1846-1920; bulk: 1888-1896
Guide to the Collection
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|
| Creator: | Russell, William E. (William
Eustis), 1857-1896 |
| Title: | William Eustis Russell
papers |
| Dates: | 1846-1920 |
| Bulk Dates: | 1888-1896 |
| Physical Description: | 24
document boxes, 22 volumes, and 10 extra-tall volumes |
| Call Number: | Ms. N-824 |
| Repository: | Massachusetts Historical Society 1154 Boylston Street Boston, MA 02215
library@masshist.org |
|
Abstract:
|
|
This collection consists of the papers of William
Eustis Russell, mayor of Cambridge, Mass. and governor of Massachusetts,
including correspondence, speeches, printed matter, letterbooks, and
scrapbooks.
|
|
Born in Cambridge, Mass. on 6 Jan. 1857, William Eustis Russell was the
ninth child and fourth son of Charles Theodore Russell, a prominent lawyer and
Civil War mayor of Cambridge, and Sarah Elizabeth Ballister Russell. He
graduated from Harvard in the class of 1877, which also included future
luminaries A. Lawrence Lowell and Barrett Wendell, and became the first ever
summa cum laude at Boston University Law School in
1879.
As his family was politically involved and strongly Democratic, Russell took
quite naturally to public affairs. Elected to the Cambridge Common Council at
the age of 24 in 1881, he advanced to the Board of Aldermen a year later and
served four one-year terms as mayor. Though his tenure was marred somewhat by a
bitter street railway strike in 1887, Russell was regarded as a highly
successful reform executive. He implemented civil service reform, balanced the
city budget, and lowered the tax rate substantially. Russell's "Cambridge idea"
of government was highly acclaimed in state and nation, and he was an obvious
choice for the Democratic gubernatorial nomination when he left the mayoralty
in 1888.
Unable to buck the prevailing Republican tide in Massachusetts, Russell lost
his first two races for governor in 1888 and 1889. In 1890, however, the young
civil service reformer made peace with the powerful Irish Democrats of Boston
and discovered a winning issue: tariff reform.
Armed with an impressive array of statistics, Russell stumped the length of
the state, blaming industrial ills on the high Republican McKinley rates on raw
materials. He proclaimed reduction as the panacea which would bring about
cheaper goods, increased demand, more work, higher wages, and prosperity.
Though he could do nothing about the tariff in the governorship, Russell
nonetheless struck a responsive chord with his audiences and was elected over
Republican John Quincy Adams Brackett by 9,000 votes.
As governor, Russell attempted to acquire more executive power for his
largely ceremonial office, but was rebuffed by the Republican legislature.
Still, he maintained his reputation as a conservative reformer by championing
the repeal of the poll tax, aiding the passage of a corrupt practices act, and
signing a bill reducing working hours for labor. A major Russell initiative was
the creation of the Metropolitan Park Commission, which, under Charles Francis
Adams and Charles Eliot, fashioned large-scale recreational facilities near the
shores and woodlands of Greater Boston.
Though he was a capable administrator, Russell was primarily known for his
prowess as a political campaigner. Eschewing the detachment displayed by most
of the politicians of his class, he toured long-ignored rural and industrial
regions of Massachusetts and spoke eloquently about local concerns.
Consequently, Russell was re-elected governor in 1891 and in 1892, despite the
sizable defeat in the state of the still-victorious presidential candidacy of
Grover Cleveland.
Throughout the 1890s, the young, popular Massachusetts governor was touted
as a potential successor to his friend Cleveland. However, a severe economic
depression and a strong movement among southern and western Democrats favoring
the free coinage of silver doomed his chances for the presidency. At the
Democratic National Convention of 1896, Russell played a supporting role,
speaking vainly for a party commitment to the gold standard and sound money.
The impassioned speech of silverite William Jennings Bryan, which immediately
followed that of Russell, took the convention by storm and won for the
Nebraskan the presidential nomination Russell coveted.
Not long after the Convention, a tired and frail Russell went on a salmon
fishing excursion to Quebec. There, at the camp of a friend, the 39-year-old
former governor died unexpectedly on 16 July 1896.
The William Eustis Russell papers consist of 24 document boxes of
correspondence, speeches, printed matter, and miscellaneous papers; and 32
volumes of letterbooks and scrapbooks. The collection documents Russell's
career as mayor of Cambridge, Mass., 1885-1889, and governor of Massachusetts,
1891-1894; his campaign for reduction of the tariff on raw materials; and his
unsuccessful bid for the Democratic presidential nomination in 1896. Included
are papers related to the silver question and the William E. Russell Democratic
Club of Massachusetts. Among the important correspondents are Russell's wife
Margaret Manning Swan Russell, his father Charles Theodore Russell, his brother
Charles Theodore Russell, Jr., Edward Atkinson, Gamaliel Bradford, Grover
Cleveland, Patrick A. Collins, Charles Sumner Hamlin, Thomas Wentworth
Higginson, Joseph Jefferson, Nathan Matthews, Richard Olney, Joseph H. O'Neil,
Josiah Quincy, Charles H. Taylor, William C. Whitney, and William L.
Wilson.
See the
index below for a list of select individuals,
events, organizations, and subjects of significance appearing in Series I-IV of
this collection.
The Massachusetts Historical Society (MHS) holds the following collections
related to the William Eustis Russell papers:
Charles Russell papers, 1743-1962. Ms. N-821.
Letters to William E. Russell, 1889-1897. Special Colls. (originals); Ms.
N-2162 (photocopies).
Massachusetts Reform Club records, 1890-1927. Ms. N-515.
Young Men's Democratic Club of Massachusetts records, 1887-1903. Ms.
N-505.
The MHS also holds the papers of many of Russell's political contemporaries,
including Charles Francis Adams II, John Forrester Andrew, Edward Atkinson,
Richard Henry Dana III, William Everett, George Frisbie Hoar, Henry Cabot
Lodge, Robert Treat Paine II, Josiah Quincy, Frederic Jesup Stimson, Moorfield
Storey, Winslow Warren, John T. Wheelwright, and George Fred Williams. The
papers of Philip Putnam Chase at the MHS contain notes prepared by Chase for a
biography of Russell and a small amount of printed material.
Gift of Richard M. Russell, 1960, and the Marblehead Historical Society,
1979.
The collection is organized into the following series:
| | | |
| I. Correspondence, 1882-1914 |
| | A. Pre-gubernatorial correspondence, 1882-1890 |
| | B. Gubernatorial correspondence, 1891-1893 |
| | C. Post-gubernatorial correspondence, 1894-1896 |
| | D. Addenda, 1897-1914 |
| II. Speeches, 1884-1896 |
| III. Miscellaneous papers, 1846-1920 |
| IV. William E. Russell papers II, 1891-1893 |
| V. Bound volumes, 1883-1896 |
| | A. Letterbooks, 1891-1896 |
| | B. Scrapbooks, 1883-1896 |
See the
index below for a list of select individuals,
events, organizations, and subjects of significance appearing Series I-IV of
this collection.
| | | | | | | |
| Box | Folder | Volume | Contents |
| | | I. Correspondence,
1882-1914 |
| | | | A. Pre-gubernatorial correspondence,
1882-1890
This subseries contains correspondence related to Russell's political
activities prior to his governorship. Included is a long letter from Russell to
his father proposing to reform and reinvigorate a struggling Democratic Party
in 1882, congratulatory correspondence related to his election as mayor of
Cambridge in 1884, a small amount of material on city government, and letters
urging Russell to run for Congress in 1886. The bulk of this early material,
however, concerns Russell's unsuccessful contests for governor, 1888-1889, and
his ultimate election on the tariff issue in 1890.
|
| Box 1 | Folder 1-7 | | | | Undated correspondence |
| Box 1 | Folder 8-20 | | | | 1882-Oct. 1890 |
| Box 2 | Folder 1-11 | | | | Nov.-Dec. 1890 |
| | | | B. Gubernatorial correspondence,
1891-1893
This subseries contains material related to Russell's years as governor,
including correspondence concerning patronage, ballot law reform, government
reorganization, tenement house reform, and especially the national question of
tariff reform. Among Russell's closest political confidants represented in the
letters are his father Charles Theodore Russell, his brother Charles Theodore
Russell, Jr., Spencer Borden, Patrick A. Collins, Charles Sumner Hamlin,
Richard Olney, Josiah Quincy, John E. Russell, Nathaniel S. Shaler, and Charles
H. Taylor. Reformers who regularly wrote Russell on their pet issues included
Edward Atkinson, Gamaliel Bradford, Richard Henry Dana III, Emory J. Haynes,
and Thomas Wentworth Higginson. Congressmen John Forrester Andrew, John C.
Crosby, Sherman Hoar, Joseph H. O'Neil, and George Fred Williams kept the
governor informed of national developments. Letters from Mayor Nathan Matthews
discuss Boston city politics and government, in which the state was heavily
involved.
This subseries also contains a handful of significant letters from Grover
Cleveland to Russell about civil service reform, the tariff, the silver
question, and the principles of the Democratic Party. Correspondence with James
E. Campbell, David R. Francis, Lloyd McKim Garrison, Richard Watson Gilder,
Joseph Jefferson, Hoke Smith, and William L. Wilson also relates to national
political matters. Other notable correspondents include James Montgomery Beck,
James Bryce, Benjamin F. Butler, Arthur Capper, Charles W. Eliot, John F.
Fitzgerald, Edward Everett Hale, G. B. M. Harvey, William Randolph Hearst,
Gilbert M. Hitchcock, Helen Keller, Franklin K. Lane, James Russell Lowell,
Adolph S. Ochs, John Boyle O'Reilly, Walter Hines Page, Francis Parkman, Albert
Shaw, Upton Sinclair, Moorfield Storey, Thomas Taggart, and Robert C.
Winthrop.
|
| Box 2 | Folder 12-17 | | | | Jan.-Aug. 1891 |
| Box 3 | | | | | Sep.-Dec. 1891 |
| Box 4 | | | | | Jan.-Mar. 1892 |
| Box 5 | | | | | Apr.-June 1892 |
| Box 6 | | | | | July-Oct. 1892 |
| Box 7 | | | | | Nov.-Dec. 1892 |
| Box 8 | | | | | Jan.-Mar. 1893 |
| Box 9 | | | | | Apr.-June 1893 |
| Box 10 | | | | | July-Oct. 1893 |
| Box 11 | Folder 1-9 | | | | Nov.-Dec. 1893 |
| | | | C. Post-gubernatorial correspondence,
1894-1896
This subseries contains post-gubernatorial correspondence discussing
Russell's abortive presidential candidacy and providing glimpses of his views
on national issues. Included is material on tariff reform, the currency debate
over free silver, and the Venezuelan boundary matter of 1895, on which Russell
differed with the Cleveland administration's hard line. Of particular
importance is Russell's correspondence with William C. Whitney, which deals
with their efforts to bring about a "sound money" platform and presidential
ticket at the Democratic National Convention of 1896.
|
| Box 11 | Folder 10-17 | | | | 1894 |
| Box 12 | Folder 1-18 | | | | 1895-1896 |
| Box 12 | Folder 19-21 | | | D. Addenda,
1897-1914
This subseries consists of condolence letters to Russell's wife, Margaret
Manning Swan Russell, as well as receipts and letters pertaining to the
operation of the William E. Russell Democratic Club.
|
|
|
| | | II. Speeches,
1884-1896
This series contains notes for political speeches and official addresses.
The notes for campaign speeches, 1888-1892, are significant for their detailed
analyses of the effects of the McKinley Tariff on Massachusetts. Russell
collected industrial statistics for many of the Bay State cities and towns in
which he spoke. Box 16 contains typescripts of most of these speeches.
|
| Box 13 | | | | Speech notes,
1884-1890 |
| Box 14 | | | | Speech notes,
1891-1892 |
| Box 15 | | | | Speech notes,
1893-1896 Included are notes on the 1895 Massachusetts legislative hearings on the
issue of municipal ownership of gas and electrical plants.
|
| Box 16 | | | | Typewritten speeches, etc.,
1885-1896 |
|
|
| | | III. Miscellaneous papers,
1846-1920
Arranged alphabetically by subject.The bulk of this series consists of printed material on political campaigns,
issues, and state government. The series also contains additional information
on William E. Russell as governor and national Democratic spokesman, including
lists and notes concerning Russell's gubernatorial staff and all of his
published writings.
|
| Box 17 | Folder 1 | | | Advertisements: Assorted flyers promoting magazines, "abdominal
spinal supporters," etc. |
| Box 17 | Folder 2 | | | Agriculture: Memorandum, notes, etc. on agriculture in
Massachusetts |
| Box 17 | Folder 3 | | | Associations, organizations: Flyers from the Democratic Club of
Massachusetts, the National League for the Protection of American Institutions,
etc. |
| Box 17 | Folder 4 | | | Biography: Odds and ends on Caleb Strong, George Washington, and
lesser figures |
| Box 17 | Folder 5 | | | Business cards: Businessmen's calling cards |
| Box 17 | Folder 6 | | | Charities, donations: Flyers soliciting financial aid for the
retirement of General N. P. Banks, Parker's Boston Helping Hand Mission,
etc. |
| Box 17 | Folder 7 | | | Cities and towns: Data concerning the incorporation and population
of Massachusetts cities and towns |
| Box 17 | Folder 8 | | | Currency,
1893-1896: Handwritten notes and printed material on the
silver question |
| Box 17 | Folder 9 | | | Education,
1882-1891: Data concerning schools in
Massachusetts |
| Box 17 | Folder 10 | | | Harvard,
1873-1920: Russell grade reports,
1873-1874; correspondence, etc. concerning the class of
1877 |
| Box 17 | Folder 11 | | | Invitations, menus, etc.: Invitations and menus from the unveiling
of a statue of Ulysses S. Grant in Tennessee,
1891, a dinner for the living governors of Massachusetts,
1891, etc. |
| Box 17 | Folder 12 | | | Legal documents,
1846-1891: Bond of indebtedness to the Fulton Hardware
Manufacturing Company (1846); plaintiff's brief before the
Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court (1889); certificate
of incorporation of the Novelty Printing Company
(1891) |
| Box 17 | Folder 13 | | | Miscellany: Fragments, etc. |
| Box 17 | Folder 14-15 | | | Political issues - Massachusetts: Memoranda, notes, and printed
material on agriculture, gubernatorial powers, highways, immigrants, labor, the
lobby, lodging houses, a metropolitan district, railroads, Canadian
reciprocity, tenement house reform, and unemployment |
| Box 17 | Folder 16 | | | Political issues - United States: Notes and printed material
concerning permanent arbitration between Great Britain and the United States,
federal patronage, corporate consolidation and "stock watering," municipal
ownership and public franchises, Russian famine relief, temperance,
presidential veto power, etc. |
| Box 17 | Folder 17-18 | | | Political material - Massachusetts: Lists of Democratic State
Committee members and campaign flyers,
1890-1896 |
| Box 18 | Folder 1-7 | | | Political material - Massachusetts: Notes on state and national
elections,
1780-1854; vote tabulations,
1888-1891; map of Massachusetts congressional districts,
1891 |
| Box 18 | Folder 8 | | | Political material - United States: Printed material concerning the
United States Indian Service and the Democratic Party in Illinois, Minnesota,
and Pennsylvania |
| Box 18 | Folder 9-11 | | | Proclamations: Gubernatorial proclamations for Arbor Day, Fast Day,
and Thanksgiving Day,
1890-1893 |
| Box 18 | Folder 12 | | | Quincy, Josiah: Notes on legislation,
1890 |
| Box 18 | Folder 13-16 | | | Russell - appointments, etc.: Certification of William E. Russell as
justice of the peace and notary public,
1881-1894; certification for Russell to practice before
the Massachusetts Superior Court,
1880; certification of Russell's election as mayor of
Cambridge and governor of Massachusetts,
1885-1892 |
| Box 18 | Folder 17 | | | Russell - gubernatorial staff: Lists, notes, invitations, etc.
concerning the staff of Gov. Russell |
| Box 18 | Folder 18 | | | Russell - magazine articles by or about,
1894-1896: Notes, drafts, etc. of articles for
Century, Forum,
and Harper's Round Table |
| Box 18 | Folder 19 | | | Russell - memberships,
1891: Certifications of membership for the Bay State
Agricultural Society and the Massachusetts Agricultural College Alumni
Club |
| Box 18 | Folder 20 | | | Russell - memorials,
1896-1907: Memorial tributes offered by the city of
Cambridge and the William E. Russell Democratic Club; memoirs by Charles C.
Everett and John T. Wheelwright |
| Box 18 | Folder 21 | | | Russell - political campaigns,
1884-1892: Flyers from Russell campaigns |
| Box 18 | Folder 22 | | | Speeches: Printed addresses of Gamaliel Bradford on Boston city
government (1884) and of Franklin B. Sanborn on public
charities in Europe (undated) |
| Box 18 | Folder 23 | | | State government - Massachusetts - commissions,
1864-1893: Lists and notes concerning Massachusetts state
commissions |
| Box 18 | Folder 24 | | | State government - Massachusetts - governorship, lieutenant
governorship: Notes on the powers and functions of the state's highest
constitutional offices |
| Box 19 | Folder 1-2 | | | State government - Massachusetts - legislature,
1887-1892: Legislative documents concerning election laws,
utilities, taxation, the abolition of various state commissions, the framing of
municipal charters, administration of estates of the deceased, land transfers,
etc. |
| Box 19 | Folder 3 | | | State government - Massachusetts - miscellany: Memoranda, notes
concerning dentistry, Fast Day, the Metropolitan Sewerage Commission,
etc. |
| Box 19 | Folder 4 | | | State government - New York, Ohio, etc.: Notes and printed material
on state laws and governmental functions in states other than
Massachusetts |
| Box 20 | | | | Tariff reform,
1879-1894: Notes, memoranda, and printed material
concerning the tariff |
| Box 21 | | | | Tariff reform: Undated petition of businessmen to New England
Congressmen |
| Box 22 | | | | Printed material: Clippings from the Boston Advertiser and other newspapers and
magazines |
| Box 23 | | | | Printed material,
1850-1896: Address of Charles Theodore Russell,
1850; the Massachusetts Democratic Platform,
1889; William E. Russell gubernatorial messages and
speeches,
1891-1894; pamphlets, booklets, and magazine articles
concerning rapid transit, the tariff, the incorporation of Beverly, Mass.,
Democratic political strategy for
1890 and
1896, and the veto power of the governor; Proceedings of
the Democratic National Convention,
1896; remarks of Alexander McKenzie at the Russell
funeral,
20 July 1896 |
|
|
| Box 24 | | | IV. William E. Russell papers II,
1891-1893
This series consists of eight letters from citizens to Governor Russell.
Note: These letters were a gift of the Marblehead
Historical Society in 1979.
|
|
|
| | | V. Bound volumes,
1883-1896 |
| | | | A. Letterbooks,
1891-1896
This subseries consists of 12 letterbooks of Russell's personal and official
correspondence during his governorship and beyond, as well as a memorial
letterbook (Vol. 13) containing letters of condolence and memorial resolutions
upon Russell's death.
|
| | Vol. 1 | | | 12 Jan.-1 Apr. 1891 |
| | Vol. 2 | | | 1 Apr.-18 July 1891 |
| | Vol. 3 | | | 24 July 1891-18 Jan. 1892 |
| | Vol. 4 | | | 19 Jan.-13 Apr. 1892 |
| | Vol. 5 | | | 13 Apr.-25 June 1892 |
| | Vol. 6 | | | 28 June-28 Nov. 1892 |
| | Vol. 7 | | | 28 Nov. 1892-14 Feb. 1893 |
| | Vol. 8 | | | 14 Feb.-11 May 1893 |
| | Vol. 9 | | | 11 May-17 Oct. 1893 |
| | Vol. 10 | | | 23 Oct. 1893-3 Jan. 1894 |
| | Vol. 11 | | | 17 Jan. 1894-30 Dec. 1895 |
| | Vol. 12 | | | 31 Dec. 1895-16 July 1896 |
| | Vol. 13 (XT) | | | 1896 |
| | | | B. Scrapbooks,
1883-1896
This subseries consists of 16 scrapbooks covering Russell's career as
Cambridge alderman and mayor, Massachusetts governor, and presidential
candidate; a scrapbook (Vol. 30) containing clippings and other printed
material about the construction of the Harvard Bridge connecting Boston and
Cambridge, which took place during Russell's Cambridge mayoralty; and two
scrapbooks (Vol. 31-32) containing clippings on the political activities and
speeches of Massachusetts Republicans Charles H. Allen, William H. Haile,
Frederic T. Greenhalge, and Henry Cabot Lodge, as well as Russell's Democratic
allies John E. Russell and George Fred Williams. Vol. 29 includes obituaries of
William E. Russell.
|
| | Vol. 14 | | | Jan. 1883-July 1885 |
| | Vol. 15 | | | Aug.-Dec. 1885 |
| | Vol. 16 | | | Jan. 1886-Dec. 1887 |
| | Vol. 17 | | | July 1888-Dec. 1889 |
| | Vol. 18 (XT) | | | 1890-1891 |
| | Vol. 19 | | | Jan.-Mar. 1891 |
| | Vol. 20 (XT) | | | Apr.-Sep. 1891 |
| | Vol. 21 | | | Sep. 1891-May 1892 |
| | Vol. 22 (XT) | | | 1892-1893 |
| | Vol. 23 (XT) | | | 1893-1894 |
| | Vol. 24 (XT) | | | 1895 |
| | Vol. 25 (XT) | | | Apr.-July 1896 |
| | Vol. 26 (XT) | | | July 1896 |
| | Vol. 27 (XT) | | | 10-16 July 1896 |
| | Vol. 28 (XT) | | | July-Nov. 1896 |
| | Vol. 29 | | | 1896 |
| | Vol. 30 | | | 1887-1888 |
| | Vol. 31 | | | 1891-1893 |
| | Vol. 32 | | | 1891-1893 |
Listed below are select individuals, events, organizations, and subjects of
significance appearing in Series I-IV of this collection. The numbers following
each item indicate the box(es) and folder(s) where information about that item
or correspondence with that individual is located. For example, correspondence
with Brooks Adams can be found in Box 7, Folder 3.
| A |
| Aberdeen and Temair, John Campbell Hamilton Gordon, first Marquess of,
Governor-General, Canada, 3.11, 12.2 |
| Aberdeen and Temair, Marchioness of (Ishbel Maria Marjoribanks), 3.11,
11.2, 11.16 |
| Adams, Brooks, author, 7.3 |
| Adams, Charles E., merchant, 2.16, 8.17 |
| Adams, Charles Francis II, businessman, chairman, Metropolitan Park
Commission, 7.18 |
| Adams, John Quincy II, trustee, 10.17 |
| Adee, Alvey A., Assistant Secretary of State, 10.4 |
| Agassiz, Alexander, naturalist, 10.17 |
| Agriculture, 2.14, 4.5, 4.11, 8.2, 17.2, 20.10 |
| Agriculture, Massachusetts State Board of, 4.5, 4.11, 8.2, 17.2 |
| Alcoholics, treatment of, 2.12, 4.13 |
| Aldrich, Thomas Bailey, editor, Atlantic
Monthly, 2.1 |
| Alger, Alpheus B., Mayor, Cambridge, Mass., 1.12, 2.15, 3.2, 4.1,
8.8 |
| Algonquin Club (Boston), 3.10, 11.14, 11.16, 12.19 |
| Allen, Charles H., Republican gubernatorial candidate (1891), 3.3,
14.4-5, 18.21 |
| Allen, Gardner Weld, surgeon, historian, 17.10 |
| Almshouses, 1.3, 3.10 |
| American Bar Association, 4.7, 19.4 |
| American Federation of Labor, 4.1 |
| American Law Register and Review,
23 |
| American Protective Association, 11.1 |
| Ames, Oliver, Massachusetts Governor, 1.16, 3.3, 4.2, 7.1, 17.11,
20.9 |
| Amesbury, Mass., 14.15 |
| Anderson, E. Ellery, New York lawyer, reformer, 3.5, 3.9 |
| Andover, Mass., 1.12 |
| Andrew, John Forrester, Massachusetts Congressman, 4.3-5, 8.1, 8.10,
8.12, 13.3 |
| Andrews, E. Benjamin, president, Brown University, 6.9 |
| Angell, James B., president, University of Michigan, 12.1 |
| Anti-Tenement House League, 1.2, 2.12, 6.18, 7.16, 17.15 |
| Appleton, D. & Company, publishers, 11.15 |
| Arbitration, Massachusetts State Board of, 2.9, 3.10, 7.17 |
| Arena, 2.13, 2.15, 6.7-8, 9.6 |
| Associated Literary Press, 4.16,
17.1 |
| Atkinson, Edward, economist, president, Boston Manufacturers' Mutual
Fire Insurance Company, 1.6, 1.7, 1.13, 2.12, 4.2, 4.8, 5.2, 5.4, 6.15-16,
12.3, 12.8, 12.14 |
| Atlanta Journal, 2.14, 3.4-5 |
| return to top of index |
| B |
| Bacon, Edwin M., editor, author, 4.16, 5.7, 5.13, 12.2 |
| Bacon-Shakespeare controversy, 6.7-8 |
| Baldwin, William H., Jr., railroad executive, 2.8 |
| Ballot law reform, 1.17, 4.1, 7.11, 8.20, 9.12, 12.1, 16.5, 19.2 |
| Bancroft, William A., lawyer, Boston Elevated Railway executive,
2.2 |
| Banking, 3.9, 10.6 |
| Banks, Nathaniel P., Massachusetts Congressman, former Governor, 17.6,
17.11 |
| Barker, James M., associate justice, Supreme Judicial Court of
Massachusetts, 2.15, 12.1 |
| Barker, Wharton, Philadelphia financier, 5.7, 20.6 |
| Bartlett, Charles L., Georgia Congressman, 12.8 |
| Bartlett, John, publisher, editor, Bartlett's
Quotations, 1.2 |
| Baxter, Sylvester, publicist, secretary, Metropolitan Park Commission,
4.1, 5.13, 6.1, 7.17 |
| Bayard, Thomas F., United States Senator (Delaware), 2.1 |
| Beck, James Montgomery, Philadelphia lawyer, later Congressman, United
States Solicitor General, 2.3, 3.6 |
| Belford's Magazine, 23 |
| Belknap, George E., naval officer, 5.10, 8.17 |
| Bennett, James Gordon, publisher, New York Herald, 11.9, 12.19 |
| Bennett, Josiah Quincy, banker, president, Cambridge Electric Light
Company, 2.10 |
| Beverly Farms, Mass., 19.2, 23 |
| Billings, Edmund, social worker, superintendent, Wells Memorial
Institute (Boston), 12.4 |
| Bird, Charles Sumner, paper manufacturer, 7.2 |
| Bird, Francis W., paper manufacturer, 1.13, 3.10, 5.10, 6.1 |
| Blacks, 1.7, 2.2, 6.12, 8.10, 8.20, 9.1, 9.15, 10.8, 11.6, 13.3,
17.6 |
| Blaine, James G., Secretary of State, Republican leader, 4.1, 4.3,
8.10 |
| Bland, Richard P., Missouri Congressman, 4.6 |
| Bland-Allison Act (1878), 11.11 |
| B'nai B'rith, 10.9 |
| Boies, Horace, Iowa Governor, 3.6, 7.1 |
| Bok, William J., editor, 12.12 |
| Bok Syndicate Press, 12.12 |
| Bolton, Charles C., Ohio manufacturer, Mark Hanna partner, 2.6,
12.11 |
| Boot and Shoe Workers International Union, 2.14 |
| Borden, Elizabeth (Lizzie), 6.9 |
| Borden, Spencer, manufacturer, 1.16, 2.6, 2.8-9, 2.15-17, 3.4, 3.11,
5.10-11, 6.6, 6.8, 6.13, 6.18, 7.2, 7.14, 8.5, 8.7-9, 8.11-12, 8.15-16,
8.18-20, 9.7-8, 10.2, 10.10, 10.15, 12.1, 12.6 |
| Boston - Politics and Government, 8.18, 8.20, 8.21, 9.17, 18.22 |
| Boston Advertiser, 22.1, 22.3-5 |
| Boston & Lowell Railroad, 23 |
| Boston & Maine Railroad, 23 |
| Boston Boys' Institute of Industry and Club Work, 6.4 |
| Boston, Cape Cod & New York Canal Company, 17.14 |
| Boston Central Labor Union, 10.3 |
| Boston Chamber of Commerce, 7.10 |
| Boston, Concord & Montreal Railroad, 23 |
| Boston Globe, 2.15, 3.2, 11.3 |
| Boston Herald, 3.2, 3.3, 12.15 |
| Boston Journal, 3.2, 7.12, 11.15,
13.13 |
| Boston Merchants Association, 7.1 |
| Boston Navy Yard, 9.8, 9.17 |
| Boston Pilot, 2.15 |
| Boston Post, 3.1, 3.6, 3.7, 12.17 |
| Boston University Law School, 14.11 |
| Bostonian Society, 7.15, 7.17 |
| Boutwell, George S., former Secretary of the Treasury, Massachusetts
Governor, United States Senator, 2.12, 17.11 |
| Bowles, Francis T., naval officer, engineer, 10.1 |
| Bowles, Samuel, editor, Springfield Republican, 1.16, 6.11, 10.1-2 |
| Boys' and Girls' National Home and Employment Association, 6.7,
17.3 |
| Brackett, John Quincy Adams, Massachusetts Governor, 1.2, 1.5, 1.16-17,
2.2, 2.9, 13.9-10, 13.12, 13.15, 17.11, 17.19, 18.21 |
| Bradford, Gamaliel, author, 1.6, 3.4, 3.9, 3.11, 4.1, 5.1, 5.11, 6.13,
7.3, 7.17, 8.6, 12.9, 18.22 |
| British and Canadian Exchange Club, 17.3 |
| Brockton (Mass.) Enterprise, 3.2 |
| Brooks, Phillips, Episcopal bishop, 4.8, 4.14, 5.5 |
| Brown, D. Russell, Rhode Island Governor, 11.7 |
| Brown, Frank, Maryland Governor, 7.18 |
| Brown, William Garrott, author, 1.7, 6.6, 12.19 |
| Brown University, 5.4 |
| Bryce, James, British author, diplomat, 1.4, 2.10 |
| Bryce, Lloyd, publisher, North American
Review, 1.6, 6.15, 11.3 |
| Bull, Melville, Rhode Island Congressman, 9.16 |
| Burdett, E. W., Boston utilities lawyer, 1.9 |
| Burton, Theodore E., Ohio Congressman, 12.19 |
| Business Men's Democratic Association, 2.5 |
| Butler, Benjamin F., Massachusetts Governor, Congressman, 4.2, 6.16,
6.17, 8.4, 17.11 |
| Butler, Sigourney, Boston lawyer, 5.7, 6.15, 8.11, 8.16, 8.21, 9.2,
9.17, 10.1, 10.3, 10.17-18, 11.6, 11.7 |
| Butler Club, 2.12 |
| Byrne, James, New York lawyer, 9.13, 9.14 |
| return to top of index |
| C |
| Cambridge, Mass., 1.9-12, 13.1, 13.3, 13.8-9, 13.11, 16.1, 18.16,
18.20 |
| Cambridge Electric Light Company, 1.16, 2.10 |
| Campbell, James E., Ohio Governor, 2.16-17, 3.4, 3.11, 12.3 |
| Canada, 3.7, 10.12, 12.16, 16.2, 16.6, 17.15 |
| Canado-American Democratic Club of Lowell, Mass., 10.12 |
| Capen, Samuel B., merchant, municipal reformer, 4.14, 12.16 |
| Capper, Arthur, publisher, Topeka Mail,
later United States Senator (Kansas), 12.7 |
| Carlisle, John G., Secretary of the Treasury, 5.9, 8.8, 10.18,
12.7 |
| Carmichael, James H., Lowell, Mass. lawyer, 2.9, 3.4, 5.12, 6.14, 6.17,
10.2 |
| Carter, Franklin, president, Williams College, 9.10 |
| Catholic Total Abstinence Union, 6.8-9 |
| Century Magazine, 11.11, 12.3, 12.16,
23 |
| Chamberlain, Joseph, British statesman, 9.2 |
| Chapin, Alfred C., New York Congressman, 10.20 |
| Charitable Irish Society, 14.2, 14.8, 15.1 |
| Chase, William L., inspector general, military staff of Governor
Russell, 1.4-6, 2.11, 3.4, 3.11, 4.5, 5.9-10, 6.6, 6.8, 6.11, 6.15, 8.1, 8.4,
8.9, 10.15, 11.9, 11.12, 11.17, 12.3 |
| Chicago Daily Globe, 6.13 |
| Chicago Herald, 6.8 |
| Child, Francis J., educator, 1.10 |
| Child, Linus M., Boston lawyer, 9.7 |
| Chile, 4.3-4, 4.16 |
| Choate, Charles F., president, Old Colony Railroad Company, 1.12, 5.8,
12.19 |
| Choate, Joseph H., American diplomat, 1.20, 11.10, 11.13 |
| Cincinnati Enquirer, 3.11 |
| Citizens' Law and Order League of Massachusetts, 5.2 |
| Civil Service Commission, Massachusetts, 2.9, 3.6, 4.16 |
| Civil service reform, 1.8, 8.15, 16.10 |
| Civil War, 13.3 |
| Claflin, William, former Massachusetts Governor, 1.9, 17.11 |
| Cleveland, Frances F. (Mrs. Grover Cleveland), 3.5, 6.4, 11.15, 12.1,
12.3, 12.19 |
| Cleveland, Grover, 1.13, 1.17, 2.5, 2.8, 2.10, 2.12, 2.15-16, 3.2,
3.4-6, 3.9-10, 4.1, 4.8, 4.10-11, 4.16, 5.1-2, 5.8, 5.11, 5.14-16, 6.1-4, 6.13,
7.1-3, 7.9, 7.11, 7.14, 7.18, 8.4-5, 8.8-14, 9.3, 10.1, 10.3, 10.9, 10.12,
10.18, 11.10-15, 12.1, 12.3-6, 12.18-19, 13.1, 13.3-7, 14.3, 14.13-15, 16.2,
16.10, 17.8, 17.16, 17.18, 18.18 |
| Clinton, Mass., 1.13 |
| Codman, Charles R., Boston Mugwump lawyer, 1.12, 4.2, 9.18, 10.1, 10.17,
11.7 |
| Cody, William F. "Buffalo Bill," showman, 10.19 |
| Collins, Patrick A., United States Consul-General at London, later
Boston Mayor, 1.2, 2.15, 4.15, 5.5, 6.1, 6.9, 7.1, 7.18, 8.7-8, 11.10, 13.7,
15.1 |
| Columbian Exposition - Chicago (1893), 2.12, 3.2, 3.11, 4.2, 4.5,
4.13-14, 5.1, 6.2, 6.16, 7.17, 8.6, 9.8, 10.1-2, 10.5, 10.8-9, 10.11, 10.15-16,
10.19, 16.5, 17.11 |
| Commissions (Massachusetts), 16.3, 18.23 |
| Connecticut River Railroad Bill (1892), 5.7, 6.7 |
| Coolidge, Louis A., journalist, 12.18 |
| Coolidge, T. Jefferson, manufacturer, diplomat, 5.8, 11.12 |
| Coolidge, T. Jefferson, Jr., Boston banker, 7.17-19, 8.21 |
| Corbett, Joseph J., judge, Boston political leader, 10.5 |
| Corcoran, John W., Massachusetts Democratic leader, 1.4, 1.13, 2.9,
2.13, 3.8, 3.10, 4.1, 4.9, 5.13, 5.15, 6.5, 6.8, 7.7, 10.20, 11.1, 11.3, 11.7,
12.8, 12.10, 12.12, 12.15, 23 |
| Corporations, 1.19, 2.1, 2.15, 4.1, 5.7, 5.11, 7.16, 8.8, 9.4,
17.19 |
| Corruption, 7.15, 8.1, 9.1, 19.2, 23 |
| Costa Rica, 9.18 |
| Coveney, Jeremiah W., Boston Postmaster, 1.2, 2.14, 6.17, 7.18, 10.3-5,
10.8, 10.10, 10.20 |
| Crosby, John C., Massachusetts Congressman, 2.8, 3.1, 3.5, 4.5, 6.6,
6.9, 7.7, 8.12, 9.5, 10.1, 10.5, 11.5 |
| Cuba, 8.9, 12.4 |
| Cunniff, Michael M., Boston Democratic leader, 1.11 |
| Cunningham, J. H., Boston businessman, 1.1, 2.9, 4.7, 7.18-19, 10.13,
10.20, 11.6 |
| Currency, 1.7, 2.9, 4.1-2, 4.4-5, 4.8, 4.15-16, 5.9, 6.4, 8.15, 10.7,
10.16, 10.19, 11.11-12, 12.3-5, 12.8-18, 16.11, 17.8 |
| Curtis, George William, author, orator, 2.16, 17.6 |
| Cutler, Marshall, art exporter, 8.10, 9.4, 9.6 |
| return to top of index |
| D |
| Dallinger, Fred W., Boston lawyer, later Congressman, 2.12 |
| Dalton, Samuel, Adjutant General, Massachusetts, 1.2, 1.6, 2.3, 2.7,
2.9-10, 2.16, 6.8, 9.18, 10.12, 11.10 |
| Dana, Charles A., editor, New York Sun,
9.4 |
| Dana, Richard Henry Dana III, lawyer, civil service reformer, 1.17,
4.16, 5.13, 6.1, 7.18, 8.15 |
| Daughters of the Revolution, 11.2 |
| Davis, John W., Rhode Island Governor, 2.2 |
| Dawes, Henry L., United States Senator (Massachusetts), 8.12,
11.16 |
| Democratic Club of Massachusetts, 17.3 |
| Democratic Honest Money Committee of 500, 12.12 |
| Democratic Party - Boston, 1.6, 3.4, 12.7 |
| Democratic Party - California, 3.7, 4.7, 7.6, 12.12 |
| Democratic Party - Connecticut, 5.12, 12.11-12 |
| Democratic Party - Florida, 8.20 |
| Democratic Party - Illinois, 11.14 |
| Democratic Party - Maine, 4.4, 4.10, 6.8-9, 8.21, 12.4, 12.11 |
| Democratic Party - Maryland, 12.7 |
| Democratic Party - Massachusetts, 1.1-2, 1.8, 1.11-12, 1.15-16, 2.6-7,
2.12, 2.15-17, 3.2-5, 3.12, 4.1-2, 4.5, 4.13-14, 4.16, 5.16, 6.4, 6.7, 6.9,
6.16-18, 7.1-6, 7.18-19, 8.13, 9.15, 10.4, 10.12, 10.15, 10.17, 10.20, 11.1,
11.5, 11.12-13, 11.15, 12.8, 12.10, 12.13, 12.15, 13.3-8, 13.10-18, 14.2-3,
14.5-8, 14.10, 14.13-15, 15.1-5, 15.9, 15.14, 15.16, 16.1, 16.8-9, 17.7, 18.21,
22.1-10 |
| Democratic Party - Minnesota, 6.5, 11.14-15, 12.4, 12.7, 12.10 |
| Democratic Party - Missouri, 4.3, 11.15 |
| Democratic Party - New Hampshire, 12.5, 12.7 |
| Democratic Party - New Jersey, 11.15, 12.8-9 |
| Democratic Party - New York, 3.5, 6.9, 6.12, 11.14-15, 12.6,
17.3 |
| Democratic Party - Ohio, 2.2, 2.5, 2.16, 3.6, 7.3, 12.11 |
| Democratic Party - Pennsylvania, 2.3 |
| Democratic Party - Rhode Island, 4.13-16, 5.1, 5.5, 6.7-9, 14.10,
14.13 |
| Democratic Party - United States, 1.3, 1.6, 1.13, 1.16, 2.4-5, 2.16,
3.5-8, 4.4, 4.7-8, 4.13-14, 4.16, 5.2, 5.12, 5.14-16, 6.6-7, 6.12-13, 6.15,
7.1, 7.3-14, 9.13, 9.18, 10.7, 10.17, 11.11-12, 12.1, 12.7, 12.10-16, 13.1,
13.3-8, 13.10-18, 14.2-3, 14.5-8, 14.10, 14.13-15, 15.1-5, 15.9-10, 15.14,
15.16, 16.1, 16.8-9, 16.11, 17.17, 18.18, 22.1-10, 23 |
| Democratic Party -Vermont, 6.6, 12.8 |
| Democratic Party - West Virginia, 4.4, 12.15 |
| De Normandie, James, Unitarian clergyman, 2.7, 12.12 |
| De Pew, Chauncey M., railroad magnate, 10.3 |
| DeWitt, John, Princeton theologian, 12.13 |
| Donahoe, Patrick, publisher, Donahoe's
Magazine, 2.15, 5.11 |
| Douglas, William L., manufacturer, later Massachusetts Governor, 2.4,
7.3, 11.6 |
| Douglass, Frederick, diplomat, journalist, 12.15 |
| DuFais, John, New York architect, 1.4, 7.16-17, 8.17, 10.9, 10.11,
10.13, 10.16 |
| DuPont, Henry A., industrialist, later United States Senator,
20.6 |
| Durrell, Oliver H., manufacturer, 2.14, 3.5, 5.1 |
| return to top of index |
| E |
| Edes, Henry H., insurance executive, historian, 2.16, 9.8, 17.10 |
| Education, 1.7, 2.7, 8.19, 17.9 |
| Elder, Samuel J., Boston lawyer, 4.4, 7.11, 7.13, 7.15-16 |
| Elevated railways, 15.15 |
| Eliot, Charles, landscape architect, 5.11-14 |
| Eliot, Charles W., president, Harvard University, 1.1, 1.11, 1.16, 8.5,
12.4 |
| Ellis, George E., Unitarian clergyman, president, Massachusetts
Historical Society, 9.3 |
| Elwell, F. Edwin, sculptor, 4.1, 4.3, 4.15, 6.5 |
| Ely, Richard T., economist, 4.10 |
| Endicott, William C., former Secretary of War, 2.2, 9.2, 9.4 |
| Endicott, William C., Jr., Boston lawyer, 2.2, 7.11-12, 8.9, 8.21,
10.14, 10.17-18, 11.10 |
| England, 2.10-11, 8.5, 12.3-4, 17.16 |
| Enterprise, U.S.S., 1.7 |
| Epileptics, treatment of, 7.18 |
| Ernst, Carl Wilhelm, Boston author, 10.6 |
| Essex County Club (Massachusetts), 7.1, 7.17 |
| Everett, Charles Carroll, Dean, Harvard Divinity School, 18.20 |
| Everett, William, Massachusetts Congressman, 2.12, 2.14, 4.1, 8.13,
8.16, 9.7, 9.12, 10.1, 10.18, 12.8 |
| Exchange Club (Boston), 11.15 |
| return to top of index |
| F |
| Fall, Charles G., author, lawyer, 2.10, 3.9 |
| Farmers' Alliance, 4.16, 5.7 |
| Farmers' League of Massachusetts, 1.16 |
| Farquhar, Arthur B., manufacturer, political economist, 3.6, 11.12,
12.18 |
| Fast Day, 8.8, 10.4, 16.6, 18.11, 19.3 |
| Faulkner, Charles J., United States Senator (West Virginia),
12.7 |
| Federal Elections (Force) Bill (1890), 5.15, 14.13, 16.11 |
| Fish, Frederick P., Boston lawyer, 11.11 |
| Fisheries (Massachusetts), 1.12-13, 3.8, 4.6, 4.10, 7.15 |
| Fitchburg, Mass., 1.13 |
| Fitzgerald, John F., Boston Democratic leader, later Mayor, 3.4,
12.7 |
| Fitzgerald, Thomas B., manufacturer, 6.2, 6.11 |
| Flint, Charles R., New York merchant, banker, 12.4 |
| Flower, Benjamin Orange, editor, Arena,
2.13, 2.15, 6.7, 6.8, 9.6 |
| Flower, Roswell P., New York Governor, 4.11, 5.1, 7.17 |
| Forbes, John Murray, railroad executive, 1.11, 10.17, 11.14 |
| Forum, 4.12, 6.4, 11.11-12, 12.2, 12.5,
12.10, 15.4, 23 |
| Foster, Frank K., labor leader, 4.1 |
| Foster, John Watson, Secretary of State, 6.7 |
| Fox, Jabez, lawyer, civil service reformer, judge, 1.11, 7.15 |
| Francis, David R., Missouri Governor, Secretary of the Interior, 2.8,
3.5, 4.3, 7.11, 11.15 |
| Free Public Library Commission, Massachusetts, 3.9, 7.10 |
| return to top of index |
| G |
| Gardner, Henry J., former Massachusetts Governor, 17.11 |
| Gargan, Thomas J., Boston lawyer, Democratic leader, 3.9, 5.7, 9.17,
11.8 |
| Garland, Hamlin, author, 17.11 |
| Garrison, Lloyd McKim, New York lawyer, 1.17, 2.2, 4.11, 8.1, 8.7,
8.15-16, 11.10, 11.13, 11.16, 12.1, 12.3-4, 12.9-10, 18.18, 23 |
| Garrison, Wendell P., literary editor, the Nation, 11.13, 12.11 |
| Gaston, William, former Massachusetts Governor, Boston Mayor,
17.11 |
| Gaston, William A., Boston lawyer, Democratic leader, 2.9-10, 3.11,
7.10, 8.1, 8.4, 8.14 |
| Gates, Merrill E., president, Amherst College, 11.16 |
| George, James Z., United States Senator (Mississippi), 12.8 |
| German-Americans, 7.4 |
| Gerry, Elbridge T., New York lawyer, reformer, 6.5-6 |
| Gherardi, Bancroft, naval officer, 8.19, 9.5, 10.15 |
| Gilder, Richard Watson, editor, Century
Magazine, 1.19, 2.3, 2.5, 11.11-13, 11.15-16 |
| Gillett, Frederick H., Massachusetts legislator, later Speaker, United
States House of Representatives, United States Senator (Massachusetts), 4.10,
12.19 |
| Gladstone, William E., British statesman, 6.2, 8.17, 9.3 |
| Glasgow, Scotland, 6.16 |
| Gloucester, Mass., 1.13, 16.4 |
| Godwin, Parke, author, 7.4, 8.18, 12.18 |
| Good Roads Magazine, 7.16 |
| Goodell, Abner C., Jr., lawyer, historian, 3.6, 3.9 |
| Gorman, Arthur Pue, United States Senator (Maryland), 12.7 |
| Gould, George Jay, capitalist, 10.3 |
| Government reorganization, 3.11, 4.1, 4.4, 5.1, 16.3, 16.5-6,
17.14 |
| Governor (Massachusetts), 16.5-6, 18.24 |
| Governor's Council (Massachusetts), 1.1, 8.16, 15.4, 15.12 |
| Grace, William R., former New York Mayor, international merchant,
2.5 |
| Grady, Henry W., southern orator, journalist, 1.17, 3.1 |
| Grant, Hugh, New York Mayor, 6.12 |
| Grant, Robert, judge, author, 2.1, 10.1 |
| Grant, Ulysses S., President, 3.2, 17.10 |
| Greene, William S., Massachusetts superintendent of prisons, later
Congressman, 3.6-7, 7.10, 8.7 |
| Greenfield, Mass., 1.13 |
| Greenhalge, Frederic T., Massachusetts Governor, 11.2, 12.2,
12.4 |
| Greenough, Charles P., Boston lawyer, 10.5, 10.20, 11.1 |
| Gresham, Walter Q., Secretary of State, 1.2 |
| Gridiron Club (Washington), 4.4, 4.6, 8.10, 8.18 |
| Griffin, Eugene, General Electric vice-president, 10.1 |
| Griffin, Solomon B., managing editor, Springfield Republican, 2.10, 2.14, 7.9, 11.1 |
| Groton School (Massachusetts), 2.15, 12.1 |
| Grozier, Edwin Atkins, publisher, Boston Post, 3.1, 3.6-7, 5.3, 6.1, 8.5, 9.1, 9.6 |
| Guild, Curtis, editor, Boston Commercial
Bulletin, president, Bostonian Society, 7.15 |
| Guild, Curtis, Jr., journalist, Republican leader, later Massachusetts
Governor, 3.4 |
| Guiney, Louise Imogen, author, 12.19 |
| Gypsy Moth Commission, Massachusetts, 1.19, 2.13 |
| return to top of index |
| H |
| Haile, William H., Republican gubernatorial candidate (1892), 14.10,
18.21, 22.3 |
| Hale, Edward Everett, author, Unitarian minister, 5.1-2, 11.5-6 |
| Hamilton, J. W., corresponding secretary, Freedmen's Aid and Southern
Education Society, later bishop, Methodist Episcopal Church, 11.12,
11.14 |
| Hamlin, Charles Sumner, Assistant Secretary of the Treasury, 3.4, 3.7,
7.15, 7.18-19, 8.5, 8.8-9, 9.12-14, 10.1-2, 10.6, 10.11, 10.16, 10.18, 11.5,
11.13, 12.1, 12.7, 20.6 |
| Harper, William Rainey, president, University of Chicago, 12.3 |
| Harper's Weekly, 12.8 |
| Harrison, Benjamin, President, 1.5, 4.3, 14.7-8, 17.11 |
| Hart, Albert Bushnell, Harvard professor of history, 12.19 |
| Harvard Civil Service Reform Club, 11.14 |
| Harvard Dental School, 1.1 |
| Harvard Free Wool Club, 1.17 |
| Harvard Graduates' Magazine, 10.2 |
| Harvard University, 1.1-2, 1.10, 1.17, 2.4, 2.15, 3.12, 5.13-15, 7.9,
8.9, 10.2, 10.20, 12.3, 12.19, 13.3, 13.11, 15.2, 15.9, 16.2, 16.7,
17.10 |
| Harvey, George Brinton McClellan, political journalist, 4.14 |
| Haskins, David Greene, Boston lawyer, secretary, William E. Russell
Democratic Club, 1.7, 2.15, 5.13, 12.19 |
| Hasty Pudding Club (Harvard), 12.3, 15.5, 15.9 |
| Hayden, Edward D., Massachusetts Congressman, railway official, 1.11,
6.14 |
| Haynes, Emory J., pastor, People's Church, Boston, tenement house
reformer, 1.2, 2.12, 2.15-16, 4.4, 6.3, 8.5, 10.3, 10.18, 10.20, 11.3,
17.15 |
| Hearst, William Randolph, publisher, 12.8, 12.12, 12.15, 12.17 |
| Herbert, Hilary A., Alabama Congressman, Secretary of the Navy, 5.15,
10.18, 12.2-3 |
| Higginson, Francis John, naval officer, 10.17 |
| Higginson, Henry Lee, investment banker, 7.17, 8.3, 9.15, 10.7, 10.13,
10.17 |
| Higginson, Thomas Wentworth, author, 1.11, 1.16, 3.5, 3.6, 3.8, 4.1,
7.8, 7.15, 8.4, 8.8, 8.14, 10.18, 11.16, 12.2, 12.3 |
| Highways, 4.1 |
| Hill, David B., New York Governor, United States Senator, 4.8, 11.15,
11.16 |
| Hitchcock, Gilbert M., publisher, Omaha World-Herald, later United States Senator (Nebraska),
3.9 |
| Hitchcock, Ripley, editor, critic, 2.8, 11.5 |
| Hoadly, George, New York lawyer, Democrat, 12.16, 12.17 |
| Hoar, George Frisbie, United States Senator (Massachusetts), 1.16, 5.7,
15.14 |
| Hoar, Sherman, Massachusetts Congressman, 1.11, 4.4, 4.11, 4.13, 4.15,
5.7, 8.6, 8.9, 10.4, 10.5, 10.15, 13.3, 20.4 |
| Holmes, Oliver Wendell, Jr., jurist, 10.14 |
| Holy Cross College (Worcester, Mass.), 16.2, 16.8 |
| Holyoke, Mass., 1.13, 3.3, 8.1, 10.20 |
| Home rule (Boston), 16.3, 16.5 |
| Honey, Samuel R., Newport, R.I. Mayor, 2.8, 2.16-17, 4.13-16, 5.1, 5.5,
6.6-9, 10.12, 10.18, 11.3 |
| Hospitals, 4.12, 10.3 |
| Houghton, Henry Oscar, publisher, 1.9 |
| Houghton, Henry Oscar, Jr., publisher, 2.16 |
| Houghton, Mifflin & Company, Boston publisher, 4.10 |
| Hovey, E. C., secretary, Massachusetts Commission on the Columbian
Exposition, 1.1, 3.2, 3.4, 4.1, 4.5, 5.1, 6.7, 6.14-15, 7.3, 7.17, 9.12, 9.18,
10.1-2, 10.5, 10.11, 11.9 |
| Howe, Archibald M., Boston lawyer, civil service reformer, 10.16 |
| Howells, William Dean, author, 11.13 |
| Hull, Mass., 4.10 |
| return to top of index |
| I |
| Immigration restriction, 5.7-8, 6.15, 7.5, 17.14 |
| Independent Women Voters of Boston, 2.11 |
| Indian Commissioners, United States Board of, 3.6, 3.8, 3.11, 8.2,
11.16-17, 18.8 |
| Insane asylums, 1.6, 3.9-10, 4.1-2, 4.4, 4.7, 4.9, 4.13, 5.1, 6.14, 9.5,
10.1, 11.7-8, 12.1, 18.22 |
| Ireland, Archbishop John, Roman Catholic clergyman, 3.10 |
| Ireland, 1.19, 2.4, 6.2, 8.17, 9.3, 9.10, 11.10, 14.8, 15.1 |
| Irish, 2.3-4, 14.8, 15.1 |
| return to top of index |
| J |
| Jackson, Charles Cabot, stock broker, 7.9, 12.4, 12.11 |
| Janes, Lewis G., religious lecturer, teacher, 2.12, 2.16, 3.12 |
| Jaquith, Henry J., Boston corporation lawyer, 1.7 |
| Jefferson, Joseph, actor, 1.5, 3.4, 5.14, 6.5-6, 7.5, 10.1, 11.10-12,
11.14, 11.16, 12.3 |
| Jefferson, Thomas, President, 15.10-12, 16.11, 17.4 |
| Jews, 6.11, 16.1, 17.14 |
| Johnson, Robert Underwood, associate editor, Century Magazine, 12.3 |
| Jones, James K., United States Senator (Arkansas), 12.8 |
| return to top of index |
| K |
| Kapiolani, Queen (Hawaii), 1.11 |
| Keane, John J., rector, Catholic University of America, 10.17 |
| Keller, Arthur H., Alabama publisher, 9.10 |
| Keller, Helen, author, feminist, advocate for the handicapped, 9.10,
10.17 |
| Kelly, John L., Boston City Councilman, 12.7 |
| Kelly, Patrick H., Minnesota businessman, 11.15 |
| Kennedy, Patrick J., Boston Democratic leader, 12.7 |
| Kenny, Thomas J., Boston lawyer, Democratic leader, 3.3 |
| Knights of Labor, 9.15, 11.13 |
| Knowlton, Hosea M., Massachusetts Attorney General, 12.1 |
| return to top of index |
| L |
| Labor, 1.11, 2.5, 2.10, 3.3, 3.7, 5.5, 6.4, 7.17, 13.2, 13.13, 16.3,
17.17, 18.22, 20.4 |
| Ladies Hermitage Association (Nashville, Tenn.), 3.11, 17.6 |
| Lamb, Henry W., manufacturer, 10.16, 12.19 |
| Lamont, Daniel S., Secretary of War, 1.6, 10.1, 12.1 |
| Lane, Franklin K., California lawyer, later Secretary of the Interior,
3.7 |
| Lane, Gardiner M., investment banker, 2.3 |
| Laurier, Wilfrid, Canadian statesman, 3.7, 12.16, 16.2 |
| Lawrence, William, Episcopal Bishop of Massachusetts, 7.3, 12.1 |
| League of American Wheelmen, 4.1, 7.16, 10.9, 12.3, 12.14, 12.18 |
| Lee, Henry, investment banker, 1.13, 2.4, 10.17 |
| Leslie's Weekly, 12.7-8 |
| Liliuokalani, Princess (Hawaii), 1.11 |
| Lincoln, Waldo, manufacturer, 2.15 |
| Lindsay, John D., New York lawyer, reformer, 4.12 |
| Lobby, 2.9-10, 4.5, 4.8, 16.3, 16.6, 17.14 |
| Lodge, Henry Cabot, Massachusetts Congressman, United States Senator,
1.16, 2.15, 3.4, 5.15, 13.10, 14.13, 16.11 |
| Lodging houses, 5.6, 17.14 |
| Long, John D., former Massachusetts Governor, later Secretary of the
Navy, 3.6, 8.16, 17.11 |
| Lovering, Henry B., former Massachusetts Congressman, prison warden,
2.2, 8.9 |
| Low, A. Maurice, British author, journalist, 4.15, 5.1 |
| Lowell, James Russell, poet, diplomat, 1.19, 2.14 |
| Lowell, Mass., 3.3 |
| Lyman, Arthur T., manufacturer, 1.13 |
| return to top of index |
| M |
| McAdoo, William, Assistant Secretary of the Navy, 11.15 |
| McClellan, George B., soldier, 2.15 |
| McEttrick, Michael J., Massachusetts state representative, Congressman,
3.12, 10.8-9 |
| McKenzie, Alexander, Congregational clergyman, 1.9, 2.2, 7.9, 8.19,
8.21, 11.2, 11.16, 23 |
| McKinley, William, Ohio Congressman, President, 7.19, 8.15, 11.14,
12.7-9, 12.14, 12.18, 14.3, 16.10, 17.8 |
| McKinley Tariff (1890), 2.2, 3.6, 4.4, 5.15, 6.15, 7.19, 11.15, 12.6,
13.12-17, 14.3, 16.10, 20.1-14 |
| McMillin, Benton, Tennessee Congressman, 4.14 |
| McPherson, John R., United States Senator (New Jersey), 2.4,
2.12 |
| MacVeagh, Franklin, Illinois businessman, later Secretary of the
Treasury, 11.14 |
| Maguire, Patrick, Boston Democratic leader, editor, the
Republic, 5.16, 10.5 |
| Marblehead, Mass., 20.14 |
| Marden, Orison Swett, editor, author, 11.17 |
| Massachusetts Agricultural College, 2.12, 2.15, 5.11, 11.14-15 |
| Massachusetts General Hospital, 8.9 |
| Massachusetts Historical Society, 9.3 |
| Massachusetts Prison Association, 2.12 |
| Massachusetts State Grange, 1.16 |
| Massachusetts Society for Promoting Good Citizenship, 3.8 |
| Massachusetts Superior Court, 5.3 |
| Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 2.15, 3.9 |
| Massachusetts Woman's Christian Temperance Union, 3.2 |
| Matthews, Nathan, Boston Mayor, 1.16, 3.2, 4.16, 5.5, 5.10, 5.16, 6.1,
8.18, 8.20, 9.17, 10.6, 23 |
| Mead, Edwin D., editor, New England
Magazine, 3.3, 3.8-9, 5.8, 6.2, 8.8, 10.18 |
| Mellen, James, Massachusetts state legislator, 1.16, 3.12, 18.21 |
| Metropolitan District (Greater Boston), 1.7, 3.7, 4.1, 5.11-14, 6.1,
7.13, 7.17-18, 16.6, 17.18, 19.3 |
| Metropolitan Park Commission, 1.7, 4.1, 5.11-14, 6.1, 7.17-18,
16.6 |
| Metropolitan Sewerage Commissioners, Massachusetts Board of, 3.7, 4.1,
7.13, 19.3 |
| Mexico, 8.9 |
| Milburn, W. H., chaplain, United States Senate, 11.7 |
| Miles, Nelson A., soldier, 6.17, 12.3 |
| Miller, Warner, former United States Senator (New York), president,
Nicaragua Canal Construction Company, 5.3 |
| Mills Tariff Bill (1889), 1.13, 11.9 |
| Monroe Doctrine, 12.3 |
| Moody, William H., Massachusetts Congressman, later Secretary of the
Navy, 12.19 |
| Moral Education Association, 5.7 |
| Moran, John B., Boston lawyer, later Democratic leader, 7.2, 9.11,
9.13 |
| Morgan, J. Pierpont, financier, 9.1 |
| Morse, Leopold, businessman, former Massachusetts Congressman, 1.16,
3.5, 20.3 |
| Morton, J. Sterling, Secretary of Agriculture, 12.18 |
| Morton, Levi P., Vice-President, New York Governor, 11.14 |
| Moseley, F. S., stock broker, 1.13 |
| Mugwumps, 2.2, 2.6, 3.4, 7.7 |
| Municipal ownership, 15.8, 17.16, 23 |
| Munsey, Frank A. & Company, publishers, 7.1 |
| Munsey's Magazine, 7.1 |
| Myrick, Herbert, agricultural editor and publisher, 1.16, 5.7,
5.12 |
| return to top of index |
| N |
| National-American Woman Suffrage Association, 5.1 |
| National Association of Democratic Clubs, 11.12, 12.6, 20.11 |
| National Board of Fire Underwriters, 5.4 |
| National Continental Union League, 9.4 |
| National League for Good Roads, 1.2, 7.14 |
| National League for the Protection of American Institutions,
17.3 |
| National League of College Democratic Clubs, 12.5 |
| National Woman's Relief Corps Home, 6.4 |
| Naval War College, 12.2, 15.4, 15.7 |
| Nelson, Henry Loomis, author, editor, Harper's
Weekly, 1.3, 2.15, 12.13-15 |
| New Bedford, Mass., 1.13, 8.16 |
| New England Historic-Genealogical Society, 3.9 |
| New England Homestead, 1.14 |
| New England Magazine, 10.18 |
| New England Shoe Leather Association, 1.12 |
| New England Tariff Reform League, 3.7, 20.4, 20.6, 20.11 |
| New York and New England Railroad, 2.13 |
| New York Herald, 11.9 |
| New York Independent, 6.7 |
| New York Journal, 12.8, 12.12, 12.15,
12.17 |
| New York Tribune, 11.7 |
| New York World, 2.10, 2.15, 3.3, 3.6,
4.4, 4.7, 4.14, 6.9, 6.15, 7.11, 7.19, 9.9, 10.9, 11.2, 11.14, 12.7, 12.13-14,
12.16 |
| Newburyport, Mass., 1.7, 17.7 |
| Nicaragua Canal Construction Company, 5.3, 10.10 |
| North Adams, Mass., 13.11 |
| North American Review, 1.6, 6.15, 10.20,
11.1, 11.3, 12.8 |
| Northampton, Mass., 1.13 |
| Norton, Charles Eliot, professor, history of art, Harvard, 1.12, 2.16,
10.5, 11.13, 12.3, 12.19 |
| return to top of index |
| O |
| O'Brien, Hugh, former Boston Mayor, 1.16 |
| O'Brien, James, former New York Congressman, 12.7 |
| O'Brien, Robert Lincoln, secretary to President Cleveland, later Boston
Transcript editor, 10.3 |
| Ochs, Adolph S., publisher, Chattanooga Times, later publisher, New York
Times, 9.2, 11.15 |
| O'Kane, Bernard, Democratic office-seeker, 1.2, 2.12-13, 3.11, 4.5, 4.7,
4.13, 5.15-16, 6.2, 6.9, 6.14, 7.19, 8.2, 8.5, 8.8, 8.18, 10.4, 10.12,
11.8 |
| Olney, Richard, United States Attorney General, Secretary of State, 1.1,
2.12-13, 2.15, 3.6, 5.4, 8.5, 8.14, 8.17, 11.15, 11.17, 12.4, 12.7 |
| Olney, Richard II, son of Richard Olney, later Congressman, 5.4,
7.19 |
| O'Neil, Joseph H., Massachusetts Congressman, 4.1-2, 4.4-5, 4.7, 5.2,
5.4, 7.15, 11.4 |
| O'Reilly, John Boyle, poet, editor, Boston Pilot, 1.19 |
| return to top of index |
| P |
| Page, Walter Gilman, artist, 11.6 |
| Page, Walter Hines, editor, Forum, later
publisher, diplomat, 11.11-12 |
| Paine, Robert Treat II, philanthropist, 8.14, 8.16, 9.3, 11.1 |
| Palmer Alice Freeman, educator, 6.9, 8.13, 9.16 |
| Palmer, Julius A., Russell political correspondent, 1.1, 2.2, 3.10,
9.17, 10.4 |
| Pardon of criminals, 4.1-2, 4.7, 4.15, 5.11, 6.1, 7.18, 9.6,
10.1 |
| Parental Home Association, 5.3 |
| Parker, George F., journalist, 2.12, 4.2, 4.6, 4.11-13, 7.11, 7.14,
7.19 |
| Parker's Helping Hand Mission (Chelsea, Mass.), 17.5 |
| Parkhurst, Charles, Methodist Episcopal clergyman, editor,
Zion's Herald, 2.16, 6.1 |
| Parkman, Francis, historian, 8.6 |
| Parnell, Charles S., Irish Nationalist leader, 1.19, 3.5 |
| Patronage, 1.1-2, 1.5-7, 1.11, 2.2, 2.6-7, 2.9-11, 2.15-17, 3.7-9,
3.11-12, 4.2-7, 4.10-11, 4.13-16, 5.1-2, 5.6-8, 5.10-12, 5.14-16, 6.1-4, 6.6-7,
6.9-11, 6.13-14, 6.18, 7.2, 7.9, 7.15, 8.4-13, 8.17-18, 8.20-21, 9.1-18,
10.1-4, 10.6-12, 10.15-18, 10.20, 11.2-9, 11.12, 11.16, 12.1, 12.7 |
| Patti, Adelina Juana Maria, opera singer, 12.3 |
| Pattison, Robert E., Pennsylvania Governor, 4.2, 4.6, 6.8 |
| Peabody, Andrew P., Unitarian clergyman, 1.10, 4.2 |
| Peabody, Endicott, headmaster, Groton School, 2.15, 6.15 |
| Peabody, Francis, Jr., Boston lawyer, 2.8-9, 4.10, 6.1, 7.3, 9.16, 10.5,
10.7, 10.17, 12.8 |
| Peabody, Francis G., Harvard theologian, 2.4, 11.11, 11.15 |
| Peffer, William Alfred, United States Senator (Kansas), 3.11 |
| Peirce, James M., professor of mathematics, Harvard, 1.9, 2.2, 7.3,
10.1 |
| Pendleton Act (1882), 1.8 |
| Pennsylvania Mutual Life Insurance Company, 7.18 |
| Pensions, government, 1.7, 5.4, 5.10, 6.4 |
| Perry, Arthur Latham, economist, historian, 3.2 |
| Phillips, Wendell Union, 4.7, 15.16 |
| Pierce, Henry L., businessman, 1.11, 4.8, 6.6 |
| Pillsbury, Albert E., Massachusetts Attorney General, 4.2, 5.8 |
| Pittsfield, Mass., 1.13 |
| Playfair, Lyon, first Baron Playfair of St. Andrews, British scientist
and statesman, 7.6, 11.13 |
| Plympton, Noah A., president, Butler Club, 2.12, 8.4 |
| Poll tax, 15.12, 16.3, 16.5 |
| Powers, Samuel L., Boston lawyer, later Massachusetts Congressman, 3.5,
4.6 |
| Pratt, Ella Farman, children's author, 4.16, 5.10 |
| Pratt, Linwood S., journalist, 3.6, 4.7, 5.11, 6.7 |
| Presidency (Russell candidacy), 1.2, 2.4, 2.7, 3.4, 3.7, 4.1, 4.7-8,
5.2, 7.3-5, 7.8, 11.10, 12.1, 12.4-13 |
| Prisons (Massachusetts), 1.1-2, 1.7, 2.12, 3.7, 3.10, 5.3, 7.10, 7.19,
8.5, 8.7, 8.16-17, 8.19, 9.11, 9.13, 9.18, 10.4, 10.16, 16.6 |
| Prohibition Party, 7.16 |
| Province lands (Massachusetts), 9.15-16, 10.12 |
| Province laws (Massachusetts), 3.6-7 |
| Pulitzer, Joseph, publisher, New York World, 9.6, 10.9 |
| Putnam, Elizabeth C., civic leader, 4.5, 4.8, 6.1-3, 8.14, 10.13 |
| return to top of index |
| Q |
| Quincy, Josiah, Democratic leader, Assistant Secretary of State, later
Boston Mayor, 1.2, 1.4, 1.13, 2.5-7, 2.17, 5.14, 6.6-7, 6.9, 6.16, 8.19, 9.1-2,
9.4, 9.6, 9.9-10, 9.12, 9.15, 10.1, 10.7, 10.9, 10.13, 10.15-16, 12.3, 12.11,
18.12, 23 |
| return to top of index |
| R |
| Railroad Commissioners, Massachusetts Board of, 3.8, 4.2, 5.11,
10.12-13, 10.20 |
| Railroads, 1.20, 3.11, 5.6-7, 6.7, 6.10, 6.18, 9.4, 18.21 |
| Randall, Charles S., Massachusetts Congressman, 4.15, 10.18 |
| Rapid Transit Commissioners, Massachusetts Board of, 2.17, 23 |
| Redfield, William C., Brooklyn Democratic leader, later Secretary of
Commerce, 12.5 |
| Reed, Henry R., Boston merchant, 1.4, 1.17, 2.8, 8.21, 10.4,
12.18 |
| Reform Club (Massachusetts), 2.7, 3.7, 13.18 |
| Reform Club (United States), 2.8, 2.10, 3.4, 3.9, 10.13, 16.1, 18.21,
20.2, 20.10 |
| Republic (Boston), 12.4 |
| Republican Party - Massachusetts, 1.2, 1.8, 1.16, 2.2-3, 3.2-5, 4.2,
7.9, 8.8, 9.15, 13.3-8, 13.10-18, 14.2-3, 14.5-8, 14.10, 14.13-15, 15.1-5,
15.9, 15.14, 15.16, 16.1, 16.8-9, 17.17, 18.21, 22.1-10, 23 |
| Republican Party - United States, 3.8, 4.1-2, 12.3, 13.3-8, 13.10-18,
14.2-3, 14.5-8, 14.10, 14.13-15, 15.1-5, 15.9-10, 15.14, 15.16, 16.1, 16.8-9,
16.11, 17.17, 18.18, 22.1-10, 23 |
| Review of Reviews, 3.4, 6.1,
12.12 |
| Rice, Alexander H., former Massachusetts Governor, 4.5, 14.12,
17.11 |
| Rideing, William Henry, associate editor, North
American Review, 10.20, 12.8 |
| Rindge, Frederick H., philanthropist, 12.1 |
| Roads, Samuel, Jr., secretary to Governor Russell, 1.1, 3.1, 3.6-7,
3.9-10, 4.5, 4.8, 4.10, 4.13-15, 5.2, 5.16, 8.2, 9.16 |
| Robinson, George D., former Massachusetts Governor, 17.11 |
| Roche, James Jeffrey, editor, Boston Pilot, 10.1, 10.8 |
| Roosevelt, Theodore, Republican leader, later President, 8.12, 12.3,
23 |
| Root, Elihu, New York lawyer, later Secretary of State, 11.5, 11.7,
11.9 |
| Ropes, John C., author, Boston lawyer, 10.17 |
| Russell, Charles Theodore, lawyer, father of William E. Russell, 1.8,
2.2, 3.1, 8.17, 10.4, 10.11, 22.9, 23 |
| Russell, Charles Theodore, Jr., lawyer, brother of William E. Russell,
2.9, 3.6, 4.16, 8.15, 10.3, 10.8 |
| Russell, Henry E., businessman, brother of William E. Russell, 2.6,
2.10, 7.17, 11.1, 11.10 |
| Russell, John E., Massachusetts Congressman, 1.12, 3.4, 3.11, 5.15, 7.3,
10.11-12, 10.17, 11.1, 11.12-14, 12.4 |
| Russell, Margaret Manning Swan (Mrs. William E. Russell), 1.7, 1.16,
2.4, 3.5, 4.5, 4.7, 7.14, 9.10, 11.2-5, 11.16, 12.1, 12.3, 12.19, 18.20 |
| Russell, Sarah Elizabeth Ballister (Mrs. Charles Theodore Russell),
mother of William E. Russell, 1.9, 2.16 |
| Russell, William E., Massachusetts Governor, 1.1-24.1 |
| Russell, William E., Democratic Club, 1.7, 6.4, 12.19, 18.20 |
| Russell, William E., Staff Association, 11.10, 18.17 |
| Russell, William E., Jr. (Eustis), son of William E. Russell,
1.1 |
| Russia, 4.6-8, 4.14, 7.19, 8.16 |
| return to top of index |
| S |
| St. Louis Republic, 10.9 |
| Salaries, public employees', 1.3, 5.10, 5.13 |
| Saltonstall, Leverett, Collector of the Port of Boston, 1.2, 1.4, 2.2,
3.4, 4.7, 10.13-14 |
| San Francisco Examiner, 11.4 |
| Sanborn, Franklin B., journalist, 3.9, 4.13, 18.22 |
| Sargent, Charles Sprague, director, Arnold Arboretum (Boston),
5.11-12 |
| Schaff, Morris, author, 10.1 |
| Schouler, James, lawyer, historian, 2.2 |
| Scotland, 14.15 |
| Seelye, Julius H., president, Amherst College, 2.2 |
| Selfridge, Thomas O., Jr., naval officer, 9.8, 9.17, 10.17 |
| Shaler, Nathaniel S., Harvard geologist, 1.11, 3.9, 3.12, 4.5, 4.11,
5.11, 5.14-15, 6.5, 6.10, 6.12, 6.15, 7.15, 7.17, 9.3, 9.18, 10.4, 10.16,
10.18, 11.6, 12.19 |
| Shaw, Albert, editor, Review of Reviews,
3.4, 6.1, 12.12 |
| Sherman, John, Ohio Senator, later Secretary of State, 10.20 |
| Sherman Silver Purchase Act (1890), 17.8 |
| Shuman, Abraham, Boston merchant, 4.11, 7.1, 7.4, 7.19, 8.3,
9.10-11 |
| Simpkins, John, Massachusetts Congressman, 6.8, 10.7-8, 10.10, 10.14,
10.20, 11.5 |
| Sinclair, Upton, author, 7.1 |
| Single tax, 2.12, 4.5, 4.9, 17.16 |
| Sisters of Charity (Carney Hospital), 2.13, 3.6 |
| Smith, Charlotte, editor, Working Woman,
3.9-10 |
| Smith, Hoke, Secretary of the Interior, later Georgia Governor, United
States Senator, 2.8, 3.8, 3.11, 5.15, 7.3, 11.16-17, 12.3 |
| Social Science Institute (Boston), 15.16, 17.6 |
| Society for the Collegiate Instruction of Women, 2.14 |
| Society of the Cincinnati (Massachusetts), 2.15, 5.13, 9.15 |
| Soldiers' Home in Massachusetts, 8.18 |
| Sons of the American Revolution (Massachusetts), 2.13 |
| South, 1.7, 1.17, 2.4-5, 2.7, 7.6, 7.14, 10.6, 13.3, 14.8 |
| Speed, John Gilmer, editor, Leslie's
Weekly, 12.7, 12.16 |
| Springfield, Mass., 1.7 |
| Springfield Republican, 1.16,
6.11 |
| State House (Massachusetts), 1.1, 1.16, 3.6, 5.5, 7.11-12, 17.15 |
| Stearns, George M., Chicopee, Mass. businessman, 1.13, 1.16, 2.2, 2.15,
5.6-7 |
| Stevens, Eben S., woolen manufacturer, 4.6, 5.11, 5.13, 6.13, 6.15-16,
9.15, 11.4, 11.7 |
| Stevens, Moses T., Massachusetts Congressman, 2.7, 6.18, 11.4 |
| Stimson, Frederic Jesup, Boston lawyer, author, 1.4, 2.6, 7.1, 7.4,
10.19 |
| Storey, Moorfield, Boston lawyer, reformer, 2.4, 10.17 |
| Stoughton, Mass., 1.7 |
| Straus, Nathan, New York merchant, 11.15 |
| Straus, Oscar S., American diplomat, 4.5, 7.18 |
| Swift, Henry W., Boston lawyer, 1.6, 2.6, 2.15, 4.11, 5.11, 7.2, 10.15,
10.17, 11.17 |
| Swift, William N., Boston physician, 1.12, 2.8, 2.14, 8.18, 9.8 |
| return to top of index |
| T |
| Taggart, Thomas, Indiana Democratic leader, 5.7 |
| Tammany Hall (New York), 3.2, 11.15-16, 12.7, 12.9, 12.17, 12.19 |
| Tammany Times, 1.1, 12.7, 12.9, 12.17,
12.19 |
| Tarbell, Edmund C., artist, 12.19 |
| Tariff, 1.1, 1.7, 1.11, 2.2-3, 2.5, 2.11, 2.13, 3.5-6, 4.2, 4.14-15,
5.3, 5.7, 5.9, 5.15, 6.2, 6.7, 6.9, 6.15, 7.1, 10.13, 10.17, 10.20, 11.2,
11.4-5, 11.9, 11.12, 11.14-15, 13.1, 13.3-8, 13.10-18, 14.2-3, 14.5-8, 14.10,
14.13-15, 15.3, 15.14, 15.16, 16.1, 16.8-10, 18.18, 18.21, 20.1-14, 21, 22.2,
22.6, 22.9-10, 23 |
| Tariff Reform League, 1.11 |
| Taxation, 4.5, 4.9, 5.1, 7.15, 17.16, 19.1 |
| Taylor, Charles H., publisher, Boston Globe, 2.6, 2.8, 2.15, 3.11, 4.10, 4.15, 5.8-9, 6.1-2,
7.8, 7.13-14, 8.12-13, 10.14, 10.20 |
| Temperance, 1.2, 1.17, 2.10, 2.16, 3.2, 3.10-11, 4.7, 4.16, 5.13, 6.16,
7.7, 7.15, 7.17, 7.19, 8.2, 11.6, 11.8, 13.1, 15.14, 16.3, 17.11, 17.16 |
| Tenement house reform, 1.2, 2.12, 2.15, 4.6, 4.13, 6.18, 7.16,
17.15 |
| Texas, 4.1 |
| Thayer, A. M. & Company, publishers, 3.7, 3.8, 4.13 |
| Thayer, James Bradley, Harvard professor of law, 1.11 |
| Thayer, John E., member, Governor's staff, 2.9, 7.1, 10.13 |
| Tillinghast, Caleb B., Massachusetts state librarian, 5.1, 5.10, 6.18,
7.10, 8.3, 9.1, 11.10 |
| Tillman, Benjamin R., South Carolina Governor, later United States
Senator, 10.10, 10.15 |
| Tobey, Horace P., Cape Cod businessman, 1.16-17, 2.2, 3.2, 4.14, 4.16,
5.3, 7.4, 9.2, 9.4 |
| Topeka Mail, 12.7 |
| Turner, Henry S., Illinois businessman, 1.2, 1.16, 6.6, 8.21,
10.5 |
| Tuttle, Lucius, railway official, 11.17 |
| Tyler, John F., Boston lawyer, 2.14, 5.3, 5.8, 7.3, 17.10 |
| return to top of index |
| U |
| Underwood, F. H., businessman, 2.2, 2.12, 2.15, 4.1, 7.12 |
| Unemployment, 17.15 |
| United States Military Academy (West Point, N.Y.), 17.16 |
| University Magazine, 5.3 |
| return to top of index |
| V |
| Venezuela, 12.3, 12.4, 16.10 |
| Vest, George Graham, United States Senator (Missouri), 4.8 |
| Vice-Presidency (Russell candidacy), 3.5, 3.7, 5.9, 6.2, 12.1 |
| return to top of index |
| W |
| Wadlin, Horace G., statistician, 3.7, 6.15, 7.14 |
| Walker, Francis A., president, Massachusetts Institute of Technology,
2.10, 3.7, 3.9, 4.3, 5.8, 11.10 |
| Waltham, Mass., 19.4 |
| Walton, Mason Augustus, author, 1.16-17, 4.1, 8.1, 11.4, 12.1 |
| Wanamaker, John, Postmaster General, 20.3 |
| Warner, Joseph B., Cambridge, Mass. lawyer, 9.18, 10.7-8, 10.12,
10.17 |
| Warren, Charles, secretary to Governor Russell, 1.3, 9.18, 11.3 |
| Warren, William F., president, Boston University, 1.2, 2.2 |
| Warren, Winslow, Boston lawyer, 1.17, 1.20, 2.7, 2.10-11, 3.4, 3.7,
5.13, 6.13, 6.15, 9.15, 9.17 |
| Washington, George, President, 17.4 |
| Washington Post, 17.1 |
| Watterson, Henry, editor, Louisville Courier-Journal, 2.8, 11.8 |
| Wayland, Francis, Dean, Yale Law School, 11.10-11 |
| Webster, Daniel, Secretary of State, United States Senator
(Massachusetts), 6.15 |
| Wellesley College, 11.16 |
| Wells, Kate Gannett, member, Massachusetts Board of Education,
2.14 |
| Wells Memorial Institute for Workingmen (Boston), 12.4, 15.1 |
| West End Railway (Boston), 2.4 |
| Westfield, Mass., 1.13 |
| Westport, Mass., 17.7 |
| Wetherbee, J. Otis, Boston businessman, 1.6, 2.14, 2.16, 3.1, 4.1, 5.5,
8.17, 9.2, 9.15 |
| Wharton, William F., Assistant Secretary of State, 2.17, 4.15,
6.17 |
| Wheelwright, John T., Boston lawyer, reformer, 1.3, 1.16, 2.4, 2.9,
2.11, 3.5, 5.8, 10.8, 10.15, 10.19, 11.1, 11.10, 12.19, 18.20 |
| White, Andrew D., educator, diplomat, 8.16 |
| White, Horace, editor, New York Evening Post, 12.12 |
| Whitman, Edmund A., Boston lawyer, 3.10, 7.17, 9.1, 9.18 |
| Whitney, Henry M., Boston railway magnate, 10.6-8, 10.10 |
| Whitney, William C., former Secretary of the Navy, 2.10, 4.5, 11.15,
12.13-16, 12.18 |
| Williams, George Fred, Massachusetts Congressman, 2.9, 4.4, 4.16, 5.3,
12.12, 19.1 |
| Williams, Moses, Boston lawyer, 1.2, 5.1, 5.13 |
| Williams College, 15.1 |
| Wilson, James Grant, author, 11.13-15 |
| Wilson, William L., Georgia Congressman, Postmaster General, 1.1, 1.6-7,
1.12, 4.8, 4.16, 5.7, 10.15, 11.14, 12.3, 12.15, 15.5 |
| Wilson-Gorman Tariff (1894), 11.6, 11.12, 11.14 |
| Winthrop, Robert C., former United States Senator (Massachusetts) and
Speaker, United States House of Representatives, 1.5, 1.18, 11.10 |
| Woman suffrage, 2.11, 5.1 |
| Woman's National Industrial League of America, 3.9 |
| Woodberry, George E., poet, critic, 2.3, 5.9 |
| Wool Consumers' Association, 19.2, 20.5 |
| Worcester, Mass., 17.7 |
| Working Woman, 22.10 |
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| Y |
| Yale University, 3.5, 15.3, 15.5-6 |
| Yale University Law School, 3.5, 15.3, 15.5 |
| Young Men's Christian Association, 10.3, 17.11 |
| Young Men's Democratic Club of Massachusetts, 1.7 ,1.13-14, 1.19, 2.2,
6.7, 8.14, 8.16, 10.4, 10.16, 13.7-8, 13.11, 13.17, 14.2, 14.7, 14.15, 15.9,
16.8-9, 20.4 |
| return to top of index |
William Eustis Russell papers, Massachusetts Historical Society.
This collection is indexed under the following headings in
ABIGAIL,
the online catalog of the Massachusetts Historical Society. Researchers
desiring materials about related persons, organizations, or subjects should
search the catalog using these headings.
| | |
| Persons: |
| | Atkinson, Edward, 1827-1905. |
| | Bradford, Gamaliel, 1831-1911. |
| | Cleveland, Grover, 1837-1908. |
| | Collins, Patrick A. (Patrick Andrew),
1844-1905. |
| | Hamlin, Charles, 1861-1938. |
| | Higginson, Thomas Wentworth,
1823-1911. |
| | Jefferson, Joseph, 1829-1905. |
| | Matthews, Nathan, 1854-1927. |
| | O'Neil, Joseph H. (Joseph Henry), b.
1853. |
| | Olney, Richard, 1835-1917. |
| | Quincy, Josiah, 1859-1919. |
| | Russell, Charles Theodore, 1815-1896. |
| | Russell, Charles Theodore, 1851-1903. |
| | Russell, Margaret Manning Swan. |
| | Taylor, Charles H., 1846-1921. |
| | Whitney, William C. (William Collins),
1841-1904. |
| | Wilson, William Lyne, 1843-1900. |
| | |
| Organizations: |
| | Cambridge (Mass.). Mayor (1885-1889 :
Russell). |
| | Democratic Party (Mass.). |
| | Democratic Party (U.S.). |
| | Massachusetts. Governor (1891-1894 :
Russell). |
| | William E. Russell Democratic Club
(Mass.). |
| | Young Men's Democratic Club of
Massachusetts. |
| | |
| Subjects: |
| | Silver question. |
| | Tariff. |
|