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Full text of "Chicago illustrated, 1820 to 1880 : also a condensed history of the Orders of Knighthood, including an official programme of the Triennial Conclave of the Knights Templar of the United States to be held in Chicago, August, 1880"

I 




ALSO ft HISTORY OF 






CONCLAVE TO BE 
kloLDEN IN CHICASO1 



siied by Vai: \ Lor, 



Chicago. 



UNIVERSITY OF 

ILLI.HOI5 U80VRY 
AT URBANA CHAMPAIGN 

ILL HIST. SURVEY 



zi n DID nn a a n n c 




CHICAGO ILLUSTRATED, 

1020 TO ieso. 



ALSO A CONDENSED HISTORY OF THE 

ORDERS OF KNIGHTHOOD, 



I N C I. I' D I NO AX 



OFFICIAL PROGRAMME 



TRIENNIAL CONCLAVE 



A 



NIGHTS EMPLAR 



OF THE UNITED STATES, 

TO BE ZETIEIjID 1 3ST 



AUGUST, 188O. 



COMPILED AXD PUBLISHED BV 

VANDERCOOK & CO., CHICAGO. 
1880. 



Entered according to act of Congress, May, iSSo, in the office of the 
Librarian of Congress, at Washington, D. C. 



PRINTEn BY ELECTRO-TYPED BY 

CL-SHINO, THOMAS & Co., JL'KGBLUT, HEXRICKS A- I'o., 

CHICAGO. CHICAGO. 



INDEX 



PAGE. 

Amusement, Places- of. 32 

Banks 28 

Cemeteries __ .. 33 

- 

Charitable Institutions _ _ 27 

Chicago, Historical 7 

Chicago, Map of Frontispiece _ 

Churches, Principal. 22 

City Officials _ 21 

Colleges and Seminaries _ 29 

Express Companies 30 

Grand Encampment of Knights Templar, History of ... 57 

Grand Encampment of Knights Templar, Programme for 1880 S^ 

Grand Encampment Tableau '69 

Grand Recorders - 74 

Hack Ordinance 42 

Introductory __ 5 

Judiciary 30 

Knights Templar, Historical _ 45 

Masonic Bodies _ 40 

Newspapers 31 

Notable Blocks and Buildings 33 

Parks and Boulevards _ 19 

Public Libraries and Reading Rooms _ 30 

Railroad Depots 31 

Railroad Ticket Offices _ 31 

Societies 33 

Street Car Lines 23 

Triennial Committee 75 




RESIDENCE OF JOHN EJ-NZii. ilKST HOUSE IS CUICAOO. 



INTRODUCTORY, 



The year 1880 is destined to mark a new era in the history of Chi- 
cago, and will be recorded as an eventful one by those who have been 
reared within her borders, and lived to witness what is confidently 
believed will be one of the grandest and most glorious assemblages of 
Knights Templar the world has ever known. 

In placing this work before the public, the compilers have endeav- 
ored to encompass in as brief a manner as possible much information 
respecting the early days of Chicago, her astonishing growth, and her 
present proud position among the great cities of America, together 
with views of Public Buildings, Hotels, Theaters, etc., the location of 
Places of Amusement, Post Office, Hotels, Banks, Newspaper offices, 
Churches, Kailway Depots and Ticket offices, Telegraph offices, the 
ordinance relating to Hacks, and matter of a character to interest the 
thousands of strangers who will visit the city during the present sum- 
mer. The index page will readily direct the reader where to find 
the desired information upon any subject named, and it is confidently 
believed that the thorough researches of the publishers and the result 
of their labors as given herein, will cover every required point, be 
found full and complete, and abide the test of criticism. 

Brevity has been studiously observed, riot by meagerness of mate- 
rial, but by compression of matter; and it is intended to be a valuable 
and comprehensive book of reference for the citizen of Chicago, as 
well as an almost indispensable guide to the stranger. 

Included in the work will be found a short and concise history of 
the Order of Knights Templar, and of the General Grand Encamp- 
ment of the United States, together with a full and Official Programme 
of the festivities to be tendered during the Triennial Conclave to be 
held in Chicago in August, 1880. 

All of which is respectfully submitted by 

THE PUBLISHERS. 




THE OLD BLOCK BOUSE. 



CHICAGO, 1820 TO 1880. 



A history of Chicago ! Verily the words are light and simple ; but 
the task of writing a full and complete narrative of this now great 
metropolis, from the days of Marquette and Joliet, when the foot of 
the white man began first to press the soil whereon now stand hun- 
dreds of palatial monuments, tracing the magic work of more than 
three score years, would be an herculean one indeed. Hundreds of 
pages have been, and hundreds more might be, written of the won- 
derful growth of the city, and the incidents and reminiscences would 
fill a volume of no mean dimensions. But the publishers of this book 
design giving merely the outlines of such a history, without descend- 
ing to details, and thus comprise the more important events in the 
life of what must be regarded as one of the greatest commercial cen- 
ters of the world. 

The name " Illinois " is derived from Leno " man." The Dela- 
ware Indians called themselves Lenno-Lenape, which means "origin- 
al " or " unmixed men." The tribes along the Illinois gave the 
French explorers to understand that they were pure blooded, real men. 
The termination " ois " is undoubtedly of French origin. 

The first white men M r ho visited this region were Marquette and 
Joliet, two Jesuit missionaries, in 1662-3. Canada eventually fell 
into the hands of the English, and the war of the revolution trans- 
ferred the Northwestern possessions of the British to the United 
States. English intrigue still stirred up Indian warfare upon our 
border, and so embittered did it become that after peace was effected 
a general war of the western Indians against the United States was 
declared. This was continued till the year 1795, when, having been 
roughly handled and severely chastised by Gen. Wayne, the Chiefs of 



EAKI.Y DAYS (IF CHICAGO. 



the several tribes concluded a treaty, of peace with him, which closed 
the war of the west. In this treaty the Indians ceded to the United 
States, among other small tracts of land, one described as " one piece 
of land six miles square, at the month of Chickajo (Chicago) river, 
where a Fort formerly stood." In this treaty is contained the first 
land trade of this city. 

Not many years passed after this " tract and parcel of land " had 
been ceded to the United States, ere the energetic proprietors thought 
it practicable to enter upon actual possession. A trade was already 
established with the Indians, which needed protection ; and in these 
regions, remote from civilization, peace could not well be maintained 
among the tribes without a show of that restraining force which was 
at command. Accordingly, in 1804 the government built the first 
United States fort occupying this locality. It stood nearly on the site 
of the fort erected in 1816, and finally demolished in the summer of 
1856. It was somewhat different in its structure from its successor 
having two block houses, one on the south-east corner, the other at the 
north-west. On the north side was a sally-port, or subterranean pas- 
sage, leading from the parade ground to the river, designed as a place 
of escape in an emergency, or for supplying the garrison with water 
in time of a siege. The whole was enclose'd by a strong palisade of 
wooden pickets. At the west of the fort, and fronting north on the 
river, was a two-story log building, covered with split oak siding, 
which was the United States factory, attached to the- fort. On the 
shore of the river, between the fort and the factory, were the root 
houses or cellars of the garrison. The ground adjoining the fort on 
the south side was enclosed and cultivated as a garden. The fort was 
furnished with three pieces of light artillery. A company of United 
States troops, about fifty in number, many of whom were invalids, 
constituted the garrison. It received the name of Fort Dearborn, by 
which it was ever after known as long as it continued a military post. 
Such was the old fort previous to 1812. 

Up to the time of the erection of this fort no white man had made 
here his home. The Pottawatomie Indians had undisputed sway. 



o 

c 
o 



to 

o 




EARLY DAVS OF CHICAGO. 9 

Their villages were all in this vicinity. In addition to the garrison, 
there soon gathered here a few families of French, Canadians and 
half-breeds, consisting of that floating class which hang about a mili- 
tary post or an Indian trading station. Whatever there was of civil- 
ized society, which has connected those days of the past in a bright 
chain of identity with the present, was sustained in the Kinzie family. 
And such was the nucleus of a community formed in the center of 
the North- West but half a century ago, shut out from communication 
with all the world, except by the waters of the lakes passed over but 
once or twice a year by a single sail vessel or by Indian trails to 
other almost as isolated communities, at St. Louis, Detroit or Fort 
Wayne. It was certainly a way-mark in the wilderness far in advance 
of civilization. They were a little world unto themselves. They 
pursued in an even way the narrow routine of pioneer life, furnishing 
few incidents of sufficient note to fill up a page of historv, from the 
time of the erection of this fort, till the one great incident, which 
blotted it out the massacre of 1812. 

When the war with Great Britain broke out, our Government, ap- 
prehensive that so distant a post could not be maintained, ordered the 
commander to distribute the Government property among the Indians, 
and march his troops to Fort Wayne. Nearly all the officers remon- 
strated against carrying out the instructions, but Capt. Heald called 
a council, and laid the propositions of the Government before the In- 
dians, asking in return their escort to Fort Wayne, which they prom- 
ised to give. 

The fort was well supplied with provisions and military stores, but 
during the night, lest the guns and ammunition which they were to 
distribute the next day to the savages might prove a dangerous gift, 
although promised to them, the powder was thrown into the well, the 
guns were broken, the cannon thrown into the river, and the liquor 
shared the same fate. When the Indians came together the following 
day to receive the promised presents, they gave evidence of dissatis- 
faction and deep seated revenge, when only the remaining goods were 
distributed. They charged the whites with bad faith, and, aroused to 



10 



EARLY DAYS OF CHICAGO. 



the highest pitch of resentment, left the immediate vicinity, to pre- 
pare for a bitter revenge. 

On the morning of the 15th of August the troops took up their 
line of march for Fort Wayne, and had proceeded along the lake shore 
about a mile and a half when they were suddenly attacked by a party 
of Pottawatomies, who lay in ambush behind the sand hills. Although 
the troops did not flinch for a moment, but charged and dislodged the 
Indians in front, their great numbers enabled them to outflank the 
troops, and being under a heavy cross-fire, Capt. Heald, confident that 
further resistance was entirely vain, agreed to surrender on condition 
that the lives of the prisoners should be spared. 




FORT DEARBORN. 

The troops delivered up their arms, and were marched back to the 
fort. The Indians violated their agreement, and the fort was plundered 
and burned. The children, twelve in number, were placed in a bag- 
gage wagon and slain by the tomahawk of a single savage. Twenty- 
six of the regular troops and twelve militiamen, with two women, were 
killed in the action and subsequent massacre. No effort was made to 
re-establish the fort during the war. 

In 1S1G it was rebuilt, and continued to be occupied till 1837, when 




CHICAGO IN 1833. 



EARLY DAYS OF CHICAGO. 11 

it was abandoned. On a part of the grounds of the fort the U. S. 
Marine Hospital stood for many years. 

In ISO-t the first house was built here by John Kinzie, an Indian 
trader, and in 1818 there were but two white families resident. The 
American Fur Company had trading posts at convenient distances all 
through this section. In 1828 another Indian war was threatened, 
but the Indians were pacified by the presence of a large force under 
Gen. Atkinson, and very little mischief was done. 

Cook county was organized in March 1831, and included all the ter- 
ritory in the counties of Lake, Mclienry, Dupage, "Will and Iroquois, 
and there were but a dozen families constituting, with the officers and 
soldiers in the fort, the entire population of Chicago at this time. 
The original town was surveyed in 1829, and the first map was made 
by James Thompson, being dated August 4, 1830. 

The winter of 1831-2 was long and intensely cold, and on the ap- 
proach of spring it was announced that Black Hawk, with about 500 
Sank and Fox Indians, was moving up Rock "River with hostile intent, 
burning houses and destroying property. What few inhabitants were 
in the surrounding country made their way to Chicago, and by the 
middle of May near seven hundred souls, two-thirds of whom were 
women and children, sought safety in Fort Dearborn, where no effort 
was spared by the officer in charge, Col. Owen, to accommodate all 
that came. After the defeat of Black Hawk, and his capture in Aug- 
ust, and delivery at Prairie du Chien, the war terminated, and the 
Indians relinquished all their claim to the country, and agreed to move 
west of the Missouri. 

The first election for five Trustees of the Town of Chicago was held 
August 10, 1833, at which there were twenty-eight voters. On the 
26th of November, of the same year, the first newspaper printed in 
Chicago was published by John Calhoun. 

During the summer of 1833, Chicago, in population, grew rapidly. 

At that time there was but one mail per week received here, which 

was carried on horseback from Niles, Michigan. In 1834 it is said 

that emigration had fairly commenced, and the arrivals by boat and 

I 



12 



EARLY DAYS OF CHICAGO. 



otherwise averaged ten persons per clay, and the total number of votes 
polled in Cook County at the August election of that year was 528, 
while in November, 1835, at the first census taken, the Town contained 
3,265 and the County 9,773 inhabitants. 

The Fire Department was organized in September, 1835, and in 
October, 1836, steps were taken towards obtaining a city charter. 
The charter was granted by the Legislature, and approved March 4, 
1837, and the first election for city officers was held in May, 1837, 
when William B. Ogden was chosen Mayor, John Shrigley High 
Constable, and N. B. Judd City Attorne} r . From this time onward 
the growth of Chicago an increase never before equalled by any city 
in the history of the world was assured. 

The city began to attract the attention of the outside world about 
the year 1850. In little more than a decade she had risen from a vil- 
lage of a few hundred inhabitants to be a city with a population of 
thirty thousand of the widest-awake and most energetic people on the 
face of the earth. 

Page's Guide thus refers to this portion of the history of Chicago : 

" An opportunity unparalleled 
lay before her. The heart of the 
continent, containing millions of 
square miles of fertile soil, was al- 
most untapped ; an immense terri- 
tory was waiting for the plough. A 
great commerce was destined to flow 
from these hitherto unoccupied 
lands. Where should it find its 
center ? Older cities were reaching 
out after it ; they had accumulated 
capital, established lines of com- 
munication, the great central rivers of the continent to aid them. 
Chicago held command of the lakes the finest system of inland navi- 
gation ever known. 

"A new power in commerce came to the front with giant strides 




EARLY DAYS OF CHICAGO. 



13 



the locomotive, destined to be the great agent in peopling the prai- 
ries of the West. This powerful ally was on the side of whoever 
could bring it to bear the soonest and most effectively ; natural ad- 
vantages became secondary ; the command of railway lines was the 
first thing to be secured. Our citizens of thirty years ago were alive 
to these facts ; they were not the men to miss the tide at its flood. 
Railway communications were secured in all directions with the least 




CHAMBER OF COMMERCE, CORNER WASHINGTON AND LASALLE STREETS. 

possible delay. In 1852 the Lake Shore and Michigan Central lines 
each established their connections with Chicago, and from that time 
onward year by year new roads were added, till now a score of trunk 
lines radiating in all directions, and aggregating over 12,000 miles of 
road, have their center in Chicago. 



14 



EAKLY DAYS OF CHICAGO. 



" But the wisest of our citizens of the early days of 1850 could 
scarcely have dreamed of the wonderful strides Chicago was destined 
to make in population and trade. . The census of 1860 showed that 
our population had advanced from 30,000 to 112,172 in ten years. No 
o:lier city under the sun has ever shown such great progress as this ! 




CEXTKAI, MUSIC HALL, CUKXEK STATE AM) RANDOLPH STREETS. 

In 1870 the census showed a population of 298,977, again nearly three 
hundred per cent, of an increase in ten years. The decade jnst passed 
has been a period mainly of depression in business throughout the 
world, and one of especial trial to Chicago ; but there has been no 
halt in her progress, and the lowest estimates now place our popu 
lation at between five and six hundred thousand souls. 



EAELY DAYS OF CHICAGO. 



15 



" That the commerce of the city has more than kept pace with its 
population, the following figures will clearly show : 

" Business done by wholesale dealers and manufacturers, 1850 $ 20,000,000 

1860 97,000,000 

" 1870 377,000,000 

1879 764.000,000 

" These enormous amounts do not include the business done by re- 
tailers, nor are they the result of the combined purchases and sales of 
wholesale houses, but represent only the amount of sales made, after 




STATE STREET FROM WASHINGTON, SOUTH PALMER HOUSE IN DISTANCE. 

deducting the value of goods handled twice that is to say, such 
goods as are manufactured in the city and sold through our wholesale 
merchants. As has been intimated, no other city has ever had equal 
opportunities of advancement with Chicago ; but, on the other hand, 
there have been unprecedented difficulties to overcome, and the way m 
which these have been met and conquered is such as to challenge the 
admiration of the world, and to prove that it is not alone the natural 



16 



EARLY PAYS OF CHICAGO. 



advantages of her situation that have made Chicago what she is, but 
that these have been seconded in no ordinary degree by the indomita- 
ble coiwage and dauntless energy of her citizens." 

The disaster of 1871, when the great fire-fiend appalled the world 
by the almost total destruction of the city, is of so recent a date that 
but few words are needed in relation to it here. The entire business 
portion ot the city was consumed, and over one hundred thousand of 
its inhabitants were left homeless and impoverished. About eighteen 





VIEW OF CHICAGO FROM THE I.AKE. 

thousand buildings were destroyed, and two hundred millions of dol- 
lars worth of property laid in ashes. The people of all countries 
manifested their sympathy most heartily, and came to the relief of a 
community whose energy, perseverance and progressive spirit, without 
wasting an hour in vain regret, set them about rebuilding their city, 
and it is now more substantial, imposing and grander than it was be- 




TKIJJUXE liUILULNG, COKJfElt MAUISOX AM) UEAKBOKN STREETS. 



EARLY DAYS OF CHICAGO. 



17 



fore. Strangers who now look upon the magnificent granite buildings 
which cover the old ruins of 1871, are struck with wonder at the ele- 
gance of the work, and the speed witli which they have been reared. 
Truly, it is something to astonish mankind. 

A humorous anec- 
dote is related to illus- 
trate the spirit and 
"vim" of the men who 
made Chicago. An 
I intelligent and shrewd 
gentleman arrived one 
morning several years 
since, intending to lo- 
cate, and searched in 
vain for a store room 
or place of business ; 
but everything was 
snapped up as soon as 
completed, which fact 
convinced him that 
he must use his sharp- 
est wits, and keep his 
;E: eyes open, or " get 
left." When almost 
discouraged and about 
CHICAGO RIVER CLARK STREET BRIDGE. to abandon his pro- 

ject, he one day met a son of Erin, armed with pick and shovel, on 
his way to work. He inquired of Pat where he was laboring, and was 
informed that he was just about to commence work on a new building 
at a certain place. The anxious would-be settler followed him up, 
and learning who the proprietor of the contemplated building was, 
" went for him " and secured the first floor before even the foundation 
walls were laid. In thirty days the party was selling goods in the 




18 EARLV DAYS OF CHICAGO. 

new building, and is now one of our wealthiest and most energetic 
citizens. This is characteristic of the progressive spirit her people 
have always evinced. 

To-day, only a little more than eight years from the time of the dis- 
aster, the city presents so many miles of stately streets, such evidences 
on eveYy hand of accumulated wealth, that the visitor can scarcely 
realize the fact that all he sees has been created within so short a 
time. It seems more like a tale from the Arabian Nights than a sober 
reality of the present age. 

Less than three years after the Great Fire, Chicago was visited with 
another conflagration. On July 14, 1874, a fire broke out in the heart 
of the city which swept over eighteen blocks, and destroyed $4,000,000 
worth of property. Fortunately in this case the solid edifices, which 
are the pride of the city, were spared, most of those destroyed being 
wooden shanties which could with much benefit be replaced with 
buildings of a more substantial sort. 

From 1874 the march of Chicago has been steadily upward and 
onward, and every step has been an advance. Buildings are being 
erected on every hand, and are occupied the moment they are com- 
pleted. Indeed, during all the years of commercial depression she 
has seemed to feel it less than her neighboring and sister cities, and 
thus in the beginning of the summer of 1880 she stands proiidly be- 
fore the world as one of the wonders of the nineteenth century. 

A word, in conclusion, as to the health of the city. Some of the 
newspapers, during the past few years, in a spirit of sportive irony 
have bantered the editor of the Tribune upon his enthusiastic praises 
of Chicago as a "summer resort." But Mr. Medill never spoke truer 
words than when he asserted that this is one of the healthiest cities 
in the world. With the lake on the east, and the broad prairies sur- 
rounding us westward, we have at all times during the heated terms 
in other western cities, a healthful and invigorating breeze, and those 
of our citizens who, for a change of sir, -make pleasure tours in mid- 
summer, are generally giad to get back. The mortality reports of the 
city will compare most favorably with those of any other city in the 
country. 




VIEW OF LASALLE STKEET, LUUXING- SOUTH. 



PARKS AND BOULEVARDS. 



The system of Parks and Boulevards in Chicago is certainly more 
elaborate than that of any city in the country, and when completed a 
belt of verdure will surround the city on its northern, western and 
southern margins. The bulk of the ground devoted to Park purposes 
has been purchased within the last twelve years, at a cost, with the 
improvements, of over ten millions of dollars. The Parks are em- 
braced in one comprehensive scheme, which is certainly unique, and 
characterized by that thoroughness which distinguishes all Chicago 
undertakings. 

.Lincoln Park, situated on 
the North Side, on the lake 
shore, has a frontage, inclu- 
ding the drive from the Wa- 
ter Works, of two and a 
quarter miles. For a prairie 
country this Park id a re- 
markably picturesque one 
a literal blooming garden. 

The next and most striking 
in the series is Humboldt 
Park, situated at the north- 
western limits of the city. 

Central Park, one mile 
south of Humboldt Park, its 
center traversed by Madison 
LAKE VIEW IN LINCOLN PARK. street, one of the great tho- 

roughfares of the city, is the great feature of the West Side Park 
system. 

To the south of Central, and on a line with Humboldt, lies Douglas 
Park, which has its own many striking and pleasing features. 

On the South side of the city the great South Parks are located, 

which are connected with the West Side system and the center of the 
19 




20 



PARKS AND BOULEVARDS. 



^H ' ' ~ . 



city by Boulevards, from two to four hundred feet wide. Being situ- 
ated conveniently to one of the most aristocratic quarters of the city, 

they are more espe- 
cially the resort of 
our well-to-do citi- 
zens, and those who 
delight in the con- 
templation of beau- 
ty and fashion, gaily 
caparisoned horses, 
and handsomely fur- 
nished equipages, 
should spend the 
afternoon of some 
fine day in the Parks 
of the South Side. 

The Grand Boule- 
vard commences at 
Douglas avenue, 
five blocks east of 
LAKE VIEW IN CENTRAL PARK. Michigan Avenue. 

It is practically a continuation of South Park Avenue. It stretches 
away for two miles in a straight line, on which a thousand carriages 
may be seen almost any pleasant afternoon. The Boulevard has a cen- 
tral driveway fifty-five feet wide, of the finest quality. Outside of 
this are rows of trees and a rich greensward. Beyond this a superb 
sidewalk. 

Drexel Boulevard, or Grove Parkway, as it is now officially called, 
is two hundred feet wide, and a mile and a half in length. The plan 
comprises a central ornamental space, ninety feet wide, adorned with 
paths and grass plots, and planted with trees, shrubs and flowers, and 
a driveway on each side. Grand Boulevard suggests dash and whirl, 
but when one turns into Drexel, he feels like slacking up to inhale the 
perfume of the flowers, and feast the eye upon the elegant floral dis- 
play to be observed on either side. 





CUSTOM HOUSE AND POST-OFFICE. 

GENERAL INFORMATION. 



CITY OFFICIALS. 



Headquarters : City Hall, corner Adarns and Lasalle Streets. 
hours, 9 A. M. to 4 P. M. 

Mayor. Hon. Carter H. Harrison. 
Mayor's Secretary. Thomas O. Thompson. 
City Clerk. Patrick J. I loward 
City Clerk's Deputy. John A. Moody. 
Comptroller. Theodore T. Gurney. 
Comptroller's Chief Clerk. Francis M. Barrett. 
Treasurer. William C. Seipp. 
Assistant Treasurer. Thomas Brenan. 
Treasurer's Book-Keeper. John Lanagan 
Corporation Counsel. Francis Adams. 
City Attorney. Julius S. Grinnell. 
Prosecuting Attorney. Col. Charles S. Cameron 
City Physician. W. P. Dunne. 
City Collector. William J. Onahan. 
License Clerk. Charles J. White. 
Scrip Registrar.]. C. Hitchcock. 
BmldiHg Superintendent. Alexander Kirkland. 
City Engineer. DeWitt Clinton Cregier. 
Fire Marshal. D. J. Swenie. 
Superintendent of Police. Simon O'Donnell. 
Secretary of Police Department. Austin J. Doyle. 
Chief of Detectives. E. J. Steele. 
Superintendent of Public Works. Charles S. Waller 
Superintendent of Public Schools. Duane Dotv. 
Health Commissioner. O. C. DeWolf. 
Health Coinmissione 's Secretary. Brock L. McVicker. 
21 



Office 



22 rinxrii'Ar, (-iiri:ciii-:s. 



PRINCIPAL CHURCHES. 



BAPTIST. 

First Church, Thirty-First Street and South Park Avenue, Rev. Geo. C. Lorimer. 
Second Church, Morgan and Monroe Streets. 

Michigan Avenue Church, Michigan Avenue, near Twenty-Third Street. 
Fourth Church, Washington and Paulina Streets, Rev. E. B. Hulbert. 

CONGREGATIONAL. 

Plymouth, Michigan Avenue, near Twenty-Fifth Street, Rev. Chas. H. Everest. 
Union Park, Ashland Avenue and Washington Streets, Rev. F. A. Noble." 
First Church, Washington and Ann Streets, Rev. E. P. Goodwin. 
New England Church, Dearborn Avenue and Park Place, Rev. Arthur Little. 

METHODIST. 

Centennary, West Monroe Street, near Morgan, Rev. II. W. Thomas. 
First Church, Clark and Washington Streets, Rev. Dr. Williamson. 
Wabash Avenue Church, corner Fourteenth, Rev. Frank M. Bristol. 
Grace Church, North Lasalle and White Streets. 

PRESBYTERIAN. 

First Church, Indiana Avenue and Twenty-First Street, Rev. Arthur Mitchell. 
Second Church, Michigan Avenue and Twentieth Street, Rev. J. Monroe Gibson. 
Third Church, Ashland and Ogden Avenues, Rev. A. E. Kittredge. 
Fourth Church, Rush and Superior Streets. 

EPISCOPAL. 

Cathedral, West Washington and Peoria Streets, Rt. Rev. W. E. McLaren 
Grace Church, Wabash Avenue, near Sixteenth. Rev. Clinton Locke. 
Trinitv, Michigan Avenue and Twenty-Sixth Street, Rev. R. A. Holland. 
St. James, Cass and Huron Streets, Rev. Frederick Courtney. 

REFORMED EPISCOPAL. 

St. Matthew's Church, North Clark and Center Streets, Rev. F. W. Adams. 
Christ Church, Michigan Ave. and Twenty-Fourth Street, Rt. Rev. C. E. Chenev. 
St. Paul's, West Washington and Carpenter Streets, Rev. Bishop Fellows. 

CHRISTIAN. 

First Church, Indiana Avenue and Twenty-Fifth Stree!s, Rev. B. W. Johnson 
Second Church, Oakley Avenue and Jackson Streets, Rev. Chas. H. Caton. 

UNITARIAN. 

Church of the Messiah, Michigan Avenue and Twenty-Third Streets, Rev. Brooke 

Hereford. 

Unity, Dearborn Avenue and Walton Place. Rev. W. C. Gannett. 
Third Church, Monroe and Laflin Streets, Rev. E. I. Galvin. 

UNIVERSALIST. 

St. Paul's Church, Michigan Avenue, between Sixteenth and Eighteenth Streets, 

Rev. W. H. Ryder. 
Second Church, Washington and Sangamon Streets, Rev. Sumner Ellis. 

INDEPENDENT. 

Chicago Music Hall, State and Randolph Streets, Rev. David Swiiiij. 
Chicago Avenue Church, corner Lasalle Street, Rev. George C. Needham. 



a 

a 

M 
M 

3 






B 




STREET CAR LINKS. 



23 




FIKIJ), J.KITKR & COS 1JETAIL STOKK, STATE AND WASHINGTON STKEKTS. 
STREET CAR LINES. 



SOUTH SIDE. 

State and Thirty-Ninth Streets. Cars run on State Street, from Luke to Thirty- 
Ninth. Distance, 4^ miles. Red light. Time 42 minutes. 

State and Thirty-Fourth Streets Cars run on State Street from Lake to Thirty- 
Fourth. Distance 3^ miles. Red light. Connect with Stock Yards line at Thirty- 
Fourth Street. Time 36 minutes. 

Union Stock Yards. This line extends from Thirty-Fourth Street south-west to 
the Union Stock Yards. Distance 2}4 miles. Connect with State Street line at Thir- 
ty-Fourth Street. Red light. Time 30 minutes. A transfer car connecting with 
cars on'the Stock Yard Line, at Thirty-Ninth Street, runs between State Street and 
Cottage Grove Avenue, via Thirty-Ninth Street. 

Halsted Street Stock Yards Line. Cars run on Halsted Street, from the bridge on 
the south branch, to Thirty-Ninth Street. Distance,!^ miles. Time 22 minutes. 

Archer Avenue These cars run on State from Lake to Archer Avenue, thence 
south-west on Archer Avenue to the Rolling Mills. Distance 43^ miles. White 
light. Time 43 minutes. 

Indiana Avenue and Thirty-First Street. Cars run on State from Lake to Madison, 
on Madison to Wabash Avenue, on Wabash Avenue to Eighteenth Street, on Eight- 
eenth to Indiana Avenue, and on Indiana Avenue to Thirty-First Street. Distance 3 
miles. Green light. Time 35 minutes. 

Indiana Avenue and Thirty-Ninth Street, via. Wabash Avenue. Cars run on State 
Street from Lake to Madison, Madison to Wabash Avenue, Wabash Avenue to 



STREET CAR LINKS. 



Eighteenth, Eighteenth to Indiana Avenue, Indiana Avenue to Thirty-Ninth. Dis- 
tance ^y 2 miles. Green light. Time 45 minutes. 

Indiana Avenue and Fifty-First Street. Cars run on Indiana Avenue from Thirty- 
Ninth to Fifty-first Streets, and on Fifty-First Street to the South Park. Distance i^ 
miles. Green light. Time 17 minutes. 

Cottage Grove Avenue and Twenty-Fifth Street, via. Clark Street. Cars run on 
Clark Street from Randolph to Van Buren, Van Buren to Wabash Avenue, Wabash 
Avenue to Twenty-Second, Twenty-Second to Cottage Grove Avenue, and on the lat- 
ter to Twenty-Fifth Street. Distance zy 2 miles. Blue light. Time 30 minutes. 

Cottage Grove Avenue and Thirty-Ninth Street. Cars run on State Street from 
Randolph to Madison, Madison to Wabash Avenue, Wabash to Twenty-Second, 
Twenty-Second to Cottage Grove Avenue, and on the latter to Egan Avenue or Thir- 
tv-Ninth Street. Distance 5 miles. Blue light. Time 48 minutes. Connect with 
Hvde Park Dummy Trains. 

Hvde Park Dummv. This is a steam railroad extending from Egan Avenue (City 
limits) south to the center of the village of Hyde Park. Distance 3 miles. Connects 
at Egan Avenue with Cottage Grove Avenue cars. 




BoYOES BLOCK, CORNER STATE AND MADISON STREETS. 



STltKKT C'AH LINKS. 



25 



WEST SIDE. 

Madison Street. Cars run on State Street from Randolph to Madison, and on Mad- 
ison to Western Avenue. Distance 3^ miles. Red light. Time 35 minutes. 

Madison Street and Ogden Avenue. Cars run on State Street from Randolph to 
Madison, Madison to Ogden Avenue, and on the latter to Western Avenue and Silver 
Leaf Grove. Distance 3^ miles. Yellow light. Time 43 minutes. 

Randolph Street. Cars run on Randolph Street to Union Park, thence on Lake to 
Western Avenue. Distance 3 miles. Red light. Time 33 minutes. 

Halsted and Indiana Streets. Cars run on Randolph Street from State to Halsted, 
Ilalsted to Indiana, and on Indiana to Western Avenue. Distance 2/4 miles. Pur- 
ple light. Time 39 minutes. 

Milwaukee Avenue. Cars run on Randolph Street from State to Clinton, Clinton 
to Milwaukee Avenue, and on the latter to Armitage Avenue. Distance 4^ miles. 
Green light. Time 48 minutes. 




SOUTH-WEST CORNER STATE AND MADISON STREETS. 

Humboldt Park Transfer. Connecting with Milwaukee Avenue cars. ' Runs be- 
tween 11 umboldt Park and corner of North and Milwaukee Avenues every 36 min- 
utes, from 6 o'clock A. M. to 8 P. M. 

Canalport Avenue. Cars run on Randolph Street from State to Clinton, Clinton to 
Harrison, Harrison to Canal, Canal to Canalport Avenue, and on the latter to Halsted 
Street. Distance 3 miles. White light. Time 33 minutes. 

Halsted Street and Blue Island Avenue. Cars run on State Street from Randolph 
to Madison, Madison to Halsted, Halsted to Blue Island Avenue, and on the latter to 
Western Avenue. Distance 4^ miles. Blue light. Time 48 minutes. 

Madison and South Halsted Streets. Cars run on State Street from Randolph to 
Madison, Madison to Halsted, Ilalsted to the Bridge, and connecting with Union 
Stock Yards cars. Distance 3^ miles. Violet light. Time 39 minutes. 

Twelfth and Canal Streets. Cars run on Randolph Street to Fifth Avenue, Fifth 
Avenue to Van Buren, Van Buren to Clinton, Clinton to Harrison, Harrison to Canal, 
Canal to Twelfth, and on the latter to Ogden avenue. Distance 4 miles. Yellow 
light. Time 48 minutes. 



26 



STREET CAR LINES. 



Clinton and Jefferson Streets. Cars run on Randolph Street, from State to Clinton, 
Clinton to Twelfth, Twelfth to Jefferson, and on Jefferson to Meagher. Distance 2/4 
miles. White light. Time 28 minutes. 

Van Buren Street. Cars run on Randolph Street from State to Fifth Avenue, 
Fifth Avenue to Van Buren, and on the latter to Western Avenue. Distance 3)4 
miles. Purple light. Time 39 minutes. 




CLIFTON HOUSE, WABASH AVENUE AND MOSTROE STREETS. 

NORTH SIDE. 

Clark Street and City Limits. Cars run on Clark Street from Madison to Limits. 
Distance 3^ miles. Green light. Time 42 minutes. Connect at Limits with Steam 
Dummy for Graceland. 

Graceland Steam Dummy. This is a steam railroad, which extends from the Citv 
Limits (Diversy Street,) north to Graceland Cemetery. Distance 3 miles. Time 
20 minutes. 

Lincoln Avenue. Cars run on Clark Street from Madison to Center, Center to 
Lincoln Avenue, and on the latter to Wrightwood Avenue. Distance 33^ miles. 
Purple light. Time 45 minutes. 

Webster Avenue and Center Street. Cars run on Clark Street from Madison to 
Center, Center to Lincoln Avenue, Lincoln Avenue to Webster Avenue, Webster 
Avenue to Racine Avenue, and on the latter to Center Street, returning bv Center 
to Clark. Distance 3^ miles. Combination red and white light. Time 42 minutes. 

Wells Street and Lincoln Park. Cars run on Wells Street, (Fifth Avenue,) from 



STREET CAB LINES. CHARITABLE INSTITUTIONS. 



27 



Randolph to Clark, and on Clark to Wrightwood Avenue. Distance 3 miles. Green 
light. Time 36 minutes. 

Division Street and Clybourne Avenue. Cars run on Clark Street from Madison to 
Division, Division to Clybourne Avenue, Clybourne Avenue to Clybourne Place. 
Distance 3^ miles. Red light. Time 42 minutes. 

Chicago Avenue and Larabee Street. Cars run on Clark Street from Madison to 
Chicago Avenue, Chicago Avenue to Larabee, and on Larabee to Center. Distance 
i]h miles. White light. Time 36 minutes 

Sedgwick Street and North Avenue. Cars run on Clark Street from Madison to 
Division, on Division to Sedgwick, Sedgwick to North Avenue. Distance 2% miles. 
Combination red and White light. Time 30 minutes. 



CHARITABLE INSTITUTIONS. 




MERCY HOSPITAL, CALUMET AVENUE AND TWENTY-SIXTH STREET. 

Alexian Brothers' Hospital, 539 to 559 North Market. 
Chicago Protestant Orphan Asylum, 789 Michigan Avenue. 
Chicago Reforn) and Industrial School, Bridgeport, 707 Archer Avenue. 
Chicago Hospital for Women and Children, West Adams corner of Paulina. 
Cook County Hospital, West Harrison, corner of Wood. 
Foundling's Home, 72 South Wood Street, near Madison. 
Hahnemann Hospital, 287 and 289 Cottage Grove Avenue. 
Home for the Friendless, 911 Wabash Avenue. 

Marine Hospital, five miles north from the Court House, on Lake Shore. Office, 
room 7, Custom House. 

Mercy Hospital, (Sisters of Mercy,) Calumet Avenue, corner of Twenty Sixth 

Newsboys' and Bootblacks' Home, Qjincy Street, near Fifth Avenue. 

St. Joseph's Home for the Friendless, 409 South May Street. 

St. Luke's Free Hospital, 724 Indiana Avenue. 

Washingtonian Home, 566 to 572 West Madison Street. 

Woman's Hospital of the State of Illinois, 273 Thirtieth Street. 



28 



BANKS. 



BANKS. 

Bank of Montreal, Southeast corner of Lasalle and Madison. 

Canadian Bank of Commerce, Northwest corner of Lasalle and Madison 

Commercial National, Northeast corner of Washington and Dearborn. 

Corn Exchange, Chamber of Commerce, Washington and Lasalle. 

Dime Savings Bank, 105 Clark Street. 

First National Bank, Southwest corner of Washington and State. 




FIRST NATIONAL BANK, WASHINGTON A.XD STATE STKKETS. 

Fifth National Bank, Northwest corner Washington and Lasalle. 
Hibernian Banking Association, Southwest corner Clark and Lake. 
Hide and Leather Bank, Southwest corner Lasalle and Randolph. 
Home National Bank, Southwest corner Halsted and Washington. 
Home Savings Bank, Southwest corner Halsted and Washington. 
Illinois Trust and Savings Bank, 145 Randolph. 
International Bank, 108 Lasalle. 
Merchants' National Bank, 136 Lasalle. 

Merchants' Saving, Loan and Trust Co., Southeast corner Dearborn and Washing- 
ton Streets. 



BANKS, COLLEGES AND SEMINARIES. 



National Bank of Illinois, 107 Dearborn. 

Northwestern National Bank, Northeast corner Washington and Clark. 

Prairie State Loan and Trust Co., Southwest corner Desplaines and Washington. 

Traders' Bank, Southwest corner Madison and Lasalle. 

Union National Bank, Southwest corner Lasalle and Washington. 

Union Stock Yards National Bank, Union Stock Yards. 

Union Trust Co., Northeast corner Dearborn and Madison, 




FOUNDLING'S HOME, \v 



, NEAR MADISON. 



COLLEGES AND SEMINARIES. 

Bennett Medical College, 511 and 513 State Street. 

Chicago College of Pharmacy, 235 Wabash Avenue. 

Chicago Homoeopathic College and Dispensary, Southwest corner Michigan Ave- 
nue and Van Buren Street. 

Chicago Medical College, Prairie Avenue, corner Twenty-Sixth. 

Chicago Conservatory of Music, Southeast corner State and Adams. 

Chicago Musical College, 495 Wabash Avenue. 

Chicago Theological Seminary, corner Ashland and Warren Avenues. 

Hahnemann Medical College, 287 Cottage Grove Avenue. 

Hershey School of Musical Art, 83 East Madison Street. 

Presbyterian Theological Seminary of the Northwest, 1060 North Halsted. 

Rush Medical College, corner of Wood and West Harrison Streets. 

St. Ignatius College, 413 West Twelfth Street. 

Union College of Law, of the University of Chicago and the Northwestern Uni- 
versity. 

University of Chicago, 570 Cottage Grove Avenue. 



30 EXPRESS COMPANIES, JUDICIARY AND LIBRARIES. 

EXPRESS COMPANIES. 



Adams Express, Madison Street, between State and Wabash Avenue. 

American Express, 72 to 78 Monroe Street. 

United States Express, 89 and 91 Washington Street. 




AMERICAN EXPRESS BUILDING, 72 TO 78 MONROE STREET. 
JUDICIARY. 



Apellate Court of Cook County, Grand Pacific Hotel. 
Circuit Court of Cook County, City Hall, Adams and Lasalle Streets. 
Superior Court of Cook County, City Hall, Adams and Lasalle. 
Criminal Court of Cook County, Criminal Court Building, Michigan Street, Rooms 
6 to 8. 

County Court of Cook County, Room 2, Criminal Court Building. 

Probate Court, 75 and 77 Clark Street. 

United States Court, Custom House, Government Building. 



PUBLIC LIBRARIES AND READING ROOMS. 



Chicago Law Institute, Citv Hall, Room 12. 

Chicago Publ c Library and Free Reading Room, Dearborn Street, near Lake 

Chicago Athanaeum Library, 50 to 52 Dearborn Street. 

Railroad Chapel Library, 715 State Street. 

Union Catholic Library Association, 174 State Street. 

Young Men's Christian Association, 150 Madison Street. 



NEWSPAPERS AND EAILEOAI) DEPOTS. 



31 



DAILY NEWSPAPERS. 

Cribune. Southeast corner Madison and Dearborn. 

Times. Northwest corner Washington and Fifth Avenue. 

1 nter-Occan. 83 Madison Street. 

Journal. 159 and 161 Dearborn Street. 

Neil's. 123 Fifth Avenue, 

Telegraph. 120 Fifth Avenue. 

Staats-Zeitung. Northeast corner Washington and Fifth Avenue. 

Frie Presse. 185 Washington Street. 




*n> _>vf 

TREMDNT HOUSE PALACE HOTEL 

RAILROAD DEPOTS. 



Baltimore and Ohio. Foot of Monioe Street. 
Chicago and Alton. Van Buren and Canal Streets. 
Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Foot of Lake Street. 
Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul. Clinton and Kinzie Streets. 
Chicago and Northwestern. Omaha Line, Wells and Kinzie Streets 
line, Kinzie and West Water Streets. 

Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific. Lasalle and Van Buren Streets. 

Chicago and Eastern Illinois. Clinton and Kinzie Streets. 

Illinois Central. Foot of Lake Street. 

Lake Shore and Michigan Southern. Lasalle and Van Buren Streets. 

Michigan Central. Foot of Lake Street. 

Pittsburg, Fort Wayne and Chicago. Canal and Van Buren Streets 

Pittsburg, Cincinnati and St. Louis. Clinton and Kinzie Streets. 



Wisconsin 



RAILROAD TICKET OFFICES. 



Baltimore and Ohio, 83 Clark Street. 
Chicago, Alton and St. Louis, 89 Clark Strett. 
Chicago, Burlington and Quincy, 59 Clark Street. 



32 



TICKET OFFICES, THEATERS, ETC. 



Chicago and Eastern Illinois, 123 Dearborn Street. 

Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul, 63 Clark Street. 

Chicago and Northwestern, 60 Clark Street. 

Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific, 56 Clark Street. 

Erie and Chicago, 104 Clark Street. 

Grand Trunk, corner Washington and Clark Streets. 

Illinois Central, 121 Randolph Street. 

Kankakee Line. 121 Randolph Street. 

Union Pacific, 57 Clark Street. 

Lake Shore and Michigan Southern, corner Randolph and Clark Streets. 

Michigan Central, corner RanSolph and Clark Streets. 

Pittsburg, Fort Wayne and Chicago, corner Randolph and Clark Streets. 

THEATERS. 




MACVICKER'S THEATKU, MADISON STREET, BETWEEN STATE AND DEARBORN. 

Haverlys. Corner Monroe and Dearborn. 
Mac Vicker's. Madison Street, between State and Dearborn. 
Academy of Music. Halsted Street, near Madison. 
Olympic. Clark Street, between Randolph and Lake. 
Hamlin's. Clark Street, between Washington and Randolph. 
Hooley's. Randolph Street, between Clark and Lasalle. 



SOCIETIES, CEMETERIES AND PUBLIC BUILDINGS. 



33 



SOCIETIES. 

Chicago Academy of Art and Design, corner of State and Monroe. 

Chicago Academy of Sciences, 263 Wabash Avenue. 

Chicago Historical Society, corner of Dearborn Avenue and Ontario Street. 

Chicago Mechanic's Institute, 50 Dearborn Street. 

Chicago Relief and Aid Societv, 51 and 53 Lasalle Street. 

Illinois Humane Society, 124 Clark. 

Philosophical Society, 103 State. 

Microscopical Society, 263 Wabash Avenue. 

Young Men's Christian Association, 150 Madison. 




SIIEKMAN HOUSE, CORNER CLARK AND RANDOLPH STREETS. 

CEMETERIES. 

Calvary. Ten miles north of Chicago, at Evanston. 

Graceland. Two miles north of the City Limits, on Green Bay Road. 

Oakwood. Eight miles south, on Illinois Central Railroad. 

Rose Hill. Seven miles north, on Northwestern Railroad. 



PUBLIC BUILDINGS. 



Abbott Block, 23 to 27 Lake. 
Academy of Music, 83 South Halsted. 
Adams Building, 358 and 360 Wabash Avenue. 



3-i 



I'UULIC BUILDINGS. 



Agricultural Insurance Company's Building, 544 West Madison. 

Atlas Block, Northwest corner of Wabash Avenue and Randolph. 

American Express Company's Building, 72 to 78 Monroe. 

Andrews Building, 153 and 155 Lasalle. 

Apollo Hall, 1270 State. 

Appleby Building, Monroe Street, near Lasalle. 

Arbeiter Hall, 368 West Twelfth. 

Arcade Building, 156 to 164 South Clark. 

Arthur Block, 970 and 972 Wabash Avenue. 

Ashland Block, Northeast corner Clark and Randolph. 

Athanjcum Building, 50 Dearborn, 

Aurora Turner Hall, corner Milwaukee Avenue and Huron. 




HAVERLY'S THEATER, CORNER MONROE AND DEARBORN STREETS. 

Beaurivage Building, Michigan Avenue and Van Buren. 

Bernauer Building, Northwest corner Lake and Clinton. 

Board of Trade Building, Lasalle and Washington. 

Bolter's Building, 170 Van Buren. 

Bonfield Building, 201 Randolph. 

Bookseller's Row, 117 and 119 State. 

Boone Block, 129 to 133 Lasalle. 

Brinkworth Block, Monroe and Lasalle. 

Bryan Block, 160 to 174 Lasalle. 

Bryant Block, Northeast corner Randolph and Dearborn. 

Burlington Hall, corner State and Sixteenth. 

Caledonia Hall, 167 Washington. 

Castle's Block, 615 to 625 West Lake. 

Central Block, Southwest corner Washing! n and Market. 

Central Hall, Wabash Avenue, near Twenty-Second. 



PUBLIC BUILDINGS. 



Chamber of Commerce Building, corner Lisalle and Washington. 

Chicago Club House, 43 and 45 Monroe. 

Cilliek's Block, 204 Van Buren. 

City Bank Building, 156 Washington. 

City Hall, Adams corner Lasalle. 

City Hall, new, now being finished, Clark Street, from Washington to Randolph. 

Cobb Building, 120 to uS Dearborn. 

Coles Block, 186 to 196 West Madison. 

Concordia Hall, 166 and 168 Twenty-Second. 

Corinthian Hall, 187 East Kinzie. 




GARDNER HOUSE, CORNER MICHIGAN AVENUE AND JACKSON STREETS. 
Covenant Hall, Southwest corner Lake and Lasalle. 
Criminal Court Building, corner Michigan and Dearborn. 

Custom House, 159 and 161 Lasalle. 

Custom House, new, now being finished, Clark Street, from Adams to Jackson. 
Davison Block, 147 to 153 Fifth Avenue. 
Dearborn Building, 130 and 132 Dearborn. 
Dickey Building, 34 to 46 Dearborn. 
Dore Block, Northwest corner State and Madison. 
Douglas Hall, corner South Park Avenue and Twenty-Second. 
Drake Block, Southeast corner Wabash Avenue and Washington. 
Empire Block,' 128 and 130 Lasalle. 

Ewing Block, North Clark, between the Bridge and Kinzie Street. 
Excelsior Hall, 13 South Halsted. 

Exchange Building, Southwest corner Washington and Clark. 
Exposition Building, Michigan Avenue and Monroe. 
Farwell Hall, 148 Madison. 

First National Bank Building, corner State and Washington. 
Foote Block, Southwest corner Clark and Monroe. 
Forbes Block, 193 Washington. 



36 



PUBLIC BUILDINGS. 



Ford's Hall, 44 to 50 West Van Buren. 

Freemason's Hall, 76 Monroe. 

Fuller Block, 148 to 156 Dearborn. 

Fullerton Block, 90 to 96 Dearborn. 

Gardner Building, 164 and 166 Wabash Avenue. 

Germania Hall, 60 North Clark. 

Glickauf Block, Si and 83 North Clark. 

Grocer's Block, corner Wabash Avenue and Lake. 

Grow's Opera House, 517 West Madison. 

Hale Building, Southeast corner State and Washington. 




BAPTIST THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY, RIIODKS AVICXTK. 

Hamlin's Theater, 87 and 89 Clark. 

Hartford Building, 49 Lasalle. 

Haw-ley Building, 138 to 146 Dearborn. 

Healy Hall, 543 Archer Avenue. 

Henning & Speed Block, 121 to 127 Dearborn. 

Herrick Block, Southeast corner Wabash Avenue and Madison. 

Hershey Music Hall, 83 Madison. 

Hoeber's Hall, 220 to 224 West Twelfth 

Holt Building, 165 Washington. 

Honore Block, Northwest corner Dearborn and Adams. 

I lowland Block, Southwest corner Dearborn and Monroe. 

Hyman Building, 14810 152 South Water. 

Ingals' Building, 190 and 192 Clark. 

Jenks' Building, Madison Street, near Michigan Avenue. 

Journal Building, 159 and 161 Dearborn. 

Kendall Block, Southwest corner Dearborn and Washington. 

Kent Building, 151 and 153 Monroe. 

Kentucky Block, Northeast corner Adams and Clark. 

Kingsbury Block. 113 and 115 Randolph. 



PUBLIC BUILDINGS. 



37 



Lakeside Building, Southwest corner Adams and Clark. 

Leander Building, 79 to 85 Wabash Avenue. 

Leonard's Building, 996 and 998 West Madison. 

Loomis' Building, Northwest corner Clark and Water. 

Lumber Exchange, corner Water and Franklin. 

Madison Block, 230 to 238 West Madison. 

Major Block, Southeast corner La-alle and Madison. 

Marine Building, 152 to 158 Lake. 

Mariner's Temple, corner Michigan and Market. 

Maskell Hall, 173 South Desolaines. 

Mason Block, 92 and 94 Washington. 

McCormick Block, Southeast corner Dearborn and Randolph. 

McCormick Hall, Northeast corner Clark and Kinzie. 

McNeil Building, 128 and 130 Clark. 

McNeill Building, 188 Clark. 

MacVicker's Theater, 78 to 84 Madison. 

Mendel Block, 127 to 133 Van Buren. 




CHICAGO WATEK AVOEKS. 
Mercantile Block, 112 to 118 Lasalle. 

Merchant Building, Northwest Corner Lasalle and Washington. 
Methodist Church Block, Southeast corner Clark and Washington. 
Metropolitan Block, Northwest corner Lasalle and Randolph. 
Miller Block, 117 Clark. 

Morrison Building, Northeast corner Clark and Madison. 
Morrison Block, Southeast corner Clark and Madison. 
Mueller's Hall, 356 10364 North Avenue. 
Nevada Block, Southwest corner Franklin and Washington. 



PUBLIC ]JUIL1)IX(;S. 



Nixon Building, 169 to 175 Lasalle. 

Odd Fellows' Hall, Southeast corner Clark and Washington. 

Odd Fellows' Hall, 406 and 408 Milwaukee Avenue. 

Ogden Building,. South west corner Clark and Lake. 

Oriental Building and Hall, 122 Lasalle. 

Orpheus Hall, 239 and 241 West Lake. 

Otis Building, Southwest corner Madison and State. 

Otis Block, 280 to 288 Wabash Avenue. 

Otis Blook, Southwest corner Madison and Lasalle. 

Pacific Block, 281 to 289, Southeast corner Clark and Van Buren. 

Page's Block, 115 to 119 State. 

Parker Block, 181 West Madison. 

Pierce Block, 250 and 252 Wabash Avenue. 

Pike's Block, Southwest corner Monroe and State. ' 

Portland Block, Southeast corner Dearborn and Washington. 

PostJOffice, new Custom House, Clark and Adams. 

Produce Exchange Block, Southeast corner Water and Lasalle. 

Purple Block, North Clark Street, between Ontario and Erie. 




ROAD HOUSE IN SOUTH PARK. 
Quinlan Block, 81 and 83 Clark. 
Radical Hail, 615 West Lake. 
Rawson Building, 149 and 151 State. 
Reaper Block, Northeast corner Washington and Clark. 
Republic Life Building, 157 to 163 Lasalle. 
Rice's Building, 75 to Si Dearborn. 
St. Alban's Block, 291 to 297 Wabash Avenue. 
St. Marv's Block, Southwest corner Wabash Avenue and Madison. 



PUBLIC BUILDINGS. 39 



St. James Block, 406 to 414 Clark. 

St. Peters' Hall, 328 and 330 State. 

Schnaitman's Hall, 634 Larabee. 

Sharpshooter's Hall, corner Clark and Illinois. 

Shreve Building, Northwest corner Lake and Clark. 

Singer Building, Northeast corner State and Washington. 

Skandinavian and American Building 123 Fifth Avenue. 

Social Workingmen's Hall, 368 and 370 West Twelfth. 

Societies Hall, 210 Blue Island Avenue. 

Springer Building, Southwest corner Randolph and State. 

Staats Zeitung Building, Northeast corner Fifth Avenue and Washington. 

Standard Hall, Southwest corner Michigan Avenue and Thirteenth. 

Star Building, in Madison. 

Starkweather Building, State Street, between Van Buren and Harrison. 

Stewart Building, Northwest corner State and Washington. 

Superior Block, 75 to 79 Clark. 

Syracuse Block, 171 and 173 Randolph. 

Taylor Building, Northeast corner Wabash avenue and Washington. ' 

Temperance Hall, corner North Market and Michigan. 

Temperance Radical Hall, 619 West Lake. 

Teutonia Building, Southeast corner Fifth Avenue and Washington. 

Thompson Block, 229 to 247 West Madison. 

Times Building, Northwest corner Fifth Avenue and Washington. 

Tribune Building, Southeast corner Dearborn and Madison. 

Turner Hall, 257 North Clark. 

Turner Hall, 251 to 255 West Twelfth. 

Uhlich Block, 19 to 37 North Clark. 

Union Building, 106 to 1 10 Lasalle. 

Union Hall, Southeast corner Clark and Washington. 

United States Express Company's Building, 87 and 89 Washington. 

Vermont Block, 155 and 157 Fifth Avenue. 

Wadsworth Building, 175 to 181 West Madison. 

Washington Block, Southwest corner Washington and Fifth Avenue. 

Washingtonian Home, 566 to 572 West Madison. 

Water Works, corner Chicago Avenue and Pine. 

Water Works, West Side, corner Ashland Avenue and Twenty- Second. 

Westpal's Hall, 691 and 693 South Halsted. 

Willard's Building, 318 and 320 Wabash Avenue. 

Wilmarth Building, 390 to 396 Wabash Avenue. 

Windett Block, Northeast corner State and Randolph. 

Workingmen's Hall, 368 and 370 West Twelfth. 

Yates Building, Southwest corner Randolph and Lasalle. 



40 MASONIC! BODIKS. 



MASONIC BODIES. 



BLUE LODGES. 



Blair, 393, Monday evening, 76 Monroe. 

Chicago, 437, Monday evening, 122 La Salle. 

Herder. 669, Monday evening, cor. Union and W. Fourteenth. 

Waldeck, 674, Monday evening, 227 South Park Avenue. 

Lakeside, 769, Monday evening, Indiana Avenue, cor. Thirty-first Street. 

Lessing, 757, Tuesday evening, 12 N. Clinton. 

National, 596. Tuesday evening, cor. Randolph and Halsted. 

Golden Rule, 726, Tuesday evening, 122 La Salle. 

Ashler, 308, Tuesday evening, 76 Monroe. 

D. A. Cashman, 686, Tuesday evening, cor. Madison and Robey. 

Garden City, 141, Wednesday evening, 122 La Salle. 

Blaney, 271, Wednesday evening, 76 Monroe. 

Mithra, 410, Wednesday evening, Turner Hall, Clark Strict and Chicago Avenue. 

Hesperia, 411, Wednesday evening, cor. Randolph and Halsted. 

Union Park, 610, Wednesday evening, 679 W. Lake. 

Keystone, 639, Wednesday evening, 62 North Clark. 

D. C. Cregier, 643, Wednesday evening, 280 Milwaukee Avenue. 

Germania, 182, Thursday evening, 62 X. Clark. 

Cleveland. 211, Thursday evening, cor. Randolph and Halsted. 

Kilvvinning, 311, Thursday evening, 185 and 187 Kinzie. 

Thos. J. Turner, 409, Thursday evening, 76 Monroe. 

Pleaides, 478, Thursday evening, 220 W. Twelfth. 

Apollo, 642, Thursday evening, cor. State and Twenty-eighth. 

South Park, 662, Thursday evening, cor. Oak and Lake, Hvde Park. 

Englewood, 690, Thursday evening, Wentworth Avenue, bet. Sixty-second and 
Sixty-third streets. 

Richard Cole, 697, Thursday evening, 770 Archer Avenue. 

Lumberman's, 717, Thursday evening, 692 Archer Avenue. 

Oriental, 33, Friday evening, 122 La Salle. 

Dearborn, 210, Friday evening, 76 Monroe. 

Wabansia, 160, Friday evening, 76 Monroe. 

Accordia, 277, Friday evening, 112 and 114 E. Randolph. 

Landmark, 422, Friday evening, cor. Thirty-seventh Street and Cottage Grove 
Avenue. 

Home, 508, Friday evening, 134 E. Twenty-second. 

Covenant, 256, Friday evening, 185 and 187 Kinzie. 

Lincoln Park, 6n, Friday evening, 869 N. Clark. 

Crescent, 635, Friday evening, 208 La Salic. 

St. Andrews, 703, Friday evening, 76 Monroe. 

Win. B. Warren, 209 Saturday evening, 76 Monroe. 

CHAPTERS. 

Lafayette, 2, Monday evening, 76 Monroe. 

Corinthian, 69, Monday evening, 185 and 187 Kinzie. 

Fairview, 161, Monday evening, cor. Thirty-seventh Street & Cottage Grove Avenue, 



MASONIC BODIES. 



Lincoln Park, 117, Tuesday evening, 869 N. Clark. 

Chicago, 127, Wednesday evening, 134 E. Twenty-second. 

York, 138, Thursday evening, cor. Madi-on and Robey. 

Elwood M. Jarrett, 176, Thursday evening, Wentworth Avenue, bet. Sixty-second 
and Sixty-third Streets. 

Washington, 43, Friday evening, cor. Randolph and Halsted. 
Wiley M. Egan, 126, Friday evening, 220 W. Twelfth. 

COUNCILS. 

Chicago, 4, Wednesday evening, 76 Monroe. 

Siloam, 52, Saturday evening, cor. Randolph and Halsted. 

COMMANDERIES, K. T. 

Chicago, 19, Monday evening, cor. Randolph and Halsted. 

Apollo, i, Tuesday evening, 76 Monroe. 

St. Bernard, 35, Wednesday evening, 185 and 187 Kinzic. 




FERKY HALL, LAKE FOKEST, ILL. 



42 HACK ORDINANCE. 



HACK ORDINANCE. 



The price to be charged by the owner or owners, or drivers of any hackney coach, 
carriage or vehicle for the conveyance ot passengers, except omnibuses, for hire 
within the city of Chicago, shall be as follows, to be regulated and estimated by the 
distance on the most direct routes, namely : 

For conveying each passenger from one railroad depot to another railroad depot, 
fifty cents. 

For conveying each passenger not exceeding one mile, fifty cents. 

For conveying a passenger any distance over one mile and less than two miles, one 
dollar. 

For conveying each additional passenger of the same family or party, fifty cents. 

For conveying a passenger in said city any distance exceeding two miles, one dollar 
and fifty cents. 

For each additional passenger of the same family or party, fifty cents. 

For conveying children between five and fourteen years of age, half the above rates 
may be charged for like distances, but for children under five years of age, no charge 
will be made. Provided, that the distance from any railroad depot, steamboat landing 
or hotel, to any other railroad depot, steamboat landing or hotel, shall in all cases be 
estimated as not exceeding one mile. 

For the vise by the day of any hackney coach or other vehicle, drawn by two 
horses or other animals, with one or more passengers, eight dollars per day. 

For the use of any such carriage or vehicle by the hour, with one or more passen- 
gers, with the privilege of going from place to place, and stopping as often as may be 
required, as follows ; For the first hour, two dollars ; foi each additional hour or part 
of an hour, one dollar. 

For conveying one or more passengers to or from any place in said city, between 
the hours of twelve o'clock midnight and seven A. M., for each trip, without regard 
to distance or number of passengers, two dollars. 

For the use of any cab or other vehicle drawn by one horse or other animal, by the 
hour, with the privilege of going from place to place, with one or more passengers, 
and stopping when required: For the first hour, one dollar; for each additional hour 
or part of an hour, fifty cents. 

For the use of any such carriage by the day, four dollars. 

Every passenger shall be allowed to have conveyed upon such vehicle, without 
charge, his ordinary traveling baggage, not exceeding in any case one trunk and 
twenty-five pounds of other baggage. For every additional package, where the 
whole weight of baggage is over one hundred pounds, if conveyed to any place 
within the city limits, the owner or driver shall be permitted to charge fifteen 
cents. 



To KNIGHTS TEMPLAR, GREETING : 



In the following pages the publishers have gathered and consolida- 
ted a large amount of matter relating to the ancient and modern life 
of Knighthood, embracing the trying days of the Crusades, and fol- 
lowing, step by step, the progress and growth of the Order down to 
the present time. Also a table of times and places of organizations 
of Grand Commanderies and Triennial Conclaves, from reliable 
sources, in a more condensed form than has been hitherto published. 

The closing pages comprise the Programme to be observed during 
the Grand Encampment to be held in Chicago in August, 1880, with 
such other official information as will be found nowhere else. 
Courteously Yours, 

.THE PUBLISHERS. 




THE DAYS OF KNIGHTHOOD, 



" In days of old our fathers went to war, 
Expecting sturdy blows and scanty fare ; 
Their beef they often in their morion stew'd, 
And in their basket-hilt their beverage brew'd." 

Away back in the world's history, so far that modern eyes trace the 
old and time-worn pages with wonder, dates the first days of Knight- 
hood. The Romans are said to have established the earliest Orders of 
Knights, and it was a sort of nobility sought after and appreciated, 
for it testified in the strongest possible manner to the merit of the 
wearer of knightly armor. The Crusaders made religious professors 
of all Knights, and never was one present at the reading of the gospel 
who did not hold the sword pointed to the book, in testimony of his 
desire to uphold its teaching by force of arms. Achilles was consid- 
ered of true knightly spirit. He had a supreme indifference as to 
what side he fought on, but held a warm affection for friends, and 
looked at death calmly. The young and chivalric Knights courted the 
45 



46 TIIK DAYS OK KNIGHTHOOD. 

foremost places of danger, and would gladly have given their last 
drops of blood to serve the cause in which they were engaged. "With 
their determination to uphold and defend the scriptures, was also 
combined a iixed resolution to display courtesy, gallantry and readi- 
ness to protect defenceless women. Olibion, the son of Asteriel, of 
the line of Japhet, is said to have been the first Knight ever created. 
There seems to be little doubt that Kiiecht was the original title, 
meaning a servant to the King. Later on it was declared that only 
military men should be made Knights. When Suffolk yielded to 
Regnault, about four hundred years ago, he asked the victor, " Are 
you gentleman or Knight ?" Eegnault replied, "I am a gentleman , 
but not yet a Knight." "Whereupon Suftblk, according to the custom 
that a Knight never surrendered his sword but to a Knight, bade Reg- 
nault kneel, dubbed him Knight, received the accustomed oaths, and 
gave up his sword to the new chevalier. 

The class of knighthood with which we propose mostly to deal in 
this work is that relating to the days of the Temple. In the early 
ages of the Christian Church the holy veneration for the scenes which 
had been consecrated by the sufferings and death of the founder of our 
religion, led thousands of pious pilgrims to visit Jerusalem, for the 
purpose of offering up their devotions at the sepulchre of the Lord. 
To such a hight did this religious enthusiasm arrive that in the year 
1064 not less than seven thousand pilgrims assembled from all parts 
of Europe around the tomb of Christ. At a time when the facilities 
of intercourse which now exist were unknown,' a journey was always 
attended with difficulties and dangers, to which the youthful, the aged 
and the infirm were often sacrificed. But when Palestine was con 
([iiered by the Arabs, and the land of pilgrimage became inlested by 
hordes of barbarous fanatics, inspired with the most intense hatred 
toward Christianity these difficulties and dangers were eminently 
increased. The tale of the sufferings inflicted upon the pilgrims by 
the Mussulman possessors of Jerusalem, excited in Europe an enthu- 
siastic indignation which led to the institution of the Crusades wars. 
undertaken solely for the purpose of recovering the holy laud from the 
followers of Mahomet. 



THK DAYS OF KNIGHTHOOD. ' 47 



In 1099 the city of Jerusalem was captured by the Crusaders, the 
consequence of which was an increase in the zeal of pilgrimage, which 
had been gathering intensity during its long -suppression by the bar- 
barities of the Turcomans. Although the infidels had been driven 
out of Jerusalem, they had not been expelled from Palestine, but still 
continued to infest the lofty mountains bordering on the seacoast, 
from whose inaccessible stronghold they were wont to make incursions 
into the roads surrounding the holy city, and pillage every unguarded 
traveler. 

To protect the pious pilgrims. thus exposed to plunder and death, 
nine noble Knights who had previously distinguished themselves at 
the siege of Jerusalem, imited in a brotherhood, and bound them- 
selves by a solemn compact to aid one another in clearing the high- 
ways of infidels and robbers, and in protecting the pilgrims through 
the passes and defiles of the mountains to the holy city. Of these 
nine who formed the compact, the names of only two seem to have 
been preserved with certainty, viz : Hugh de Payens and Godfrey de 
St. Aldemar. Six of the others are named by Wilke as Koral Gunde- 
mar, Godfrey Bisol, Payens de Montidier, Archibald de St. Aman, 
Andre 'de Montbar and the Count of Provence. They united the 
military with the monastic character, and in the presence of the Pa- 
triarch of Jerusalem took the usual vows of chastity, poverty ;r..,l 
obedience, and with deep humility assumed their title of " Poor Fellow 
Soldiers of Christ." 

Baldwyn, King of Jerusalem, gave them, in 1118, for a dwelling, a 
part of the church which had been built by the Emperor Justinian, 
within the site of which the Temple of Solomon had been erected on 
Mount Moriah, and adjoining to the Temple which had been built by 
the Caliph Omar. The Abbot and Canons of the Temple also ten- 
dered to them a building in which to store their arms and accoutre- 
ments. From this fact they derived the name of Templars, a title 
which has been retained by their followers to the present day. 

The views of the order now became more extensive, and they added 
to their profession of protecting poor pilgrims that of defending the 



48 THE DAYS OF KNIGHTHOOD. 

kingdom of Jerusalem and the whole eastern church from the attacks 
of the infidels. Hugh de Payens was chosen by the Knights their 
leader, under the title of " Master of the Temple." Their name and 
reputation spread rapidly through Eurepe, and many of the nobles of 
the west who had visited Palestine as" pilgrims, became members of 
the Order. 

In 1128 Hugh de Payens was sent to Europe by King Baldwyn to 
get permission from Pope Honorius II. to form a religious military 
order similar to that of the Hospitalers of Jerusalem. The pontiff 
approved of the petition and sent him to Troyes, in Champagne, 
where the ecclesiastical council was in session, and where the ambas- 
sador was received with due courtesy, his project rehearsed, and St. 
Bernard directed to prescribe rules for the new Order, which was en- 
titled Pauperes commilitis Christi et Templi Solomonis " Poor 
Fellow Soldiers of Christ and of the Temple of Solomon." The rules 
enjoined severe devotional exercises, fasting, prayer and self mortifi- 
cation. Thus provided with a rule that should give permanence and 
authority to the Order, the ambassador returned to Jerusalem, accom- 
panied by many recruits from some of the noblest families of Europ-. 
He also received from different princes and nobles many liberal dona- 
tions of land and money. In England especially, where the amounts 
donated were large, he established a branch 01' the Order placing a 
Knight Templar at its head as his vicegerent, with the title of Prior 
of the Temple. The Templars everywhere eminently distinguished 
themselves as warriors and soldiers of the cross. 

The dress prescribed to them by the rule of St. Bernard consisted 
of a white mantle, to commend themselves to their Creator by a pure, 
white life. To this Pope Eugenius some years afterwards added a 
red cross, as a symbol of martyrdom. Their banner was half black 
and half white, called beauseant ; that is to say, well-becoming, be- 
cause they were fair and favorable to the friends of Christ, but black 
and terrible to his enemies. 

The order was divided into three classes, viz : Knights, Chaplains 
and Serving Brethren. It was required of whoever presented himself 



THE DAYS OF KNIGHTHOOD. 49 

for knighthood must prove that he was a member of some knightly 
family ; born in lawful wedlock ; that he was free from all previous 
obligations ; that he was neither married nor betrothed ; that he had 
not made any vows of reception in another Order ; that he was not 
involved in debt ; and, finally, that he was of sound and healthy con- 
stitution of body. 

The Chaplains were admitted as spiritual advisers by a bull of Pope 
Alexander III. in 1162. They were required to serve a novitiate of 
one year. They were received the same as Knights, except that they 
took upon themselves only three of the vows chastity, poverty and 
obedience. Their duties were to perform all religious offices, and to 
officiate at all ceremonies of admission and installation. They were 
privileged to sit next the Master, and be first served at table. 

The Serving Brethren were often of wealth and high standing. 
The only qualification for their admission was that they were free- 
born, not slaves. They fought beside the Knights in the field, and at 
home performed the menial offices of the household. At first there 
was but one class, but afterwards they were divided into two, and 
called the Brethren-at-Arms and the Handicraft Brethren. The 
former were soldiers, while the latter exercised their various trades, 
such as armorers, farriers, etc. Their reception was similar to that of 
the Knights, but the accident of birth precluded promotion for them 
out of their class. 

There was a fourth class at this time called the Affiliated, consisting 
of both sexes and from various ranks. They were recognized by the 
Order, though not openly connected with it, and entitled to its protec- 
tion and some of its privileges. 

There was still another class called Donates youths destined at 
the proper age for the service of the Order, or who, from admiration, 
bound themselves to aid and assist the Knights, and desiring to share 
their honors. Over all presided the Grand Master, who was in the 
earry days of the Order simply Master of the Temple. In 1178, at 
the treaty of peace between the Templars and the Hospitalers, Odo 
de St. Arinand called himself " Humble Master of the Order of the 



THE DAYS OF KNIGHTHOOD. 

Temple." This humble spirit later seemed to be laid aside, and the 
title of Grand Master was accorded and accepted ; for in the best 
days of the Order the Grand Master was considered as the equal of a 
sovereign. 

The Grand Master resided at Jerusalem, and after the destruction 
of the city at Acre, and finally at Cyprus. His duty compelled him 
to reside in the Holy Land. He was elected for life from among the 
Knights. At the death of a Grand Master a Grand Prior was chosen 
to administer affairs until a successor was elected. On a day appoint- 
ed for the election three or four of the most esteemed Knights were 
proposed. The Grand Prior collected all the votes, and he who had 
tke greatest number was declared the electing Prior. Another Knight 
was then called to assist him, and the two spent an entire night in the 
chapel engaged in prayer. In the morning they chose two others, and 
these four two more, and so on until twelve (the number of the apos- 
tles) had been selected. The twelve elected a Chaplain, and the thir- 
teen then proceeded to vote for a Grand Master, the Knight receiving 
a majority of the thirteen votes being declared duly elected. 

The vote was announced at the close of the election, whereupon the 
assembled brethren promised obedience, and the Chaplain said to the 
new Master, "In the name of God the Father, the Son and the Ho'y 
Ghost, we have chosen, and do choose thee, brother A., to be our Mas- 
ter." Then turning to the brethren he said, " Beloved Sirs and 
Brethren, give thanks unto God ; behold here our Master." The 
Chaplains chanted the Te D^um, and the -new Master was taken in 
the arms of the brethren, carried into the chapel and placed before the 
altar, where, kneeling, he continued for a time in prayer, and the 
Chaplains repeated their devotional exercises. 

Next in rank to the Grand Master came the Seneschal, or Lieuten- 
ant ; then followed the Marshal, or General, the Treasurer, who was 
called also the Grand Preceptor of Jerusalem, the Draper, who had 
charge of the clothing, and was a kind of Commissary General, and 
the Turcopolier, or Commander of the light horse. There was a 
class of officers next called Visitors, whose duty was to visit the dif- 



TIIK DAYS OF KNIGHTHOOD. 51 

ferent provinces and correct abuses, if found. There were also sub- 
ordinate officers to the Serving Brethren, such as Standard Bearer, 
Sub-Marshal and Farrier. These officers, with the Grand Preceptors 
of the Provinces, and the most distinguished Knights in attendance, 
constituted the great legislative corps, or General Chapter, who framed 
all laws and regulations for the Order. The body met but seldom, 
and during the intervals of its sessions its business was transacted 
and its powers exercised by the Chapter of Jerusalem. 

The Order being thoroughly organized and in prosperous condition, 
augmented its possessions both at the East and in Europe, when it 
was divided into Provinces, each of which was governed by a Grand 
Preceptor or Grand Prior the titles being both used though the 
former related more especially to the Templars, while the latter ap- 
plied more particularly to the Knights Hospitalers of St. John. 

There were fifteen provinces, as follows : Jerusalem, Tripolis, An- 
tioch, Cyprus, Portugal, Castile and Leon, Aragou, France and Au- 
vergne, Normandy, Aquitaine, Provence, England, (which included 
Ireland and Scotland), Germany, Upper and Central Italy, and Apu- 
lia and Sicily. There were only the kingdoms of Sweden, Denmark, 
and Norway :n Europe to whix;h Templars -had not extended their 
influence and possessions. 

In each of these Provinces there were located temples called Pre- 
ceptories, in charge of Preceptors. In the larger and more influential 
ones, there were Chapters, in which local laws^were enacted and mem- 
bers were received into the Order. 

Various ancient authors differ somewhat as to the reception of can- 
didates for knighthood some averring that the ceremonies were of a 
secret character, while others proclaim that everything was public in 
its nature. There can be no doubt that, in many instances, initiations 
were performed with closed doors, the cause of which may be attribu- 
ted to the spirit of hostility exhibited by a portion of the church in 
latter days. Eaynonard says the following oath was taken by the 
candidate : 

" I swear to consecrate my discourse, my arms, my faculties, and 



THE DAYS OF KNIGHTHOOD. 



my life to the defence of the sac d mysteries of the faith, and to that 
of the unity of God. I also promise to be submissive and obedient 
to the Grand Master of the Order. At all times that it may be neces- 
sary I will cross the seas to go to battle ; I will contribute succor 
against infidel Kings and Princes ; I will not turn my back upon 
three foes, and even if I be alone I will fight them if they are infi- 
dels." 

The Knights, engaged in constant wars with the infidels, continued 
to increase their reputation and enlarge their possessions. But in the 
beginning of the fourteenth century the avarice of Philip le Bel and 
the weakness and perfidy of Clement V., conspired to give a blow to 
the Order from which it never recovered. 

From the time of Hugh de Payens to that of Jacques de Molay, 
the Templars continued to be governed by a succession of the noblest 
and bravest Knights of which the chivalry of Christendom could 
boast. They continued to increase in power, in fame and in wealth, 
and, what is unfortunately too often the concomitants of these quali- 
ties, in luxury and pride. 

At the time referred to the throne of France was filled by Philip 
the Fair, an ambitious, a vindictive and an avaricious Prince. In his 
celebrated controversy with Pope Boniface, the "Templars had, as 
usual with them, sided with the Pontiff and opposed the King. This 
act incited his hatred. The Order was enormously wealthy ; this 
aroused his avarice. T^heir power interfered with his designs of polit- 
ical aggrandizement, and this alarmed his ambition. He therefore 
secretly concerted with Pope Clement Y. a plan for their destruction, 
and the appropriation of their revenues. Clement, by his direction, 
in June, 13C6, wrote to DeMolay, then Grand Master, at that time at 
Cyprus, inviting him to come and consult as to matters of great im- 
portance to the Order. DeMolay obeyed the summons, and arrived 
in the beginning of 1307 at Paris, with sixty Knights and a large 
amount of treasure. He was immediately imprisoned, and on the 
13th of October following every Knight in France was, in consequence 
of the secret orders of the King, arrested on the pretended charge of 



THE DAYS OF KNIGHTHOOD. 53 

idolatry, with other enormous crimes, which a renegade and expelled 
Prior of the Order was said to have confessed that the Knights were 
guilty of in their secret Chapters. On the 12th of May, 1310, fifty- 
four of the Knights were, after a mock trial, publicly burnt, and on 
the 18th of March, 1314. DeMolay, Grand Master, with the three 
principal dignitaries of the Order, suffered the same fate. They died 
faithfully asserting their innocence of all the crimes imputed to them. 
The Order was now, by the energy of the King of France, assisted by 
the spiritual authority of the Pope, suppressed throughout Europe. 
It was not, however, annihilated. DeMolay, in anticipation of his 
fate, had appointed John Mark Larmienus as his successor in office, 
and from that time to the present there has been a regular and unin- 
terrupted succession of Grand Masters. 

Notwithstanding, therefore, the efforts of the King and the Pope, 
the Order of Knights Templar was not extinguished. In France it 
still exists, and ranks among its members some of the most influen- 
tial noblemen of that kingdom. In Portugal the name of the Order 
has been changed to that of the " Knights of Christ," and its cross 
is frequently conferred by the Government as the reward of distin- 
guished merit. In England, the Encampment of Baldwyn, which was 
established at Bristol by the Templars who returned with Richard I. 
from Palestine, still continues to hold its regular meetings, and is be- 
lieved co have preserved the ancient costumes and ceremonies of the 
Order. This Encampment, with another at Bath, and a third at York, 
constituted the three original Encampments of England. From these 
have emanated the existing Encampments in the British Islands and 
in the United States, so that the Order, as it now exists in Great Brit- 
ain and America, is a lineal descendant of the Ancient and Illustrious 
Order. 

Of the history of the Order in America, the proceedings of the 
Grand Encampment of the United States, which was formed in the 
year 1816, gives all that is known to the world. It being of such recent 
date, and no occasion arising to bring the Order into notoriety, having 

with the advance of the world denuded itself of its warlike character 
5 



54 TIIK DAYS OF KNIGHTHOOD. 

it has become, with the propagation of the Christian religion, what 
it now*is. 

The connection between the Knights Templar and Freemasons has 
been repeatedly asserted by the enemies of both institutions, a*nd as 
often admitted by their friends. Lanrie, on this subject, holds the 
following language : 

""We know that the Knight Templars not only possessed the mys- 
teries, but performed the ceremonies and inculcated the duties of Free- 
masons ;" and he attributes the dissolution of the Order to the discov- 
ery of their being Freemasons, and their assembling in secret to prac- 
tice the rites of the Order. He further endeavors to explain the 
manner in which they became the depository of the Masonic mysteries, 
by tracing their initiation to the Druses, a Syriac fraternity, which, at 
the time of the Crusaders, and long after, existed on Mt. Libanus. 

Hospitality has been, from time immemorial, esteemed among Ma- 
sons as one of the chief virtues. Brethren throughout the globe 
never disregarded a diploma or certificate bearing the words, "Every 
Mason shall receive and cherish strange fellowes when they come over 
the countreye." The Knights of the eleventh century established 
hospitals for the sick and weary pilgrims, and assumed the name of 
Hospitalers of Jerusalem. In their laudable and kindly efforts to 
provide for the poor, and ameliorate the sufferings of the weak, they 
were heartily seconded by the rich merchants of Amain" a thriving 
city of the Kingdom of Naples. Chapels and hospitals were built at 
various points, and many of the pilgrims who had experienced the 
liberality and bounty which was always bestowed upon wayfarers, 
abandoned the idea of returning to Europe, and formed themselves 
into bands of charitable assistants, and devoted themselves to the care 
of the needy and destitute. The Hospitalers of Jerusalem finally 
took up arms in defence of the holy places against the Saracens, and 
called themselves Knights Hospitalers, which was subsequently 
changed to Knights of Rhodes, and then to Knights of Malta. 

The highest compliment, perhaps, ever paid to the Order of Knights 
Templar, was by St. Bernard, when he said, after visiting them in 



Til?: DAYS OF KNICJHTHOOD. 00 

their temple, ' Their arms are their only finer/, and they use them 
with courage, without dreading either the number or the strength of 
the barbarians. All their confidence is in the Lord of Hosts, and in 
fighting for His cause they seek a sure victory or a Christian and hon- 
orable death." He spoke in the warmest terms of their self denial, 
their modesty, their piety, their frugality and their bravery. 

" Dying in harness," or " clothed in steel," was a favorite phrase 
in chivalric annals, to illustrate the bravery of a Knight falling in 
battle. Hume says of Sevvard, Earl of 'Northumberland, that when 
the death of Osborne, his son, was announced to him, he was inconso 
lable until he was informed that his death wound was in his breast, 
and that he had behaved with great gallantry during the action ; so, 
when he found his own death approaching, he ordered his servants to 
dress him in a complete suit of armor, and sitting erect on his couch 
he awaited the final summons, with spear in hand, declaring that only 
thus should a true warrior die. And thus he sat at the final moment. 
An ancient poem thus portrays the event : 

See how the chief of many a field 

Prepares to give his latest breath ; 
And like a well-trained warrior yield 

Becomingly to impending death. 
That one stern conqueror of all, 

Of chieftain in embattled tower, 
Of lord within his ancient hall, 

And maiden in her trellis'd bower. 

To meet that surest of all foes, 

From off his soft and pillowed bed, 
With dignity old Seward rose, 

And to a couch of state was led. 
Fainting, yet firm of purpose there, 

Stately as monarch on his throne, 
Upright he sat, with k ngly ail, 

To meet the coming foe alone. 

" Take from these limbs," he weakly cried, 

" This soft and womanish attire ; 
Let cloak and cap be laid aside 

Seward will die as did his sire ; 
Not clad in silken vest and shirt, 

Like princes in a fairy tale ; 



56 THE DAYS OF KNIGHTHOOD. 



With iron be these old limbs girt, 
My vest of steel, my shirt of mail. 

" Close let my sheaf of arrows stand ; 

My mighty battle-axe now bring ; 
My ashen spear place in my hand ; 

Around my neck my buckler sling. 
Let my white locks once more be press'd 

By the old cap of Milan steel; 
Such soldier's gear becomes them best 

They love their old defence to feei. 

" 'Tis well ! Now buckle to my waist 

My well-tried gleaming blade of Spain ; 
My old blood leaps in joyful haste, 

To feel it on my thigh again. 
And here, this pendent loop upon, 

Suspend my father's dagger bright ; 
My spurs of gold, too, buckle on, 

OrSeward dies not like a Knight." 

'Twas done ! No tear bedimmed his eyes, 

His manly heart had ne'er known fear ; 
It answer'd not the deep-fetched sighs 

Of friends and comrades standing near. 
Death was upon him ; that grim foe 

Who smites the craven as the brave ; 
With patience Seward met the blow, 

Prepared and willing for the grave. 





THE GRAND ENCAMPMENT 

OF TIIK 

UNITED STATES. 

The General Grand Encampment of Knights Templar of the United 
States of America was formed at a Convention held at Mason's 
Hall, in the city of New York, on the 20th and 21st of Jnne, 1816, 
and consisted of delegates, or Sir Knights Companions, from eight 
(as then called) Councils and Encampments of Knights Templar and 
appendant Orders, viz : 

Boston Encampment, chartered March, 1806, Boston, Mass. 
St. Paul's Encampment, chartered May, 1806, Newburyport, Mass. 
St. John's Encampment, chartered October, 1805, Providence, R. I. 
Newport Encampment, chartered June, 1814, Newport, R. I. 
Ancient Encampment, chartered June, 1814, New York City. 
Temple Encampment, chartered June, 1814, Albany, N. Y. 
Montgomery Encampment, chartered Tune, 1814, Stillwater, N. Y. 
Darius Council, of Portland, Me. 

There were six other Encampments in the United States: 

Rising Sun, with Charter dated May, 1814, at New York. 
Pittsburg, with Charter dated May, 1814, at Pittsburg, Pa. 
Maryland, with Charter dated May, 1814, at Baltimore, Md. 
Washington, with Charter dated May, 1814, at Washington, D. C. 
Philadelphia, with Charter dated March, 1814, at Philadelphia, Pa. 
Indivisible Friends, with Charter dated May, 1814, at New Orleans, La 

Six only of these fourteen have had a continuous existence since 
their organization, viz : 

St John's, at Providence; Boston, at Boston; Maryland, at Baltimore; Rising 
57 



58 GRAND ENCAMPMENTS. 



Sun, (now Columbia,) at New York; Temple, at Albany, and Indivisible Friends, at 
New Orleans. 

Evidently some of these Encampments had been at work several 
years as voluntary associations, without regular charters, or under the 
pretended authority of the charter of a Lodge of Ancient Craft Ma- 
sonry ; for we find in Creigh's History that of the members of Phila- 
delphia Encampment No. 1, one had been knighted in February, 1794, 
another in July, 1794, another in 1795, another in 1796, three in 1800, 
on'e in 1806, and three in 1810. It could not, then, have been until 
1810 that there could have been any regularly organized body of 
Knights Templar in Pennsylvania , nor until the 27th day of Decem- 
ber, 1812, when the Sir Knights belonging to the Lodges united into 
an association by the name of Encampment No. 1, at Philadelphia, 
without charter from any superior source whatever. It was this or- 
ganization that devised the " Pennsylvania Grand Encampment of 
Knights Templar with the jurisdiction thereunto belonging." 

There is no way at hand for determining the number of Knights 
subordinate to the Grand Commandery which was established on the 
22d of June, 1816, although the number enumerated was 238. But 
it could not much have exceeded three hundred. From this small be- 
ginning in America has sprung, after passing through years of 
gloom and persecution, the now goodly array of one hundred thousand 
Sir Knights, who bow allegiance to the Grand Encampment of the 
United States. This increase, as of old, brings us back to the days of 
the Crusades, when nine Sir Knights in Palestine banded themselves 
together ; and although the old religious war is not paramount, still 
that zeal and knightly courtesy which was pre-eminent in those days 
yet dwells in the hearts of the Companion Sir Knights of this decade. 

At this first Convention, after the adoption of a Constitution, which 
was substantially the same as the one under which the General Grand 
Encampment acted up to 1844, and the election and installation of the 
following list of officers : 

M. E. the Hon. DeWitt Clinton, of New York Grand Master. 
R. E. Thomas Smith Webb, of Boston, Deputy Grand Master. 
V. E. Henry Fowle, of Boston, Grand Generalissimo. 
V. E. Ezra Ames, of Albany, Grand Captain General. 



GEAND ENCAMPMENTS. 59 



V. E. Rev. Paul Dean, of Boston, Grand Prelate. 

V. E. Martin Hoffman, of New York, Grand Senior Warden. 

V. E. John Carlisle, of Providence, Grand Junior Warden. 

V. E. Peter Grinnell, of Providence, Grand Treasurer. 

V. E. John I. Loring, of Boston, Grand Recorder. 

V. E. Thomas Loundes, of New York, Grand Warder. 

V. E. John Snow, of Providence, Grand Standard Bearer. 

V. E. Jonathan Schieffelin, of New York, Grand Sword Bearer. 

who were to continue in office until the third Thursday in September, 
1819, they adjourned to meet at that time, in the city of New York. 

The Second meeting of the General Grand Encampment of Knights 
Templar was convened pursuant to the provisions of their Constitution 
at Mason's Hall in the city of New York, on the 16th day of Septem- 
ber, 1819, at which was announced the 4eath of the R. E. Thomas 
Smith "Webb, Deputy Grand Master. Nothing further of note oc- 
curred, and after the election of officers, (no changes being made, ex- 
cept the Eminent Sir Henry Fowle, was advanced to the vacancy 
caused by the death of our late lamented Companion Sir Knight 
"Webb, and Eminent Sir Knight John Snow, who had in the interim 
moved to Ohio, and organized an Encampment at "Worthington, was 
promoted to Grand Generalissimo,) the Encampment adjourned. 

The third meeting was holden at St. John's Hall, in the city of New 
York, on the 18th day of September, 1826, at which were represented 
the Grand Encampments of the States of New York, Massachusetts, 
Rhode Island, New Hampshire, Vermont, Virginia and North Caro- 
lina. After granting charters to various Encampments throughout 
the country, the election and installation of officers, with the necessary 
routine business incident to the gathering, nothing of interest having 
transpired, they adjourned until the 14th of September, 1829. 

The fourth meeting was held at the same place, at the time specified, 
when the death of M. E. Grand Master Sir DeWitt Clinton was an- 
nounced. Representatives were present from the Grand Encamp- 
ments of New York, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, 
Rhode Island and South Carolina. Also from Mt. Vernon Encamp- 
ment, of Ohio, and "Washington, No. 1, Washington, D. C. Sir Jona- 
than Ney, of New Hampshire, was elected Grand Master, Sir Ezra S. 



60 GENERAL GRAND ENCAMPMENT. 

Cozier, of Utica, Deputy Grand Master, Sir Josiah "Wliittaker, of 
Providence, Grand Generalissimo, Sir James Eyland, of Charleston, 
Grand Captain General. 

The fifth meeting of the General Grand Encampment was held in 
the city of Baltimore, Maryland, on the 29th day of November, 1832, 
but owing to the then unsettled state of the Order, nothing of interest 
transpired. M. E. Sir Jonathan Nye was re-elected Grand Master. 

At the sixth meeting, held in the city of "Washington, D. C., M. E. 
Sir James M. Allen, of New York, was elected Grand Master, and 
Charles Gilman, of Baltimore, Grand Recorder. At the Triennial 
held at Boston, Mass., in 1838, were represented the Grand Encamp- 
ments of New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut 
and New York. Also No. 1, of Baltimore. The former officers were 
re-elected. 

Templar Masonry had for a long time been at a low ebb, and but 
little interest was being manifested, except in some of its most staunch 
supporters. September 14th, 1841, at the Triennial held in the Chap- 
ter room of Apollo, in the city of New York, renewed vigor was 
imparted into the Order, and the general reports gave a very favorable 
showing from all parts of the jurisdiction. The same officers were 
re-elected and installed. 

The next Triennial was held at New Haven, Conn., September 10th, 
1844, when the Constitution was revised, and more stringent regula- 
tions were adopted for the government of subordinate bodies. Sir 
Archibald Bull, of Troy, N. Y., was elected Grand Master, and 
Charles Gilman Grand Recorder. 

At the tenth meeting, at Columbus, Ohio, September 14th, 1847, 
M. E. Sir William B. Hubbard was elected Grand Master, and Charles 
Gilman re-elected Grand Recorder. There were now on the register 
of the General Grand Encampment five State Grand Encampments, 
viz : Massachusetts, Rhode Island, New York, Connecticut and Ohio, 
with nineteen subordinate Encampments scattered through the various 
States, among which were Apollo, No. 1, Chicago, and St. Louis, 
No. 1, St. Louis. 



GENERAL GKAND ENCAMPMENT. 61 

The next meeting, at Boston, September 10th, 1850, was without 
much interest, and the work was the usual routine. M. E. Sir W. B. 
Kubbard was re-elected Grand Master, and V. E. Sir B. B. French, of 
the District of Columbia, Grand Recorder. The registry now con- 
tained the Grand Commandery of Kentucky, and eight additional 
subordinate Commanderies. Some material amendments were made 
to the Constitution. 

The twelfth Triennial, at Lexington, Kentucky, September 13th, 
1853, was without special interest. The officers, with but slight 
changes, were re-elected, and the Grand Encampments of Maine, Ver- 
mont and Virginia were added to the register. 

At the Triennial at Hartford. Conn., September 9th, 1856, it was 
ordered, " That the word ' Encampment ' or ' Encampments,' wherev- 
er they are applied to State or subordinate bodies, in the Constitution, 
be stricken out, and ' Commandery ' or ' Commanderies ' be inserted. 
The Grand Recorder, in his report at this meeting, said : 

" One is forcibly struck, in perusing the old records, with the steady 
progress of Knight Templarism from 1816 to the present time. It is 
true, that between 1826 and 1832 the Orders of Knighthood remained 
nearly stationary. From the crude manner in which the earlier rec- 
ords were kept, it is impossible to ascertain the exact number of the 
subordinate Encampments. In 1829 five Grand Encampments and 
three subordinates were represented in the General Grand Encamp- 
ment, and the records show the existence of several more not repre- 
sented. From that time the increase has been steady, and the Order 
in the United States promises, ere long, to stand the foremost in the 
chivalry of the world." 

This comparison, made by Sir Knight the Grand Recorder, has 
been more than realized. In this year, 1856., there were eleven Grand 
Commanderies and forty-two subordinate Commanderies under the 
jurisdiction. The officers were again re-elected. 

The fourteenth Triennial, which assembled at Chicago September 
13th, 1859, was the largest gathering of the Order which had then 
been held, and the Grand Commanderies of California, Connecticut, 



62 GENERAL GRAND ENCAMPMENT. 

Indiana, Illinois, Kentucky, Maine, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, 
Michigan, Mississippi, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Texas, Ver- 
mont and Virginia, also seventeen subordinate Coinmanderies, were 
represented. The Order having assumed such proportions, considera- 
ble legislation became necessary to revise the Constitution, adopt a 
costume, etc., and the session was protracted, covering a full week in 
its deliberations. M. E. Sir B. B. French, of Washington, D. C., was 
elected Grand Master, R. E. David Short Goodloe, of Lexington, Ivy., 
Deputy Grand Master, V. E. "Winslow Lewis, of Boston, Grand Gen- 
eralissimo, V. E. Sir James V. Z. Blaney, of Chicago, Grand Captain 
General, and V. E. Sir Samuel G. Risk, of New Orleans, Grand Re- 
corder. 

December 9th, 1857, at a Special Communication of the Grand 
Commandery of Ohio, the resolution dissolving their connection with 
the General Grand Body, which had been adopted at their annual meet- 
ing in October previous, was repealed. This was a matter of general 
rejoicing. The Grand Commandery of Tennessee came in at the close 
of this meeting, and after seven days of harmonious session, the body 
adjourned to meet at Memphis, Tenn., September 3d, 1862. Among 
the notable events of this session was the banquet tendered by the Sir 
Knights of Apollo, No. 1, Chicago, to their distinguished fraters from 
abroad, and given at the Tremont House Friday evening, September 
16th. It were well to note those who sat around that board. There 

were 

Kellogg and Marsh, of California. 

Smith and Clark, of Connecticut. 

Porter, Fribarger, Austin and Hacker, of Indiana. 

Gano, Orr and Rob Morris, of Kentucky. 

Dunlap, Bell, Thompson and Burnham, of Maine. 

Dr. Winslow Lewis, 'and Charles Robbins, of Massachusetts. 

Doyle and Barker, of Rhode Island. 

Jacobs, Clark and Frank Darrow, of Michigan. 

Giles M. Hillyer, of Mississippi. 

Judd, Drew and Z. C, Priest, of New York. 

Hubbard, Achey, Creighton and Kent Jarvis, of Ohio. 

Alfred Creigh, of Pennsylvania. 

Wm. \V. Goodwin, of New Jersey. 

Neill and Case, of Texas. 

Washburn and Philip C. Tucker, of Vermont. 



b 



55 

Q 

4 



g 




GENERAL GKAND ENCAMPMENT. 63 

A. T. C. Pierson and Prescott, of Minnesota. 

Horace Chase and Moses Paul, of New Hampshire. 

Porter, Hartsock, Bovle and Parvin, of Iowa. 

English,- Barber and Albert Pike, of Arkansas. 

S \vasey, Crane, Fellows and Risk, of Louisiana. 

O'Sullivan, Henderson and Flynt, of Missouri. 

Piper, Webb and Yeates, of Maryland. 

Wood, Watson and Hastings, of Alabama. 

Ramsay, Buist and Mackev, of South Carolina. 

Haley, Stevens and French, of the District of Columbia. 

Hunt, Tracey, Lewis and H. L. Palmer, of Wisconsin. 

Phil. Thomas Schley, of Georgia. 

Deming, Goodloe, Sorlev, Lawrence, McClellan, Ely S. Parker, with our own 
Blaney, Josiah Hunt, Johnson, Buck, Mitchell, Deering, Hurlbut and others, of Illi- 
nois. 

It brought forth some of the most brilliant, chivalric speeches ever 
listened to by any body of men, and from the giants of the Order, 
served in many a dark day following to bind them closer together. 

They were not destined to reunite at Memphis in 1862, for owing to 
the exigencies of the war a special meeting was convened at New 
York city on Monday, September 1st, 1862, in pursuance of a call by 
the Grand Master, stating that, for reasons apparent to all, it was be- 
lieved to be impossible to meet at Memphis, and as- he had no power 
to change the place of meeting selected, he had called this special to 
legislate accordingly. The Grand Comnianderies of Connecticut, 
Maine, Indiana, Illinois, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Michigan, New 
York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Vermont, Kentucky and New Jersey, with 
Maryland, No. 1, Washington No. 1, and Indivisible Friends, No. 1, 
of New Orleans, were represented, and passed a resolution rescinding 
the former one, and calling the Triennial to be held on the following 
day in the city of New York. 

At this session, objections having been advanced to the costume 
adopted at the last Conclave, owing to want of adaptation to the re- 
quirements of our modern Templars, its liability to injury, as also its 
expensiveness, a new uniform was proposed (that in present use) and 
adopted. It consisted of 

FULL DRESS. Black frock coat, black pantaloons, scarf or baldrick, 
sword, belt, gauntlets and chapeau, with their appropriate trimmings. 

FATIGUE DRESS. Same as full dress, except for chapeau, a black 



64 GENERAL GRAND ENCAMPMENT. 

cloth cap, navy form, with appropriate cross in front, and for gauntlets 
white gloves. The Sir Knights to wear white metal wherever metal 
appears. Commanders, Past Commanders and Grand officers to wear 
yellow. Commanders, Generalissimos and Captain Generals to wear 
shoulder straps. 

THE GEAND STANDARD to be of white woolen or silk stuff, six feet 
high, five feet in width, made tripartite at the bottom, fastened at the 
top to a cross-bar by nine rings. In the center of the field a blood-red 
passion cross, over which the motto, " In hoc signo vinces," and un- 
der, " Non nobis, Doming, non nobis, sed Noinini tuo da Gloriam." 

BEAUSEANT. Of woolen or silk stuff, same form and dimensions of 
Grand Standard, and suspended in same manner. The upper half of 
this standard to be black, the lower half white. 

M. E. Sir B. B. French was re-elected Grand Master, and Sir John 
D. Caldwell Grand Recorder. The session was short and unimportant, 
and when they adjourned it was to meet at Columbus, Ohio, on the 
first Tuesday of September, 1865. 

At the sixteenth Triennial, September 5, 1865, at Columbus, Cali- 
fornia, Connecticut, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky, Louisiana, 
Maine, Massachusetts, Khode Island, Michigan, Missouri, New Jersey, 
New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Tennessee and Wisconsin, with sub- 
ordinate Commanderies from Arkansas, District of Columbia, Mary- 
land and Minnesota were represented. The present Templar drill was 
adopted, and the costume modified in some slight particulars, but no 
business of note was transacted. M. E. Sir II. L. Palmer^ of Milwau- 
kee was elected Grand Master, R. E. Sir ~W. S. Gardner, of Massa- 
chusetts, Deputy Grand Master, V. E. Sir John D. Caldwell Grand 
Recorder. 

The seventeenth Triennial was held at St. Louis September 15th, 
1868. This was the most noted of all the meetings up to this time, 
from the very large attendance of Sir Knights from all parts of our 
now common country. It was truly a grand re-union, not only from 
the vast numbers present, but also from the courteous, knightly hos- 
pitality shown by the Companion Sir Knights, and also the entire com- 



GENERAL, GRAND ENCAMPMENT. 65 

munity of the city of St. Louis. The bounteous cheer and cordial 
greeting received on every hand has made it a memorable epoch in the 
history of the Order. The imposing escort of Templars to the Grand 
Encampment far surpassed in display any pi-evious occasion, and pre- 
sented a pageant so brilliant that it is only those who participated can 
realize, even at this day, the impetus given to Chivalric Templar Ma- 
sonry by this gathering of the hosts. The noble Knights once more 
met in strong fraternal greeting over a re-united country. Much leg- 
islation of an important nature for the good of the Order was trans- 
acted, all of which is of such a recent date as to be well known to the 
members, but is uninteresting to the outside world, and does not re- 
quire repetition. The address of M. E. Sir Henry L. Palmer was a 
masterly document. M. E. Sir William Sewall Gardner, of Massa- 
chusetts was elected Grand Master, and V. E. Sir John D. Caldwell, 
of Ohio, re-elected Grand Recorder. 

The eighteenth Triennial convened at Baltimore September 19th, 
1871. The Grand Commanderies of Alabama, California, Connecticut, 
Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, 
Maryland, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Michigan, Minnesota, Mis- 
sissippi, Missouri, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, 
Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Texas, Vermont, Virginia and Wisconsin, 
were represented by their Grand Officers, and subordinate Comman- 
deries from Arkansas, Colorado, Delaware, District of Columbia, Flor- 
ida, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, South Caroli- 
na and the Sandwich Islands. The very able report of the Grand 
Master, covering as it did a vast scope of territory, was of great inte- 
rest. Many necessary and important changes were made in the Con- 
stitution and By -Laws, to conform to the rapidly increasing state of 
the Order. Seventy-six Commanderies, forty-three hundred Sir 
Knights, with seven hundred musicians, hailing from thirty States 
and territories, participated in the escort to the Grand Encampment, 
and the pageant was brilliant in the extreme. The Parade and Review 
was held on Thursday, 21st of September. Apollo Commandery, No. 
1, of Chicago, acting, by request, as the Guard of Honor to the Grand 



66 GENERAL GRAND ENCAMPMENT. 

Encampment of the United States. The various Commanderies hav- 
ing formed in twelve divisions on the east and west sides of Broad- 
way, facing inward, the Grand Master and Grand Officers, with 
their guard, proceeded by Vass & Chaffee's Light Guard Band, 
of Chicago, passed down between the lines, the Knights presenting 
arms, and the bands (thirty in number) playing in their regular 
order as the Grand Officers approached. The Grand Master, having 
taken position on the extreme right, the divisions wheeled into line, 
led by troops of mounted Red Cross Knights, with prancing steeds, 
gaily caparisoned, and lances at a poise decorated with gay ribbons. 
During the march several of the Commanderies executed many bril- 
liant movements, forming in triangles, curves and double crosses, ex- 
citing the admiration of the assembled thousands. The soldierly 
bearing and drill of the different Commanderies was very marked, and 
although there were many notable ones, a comparison, where all were 
so perfect, would be invidious. The Committee appointed to award 
the prize (consisting of a superb libation service) offered by Baltimore 
Commandery, No. 2, after careful consideration, arrived at the conclu- 
sion that, for excellence of movement, perfection of discipline, and 
general knightly appearance, Detroit Commandery, No. 1, of Detroit, 
Michigan, bore away the palm. 

The entire route of march passed over was one dense mass of human 
beings, estimated at over two hundred thousand people, who witnessed 
the gorgeous array, while the places of business and private residences 
throughout the line of march were gaily decorated. Passing the shaft 
erected in honor of the "Father of his Country," in memory of their 
beloved brother, the Knights gave the military salute, and the Grand 
Officers uncovered their heads and bowed in reverence. 

Nature was propitious, for " the morning dawned bright and clear. 
The twinkling stars that shone with such unwonted brilliancy the 
preceding night had given promise of a day radiant with mellow sun- 
shine," which was fully appreciated by the gay cavaliers who had 
journeyed so far to participate in the glories of that ever memorable 
occasion. Thousands of glad hearts thanked God that day for the 



GENERAL GRAND ENCAMPMENT. 



67 



bright sunshine, so in unison with all the brilliant scenes enacted du- 
ring its passing hours, and which will ever haunt them like a dream 
in fairy land. 

M. E. Sir J. Q. A. Fellows was elected Grand Master, R. E. Sir 
James Herron Hopkins, Deputy Grand Master, V. E. Sir Vincent 
Lumbard Hurlbut, Grand Generalissimo, V. E. Sir Benjamin Dean, 
Grand Captain General, and V. E. Sir James Sutton Parvin, Grand 
Recorder. With the growth of the Order necessarily a vast amount 
of business was transacted, and after a very harmonious session the 
Grand Encampment adjourned. 

The nineteenth Triennial Conclave was held at New Orleans Decem- 
ber 1st to 5th, 1874. This was a notable gathering also ; and while 
it was not so largely attended as the former meeting at Baltimore, 
still the whole general ensemble was of the same gay, gorgeous dis- 
play, and the proverbial hospitality of the inhabitants of the Crescent 
City was poured forth with a lavish hand. 

The parade to escort the officers of the Grand Encampment to Ma- 
sonic Hall was rich in the extreme, and nature tendered her best work 
to facilitate the cause. Thirty State Grand Commanderies and eleven 
subordinate Commanderies were represented, and peace, jo} r and har- 
mony prevailed. The regulation relating to uniform, adopted in 1862, 
was re-endorsed, all propositions relating to its change being voted 
down. M. E. Sir James Herron Hopkins was elected Grand Master, 
R. E. Sir Y. L. Hurlbut, Deputy Grand Master, Sir "Walter Lawrence 
Bragg, Grand Generalissimo, Sir Edward Thomas Schultz, Grand 
Captain General, and Sir T. S. Parvin Grand Recorder. 

The twentieth Triennial Conclave was called together at Cleveland, 
Ohio, August 28th, 1877, Tancred Commandery, No. 48, of Pitts- 
burg, Pa., being the special Commandery detailed by the Grand Com- 
mander of Pennsylvania, as the escort of the M. E. Grand Master Sir 
Knight James Herron Hopkins. The arrangements for this meeting 
were of a very elaborate order, and, while the attendance was not so 
great as was expected, still the Grand Parade, with all of the sur- 
roundings, was of such a character as to give renewed eclat to the 
6 



68 



GENERAL GRAND ENCAMPMKNT. 



chivalric standing of the Sir Knights, each of whom, as well as the 
Cotninanderies, as bodies, vied with ^ach other as to who could best 
maintain the high standing accredited to them in the general estima- 
tion. The report of the M. E. Grand Master 1 was recognized as one 
of the ablest documents ever laid before the General Grand Body, 
and covered every point that naturally presented itself to the chi valr.ic 
notice of the Illustrious Companions. Much valuable legislation was 
enacted. Thirty-one State Grand Commanderies and eleven subordi- 
nate Commanderies were represented. The Parade and Review was 
magnificent, and ably carried out. Detroit Commandery, N-\ 1, as at 
Baltimore, again carried off the prize, a magnificent banner, of which 
they may well be proud. The officers elected will follow in the 
Tableau for 1880. 





TABLEAU, 



Irani Jfotamjtraijttl fltj 



UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. 



M. E. 
E. E. 
V. E. 
V. E. 
V. E. 
V. E. 
V. E. 
V. E. 
V. E. 
V. E. 
V. E. 
V. E. 
V. E. 



i a Q o. 

Sir Vincent Lumbard Hurlbut, Illinois, Grand Master. 

Sir "Walter L. Bragg, Alabama, Deputy Grand Master. 

Sir Benjamin Dean, Massachusetts, Grand Generalissimo. 

Sir LaFayette Lyttle, Ohio, Grand Captain General. 

Eev. Sir Clinton Locke, Illinois, Grand Prelate. 

Sir Eobert E. "Withers, Virginia, Grand Senior "Warden. 

Sir Benjamin B. Eichardson, Texas, Grand Junior Warden. 

Sir John "W. Simons, New York, Grand Treasurer. 

Sir Theodore T. Parvin, Iowa, Grand Eecorder. 

Sir John "W. "Woodhull, Wisconsin, Grand Standard Bearer. 

Sir Charles Win. Carter, Connecticut, Grand Sword Bearer. 

Sir Orin Welch, New York, Grand Warder. 

Sir Hiram T. Graves, California, Grand Captain of the Guard. 



PAST GRAND OFFICERS. 



PAST GRAND MASTERS. 

M. E. Sir Henry L. Palmer, Wisconsin. 
M. E. Sir William Sewall Gardner, Massachusetts. 
69 



70 TABLEAU. 



M. E. Sir J. Q. A. Fellows, Louisiana. 

M. E. Sir James Herron Hopkins, Pennsylvania. 



PAST DEPUTY GRAND MASTKRS. 
R. E. Sir David Short Goodloe, Kentucky. 
R. E. Sir William Tracy Gould, Georgia. 



PAST GRAND GENERALISSIMOS. 
V. E. Sir Zenas C. Priest, IS'ew York. 
V. E. Sir William J. Eeese, Ohio. 



PAST GRAND CAPTAIN GENERALS. 
V. E. Sir Ezra S. Barnum, New York. 
V. E. Sir James Sorley, Texas. 
V. E. Sir A. T. C. Pierson, Minnesota. 
V. E. Sir George W. Belt, Missouri. 
V. E. Sir Ed. Thomas Schultz, Maryland. 



OFFICERS STATE GRAND COMMANDERIES. 

(GRAND COMMANDER, DEPUTY GRAND COMMANDER, GRAND GENERALISSIMO AND QRAND CAPTAIK 

GENERAL.) 



Alabama* Arkansas. 



William S. Foster, 
Stephen H. Beasley, 
Daniel Smith, 
Eobert Moulthrop. 

California. 
Alfred A. Redington, 
Edward R. Hedges, 
Charles F. Lott, 
Edwin A. Rodgcrs. 



James H. Van Hoose, 
Robert E. Salle, 
James A. Henry, 
Raphael M. Johnson. 



Colorado. 

Harper M. Orahood, 
James M. Strickler, 
Michael Spangler, 
Michael II. Fitch. 



rABLEAU. 



71 



Connecticut. 
Charles W. Carter, 
Israel JVT. Bullock, 
Charles W. Skiff, 
Nelson J. "Wei ton. 

Illinois. 

Charles Moody Morse, 
John Corson Smith, 
Loyal L. Munn, 
Henry Turner. 

Iowa. 

Horace S. Winslow, 
J. Scott Jenkins, 
"William G. Donnan, 
James Morton. 

Kentucky. 
D. Yertner Johnson, 
James E. Cantrill, 
Thomas II. Sherley, 
Edwin G. Hall. 

Maine. 
John Bird, 
Edward P. Burnham, 
Isaac S. Bangs, 
John O. Shaw. 



Georgia. 

Charles R. Armstrong 
William D. Luckie, 
William S. Rockwell, 
John G. Dietz. 



Indiana. 
Henry G. Thayer, 
John H. Hess, 
Samuel B. Sweet, 
Richard L. Woolsey. 



Kansas. 

Edwin D. Hillyer, 
Dwight Byington, 
Andrew M. Callahan, 
S. E. W. Johnson. 

Louisiana. 
A. W. Hyatt, 
George Soule, 
E. E. Adams, 
William II. Chaffee. 

Maryland. 
George R. Coflroth, 
Christian B. Kleibacker, 
John H. Weber, 
W. A. Hanway. 



Massachusetts and Rhode Islam!. ' 

Nelson W. Aldrich, 
William H. Kent, 
Caleb Saunders, 
George H. Burnham. 



Michigan. 
William B. Wilson, 
George W. Chandler, 
Charles E. Grisson, 
Eugene B. Robinson. 



TABLKAU. 



Minnesota. 
William C. Williston, 
Robert L. McCormick 
Eussell C. Hunger, 
Luther Z. Rogers. 

Missouri. 
Sol. E. "Waggoner, 
William G. Hall, 
William J. Terrell, 
John A. Sloan. 

New Hampshire. 
Joseph W. Hildreth, 
Benjamin F. Ruckley, 
Nathan P. Hunt, 
Thomas S. Ellis. 

New York. 
Thomas C. Chittenden, 
George W. Walgrove, 
Simon Y. McDowell, 
John S. Bartlett. 

Pennsylvania. 
John P. S. Gobiri, 
DeWitt C. Carroll, 
George W. Kendrick, Jr., 
B. Frank Breneman. 

Texas. 

Henry Scherffius, 
H. B. Stoddard, 
J. W. Hannig, 
R. H. Neal. 



Mississippi. 
Charles M. Erwin, 
W. G. Benbrook, 
R. F. Hudson, 
William French. 

Nebraska. 
Joseph K. Marlay, 
Edwin A. Allen, 
Eben K. Long, 
Francis E. White. 

New Jersey. 
I. Lay ton Register, 
Joseph W. Congdon, 
George G. Felton, 
Charles H. Ingalls. 



Oldo. 

J. Kelly Oneall, 
Henry H. Tatem, 
Alexander F. Yance, 
Elijah H. Norton. 

Tennessee. 
George C. Connor, 
Joseph H. Fussell, 
William David Robison, 
Benjamin F. Haller. 

Vermont. 
Edward S. Dana, 
Ormond Cole, 
Rigny D. Marvin, 
Thad. M. Chapman. 



TABLEAU. 73 



Virginia. 
James G. Bain, 
John F. Reynault, 
Peyton S. Coles, 
John L. Roper. 



Wisconsin. 
John W. Woodhull, 
Milton D. Bartlett, 
Kirtland M. Hiitchinson, 
Lemuel Rossiter. 



These, with all Past Grand Commanders of the above State Grand 
Bodies who may be present, are entitled to one vote each. Also 
the first three officers of the following subordinate Commauderies, 
holding their charters immediately from the Grand Encampment, 
who, or as many of whom, may be present, are entitled to, collective- 
ly, one vote, viz : 

St. John's, No. 1, Wilmington, Delaware. 

Washington, No. 1, Washington, D. C. 

Columbia, No. 2, Washington, D. C. 

Potomac, No. 3, Georgetown, D. C. 

DeMolay, No. 4, Washington, D. C. 

Cceur de Lion, No. 1, Warrington, Florida. 

Damascus, No. 2, Jacksonville, Florida. 

Baron, No. 3, Key West, Florida. 

Virginia City, No. 1, Virginia City, Montana. 

Helena, No. 2, Helena, Montana. 

DeWitt Clinton, No. 1, Virginia, Nevada. 

Wilmington, No. 1, Wilmington, N. C. 

Charlotte, No. 2, Charlotte, N. C. 

South Carolina, No. 1, Charleston, S. C. 

Columbia, No. 2, Columbia, S. C. 

Utah, No. 1, Salt Lake City, Utah. 

Wyoming, No. 1, Cheyenne, Wyoming. 

Oregon, No. 1, Portland, Oregon. 



GRAND RECORDERS. 



State. Name. Post Office. 

Alabama Daniel Sayre Montgomery. 

Arkansas John "W. Rison Little Rock. 

California Thos. H. Caswell San Francisco. 

'"Canada Daniel Spry Toronto. 

Colorado Ed. C. Parmelee Georgetown. 

Connecticut John W. Stedman Norwich. 

^England and Wales. .Alex. Stavely Hill London. 

Georgia A. M. "Wolihin Albany. 

Illinois Gilbert W. Barnard Chicago. 

Indiana John M. Bramwell Indianapolis. 

Iowa W. B. Langridge Muscatine. 

Kansas John H. Brown Wyandotte. 

Kentucky L. D. Croninger Covington. 

Louisiana . : Richard Lambert New Orleans. 

Maine Ira Berry Portland. 

Maryland Charles T. Sisco Balrimore. 

Mass, and R. Island. . . Alfred F. Chapman Boston. 

Michigan Win. P. Innes Grand Rapids. 

Minnesota A. T. C. Pierson St. Paul. 

Mississippi J. L. Power Jackson. 

Missouri Win. H. Mayo St. Louis. 

Nebraska Wm. R. Bowen Omaha. 

New Hampshire George P. Cleaves Concord. 

New Jersey George B. Edwards Jersey City. 

N ew York Robert Macoy New York. 

Ohio James Nesbitt Troy. 

Pennsylvania Chas. E. Meyer Philadelphia. 

Tennessee Morton B. Howell Nashville. 

Texas Robert Brewster Houston. 

Vermont J. M. Poland Montpelier. 

Virginia Win. B. Isaacs Richmond. 

West Virginia Geo. F. Irvine Wheeling. 

AVisconsin Chas. P. Utley Milwaukee. 

G. Encampment 1 T . S. .Theo. S. Parvin Iowa City, Iowa. 

* Great Priories. 

74 




AMERICAN EXI'UICSS BflLDINU ASYLUM Off APOLLO COMMANDEKY 



THE TRIENNIAL COMMITTEE, 




ST. BERNAKD. 

When the Chicago Commanderies returned home from Cleveland, 
in September, 1877, with the knowledge that their city had been se- 
lected by the Grand Encampment of Knights Templar for the 
twenty-first Triennial Conclave, to be held in August, 1880, it took 
but a short time to realize the fact that there was a stupendous work 
before them. " Let the Lord arise, and let His enemies be scattered,'' 
sang twenty thousand Knights, as their banners streamed in the wind 
on the onward march to Jerusalem. The tumult of battle allowed no 
time for delay. Never since that day has there been such a gathering 
of Knights. The crescent paled before the cross. Next August, sev- 
en hundred and eighty-five years from the time the tramp of ye 
ancient Knight shook the Eastern empires, will be assembled a host 
75 



76 TRIENNIAL COMMITTEE. 



more formidable, who bear the cross, but not to draw the sword upon 
this favored continent. Never will that happen here in the cause of 
sect or religion. Men may differ in their creeds, but this dispute is 
one of words. As the wave of civilization flows over this land, it 
will carry the softening influences of the knightly character with it, 
and that will have an influence for the better upon all mankind." 

It is befitting that Chicago, great in all things, should be selected 
as the Mecca of the Pilgrims. It is fortunate, too, that she should 
have at the head of one of her Templar organizations the man of all 
others competent to carry through, to a successful termination, one of 
the grandest events ever known in the history of brilliant Conclaves 
of the Grand Encampment of the United States. 

At a Stated Conclave of Apollo Commandery, No, 1, held February 
19, 1878, a resolution was unanimously adopted, raising a Committee 
of five of which Em. Sir Norman T. Gassette was to be Chairman, 
with full power to make the necessary arrangements for the Triennial 
Conclave of 1880. 

On the 6th of April, the Chairman of the Committee of Apollo 
Commandery, on behalf of the Committee, indicted a letter to the Emi- 
nent Commanders of Chicago Commandery, No. 19, and St. Bernard 
Commandery, No. 35, requesting the appointment of a similar Com - 
mittee by each of said Commanderies, and requesting a conference 
meeting for organization. Accordingly, April 12, the several Com- 
mittees appointed by the Commanderies named met as v equested, and 
effected an organization. 

On the 18th day of June, a meeting of the several Committees was 
again held, when their credentials, under the^eal of said three Com- 
manderies, were presented, accepted, recorded, and thus ihe Triennial 
Committee, consisting of 

E. Sir Norman T. Gassette, Commander Apo^o No. 1, Chairman 

E. Sir Lester L. Bond, P. C. Chicago, No. 19, Vice Chairman 

Sir Geo. M. Moulton, St. Bernard No. 35, Secretary, 

Sir DeWitt C. Cregier, Apollo, 

Sir "Warren G. Purdy, Apollo, 



TRIENNIAL COMMITTEES. 77 



Sir Oscar W. Barrett, Apollo, 

Sir Charles E. Coburn, Apollo, 

E. Sir Alexander White, Chicago, 

E. Sir John Witbeck, Chicago, 

Sir Henry H. Pond, Chicago, 

Sir Malcolm McDonald, Chicago, 

E. Sir John A. Crawford, St. Bernard, 

E. Sir John "Woodman, St. Bernard, 

Sir Anson Gorton, St. Bernard, 

Sir Wm. H. Thompson, 
became permanently organized. 

At the meeting of the Grand Commandery of the State of Illinois, 
in October next ensuing, after a statement of the action of the local 
Commanderies had been made to that body, the following resolution 
was unanimously adopted . 

Resolved, That the report of E. Sir Norman T. Gassette be received, 
and the action had by the Committee be approved, and that the Com- 
mittee be continued under the auspices of this Grand Commandery. 

The Permanent Committee of the three Commanderies named, 
clothed with the added authority of their Grand Commandery, fuliy 
mindful of the great responsibility resting upon them, have labored 
diligently for the accomplishment of the results sought to be obtained. 

The first business done was the absorption of the entire hotel capa- 
city of the city (which is second only to New York) for their Templar 
guests, and to assign them to quarters in the order in which they sig- 
nified their intention to be present, a communication to the following 
effect having been sent to each Grand and subordinate Commandery 
in the United States : 

CHICAGO, August 18th, 1879, A. O. 761. 
To the Eminent Commander, Generalissimo, Captain General and Sir 

Knights of - - Commandery, No. , Knights Templar, stationed 

at , State of - - : 

KNIGHTIA AND GREETING : The Grand Encampment of Knights 
Templar of the United States, having determined to hold its Twenty- 
First Triennial Conclave in the city of Chicago, Illinois, Tuesday, 



78 



TRIENNIAL COMMITTEES. 



August 17th, 1880, A. O. 762, the Triennial Committee of Knights 
Templar, acting by authority of Apollo, Chicago and St. Bernard 
Commanderies, stationed at Chicago, and with the sanction, and by 
authority of the Grand Commandery of Knights Templar, and the 
Right Eminent Grand Commander of Illinois whom they also rep- 
resent courteously and fraternally invite your Commandery to be 
present, and, on that occasion, participate in the escort of the Grand 
Encampment to the Asylum. 

The following is a part of a standing resolution, adopted by the 
Grand Encampment, to wit : 

"That the Grand Encampment will hereafter accept no invitation to 
unite in a parade during its sessions, and it hereby prohibits any of 
its members from participating in a Templar parade during its ses- 
sions, except to escort the Grand Encampment to the Asylum, at the 
opening of the Triennial Conclave." 

The Grand Parade, consequently, will be limited to escorting the 
Grand Encampment to the Asylum on the first day, Tuesday, August 
17th, 1880. 

FULL LIST OF SUB-COMMITTEES. 



FINANCE COMMITTEE. 



Benjamin Allen, Philo 

Anderson, T. W. 
Barrell, James 
Best, William 
Blakely, C H. 
BonBeld, J. F. 
Borland, M. W. 
Button, Peter 
Campbell, Murdoch 
Chambers, B. R. 
Chapin, G. S. 
Coey, David 
Colvin, H. D. 
Counselman, Charles 
Crilley, Daniel F. 
Dickerson, f. O. 
Doane, J. W. 
Drake, John B. 
Dutch, John B. 
Farwell, C. B. 
Furwell, M. F. 
Fitch, Henry S. 
Forsythe, Robert 
Fuller, Wm. A. 
Gage. Albert 
Gill.B. G. 



John H. Witbeck, Chairman. 

G. Dodge, C. M. Hotchkiss, Wm. E. McHenrv, 

Vice Chairmen. 



Gossage, Charles 
Grannis, Amos 
Henderson, C. M. 
Hinckley, F. E. 
Hodge, Andrew T. 
Holmes, Ira 
Hotchkiss, C. M. 
How, George M. 
Hussander, P. J. 
James, Fred. S. 
Jeffer'v, John B. 
Kirk,'john B. 
Libbey, C. P. 
Matthews, Frank 
McLaren, John 
Merrick, M. M. 
Miller, T. E. 
Mills, Luther L. 
Mortimer, Win. E. 
O'Neill, John 
Patterson, Wm. J. 
Peacock, C. D. 
Pond, H. H. 
Potter, O. W. 



Richardson, L. D. 
Raymond, Samuel B. 
Rutter, J. O. 
Schutler, Peter 
Seipp, Wm. C. 
Shaffer, H. R. 
Shafther, Louis 
Sherer, W. T. 
Shurley, E. R. P. 
Sinclair, Geo. F. 
Skinkle, Jacob W. 
Spaulding, Jesse 
Spry, John 
Scott, I. W. 
Stockton, Joseph 
Sullivan, J. B. 
Thompson, A. M. 
Turner, Henry 
Walshe, John R. 
Walshe, Robert J. 
Ward, Dennis 
Williams, Geo. T. 
Willing, W.J. 
Young, Otto 



I 

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TKIKXNIAL COMMITTEES. 



79 



COMPETITIVE DRILL COMMITTEE. 

John Wood.man, Chairman. E. B. Myers, Vice Chairman 

Purington, II. G. 



Atkins, A. R. H. 
Chamberlain, E. W. 
Davis, George R. 
De Young, Benjamin R. 
Field, H. D. 



Hall, D. E. 
Holmes, Gilbert M. 
Knox, E. B. 
Loomis, J. Mason 



Swain, E. D. 
Torrance, J. T. 
Turner, Henry 



HOTEL COMMITTEE, 



Edward B. Rambo, Chairman. 
Alexander, E. S. 
A very, Danl. J. 
Barrett, O. W. 
Buck, A. H. 
Burbank, W. M. 



Clark, Jr, S. W. 
Croft, F. W. 
Fitch, T. D. 
Gould, G. T. 
Leonard, C. E. 



Anson Gorton, Vice. 
McGrath, M. J 
Munger, Geo. D. 
Pond, H. H. 
Van Pelt, Geo. H. 



DECORATION COMMITTEE. 

H. II. Pond, Chairman. J. B. Overmeyer, Vicr 

annell, J. M. 
renan, C. H. 



Bonnell, 

B 

Burhaus, L. H. 

Crabbe, C. C. 

Dainty, A. H. 

Dakin, R.L. 



Deprato, John 
Holmes, G. M. 
Knox, E. B. 
McAvov, J. H. 
McDonald, Walter 



McGrath, M. J. 
Murphy, J. K. 
Powell, M W. 
Walshe, R. J. 
Wilcox, W. H. 



PRESS COMMITTEE. 

Franc B. Wilkie, Chairman. 
Armstrong, Geo. B. Hammond, J. R. 



Burgess, Wm. 
I hristie, H. A 
Dunlop, J. R. 
Edwards, J. B. 



Magee, Guy 
Malcolm, Robert 
Xorthrup, Charles W. 
Ogden, Wm. L. 



J. B. Jeffery, Vice. 
Raster. Herman 
Stone, M. E. 
Tilden, H. W. 
Walker, Wm. S. 



TRANSPORTATION COMMITTEE. 



Anson Gorton, Chairman. 
Adams, C. W. I Malcolm, Robert 

Forsvthe, Robt. ! Pingree, Wm_. 



Law, Jr., William 
Linsted, D. B. 



Richardson, L. D. 
Sage, Wm. U. 



Alexander White, Vice. 
Sinclair, Geo. F. 
St. John, E. 
Thrall, W. A. 
Vandercook, C. R. 



ENTERTAINMENT COMMITTEE. 



D. C. Cregier, Chairman. 



Asay, E. G. 
Beebe, L. A. 

Bisbee, L. H. 
Carr, J. D. M. 
Clark, Jonathan 



Dixon, Joseph 
Duvall, Harry 
Hale, A. L. 
Hotchkiss, C. T. 
Neelev, John C. 



G. 11. Laflin, Vice 
Reynolds, J. P. 
Squires, C. S. 
Stevens, W. A. 
Tathain, R. L. 
Thomas John W. 





80 TKIENNIAL COMMITTEES. 


BOAT EXCURSION COMMITTEE. 


O. W. Barrett, Chairman. Alexander White, Vice. 


Avery, D. J. 


Lawrence, G. W. 


Tillotson, E. N. 


Channon Henry 


Miller, T. E. 


Tobey, E. P. 


Farrar, John P. 


Morford, T. T. 


Van Dalsen, E. 


Gunther, C. F. 


Russell, Alfred 


Wheeler, J. S. 


Hamilton, D. G. 


Storey, Robt. E. 


White, George E. 


CONSTRUCTION COMMITTEE. 


A. Grannis, Chairman. George Tappen, Vice. 


Coey, David 


Dixon, L. B. 


Milligan, H.J. 


Cleveland, L. D. 


McDanald, D. H. 


Pitts, James L. 


Crilly, D. F. 


McGarigle, W. J. 


White, J. S. 


GRAND RECEPTION COMMITTEE. 


William Aldrich, Chairman T. T. Gurnev, Viee. 


Allen, J. Adams | Gilette, J F. 


Sanborn, J. H. 


Allen, Win. T. 


Goodman, D. 


Sherwood, George 


Armour, George 


Grannis, Amos 


Sinclair, G. F. 


Avery, D. G. 


Gray, F. D. 


Skinkle.J. W. 


Ayres. Enos 


Hall, A. T. 


Skinner, Mark 


Barber, Jr., Hiram 


Harrison, C. H. 


Smeal, J. B. 


Barnard, Gil. W. 


Heath, Monroe 


Smith, Perry H. 


Bennett, A. M. 


Henderson, S. M. 


Smith, Sidney 


Billings, A. M. 


Hewitt, George 


Sprague, A. A. 


Birch, H. T. 


Howard, Martin 


Swartley, J. S. 


Bisbee, L. A. 


Hutchins, Thomas 


Stager, Anson 


Bond, L. L. 


Ives, George A. 


Steele, T. W. 


Bonney, C. C. 


Jacobs, H. T. 


Stevens, W. A. 


Brooks, J. C. 


Jenks, W. B. 


Stewart, I. W. 


Buel, Ira W. 


Johnson, H. A 


Stewart, Wm. 


Campbell, Geo. C. 
Campbell, Murdoch 


Kerr, Samuel 
Kretzinger, G. W. 


Sturges, J. D. 
Tenney, J. F. 


Catlin, C. 


Laflin, G. H. 


Thomas, H. W 


Clark, Jonathan 


Lombard, Isaac G 


Thomas, A. M. 


Cleveland, M. B. 


Mattocks, John 


Tilden, Wm. M. 


Cobb, Silas B. 


McAvoyJ. H. 


Tolman, S. A. 


Coffin, G. B. 


McCagg, E. B. 


Turner, Henry 


Creo, D. R. 


McCiurg, A. C. 


Turner, Volney 


Dakin, R. L. 


MacVicker, J. H. 


Turner, Wm. H. 


Dale, David 


Meech, G. A. 


Underwood, P. L. 


Davis, Geo. R. 


Miles,]. H. 


Van Pelt, G. H. 


Dexter, Wirt 


Munger, C. E. 


Wadsworth, L. L. 


Doty, M. R. 


Nelson, Murray 


Ward, Dennis 


Durand, C. E. 


Nickerson, N. 


Warrington, A 


Dwight,John II 
Egan, Wiley M. 


Oneill, John 
Palmer, F. W. 


Watson, J. D. 
Wentworth, W. F 


Fargo, Charles 


Perry, H. G. 


White, John S. 


Farwejl.j. V. 
Field, Marshall 


Pullman, A. B. 
Pullman, George M. 


White, W. R. 
Whitehouse, J. J 


Firman, L. B 


Rambo, E. B. 


Williams, Norman 


Gardner, George 


Ranney, H. C. 


Williams, S. G 


Gillett, E. W. 


Rumsey, J. S. 


Wolseley, H. W 







TRIENNIAL COMMITTEES. 81 


GRAND RECEPTION FLOOR COMMITTEE. 


J. M. Bonnell, Chairman. R. J. Walshe, Vice. 


Adams, Alex. 


Dreyer, H. W. 


Muir, G. W. 


Adams, C. W. 


Dunn.J. O. 


Murphy, J. K. 


Agnes, T. S. 


Durphy, C. L. 


Napier, E. E. 


Amerson, Wm. 


Foerster, C. F. 


Ogden, William L. 


Anderson, J. H. 


Garrabrant, R. C. 


Olcott, J. F. 


Anthony, J. T. 
Atkinson, j. W. 


Handlin, William 
Haven, OtisE. 


Overmeyer, J. B. 
Parker, Thomas A. 


Averill, G. B. 


Havvley, G. A. 


I'erkins, C. A. 


Baker, Henry 


Hayden, F. A. 


Pond, H. H. 


Baker, O. P. 


Hemmelgarn, H. 


Purington, H. G. 


Bay, George P. 


Hilton, J. C. 


Quast, A. 


Beebee, L. A.j 


Hogan, Joseph 


Quick, J. H. S. 


Blackburn, M. 


Holcomb, H. F. 


Raggio, Samuel C. 


Booth, David 


Holmes, G. M. 


Roe, George H. 


Borland, M. W. 


Horton, E. M. 


Ross, George A . 


Bosley, D. W. 


Hussander, P. J. 


Ruddock, C. H. 


Bowers, Jno. H. 


lluyrk, John H. 


Russell, Alfred 


Boyer, A. 


Hyde, C. E. 


Sawyer, Jr., C. W. 


Brad well, William H. 


Iglehart, N. G. 


Seipp, W. C. 


Braymer, A. E 


Isbell, Edward 


Seymour, H. F. 


Brenan, C. H. 


James, F. S. 


Shafther, L. 


Buck, A. H. 


Jarman, W. S. 


Smith, James 


Buckman, R. M. 


Kimbark, D. A. 


Squires, C. S. 


Buckner, George 


Kirk, J. S. 


Storev, R. E. 


Burgess, C. A. 


Knisely, A. 


Stray", William 


Butler, F. S. ' 


Lapp, Peter 


Stubbs, J. B. 


Butler, Joseph 


Lawrence, G. W. 


Tennis, J. C. 


Campbell, Alex. 


Lindley, W. T. 


Tobey, E. P. 


Carr, J. D. M. 


Linsted, D. B. 


Trimmingham, F. 


Carroll, Henry 


Lyons, Joseph M. 


Trimmer, J. R. 


Chadduck, D. H. 


Malcolm, Robert 


Van Buren, A. T. 


Chambers, George 


Mann, O. H. 


Van Vorhees, T . 


Chapman, H. B. 


Mason, D. W. 


Wadhams, A. S. 


Clark, R. 


Maurer, C. F. 


Walker, C. 


Cleland, I. 


McArthur, S. W. 


West, A. F. 


Cowles, Charles 


McDanold, D. H. 


Whitehouse, F. W. 


Coyne, J. H. 


Metzger, H. E. 


Williams, G. A. 


Croft, F. W. 


Milligan, H. J. 


Williams, G. T. 


Crosby, G. F. 


Montgomery, G. W. 


Wilson, C. B. 


Dalton, W. H. 


moody, John A. 


Wilson, F. C. 


])av, Joseph L. 


Morgan, O. H. 


Wollensah, J. F 


De'Luce, William T 


Morrison, E. W. 


Woods, J. G. 


])ickinson, J. O. 


Mosher, W. .H. 


Wrisjht, C. B. 


RECEPTION COMMITTEE MUSIC HALL. 


MONDAY NIGHT, AUGUST l6. 


L. L. Bond, Chairman. A. Grahnis, Vice. 


Anderson, T. W. 


Jacobus, G. I. 


Rollo, Wm. E. 


Avery, D. J. 
Boone, L. D. 


Johnson, R. H. 
Kent, Benjamin A. 


Talcott, L. A. 
Thompson, Jerry S. 


Briggs, Clinton 


Libbey, A. A. 


Thorpe, Thomas H. 


Carpenter, George 


Mallory, H. E. 


Thrall, W. A. 


Chase, F. L. 


Maurer, Cass F. 


Watkins, W. W. 


Guilford, A. J. 


Mcech, Geo. A. 


White, Julius 


Henderson, S. M. 


Montague, Geo. 


Wickcrsham, Swayne 


Holland, R.W. 


Morford, T. T. 


Williams, E. S. 


Hoxie, J. R. 


Ranson, Wm. B. 


Williams, Geo. T. 


Hughitt, Marvin 1 


Parker, R. S. 


Woodward, J. L. 







82 TRIENNIAL COMMITTEES. 


RECEPTION COMMITTEEFAR WELL HALL. 


MONDAY NIGHT,' AUGUST l6. 


A. White, Chairman.. A. M. Thompson, Vice. 


Aldrich, Wm. II. ' 


Dalton, Jas. P. 


Lombard, Isaac G. 


Allen, Ira \V. 


DeKoven, John 


Lyon, Geo. W. 


Anguerra, A. 


Eckardt, Thomas 


Miles, James H. 


Armour, P. D. 


Emiick, C. G. 


Patrick, B. F. 


Bentlev, Cyrus 


English, J. E. 


Rust, H. A. 


Blair, C. M. 


Fafch, C. H. 


Steele, W. R. 


Blake, E. N. 


Foskitt, A. II. 


Taylor, George 


Bradley, J. H. 


Foster, Jacob F. 


Torrester. Charles T. 


Briggs, Charles W. 


Gill, B. G. 


Trimmer, John R. 


Brower, C. H. 


Gillette, James F. 


Tuthill, R. S. 


Butler, J. W. 


Gray, Moses 


Wheeler, C. C. 


Chapman, S. S. 


Hilton, Charles C. 


Wilson. Cleon B. 


Clark, Wm. C. 


Hutchinson, B. F. 


Wilson, J. J. S 


Cooke C. A " 


Knickerbocker. J. J. 


Woodbury, Wm. H. 


Crabbe, C. C. 


Laflin, Geo. I ' . 


Young, H. G. 


Cunningham, T. S. 






RECEPTION COMMITTEE McCORMICK'S HALL. 


MONDAY NIGHT, AUGUST l6. 


Gil. W. Barnard, Chairman. Wiley M. Egan, Vice. 


Barnum, W. L. 


Lamb, A. C. 


Slaughter, A. O. 


Boggs, George T. 


Mann, O. H. 


Smith, James P. 


Bradwell, James B. 


Marks, Stewart 


Stoufter, C. R. 


Broomhall, C. W. 


McP'arland, ChurPes, 


Treadway, George P. 


Cochrane, William 


McGuire, J. E. 


Vandereook, H R. 


Cunningham, W. A. 


McLandburgh, John 


Van Zandt, L. Z. 


Eames, H. F. 


Moore, S. M. 


Warner, Orrin 


Evenden, John G. 
Ewart, W. D. 


Muir, George W. 
Noble, William E. 


Waroville, G. W. 
Warren, James D. 


Goodman, Jonathan 


Ranney, H. C. 


Wadhams, S. 


Gould, S. A. 


Ravlin, J. D. 


Walshe.John R. 


Gow, John 


Ravlin, N. F. 


Watson, J. D. 


Hale, D R. 


Riddle, Hugh 


Wheeler, S. W.. 


Hamilton, H. E. 


Roe, John 


Wilcox, Jewett 


Hayden, J. A. 


Shedd, E. A. 


Winston, F. H. 


Kern, Charles 


Slack, C. H. 


Wrenn, J. H. 


AUXILIARY TRIENNIAL COMMITTEE. 


T. T. Gurney, Chairman. C. E. Hunger, Vice. 


ALTON. 


AURORA. 


jLOOMINGTOX. 


Ferguson, F. H. 


Byan, H. S. 


Bloomfield, Ira G. 


Smith, R. B. 


Walker, James 


Waddle, S. W. 




Wardner, Horace 


Webb, C. F. 


AUGUSTA. 




White, J. L. 


Leach, W. G 


BELLEVILLE. 


CAIRO. 


Michaelis, R. C. 


Storkel, L. C. 


Barclay, P. A. 


Pitnev, O. L. 


Waugh, J. C. 


Dunning, C. W. 







TRIENNIAL COMMITTEES. 83 


AUXILIARY TRIENNIAL COMMITTEE CONTINUED. 


CARROLLTON. 


GALESBURG. 


PARIS. 


Armstrong. Clinton 


Lanphere, G. H. 


Dyas, J. A. 


Multon, J. B. 


Patch, W. W. 


McKinlay, R. L. 


Orr, William L. 


Pearson, I. M. 


Vance, J. W. 


CENTRALIA. 


HAVANNA. 


Weider, D. M. 


Delanev, W. J. A. 


Doering, Charles 


PAXTON. 


Hubbard, H. W. 


Harphan, C. H. 


Rawlins, H. C. 


Rhodes, H. L. 


Wallace, E. A. 


Shepardson, George J. 


CHICAGO. 


JACKSONVILLE. 


PERU. 


Allen, J. Adams 


Gilett, P. G. 


Hattenhauer, R. C. 


Atkins, A. R. H. 


Kreider, E. C. 


Powell, Wm. B. 


Barnard, Gil W. 


Morse, C. M. 


PETERSBURG. 


Burbank, W. M. 


Thompson, S. H. 


Hamilton, H. 


Edwards, E. K. 


JOLIET. 


McNulty, T. W. 


Egan, Wiley M. 


Brooks, W. S. 


Strodtman, J. G. 


Ferns, John P. 


Dougall, William 


PITTSFIELD. 


Gardner, George 


ElwoodJ. G. 


Cassell, F. M. 


Johnson, H. A. 


Millar, John S. 


Grimes, V. A. 


Locke, Rev. Clinton 


KANKAKEE. 


PRINCETON*. 


Sanborn, John H. 


Ashley, R. 


Romberger, L. D. 


Smith, John C. 


Clarke, H. C. 


Sampson, G. W. 


Turner, Henry. 


Hatch, F. S. 


Zeigler, P. H. 


Turner, W. H. 


Hickox, W. R. 


QUINCY. 


Vandercook, C. R. 


LINCOLN. 


Mulliner, E. S. 


Witbeck, J. H. 


Bromfield, W. F. 


Robbins, James 


CLAYTON. 


Hudson, E. G. 


ROCKFORD. 


Black, T. C. 


LITCHFIELD. 


Bailey, R. C. 


Bull, Eli B. 


Raymond, G. M. 


Montgomery, I. S. 


McCoy, B. W. 


Rogers, James 


ROCK ISLAND. 


DANVILLE. 


MATTOON. 


Cleveland,]!. C. 


Bixby, A. S. 


Lewis, W. A. 


Parsons, W. S. 


English, C. L. 


Miller, Michael 


Sweeney, W. L. 


DECATI-R. 


Weymouth, C. G. 


SPRINGFIELD. 


Fuller, C. H. 


MENDOTA. 


Cook, John 


Gorin. Jerome R. 


Edwards, J. W. 


Harlow, G. II. 


Hostettler, J. W. 


Hale, William N. 


Lawrence, R. D. 


DEKALB. 


Rurdy, Casper 


SULLIVAN. 


Vaughn, Silas A. 


METROPOLIS. 


Dunscomb, J. H. 


DIXON. 


Brown, W. R. 


Millan, Geo. E. 


Crabtree, J. D. 


Corlis, G. W. R. 


Fitter, D. M. P. 


Dodge, O. B. 


Davis, A. D. 


SYCAMORE. 


Hawley, James A. 


MORRIS. 


Dustin, Daniel 


ELGIN. 


Armstrong, Perry A. 


Sawyer, A. W. 


Dickerson, C. D. 


Beach, L. F. 


TUSCOLA. 


Hunter, W. G. 


Goold, C. N. 


Bye, Cornelius 


EL PASO. 


MT. PULASKI. 


Dreyer, W. B. 


Ensign, William O. 


Foley, S. A. 


Eivin, John 


. Ferrill, S. M. 


Mayer, George 


URBANA. 


Thompson, James 


Sawyer, W. F. 


Black, J. C. 


FAIRBURY. 


OLNEY. 


Cunningham, A. P. 


Allen, W. H. 


Niblo, J. A. 


Eubeling, F. E. 


Gregg, Emery 


Stanker, G. D. 


UTICA. 


Zimmerman, John 


Tolle, G. H. B. 


Halliday, C. C. 


FREEPORT. 


OTTAWA. 


WAUKEGAN. 


Cronkrite, E. L. 


Nash, John F. 


Brewster, Daniel 


Hutchison, H. C. 


Smith, E. H. 


Hutchinson, H. C. 


Munn, L. I.. 


Wade, T. F. 


Lyon, G. R. 


GALENA. 


PEORIA. 


WOODSTOCK. 


Caldervvood, J- C. 


Martin, R. S. 


Richards, E. E. 


Corwith, D. N. 


Hitchcock, C. T. 


Salisbury, A. L. 


Rowlev, W. R. 


Tart, Samuel 


Thomas E. E. 






8 4 



PROGRAMME OF ENTERTAINMENT 

FOR THE WEEK. 



JIOJTQAY, AUGUST, 16, 1880. 

The receiving and escorting of visiting Commanderies as they arrive, 
to their several quarters. In the evening three general receptions will 
be held at 8 o'clock, P. M. at the new Central Music Hall, corner of 
State and Randolph Streets, McCormick's Hall, corner of North 
Kinzie and Clark Streets, and at Farwell Hall, on Madison Street, near 
Clark at each of which guests will l>e cordially welcomed by knightly 
speakers, and a brilliant musical programme will be given. 



TUESQA Y, A UG- UST 1^. 

At 10 o'clock, A. M., prompt, the Grand Parade and Eeview by the 
Most Eminent Grand Master, VINCENT LUMBAED HUKLBUT, and tin; 
escort of the Grand Encampment to the Asylum, on Lake Front Park, 
will take place. The various divisions will form on the east and west 
streets, right resting on Wabash Avenue, and at the hour named, the 
head of the column, Apollo Commandery, No. 1, will take up the line 
of march from Lake Street, south on "Wabash Avenue to Twenty-First 
Street, east on Twenty-First to Prairie Avenue, north to Sixteenth 
Street, east to Michigan Avenue, north to Lake Street, where it will 
countermarch, to enable the Sir Knights in line to view the pageant, 
and extend marching courtesies to each other. On reaching the ex- 
treme left of the line, it will again countermarch and pass over the 
same ground to Lake Street, east on Lake to Fifth Avenue, south to 
Washington Street, east to Clark, and south on Clark to Jackson 
85 



86 KROGKAMME OF ENTERTAINMENT. 

Street, where it will be dismissed, each division moving off to its own 
quarters. 

On W abash Avenue, commencing at Adams Street, will be erected 
a series of arches, sixteen in number, about three hundred feet apart, 
and ending with the Grand Arch and Stand at Fourteenth Street, from 
whence the Most Eminent Grand Master will review the cortege. 

It will be incumbent on every Commander to see that his command 
is in line at the time and place designated in the General Orders of 
the day ; for, Chicago being pre-eminently a railroad city, everything 
will be conducted on schedule time, and neither the Sir Knights on 
parade, nor the general public, will suffer from unnecessary delays at 
any point. The Grand Encampment will arrive at their Asylum a few 
minutes before the sun reaches its meridian. 

Every hour during the afternoon, until 6 P. M., there will be boat 
exciirsions weather permitting on Lake Michigan. A large fleet of 
steamers will be in use, providing ample accommodations for all who 
desire to avail themselves of a trip on the water. 

In the evening the Grande Reception Musicale et Dansante, ten- 
dered by the Sir Knights of Chicago to their Fraters and Ladyes 
Faire, will be given at the Grand Exposition Building, which has a 
capacity to accommodate seventy thousand people. Indeed no grander 
sight can be witnessed, than from the galleries, to see ten thousand 
couples on the floor below, moving to the music of the numerous 
bands on the " light fantastic." The building is so vast that all can 
be cared for without crowding. 



WEQJTESQA Y, A UG- UST 18. 

At 9.30, A. M., the Grand Competitive Prize Drill will commence 
at the Chicago Jockey Club Park, which is located just west of Cen- 
tral Park, and is reached by the Madison Street car line, and also by 
trains en the Chicago and Northwestern Railway, which M'ill run 
every ten minutes to a point near the entrance of the grounds. Every 
facility will be offered to accommodate the thousands who may desire 



1'KOGRAMME OF ENTERTAINMENT. 87 

to witness the splendid movements of well trained chivalric soldiers, 
and their beautiful evolutions. 

The prizes, five in number, offered by the Grand Commandery of 
the State of Illinois and the Sir Knights of Chicago, are appropriate, 
and of a character creditable to the generous spirit which should pre- 
vail on such an occasion. 

At 9.30, A. M., also weather permitting and hourly thereafter, 
until 6, P. M., there will be day boat excursions upon Lake Michigan 
to the Crib, Evanston, South Chicago, and elsewhere to points of inte- 
rest in the vicini^- , the entire fleet of steamers being at the disposal 
of the Committee. 

At 8, P. M., and thereafter, there will be moonlight boat excursions 
upon the Lake. 

At 8, P. M., also, there will be performances at McVicker's Theater, 
Haverly's Theater, Hooley's Theater, and other places of amusement, 
for the gratuitous and complimentary entertainment of Templar guests 
and their ladies, at the invitation of the Sir Knights of Chicago. 

On this evening, also, there is in preparation a grand surprise, which 
would not be one if farther mention were made of it here or elsewhere. 

Receptions will be held at the different Commaiidery Headquarters. 



THIXRSQA Y, A UG- UST 19. 

At 9.30, A. M., the Grand Competitive Prize Drill will be contin- 
ued, at Chicago Jockey Club Park. 

In the city the day will be devoted to exchanging courtesies, and to 
such entertainments as the exigencies may require, for the pleasure of 
those who remain. 

In the evening, in addition to the Eeceptions at the various Head- 
quarters, another grand surprise is to come off. It were well that all 
remain to participate in it. 

Friday will be devoted to a renewal of the friendships created, er 



88 PROGRAMME OF KNTERTA.INMKNT. 

the last word is spoken that closes the chapter on this ever to he me- 
morable occasion. 

Notwithstanding the vast Hotel resources of the Garden City of the 
West, her capacity will be taxed to the utmost. Her citizens have 
nobly stepped forward in the breach, however, and all who come will 
receive hospitable welcome and be well cared for. One of the greatest 
features of the 'occasion will be the Templars' 1 Camp on the Lake 
Front. 

A temporary bunding in the form of a Passion Cross is to lie 
erected on Lake Front Park, for the sessions of the Grand Encamp- 
ment. Surrounding this, and extending from Jackson Street on the 
north to Park Row on the South, about three-c[iiarters of a mile in 
length, and from Michigan Avenue to the Lake, will be erected a mili- 
tary Camp, with over two thoiisand Tents, kindly loaned by the War 
Department, under an act of Congress passed in April last. The 
equipment is the Government Reserves, and will take a train of about 
thirty freight cars to bring to Chicago. The Cots and Bedding are all 
provided under contract by the Committee, and everything will be as 
comfortable as in one's own home. 

The Police arrangements are of the best. .Each five tents is provi- 
ded with a special attendant. The meals of the Grand Armee will be 
furnished by Sir John Wright, Caterer, in the Exposition building. 
The entire capacity of the Camp isr engaged, and \vill contain some 
7,200 Knights and 1,200 Ladies. The occupants will be the Grand 
Commandery of New Hampshire, and subordinate Commanderies of 
that State ; the Grand Commandery of Ohio, and subordinate Com- 
manderies of that State ; the Grand Commandery of Wisconsin, and 
all subordinate Commanderies of that State ; the Grand Gommandery 
and subordinate Commanderies of the State of California ; the Com- 
manderies of 17evada ; the Grand Commandery of the State of Illi- 
nois, and every subordinate Commandery of the jurisdiction, outside 
of the city of Chicago. 

The Camp will be placed under the command of the Grand Com- 
manders of the States above, in their order, each for twelve hours 



PROGRAMME OF ENTERTAINMENT. 



89 



noon to midnight, and midnight to noon the Commander in charge 
to appoint the Officer of the Day, and with his own Sir Knights to 
supervise the internal arrangements. The discipline will be of the 
highest military order, and it is only necessary to say are perfect in 
every detail. There will be nothing for the guests from abroad to do 
but to " walk into my tent, sit thee down, rest and refresh thyself." 




AM GOING 

TO TAKE THE 

CHICAGO, BURLINGTON & QUINCY R, R. 

AS IT OFFERS TO THE PUBLIC 

Every advantage to be enjoyed by a trip overa line which is FIRST-CLAMS 
in all its appointments, at the very lowest rates, with 

FAST TIME AND DIRECT CONNECTIONS 

BETWEEN CHICAGO AND ALL POINTS IN 

KANSAS, NEBRASKA, COLORADO, WrOMINCr 

MONTANA, NEVADA, ARIZONA, IDAS . 



The Shortest, Speediest aud Most Comfortable Route via Hannibal to ail points in 



BBOBBAM YERE$CT@EIY t ARKANSAS 

No other lino Wes 1 ; from Chicago runs 



TEXAS. 



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THE FAMOUS C,, B. & Q, PALACE DINING CARS. 

Steel Track and Superior Equipment, combined with their GREAT THROUGH CAR AR- 
RANGEMENT, makes this, above all others, the favorite Route to the South, South- West, and the 
Far West. Try it, and you will find traveling.a luxury instead of a discomfort. 

All information about Rates oi Fare, Sleeping Car Accommodations, and Time Tables, will be 
cheerfully given by applying to 

D. W. HITCHCOCK, Gen. Western Passenger Agent, Chicago, 111. 
JAMES R. WOOD, Gen. Passenger Agent, Chicago. T.J. POTTER, Asst. Gen. Manager, Chicago. 



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CLOTHING 

MASIFICTIRERS 

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151 AND 153 FIFTH AVENUE, CHICAGO. 

SUITS MANUFACTURED FOR 

Masonic Societies, R. R. Conductors, 

Military Co's Telegraph Operators, 

Bands, P. 0. Employes, 

Firemen, Schools, 

Police, Etc., Etc. 

J3P 1 Jobs in Clothing on hand at all times, much below market value. 



WESTERN AGENTS FOR P. LORILLARD & CO. 



BEST, RUSSELL & Co. 



WHOUBSAKiE 



CIGARS AND TOBACCOS, 

|tnptujlers of 1|mc l|auana (Sigars. 

Proprietors of the Celebrated Golden Crown and Diamond Cigars. 
57 LAKE AND 41 STATE STREETS, 

\V. M. BEST, Chicago. I (~< IT T (~* A f f~^ J LORIN PALMER, 

W. II. RUSSELL, " f U r~L 1 U A LjO . 1 New York. 



WESTERN' AGENTS FOR SEIDENBERG'S KEY WEST CIGARS. 



MISCELLANEOUS. 



The Grand Encampment. 

Sir Charles R. Woodruff, of Kentucky, says : " It is very gratifying 
to record that the Grand Encampment of the United States is becom- 
ing more popular year by year throughout its jurisdiction. Expres- 
sions of discontent and carping criticisms are quite infrequent of late, 
and a settled feeling of loyalty is the prevailing, if not the universal 
sentiment. This is as it should be, not only because in union there is 
strength, but the Grand Encampment, by a wholesome exercise of its 
legitimate authority, has succeeded in making Knight Templary what 
it is to-day. 

"A judicious attention in the future to the principles of justice and 
fairness, and a severe letting alone of affairs belonging to subordinate 
bodies only, will insure to the Order immeasurable prosperity and 
evolve posibilities for the accomplishment of incalculable good. 

" The Grand Encampment has persistently neglected the Ritual, 
which, in consequence is becoming revised, and enlarged, and embel- 
lished, until after a while it will scarcely be recognizable. It were an 
easy matter to authorize a satisfactory Ritual for common use ; and 
when once decided upon, it should be printed with the greatest care, 
and rigidly adhered to. A uniform system of Tactics and Drill may 
not be so important. Templars are everywhere drilled much upon the 
same principles. The Tactics of Sir Knight H. B. Grant, which have 
already received the approval of two Grand Commanderies, so sim- 
plify the drill and movements, that there is now but little if anything 
left to be desired in this direction. 

" The most prominent feature of our Triennial Conclaves is the so- 
ciability engendered, which renders them more and more attractive at 
every meeting, and requires increasing manifestations of hospitality 
and courtesy. 

" The assembling of Templar Fraters from the most distant parts of 
the land is a magnificent spectacle, and commends itself most charm- 



MISCELLANEOUS. 



ingly to every candid member of our noble Order. The Sir Knights 
have an unquestionable right to manifest their admiration for the 
Order, and their devotion to it, by such proper display as they desire, 
the munificence of which is only to be limited by their wishes. 

"The Grand Encampment, at any rate, has proved itself a necessity 
to American lemplary, and we are confident of representing the sen- 
timents of Kentucky Sir Knights in closing this our sixth annual 
report on correspondence, to wish, for our Grand Governing Body, 
' a long and happy reign.' " 



Cleopatra's Needle. 

Great interest has been excited in regard to this obelisk, which is 
being removed from Alexandria to New York, by the finding tinder 
the foundation certain emblems which Lt. Com. Gorringe, who is su- 
perintending its removal, pronounces to be masonic. The emblems 
discovered are an apron cut in stone, a cubic stone, a mosaic pave- 
ment, a perfect ashlar, a rough ashlar, a square and a trowel. As the 
obelisk was first erected in Heliopolis, 1,500 years B. C., it is argued 
that masonry is proved to have existed before King Solomon. But as 
the emblems may have been put under the foundation when it was 
removed to Alexandria, in the seventh year of Augustus Csesar, B. C. 
24, it is possible that the Roman Guild of Masons may have been 
their originators. Leading masons are chary of endorsing either the- 
ory until a more careful study has been given to the subject. 



- Sir DeWitt Clinton once said : " Although the origin of our 
fraternity is covered with darkness, and its history is, to a great extent, 
obscure, yet we can confidently say that it is the most ancient society 
in the world, and we are equally certain that its principles are based 
on pure morality that its ethics are the ethics of Christianity, its 
doctrines the doctrines of patriotism and. brotherly love, and its senti- 
ments the sentiments of exalted benevolence. Upon these points 
there can be no doubt. All that is good, kind, charitable, it encoura- 
ges ; all that is vicious, cruel and oppressive, it reprobates." 



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MISCELLANEOUS. 



Freemasonry. 

We have heard persons, apparently in good faith, declare that Ma- 
sonry seeks to set itself up as a kind of religion, thus inculcating 
teachings which find expression in the saying of some of the members, 
that " they want no better religion than Masonry." Certainly no one 
connected with the Order will claim that it teaches anything like a 
religious dogma, or that it fails to inculcate the broadest catholicity 
of thought and feeling, and at the same time is founded upon the 
broadest principles of morality. Grand Chaplain John G. Webster, 
of New York, once said : 

"Freemasonry never yet, as I have heard, attempted to work mira- 
cles. It never yet infused brains into a cranium that had no cavity 
for their reception, nor did it ever send human blood courting through 
a heart of granite. Its mission is to improve, not to create, and the 
material for its use must be capable of being moulded, or it cannot 
work it up. Again, Masonry is not religion, in a sectarian sense, nor 
a substitute for it, and he who pretends that, or declares it to be " a 
good enough religion " for him, hoists it out of its legitimate place, 
inflicts upon it a grievous wrong, and lays himself open to the suspi- 
cion of ignorance of its teachings. While it inculcates a firm faith 
in the Being and divine attributes of God, almighty and eternal, and 
while it includes within its acknowledged brotherhood, standing side 
by side upon the same level of manhood, my Hebrew brother, who 
worships Grod in unity, and myself, who worship him triune ; and, 
while it presents to me, as it does not to him, the story of Messiah in 
manv of its ceremoinies ; and while it inculcates to both of us alike, 
reverence of the Divine Being, attention to His word, and invocation 
for His aid in all of our laudable undertakings, it imposes upon nei- 
ther religious dogma. It leaves that for a different department of 
man's duties. It is no substitute for that department, never was in- 
tended to be, and never will be pretended to be, by the well-instructed 
Mason." 




v feeV V ^ & 

* 202 to 208 SOUTH WATER STREET, 



-DEALERS IN- 









CHICAGO, ROCK ISLAND AND PACIFIC RAILWAY DEPOT ON VAN 

BUEEN STREET, HEAD OF LASALLE STREET. 
THE ONLY FIRST CLASS DEPOT IN CHICAGO. 




INTERIOR OF THE MAGNIFICENT PASSENGER STATION OF THE GREAT ROCK ISLAND ROUTE." AT CHICAGO. 



"The Great Rock Island Route" 

Calls your attention to the following REASONS WHY, if about to make a 
Journey to the GREAT WEST, you should travel over it: 



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this is the most direct route for all 

points WEST and SOUTHWEST. 

For further information, time-tables, maps, or folders, call 
upon or address 

R. R. CABLE, E. ST. JOHN, 

Vice Pres't & Gen'l Manager. Gen'l Ticket and Pass. Ag't. 

CHICAGO. 



MISCELLANEOUS. 



A Romantic Love Story. 

The Count de St. Croix, belonging to one of the oldest, noblest and 
wealthiest families of France, became engaged, after a long and 1 assid- 
uous courtship, to a lady who was his equal in position, and fortune, 
and famous for her beauty. Shortly after the happy day was appoint- 
ed, which was to render two hearts one, the Count was ordered imme- 
diately to the siege of Sebastopol ; so he girded on his sabre, and at 
the head of his regiment inarched to the battle-field. 

During the Count's absence it happened that the beautiful lady who 
was to be his bride had the small-pox. After hovering between life 
and death for many days, she recovered her health, but her beauty 
was hopelessly lost. The disease had assumed in her case the most 
virulent character, and left her not only disfigured but seamed and 
scarred to such a frightful extent that she became hideous to herself, 
and resolved to pass the remainder of her days in the strictest seclu- 
sion. 

A year passed away, when one day the Count, immediately on his 
return to France, accompanied by his valet, presented himself at the 
residence of his betrothed, and solicited an interview. This was re- 
fused. He, however, with the persistence of a lover, pressed his suit, 
and finally the lady made her appearance, closely muffled in a. double 
veil. 

At the sound of her voice the Count reached forward to embrace 
her, but stepping aside she tremblingly told him the story of her sor- 
rows, and burst into tears. A heavenly smile broke over the Count's 
handsome features, as, raising his hand above, he exclaimed : 

" It is God's work. I am blind !" 

It was even so. While gallantly leading his regiment to the attack, 
a cannon ball passed so closely to his eyes that, while it left their ex- 
pression unchanged and his countenance unmarked, it robbed him 
forever of his sight. 

I f is almost unnecessary to add that their marriage was shortly after 
solemnized. 



CRANE BROS 



^MANUFACTURlNGlCOMPANYK 

* ~""" ~~~ 'c\nYc\s* * 



General Offices, 10 North Jefferson St., Chicago. 






MANUFACTURERS OF 









STEAM AND HYDRAULIC 




STATIONARY STEAM ENGINES, Arc. 



MISCELLAXEOUS. 



Putting a hoop on the family flour barrel is an operation that 
will hardly bear an encore. The woman generally attempts it before 
the man comes home to-dinner. She sets the hoop upon the end of 
the staves, takes a deliberate aim with the rolling pin, and then shut- 
ting both e^es brings the pin down with all the force of one arm, 
while the other instinctively shields her face. Then she makes a dive 
for the camphor and unbleached muslin, and when the man comes 
home she is sitting behind the stove, thinking of St. Stephen and the 
other martyrs, while the 6nrnt dinner attests that the camphor has re- 
ceived a great deal of attention. He tells her if she had kept her 
temper she wouldn't have got hurt. Then he visits the barrel him- 
self, and puts the hoop on very carefully, and adjusts it so nicely to 
the top of every stave that only a few smart knocks are apparently 
needed to bring it down all right. Then he laughs to himself to think 
what a fuss his wife kicked up over a simple matter that only needed 
a little patience ; and then he gets the hammer and fetches the hoop a 
sharp rap on one side, and the other side flies up and catches him upon 
the bridge of the nose, filling his soul with wrath and his eyes with 
tears, and the next instant that barrel is flying across the room, ac- 
companied by the hammer, and another candidate for camphor and 
court-plaster is enrolled in the great army that is unceasingly march- 
ing toward the grave. 



Appropos of church fairs, and their frequently very questionable 
devices for raising money, we are reminded of the following anecdote 
of Dean Richmond : A minister of a western town was one evening 
accosted at a fair of his church, by Richmond, with, " Dominie, I 
don't exactly understand all your games here, but I would like to help 
the cause along. If you've no objection, I would like to go into one 
of these sid'e rooms and try a game of poker with you the winnings 
to go to the church, anyway." The parson squirmed a little, as he 
declined the proposal, and at succeeding fairs of that church the game 
of blanks aud prizes disappeared. 





flCOOK ft 





Send 25 Cents, Stamps, for our LEADVILLE GUIDE, 
"With Four Maps" of the Western Country. 





BUILDING CUTS MADE FROM PHOTOGRAPHS OR SKETCHES. 

Machinery, Buildings, Portraits, Book Illustrations, Bank Checks, 

Drug Labels, Bill Heads, Letter Heads, Etc., got up in 

First-Class Style, at Low Figures. 

POSTERS AND SHOW CARDS IN COLORS. 



UOOD WOKK. AT L.OWEST PHICES. 

"V AKDEKCOOK & Co., State and Madison Sts., 
CHICAGO, ILLINOIS 



MISCELLANEOUS. 



THE PUNJAUB. The District Grand Lodge of the Punjaub, India, 
says Major Ramsay, of the English army, is in a flourishing condi- 
tion. Six Lodges assisted in the organization of the D. G. L. in 1869, 
having then 149 subscribing members. Their tenth year closed with 
18 Lodges and 558 members. During the ten years the District 
Grand Lodge expended in benevolence $26,000, and they have now an 
equal sum on hand. The Punjaub is the extreme northwestern prin- 
cipality of India, situated between the Chinese Empire and Afghan- 
istan, with the extreme limit touching Turkestan. 



UNANIMITY. Among the variety of duties incumbent upon Masons, 
there is none more eflicacious to the welfare of our institution than 
unanimity. This makes the cement, the great principle of cohesion, 
which gives compactness to all the parts and members, forms them 
into a regular structure, into one uniform building, and adds harmony 
and beauty, firmness and stability to the whole work. Or it may be 
likened to the keystone, which compacts and strengthens the arch on 
which the edifice is supported and upheld. 



KADOSCH OF THE JESUITS. Thory tells us that this grade was in- 
vented by the Jesuits, and was for the purpose of aiding the Templars 
and restoring to them their possessions. Why DeBonneville called 
his system the " Chapitre de Clement " is not clear, and it may have 
had its origin with some Jesuits of that College ; "but," says Ken- 
ning, " I doubt the story." 



CRESCENT. In heraldry bearing the form of a half moon. Crescent 
has been applied to the three orders of knighthood that instituted 
by Charles, King of Naples, in 1268 ; that by Rene, of Anjou, in 
144S, and that by Sultan Selim in 1801. The latter is still in exist- 
ence, and remarkable from the fact that none but Christians are eligi- 
ble for admission. 



MISCELLANEOUS. 



How to Cure a Cold. 

An old paper thus furnishes a panacea for all the coughs and lung 
complaints that human flesh is heir to : 

" One of our citizens who has been troubled with a severe cold on 
the lungs, effected his recovery in the following simple manner : He 
boiled a little boneset and horehound together, and drank freely of the 
tea before going to bed. The next day he took five pills, and put a 
plaster on his back. Under advice from an experienced old lady he 
removed the latter with an oyster knife in the afternoon, and slapped 
on a mustard plaster in its place. His mother put some onion drafts 
on his fest and, gave him a lump of tar to swallow. Then he put hot 
brides to his leet and went to bed. Next morning another old lady 
came in with a bottle of goose oil, and gave him a dose of it on a 
quill ; an aunt arrived about the same time, with a bundle of sweet 
fern, which she made into a tea, and gave him every half hour until 
noon, when life took a big dose of salts. After dinner his wife, who 
had seen a fine old lady of great experience in doctoring, gave him 
two pills of her make, about the size of an English walnut, and of a 
similar shape, and two tablespoonfulls of home-made balsam, to keep 
them down. Then he took a half pint of hot rum at the suggestion 
of an old sea captain in the next house, and steamed his legs with an 
alcohol bath. At this crisis two of the neighbors arrived, who saw at 
once that his blood was out of order, and gave him a half-gallon of 
spearmint tea, and a big dose of castor oil. Before going to bed he 
took eight of a new kind of pill, wrapped about his neck a flannel 
soaked in hot vinegar and salt, and had feathers burnt on a shovel in 
his room. He is now thoroughly cured and full of gratitude." 



- It is the babbling spring that flows gently, the little rivulet that 
runs along day and night by the farm house, that is useful, rather 
than the swollen flood or roaring cataract. It is not by great deeds, 
but by the quiet virtues of life, little acts of kindness and courtesy, 
and a spirit of forbearance, one with another, that the most good is 
accomplished. 



PASSENGERS BOUND FOR 



, , 

MANITOBA, DAKOTA, MINNESOTA, WISCONSIN, MONTANA, 

And the Wwtern Territories, should consult their interest, and buy their Ticket! via the 



IT IS THE LEADING RAILWAY OF THE WEST AND NORTH-WEST. 

This importsnUystem of Railway Lines owns and operates under one management nearly 3.03Q Miles ol 
Roid. Its lines run from Chicago in 30 many directions that itis necessary to designate its lines by speci- 
fic names, which will give a correct idea to the passenger of the part of the country each line traverses. These 
lines, numbering eight, are as follows 



Chicago, Council Bluffs and 
California Line. 

Chicago, Sioux City and 
Yankton Line. 

Chicago, Clinton, Dubuque] 
\ and La Crosse Line. 

Chicago, Freeport and Du-| 
buque Line. 




Chicago, La Crosse & Win- 
on Line. 

Chicago, Minnesota, & Da- 
kota Line. 

Chicago, St. Paul & Minne- 
apolis Line 

Chicago,!*! ii waukec & Lake 
Superior Line. 



These Lines enable the ' CHICAGO & NORTH-WESTERN" to reach all principal joints in the West, North- 
West, and through its connections, the Far West and Manitoba. 

It offers every facility for Quick, Sate and Comfortable Transit to the traveler who selects this as his route. 

It stands second to no road in the West, and offers inducements and advantages that are not uud ca.n not 
be offered by any of its competitors. 

Its management adopts every improvement known to the modern Railway system, and is determined 
that the "MUBTH- WESTERN" shall remain the Leading Railway of the Great West. 



Passengers should ask for and be certain their Tickets have a Coupon which reads over the 

o & ACortft- Western fig 



All Ticket Agents will be glad to sell them via this line. 

Knn regularly between Chicago and Council Bluffs, on the Califor- 
nia E*pre Tmim of the Chicago * North-Western Railway. 
Bear in mind, no other road runa Pullman Hotel Cars Through between Chicago and the Missouri River. 



I 
l- 



NO TRANSFER AT ST. PAUL via the CHICAGO & NORTH-WESTERN RY. 

Passengers procuring tickets to points beyond St. Paul, shou'd use great care to see that they read over the 
CHICAGO & AORTH- WESTERN BAIL WAY, 

OR THE 

CHICAGO, ST. PAUL & MHOTEAPOtlS tlXE, 

And not over a route having a SIMILAR NAME, as this is 

JSTThe ONLT Route you can take to avoid a Change of Depot at St. Panl."8 



New York Office No. 415 Broadway. 

Boston Office No. 5 State Street. 

Milwaukee City Ticket Office 102 Wisconim Street . 

St. I'aul Ticket Office Cor. Third anil Juckson Sts. 

Minneapolis Ticket Offices 13 Nicollct House and 

St. Paul <fc Pacific Deit. 
Chicago Ticket Offices HO & (!2 Clark St.; 75 Canal 

St.; Canal St. Depot, and Wells St. Depot. 



ouncil Bluffs Ticket Offices Cor. Broadway and 
iV;ul Sts.; Union Pacific Depot; and Chicago & 
North-Western llailway Depot. 



Cou 
Pi 

North-Western llailway Depot. 

Omaha Ticket Offices Union Pacific Depot, and 1324 
Farnum St., cor 14th. 

San Francisco Office 2 New Montgomery St. 

London, England, Offices 449 Straad, and 3 Ade- 
laide St.