster... ..-Consul. Words oul ve on an Ti eR Pe Vice-consul. Holyhead oo... coil bosons Robert R, Tonesi........ Consular agent. emis Honda... Co-lo va a William Bl. Chapman... -Deo. Honfleur, Brance. one vuimininnns Jonathan Do. ...... Wagner......-Hong-Kong, China...........oe jom'S. ...... Consul. o.oo Mosby: {a Ge RI ER RO H. Seldon Loving. ...... Vice-consul. Honolulu, Hawaiian Islands... ......... James: Seat ciit lL Consul. D0. dh on teri ens eaters Frank P. Hastings......| Vice and deputy consul. Horgen.=-ili enon ee mi Vo GaNeltor 00.00oon Consular agent. Huddensfield; England... ..c..... ....[ Co W. Whitman ;. .....-Do. Huelva, Spam’... .... cos vichvn smgsins Henrique Ruiz. .......---Do. Hall, England. 0... ........-...| Joseph Atkinson .... -.= Do. Huntingdon; Canada. ........ouneivsivnn-Levi. "Guimond...-:-.--Do. En IN Do Jloilo, Philippine Islands...... «—...... John G. Austen i...-... Consul. ER RS Se SL Le IL ST Sl Ce) Vice-consul. Tquique. ti. .uio. she Joseph W. Merriam ...... Consul. Congressional Directory. Consular offices. Consular officers. Rank. See ae a Meximo Rosenstock. ....| Vice-consul. Yeabal ...-.... ER Dd Botls.cc ue. ainuun Consular agent. Joemekoo oooh onire nee th vr hen tes Adrian H. Lazarre...... Do. : in GRE EE EELS ES Ei ee Ge Do. Jeremie... coucincnisnsSunnis L. Trebaud Rouzier..... Do. inure Jerez dels Frontera. ...-...: ouive--. | Henzy'R. Daviegi.i, ... Deo. Jersey Island. coool. coi) cnn rnivamue Thomas Repouf..’.....-.: Do. Jevasalem, Syuine iv. oil coo vane bans Joseph G. Willson. ...... Consul. | RH CR SE ie Rp ee Herman Friedlander ....| Vice-consul. Ranagawa, Japan.......ccce:.niauass Thomas B. Van Buren Consul-general. Docu hdeatoinnsosvaninasy George BE. Rice......... Vice-consul sin, general. HER SRRa nC Carl Schwarzmann ...... Consular agent. DR emp cece oben eee ChonlesBE, Hobart... Do. gg anartonm, Bovpt. oo. 00 olan is, Azar Abdel Melak...... Do. aE ra SEE ee FSR Ae WE August Sartori... cave Do. Kidderminster. on uob. ona shia sams | James Morton. ...--=v: Do. Kingston, TAmalen. cu. ceureesaunas | George E. Hoskinson ...| Consul ss PREECE Vice-consul. I IN a Cee | Kingston, Conada....---=. hepa | Marshall H. Twitchell...| .5-Consul. Ole CE i Le | Mathew H. Folger... .-. Vice-consul. Binkeaddy o.ooa Andrew Innes........:. Consular agent. col. Kiv-Kiang, Chima. ........... ...---.| Henry M. Cunningham. Do: IEonigsbere, Germany -.-ec. ue in fiona Mell...ol -. Do. Tacos, Portugal... ..h cin anne. “J. M. Mascarenhas...... Do. Lasnayra, Venezuela oie nus. James €. Eckert co. o.o. | Commercial o.oo agent. Qasiniods ban sunt pen ico i enry Rinoman. 000 | Vice-commercial agent. Faliberiad, SanSalvador. o.oo oii] es dss nnn vn aim | Consular agent. Lambayeque, Pern... ... co iecs... SC. Montjoy. oa. -. | Consul. TeAa Se A 6G. Bd. Self... ...... | Vice-consul. Lanzarotte, Canary Islands............ JL ophamy. c ves vninees | Consular agent. a Paz. snus anes David Turner .. cosa oi Consul. MeXICO...ooivainasie Do. can.ooye ob gl Tames Viosea oo ool | Vice-consul. EaPas, Bolivia. .oc. o.oo.iv ld José E. de Guerra ..... -. | oo Consul. ERO Re Sa EC RR | Vice-consul. Larsiche, Moroceo. iv... vevicosoesis M. Abeeasis.... cious, | Consular agent. ison La Rochellew. ia inusicans Georoe ll. Catlin, ... ...-| Commercial o.oo, agent. BB inn eve vs Pav ne pre wpm Gabrial Server... 2.5: | Vice-commercial agent. Yatalkln, Syria. cocoe, -1s sess vs va nein Do Metheny coves vueone | Consular agent. La Union, San Salvador: .......-5a. Clarence C. Ford......... | Consul. DG niacin ne ert a we] JON HarTiSOn occas | Vice-consul. rE ERC EO Ee GW, Griffin... o.oo... | Commercial agent. |U0 EE MA RL HC | Charles W. Drury. ......| Vice-commercial agent. Jeeeds, Busland:_..c.hocennnain Alfred V. Dockery... Consul. : 1 LeEt CR | William Ward .......... | Vice-consul. Leicester, England. ...... c-vneeeereis | Joseph Barber Haxby ...| Consular agent. Lechorn, Mtaly.......ces ioivnen Manuel Govin........:-| on Consul. eR CS Rs Emilio Masi. .... ..-...| Vice-consul. Leith, Scotland... oc. ccvees-nzc-s-=--| John Ts Robeson. .v.--= | Consul. ER IN BN ME | Allan McCaskie ...... ..| Vice-consul. FL eipsic, Saxony ..vneriscrssno rnsss | John I]. Stenart.. ......-| Consul. snus RE Na BAR | Henry Van Arsdale ..... | Vice-consul. Lieata, Italy. oo dials | Angelo Verderame...... | Consular o.oo. agent. Fille. olai CoD) Gregolve LLL LL Do. Limerick...o.oo ic. Tom R, Tingley... .-......-Do. ..ou.. Limoges, France. ....... NLS Ded Birman Berthet. ---.....--Do. Emeborough..c vo cro ees saoata] FliS. Beebe oon Do. i. Lingan, Nova Scotia. -...... .cioue cine Frederick E. Leaver. ....| Consular agent. AY Bisbon, Portusal........«sie oiess: | Henry W. Diman....... Consul. co LR I Charles Hutchens... .... | Vice-consul. Liverpool, England ....:. ccrsrr coniv=i Stephen B. Packard ..... | Consul. |TL RT William P. Paul. .......| Vice-consul. Liverpool, NN. 8S... =... oo uci aa onl. James N. S, Marshall ....| Consular agent. Ilenelly,s Wales. . oie: savivnn vs bmosns Benj. Jones eer osx: Do. London, Canada... -.s. c.f Willam F, Blake... ....... Do. London, England .......c czvinvncmiiniss Adam Badeawn -....-..-. Consul-general. Do... ete ae nao fOShUA Nunn. os ---. | Vice-consul-seneral, ; Consuls and Consulaies. Aa 137 Consular offices. Consular officers. Rank. Londonderry, Ireland ..............-. Arthur Livermore. ...... James: Stewart o.oo.oaLR RR Jacob Meyer, jie i... Luxor, Boyt oc. co. ion sinus innicat Aly Mourad... ilu. os Fyons, France. i. ee. vatbiuliene Benjamin F. Peixotto.... D William M. Grinnell __.. Macelo, Brazil...snanin sani lei Theodore Braasch....... Madras, British Indian. ..oi.. -o.i.a ue. Lumisden Strange....... Magdalen Islands... ... ...ccciinnnin-nx Jom J: Box.oo ion Mahe, Soy chelle Islamdsl oon moo, Thos. 7. Prentis ....0-<.- Charles Dupuy ......... John E. si SHI John R. Geary .....c..:: Maluyo .... AC SE Peter M. Patan AE Malta. ... Pr Rh Ne Ele Henry Ruggles. ........ Charles B. Eynand... ... Albert Dd. Shaw... on John B. Payne... ..... Frederick G. Fleron. ..:. Edward A. Youngs. .... Edward M. Smith....... | William Keester -..-..--Monsurah, BEoypt io. oanleis Manzanillo, Cuba. oo. coi. oon. Sooo an | Manzanillo, Mexico... .. ..c avai i | J..¥. Dieckmann...--Eugene H. Plumaches . .. Teléman J. MeGregor . -. Miapahom Dome anes Dan nena Coils Marash, Torley... coe. ov oisennnirenas G. F. tannery AT Marsala, Italy. con. oo. oven oe canals George Rayson -....---. Marseilles, iBrance. ... cc. acaniiaing, John 5 Gould... Pos. coasts.asl S. Marling. 0...sad John Martinique... oC ier. idneiiant Walter H. Garfield...... John]. Ciceron.cu... +. Warner P. Suiion....-.. OI PE NRG NEN John :P. Valls: ona. L Matanzas, Cuba... oc. nao dsewninsinma JomesiW. Steele. ......c Geo. L. Washington. .... Mathewtown, Bahamas. ............u. John I. Sargent......:.. Mayacuez, Porto Rico....... -..-.. Hoi Gorham E. Hubbard..-.. Mayence too. dat eilea August Heidelberger .... Mazaran, Moroeeo. .cinviccamnve-dsinas Alfred Redman ..... .... Mazatlan, Mexico... 0. vacacovs esas Edward G. Kelton ...... Boo aril oe ena A. H. McHatton . McAdam Junction, New Brunswick . . .. Chas. ¥. Hoeben'ii.. 0. Medellin oon i. oo Casal ‘Thomas: Herran ......-.at |e ee SC ee ME ef CRE SI i a TS aA Melbourne, Australia. ..ocaonn doa in 0. M. Spencer... Doc ioeos tei veial i Sanmel P. Lord: cov. Mentone, ifrance. oc cc a. cnaai ues Chatles Piath i... ooo Merida, Metleon oer eons Alphonse J. Lespinasse .. IR EE ES EN ed Manuel Ceballos....-... Messing, Italy... oo idl coa allo. George H. Owen... ...: ET TE IR CARR Letterio Pirrone ..-xcee-Mexico. Jona cuit oven dannii. Justin E. Colburn.......-3ELITE Ci Eh ne I A George S.;Skilton-...... Mier, Moiese Re EL ne SR i Ge Sa a in Milford Ly Wales: .ioaane odio, Ts ey NE Milan Lond iis Je coe heen a ee SSI Sle LL Ln 3B a RE ST MR RA Dunham J. Crain. ...-.-Minatitlan, Mexico. ..cecnninconesonon. Geo. M. Cayce. ovate: } I NEI SE ee OE RY en SE Tl a Miracoane Lo sins contin Avpust dius Ahrendis........ Mogador, : Morocco. J. ce csinniznninssas]i Abraham Corcos.------Monsen. iis coe ei emai sees Emile de Loth...:..... EEX Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Do. Consul. | Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Consul. ; Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Commercial agent. Vice-commercial agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Do. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Commercial agent. Vice-commercial agent. Consul-general. Vice-consul-general. Consular agent. | Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice consul. Consul-general. Vice-consul-general. Commercial agent. Vice-commercial agent. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Commercial agent. Vice-commercial agent. Consular agent. Do. Congressional Directory. Consular offices. Consular officers. Rank. Monganni os aii tn cin sieht Robert Wyles ............| . Consular agent. Monrovia, Liberia i. co vn meionivie ws/misime] J M. Tumer............] -Consul-general. Dos india Marianus A. Ammey -...| \ Vice-consul-general. Montego Bay, Jamaica. .--....cohiceioiae S.G.:Corinaldi ......>--. Consular gent: Montevideo, Umguay.. =. .ianaiaoch I Frederick Crocker... -... ~ Consul. OT i I Na Lg { Thos: W. Howard ......| Monterey, 1 Soho in vidas | John Weber... Lota Memeo. Cont |B LSRE Re soz lt Rudolph Dressel... Vice-consul. Montreal, Canada... oon olan JohniQ. Smith... i. . Consul-general. |ELD A ASR Orlando P. Bloss..--....; ~ Vice-consul-general. Mornighurg cooiasion.ol docu, Jas. Reddington --.. ----| agent. col Consular Moscow, Russia. bn icin madi fedeee Commiercial agent. doe . Bo nection cit sah ai ah si GG Vice-commercial agent. Noulmeln-onion.Cada von, Bernard Lenman....>... | agent. oe Consular Mulhansen inicioaan Max H. -.. Consular agent. ll Fischer... Munich, Bavaria: Solo. iiiilg G. Henry Horstmann ... Consul. Bo riiionlone. alm Dates George Hoesslin 0. .-.-. Vice-consul. Musquiz «cena Abram Murdock ......... Consular agent. Myfilene, Turkey on oo oon «izesnas M. M;: Fottlon.. 0... Consular agent. Nagasaly, Japan. ..il.. .ce es endianons Willie P. Mangum ..... . Consul. -| PRR SE Ra a ey Chas.ol. Pisher 0.0.0. Vice-consul. Naguabo, Porto Ricet...... o.oo. W. Haddock... nc: | Consular agent. Nantesasavne ve lon, Lod.ainndl George Gifford...» Commercial agent. Nopanee, Canada West. ...... ........ =e William V. Delton...--. Consul. |Ural Ea Sp hr George W. Amy... -Vice-commercial agent. Naples, duty fe LC SBR B. Odell Duncan... ...-.. Consul. EER EE Es a UO Howard M. Ticknor..... Vice-consul. Thomas J. McLain, jr.... Consul. ET OR I Cr EME Samuel P. Saunders... .. . Vice-consul. N Syiastio: -upon-Tyne, England........ Evan R. Jones. ..--.:-.. | Consul. res Ra Ra Se Herbert Davy... --.....-Vice-consul. N erie. New South Wales. ......... George Mitchell... ... Consular agent. Newcastle, New Brunswick ........... Robert R.Call ol. oii Do. New Chomnd China 0. .o oo. hinndl, Francis P. Knight...| Consul. EE SRO Sa CAPR Frederick Bandinel...... Vice-consul. Nonpn Walesa...LLL James N. Knapp. ...... agent. tlm Consular Nice, Trance... oii lenaihe William HH. Vesey... --.. Consul. Te hi HerbertC. Nash’. ....... Vice-consul. Nienwediep oven.vials Klass 'C. Van Veit. -.... Consular Li agent. Ningpo, China. oil Ce onvaims cium Edward C. Lord <..-2... Consul. 1 er SP SR Cl Marcellus A. Churchill. .. Vice-consul. Nowmrhoping -. 00. 0 isie, S;.€C. Mobeck o.oo. Consular agent, North Sydney, Nova Scotia. ........-~. Wv. Paves. oi... Do. Nottingham, England ........ 0... .. Jasper Smieh. oo... Commercial agent. |r OE EE RR SE es BG. Pawson... o0.. Vice-commercial agent. Nuremberg, Bavaria.............cmua James M. Wilson... .<. Consul. er RSCR Wm. F. G. Geisse. ...---. Vice-consul. Nuevitag, Cubs o.oo Joaquin Sanchez ..-....-| Consular agent. NuevolLaredo.--.h..iinnavn nso James J. Haynes. .....:. Commercial agent. a naSI MA EN Francis W. Gradler . .... Vice-commercial agent. Oajace, MEXICO. tt. in ies iniie sins 1.1. lawrence... ....... Commercial agent. Mora. ilenae hs Henry Pnyes. .. 0 Vice-commercial agent. cL io... Odessa, Russia oo... ig Leander BW. Dyer... Consul. Do. ies we John H. Volkmann ....: Vice-consul. Old Hartlepool, England... ._. .......¢. Christian Nielson ....... Consular agent. Olten, Switzerland)... .. i oni HH. Salathe...... 0c... Do. Omea, Honduras =... ............... Yronke VW. Frye... .... Consul. ILA a a SrSR William Edoar..-.----Vice-consul. OPORIO: -nts He eo ee mats 2 William Save .......... Consular agent. Orotava. noiiiuna ha es. ees Peter Hl. Reedc. .C. .i-o-Do. RECe le SR, Ra Isidore Castel ............ Consular agent. Osaca 2d Hiogo, Japan... --.. oven. Julius Stahel -0.0... Consul. EI ee a Edward S. Benson ...... Vice-consul. Osiut, et TR A Ce Se Wasif-el Hayat .....vnes Consular agent. Ostend, Belgium Auguste Van Iseghem... Do. Ottawa Ontario. vonwa Alexander Cummings -.. Commercial agent. s..civonaivnivss DG its cece em ene cme... BEd. Ring. .o.... cna. Vice-commercial agent. cme Consuls and Consulates. : I 39 Consular offices. Consular officers. Rank. Padang, Sematnerte Con CL a SL Consul. Ie In CR Ms William B. Pearson. .... Vice-consul. Pagoage. 0. ci... Gustavus Goward. ...... Do. Palermo, iltaly i tol lo ceca edn Sampson P. Bayly ...... Consul. ais sr a ee a Francis Belli... 0... Vice-consul. Palma, Canary .... Fred. W, Lavers .._... ' Consular Islands............ agent. Palma, Majorcs oc: vows domnine bums ErnestoCanut....c-c--. Do. Panama, United States of Colombia ....| Owen M. Long......... Consul. re Ee Oe Lucius Crocker. -.....-Vice-consul. ara Brad Sna a i ea A CoPrindlen. cao Consul. HT CR RE EA GR PE ¥nedernick Pond... .._ 7 Vice-consul. Panaiba, Buazdl. soe a an Arthur B. Dallas. =... Consular agent. ive. Paramaribo, Dutch Gmana... o-oo lois a a vie on Consul. |BEpC Se OE Hsia all ne LOR Vice-consul. Paris, Canada... 0 wa. cas yiin, Mo Sharp. wooo. Consular agent. Baris, Framee nino cides nae, Lucius Fairchild =... oC. Consul-general. 1 rene i A Se a SLE Robert! M.. Hooper... .--Vice-consul-general. Parshoro’ ioe. dice nn wn na Benj, . Sing... ... .... Consular agent. Paso del Norte, Mexico. 5.0 5. Solomen Schultz. ....... Commercial agent. ...... Tn le eS De | Frnest Kohlberg........ Vice-commercial agent. Patigs, Greece. ir. uu e dessa, Edward Hancock. ...... Consul. Boron 0 Spi aba Es ---.| Frederick B. Wood ...-.. Vice-consul. Pani sl eaee ih Geo. de M. Clay... .. Consular agent. Paysanduic-Tobieo J CG. Hulnaole.. ....... 0 Do. Penang, Indin..... i. ...0. cn Andrew M. Watson ..... Do. Bernambneo, Brazil Lo .....0. .... Andrew Cone. _........ .. Consul. | ReLO ER William Hughes... ......| Vice-consul. Pegth ioscan aaaa aL Consul. LEE Se ln Ee I ER Gn A Vice-consul. Philipopolis tir. ican anni = John E. Gueshoff .......| Consular agent. coshivene Petit Gove. oo eevee C.S. Rostonard ........ Do. Picton, Conada .... «va cn creaoninininivnis Robert Clapp---= 2.05 Do. Pictou; Nova Scotia... ...c.ov.-Oscar Malmros -......-..| duis: Consul. A A SO er Joon R. Noonan........ Vice-consul. Piedras Negras, Mexico. .--........... William Schuchardt...... Commercial agent. Bobi Sr Sarai nn oo al Vice-commercial agent, Piaens cr oa ven, Anthony Martelao..... Consular agent. Plymouth, England .....:oe-oiinon Henry Vox ooo Lo. Consul. ait il a ee Thos. W. Pox... Vice-consul. Pointde Galle .-20.0 0 0 on ooo, T:7T. Delmege.... -.... Consular agent. Ronee, PortoiRieon foc lait ay Edward &: White -.-¢... Commercial agent. IEE CR RE eR Y EoFinlay oes ncaa Vice-commercial agent, Porto Bello. 0 10 0 Sn a Henry Abrahams ....... | Consular agent. Port Antonio,’ Jamaica. .c veut con. Peter A. Moodie... ...-.. Do. Port aw Prince,iHayil ............c.. John M. Langston. .... Consul-general. Blois Se ee TE Re a | Vice-consul-general. Pontide Palti,t oo Sno ed oi Eo MWerth nous mile Consular aniaitian agent. Portof Marbella... ....o. 0... Mionel Calzado... ... Do. Port Elizabeth ne. ano Alphonso Taylor........ colooo. Do. Port Tope, Canada... cv... nines ot LaRue Peck. .o..i. i. Do. Pont: Limon, Costa Rica... ...... cui. oii Minop'C. Beith. \.o--Do. Port Louis, Mauritius ..........oo. Henry C. Marston...... Consul. 1rd de Ne SEE i Re Sr Robert W. Chamney .... Vice-consul. Povi Mahon. ott ov. on. ol Joseph Montanari ....... Consular agent. Port Natal oc oi re cess dose naias Gen. C. Cato... oon el Do. Port Rowan, Canada... i...clu. Chauncey. Bennett. ...... Do. Pont Sarnia, Canada. 0... ... ot. Samuel PD. Pace... .... Consul. |I a UC John Chester...... Vice-consul. Postsmowth oo io. boa C.E. McCheameo.. Consular agent. Port Stanley, Falkland Islands. ........ George Gerard... ... --. Consul. | ss eR DA Geo-M. Dean... ....... Vice-consul. Port Stanley and St. Thomas. ..... .... George C.. Baker ....... Commercial agent. Port:Se. Mary, Spaih kh... cu tal hl ea ee ries Do. Port of Sydney, Cape Breton.......... Fredk. E. Leaver....-.. Do. Potiand Tiflis oe. .ien. td ieavee.. DD. R. Peacock coveend. Do. Potton. il i eek abies ime enlein um John Bisbee. .-----%---. Do Prague, Bohemia over vue cuny Charles A. Phelps. ...... ic.cnic. Consul. Congressional Directory. ;Consular offices. Consular officers. Rank. ) | | Prague, Bohemia. ool: o.oo hr asian Leo Sekeles..... iain | Vice-zone Prescott, Canin eR CEN ae Sanford S. Blodgett .....| | Consul. A v=stema ti Jomes Buckley. co... | Vice-consul. Presidio del IERTe eRSS ‘Thomas Singer... .... | Commercial agent. IRC UE I ER Br Ce a ETO RE el | Vice-commercial agent, Puerto Cabello, Venezuela ............} [fA lacombe............ | Consul. rn CL NN FE Ss Richard Kolster ....%... | Vice-consul. Puerto Plata, San Dontingo ... -saecafiiet ns os mins seni wsas] Commercial agent, Ean On i EG i William Lithgow........ | Vice-commercial agent, Pugwash, Nove Seetia oc. Lc doacdoslintoles, | Consular odor agent. Punta Avenas, Costa: Rica. ...... coll. Fabian Esquivel... .... | Do. Ouebse, Comada noi: Loo tdn bl, John N. Wasson... ......| Consul. Bol oi oad ani Charles P. Champion....| Vice-consul. Rabat, Moreeeot oan aod Sousa oni a adie ad a 3 | Const agent, Ramsgate, Margate, and Deal ......... Alfred. 1.. Hodges. .-.--.| Do. Ranoeon, Barmah... os. oa nn James M. Leishman. .... Do. Redditeh ooo cussalee SN i LCL Browning oa. Do. Reims, [Frmnee.... 0. .c.... liven. Adolph Gouverneur Gill .| Consul. Po cr it Vice-consul. Riga, Russial oo clon ooo odigaaiiio ny lain onan: | Consular agent. Ringkjobing, Denmark... .. 0 aio. ALC Flustedpd oc ice oof Do. Rio de Janeiro, Bragill ©... .. cleoda. Thomas -Adamson. ....-. Consul-general. EA RG, Bg ~...| Francis M. Cordeiro. ....| Vice-consul-general. Rio Grands, Brazil. .«........c.50 John L. Frisbie:........ 0004 Consul. ESTE Ce IT (Geo. F. Upton... ......| Vice-econsul. Rio iil United Sintes of Colombia. i] ota.tdi san Consul. ar Do i... ol ea aN Dane, I TA Lad Vice-consul. Ritzebiittel and Cuxhaven, Germany-....| Johann Eggers ....:.... , Consular agent. Rout .o. nv oi ua T. del Girdice vi. 5. Do. Rome, Ttaly-o.oo 00... 0 iiipei Charles McMillan. ...... Consul-general. BO iA in ea eh te ie See man Vice-consul-general, Ronne; Dewmark -» 5c.ai badug: Charles Bistrup. ........| Consular agent. Reosarie, Argentine Republic... ...-.. Thomas B. Wood. ....-. Consul. Bo PT CAR Alansen'S. Hallo... | Vice-consul. Restofl, Russian cu ao. ooo clout: Jom Martin. oo... Consular agent. Rotterdam, Netherlands ...... .......-John'l', Winter. 0. Consul. OR NE a 2 SCR GO Or Ee A.A. Wambersie . ...... Vice-consul. Roubaix c=. co iui us sie CasarsPiat oonan Consular agent. Rouen, France. i... . ous .isviiaici Albert Rhodes. 0. ta: Commercial agent. | A ERT Lp Jules Bscluvy 1... LL... Vice-commercial agent. Russell, New Zealand .... cc cuuuincian John H. Salmon ........ Consular agent. Rustelinle, Turkey. oo... ceavce ina Richard Reade ......... Do. Sabanilla, United States of Colombia... Elias P. Pellet. ......... Consul. a TR | RR EGE Christopher Hoyer ....... Vice-consul. Saf, Morouco i iii vee eas Isaac Benzacar.....: .... Consular agent. o.oo Sagua la Grande, Salm SE Joseph R. Joell... ..-Do. Sal, Cape Verde Islands ...... ........ Tole Vem Cruze iln. Jo Do. Salonica, Burkey. ones onan PH Togznvo... oui nnun Do. boints Saltillo. ;..........io die Daal John 1. Carothers ...... .. Consul. Ln ee ee ER RES SEG SIR TE I ER Vice-consul. Samana. ot Soe LE Le Fred. P. Markham...... Commercial agent. Poses chamoisiaogisg William H. Bostwich.... Vice-commercial agent. San Andrés, Caribbean Sen... o.oo fiaaiin ni nil linia. Commercial agent. | Cee RCO LN PRR CCIE ET BE fn ERE Vice-commercial agent. Sam Benitor i toot taldal Charles Desponds. ...... Consular agent. Sam Blass Lesa Frank Arnim. o....... Do. : Do..c... lrae as James W. Stephens ..... Vice-consul. San José, Costa Rica....-i........... Arthur Morrell .........} Consul. | RC ER SR RR Joseph L. Livingston....| Vice-consul. San José and Cape St. Lucas .......... Eugene Gillespie ....-... Consul. |B RS a re AL ROL a Re i Vice-consul. San José de Guatemala ...... -....<..; Audley E. Donnelly. .... Consular agent. San Juan de los Remedios. -.-: Consul-general. Be |: William Herz... vaves Vice-consul-general. Vigo, Spain. Joiadid soaso Camilo Molins... ...xe-.-| Consular agent. Nvere Lo Cr sa | Joaquin Muniz. ..... | Do. MWallncelmimnpi io coi sna ooo oa, Lionel H. Johmson......| Do. Waltons on volun leon dann, Alex. MeN. Parker... Do. Warsaw, Russia 2-0 Sooo oo 0 Joseph Rawiez:..-. =| Consul EES IE Se el Ree a EE De tte | Vice-consul. Waterford, Ireland 20.oo. oie Benjamin Moore.... ...., Consular agent. WwW ellington, New Zealond. =... --.. ..-- Daniel Meclntyre---.---- Do. Weymonth oon.oe isda William Smith. 0... .-..: | Do. RVhithy on George B. Yule... ...... Do. Windsor, Canada... oo. Loseal 20 John “H. Joensuu a Commercial agent. eran EE Ne John'W. Holton... ... Vice-commercial agent. Windsor, Nova Scot naeal os ve dieu | Daniel K. Hobart....:..| Consul. TO ha Le OAS NE GO) Peter S. Burnham ..--... Vice-consul. Winninen, British North America ...... | James W. Taylor....... Consul. a I ee ned Abel Grovenor:...--....| Vice-consul. Wolfville, Nova Scotia... ---.on-o. if Joseph R. Hea. ......... Consular agent. Wolverhampton, England ...... ......| John Neve... ........s o. Wyborg, Finland i. cocoa.cai iii | SPIYOW. oa carat seins Do. Yarmouth, Nova Scotia. --.- .--o-.2. | Joseph R. Kinny: . =... Do. Zanzibar. 3 ah saa | William H. Hathorne ... Consul Dor Seatrl aie, | Geo. F. C. Thompson... Vice-consul. Zacatecas, Mexleom ul sues dhe do vataailonis sas soins Se wen sale hine Consul. LR Ee Se a Se SE | A.M. Kimball =o... 5. Vice-consul. Zante. oor se te Ts ees | Anastatius Sargint......- Consular agent. C4 CERSO Me RR Sinesio Ballesta........- Do. Zurich, Switzerland. 22...oh oco iio | Samuel H. M. Byers....| Consul. ERR SIel ey | Ephuaim L. Corning ....| Vice-consul. Congressional Directory. CONSULAT CLERES. S Authorized by the act of Congress approved Fune 20, 1864. Chas, P. Thirion........... Algiers Jos. A. Springer... ...c. Havana. Joseph A. Raphel: ., ii.. Havana. EP Maclean. .cai-aaens Berlin. Charles'M. Wood..........Rome John B. Hay cove onsen | Edward A. Van Dyck... ....Cairo. George H. Scidmore....... Dunfermline. O. B. Bradford ...... Ey Shanghai Frank P. Hastings... Honolulu. Joseph'S. J. Eaton i... .... Paris. Gustavus Goward. ... ..... Pago Pago. COMMISSIONERS. President.—S. L. Phelps, 1500 Thirteenth street, N. W. J. Dent, Road street, opposite Congress street, (Georgetown. W. J. Twining, Major of Engineers, U. S. A., 1720 Fourteenth street. * Secretary.—William Tindall, 1218 Virginia avenue. THE DISTRICT OFFICERS. Assistant Engineer.—Ligutenant R. L. Hoxie, U. S. A., 235 Pennsylvania avenue, N. W. Attorney. —A. G. Riddle, 1116 Thirteenth street, N. W. ; office, 460 Louisiana avenue. Assistant Attorney.—Francis Miller, 460 Louisiana avenue. . Collector of Taxes.—John F. Cook, 1005 Sixteenth street. Zreasurer.—Robert P. Dodge, 89 Montgomery street, Georgetown. Auditor and Comptroller —]John T. Vinson, Rockville, Md. Assessors.—William Dixon, 303 Indiana avenue. George A. Rohrer, 1020 G street, S. E. B. D. Carpenter, Brightwood. : Health Officer —Smith Townshend, M. D., 213 Four-and-a-half street. Coroner.—De Witt C. Patterson, M. D., 919 I street, N. W. Water-Registrar. —Thomas C. Cox, 25 Gay street, Georgetown. Surveyor.—John A. Partridge, 218 New Jersey avenue, S. E. Supt. of Assessment and 7axes.—William Morgan, 1112 M street, N, W, Supt, of Public Schools.—J. Ormond Wilson, 1439 Massachusetts av., N. W, Chief Engineer of the Five Department. —Martin Cronin, 435 Washington street, N. W, ; THE POLICE COURT. Fudge.—William B. Snell, 471 C street. Clerk.—Howard L. Prince, 415 Spruce street, Le Droit Park. Assistant U. S. Attorney.—Randolph Coyle, 130 C street, Georgetown. Special Assistant Attorneyfor D. C.—]J. E. Padgett, 1030 Louisiana avenue. THE METROPOLITAN POLICE. Major and Superintendent.—Thomas P. Morgan, 1718 Rhode Island avenue. Captain and Inspector.— William C. Brock, 219 Eleventh street, S. W. Property Clerk.—Edward G. Curtis, 624 F street, N. W. : Cierke.—William J. Dunivan, 1915 Ninth street, N, W, ig Police Surgeons.—Dr. S. A. H. McKim, Dr. G. W. H. Newman, and Dr. Johnson Elio, iH (Police Headquarters, after January 1st, 451 Pennsylvania avenue, N. W.) ! LE { ENGINEER OEFICE, WASHINGTON MONUMENT. (Corner Seventeenth and F streets, N. W.) Lngineerin charge.—Bvt. Col. Thomas Lincoln Casey, Corps of Engineers, 1419 K st., NW. Assistant Engineer.—Capt. George W. Davis, Fourteenth Infantry, 1316 R street, N. W. Clerks.—A. C. Bowie, 1223 Thirteenth street, N. W. ; F. L. Harvey, jr., 1005 Ninth street, N. W, The District Fudiciary— Capitol Folice. : THE DISTRICT JUDICIARY. CRIMINAL COURT—DISTRICT COURT—COMMON-LAW COURT—EQUITY COURT. Chief-Justice David K. Cartter, 1505 I street, N. W, Associate Justice Abram B. Olin, 1223 N street, N. W, Associate Justice Andrew Wylie, Vermont avenue, corner of Fourteenth street. Associate Justice D. C. Humphreys, 1340 Massachusetts avenue. Associate Justice Arthur Mac Arthur, 1201 N street, N. W., Clerk.—R. J. Meigs, 302 New Jersey avenue, S. E. DISTRICT ATTORNEY'S OFFICE. U. S. District Attorney.—H. H. Wells, gor M street, N. W. Assistant U. S. Dist. Att.—H. H. Wells, jr., 1211 Ninth street, N. W. UNITED STATES MARSHAL’S OFFICE. United States Marshal.—Frederick Douglass, Uniontown, D. C. U. S. Deputy Marshals— Leander P. Williams, Irving street, near Howard University. Lewis H. Douglas, 2002 Seventeenth street, N. W. Isaac N. Cary, Fourteenth street. Clerf—Frank L. Williams. 3 REGISTER IN BANKRUPTCY’S OFFICE. Register in Bankruptcy.—]. Sayles Brown, 914 Scott Place. REGISTER OF WILLS OFFICE. Register of Wills.—Amos Webster, 1731 F street, N. W, Assistants.—William H. Dennis, 402 Sixth street, N. W. RECORDER’S OFFICE. Recorder of Deeds.—George A. Sheridan, Ebbitt House. Deputy Recorder of Deeds.—George F. Schayer, Washington street,| Cenrgeomn, THE CAPITOL POLICE. Captain.—S. S. Blackford, 102 Massachusetts avenue, N. W, Lieutenants.—S. A. Boyden, 205 C street, N. E. Thomas Phelan, 34 F street, N. W, George S. Smith, Alexandria, Virginia. Privates.—Ball, G. |., 12 Sixth street, N. E. Banks, H. T., 108 Second street, N. W. Beelz, G., 233 Second street, N. WV, : Blanchard, C. H., 104 Massachusetts avenue, N. W, Connolly, Thomas, 217 B street, N. W. Crane, Norman, Mades Hotel. Gilbert, Joseph, Howard House. Goodreell, W. H., 40 D sireet, S. E. Hitchcock, J. H., 418 B street; S. F, Ingram, Thomas, Myrtle street. Jones, F. G., 222 Third street, N. W. Lemmon, H. H., 503 Maryland avenue, S. W, Manning, Charles H., 57 D.street,'N, I. ! McNall, Webb, 314 Maryland avenue, N. E. d McCor aiick, J. R., 314 Fourth-and-a- half street. i Slade, W. in Washington House. : Thompson, I S., 226 Second street, N. E. w Thwing, C. G., 27 D street, S. E. Thomas, A. L., 913 Tenth street, S. E. Wood, F. A., 205 A sireet, S. E. i Young, T. W, 221 North Capitol street. i Worimen. — Bulkley, M., Third street, S. E. Koch, C., 301 First street, N. E. k Mallory, S.» 40 BP street, N. W. Riley, Terome, Fourth near B, S. E. Rowe, S., 102 Massachusetts avenue, N, W. Smoot, B. F.; Howard House. I0 146 + Congressional Directory. THE SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION. Presiding officer, ex officio.—RUTHERFORD B. HAVES, President of the United States. Chancellor .—Morrison R. Waite, Chief-Justice of the United States, 1709 R. I. avenue. Secretary, or Director of the Institution.—Spencer F. Baird, 1445 Massachusetts avenue. Chief Clerk.—William J. Rhees, Spring street, Mount Pleasant, county. Corresponding Clerk.—D. Leech, 1501 Vermont avenue. Bookkeeper.—Clarence B. Young, 1431 QQ street. Executive Committee.—DPeter Parker, 700 Lafayette Square, west side. | ; John Maclean, Princeton, New Jersey. William T. Sherman, W ashington, D.C, REGENTS OF THE INSTITUTION. Morrison R. Waite, Chief-Justice of the United States. William A. Wheeler, Vice-President of the United States. H. Hamlin, member of the Senate of the United States. R. E. Withers, member of the Senate of the United States. A. A. Sargent, member of the Senate of the United States. Hiester Clymer, member of the House of Representatives. Alex. H. Stephens, member of the Houseof Representatives. James A. Garfield, member of the House of Representatives. John Maclean, citizen of New Jersey. (Princeton.) Peter Parker, citizen of Washington, 700 Lafayette Square, west side. William T. Sherman, citizen of Washington. Asa Gray, citizen of Massachusetts. (Cambridge.) Henry Coppée, citizen of Pennsylvania. (Bethlehem.) Noah Porter, citizen of Connecticut (New Haven.) MEMBERS EX OFFICIO OF THE INSTITUTION. Rutherford B. Hayes, President of the United States. William A. Wheeler, Vice-President of the United States. Morrison R. Waite, Chief-Justice of the United States. William M. Evarts, Secretary of State. John Sherman, Secretary of the Treasury. G. W. McCrary, Secretary of War. Richard W. Thompson, Secretary of the Navy. Carl Schurz, Secretary of the Interior. David M. Key, Postmaster-General. Charles Devens, Attorney-General. H. E. Paine, Commissioner of Patents. THE CORCORAN GALLERY OF ART. BOARD OF TRUSTEES. President.—James C. Hall, M. D., gog Pennsylvania avenue, N. W, Vice-President.—Charles M. Matthews, 140 Washington street, Georgetown. Treasurer.—George W. Riggs, 1617 I street, N. W, Secretary. —Anthony Hyde, 122 Washington street, Georgetown. ‘Henry D. Cooke, 5 Stoddert street, Georgetown. J. C. McGuire, 614 E street, N. W. William T. Walters, Baltimore. James C. Welling, LL. D., President of Columbian College. Spencer F. Baird, Director of the Smithsonian Institution, CURATOR, William MacLeod, 1317 S street. ASSISTANT CURATOR. F. S. Barbarin, Dunbarton street, Georgetown. Flaces of Divine Worship. 147 PLACES OF DIVINE WORSHIP, HEBREW SYNAGOGUE. Washington Hebrew Congregation, Eighth street, between H and I north. Service Fri-day evening at 7 o'clock, and Sabbath [ Saturday] morning at 9 o’clock. L. Stern, reader. Adas Israel Congregation, (orthodox,) 602 Sixth street. Services Friday evening at sunset, and Saturdays at 8 o’clock a. m. Rev. Mr. Bernstein, reader. CATHOLIC. St. Patrick’s Church, F street north, corner of Tenth street west, one square west from the Patent-Office edifice. Rev. J. A. Walter, pastor; Rev. L. A. Morgan, assistant. St. Peter’s Church, Capitol Hill, about three squares from the southeast corner of the Cap-itol grounds. Rev. 1 O’Sullivan, pastor. St. Matthew’s. Church, corner of Fifteenth and H streets, a short distance north Hom the Treasury Department. Rev. F. E. Boyle, pastor; Rev. P. Ryan, D. D., assistant. St. Mary’s Church, (German, ) Fifth street, near-IlI. Rev. Matthias Alig, pastor. St. Dominick’s Church, on the Island, Sixth street west, corner of F street south. Rev. A. Rotchford, pastor; Rev. M. B. Fortune, O. S. D., Rev. J. Sheridan, Rev. F. D. Reveillé, Rev. T. L. Power Rev. J. A. Clarkson, assistants. St. Aloysius Church, North Capitol street, corner of I street. Rev. Stephen Kelly, S. J., pastor; Rev. J. Foran, S. J., assistant. Church of the Immaculate Conception, Eighth and N streets. Rev. P. F. McCarthy, pastor ; Rev. J. Gallen, assistant. St. Stephen’s Church, Pennsylvania avenue and Twenty-fifth street. Rev. John McNally, pastor. Rev. Edward Southgate, assistant. St. Augustin’s Church, (for colored people,) Fifteenth street, near L street north. Rev. F. Barotti, pastor; Rev. P. Tarro, assistant. St. Joseph's Church, (German.) Rev. James Simeon, pastor; Rev. J. P. M. Schleuter, S. J., assistant. Trinity Church, Georgetown. Rev. J..J.. Murphy, S. J., pastor; Rev. F. Casey, S. J. EPISCOPAL. St. Paul’s Church, Twenty-third street, south of Washington Circle. Rev. A. Jackson. 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. Charlies D. Andrews. St. John’s Church, opposite the President’s House. Rev. John V. Lewis, D. D. Trinity Church, Third and C streets, N. W. Rev. Thomas G. Addison, D. D. Church of the Epiphany, G street north. Rev. William Paret, D. D. Church of the Ascension, Massachusetts avenue, N. W. Rev. John H. Elliott, S. T. D. Church of the Incarnation, N street, corner of Twelfth, N. W. Rev. I. L. Townsend, S. TT, D. Grace Church, Island, D street south, between Eighth and Ninth. Rev. A. Holmead. Rock Creek Church, near Soldiers’ Home. Rev. James A. Buck. St. Mary’s Chapel, Twenty-third street. Rev. Alexander Crummell, D. D. Chapel of the Holy Communion, Virginia avenue. Rev. James W. Clark. Church of the Holy Cross, Massachusetts avenue, N. W. Rev. J. A. Harrold, M. D. METHODIST EPISCOPAL. Metropolitan, corner of Fourth-and-a-half and C streets. Rev. H. R. Naylor, D. D. East Washington, Fourth street east. Rev. B. G. Reid. Foundry Church, corner of G and Fourteenth streets. Rev. John Lanohan, D. D. Wesley Chapel, corner Fifth and F streets. Rev. J. S. Deale, D. D McKendree Chapel, Massachusetts avenue, near Ninth street. Rev. A. H. Ames. Fletcher Chapel, corner New York avenue and Fourth street. Rev. A. J. Bender. Union Chapel, Twentieth street, near Pennsylvania avenue. Rev. George V. Leech. Ryland Chapel, Tenth street, corner of D, Island. Rev. L. M. Gardner. Gorsuch Chapel, L street south, corner of Fourth-and-a-half street. Rev. James McLaren. Waugh Chapel, A street north, corner of Fourth street east. Rev. J. R. Wheeler. North Capitol Street Church, corner Kistreet, N. E. Rev. Henry Boggs. Hamline Church, corner of Ninth and P streets north. -Rev. W. I. McKenny. Grace Church, corner Ninth and S streets. Rev. H. S: France. Mount Zion, Sixteenth street, corner of R. Rev. D. D. Owen. Twelfth Street Church. Rev. Henry Nice. , METHODIST EPISCOPAL, SOUTH. Mount Vernon Place Church, corner of Ninth and K streets. Rev. W. P. Harrison. 148 Congressional Directory. METHODIST PROTESTANT. Methodist Protestant Church, Ninth street, between E and F. Methodist Protestant Church, Virginia avenue, near navy-yard. Rev. Jos. P. Wilson. CONGREGATIONAL. First Congregational Church, corner of Tenth and G. Rev. J. E. Rankin, D. D. Services at IT a. m. and 7.30 p. m. Sabbath-school, 9.45 a. m. Mission-schools, 3 p. m. Weekly meeting, Thursday evening. Young people's meeting, Tuesday evening. BAPTIST. First Baptist, Thirteenth street, between G and H. Rev. J. H. Cuthbert, B.D. Second Church, Virginia avenue, corner Fourth st., near navy-yard. Rev. W. M. Ingersoll, = E Street Church, a square east from the General Post-Office. Rev. J] W. Parker, D. D. Fifth Baptist Church, D street south. Rev. C. C. Meador. Calvary Church, corner of H and Eighth streets. Rev. A. F. Mason. Kendall Mission Chapel, corner of D and Thirteenth streets, S. W. Rev. Mr. Olcott Calvary Mission Chapel, corner of Fifth and P streets. Calvary Mission No. 3, corner of H and First streets. Rev. J. W. Parks. Baptist Mission Chapel, corner of A and Eighth streets, N. E. North Baptist Church, Fourteenth street, between R and S sts. Rev. E. H. Gray, D. D. Georgetown Baptist Church, Rev. G. W. Beale. > CHRISTIAN. First Christian Church, Vermontave., between N and O sts., N.W. Rev. Frederick D. Power. PRESBYTERIAN. First Church, Fourth-and-a-halfstreet, between C and D. Rev. Byron Sunderland, D. D. New York Avenue Church, New York avenue and H street, N. W. Rev. John R. Paxton. Fourth Church, Ninth street, N. W., between (; and HH. Rev. J. T. Kelly. Assembly’s Church, corner of Fifth and I streets, N. W. Rev. George O. Little. | Sixth Church, Sixth street, S. W., near Maryland avenue. Rev. Mason Noble, D. D. 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. Rev. F. J. Grimke. Eastern Church, Eighth street, N. E., between F and G. Rev. Geo. B. Patch. Reformed Presbyterian Church, First street, S. W. Rev. J. M. Armour. Central Church, Third and I streets, N. W. Rev. A. W. Pitzer, D. D. Lutheran Evangelical Zion Church, O street. corner of Twelfth street | German Evangelical Zion Church, corner of Sixth and P sts.,, N. W. Rev. G. W. Landan. West Street S. H. Howe, Church, D. D. West street, between Congress and High streets, Georgetown. Rew. 1 UNITARIAN. All Souls Church, Fourteenth street, corner of L street. Rev. Clay MacCauley. Morning services at IT o'clock; vespers at 7% p. m. UNIVERSALIST. Murray Universalist Society. Morning services at Tallmadge Hall, F street, between | Ninth and Tenth streets, N. W. Rev. A. Kent. . | FRIENDS’ MEETING-HOUSES. | Orthodox Meeting-House, No. 453 Ninth street. Meeting at 11 o’clock a. m. - | Meeting-House, (Hicksite,) North I street, north side. 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. Ha ~ Rev. Jabez Fox ; residence, 320 Indiana avenue. Ww LUTHERAN. German Evangelical Congregation of Trinity, Unaltered Augsburg Confession, Fourth street west, corner of E street north. -Rev. W. C. H. Luebkert. 4 German Evangelical Church, G street north, corner. of ['wentieth street west, First ward, Services 11 o'clock a. m., and evening. Rev. G. L. Rietz. German Evangelical, St. John's Church, Fourth-and-a-half street. Rev. A. Kurz. St. Paul’s Church, corner of Eleventh and H streets west. Rev. Samuel Domer. Memorial Church, corner of N and Fourteenth streets. Rev. J. G. Butler, D. D. Church of the Reformation; First street east. Rev. L.. Hay. GERMAN REFORMED CHURCH. First Reformed Church, corner of Sixth and N streets, N. \V. Rev. M. Treibe. Ger- man service on Sunday morning at 11 o’clock. Railroad Time-Zables. RAILROAD TIME-TABLES. SEEEEEEEEE BALTIMORE AND OHIO RAILROAD. (Depot corner New Jersey avenue and C street.) TRAINS LEAVE WASHINGTON. 3:05 a. a. m. m . New York and Annapolis, Boston Express. way st. . Mm. Baltimore Baltimore and Laurel way Express. stations. .50 Baltimore, and and *7.40 2. Mm Baltimore Express. Point of Rocks and Winchester. 8.10 a. m . Point of Rocks, Piedmont, Stras-Baltimore, Annapolis, and way st. burg, Winchester, Hagerstown Philadelphia, and Norfolk, Exp. 8.30 a. New York and Boston Express. | Baltimore and way stations. *8.35 a. St. Louis and Chicago, Express. . Chicago and Columbus Express. 19.00 a. m. Baltimore and way stations. Baltimore Express. *10.00 a. m. Baltimore Express. Point of Rocks and way stations. 12.10 p. m. Baltimore and Annapolis. Saint. Louis, and Pittsburg Exp. *1.30 p. m. New York and Boston Express. *10.75 p. New Yorkand Philadelphia Exp. Trains marked * daily; other trains daily except Sunday. t Sund-~y only. TRAINS ARRIVE AT WASHINGTON. 5.00 a. St. Louis and Cincinnati Express. 3-€0 p: Baltimore and way stations. *6.35 a. Philadelphia and New York Ex. 4.30 p. Baltimore and way stations ®y.50 a. Chicago and Pittsburgh Express. 5.00 Pp. New York and Philadelphia Exp. 8.20 a. Baltimore and way stations. 5.05 p. Piedmont, Winchester, Fred- 8.25 a. Frederick, Point of Rocks. erick. : 8.27 a. Baltimore and Annapolis Ex. Balto., Annapolis, and way. *6.37 p *9.45 a. Martinsburg and Winchester. *7.20 p. Baltimore Express. *10.30 a. Baltimore and way stations. 7:55 P-Baltimore and way. 11.30 a. Baltimore Express. #8.00 p. Chicago and St. Louis Express. *1.50 p. Baltimore, Annapolis, and way. *9.40 p. New York and Phila. Express. * Arrive daily. = Others Sunday excepted. 1 On Sunday only. 6.50 a. m. 7.00 a. m. 7.00 a. m. 8.35 a. m. 9.30 a. m. *10.10 a. m. 1.30 p. m. *6.25.a./m. 8.45 a. m. #8.55 a. m, 11.00 a. m. 1.00 p. m. I.10:p: Mm. * Daily. BALTIMORE AND POTOMAC RAILROAD. (Depot corner Sixth and B streets. ) TRAINS LEAVE WASHINGTON. Richmond Express, southward. | 4.20 p. . Baltimore and Annapolis. Baltimore and Annapolis. Richmond Express, southward. Chesapeake and Ohio route. Philadelphia Express. Baltimore Passenger. Chesapeake and Ohio route. New York Limited Express. Cincinnati Express. Fast line for West and North. . New England Express. New England Express. TRAINS ARRIVE AT WASHINGTON. New York Night Express. 4-05 Pp. . New York Limited Express. Accommodation from Baltimore, 4:35 P-. New York Mail. From the West and North. 6.50 p. Washington Passenger. Washington Passenger. *9 00 Pp. . From North and West. From Baltimore, and Boston. 9.55 p-Richmond Express. Richmond Express. Others Sundays excepted. ALEXANDRIA AND WASHINGTON RAILROAD. (Depot corner of Sixth and B streets.) Local trains for Alexandria leave as follows: 6.00, 7.15, 8.00, 9.00, 10.00, 11.00 a. m., and 1.15, 3.00, 4.20, 5.00, 6.05, 7.00. 11.30 p. m. The 9.10 a. m. and 1.00 and 7.00 p. m. trains run daily; all other trains daily except Sunday. Local trains leave Alexandria as follows: 6.15, 7.15, 8.00, 9.00, 10.00, 11.00 a. m., and 1.00, 3.00, 4.20, 5.00, 6.15, 7.00, and 12.00 p. m. The 8.170 and 10.00 a. m. and 6.00 p. m. trains leave Alexandria daily; all other trains daily except Sunday. Directory. Congressional 150 Adg0T NHILSIM 7, } 7 Wl, | >= > = | 2 2 1 2 2 0 e ~ ww = 4 z 2 [3 = tc = : a 5 5 g = 3 z : 7) [od 3 i s 3 6)S if -i 5 3 | Oo Ec 1 g Ll [| a 8 2) % | a $i | V8] Oo = = 0 INOOY NOILIIOTY J | ' [a i r 1 A9g0OT7 NYHILSY3 S3av J |} | 1 COAT ROOM 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 ana Assistants. R. Official Reporters. . F. Hereford, of West Virginia. 53. J. P. Jones, of Nevada. . B. K. Bruce, of Mississippi. . S. B. Conover, of Florida. 54. N. Booth, of California. . G. F. Hoar, of Massachusetts. . J. B. Chaffee, of Colorado. 55. H. L. Dawes, of Massachusetts. . D. Davis, of Illinois. . A. A. Sargent, of California. 56. W. Sharon, of Nevada. . J. S. Morrill, of Vermont. . M. W. Ransom, of North Carolina. 57. S. W. Dorsey, of Arkansas. H. B. Anthony, of Rhode Island. 32. R. Conkling, of New York. 58. R. J. Oglesby, of Illinois. G. F. Edmunds, of Vermont. . H. Hamlin, of Maine. 59. G. E. Spencer, of Alabama. S. J. Kirkwood, of Iowa. . T. O. Howe, of Wisconsin. 6o. J. E. McDonald, of Indiana. . J. H. Mitchell, of Oregon. . J. G. Blaine, of Maine. . 61. W. H. Barnum, of Connecticut. . J. J. Ingalls, of Kansas. . J. J. Patterson, of South Carolina. 62. W. W. Eaton, of Connecticut. . W. B. Allison, of Iowa. . W. Windom, of Minnesota. 63. A. G. Thurman, of Ohio. . B. Wadleigh, of New Hampshire. . T. W. Ferry, of Michigan. 64. T. C. McCreery, of Kentucky. . W. P. Whyte, of Maryland. . S. J. R. McMillan, of Minnesota. 65. T. F. Bayard, of Delaware. . W. A. Wallace, of Pennsylvania. . A. Cameron, of Wisconsin. 66. F. Kernan, of New York. + I. G. Harris, of Tennessee. . A. S. Paddock, of Nebraska. 67. J. W. Johnston, of Virginia. S . B. Maxey, of Texas. . A. E. Burnside, of Rhode Island. 68. E. Saulsbury, of Delaware. A . H. Garland, of Arkansas. . S. Matthews, of Ohio. 69. J. B. Gordon, of Georgia. D . W. Voorhees, of Indiana. . S. W. Kellogg, of Louisiana. 70. L. OQ. C. Lamar, of Mississippi. . J. E. Bailey, of Tennessee. . P. B. Plumb, of Kansas. 71. J. R. McPherson, of New Jersey. B . H. Hill, of Georgia. . J.-B. Eustis, of Louisiana. 72. J. T. Morgan, of Alabama. G . R. Dennis, of Maryland. 73. R. Coke, of Texas. J: B. Beck,of Kentucky. . J. D. Cameron, of Pennsylvania. 74. L. F. Grover, of Oregon. . BF. M. Cockrell, of Missouri. . A. Saunders, of Nebraska. 75. C. W. Jones, of Florida. . R. E. Withers, of Virginia. . E. H. Rollins, of New Hampshire. 76. T. F. Randolph, of New Jersey. . A. S. Merrimon, of North Carolina. . 1. P. Christiancy, of Michigan. 77. D. H. Armstrong, of Missouri. . H. G. Davis, of West Virginia. . H. M. Teller, of Colorado. 78. M. C. Butler, of South Carolina. Ll (9, La SAOIVUIS JO 10VIOT IIIT CEE NORTHERN DOOR H000 NY31S3IM : 52 40% Ns AY a 15 © 128 00 a REPORTERS i = [os [onl 16 50 97 15] [85 72] [96] [123 : 14] [20 a 71 | [95 | [122 1 13 28] [47 [70] | 94 [0] Alea. IIra "A4OPI2UUT JVUOISSIASUOY) eS1 Congressional Directory. ALPHABETICAL LIST OF SENATORS, REPRESENTATIVES, AND DELEGATES, WITH THEIR HOME POST-OFFICES AND RESIDENCES IN WASHINGTON. \ [Corrected to December g, 1878.] The * designates those whose wives accompany them ; the § designates those whose daughters accom-pany them ; the | designates those having other ladies with them. The streets and avenues of Washington are now numbered on the * Philadelphia plan,” starting north south, east, and west from the base-lines, which run north and south, east and west, intersecting at the Capitol. Thus, in the northwest section of the city, the houses on any street designated by a letter, or on any avenue running east and west, which are between First and Second streets, are numbered between one and two hundred ; those between Second and Third streets are numbered between two and three hundred, and so forth. On the streets designated by numbers, or on any avenue running north and sout h the houses between A and B streets are numbered between one and two hundred ; those between B and C streets are numbered between two and three hundred, and so forth. This system of numbering enables any one, with the aid of a map of the city, to determine the exact location of any house the number and street of which are given. SENATORS. Name. Post-office. Residence in Washington. WHEELER, W. A., President. Allison, William B........ Anthony, Henry B........ Armstrong, D. Hl... ...... *9 || Bailey, James E....... *§ || Barnum, William H.._. * § § Bayard, Thomas F .... # Deck, James B ....,.-2 | Blame, James G........ Booth, Newton... .......: * Bruce, Blanche K ........ Burnside, Ambrose E...... ER Butler, M. C ............ Cameron, Angus......... §€ameron, J. D......... §/|l Chaffee, Jerome B...... * Christioncy, Isanc Pui... -. * Cockrell, Francis M...... Coke,;Richard............. Conkling, Roscoe = ..0..-... ®Conover, Simon B.... .... Davis, David... .........; #8 Davis, Henry G. ........ #8 Dawes, Henry L........ Dennis, George’ R........ ... * | Dorsey, Stephen W. .... * Eaton, William W ........ *§ Edmunds, George F. _... Eustis, James B..._.._0. Perey. Wr oo lo... ik Garland, ATL .~0..... 00. *Gordon, John B * Grover, L. F * Hamlin, Hannibal ........ Harris, I. CG... Hereford, Frank. .......... Malone, New York.......... Dubuque, Towa. 2. ......0... Providence, Rhode Island.... Saint Louis, Missouri. ...... Clarksville, Tennessee ....... Lime Rock, Connecticut. .... Wilmington, Delaware ...... Lexington, Kentucky.-..... Augusta, Maine. o.oo, Sacramento, California... .-.. Rosedale, Mississippi --..... Providence, Rhode Island. ... Edgefield, South Carolina .... LaCrosse, Wisconsin. ....... Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.... Denver,. Colorado. i... 22." Lansing, Michigan .......... Warrensburg, Missouri . . .. Waco, Bexas ohn. it. Utica, New York... ... .. vee-Tallahassee, Florida. ........ Bloomington, Illinois........ Piedmont, West Virginia .... Pittsfield, Massachusetts. .. . Kingston, Maryland. ........ Helena, Arkansas. i... ..:. Hartford, Connecticut. ...... Burlington, Vermont ........ New Orleans, Louisiana -.... Grand Haven, Michigan... .. Little Rock, Arkansas....... Atlanta, Georgia .-i.e 2-.--Salem, Oregon’... ......... Bangor, Maine -. ...... 2... Memphis, ‘Tennessee... ... Union, West Vriginia ....... Riggs House. 1124 Vermont avenue. 1807 H street, N. W. National Hotel. 1413 K street, N. W. Arlington Hotel. 1413 Massachusetts avenue. 204 Pennsylvania av., East. 821 Fifteenth street. 601 Thirteenth street, N. W. Cor. Fourth and College sts. 1323 H strees, N. W, 1214 New York avenue. 1213 N street. 1731 I street, N. W. Arlington Hotel. 411 Fourth street. 912 Fifteenth street, N, W. 715 Market Space. Wormley’s Hotel. Willard’s Hotel. National Hotel. Arlington Hotel. 4 La Fayette Square. [ Baltimore, Md. ] 1121 I street, N. W. McPherson House. 1411 Massachusetts avenue. Willard’s Hotel. National Hotel. Riggs House. Willard’s Hotel. 1108 F street, N. W. Willard’s Hotel. 515 Eleventh street, N. W, National Hotel. Senators and Representatives. Name. Post-office. Residence in Washington. * Hill, Benjamin H..-.... 2 Hoar, G. F * § | Howe, Timothy O. ... Ingalls, John *§0 Johnston, John W . * Jones, Charles We. 1. *{ Jones, John P--._. * Kellogg, William Pitt .... | #§ Kernan, Francis .... ..- * Kirkwood, 8.7. cons Lamar, [.. Q..C. iia 20 * Matthews, Stanley... ... Maxey, Samuel B......... McCreery, Thomas C ... --McDonald, Joseph Eo... McMillan, Samuel J. R .... ® McPherson, [.R. =... ... *Mervimon, A. So. = Mitchell, John H....... Morgan, J. T ® Morrill, Justin Sid... Oglesby, Richard J. ...... * Paddock, Algernon S . ... & Patterson, John J.-.---.. Plumb, BP. de B....0..a *§ Randolph, Theodore F. a * Ransom, Matt W....... 2S Rollins, BE. FH ......... * § Sargent, Aaron A....... Saulsbury, Eli. ..... XCannders, A. LLL a0 Sharon, William ........... = Spencer, George E...... 2 Meller, Henry Mo... ...: * Thurman, Allen G....... * 8d Voorhees, ID. W........ * Wadleigh, Bainbridge... .. * Wallace, William A . .... Whyte, William Pinkney . a * | Windom, William...... ®Y Withers, Robert EB... Atlanta, «Georgia-.-o-oo. Worcester, Massachusetts. ... Green Bay, Wisconsin. . ...-. Atchison, Kansas .....:.. ...-Abingdon, Virginia... ...-.. Pensacola, Florida. Gold Hill, Nevada . New Orleans, Louisiana ..... Utica, New York ..o Loo... Yowa City, Towa. ..C..o.-0 Oxford, Mississippi --.-t.... Glendale, @hio. .. cL lids Paris, Texas. 5 Ow ensbor ough, Kentucky. HY Indianapolis, Indiana. . : Saint Paul, Minnesota... .... Jersey City, New Jersey....«. Raleigh, North Carolina . Portland, Oregon...t....... (Selma; Alabama....w.n.ou. Strafford, Vermont .......... Decatur, Tilineisi.. ..... 0.0. Beatrice, Nebraska.... Charleston, South Carolina. .. Emporia, Kansas..._.-..... Morristown, New Jersey... .. Weldon, North Carolina . .... Concord, New Hampshire... San Francisco, California... Dover, Delaware: .. oc. Omaha, } ..ouaia. Nebraska. Virginia City, Nevada ..-.2.. Decatur, Alabama. .. Central City, Colorado. ...... Columbus; Ohio...woes i. ‘Terre Haute, Indiana........ Milford, New Hampshire.... Clearfield, Pennsylvania... ... Baltimore, Maryland. ........ Winona, Minnesota . Wytheville, Virginia... -.-. Arlington Hotel. 919 I street, N. W. 1708 I street, N. W. 814 Twelfth street, N. W, 606 Thirteenth st., N. W, National Hotel. New Jersey av. and B st., S. E. Willar’s Hotel. 1500 I stieet. 1314 Tenth street, N. W. Metropolitan Hotel. 1409 K street, N.. W. 413 Fourth street, N. W. West End Hotel, Georgetown. 610 Fourteenth street, N. W. National Hotel. McPherson House. Metropalitan Hotel. 1607 1 street, N. W. 401 G street," N. W, Vermont av. and M street. 1304 F street, N. W. 1323 H street, N. W. 1331 Eleventh street, N.W. 1412 I street 1326 Massachusetts avenue. Metropolitan Hotel. 145 East Capitol street. 1733 De Sales street. 610 “Fourteenth street, N. W. National Hotel. Arlington Hotel. 1011 M street, N. W. 1017 Fourteenth street, N. W, 1528 I street, N. W. 137 East Capitol street. 1405 KE street. [ Baltimore, Md. ] 1116 Vermont avenue. [ Alexandria, Va.] REPRESENTATIVES. Name. Post-office. Residence in Washington. * § RANDALL, S. J., Speaker. | | Pride, Pennsylvania. .. 120 C street, S. E. Acklen, 3 H | Pattersonville, Louiaiana -... 1212 G street, N. W. Aiken, D. Wath ._......: Cokesbury, South Carolina... 429 Tenth street. Aldrich, Will Chicago, [llinois:...cc.. +... | 1326 F street, N. W, Atkins, John DIC .....-0 Paris, Tennessee. ........... 420 Tenth street, N. W. * Bacon, William J. --..-.-Utica, New York. . Hamilton House. Bajley Ja on | New Arlington Hotel. Mooion Albany, York * Bagley, George A. ...."-.. Watertown, New York ...... Arlington Hotel. * Baker, [ohn I .......... Goshen, Indiana. -...ous Washington House. cee * § § Baker, William H. ... Constantia, New York. Ebbitt House. Ballou, Latimer W.... Woonsocket, Rhode Island... 811 Ninth street. Banks, Nathaniel P.......| Waltham, Massachusetts. .... | 1322 I street, N.. W. ® Banning, Henry B...... ..| Cincinnati, Ohio .........-¢. Congressional Hotel. * Bayne, Thomas M......-.. | Al egheny City, Pennsylvania. 1305 F street) * Beebe, George M ..........[ Monticello, New York....... 1322 G sireet, N.'W. Bell, Hiram Pl. oc. nc | Comming, Georgia. .---..--= National Hotel. Congressional Directory. Name. Post-office. Residence in Washington. § Benedict, Charles B Attica, "New York... ..0.. 0 Riggs House. * Bicknell, George: A... New Albany, Indiana 211 North Capitol street. Bisbee, Horatio, jr: --.5 .. Jacksonville, Florida .... .... 1326 F street, N. W. Blackburn, Joseph C. S... Versailles, Kentucky 711 Ninth street. *Blair, Henry W.... Plymouth, New Hampshire .. 913 M street, N. W, Bland, Richard P.........: Lebanon, Missouri... ....... 200 A street, E. Bliss, Archibald M Brooklyn, New York. ....... Willard’s Hotel. -* Blount, James H Macon, Georgia. ..- ...... National Hotel. Boone, Andrew R Mayfield, Kentucky 915 G street, N. W. Bouck, Gabriel Oshkosh, Wisconsin Arlington Hotel. Boyd, Thomas A Lewiston, Illinois 1412 G street, N. W. Brago, Edward S.-....._.. Fond du Lac, Wisconsin. .... Arlington Hotel. Brentano, Lorenzo... .... Chicago, Illinois 923 Seventh street, N. W. * Brewer, Mark S Pontiac, Michigan National Hotel. * Bridges, Samuel A Allentown, Pennsylvania .... Arlington Hotel. *§ § Briggs, James F Manchester, New Hampshire 1523 Fourteenth street, N. W. Bright, John M Fayetteville, Tennessee... ... 306. C street, N. W. Brogden, Curtis H Goldsboro’, North Carolina... 9 H street, N. W. Browne, Thomas M Winchester, Indiana 130 A street, N. KE. Buckner, Aylett Fl 2... ...2 Mexico, Missouni iad. nn. Metropolitan Hotel. # Bundy, Solomon -«= i... Oxford, New York Washington House. * Burchard, Horatio C Freeport, lllinois_v.-_ 0. 1912 I street, N. W., : * Burdick, Theodore W .... Decorah, Iowa 708 Eleventh street. Be || I| Butler, Benjamin F Lowell, Massachusetts. ...... 201 New Jersey av., S. E. Co ® Cabell, George C Danville, Virginia... ..... ._.. 606 Thirteenth street, N. W. Cain, Richard H Charleston, South Carolina... 637 S. C. avenue, S. E, Caldwell, Jom W........... Russellville, Kentucky... .... 29 Grant Place, N. W. Caldwell; William P Gardner, Tennessee: ......... goz H street, N. W.. La Porte, Indiana Gor Thirteenth street, N. W. >A Camp, Johnik coaontin Lyons, New York............ Arlington Hotel. Campbell, Jacob M........ Johnstown, Pennsylvania .... 1327.F street, N. W. Candler, Milton A ......... Atlante, Georgia. 75-L. Joon. 340 C street, N. 'W. * Cannon, Joseph G....... Danville, Mineis, Lo cu National dotel. * Carlisle, John G Covington. Kentucky.. ...... Riggs House. § || Caswell, Lucien B...... Fort Atkinson. Wisconsin ... 1407 F street, N. W. =9, Chalmers, J. Rai oo. .« Friar’s Point, Mississippi... . Ebbitt House * Chittenden, Simeon B. .... Brooklyn, New York........ Vt. av., next Arlington. Claflin, William. ......... Newton, Massachusetts... .... 2 La Fayette Place. * Clark, Alvah A Somerville, New Jersey. ..... Sherman House. Clark, John B.,jr Fayette, Missouri 1303 F street. a= @lavk, Rush. i...... 0... Towa City, Iowa "310 Indiana avenue. Clarke, John B EP SO fry Brooksville, Kentucky. .... .. 1322 G street. Clymer, Hiester. 7. .0 Reading, Pennsylvania 1507 H street, N. W. ®Cobb, Thomas R......... Vincennes, Indiana. ......... Cutler House. Cole, Nathan St. Louis, Missouri Riggs House. Collins, Francis D......... Scranton, Pennsylvania.. .... Metropolitan Hotel. ® Conger, Omar DD... .... Port Huron, Michigan... -... National Hotel. Cook, Philip’.....0 7... Americus, Georgia Riggs House. Coverl; James Wo... ... Flushing, New York Ebbitt House. Cox, Jacob D Cincinnati, Ohio Hamilton House. Cox, Samuel S........ New York, New York. ....-. Cabell House. Crapo, William W New Bedford, Massachusetts Wormley’s Hotel. Cravens, Jordan B.C... Clarksville, ‘Avkansas........ 221 Third street, N. W. * Crittenden, Thomas T.... Warrensburg, Missouri...... 13 Grant Place. Culberson, David B.. ...... Jelfterson, Texas. 20. ul.ce Imperial Hotel. * Cummings, Henry J BL. Winterset, Iowa Ebbitt House. Cutler, Augustus W-. Morristown, New Jersey. .... Washington House. Danford, Lorenzo .... St. Clairsville, Ohio Metropolitan Hotel. Davidson, Robert H. M. -| Quincy, Florida National Hotel. ® Davis, Horace... ........ San Francisco, California .... 1816 I street, N. W. Davis, Joseph J Louisburg, North Carolina... 337 C street, N. WW, *§ § Dean, Benjamin Boston, Massachusetts....... 823 Vermont avenue. * Deering, Nathaniel C...... Osage, Iowa . 1320 PP street, N. W. $ § Denison, Dudley C. .... Royalton, Vermont laa | 130 East Capitol street. Dibrell, George G Sparta, Tennessee | 408 Sixth street, N. 'W, Dickey, Henry LL Greenfield, Ohio............ 306 C st.—National H. Representatives. £57 Name. Post-office. Residence in Washington. ‘Douglas, Deverly B........ Ayletls, Virginia doo. New York Avenue Hotel. Dunnell, Mark H ......... Owatonna, Minnesota ....... St. James Hotel %9 Durham, Milton J... --Danville, Kentucky .......... 725 Ninth street, N. W. *§ Dwight, Jeremiah W_... Dryden, New. York =. Arlington Hotel. Eames, Benjamin T ....... Providence, Rhode Island .... Wormley’s Hotel. Eden, Jom = Illinois... Imperial R-...._. Sullivan, ..... Hotel. Eickhoff, Anthony... ---. New York, New York....... Meyer’s Hotel, Penn. avenue. *$0 Elam, J. B Mansfield, Louisiana... ...... 2037 F street, N. W. Ellis, BE. John. ..2.0.....-New Orleans, Louisiana ...... Riggs House. Ellsworth, Chatles C....... Greenville, Michigan --....-. National Hotel. Ervett, Russell............. Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania..... 222 First street, S. E.¢ * Evans, I. Newton... ...% Hatboro’, Pennsylvania...... Riggs House. 29 Evans, James L.....-.. Noblesville, Indiana ........ gio F street: Evins, John Hl. ooc 0: Spartanburg, South Carolina. . National Hotel. $ Ewing, Thomas. .-.....: Lancaster, Ohio. .........i. 419 Sixth street, N. W, * Pelion, William H........ Cartersville, Georgini.... .._. National Hotel. Finley, Ebenezer B.... .... Bucyrus, Ohio. ......0...... 614 Thirteenth street. Forney, William H .... -... Jacksonville, Alabama ....... Ebbitt House. Fort, Greenbury I. 2... Lacon, Tlinaisti ol. oie Riggs House. *§Y Foster, Charles ....... Fostoria, Ohio wii.0. 1407 F street, N. W. * Franklin, Benjamin J. .... Kansas City, Missouri ....... Willard’s Hotel. *§ Freeman, Chapman. .... Philadelphia, Pennsylvania... 1312: F street, N.W. #9 Frye, William P........ Lewiston, Maine...-1235 New York avenue. Fuller, Benoni'S. .......... Boonville, Indiana........... 222 Third street, N. W. Gardner, Mills... ....... Washington C. H., Ohio. .... 306 C street, National Hotel. * kJ Garfield, James A...... Mentor, Ohio. eon... 1227 1 street, N.'W, Garth, William W......... -Hunisyille, Alabama ........ 508 Thirteenth street, N. W. * Cause, Lucien Coo. i Jacksonport, Arkansas. ...... 929 K street. ElGibson, Randall L........ New Orleans, Louisiana. .... 1325 K street, N. W. Giddings, D.C.... Brenham, Pexas..-_ .. _. 453 C street, N, W, Glover, Joh M .-......... La Grange, Missouri ....... 332 C street. #8 Goode, fohn'... ... -... Norfolk, Virginia... ui 2022 G street, N. W. * Gunter, Thomas M....... Fayetteville, Arkansas....... 224 Third street, N. W. i Ilale, Eugene. |... 0 Ellsworth, Maine ...... -.:... 1408 H street, N. W. *§ Hamilton, Andrew H.... Fort Wayne, Indiana .--. ...-. 334 C street, N. W. Honna, Tobn.. oo.= 005 Indianapolis, Indiana........ 713 Twelfth street, N. W. * Hardenbergh, Augustus A. Jersey: City, New Jersey..... 621 Thirteenth street, N. W. Harmer, Alfred C...... .... Germantown, Pennsylvania . . 1310 F street. §§ Harris, Benjamin W..... East Bridgewater, Mass... .. -. 18.Grant place. Harris, Henry RB... .-o---. Greenville, Georgia... ..... National Hotel. Elavris, Jom To... 005 Harrisonburg, Virginia. ..... Metropolitan Hotel. § Harrison, Carter I ....... Chicago, Illineis. oo... 735 Ninth st. and Willard’s. Hast, BH. WWirke. co... 0 Albion, New York .......... Riggs House. Hartridoe, Tulian ..-.... 5 Savannah, Georgia. )........-718 Eleventh street. *Hartzell, William... ...... Chester, lilinois......... a 1303 P street, N.W, ® Haskell, Dudley C....... Lawrence, Kansas .......... 1311 H street, N. W. ® Hatchey, Robert A=... Charleston, Missouri. :..... .. 225 Third street, N. W. Hayes, Philip €C . .......... Morris, Illinois... o.oo 810 Twelfth street, N. W. | Hazelton, George C..... Boscobel, Wisconsin. .... .... S812 Eighteenth street, N. W. ® Tlendee, George W.....-. Morrisville, Vermont ........ g17 G street, N. W. * Henderson, Thomas [J .... Princeton, Illinois. ........ 211 North Capitol street. Henkle, ENT 0... Brooklyn, Maryland .... ..... Baltimore. Henry, Daniel M.-..«_... Cambridge, Maryland ....... National Hotel. ¥ ll Herbert, Hilary A... Montgomery, Alabama,..-... 337 C street, N. 'W, Hewitt, Abram :S1. i... New York, New York. ...... Wormley’s Hotel. * Hewitt, ‘Goldsmith W .._. Birmingham, Alabama. ...... 513 Thirteenth street, N. W. Hiscock, Prank... ......... Syracuse, New York ........ | Arlington Hotel. * Hooker,: Charles E....... Jackson, Mississippi. ..cca-.. 525 Thirteenth street, N. \V, “ionse, John Fos.nio... Clarksville, Tennessee. .... .. Riggs House. Eli Hubbell, Tay A coo... Houghton, Michigan ........]| National Hotel. 59 Humphrey, H. L.--...% Hudson, Wisconsin. ........ 19 Grant place. Hungerford, John N..-.... Corning, New York......... Arlington Hotel. Hunter, Morton C... ..... Bloomington, Indiana ...%.. | Hamilton House. # Hunton, Eppa. .-Zo... Warrenton, Virginia. i. .-..... 1103 G street, N\V, Yitmer, Anthony -...--. ...-St. Louis, Missoarl....-.. 2. 810 Twelfth street, N. W, % James, Amaziah B.... ... Ogdensburg, New York ..... Arlington Hotel. Congressional Directory. Name. Post-office. Residence in Washington, * Jones, Frank .. olin. * Jones, James Taylor... ® Jones, John Si nice c. Jorgensen, Joseph Jeo cdi Joyce, Charles Hl .0..oi 0. Keifer, J: Warren: J... 5. * Keightley, Edwin W...... | Kelley, William Dil... i. | Renna, Jon Boo oa * Ketcham, John Hi. co io. ® Killinger, Jon W.... .... = Kimmel, William .... .... Knapp, Rebert Mc .i..o. * Knott, J. Proctor... ..un 0. * Landers, George M. ...... Lapham, Elbridge G....-.. Lathvop,“William-3220... #8 Ligon, Robert FF. ...... ® Lindsey, Steplgn D... .. * Lockwood, Daniel N...... Loring, George .: B.... * i Lugrell, John K .. . -.. * § Lynde, William Pitt .... #8 Mackey, L.A... oon] Mash; Levi... .t.0u00000 | Majors, iJ. in big | Manning, Van I ....c._... Marsh, Benjamin F..:i..:.. ® Martin, Benjamin Fo... ... | Mayham, Stephen L ....... | MeCook, Anson GG... ....... ENcGowan, J. H 0.0: McKenzie, James A..... * McKinley, William, jr -... McMahon, John Aza... .... Metcalfe, Lyne Shackelford . Mills, Roger Q .&.iooi.ooi ® Mitchell, Tom 1...0 Money, Hernando D....... Monroe, James = ...a..0. * Morgan, Charles H......: * Morrison, William R ..... ® Morse, . Leopold......5. = Muldvow, Bld Li........ * Muller, Nicholas... x49 Neal, Henry: 5... 01.2. § Norcross, Amasa ........ Oliver, Addison .~.......1.. O'Neill, Charles... cece. * || Overton, Edward, jr -... Page: LB. oo.ooicbias Patterson, George W ...... Patterson, Thomas M...... Peddie, Thomas B.......... Phelps, James: siglo oo. Phillips, William A ........ § § § Pollard, Henry M . .. Potter, Clarkson N ........ Pound, Thad. C......... Z Powers, Llewellyn . ...... El Price, Hiram. ......0. Pridemore, Auburn L...... Pugh, John Howard... ..: Rainey, Joseph Hl '...... Randolph, James H ........ Rea, David ...... 00. Portsmouth, New Hampshire. Demopolis, Alabama......... Delaware Ohio fr: Petersburg, Virginia... ..2 45: Rutland Vermont... ..i....5 Springheld, Ohio... 2... 5! Constantine, Michigan... ..: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania . Kanawha C. H., Weést Vi irginia Dover Plains, New York.... Lebanon, Pennsylvania ...... Baltimore, Ain Lat Jerseyville, Illinois. sll 2: ¥.ebanon, Kentucky =... C.. New Britain, Connecticut . Canandaigua, New York... Rockford, Ilinois NEAT Tuskegee, Alabama yt i: Norridgewock, Maine ....... Buffalo, New York .i..c.v... Salem, Massachusetts ....... Santa Rosa, California... .... Milwaukee, Wisconsin ...... Lock Haven, Pennsylvania. .. York, Pennsylvania .-....... Pern, Nebraska. =. ii...x Holly Springs, Mississippi. - Warsaw, [linois Si a gy Pruntytow n, West Virginia... Schoharie, New York. ...... New York, New York....... Coldwater, Michigan ©...".. Longview, Kentucky... . Canton, Oblo. ohh i. 50. Dayton, Ohio: ...... and 0, Saint Louis, Missouri -.....-Corsicana, Texas... h.2. 2" Wellsboro’, Pennsylvania ... Winona, Mississippi --....--@berlin, Ohio .. 00 i.e. iv... Lama, Missouri. .. oii Boston, Massachusetts. ...... Starkville, Mississippi -.---.. New York, New York. ...... Ironton, Ohio: ..v... .s.. 2-00 Fitchburg, Massachusetts... . Onawa, Iowa. isle Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. .. Towanda, Pennsylvania...... Placerville, California... -... Westfield, New York........ Denver; Colorado =. ...... Newark, New: Jersey... .:.. Essex, Connectient......i... Salling, Kansas... ice Chillicothe, ‘Missouri ........ 61 Wall street, New York.... Chippewa Falls, Wisconsin... Houlton, Maine... coh. Davenport, lowacs:. om . Jonesville, Virginia: . ct. Burlington, New Jersey... ... Georgetown, South Carolina. . Newport, Tennessee ........ Savannah, Missouri.......... Riggs House. Ebbitt House. 915 Twelfth street. Riggs House. 1317. F street, N. WV, 323 Sixth street, N.oW, 121 Maryland avenue, N. E. 1327.G street, N. W. 1326 New York avenue. 1329 K street, N. W. Riggs House. Riggs House. Metin Hon 1108I street, N. W. Riggs an 407 East Capitol street. 1326 I street, N. 'W. 508 Thirteenth street. 810 Twelfth street, N. W. Riggs House. 3 Grant place. 823 Vermont avenue. 1310 F street, N. W. 1407 F street. impel Hotel. 33 B street, 5. B. 6 Grant place National Hotel. Congressional Hotel. Arlington Hotel. 601 E street, N. W National Tlotel. IEbbitt House. 1017 K street, NN, W. 810 Twelfth street, N. W. 412 Sixth street, N. W. 729 Thirteenth street, N. W., 523 Thirteenth street, N. W. 924 Fourteenth street, N. W. 506 Maine avenue. 26 B street, N. E. Riggs House. Ebbitt House, 1720. F: street, N. W, 312.C street, N. W, 1329 G street, N. W. 713 Twelfth street, N. W. 516 Thirteenth street, N. W, vw illard’s Hotel. National Hotel. 917 G street, N. W. 1221 G street, N. W, Riggs House. 457 C street, N. W. 1008 H street, N. W. 13 Grant place. 938 New York avenue. 1012 Fourteenth street, N. W, Riggs House. 1213 I streeg.’ St. 'Mark’s Hotel. 508 Thirteenth street, N. 'W. 1433 L street, N. WV. 100 Fourth street, S/H, Washington House. Representatives. Name. Post-office. ~ Residence in Washington. Reagan, John Fl ...-..:... #3 Reed, Thomas B...-----. Reilly, James Be... oa. ® Rice,"Americus Vi... .... * Rice, William W.........2 * Riddle, Haywood Y ...... § Robbins, William M ..... Roberts, Charles B.......-Robertson, BB. W.... .ci-..-Robinson, George D......... * Robinson, Milton S ...... Ross, Miles... oie. Ryan, Thomas... ..-..... Sampson, Ezekiel 5S... ... 2 Sapp, Willlam F._.....--Sayler. Milton. ..c-2-----% * Scales, Alfred M.......... * || Schleicher, Gustave: .... ® Sexton; Leonidas...-.. Shallenberger, William S. .. Shelley, Charles’ M.... .... ® Singleton, Otho R=: . .... * Sinnickson, Clement H. .. Slemons, William F........ Smalls, Robert... .... cau Smith, A. Herr. .'vuivuon. Smith, WilllamE _......... Southard, Milton I. .. .... * Sparks, William A. J.... * || Springer, William M. .... *S Stay, John HH ........ Steele, Walter I. .......... ® Stenger, William S....... Stephens, Alexander H .... Stewant, To Bloc Loa Ei Stone, Jom W....... 2... 8 Stone, Joseph C........ % Strait, Horace B..ocau-ll. Swann, Thongs. .......... * § Thompson, John M..... Thornburgh, Jacob M...... Throckmorton, James W... = ipton, Thomas B...._... * Townsend, Amos... ....... x Townsend, Martin I... .... * Townshend, Richard W .. ® 8 Tucker, John R..-..... Purqer, Thomas ...-...--= Taney, Jacob............. ®8 Vance, Robert B . ...... Van Vorhes, Nelson H. ... Veeder, William D .......-Waddell, Alfred M ........ Wait, John Fc. * Walker, Gilbert C.. 0... ... ¥ Walsh, William. .......... Ward, William ........-: Se Wamer, Levi ©... ...... ® Watson, Lewis F.......... $ White, Harry... ....c... White, Michael D ......... * Whitthorne, Washington C. Wigginton, Peter D ....... Williams, Alpheus.S....... #§ Williams, Andrew...-. 8 Williams, Charles G.-..--. PY Williams, James........ Palestine, Texas... 70... Portland, Maine oto. ae. Pottsville, Pennsylvania . .... Oita, Oho. oaree Ti Worcester, Massachusetts.... Lebanon, Tennessee ........ Statesville, North Carolina. . Westminster, Maryland. ..... Baton Rouge, louisiana. .... Chicopee, Massachusetts... .. Anderson, Indiana .......... New Brunswick, New Jersey. Topeka, Kansas aiooC Sigourney, Jowa ........ Council Bluffs, Towa. ........ Cincinnati, Ohio .-.-.. Jade Greensboro’, North Carolina. Cuero, Pexas no ii. Rushville, Indiana... .-.---: , Rochester, Pennsylvania. .... Selma, Alabama m0. oa. Canton, Mississippi ......... Salem, New: Jersey... Monticello, Arkansas. ..... .. Beaufort, South Carolina. .... Lancaster, Pennsylvania ..... Albany, Georgia o-oo. Zanesville, Ohio...uimiame ci Carlyle, Illinois... .. Springfield, Illinois. ...... ... Fultonville, New York ...... Rockingham, North Carolina Chambersburg, Pennsylvania. Crawfordville, Georgia ...-.. Saint Paul, Minnesota. --> -... Grand Rapids, Michigan. ... Burlington, Jowa............ Shakopee, Minnesota... .... Baltimore, Maryland .....:.. Butler, Pennsylvania ........ Knoxville, Tennessee. ....... McKinney, Texas. co... Bloomington, Illinois........ Cleveland, Ohio. ....--.: Troy, New York. oo. i... Shawneetown, Illinois ....... Lexington, Virginia ......... re Mount Sterling, Kentucky. ... Greensburg, Pennsylvania . Asheville, North Carolina... Athens; Ghia... ... oth iel. Brooklyn, New York...:.... Wilmington, North Carolina. Norwich, Connecticut --..-.-.. Richmond, Virginia ......... Cumberland, Maryland ...... Ches er, Pennsylvania... .. Norwalls, Conn 1a .ui.uicisons Warren, Pennsylvania ....... Indiana, Pennsylvania...... Crawfordsville, Indiana ...... Columbia, Tennessee... .... Merce , California... ... ..... Detroit, Michigan. ....-----Plattsburg, New York. ...... Janesville, Wisconsin........ ‘Kenton, Delaware .......-.. 506 E street, N. W. 810 Twelfth street, N. W, Arlington Hotel Arlington Hotel. 1410 G street, N. W. 222 New Jersey avenne, S. E. Metropolitan Hotel. National Hotel. 1202 I street. Riggs House. Ebbitt House. National Hotel. 1301 I street, N. WW. National Hotel. 312 C street. Willard’s Hotel. Metropolitan Hotel. 509 Fourth street, N. W. 1327 G street, N. W. 724 Eleventh street, N. W. 508 Thirteenth street, N. W. 1225 F street, N. W. Hamilton House. Seventh street, corner of E. 1018 Fifteenth street, N. W. Willard’s Hotel. 340.4 street, N. 'W, 1317 F street, NW. Ebbitt House. 112 Kast Capitol street. Willard’s Hotel. 337 C street, N.W, 1407 F street. National Hotel. National Hotel, 115 Maryland avenue, N. E. 917 G street, N. W. 312 C street, N. W. 823 Fifteenth street, N. W. Ebbitt House. 1203 G street, N. W. 523 Thirteenth street, N. W. 714 Thirteenth street, N. W. Arlington Hotel. 810 Twelfth street, N. W. 213 Four-and-a-half street. 610 Thirteenth street, N. W. Riggs House. Metropolitan Hotel. 408 Seventh street, S. E. 19 Grant Place. 1322 G street, N. W, Metropolitan Hotel. 613 Thirteeath street, N. W, Metropolitan Hotel. 912 Fifteenth street, N. W, Riggs House. 12137 stree:,/N..W, Riggs House. Ebbitt House. 612 Fourteenth street. 915 New York avenue. 1006 F street, N. W.. 122 Third street, N. W. 312.C street, N..W, 18 Grant Place. 1406 G street, N. W. Congressional Directory. Name. Post-office. Residence in Washington. Williams, Jere. No. Clayton, Alabama . Jo... .-. . Congressional Hotel. ® Williams, Richard........ Portland. oo =n: i House. Oregon’... Ebbitt Willis, Alberi’S. |. s00 0. Louisville, Kentucky .... .... | Riggs House. ' * Willis, Benjamin A. .....-. New York, New York. ...... -Arlington Hotel * 8 Willits, Edwin ........ Monroe, Michigan: -...... 1702 L street. *Wilson, Benjamin ..-.. .... Wilsonburg, West Virginia. .. National Hotel. II | Wood, Fernando........ New York, New York. ...... 825 Fifteenth street, N. W. Wren, Thomas... ..-nA Eureka Nevada -oo. oo Ebbitt House. § Wright, Hendrick B . .... Wilkesbarre, Pennsylvania. ..| Arlington Hotel. Yeates, Jesse Joos o.o Murfreesboro’, N.C ..-5...... | 1403 New York avenne. Young, H. Casey... .. Memphis, Tennessee .. . ....| 523 Thirteenth street, N. W, { DELEGATES. Name. Post-office. Residence in Washington. ®Cannon, George Q ...... Salt Lake City, Utah .=.. .... 720 Thirteenth street, N. W. ® Corlett, William W....... Cheyenne, Wyoming .--.---. 939 K street, N. W. Fenn, Stephen'S .... 0... Mount Idaho, Idaho ........ 2014 Fourteenth street, N. W. Jacobs, Orange...oi. Washington .... Second N. .. Seattle, .... 226 street, E. Kidder, Jefferson P........ Vermillion, Dakota... ...... National Hotel. * | Maginnis, Martin... .... Helena, Montana ........... Arlington Hotel. ® 9 Romero, Trinidad. ...: Las Vegas, New Mexico . .... 1423. | street, N. WV, Stevens, Hiram S ......... Tucson, Arlzong. ibe .cuvus 1422 New York avenue. . Carlet Jp es papPRUSRRGI IU Tol J ATH LS | wa JI] = CIC 1em) foe)SANIT wads11IN177 74 HsNH ITITITTA I —————— II \ VARNES A 2 15a iT 0\ [Tae] > 3 g \ | ; z/|2 |B JOY ER a NE) N hie 3 7 Fe a | = bats NE Jacl N—7/, @, Ja pad ¢n2cison City AN WASHINGTON CITY, District of Columbia. v - N Cs, +A [28] Lb) Samy ST 2 ie REFERENCES. JVD 2] dl ? The Capitol. 7 Interior Department. 19 Smithsonian Institution. \ | President's House. 8 Post Office Department. 20 Washington Monument. A State Department. 9 Attorney Creneral’s Office. ~~ 21 -Statue of Washington. OL « Treasury Department. 10 Department of Agriculture. 22 Statue of Washington. [HIN IN . War Department. 11 Observatory. 23 Statue of Jackson. il Is | Navy Department. 12 Arsenal. 24 Corcoran Art Gallery. a I! De. , 13 Navy Yard. 25 Botanical Garden. [Ua i 5 14 Marine Barracks. 26 Congressional Burial Ground. | dl Q N 15 City Hall and Court House. 27 Naval Ilospital. CCl i se 16: Jail. 98 Statue of Emancipation. Sai | IN RY. Xe 7 City Asylum. 29 Statue of Ey City Ie 4417 1l= | A 1 P Street [S 18 vr Markets. £2oh ve of . Scott, . SE b = > overnment Printing Office, Nf EE] Lo gl \ [lo Steed Norn 155 32 Statue of Greene. : iE NH] i I 1 1s 33 Naval Monument. CE ; j >< 7 J SE 3455 Statue Statue of of Thomas. ae = =] FE ol 36 Juitary PanMcPherson.il i ] 1 ol IY ZN LEW Ios WC AN Vs 0\ i: Nj I. hi] L Stregt| North Nes. ITN EZ il 2 Al fe sed mera CAI DOC IO0 0S | [isuedtlno 1 Eb L 1 bd [2] ka HH = North El 1 FE] iE: EN LIE iE ET [} [72] 351 -2 =)= ix Nr ry aoA i JE ] ii Sars Je \Easdlnli) Zl 047 20 in a3 ! WA A fa Fal 4 131 7 SoRaE - £ me SEE CEE] Sell N= pe ere 05 Bd TS =] \ | ma pis CCEA in | \Vi1 EE vi El {700 {i EN te C000 SE Cl AN SE \ \ \V \WL MARYLAND