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George Cabot Ward (1824-1887)
George Colost Ward
1824-1887
The Prckering geneology
NINTH GENERATION.
841
17. IX. 243. Charles Hazen Dorr, her husband, born in Boston,
died in Boston. A retired merchant. Residences : Boston, Mass., and
Bar Harbor, Maine.
1863
Mr. Dorr in early life was actively engaged in business, but he retired
about thirty years previous to his death. He passed the latter part of his
life in foreign travel, and between his house in Boston and his estates in
Lenox and Bar Harbor. The latter, Old Farm," is one of the largest
and finest on Mount Desert. Mr. Dorr was a man of cultivated tastes
and of quiet and agreeable manners
1
He was a son of Samuel and Susan (Brown) Dorr, of Boston. His
father was prominent in the Legislature of Massachusetts fifty years ago.
His ancestry includes the following families : Dorr, Hawley, Harbottle,
Rawson, Perne, Wilson, Mansfield, Hooker, Bucknam, Wilkinson, Knowers,
Peabody, Fiske, Brown, Lazinby, Proctor, Adams, Winburn, Parker. See
ANCESTRY TABLES
17. IX. 245. George Cabot Ward [Thomas W. 17. VIII. 183],
born in Salem, died in New York City. A banker. Residence: New
York City.
Mr. Ward, H. C. 1843, on graduating, went to Heidelberg. After
going around the world in a sailing ship, he went to New York, where
he founded the banking house of Ward, Campbell, & Co. In 1869,
his brother, Samuel Gray Ward, moved to New York, when Mr.
Ward retired from the firm of Ward, Campbell, & Co., and became
joint agent with his brother, under the name of S. G. & G. C. Ward,
as agents for Baring Brothers & Co., of London. This partnership con-
tinued until Jan. 1, 1886. Mr. Ward was an intimate friend of Secre-
tary Chase, who consulted him on many points during the war. He
was for a long time a director of the Bank of Commerce, New York,
and of other institutions. He was a charter member of the Union
League Club, of New York, its treasurer many years, and its president
one year.
1
The Boston Daily Advertiser of Jan. 30, 1893.
% Boston Evening Transcript of May 5, 1887.
Digitized
by
Google
Original from
PRINCETON UNIVERSITY
842
THE PICKERING GENEALOGY.
G.C.W.,
17.
IX. 2451. Mary Anne Southwick, the first wife of George C.
Ward, born in Salem, died in New York City.
Mrs. Ward was a daughter of John Alley and ELZabeth (Kinsman)
Southwick, of Salem. Eliza K. Southwick [15. IX. 215] was her sister.
For her ancestry, see under the head of Eliza K. Southwick [15. IX. 215],
on page 834. See ANCESTRY TABLES 1071.
17. IX. 2452. Frances Morris, the second wife of George C. Ward.
Mrs. Ward is a daughter of William Lewis and Mary Elizabeth
(Babcock) Morris. Her ancestry includes the following families: Morris.
Pole, Graham, Staats, Ludlow, Bennett, Hanmer, Corbett, Ludlam,
Wickham, Babcock, Lawton, Lawton, Isaacs, Arden, Blanc. See ANCESTRY
TABLES IOT'.
17. IX. 247. Stephen Goodhue Wheatland [Richard G. 17. VIII.
185], born in Newton, Mass., died in New York City. A lawyer. Resi-
dence: Salem.
Mr. Wheatland, H. C. 1844, studied law, was admitted to the Essex
Bar in 1850, and practised his profession in Salem. He took an active
interest in the affairs of the city, and served as a member of the Common
Council in 1852, 1853, 1859, 1861, and 1862, the last two years being presi-
dent of that body. He was mayor of the city in 1863 and 1864, and its
representative in the Legislature in the years 1862 and 1863.¹
17. IX. 247. Ann Maria Pingree, his wife, born in Salem. Resi-
dence: Salem.
Mrs. Wheatland is a daughter of the Hon. David and Anna Maria
(Kimball) Pingree. He was an eminent merchant and shipowner, of
Salem. Her ancestry includes the following families : Pingree, Clement,
Pickard, Crosby, Brocklebank, Platt, Kneeland, Perkins, Gould, Towne,
Blessing, Symonds, Easty, Kimball, Scott, Cummings, Andrew, Towne,
Perkins, Kimball. See ANCESTRY TABLES 108. IX
17. IX. 249. Richard Henry Wheatland [Richard G. 17. VIII.
185], born in Newton, Mass., died in Salem. Residence: Salem.
1 The Boston Transcript of March 4, 1892.
Digitized
Google
Original from
PRINCETON UNIVERSITY
A HISTORY
OF THE
UNION LEAGUE CLUB
OF NEW YORK CITY
WILL IRWIN
EARL CHAPIN MAY
JOSEPH HOTCHKISS
I
LLUSTRATED
years
Fifth Avenue Club House
(Etching by E. H. Suydam, 1931)
DODD, MEAD & COMPANY NEW YORK
Copyright, 1952
FOREWORD
BY DODD, MEAD & COMPANY, INC.
All Rights Reserved
You who are members of the Union League Club have been
No part of this book may be reproduced in any form
well aware that our club, since its foundation in the critical days
without permission in writing from the publisher
of the Civil War, has been much more than meeting place for
a group of congenial men; it has been a positive and creative
Printed in the United States of America
by the Vail-Ballou Press
force in preserving and developing the principles of constitu-
tional government throughout the last eighty-eight years. In
recognition of this fact George H. Sheldon, the original Chair-
man of the History Committee, wisely decided that the activities
of the club should be studied as objectively as possible and esti-
mated as they affected the course of this nation not only in the
crisis which brought about the foundation of the club but
through those which followed. The Committee was fortunate to
enlist the interest of one of the really great journalists of recent
times, Will Irwin.
The Committee left Mr. Irwin free to select the incidents
which seemed to him most significant and representative of the
purposes of the club. Necessarily he was obliged to omit ref-
erence to many events which may be in the memory of some of
our members and would seem to them to have a place in this
book; and limitations of space obliged the historian to pass over
many contributions to the development of the club by officers
and members whom he would have liked to mention. There
were not enough pages to present all aspects of the club through
eighty-eight years.
(v)
A HISTORY OF THE
Negro friends and families of the soldiers, marching hand in
hand in columns of eight.
They turned into Canal Street. It was ominously silent. Spon-
taneously, the delegation from The Union League Club burst
into that provocative battle song "John Brown's Body." The
Negro families took it up, the band caught the key and joined
in, and it surged through the regiment. John Habberton, who
afterward wrote Helen's Babies, made that march as a lieutenant
in the Twentieth. He has testified that not a paving stone flew
and not a voice was raised against them. Contemporary news-
papers seem to confirm this. But that does not detract from the
courage of the performance.
A few weeks afterward, another full regiment recruited and
equipped exclusively by the Club, the Twenty-sixth Colored In-
fantry, marched away without any official send-off except the
presentation of colors on the transport by John Jay. Two weeks
after it landed in the war zone it formed the spearhead of a re-
connaissance in force. It lost twenty killed; and a report to the
Club declared that "no troops in the world could have borne
themselves better." Later Colonel William Silliman of this regi-
ment was killed in action. The committee had recruited six hun-
dred Negroes for another regiment when the emergencies of the
summer campaign in Virginia and difficulty in finding any more
able-bodied volunteers in New York caused them to brigade these
men with four hundred Negroes from Connecticut as the Thirty-
PRESIDENTS OF THE CLUB
first Colored Infantry. In July 1864, this green regiment,
DURING ITS FIRST FIFTY YEARS
through no fault of its own, was "more than decimated" in that
ill-directed affair of the Crater at Petersburg.
Returning to the parade of the Twentieth, a month later Super-
intendant of Police Kennedy, who led it, was elected to Club mem-
(36)
MINTURN
1864
SCHILL
JOHN
ELIHU
ROOT
PRESIDENTS OF THE CLUB
DURING ITS FIRST FIFTY YEARS
PRESIDENTS
ROBERT B. MINTURN
JONATHAN STURGES
1863
CHARLES H. MARSHALL
1864
JOHN JAY
1865
JACKSON S. SCHULTZ
1866-1869
WILLIAM J. HOPPIN
1870
JOSEPH H. CHOATE
187I-1872
JOHN JAY
1873-1876
GEORGE CABOT WARD
1877
HAMILTON FISH
1878
VILLIAM M. EVARTS
1879-1881
CHAUNCEY M. DEPEW
1882-1885
IORACE PORTER
1886-1892
LIHU ROOT
1893-1897
REDERICK D. TAPPEN
1898-1899
ORNELIUS N. BLISS
1900-1901
EORGE R. SHELDON
1902-1906
MUEL W. FAIRCHILD
1907-1910
IHU ROOT
1911-1914
ARLES E. HUGHES
1915-1916
ENRY P. DAVISON
1917-1919
MES R. SHEFFIELD
1920
TES W. McGARRAH
1921-1924
RED E. MARLING
1925-1927
ARLES C. PAULDING
1928-1930
RBERT L. SATTERLEE
1931-1938
RED H. COSDEN
1938-1939
JARD C. SHEPERD
1940-1945
J LOWRY
1946-1947
OLD WESLEY COMFORT
1948-1949
1950-
(295)
TREASURERS
1866
WILLIAM J. HOPPIN
1863-1866
1867
GEORGE CABOT WARD
1867-1877
1870
CHARLES LANIER
1878
1875
GEORGE F. BAKER
1879-1883
1878
GEORGE MONTAGUE
1884-I894
1879
WILLIAM G. WHITE
1895-1902
1881
ANDREW MILLS
1902-1906
1886
ALBERT H. WIGGIN
1907-1910
1888
GATES W. McGARRAH
1911-1920
1889
HENRY J. COCHRAN
1921-1923
-1891
THEODORE HETZLER
1924-1927
-1893
LOUIS S. BRADY
1928-1938
-1895
HARRIS A. DUNN
1939-1942
-1898
WALTON P. KINGSLEY
1943
-1902
SAMUEL G. ADAMS
1944-1949
-1907
PAUL M. RIPLEY
1950-
-1909
-1913
-1919
-1923
-1925
;1930
-1938
-1942
-1946
-1949
(297)
2020
Century Archives - The Century Association Archives Foundation
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GEORGE CABOT WARD
Board of Trustees
How to Donate
Banker/Trustee
Centurion, 1864-1885
Century Association
Biographical Archive
Born 4 November 1824 in Salem, Massachusetts
Died 4 May 1887 in New York (Manhattan), New York
Finding Aid to the
Collection
Proposed by Lucius Tuckerman and Dudley B. Fuller
Finding Aid to the Platt
Elected 7 May 1864 at age thirty-nine
Library
Centurions on Stamps
Archivist's Note: Brother of Samuel G. Ward; uncle of Robert Barker and Thomas Wren Ward
FDR: A Man of the
Century (Audio File)
Proposer of:
Seconder of:
Hot Buttons:
A. Augustus Low
Charles Stewart Davison
Presidential Campaigns
Samuel G. Ward
and the Century
Association
Century Association
Nobelists
Questions, comments, corrections: email caba@centuryarchives.org
When the Clubhouse
© 2012-2020 Century Association Archives Foundation
Was New (Photo
Gallery)
George Cacot Ward.
1864.
George Cabot Ward
Member Photograph Albums Collection
Album 2, Leaf 71
://www.centuryarchives.org/caba/bio.php?PersonID=1433&Search=baed72cfa6243ab6e3a9e83a7889bf8d
1/2
NINTH GENERATION.
841
17. IX. 243. Charles Haxen Dorr, her husband, born in Boston,
died in Boston. A retired merchant. Residences : Boston, Mass., and
Bax Harbor, Maine.
Mr. Dorr in early life was actively engaged in business, but he retired
about thirty years previous to his death. He passed the latter part of his
life in foreign travel, and between his house in Boston and his estates in
Lenox and Bar Harbor. The latter, "Old Farm," is one of the largest
and finest on Mount Desert. Mr. Dorr was a man of cultivated tastes
and of quiet and agreeable manners.1
He was a son of Samuel and Susan (Brown) Dorr, of Boston. His
father was prominent in the Legislature of Massachusetts fifty years ago.
His ancestry includes the following families: Dorr, Hawley, Harbottle,
Rawson, Perne, Wilson, Mansfield, Hooker, Bucknam, Wilkinson, Knowers,
Peabody, Fiske, Brown, Lazinby, Proctor, Adams, Winburn, Parker. See
ANCESTRY TABLES 100.
17. IX. 245. George Cabot Ward [Thomas W. 17. VIII. 183],
born in Salem, died in New York City. A banker. Residence: New
York City.
Mr. Ward, H. C. 1843, on graduating, went to Heidelberg. After
going around the world in a sailing ship, he went to New York, where
he founded the banking house of Ward, Campbell, & Co. In 1869,
his brother, Samuel Gray Ward, moved to New York, when Mr.
Ward retired from the firm of Ward, Campbell, & Co., and became
joint agent with his brother, under the name of S. G. & G. C. Ward,
as agents for Baring Brothers & Co., of London. This partnership con-
tinued until Jan. 1, 1886. Mr. Ward was an intimate friend of Secre-
tary Chase, who consulted him on many points during the war. He
was for a long time a director of the Bank of Commerce, New York,
and of other institutions. He was a charter member of the Union
League Club, of New York, its treasurer many years, and its president
one year.
I The Boston Daily Advertiser of Jan. 30, 1893.
2 Boston Evening Transcript of May 5, 1887.
842
THE PICKERING GENEALOGY.
17. IX. 245 Mary Anne Southwick, the first wife of George C.
Ward, born in Salem, died in New York City.
Mrs. Ward was a daughter of John Alley and Ehzabeth (Kinsman)
Southwick, of Salem. Eliza K. Southwick [15. IX. 215] was her sister.
For her ancestry, see under the head of Eliza K. Southwick [15. IX. 215],
on page 834. See ANCESTRY TABLES
17. IX. 245 Frances Morris, the second wife of George C. Ward.
Mrs. Ward is a daughter of William Lewis and Mary Elizabeth
(Babcock) Morris. Her ancestry includes the following families : Morris,
Pole, Graham, Staats, Ludlow, Bennett, Hanmer, Corbett, Ludlam,
Wickham, Babcock, Lawton, Lawton, Isaacs, Arden, Blanc. See ANCESTRY
TABLES IOTH
17. IX. 247. Stephen Goodhue Wheatland [Richard G. 17. VIII.
185], born in Newton, Mass., died in New York City. A lawyer. Resi-
dence: Salem.
Mr. Wheatland, H. C. 1844, studied law, was admitted to the Essex
Bar in 1850, and practised his profession in Salem. He took an active
interest in the affairs of the city, and served as a member of the Common
Council in 1852, 1853, 1859, 1861, and 1862, the last two years being presi-
dent of that body. He was mayor of the city in 1863 and 1864, and its
representative in the Legislature in the years 1862 and 1863.¹
17. IX. 247. Ann Maria Pingree, his wife, born in Salem. Resi-
dence: Salem.
Mrs. Wheatland is a daughter of the Hon. David and Anna Maria
(Kimball) Pingree. He was an eminent merchant and shipowner, of
Salem. Her ancestry includes the following families : Pingree, Clement,
Pickard, Crosby, Brocklebank, Platt, Kneeland, Perkins, Gould, Towne,
Blessing, Symonds, Easty, Kimball, Scott, Cummings, Andrew, Towne,
Perkins, Kimball. See ANCESTRY TABLES TOB
17. IX. 249. Richard Henry Wheatland [Richard G. 17. VIII.
185], born in Newton, Mass., died in Salem. Residence: Salem.
1 The Boston Transcript of March 4, 1892.
TRUSTEES.
-
1882-3.
HENRY C. DORR,
FREDERIC J. DE PEYSTER,
CHARLES E. STRONG,
FRANCIS A. STOUT,
ROBERT LENOX KENNEDY,
RICHARD T. AUCHMUTY,
EDWARD SCHELL,
STEPHEN C. WILLIAMS,
STEPHEN P. NASH,
JOHN M. KNOX,
FREDERICK SHELDON,
GEORGE CABOT WARD,
HENRY DRISLER,
JAMES M. McLEAN,
JOHNSTON L. DE PEYSTER.
OFFICERS
ROBERT LENOX KENNEDY, Chairman.
EDWARD SCHELL, Treasurer.
JOHN M. KNOX, Secretary.
LIBRARY COMMITTEE.
ROBERT LENOX KENNEDY,
CHARLES E. STRONG,
HENRY C. DORR,
JOHN M. KNOX,
HENRY DRISLER,
EDWARD SCHELL.
LIBRARIAN.
WENTWORTH S. BUTLER.
(over)
New Dork Society Library
FOUNDED,
A. D. 1700.
INCORPORATED, - A. D. 1772.
ANNUAL REPORT
OF
THE TRUSTEES,
APRIL I, 1883,
WITH
A LIST OF RECENT ADDITIONS.
New York :
EVENING POST JOB PRINTING OFFICE, BROADWAY, CORNER FULTON STREET.
1883.
adidas
the
Work Societh Librari
the
the
FOUNDED
INCORPORATED A.D. 1772
the
ANN UAL REPORT
OFFICIAL and
THE TRUST ES
the
and
the
WITH
alamy
A LIST OF RECENT ADDITIONS
the
P
Few
Post JOH PRINTING FULTON STREET
1883
COST
THE
GEORGE CABOT WARD'S FUNERAL.
New York Times (1857-Current file); May 7, 1887; ProQuest Historical Newspapers The New York Times (1851 - 2003)
pg. 8
GEORGE CABOT WARD'S FUNERAL.
The Church of the Holy Communion, at
Sixth-svenue and Twentieth-street, was filled
yesterday morning with the friends of the late
George Cabot Ward, the banker, who died on
Wednesday last. The funeral services, which
were conducted according to the Episcopal
ritual were simple. The body reated in an
baken casket, mounted in silver. A wreath of
hite roses, a cross, and a second wreath, which
Jay upon the casket, were the only flowers.
The services were conducted by the Rev. Henry
Mottet, Rector of the church. assisted by the
Rev. Prescott Evarts and the Rev. William A.
Snively, of Grace Episcopal Church, Brooklyn
Heights. After the services the body was left
In the church until 2 o'clock, when it was taken
Boston for interment at Mount Auburn
Cemetery.
Among those present at the funeral besides
the widow and immediate relatives were George
De Forest Lord, ex-Judge Charles A. Peabody,
Edward King, George Schuyler, Charles Lanier,
Charles W. Ogden. Alderman Frederick A.
Conkling, William E. Dodge, A. A. Low, ex-
Mayor Seth Low, August Belmont, John J.
Astor, and ex-Judge Charles P. Daiy.
Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission.
4
From a New York paper, May 5, 1887.
GEORGE CABOT WARD
(1824 1887)
George Cabot Ward, who died yesterday, after a long
illness, was born in Boston sixty-three - years ago. He was
the son of Mr. Thomas Wren Ward, who more than seventy years
ago came from Boston to this city, and with his relative, the
late Jonathan Goodhue, founded the firm of Goodhue and Ward,
afterwards SO well known as Goodhue & Company. (In 1817 he
returned to Boston and ten years later became the American
agent of Baring Brothers. This agency was exclusively con-
This
ducted by him until his death when it devolved upon his son,
Mr. Samuel Gray Ward.> George Cabot Ward was graduated at
Harvard, and subsequently studied at Heidelberg and after a
voyage around the world in a sailing ship, a rare experience
in those days, settled in New York and founded the firm of
Ward, Campbell & Company. It contained at one time one of the
Baring family, but was never, as has been stated, the agent of
Baring Brothers. Mr. Ward withdrew from it in 1869 to share
with his elder brother, Samuel Gray, who had moved to this city
from Boston, the Baring agency, which continued in their hands
until George Cabot's illness, when both brothers surrendered it,
January, 1885.
George Cabot was, when the war broke out, in 1861, one of
the most active and energetic supporters of the Government in
2.
this city He was one of the founders of the Union League Club,
its president for one term and its Treasurer until the decline
of his health. He was also one of the Governors, and, we believe,
Treasurer of the New York Hospital, one of the Trustees and
most devoted and valuable friends of the Children's Aid Society
and a director of the Bank of Commerce and of the Union Trust
Company. In fact he was one of the men who are always ready
"to pay with their person" for any worthy public object, and
although of a singularly modest and retiring, and one might
almost say self-distrustful disposition, had trusts and respon-
sibilities imposed upon him without stint. He was a man of
extraordinary simplicity of character and had a rare capacity
for devotion to his friends as well as those of the public. His
reading was very extensive and his love of speculation in the
field of transcendental philosophy often gave an air of quaintness
and abstraction to his conversation which made one wonder that
a business life in this city should ever have been to his taste.
He took a great interest in the establishment of The Nation
newspaper in 1865 and perhaps had more to do with putting it
on a firm financial footing than any other one person. The mem-
ories of the war made him a very good Republican down to his
last illness, but in no way diminished his sympathy with all
efforts in the direction of purer politics. His death deprives
New York of one of her most valuable citizens and one of a type
which the existing conditions of business do not foster either
in politics or society.
8/27/2019
Xfinity Connect Re_Colonel Porter, the Emersons, and George Cabot Ward Printout
Jamie M. Carr
7/17/2018 5:31 PM
Re: Colonel Porter, the Emersons, and George
Cabot Ward
To Ronald Epp
Dear Dr. Epp,
Thank you for your extremely kind words. I apologize for the delay in my response.
We had a death in my husband's family this past week and so had traveled to
Michigan. I kept thinking en route of course about how so many writers made a
similar journey after they left the Falls.
That 19th century world is like a game of six-degrees-of-separation. I love
unraveling those threads of who knew whom. Your book looks incredibly
interesting, and when I have some time to read at will again, I'll be sure to pick it
up. (I have a manuscript due in September and so am madly trying to balance
research and writing with summer family time.) I do a little work on Olmsted with
two other colleagues in an interdisciplinary class project on Niagara Falls.
Perhaps we can meet, depending on our schedules, in one of those green spaces
he had a hand in in Buffalo.
Thank you again -
Jamie
Dr. Jamie Carr
Associate Professor of English
Niagara University
English Department
320 Dunleavy
Niagara University, NY 14109
716/286-8544
From: Ronald Epp
Reply-To: Ronald Epp
Date: Wednesday, July 11, 2018 at 10:40 AM
8/27/2019
Xfinity Connect Re_Colonel Porter, the Emersons, and George Cabot Ward Printout
To: Jamie M. Carr
Subject: Colonel Porter, the Emersons, and George Cabot Ward
Dear Professor Carr:
I have just completed reading your excellent article in Western New
York Heritage. I approached the article with curiosity about the family
association with Ralph Waldo Emerson, a close friend of various
members of the Ward family of Boston.
Porter
Banker Thomas Wren Ward (1792-1858) was the father of George
Cabot Ward whose memorial essay on Emerson you brought to my
attention- thank you. Thomas was also Treasurer of Harvard for a
decade, and father of Samuel Gray Ward whose friendship with
Emerson and Margaret Fuller is legendary. I secured my doctorate in
philosophy from SUNY, Buffalo and later in my career morphed into
an academic library director, spending the better part of two decades
researching the Ward family at the MHS, Harvard, and NEHGS.
Consequently, I was extremely impressed by the thoroughness of
your research at Harvard even to the level of examining the library
borrowing records (I thought that only I and Harvard archivist Barbara
Meloni cared about such historical curiosities).
My point is that my research was prompted by visits to Acadia
National Park where information on its historic origins was deplorable.
Little did I know that my pursuit of George Bucknam Dorr, the Father
of Acadia, would lead me to his years at Harvard, his friendship and
conservation partnership with Harvard president Charles W. Eliot,
and the tragic death of Eliot's eldest son Charles, the landscape
architect and associate of Frederick Law Olmsted. Fast forward
fifteen years to 2016 and the centennials of Acadia National Park and
the National Park Service and the publication of my Creating Acadia
National Park: The Biography of George Bucknam Dorr. My subject
was the nephew of George Cabot and Samuel Gray Ward.
Given our shared interests, perhaps we could meet in the months
ahead when I have plans to visit friends who reside just south of you
in Strykersville.
7/11/2018
Faculty Directory I Niagara University
College of Arts & Sciences
Faculty Directory
Dr. Jamie Carr
Associate Professor
Email:
jcarr@niagara.edu
Phone:
716.286.8544
Office Location:
Dunleavy Hall, Room 320
Bio
I
have long been intrigued by what Sven Birkerts, in his book The
Gutenberg Elegies: The Fate of Reading in an Electronic Age (1994), says
about what we experience when we are immersed in a good story: that
we "hand over our groundedness in the here and now in order to take up
our new groundedness in the elsewhere of the book" (81). Literature, that
is, creates a 'sense of place, an 'elsewhere' in our minds that we visit for a
short while, and that leaves us changed in some way.
7/11/2018
Faculty Directory I Niagara University
College of Arts & Sciences
SCHOOL, UI IaLLUIJ.
And how might our connections to place foster our responsibility to it?
I
am fortunate to live and work in an environment that millions are drawn
to each year, and that writers have 'created' for centuries -- Niagara Falls.
I examine this cultural heritage in my manuscript, COMPOSING
NIAGARA: A LITERARY TOUR OF THE FALLS, which is under advance
contract with SUNY Press.
In my classes, students encounter opportunities to explore and encounter
the relation between literature and place, whether through reading
works that elicit such reflections; in writing; on excursions to physical
places in the city and landscape of Niagara Falls; or, through work on our
art and literary journal, the Aquila.
/
Academics / Colleges / College of Arts & Sciences / Faculty /
Faculty Directory
DEATH OF GEORGE CABOT WARD.
New York Times (1857-Current file); May 5, 1887; ProQuest Historical Newspapers The New York Times (1851-2003)
pg. 8
DEATH OF GEORGE CABOT WARD.
George Cabot Ward died yesterday at his
residence in this city, in the sixty-third year of
his age. Mr. Ward was one of the best known
business men in this city for many years. In
1886 Mr. Ward's mental faculties became im-
paired, and a trip abroad failed to benefit him.
He returned to America and resided temporarily
at Morristown, N. J., whence he removed to this
city. He was born at Salem, Mass., and while
still a boy went to Boston, where his father,
who had been a successful shipmaster, was ap-
pointed agent of Baring Brothers, the London
bankers. The son graduated from Harvard, and
then went to Heidelberg. After going around
the world in a sailing ship, he came to New-York
and founded the banking house of Ward, Camp-
bell & Co., which became the New-York agency
of Baring Brothers. In 1869 Samuel Gray Ward,
the elder son, who had succeeded his father
in Boston, came to New-York and formed a
partnership with his brother under the firm
name of S. G. & G. C. Ward. This house con-
tinued in active business till Jan. 1, 1886, when
it was dissolved and retired.
Mr. Ward was an intimate friend of Secretary
Chase, and was consulted by him on many points
during the war. He was one of the charter
members of the Union League Club, of which he
was Treasurer for many years, and also Pres-
ident for one term. He was one of the Govern-
ore of the New-York Hospital, a Director of the
Children's Aid Society, the Bank of Commerce,
the Union Trust Company, and the Iron Mount-
ain Railroad, and a Trustee of the Unitarian
Church of All Souls. He was a personal friend
of Emerson, Bryant, and other American writers.
Mr. Ward was married twice, his first wife dying
six years ago. She left two children, 8. G. Ward.
Jr., of Kidder, Peabody & Co., and Mrs. A. A.
Low. His second wife was Miss Fanny Morris,
of this city, whom he married in 1882. The
funeral will take place on Friday at 10 A. M., in
the Church of the Holy Communion, and the
burial will be in Boston.
Reproduce with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission.
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George Cabot Ward (1824-1887)
Details
1824 - 1887