BOSTON PUBLIC LIBRARY
3 9999 06660 935 3
m BOSTONIA M
^. CONDITAJD. ^y
,^^ 10 30, 4^
Digitized by the Internet Archive
in 2010 with funding from
Boston Public Library
http://www.archive.org/details/municipalregiste1902bost
THE
MUNICIPAL REGISTER
For 1902.
SEAL OF THE CITY.
<^reLj^
THE
MUNICIPAL REGISTER
FOR I902,
CONTAINING
A KEGISTER OF THE CITY GOVERNMENT,
EULES OF THE BOAED OF ALDEEMEN, COMMON
COUNCIL AND CITY COUNCIL,
A LIST OF EXECUTIVE AND OTHER .PUBLIC OFFICERS AND
VARIOUS STATISTICS RELATING TO THE CITY.
[City Document No. 45.]
BOSTON :
MUNICIPAL PRINTING OFFICE.
1902.
l'^ u-tJ'
>
1^0 V,
lax,
ok.
^•v', 1^^
%
INTEODUCTION.
The City has annually since 1821 issued a volume contain-
ing, until 1829, a register of the City Council and a list of
the officers. In 1829, the City Charter, in 1830, the Acts
relating to Boston and the ordinances, and in 1832, an index
were added. The volume for 1822 contains fifteen pages,
and for 1840 eighty-five pages, and three pages of index.
The volumes up to and including 1840 bear the title of The
Rules and Orders of the Common Council, and since that
year th^ title of The Municipal Register. The Munici-
pal Register for 1 841 contains the Rules and Orders of the
Common Council, joint rules, ordinances of the City, statutes
of the Commonwealth relating to the City, a list of the public
schools, the City Government of 1841, the committees and.
departments (consisting at that time of the ti'easury, law,
police, health, public land and buildings, lamps and bridges,
fire, and public charitable institutions), and a list of the
ward officers ; from 1842 to 1864, it also contains a list of
the members of preceding City Governments, a necrological
record of those members, the latest ordinances and the special
statutes relating to the City ; in 1851 a list of the annual
orators was added, and in 1853 a map of the City and the
Rules of the Board of Aldermen were inserted; in 1876 sta-
tistics of registration and voting were included, and since 1879
in tabulated form ; in 1883 portraits of the Mayor and pre-
siding officers of the two branches of the City Council were
included, and in 1888 a list of the members of the past City
Governments of Roxbury and Charlestown was added, and
continued to 1890. From 1889 to 1896, inclusive. The
Municipal Register contained a compilation of the Charter
and Acts subsequently passed, in the place of which an index
of said Charter and Acts was substituted in 1897. The Bos-
ton charter and index are again omitted this year; otherwise
The Municipal Register of this year is in substantially
the form of all other Municipal Registers since 1889.
By the direction of the Joint Committee on Rules and
Orders The Municipal Register of 1902 has been com-
piled by the Statistics Department. Text and tables have
been revised, and several new tables, with additional text,
have been incorporated.
GOVERNMENT
OF THE
CITY OF BOSTON.
1902.
PATRICK A. COLLINS, Mayor.
Kesidence, 74 Corey road, Brighton.
Salary, $10,000.
[gtat. 1885, Chap. 266; Stat. 1895, Chap. 449, § 1; Rev. Ord., 1898,
Chap. 2.]
BOARD OF ALDERMEN.
Salary, $1,500 each.
[Stat. 1893, Chap. 473.]
James H. Doyle, Chairman.
FIRST DISTRICT, Wabds 1 and 2.
John L. Kelly . Junction Sumner and Webster streets.
SECOND DISTRICT, Wards 3, 4 and 5.
Edward L. Quigley 14 Prospect street.
THIRD DISTRICT, Wards 6 and 8.
Maetest M. Lomasney 27 McLean street.
FOURTH DISTRICT, Wards 7, 9 and 13.
Michael W. Noeris .... 123 West Fourth street.
Patrick Bo wen 3 Maiden street.
FIFTH DISTRICT, Wards 10 and 19.
Thomas H. Dowd 129 St. Alphonsus street.
SIXTH DISTRICT, Wards 11 and 25.
George Holdbn Tinkham . 326 Commonwealth avenue.
SEVENTH DISTRICT, Wards 12 and 18.
James H. Doyle 1692 Washington street.
10 MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
EIGHTH DISTRICT, Wards 14 and 15.
Charles H. Slattery 520 East Broadway.
NINTH DISTRICT, Wards 16, 20 and 24.
George R. Miller 11 Greenheys street.
Frederick W. Farwell 44 Harvest street.
TENTH DISTRICT, Wards 17 and 21.
Timothy E. McCarthy . . . . 116 Winthrop street.
eleventh DISTRICT, Wards 22 and 23.
William B. Heath 33 Eliot street.
Clerk ^ ex officio.
Edward J. Donovan, 45 McLean street.
Salary, $5,000.
[Stat. 1854, Chap. 448, § 30; Stat. 1885, Chap. 266, § 2; Stat. 1901, Chap.
332 ; Rev. Ord., 1898, Chap. 11.]
Regular meetings, Mondays at 3 P.M.
COMMON COUNCIL.
Arthur W. Dolan, President.
Ward 1. — William B. Jackson, 62 Falcon street.
Walter J. Staples, 193 Lexington street.
Robert J. Gove, 434 Meridian street.
Ward 2. — Thomas F. Clark, 83 Cottage street.
James J. Donnelly, 11 Che ever court.
John J Flaherty, 65 Gove street.
Ward 3. — Edward L. Cauley, 4 Mystic street.
John J. Conway, 138 Medford street.
Daniel J. McDonald, 73 Decatur street.
Ward 4- — George H. Cadigan, 64 Baldwin street.
John J. Mullen, 12 Beacham street.
Peter A. McDonald, 33 Belmont street.
Ward 5. — Arthur W. Dolan, 30 Rutherford avenue. .
Maurice J. Power, 7 Winthrop street.
George A. Murdock, 33 Bow street.
COMMON COUNCIL. 11
Ward 6. — Thomas J. Grady, 49 Charter street.
George A. Scigliano, 15 Hull street.
Philip J. McGonagle, 4 North Margin place.
Ward 7. — Daniel J. Donnelly, 78 Oak street.
James F. McDermott, 4 Tyler street.
William A. H. Crowley, 48 Curve street.
Ward 8. — Michael F. Hart, 23 Eaton street.
Hyman Weinberg, 102 Brighton street.
Joseph A. Maynard, 401 Charles street.
Ward 9. — John L. Curry, 42 Dwight street.
Edward F. Fitzgerald, 103 Union Park
street.
Aaron E. Myers, 1303 Washington street.
Ward 10. — Harry O. Alexander, 173 St. Botolph
street.
James H. Phelan, 27 St. Germain street.
GlJY W. Cox, Hotel Westminster.
Ward 11. — March G. Bennett, 74 Pinckney street.
S. William Simms, 1 Phillips court.
Daniel W. Lane, 291 Beacon street.
Ward 12. — Harry S. Upham, 127 Pembroke street.
Frank E. Gaylord, 1521 Washington street.
Everett H. Jenney, 125 West Newton street.
Ward 13. — Frank J. Linehan, 195 West Fifth street.
Andrew L. O'Toole, 215 D street.
Edward F. McGrady, 266 West Fourth street.
Ward IJf. — Patrick J. Shiels, 746 East Fifth street.
John J. Teevens, jr., 87 P street.
Robert J. Ware, 12 I street.
Ward 15. — William E. Hickey, 11 Lark street.
James M. Lane, 21 Vale street.
Charles E. Walsh, 61 G street.
Ward 16. — Hugh J. Young, 102 Buttonwood street.
Arthur L. Gavin, 17 East Cottage street.
William J. Lyons, 21 Dacia street.
MUNICIPAL REGISTEE.
George A. Flynn, 4 Marshfield street.
Jeremiah J. Good, 26 Albion street.
John F. Hoar, 46 Burrell street.
■ William J. Barrett, 100 Marcella street.
Martin Milmore, 998 Tremont street.
David M. Owens, 6 Kent street.
- John F. Egan, 176 Ward street.
Peter A. Hoban, 820 Parker street.
Bernard W. Kenney, 14 Gurney street.
- Oliver F. Davenport, 27 Thacher road.
George O. Wood, 333 Park street.
Frank W. Thayer, 24 Northern avenue.
- William M. Curtis, 2986 Washington street.
Clarence W. Starratt, 39 Walnut avenue.
Edmund Weber, 74 Maywood street.
- George W. Lorey, 49 Boylston street.
John J. Burke, corner Bismarck and Porter
streets.
John Graumann, 169 Boylston street.
Ward 23. — Walter E. Henderson, 31 Orchard street.
Edward J. Bromberg, 99 Kittredge street.
John J. Conway, 4 Spring street.
Ward 24' — Herbert W. Burr, 106 Lonsdale street.
William E. Hannan, 32 Beaumont street.
Henry S. Clark, 11 Montague street.
Ward 25. — Frank H. Howe, 131 Franklin street.
Edward W. Brown, 42 Pratt street.
George McKee, 235 North Beacon street.
Clerk.
Joseph O'Kane, 40 Blakeville street, Dorchester.
Salary, $3,500.
12
Ward 17.
Ward 18.
Ward 19.
Ward 20.
Ward 21.
Ward 22.
Regular meetings, Thursdays at 7.45 P.M.
CITY COUNCIL.
13
MEMBERS OF THE CITY COUNCIL.
Bowen, Patrick
Dowd, Thomas H.
Doyle, James H.
Farwell, Frederick W.
Heath, William B.
Kelly, John L.
Lomasney, Martin M.
(Alphabetically arranged.)
ALDERMEN.
McCarthy, Timothy E.
Miller, George R.
Norris, Michael W.
Quigley, Edward L.
Slatter}^, Charles H.
Tinkham, George Holden
COUNCILMEN.
Ward
Ale:^ander, Harry 0.
10
Barrett, William J. . .
18
Bennett, March G. .
11
Bromberg, Edward J. .
23
Brown, Edward W. . .
25
Brn-ke, John J.
22
Burr, Herbert W. . .
24
Cadigan, George H.
4
Cauley, Edward L. .
3
Clark, Henry S. .
. 24
Clark, Thomas F. .
. 2
Conway, John J.
3
Conway, John J.
23
Cox, Guy W. . .
10
Crowley, William A. H
7
Curry, John L. . .
9
Curtis, William M. .
21
Davenport, Oliver F.
20
Dolan, Arthur W. .
. 5
Donnelly, Daniel J. .
. 7
Donnelly, James J. .
. 2
Egan, John F. . .
. 19
Fitzgerald, Edward F
Flaherty, John J.
Flynn, George A.
Gavin, Arthur L.
Gaylord, Frank E.
Good, Jeremiah J.
Gove, Robert J. .
Grady, Thomas J.
Graumann, John .
Hannan, William E.
Hart, Michael F.
Henderson, Walter E
Hickey, William E.
Hoar, John F.
Hoban, Peter A. .
Howe, Frank H. .
Jackson, William B.
Jenney, Everett H.
Kenney, Bernard W
Lane, Daniel W.
Lane, James M. .
Linehan, Frank J.
Ward
9
2
17
16
12
17
1
6
22
24
8
23
15
17
19
25
1
12
19
11
15
13
14
MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
Ward
Ward
. 22
Power, Maurice J.
5
. 16
Scigliano, George A.
6
. 8
Shiels, Patrick J.
14
. 7-
Simms, S. William .
11
. 3
Staples, Walter J. .
1
. 4
Starratt, Clarence W.
21
. 6
Teevens, John J., jr.
14
. 13
Thayer, Frank W. .
20
. 25
Upham, Harry S.
12
. 18
Walsh, Charles E. .
15
. 4
Ware, Robert J. . .
14
. 5
Weber, Edmund . .
21
. 9
Weinberg, Hyman .
. 8
. 13
Wood, George 0.
. 20
, 18
Young, Hugh J. . .
. 16
. 10
Lorey, George W. .
Lyons, William J.
Maynard, Joseph A.
McDermott, James F.
McDonald, Daniel J.
McDonald, Peter A.
McGonagle, Philip J.
McGrady, Edward F.
McKee, George . .
Milmore, Martin . .
Mullen, John J. . .
Murdock, George A.
Myers, Aaron E.
O'Toole, Andrew L.
Owens, David M.
Phelan, James H.
Days of Meeting.
Board of Aldermen, Mondays at 3 P.M.
Common Council, Thursdays, at 7.45 P.M.
Stenographer to the City Council. — E. W. Harnden,
26 East Springfield street.
B
69 I 6S
I
STAPLES! MoKEE ' THAYER I GOOD M'GONAGLE
LANE WEBER
-A " L ^l—A ^ -A " A--_l
66 I 65
63 62
GAYLORD {FITZCESALDI BURR JENNEY
- 1 - 1 - 1 -
LOREY HICKEY
50 \ M
PHELAN ' POWER I WOOD ' OWENS \ YOUNG
HOBAN MCDONALD
38 I 37
35 1 34 1 33 I 32
KENNEYJ CLARK GRADY O'TOOLE |FLAHERTY|H?DERH0TT DONNELLY
THIRD DIVISION.
cxB{Z]{zyao
=.&— ^
I ^^ 1 I '* 1 ( =^ I
SECOND DIVISION.
EiMiDl E®ra(gE gMMIglllFi.
r \
iC3
o
mm
SCALE OF F
T.MOONEV
ASST M£SS£MG£»\ f
C.D.MniiPHV
I DEP. Cnr M£SSENeEf{
n-
J. A.MfKTBBEK E. W-Harwden
CE.SlLLOWAY
7M£SS£NSEfl\ \
u.
.rOSEPHOKANE
p:
□-
MURDOCH
n
1 s
\ — ^
I
DONNELLY
1 ^"^
^-
l^"^
z
o
GAVIN
l_^
Q
MILMORB
(5
HENDERSON
rj
^v-^
'^^^-A
STAR RAT T
u
Q
EULES OF THE BOAKD OF ALDERMEN. 15
RULES AND ORDERS.
RULES OF THE BOARD OF ALDERMEN.
CHAIRMAN.
Rule 1. The chairman of the board shall take the chair at the hour
to which the board shall have adjourned, and shall call the members to
order, and, a quorum being present, shall cause the minutes of the
preceding regular meeting to be read; and, in the absence of the chair-
man, the senior member present shall preside as chairman pro tempore.
Rule 2. The chairman shall preserve decorum and order, may speak
to points of order in preference to other members, and shall decide all
questions of order, subject to an appeal to the board; and no other busi-
ness shall be in order until the question on appeal shall have been
decided.
Rule 3. The chairman shall propound all motions in the order in
which they are moved, unless the subsequent motion shall be previous
in its nature, except that, in naming sums and fixing times, the largest
sum and longest time shall be put first.
Rule 4. The chairman shall, at the request of any member, make a
division of a question when the sense will admit.
Rule 5. The chairman shall, without debate, decide all questions
relating to priority of business to be acted upon.
Rule 6. The chairman shall declare all votes ; but if any member
doubts a vote, the chairman shall cause a rising vote to be taken ; and
when any member so requests, shall cause the vote to be taken or veri-
fied by yeas and nays.
Rule 7. The chairman shall appoint all committees, fill all vacancies
therein, and designate the rank of the members thereof.
Rule 8. When the chairman of the board or the chairman pro
tempore shall desire to vacate the chair, lie may call any member to it;
but such substitution shall not continue beyond an adjournment.
MOTIONS.
Rule 9. Every motion shall be reduced to writing if the chairman
shall so direct.
Rule 10. A motion to strike out and insert shall be deemed indi-
visible; but a motion to strike out being lost shall not preclude amend-
ment, or a motion to strike out and insert.
Rule 11. No motion or proposition of a subject different from that
under consideration shall be admitted vinder color of amendment.
16 MUNICIPAL EEGISTER.
BuiiE 12. When an order or resolution relates to a subject which
may properly be examined and reported upon by an existing committee
of the city council, such order or resolution shall, vipon presentation,
be referred to such committee. When a motion is made to refer any
subject, and different committees are proposed, the motion shall be put
in the following order:
1. To a standing committee of the board.
2. To a special committee of the board.
3. To a joint standing committee.
4. To a joint special committee.
Rule 13. After a motion has been put by the chairman, it shall not
be withdrawn except by tuianimous consent.
Rule 14. When a question is under debate the following motions
only shall be entertained, and in the order in which they stand arranged:
1. To adjourn.
2. To lay on the table.
3. To postpone to a day certain.
4. To commit,
5. To amend.
6. To postpone indefinitely.
Rule 15. A motion to adjourn shall be in order at any time, except
on an immediate repetition, or pending a verification of a vote; and that
motion, the motion to lay on the table, and the motion to take from the
table, shall be decided without debate.
READINGS.
Rule 16. Every ordinance, order and resolution reported by a com-
mittee shall, unless rejected, have two several readings, both of which
may take place at the same session, unless objection is made. When-
ever the second reading immediately follows the first reading, the docu-
ment may be read by its title only. Orders from the board of street
commissioners changing the names of streets, and orders granting loca-
tions for poles or posts, shall, however, have one reading only at the
same session.
CONFIRMATIONS.
Rule 17. The question of confirming a nomination made by the
mayor shall be decided by a yea and nay ballot.
KECONSIDEKATION.
Rule 18. When a vote has been passed, any member rday move a
reconsideration thereof at the same meeting; or he may give notice to
the clerk, within twenty-four hours of the adjournment, of his inten-
tion to move a reconsideration at the next regular meeting; in which
case the clerk shall retain possession of the papers until the next
EULES OF THE BOARD OF ALDERMEN. 17
regular meeting; and when a motion for reconsideration is decided
that vote shall not be reconsidered.
CONDUCT OF MEMBERS.
Rule 19. Every member when about to speak shall rise, address the
•chair, and wait until he is recognized, and in speaking shall confine
himself to the question, and avoid personalities.
Rule 20. ISTo member speaking shall, without his consent, be inter-
rupted by another, el^cept upon a point of order.
Rule 21. No member shall be permitted to vote on any question, or
serve on any committee, where his private right is immediately con-
cerned, distinct from the public interest.
Rule 22. Every member who shall be present when a question is put,
where he is not excluded by interest, shall give his vote, unless the
"board for special reasons shall excuse him. Application to be so
excused on any question must be made before the board is divided,
or before the calling of the yeas and nays ; and such application shall
be accompanied by a brief statement of the reasons, and shall be
•decided without debate.
STANDING COMMITTEES.
Rule 23. The following standing committees of the board, to con-
sist of five members each, except where otherwise herein provided,
and the members of the joint standing committees on the part of this
board, named in the joint rules and orders of the city council, and all
other committees, unless otherwise provided for, or specially directed
by the board, shall be appointed by the chair:
Committee on Armories and Military Affairs — County Accounts —
Electric Wires — Faneuil Hall and County Buildings — Lamps —
Licenses — Markets — Railroads — Public Improvements, to consist of
all the members of the board, and to be divided by the chairman of the
•committee into the following sub-committees, namely, Paving Division,
Sewer Division, Bridge Division, Sanitary Division, Street-Cleaning
Division, Street- Watering Division and Ferry Division.
ORDEK OF business.
Rule 24. At every regular meeting of the board the order of busi-
ness shall be as follows :
1. Communications from his honor the mayor.
2. Hearings.
3. Presentation of petitions, memorials, and remonstrances.
4. Papers from the common council.
5. Unfinished business of preceding meetings.
6. Orders of notice of hearings.
*7. Reports of city officers.
8. Reports of committees.
9. Motions, orders and resolutions.
18 MUNICIPAL KEGISTER.
REPORTS OF COMMITTEES.
Rule 25. Committees of tlie board, to whom any matter is especially-
referred, shall report witliin four weeks, or ask for further time.
SPECTATORS.
RiiLE 26. No person, except a member of the board, shall be per-
mitted to occupy the seat of any member while the board is in session.
Rule 27. No persons, excepting members of the city council, heads
of departments, and reporters, shall be allowed in the anteroom of the
aldermanic chamber while the board is in session. No person shall be
allowed to enter the aldermanic chamber while the board is in session,
after the seats furnished for spectators are occupied. The city mes-
senger shall enforce this rule.
licenses.
Rule 28. No licenses shall be granted for exhibitions of wrestling.
Rule 29. No permission to erect a pole or post for the support of
electric wires, or for the construction of underground conduits, shall be
granted until a public hearing shall have been given by the board of
aldermen on the application for such permission. The clerk of com-
mittees shall give notice of such hearing not less than three days before
the date fixed therefor by causing to be delivered at each house upon
that portion of the street in which permission to locate poles or conduit
is asked, a copy of the petition for location, together with notice of the
place and date fixed for hearing thereon. The expense necessary for
delivery of such notices shall be borne by the applicant for permit.
Rule 30. Every license or permit hereafter granted for the location
of a street railway track, the erection of a pole or post, the construction
of an underground conduit, the laying of a pipe or wire, or for the doing
of any other work which may involve the disturbance of a surface of a
street, shall specify the time within which the contemplated work shall
be done, and shall not confer authority to do any such work after the
expiration of such specified time.
Rule 31. Any person desiring a lamp to be erected in any way, shall
make application therefor to the superintendent of lamps, who shall
examine the place where it is proposed to locate the lamp and report
thereon to the board; provided^ however^ that if the lamp is to be an
electric lamp the superintendent shall obtain the opinion of the com-
missioner of wires on the location, and forward to the board the opinion
with his report.
SUSPENSION OF RULES.
Rule 32. Any rule may be suspended by vote of two-thirds of the
members of the board present and voting.
EULES OF THE COMMON COUNCIL. 19
RULES AND ORDERS OF THE COMMON COUNCIL.
Rule 1. Unless otherwise ordered from time to time, the regular
meeting of the common council shall be held on every Thursday, at
seven forty-five o'clock P.M., and, on the appearance of a quorum, the
council shall be called to order. In the absence of the president the
oldest senior member present shall take the chair, and a president pro
tempore shall be chosen by ballot; and, if an election is not effected on
the first trial, on subsequent trials a plurality vote shall elect.
The roll shall be called at each meeting of the council, at the dis-
cretion of the president, but not later than nine o'clock.
When the meeting of the common council is called to order, it shall
be the duty of the city messenger to cause the electric bell in the ante-
chamber to be rung for the purpose of notifying the members that the
body is in session, and for the three minutes next follovring the ringing
of the bell no business shall be transacted and no member recognized by
the chair for any purpose.
PRESIDENT.
Rule 2. The president shall appoint and announce all committees,
unless othervsrise ordered, and shall communicate his appointments to
the council at the meeting following such action, if not made during a
session. All vacancies upon committees shall be filled in the manner
of original appointment; and members so appointed shall take rank
according to the date of their appointment, unless otherwise designated
by the president.
Rule 3. The president may at any time call another member to the
chair, but such substitution shall not continue beyond an adjourn-
ment. In all cases the president may vote.
Rule 4. The president shall preserve order in the council chamber
during sessions of the council, and in case any menjber, other than
the one recognized by the chair, insist on occupying the floor for
any purpose, except to rise to a point of order or question of per-
sonal privilege, he shall upon request of the president take his seat,
and upon refusal to comply with such request, said member shall by a
majority vote of the members present and voting be removed from the
council chamber, such removal to remain in effect during the remainder
of the session, unless otherwise ordered. The president shall forbid
smoking in the council chamber.
Rule 5. The clerk shall keep a record of the acts, votes, and pro-
ceedings of the common council, and a separate record of all decisions
20 MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
uf the chair upon questions of order. He shall have the care and
custody of all papers belonging to this branch of the city council; and
shall prepare a schedule of business in order for each meeting, in such
manner as the president may direct.
He shall draw up and send all messages to the board of aldermen;
and shall retain in his possession all papers until the right to file a
notice of reconsideration has expired, and if such notice is made he
shall keep the papers pertaining thereto until the right of reconsidera-
tion has expired.
CONDUCT OF MEMBERS.
Rule 6. Except when otherwise provided no member shall speak
for more than fifteen minutes, and a further equal time if the council
so vote. No member shall speak a second time on a question if another
member, who has not spoken, claims the floor.
Rule 7. No member speaking shall be interrupted by another,
except upon a point of order.
Every member, while speaking, shall confine himself to the question
under debate, and shall refrain from personalities, and shall not refer
to any other member of the council except by a respectful designation;
and no member shall speak or vote out of his place without leave of
the president.
QUORUM.
Rule 8. Whenever a member raises a doubt of a quorum being
present, the chair shall ascertain and declare whether a quorum is
present or not. For this purpose he may at his discretion, or on
motion sustained by one-fifth of the members present, order the roll to
be called. If a quorum is not present he shall declare the council
adjourned.
COMMITTEES.
Rule 9. All matters relating to the election of members shall be
referred to the standing committee on elections, which shall consist of
five members.
Rule 10. There shall be a standing committee on judiciary, consist-
ing of five members, who shall have the power to obtain the opinion of
the corporation counsel on all matters that shall be referred to them.
Rule 11. All committees of this council shall be notified of their
meetings by the clerk of committees. They shall not sit during
sessions of the council without special leave, nor be called on less
notice than twenty-four hours from the time the notices are mailed by
the clerk or despatched by special messenger, unless all the members
consent; and the clerk shall keep a record of their doings. The mem-
ber first named shall be chairman, unless otherwise ordered by the
committee, in which case the council shall be notified of the change;
and the same rule shall apply to members serving on joint com-
mittees.
RULES OF THE COMMOlSr COUNCIL. 21
Rule 12. Special committees of the council shall consist of three
members, unless otherwise ordered.
Rule 13. No report of any committee shall be received unless agreed
to by such committee at a duly notified meeting thereof. Such report,
when presented, may be ordered to be printed, and shall then take its
place among the unfinished business for consideration at the next
meeting.
COMMITTEE OF THE WHOLE,
Rule 14. When the council shall determine to go into a committee
of the whole, the president shall appoint the member who shall take
the chair.
Rule 15. The rules of proceedings in the council shall be observed
in the committee of the whole, so far as they are applicable; but the
previous question shall not be moved, and a motion to rise, report
progress, and ask leave to sit again shall be first in order, and shall be
decided without debate.
OBDER OF BUSINESS.
Rule 16. At every meeting of the council the order of business shall
be as follows:
First. Reading of the records of the preceding meeting, if called for
by a majority of the members present.
Second. Messages from his honor the mayor, reports of city officers,
and other communications addressed to the council.
Third. Papers from the board of aldermen.
Fourth. Reports of committee on finance.
Fifth. Reports of committees, which shall be called for by divisions
in numerical order.
Sixth. Motions, orders, and resolutions. Orders and resolutions
shall be read once, and upon motion, referred to their appropriate com-
mittees or assigned to the next meeting. If no objection is made, or
the rules are suspended, orders and resolutions may, at the time they
are offered, be given a second reading and passed. All orders relating
to heads of departments shall, unless otherwise ordered, be referred to
the mayor.
Seventh, Unfinished business of preceding meetings.
Eighth. Notices of motions for reconsideration. (See Rule 35.)
Ninth. Motions, orders, and resolutions, which shall take the same
course as provided in the sixth section of this rule; provided., however,
that not more than thirty minutes shall be allowed for the presentation
of papers under the sixth order of business. Papers shall be called
for by divisions in numerical order, and only one member in division
one, two members in division two, two members in division three and
one member in division four, shall be recognized until each division
has been called.
Rule 17. All papers addressed to the council shall be presented by
the president, or by a member; and, unless the council shall otherwise
determine, they shall be read by the president, or such other person as
22 MUNICIPAL KEGISTER.
he may request, and be taken up in the order in which they have
been presented.
RuiiE 18. All ordinances, orders, and resolutions shall, unless re-
jected, have two several readings, after each of which debate shall be
in order, and they shall then be put on their passage. Whenever the
second reading immediately follows the first, the document may be
read by its title only.
Rule 19. No ordinance, and no order or resolution imposing penal-
ties, or authorizing the expenditure of money, shall have more
than one reading on the same day; but this rule shall not apply to an
order to print a document.
MOTIONS.
Rule 20. Every motion shall be reduced to writing, if the president
shall so direct, and no other motion shall be entertained until a reason-
able time be afforded for com!pliance with such direction.
Rule 21. In naming sums and fixing times, the largest sum and
longest time shall first be put to the question.
Rule 22. When a question is under debate the president shall
receive any of the following motions, but no others:
1. To adjourn.
2. To lay on the table.
3. The previous question.
4. To close debate at a specified time.
5. To assign to a time certain.
6. To amend.
7. To refer to a committee.
8. To refer to another board.
9. To postpone indefinitely.
These several motions shall not be applied to each other, except that
the motion to assign, amend, refer, or to close debate at a specified
time, maybe amended; and the previous question may be demanded
upon an amendment, which motion shall be decided without debate.
When one of these motions has been made, none of the others, in-
ferior to it in precedence, shall be made, and, in proceeding to vote,
motions pending shall be put in the order of their rank, as above
arranged. No motion or proposition of a subject different from that
under consideration, shall be admitted under color of amendment.
Rule 23. When a matter has been assigned to be taken up at a fixed
hour, or at a certain stage of proceedings, such matter shall, at the
time appointed, or at any time subsequent thereto, during the same or
succeeding meetings, be in order upon the call of any member, and take
precedence of all other business.
Rule 24. When an order or resolution relates to a subject which
may properly be examined and reported upon by an existing committee
of the city council, such order or resolution shall, upon presentation.
EULES OF THE COMMON" COUNCIL. 23
"be referred to sucli committee. When a motion is made to refer any
subject, and different committees are proposed, the motion shall be put
in the following order:
A standing committee of the council.
A special committee of the council.
A joint standing committee.
A joint special committee.
Rule 25. A motion to adjourn shall always be in order, provided
business of a nature to be recorded on the journal has been transacted
since a motion to adjourn was rejected; and such motion shall be
decided without debate.
Rule 26. Debate on a call for the previous question, or on a motion
to close debate at a specified time, or on a motion to lay on the table
or take from the table, shall not exceed ten minutes, and no member
shall speak more than three minutes. In such debate, however, the
merits of the main question shall not be discussed.
Rule 27. Any member may require the division of a question when
the sense will admit of it; and any member may move at any time for
the suspension of any rule or rules.
PREVIOUS QUESTION.
Rule 28. The previous question shall be put in the following form:
■" Shall the main question be now put? " and all debate upon the main
question shall be suspended until the previous question has been
decided.
Rule 29. When the previous question is ordered, the vote shall be
taken upon all pending amendments, and finally upon the main ques-
tion.
Rule 30. All incidental questions of order, arising after a motion
is made for the previous question, shall be decided without debate,
except on an appeal; and on such an appeal no member shall be allowed
to speak more than once without leave of the council.
APPEAL.
Rule 31. No appeal from the decision of the president shall be
entertained unless it is seconded; and no motion but to adjourn shall
be in order till the question on the appeal has been decided. The
question shall be put as follows: " Shall the decision of the chair stand
as the judgment of the council ? " And it shall be deemed to be decided
in the affirmative, unless the majority of the votes given are to the con-
trary.
VOTINa.
Rule 32.' If the president is unable to decide, or if any member
doubts a vote, the president shall cause a rising vote to be taken on the
question, without further debate. The president shall appoint two
tellers for each division of the council, as fixed by him, who shall
agree on a count, and report the result aloud to him.
24 MUNICIPAL REGISTEK.
Rule 33. A motion that any pending vote shall be taken by yeas-
and nays shall be in order at any time, and no debate shall be allowed
thereon, but it shall be passed by the assent of one-fifth of the members
present. Every member present shall answer to his name unless excused
before the vote is taken.
Rule 34. After the announcement of a vote, not taken by yeas and
nays, any member may move for a verification thereof by yeas and nays,
and on such motion a debate of the original question, not exceeding
five minutes, shall be permitted ; and the yeas and nays shall be taken^
provided one-fifth of the members voting shall so require.
BECONSIDEKATION.
Rule 35. When a vote has been passed, any member may move a
reconsideration thereof at the same meeting, either immediately after
the announcement of such vote, or whenever motions are in order; or
if any member, vrho is not shovra by a yea and nay vote to have voted
against the prevailing side, shall give notice to the clerk, before 10
o'clock A.M., of the next day but one following that on which a meet-
ing was held (except the final meeting of the year, or that preceding any
adjournment for over two weeks) of his intention so to do, he may
move a reconsideration at the next meeting at which said motion is
reached in the order of proceedings.
Rule 36. Debate on motions to reconsider shall be limited to thirty
minutes, and no member shall speak more than five minutes. When-
ever a matter has been especially assigned, a notice, as above specified,,
to reconsider any vote affecting it shall be considered whenever such
special Assignment takes effect.
Rule 37. When a motion for reconsideration has been decided, that
decision shall not be reconsidered, and no question shall be twice
reconsidered unless it has been amended after the reconsideration; nor
shall any reconsideration be had upon either of the following motions :
To adjourn.
The previous question.
To lay on the table.
To take from the table.
To close debate at a specified time.
KESCINDING VOTES.
Rule 38. After a vote has been refused a reconsideration, it shall
not be rescinded unless two-thirds of the whole number of the members
of the common council vote in the affirmative.
ELECTIONS.
Rule 39. All elections of city officers by this branch shall be held
in accordance with the provisions of chapter 170 of the Acts of the year
1899.
KULES OF THE COMMON COUNCIL. 25
SEATS OF MEMBERS.
Rule 40. No person except a member of the council shall be per-
mitted to occupy the seat of any member while the council is in session.
The seats of the members of the council shall be numbered, and shall
be determined, in the presence of the council, by drawing the names of
members and the number of the seats simultaneously; and each mem-
ber shall be entitled for the year to the seat bearing the number so
drawn against his name, and shall not change it, except by the permis-
sion of the president.
SPEOTATOES.
Rule 41. The city messenger shall allow no person upon the floor
of the council chamber, or in either of the anterooms, except members
of the city government, heads of departments and reporters, without
the permission of the president; and, while the council is in session, no
person except members of the city government, heads of departments
and reporters shall be allowed in either of the anterooms on the easterly
side. The president shall order such accommodations on the floor for
reporters and spectators as he shall deem proper; provided, however,
that no spectators shall be seated behind the members of the council.
Rule 42. The council chamber shall be used for meetings of the
council only, unless by special vote of the common council; provided,
that during the summer recess the president may allow the chamber to
be used for public purposes, in all cases reporting his action to the
council at its next meeting. The anteroom and large committee room
on the east shall be subject to the same rules, except that the president
may allow committee meetings to be held therein at times when the
council is not in session. The clerk's room shall be assigned to the
clerk of the common council for occupancy and use. The anteroom
between the council chamber and the clerk's shall be used during the
meetings of the council to give access to the seats on the floor, and
for such other purposes as the president may direct; provided, that
smoking there shall not be allowed on the part of visitors. The general
care and supervision of these rooms are hereby intrusted to the city
messenger, subject to the direction of the president; but no expendi-
ture of money shall be made except by direct vote of the common
council,
paeLiamentary practice.
Rule 43. The rules of parliamentary practice as contained in Gush-
ing's " Law and Practice of Legislative Assemblies " shall govern this
council in all cases in which they are applicable, and in which they are
not inconsistent with these rules or the joint rules of the city council.
EEPEAL.
Rule 44. The foregoing rules shall not be altered, amended, sus-
pended or repealed at any time, except by the votes of two-thirds of
the members of the common council present and voting thereon.
26 MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
JOINT RULES AND ORDERS OF THE CITY COUNCIL.
JOINT STANDING COMMITTEES.
Rule 1. There shall be appointed at the commencement of the
municipal year the following joint standing committees, the members
of which shall be appointed by the respective branches in such manner
as they may determine. Said committees shall respectively examine,
as often as they deem necessary, the accounts of public moneys received
and expended by the several departments. Each of said committees
to consist of five aldermen and eight councilmen, namely:
1. A committee on the Art Department.
2. A committee on the Assessing Department.
3. A committee on the Auditlnr) Department.
4. A committee on the Bath Department.
6. A committee on the Building Department.
6. A committee on the Cemetery Department.
7. A committee on the City Clerk Department.
8. A committee on the City Messenger Department.
9. A committee on the Clerk of Committees Department.
10. A committee on the Collecting Department.
11. A committee on the Election Department.
12. A committee on the Engineering Department.
13. A committee on the Fire DeparUnent.
14. A committee on the Health Department.
15. A committee on the Hospital Department.
16. A committee on the Institutions Department.
17. A committee on the Lam}) Department.
18. A committee on the Law Department.
19. A committee on the Library Department.
^0. A committee on the Market Department.
21. A committee on the Music Department.
22. A committee on the Overseeing of the Poor Department.
23 A committee on the Park Department.
24. A committee on the Public Buildings Department.
25. A committee on the Public Grounds Department.
26. A committee on the Registry Department.
27. A committee on the Statistics Department.
28. A committee on the Street Department.
29. A committee on the Street Laying-out Department.
30. A committee on the Treasury Department.
31. A committee on the Vessels and Ballast Department.
JOINT RULES OF THE CITY COUNCIL. 27
32. A committee on the Water Department.
33. A committee on the Weights and Measures Department.
34. A committee on the Wire Department.
There shall also be appointed annually, in like manner, the following
joint standing committees to perform the duties assigned them:
1. A committee on Ajypropriations^ to consist of eight members of
the board of aldermen, and eight members of the common council, to
whom shall be referred the estimates of the departments prepared
annually, and any suggestions thereon from his honor the mayor.
They shall report an order appropriating such sums as they deem
necessary for the lawful public uses, and setting forth in detail, as far
as convenient, the purposes.
2. A conimittee on Claims., to consist of five aldermen and eight
councilmen, to whom shall be referred all claims against the city arising,
from the act or neglect of any of its departments. They shall report
annually a list of- the claims awarded or approved by them, and the
amount of money awarded or paid in settlement thereof.
3. A committee on Finance, to consist of seven members of the board
of aldermen and ten members of the common council, to whom shall
be referred all applications for expenditures which involve a loan, or a
transfer of any part of an appropriation named in the general appropri-
ation order, or from the reserved fund, as provided in Rule 17.
4. A committee on Legislative Matters, to consist of five aldermen
and eight councilmen, who shall, unless otherwise ordered, appear before
committees of the general court and represent the interests of the city;
provided, said committee shall not, unless directed so to do by the city
council, oppose any legislation petitioned for by the preceding city
council. It shall report in print to the city council all bills, resolves,
and petitions presented to the legislature affecting the city of Boston or
any department thereof. Such printed report shall be made at the next
meeting of either branch after such application is made, or earlier, at
the discretion of said committee.
5. A committee on Ordinances, to consist of the members of the
committee on law department, to whom shall be referred all ordinances
Introduced in either branch, or transmitted to them by vote of any
standing committee. Unless specially instructed, they shall pass upon
the question of the form and legality of the ordinance so referred, they
may append an order that such ordinance *•' ought not to pass,'' and give
their reasons therefor, or report such ordinance in a new draft. Such
report shall be made in not over two weeks from the meeting at which
the reference was ordered, or the ordinance received from a committee.
6. A committee on Police, to consist of five aldermen and eight
councilmen, to whom shall be referred all matters relating to the police
department.
7. A committee on Printing, to consist of five aldermen and eight
councilmen, who shall have the charge of all printing, advertising, or
28 MUNICIPAL KEGISTER.
publishing ordered by or for the city council, or either branch, as one
of its contingent or incidental expenses, and the supply of all stationery
or binding for the same purpose. The committee shall fix the number
of copies to be printed of any document printed as above, the minimum,
however, to be six hundred; and they shall have the right to make rules
and regulations for the care, custody, and distribution of all documents^
books, pamphlets, and maps by the city messenger.
8. A committee on Public Lands, to consist of five aldermen and
eight councilmen, to whom shall be referred all matters relating to
public lands.
9. A committee on Schools and School-houses, to consist of five
aldermen and eight councilmen, to whom shall be referred matters
relating to the public schools, and requests for additional school accom-
modations.
JOINT SPECIAL COMMITTEES.
Rule 2. Every joint special committee ordered by the city council
shall, unless otherwise provided in the order, be appointed in the man-
ner provided in Rule 1.
JOINT COMMITTEES.
Rule 3. The member of the board of aldermen first named on every
joint committee shall be its chairman; and, in case of his resignation or
inability, the other members of the same board, in the order designated
by the chairman of the board, and after them the members of the com-
mon council in the order named, shall act as chairman. Meetings of
the committee shall be called at the discretion of the chairman, or at
the written request of a majority of the members.
Rule 4, Every joint committee shall cause records of their proceed-
ings to be kept in books provided for that purpose; and at every meet-
ing of a committee the records of the previous meeting shall be read,
unless otherwise ordered by the committee. In all such meetings of
committees all votes shall, at the request of any member, be taken by
yeas and nays and recorded.
Rule 5. No meeting of any committee shall, without the consent of
all the members thereof, be called upon less notice than twenty-four
hours from the time the clerk shall have mailed the notices or
despatched them by special messenger.
Rule 6. Any joint committee may expend from the appropriation
for contingent expenses an amount not exceeding two hundred dollars
in any one year, for purposes connected with the duties of said
committee for which no provision has been otherwise made.
CONFEBENCE COMMITTEES.
Rule 7. In every case of disagreement between the two branches of
the city council, if either branch shall request a conference, and appoint
a committee of conference, the other branch shall also appoint such a.
JOINT RULES OF THE CITY COUNCIL. 29
committee, and such committees shall consist of not less than five mem-
l>ers each. Both committees shall, at an hour to be agreed upon by
their chairmen, meet and state to each other, verbally or in writing, as
either shall choose, the reasons for the action of their respective branches
in relation to the matter in controversy, shall confer freely thereon, and
shall report to their respective branches.
REFEBENCE TO COMMITTEES.
RuiiE 8. When an order or resolution relates to a subject vehich
may properly be examined and reported upon by an existing committee
of the city council, such order or resolution shall, upon presentation,
be referred to such committee. Either branch of the city council may
commit or recommit to a joint committee; but a reference vrith instruc-
tions shall require concurrent action.
KEPOKTS OF JOINT COMMITTEES.
EuLE 9. No report of a joint committee shall be received by either
"branch of the city council unless agreed to by such committee at a duly
notified meeting thereof. The report of a committee upon any subject
referred to it shall, unless othervrise ordered by the city council or by
the committee, be presented to the branch in which the order of refer-
ence originated. It shall be the duty of every joint committee to which
any subject may be specially referred, to report thereon within four
weeks, or to ask for further time.
RuTiE 10. All reports submitted to the city council shall be written or
printed, and no indorsement of any kind shall be made on the reports,
memorials, or other papers, excepting those made by the officers of either
branch, or the name of the member offering the same. Every report of
a committee shall be signed by a member belonging to the body to
which it shall be presented, unless otherwise directed by the committee.
Every member presenting an order, ordinance or resolution, shall have
his name indorsed thereon. Such member shall be informed, by the
clerk of the committee to which the matter is referred, of the time
fixed for its consideration, if he give notice of his desire to be heard
thereon.
Rule 11. Any report containing any recommendation, other than
*' leave to withdraw," or " inexpedient to take further action," or refer-
ence to another board or committee, shall be accompanied by an ordi-
nance, order or resolve, embodying such recommendation; and such
report shall be acted upon separately.
Rule 12. Any member of a joint committee may submit a minority
report at the same time as the majority report, and, if the latter be in
print, he shall be allowed to submit his report also in print. Either
branch may order to be printed the report of any committee submitted
to it, or any document relating to a subject under consideration, the
expense thereof to be charged to the general appropriation for printing.
30 MUNICIPAL KEGISTER.
NOTICE TO OTHER BRANCH.
Rule 13. All papers requiring concurrent action shall be trans-
mitted from one branch of the city council to the other before the next
regular meeting of the latter branch, with the action of the branch
sending them indorsed thereon, and signed by the regular presiding
officer of such branch, or, in his absence, by the clerk, or assistant
clerk, of such body. In case of votes or action by either branch, not
based on written orders or papers, notice of the same shall be trans-
mitted to the other branch, signed as hereinbefore directed. In case
any ordinance, order, or resolution, originating in one branch, shall fail
to pass in the other, notice thereof shall be given, under the signature
of the clerk, to the branch in which the same originated.
ORDERS AND RESOLUTIONS.
Rule 14. In all votes requiring concurrent action the form of
expression shall be "Ordered" for everything by way of command;
and the form shall be " Resolved " for everything expressing opinions,
principles, facts or purposes.
APPROPRIATIONS AND EXPENDITURES.
Rule 15. Whenever the city council shall order an expenditure by
any committee, board, or officer, either in addition to the estimates on
which the appropriation was made, or for an object not included in
such estimates, it shall provide for the payment of the same.
Rule 16. No expenditure shall be made from the reserved fund
except by a transfer to some othier appropriation, or to a new appropria-
tion to, be established, and no expenditure shall be charged to the
appropriation for incidental expenses except transfers and the expendi-
tures therefrom provided for in the ordinances.
Rule 17. Every application for an additional appropriation, to be
provided for by transfer or loan, shall be referred to the committee on
finance; and no such additional appropriation shall be made until the
said committee has reported thereon.
Rule 18. No order authorizing the borrowing of money, or the
transfer of one appropriation or part of an appropriation to another
appropriation, shall be passed, unless two-thirds of the whole number
of the members of each branch of the city council vote in the affirma-
tive, by a vote taken by yea and nay.
BILLS AND ACCOUNTS.
Rule 19. No presiding officer of a board or chairman of a committee,
unless duly authorized by such board or committee, shall approve any
bill or account against the city.
AMENDMENT OR REPEAL.
Rule 20. The foregoing rules shall not be altered, amended, sus-
pended, or repealed, at any time, except by the votes of two-thirds of
the members .of each branch of the city council present and voting
thereon.
COMMITTEES. 31
COMMITTEES.
STANDING COMMITTEES OF THE BOARD OF ALDERMEN.
Akmokies and Military Affairs. — Quigley, Bowen, Miller, Dowd,
Heath.
County Accounts. — Lomasney, Doyle, Miller, Slattery, Quigley.
Electric Wires. —McCarthy, Slattery, Kelly, Tinkham, Quigley.
Faneuil Hall, Etc. — Slattery, Dowd, Farwell, Heath, McCarthy.
Lamps. — Dowd, Norris, Kelly, Heath, Farwell.
Licenses. — Bowen, Kelly, Farwell, McCarthy, Dowd.
Markets. — Kelly, Tinkham, Bowen, Lomasney, Quigley.
Railroads. — Doyle, Heath, Farwell, Bowen, McCarthy.
Public Improvements. — The whole Board, Alderman Norris, Chair-
man.
Sub-Committees. — Paving Division: Bowen, Miller, Quigley. Sewer
Division: Doyle, Farwell, Heath. Bridge Division: Lomasney,
Miller, Quigley. Ferry Division : Kelly, Slattery, Bowen. Sanitary
Division: McCarthy, Lomasney, Farwell. Street Cleaning Division :
Slattery, Tinkham, McCarthy. Street Watering Division: Dowd,
Tinkham, Norris.
SPECIAL COMMITTEES OF THE BOARD OF ALDERMEN.
Franklin Fund. — Kelly, Miller.
Inspection of Prisons. — Heath, Kelly, McCarthy.
Rules and Orders. — Doyle, Kelly, Tinkham.
State Aid. — Norris, Farwell, Kelly.
STANDING COMMITTEES OF THE COMMON COUNCIL.
Judiciary. — Grady, Upham, Thayer, Bromberg, Cox. ,
Elections. — McDermott, Scigliano, Staples, Jenney, Conway (23).
SPECIAL COMMITTEES OF THE COMMON COUNCIL.
Against Abolition of Common Council. — Grady, Davenport, Lane
(15), Clark (2), Phelan, O'Toole, Teevens, Bromberg, Upham,
Dolan.
Badges. — Hoban, Hannon, McDermott.
Harbor Improvements. — Clark (2), Shiels, Wood.
32 MUNICIPAL KEGISTER.
JOINT STANDING COMMITTEES OF THE CITY COUNCIL.
Appropriations. — Aldermen — Doyle, Bowen, Tinkham, Dowd,
McCarthy, Farwell, Quigley, Slattery. Common Council — Dolan, Egan,
Weber, Donnelly (7), Staples, Donnelly (2), Brown, Burke.
Art Department. — Aldermen — Tinkham, Norris, Dowd, Heath,
Miller. Common Council — Hart, Cadigan, Jackson, McDonald (3),
Thayer, Flynn, Crowley, Jenney.
Assessing Department. — Aldermen — Lomasney, Tinkham, Kelly,
Miller, Quigley. Common Council — Scigliano, Shiels, Lorey, Hart,
Barrett, Weber, McGrady, Gove.
Auditing Department, — Aldermen — Slattery, Farwell, Norris,
Miller, Kelly. Common Council — Weinberg, Curry, Wood, McGonagle,
McKee, Mullen, Upham, Burke.
Bath Department. — Aldermen — Kelly, Slattery, Bowen, Doyle,
Farwell. Common Council — Donnelly (2), O'Toole, Lane (11), Crowley,
Upham, Hickey, Staples, Young.
• BaiLDiNG Department. — Aldermen — Kelly, Doyle, Bowen, Miller,
McCarthy. Common Council — Hoban, McDermott, Starratt, Walsh,
Lorey, Owens, Gaylord, Flaherty.
Cemetery Department. — Aldermen — Heath, Norris, Dowd, Far-
well, McCarthy. Common Council — Cauley, Myers, Davenport, McDer-
mott, Burr, Hoar, Bromberg, Shiels.
Cltt Clerk Department. — Aldermen — Lomasney, Miller, Norris,
Slattery, Dowd. Common Council — Maynard, Grady, Bennett, Power,
Jenney, Linehan, Curtis, McDonald (4).
City Messenger Department. — Aldermen — Norris, Slattery,
Bowen, Tinkham, Dowd. Common Council — O'Toole, Hickey, Hen-
derson, Hoban, Graumann, Barrett, Clark (24), Murdock.
Claims. — Aldermen — Dowd, Slattery, Farwell, Heath, Quigley.
Common Council — Grady, Lyons, Upham, Ware, Bromberg, Myers,
ThaySr, Milmore.
Clerk of Committees Department — Aldermen — McCarthy,
Heath, Kelly, Doyle, Miller. Common Council — Kenney, Ware, Hen-
derson, Good, Wood, Milmore, Gaylord, Mullen.
Collecting Department. — Aldermen — Doyle, Bowen, Lomasney,
Tinkham, Slattery. Common Council — Cadigan, Crowley, Brown,
Simms, Weinberg, McDonald (3), Alexander, Mullen.
Election Department — Aldermen — Kelly, Quigley, McCarthy,
Farwell, Dowd. Common Council — Bennett, McGonagle, Curtis, May-
nard, Wood, Conway (3), Curry, Donnelly (2).
COMMITTEES. 33
Engineering- Department — Aldermen — Lomasney, Tinkham,
Norris, Slattery, Quigley. Common Council — Mullen, Lyons, Starratt,
Hoar, Bennett, Teevens, Fitzgerald, Henderson.
Finance. — Aldermen — Norris, Kelly, Lomasney, Miller, Heath,
Quigley, Slattery, Common Council — Donnelly (7), Clark (2), Howe,
Cauley, Burr, Lane (15), Curtis, Barrett, Phelan, Conway (23).
Fire Department. — Aldermen — Slattery, Lomasney, Kelly,
McCarthy, Farwell. Common Council — Cauley, Flaherty, Gove, Gavin,
Howe, McDonald (4), Phelan, Hoar.
Health Department. — Aldermen — ^ Slattery, Lomasney, Quigley,
Tinkham, Norris. Common Council — ■ Egan, O'Toole, Upham, Ware,
Lorey, Murdock, Clark (24), Conway (3).
Hospital Department. — Aldermen — Doyle, Heath, Kelly, Farwell,
McCarthy. Common Council — O'Toole, Donnelly (2), Thayer, Gavin,
Lane (11), Myers, Brdmberg, Conway (3).
■ Institutions Departments. — Aldermen — Heath, Miller, Quigley,
Kelly, Norris. Common Council — Ware, Conway (23), Wood, Burke,
Henderson, Owens, Jackson, Clark (2).
Lamp Department. — Aldermen — Dowd, Norris, Kelly, Heath, Far-
well. Common Council — Linehan, Donnelly (7), Howe, Fitzgerald, Lyons,
Gaylord, Good, Alexander.
Legislative Matters. — Aldermen — Dowd, Slattery, Tinkham,
Farwell, Kelly. Common Council — Grady, Hoban, Simms, Lyons,
Bromberg, Weinberg, Cox, Walsh.
Library Department. — Aldermen — Tinkham, Bowen, Lomasney,
Miller, Slattery. Common Council — Barrett, Weber, Cadigan, Cox,
Crowley, Simms, Power, Maynard.
Market Department. — Aldermen — Kelly, Tinkham, Bowen,
Lomasney, Quigley. Common Council — Shiels, Curry, Jackson, Ken-
ney, Hannan, Gavin, McKee, Good.
Music Department. — Aldermen — Heath, Bowen, Lomasney, Miller,
Dowd. Common Council — Hickey, Kenney, Hart, Jackson, Scigliano,
Alexander, McDermott, Lorey.
Ordinances and Law Department. — Aldermen — Slattery, Tink-
ham, Dowd, Farwell, McCarthy. Common Council — ^ Scigliano, Clark (2),
Thayer, Lane (15), Cox, Lane (11), Lyons, Milmore.
Overseeing of the Poor Department. — Aldermen — Doyle,
McCarthy, Heath, Kelly, Tinkham. Common Council — Owens, Con-
way (23), Simms, Murdock, Jenney, McGonagle, Staples, McGrady.
Park Department. — Aldermen — Heath, Tinkham, Lomasney,
Bowen, Slattery. Common Council — Donnelly (7), Egan, Cox, Maynard,
Graumann, Hoban, Clark (24), McDonald (4).
34 MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
Police. — Aldermen — Kelly, Quigley, Bowen, Miller, Slattery.
Common Council — Curry, Milmore, McKee, Teevens, Lane (11), Maynard,
Graumann, Cauley.
Printing. — Aldei-men— Bowen, McCarthy, Quigley, Miller, Kelly.
Common Council — Teevens, McGrady, Wood, Fitzgerald, Henderson,
Conway (3), Bennett, Hoar.
Public Buildings Department. — Aldermen — McCarthy, Norris,
Dowd, Farwell, Slattery. Common Council — Kenney, Conway (23),
Staples, Ware, Lorey, Flaherty, Clark (24), Good.
Public Grounds Department. — Aldermen — Norris, McCarthy,
Lomasney, Miller, Slattery. Common Council — Donnelly (7), Egan,
Gove, Lane (15), Weber, Hoban, Henderson, Ware.
Public Lands. — Aldermen — Slattery, Dowd, Bowen, Kelly, Far-
well. Common Council — Hart, Clark (2), Davenport, Grady, Flynn,
McKee, Burke, Graumann.
Registry Department. — Aldermen — Lomasney, Dowd, Kelly,
McCarthy, Tinkham. Common Council — Young, Power, Howe, Line-
ban, Alexander, Walsh, Thayer, Flynn.
Schools and School-Houses. — Aldermen — Quigley, Tinkham,
Lomasney, Miller, Kelly. Common Council — Lane (11), Fitzgerald,
Bromberg, Murdock, Cox, Conway (23), Brown, Owens,
Statistics Department. — Aldermen — Heath, McCarthy, Bowen,
Tinkham, Miller. Common Council — Thayer, Linehan, Flynn, Myers,
Phelan, Scigliano, Simms, Walsh.
Street Department. — Aldermen — Bowen, Farwell, Lomasney,
Quigley, Norris. Common Council — McGonagle, Donnelly (7), Curtis,
McDonald (3), Alexander, Young, Clark (24), Cadigan.
Street Laying-Out Department.- — Aldermen — McCarthy, Slat-
tery, Quigley, Miller, Bowen. Common Council — Jenney, McDermott,
Owens, Cox, McDonald (4), Graumann, Walsh, McGrady.
Treasury Department. — Aldermen — Norris, Kelly, Lomasney,
Tinkham, Quigley. Common Council — Hoar, Hickey, Gove, McDonald
(3), Brown, Barrett, Burr, Power.
Vessels and Ballast Department. ^ ^ZcZej-men — Kelly, Miller,
McCarthy, Bowen, Tinkham. Common Council — Shiels, McDonald
(3), Starratt, Cadigan, Jackson, Power, Wood, Young.
Water Department. — Aldermen — Dowd, Heath, Farwell, Norris,
Quigley. Common Council — Teevens, Hart, Burr, Egan, Weber, Fla-
herty, Gaylord, Gavin.
Weights and Measures Department. — Aldermen — McCarthy,
Heath, Quigley, Tinkham, Lomasney. Common Council — Linehan^
Hickey, McKee, Donnelly (7), Jenney, Weinberg, Clark (24), Burke.
COMMITTEES. 35
WiBE Department. — Aldermen — Slattery, Dowd, McCarthy, Miller,
Kelly. Common Council — Ware, Scigliano, Davenport, Maynard,
Staples, Flaherty, Alexander, McGrady.
JOINT SPECIAL COMMITTEES.
Evacuation Day. — Aldermen — Slattery, Bowen, Norris, Farwell,
Dowd- Common Council — Lane (15), Teevens, McGrady, Walsh, Shiels,
Linehan, Hickey, Ware, O' Toole, Young.
Patkiots'' Day. — Aldermen — Lomasney, Norris. Common Council
— Grady, Scigliano, McGonagle.
Memorial Day. — Aldermen — Kelly, Bowen, Miller, Dowd, Heath.
Common Council — Clark (2), McDermott, Graumann, Myers, Gove,
Milmore, Clark (24), Conway (3).
June Seventeenth. — Aldermen — Quigley, Doyle, Heath, McCarthy,
Farwell. Common Council — Cauley, Cadigan, Power, Conway (3),
Mullen, Murdock, McDonald (3), McDonald (4), Dolan.
July Fourth. — Aldermen — Doyle, Bowen, Dowd, Farwell, Heath,
Kelly, Lomasney, McCarthy, Miller, ISTorris, Quigley, Slattery, Tink-
ham. Common Council — Dolan, Jackson, Clark (2), Cauley, Cadigan,
Power, Grady, Donnelly (7), Hart, Fitzgerald, Phelan, Simms, Gaylord,
McGrady, Teevens, Lane (15), Lyons, Hoar, Barrett, Egan, Davenport,
Weber, Lorey, Bromberg, Clark (24), Howe.
Labor Day. — Aldermen — McCarthy, Bowen, Slattery, Kelly, Miller.
Common Council — Donnelly (2), Hart, Conway (3), Good, Burke, Lane
(11), Wood, Staples.
Rules and Orders. — Aldermen — Doyle, Bowen, Kelly, Miller,
Tinkham. Common Council — Dolan, McDermott, McKee, Flaherty,
Cox, Owens, Staples, Ware.
Mayor's Address. — Aldermen — Lomasney, Kelly, Heath, McCarthy,
Tinkham. Common Council — Grady, Davenport, Teevens, Lane (11),
Milmore.
Removal of Small-pox Hospital. — Aldermen — McCarthy, Bowen,
Miller. Common Council — Hoar, Flynn, Good, Starratt, Jenney.
New City Hall. — Aldermen — Slattery, Bowen, Dowd, Doyle, Far-
well, Heath, Kelly, Lomasney, McCarthy, Miller, Norris, Quigley, Tink-
ham. Common Council — Teevens, Gaylord, McDermott, Weber, Myers,
Henderson, McGrady, Graumann, Dolan.
36
MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
EXECUTIVE OFFICERS.
The following table shows the manner in which Executive Officers or Heads of
Executive Departments of the city are appointed or elected, the time of appoint-
ment or election, the term of office as prescribed by statute, ordinance, or both,
and the salary received by each. All officers appointed by the Mayor are subject to
confirmation by the Board of Aldermen, except those whose titles are marked
with a *.
How
Appointed or Elected.
Term.
Salary.
Officers.
Created.
By Whom.
When.
Begins.
Length of.
Statute
Mayor
Annually,
three
May 1
Three years.
$4,000'
Ordinance..
«
Annually . .
" 1
One year —
Five years . .
Three years.
Five years . .
6,000
Bath Trustees
Statute
"
Annually,
one or two
Triennially.
Annually,
one
Annually,
one or two
" 1
" 1, 1901.
Building C o m m i s-
None.
$5,000
Cemetery Trustees
Children's Institutions
**
" 1
" 1
None
"
Clerk, City
" .....
2City Council
January
Ist Monday
in Jan. ...
Three years.
$5,000
Clerk of Committees . .
«
"
"
May 1
One year
4,000
1.
Mayor
<>
" 1
<i
5,000
Election Commission-
••
Annually,
one
" 1
Four years..
3,500'
Engineer, City
Ordinance..
"
Annually ..
" 1
One year
6,000
Fire Commissioner*..
Statute
"
Triennially.
" 1, 1901.
Three years.
6,000
Health Commissioners
Hospital, City, Trus-
tees
Ordinance. .
Statute
"
Annually,
one
Annually,
one or two
" 1
" 1
" 1
Five years . .
4,0001
None.
Hospital, Insane.Trus-
tees *
"
Institutions Registrar*
"
"
Annually ..
" 1
One year
$3,000
Lamps, Superintend-
ent of
Ordinance..
"
" ....
" 1
<• ....
3,500
Law Officers :
Corporation Counsel.
"
"
"
" 1
"
7,500
City Solicitor
"
"
"
" 1
" —
7,500
1 Chairman, $500 additional.
2 By concurrent vote.
EXECUTIVE OFFICERS.
37
Officers.
How
Created.
Appointed or Elected.
By Whom.
When.
Term.
Begins.
Length of.
Salary.
Library, Public, Trus-
tees of
Markets, Superintend-
ent of
Messenger, City
Music Trustees
Overseers of the Poor.
Park Commissioners..
Pauper Institutions
Trustees *
Penal Institutions
Commissioner *
Printing, Superintend-
ent of
Public Buildings, Su-
perintendent of
Public Grounds, Su-
perintendent of
Registrar, City
School-house Commis-
sioners*
Sinking-Funds Com-
missioners
Soldiers' Relief Com-
missioner
Statistics Trustees —
Streets, Superintend-
ent of
Street Commissioners.
Treasurer
Vessels and Ballast,
Weighers of
Water Commissioner*.
Weights and Meas-
ures, Sealer of
Deputy Sealers
Wire Commissioner...
Statute
Ordinance .
Statute.
MaTOr.
2City Council
Mayor
Ordinance . ,
Statute.
Ordinance .
Statute.
Vote of the I
People. . . '
Mayor.
Annually
one..
Annually
Annually
Annually
one..
Annually
four....
Annually
one
Annually,
one or two
Triennially
Annually.
Annually,
one
Annually,
two
Annually...
Annually,
one
Annually...
Annually, )
one i
Annually...
Annually,
three
TrienniaDy
Annually...
Annually,
ten
Triennially
May 1.
1.
1.
1.
1.
1.
' 1, 1901.
1st Monday
in Jan..
May 1.
1, 1901..
1....
1
1, 1900.
Five years. . .
One year —
Five years...
Three years..
Five years...
Three years..
One year
Three years..
One year —
Five years. . .
One year
Three years..
One year ...
Three years..
One year —
Three years..
None.
$3,000
4,000
None.
$5,000
3,000
3,600
4,000
4,000
3,5001
None.
$3,500
None.
$7,500
4,000«
6,000
Fees.
$5,000
3,000
1,600
5,000
1 Chairman, $500 additional.
2 By concurrent vote.
38 MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
EXECUTIVE DEPARTMENTS.
DEPARTMENT OF THE MAYOR.
Office, City Hall, second floor.
[Stat, 1885, Chap. 266; Stat. 1895, Chap. 449; Rev, Ord. 1898, Chap. 2,]
Patrick A, Collins, Mayor.
Michael P, Curran, Secretary.
James A. McKibben, Chief Clerk.
Timothy A. Butler, Stenographer.
ASSESSING DEPARTMENT,
Office, City Hall, first floor,
[Stat. 1854, Chap. 448, § 37; 1884, Chap, 123; Rev, Ord, 1898, Chap. 5.]
BOARD OF ASSESSORS.
George A. Comins, Chairman.
Charles E, Folsom, Secretary.
assessors,
John H, Donovan, John J, Murphy, George A, Comins, Terms
end in 1905,
Samuel Hichborn, Edward B, Daily, James Buckner, Terms
end in 1904,
Frederick L. Smith, Charles E. Folsom, John M. Maguire.
Terms end in 1903.
Edward T. Kelly, Clerk.
Three Assessors are appointed each year by the Mayor for a term of
three years. The salary for the Chairman is $4,500, for the Secretary
$4,200, and for the seven other Assessors $4,000.
The Assessors published annvial tax-lists from 1822 to 1866. Since
1866 the records of the department are almost entirely in manuscript,
except the annual list of polls. Annual reports have been made since
1890.
Note. — R. L. refers to the Revised Laws of Massachusetts, 1902. Stat., alone,
to the anmial Statutes or Acts and Resolves of Massachusetts; Rev. Ord., to the Re-
vised Ordinances of 189S.
The municipal year begins with the first Monday in January.
The financial year begins with February 1.
Corrections are made up to June 10, 1902.
ASSESSING DEPARTMENT. 39
ASSISTANTS.
[Stat. 1885, Chap. 266, § 2; Stat. 1894, Chap. 276; Stat. 1901, Chap. 400;
Eev. Ord. 1898, Chap. 5, § 1.]
The First Assistants are appointed by the Assessors for a term of
three years, subject to confirmation by the Mayor, one for each assess-
ment district; one-half must be from one of the two leading political
parties. The Assessors and First Assistants organize as the Board of
Assessors and Assistant Assessors, of which body the Secretary of the
Board of Assessors is at present the Secretary. The First Assistants
receive a salary of $1,000 annually.
The Second Assistants are appointed annually in the same manner
as the First Assistants, one for each assessment district; each Second
Assistant being a resident of the ward that includes the assessment
district for which he is appointed. Salary, $6 each per day.
The assessment districts, with First and Second Assistants assigned to
each, are as follows :
District 1. The whole of ward 1 (East Boston). Charles A.
TiiiDEN, Thomas Sexton.
DiST. 2. The whole of Ward 2 (East Boston). Thomas O. McEnany,
Franklin P. Snow.
DiST. 3. The whole of Ward 3 (Charlestown). Benjamin F. Bow-
ditch, Charles J. Bradley.
DisT. 4. The whole of Ward 4 (Charlestown). Dennis G. Quirk,
Frank W. Easterbrook.
DiST. 5. The whole of Ward .5 (Charlestown). John J. Taoue,
LuciAN J. Priest.
DisT. 6. That part of Ward 6 lying northerly of a line beginning at
the junction of Travers and Beverly streets; thence by the centre lines
of Beverly, Cooper, Salem, Parmenter, Hanover and Richmond streets,
Atlantic and Eastern avenues, to the Harbor Commissioners' line.
Matthew Binney, jr., James McNulty.
DiST. 7. That part of Ward 6 lying southerly and easterly of a line
beginning at the junction of School and Washington streets; thence
through the centre lines of Washington, Hanover and Richmond streets,
Atlantic and Eastern avenues, to the Harbor Commissioners' line.
Joseph D. Dillworth, Thomas H. Roberts.
DisT. 8. That part of Ward 6 lying southerly and westerly of a line
beginning at the junction of Travers and Beverly streets; thence by the
centre lines of Beverly, Cooper, Salem, Parmenter, Hanover and Wash-
ington streets, to the boundary line of Ward 7. Edward R. Spinney,
Edward A. Rogan.
DiST. 9. All that part of Ward 7 lying northerly and easterly of a line
beginning at Broadway bridge ; thence by the centre lines of Broadway
extension, Albany, Kingston, Summer and Otis streets, Winthrop square
40 MUNICIPAL EEGISTER.
and Devonshire street, to the boundary line of Ward 6. Nathan P,
Rydeb, Daniel J. Falvey.
DiST. 10. That part of Ward 7 lying northerly and westerly of a line
beginning at the junction of Pleasant and Eliot streets; thence by the
centre lines of Eliot, Kneeland, Harrison avenue. Beach, Kingston and
Otis streets, Winthrop square and Devonshire street, to the boundary
line of Ward 6. Charles B. Hunting, Alexander P. Brown.
DiST. 11. All that part of Ward 7 lying southerly of a line begin-
ning at the junction of Pleasant and Eliot streets; thence by the centre
lines of Eliot, Kneeland, Harrison avenue. Beach street to Albany street,
thence by the centre line of Albany street to the boundary line of
Ward 9. Henry J. Ireland, Harold S. Eagles.
DiST. 12. That part of Ward 8 lying northerly and easterly of a line
beginning at Craigie's bridge; thence by the centre lines of Leverett,
Green, Chambers and Cambridge streets, to the boundary line of
Ward 6. George W. Carr, Michael F. Barry.
DiST. 13. That part of Ward 8 lying southerly and westerly of a line
beginning at Craigie's bridge; thence by the centre lines of Leverett,
Green, Chambers and Cambridge streets, to the boundary line of
Ward 6. William H. Cuddy, Michael J. Toumey.
DiST. 14. That part of Ward 9 lying north-easterly of a line begin-
ning at the intersection of Tremont and Dwight streets, thence by the
centre lines of Dwight, Groton, Washington, Dover and Fay streets,
Harrison avenue, Bristol and Albany streets, to the boundary line of
Ward 12. John J. Gartland, Frederick A. H. Bennett.
DiST. 15. That part of Ward 9 lying south-westerly of a line begin-
ning at the intersection of Tremont and Dwight streets, thence by the
centre lines of Dwight, Groton, Washington, Dover and Fay streets,
Harrison avenue, Bristol and Albany streets, to the boundary line of
Ward 12. James F. Morgan, Terence F. Feely.
DisT. 16. That part of Ward 10 lying southerly and easterly of the
centre line of location of the Providence Division of the New York, New
Haven and Hartford Railroad and the centre line of Berkeley street,
to the boundary line of Ward 11. Charles J. Dowd, Francis J. Tighe.
DiST. 17. That part of Ward 10 lying northerly and westerly of the
centre line of location of the Providence Division of the New York, New
Haven and Hartford Railroad and the centre line of Berkeley street, to
the boundary line of Ward 11. David Greer, John J. Devlin.
DiST. 18. That part of Ward 11 lying easterly of a line beginning at
the Charles river; thence by the centre line of Clarendon street, to the
boundary line of Ward 10. Frederick H. Temple, Joseph A. Neal.
DiST. 19. That part of Ward 11 lying westerly of a line beginning at
the Charles river; thence by the centre line of Clarendon street to the
boundary line of Ward 10. William H. Allen, Jerome J. Crowley.
DiST. 20. The whole of Ward 12. Timothy W. Murphy, Daniel
Macdonald.
ASSESSING DEPARTMENT. 41
DisT. 21. That part of Ward 13 lying northerly and easterly of a line
beginning at the intersection of Fort Point Channel and Dorchester
avenue; thence by the centre line of Dorchester avenue, West First, C,
West Seventh and D streets, to the boundary line of Ward 15. John
H. GiBLiN, Charles H. Turner.
DisT. 22. That part of Ward 13 lying southerly and westerly of a
line beginning at the intersection of Fort Point Channel and Dorchester
avenue; thence by the centre lines of Dorchester avenue, AVest First, C,
West Seventh and D streets to the boundary line of Ward 15. Eoger
H. ScANNELL, Joseph F. Ripp.
DiST. 23. The whole of Ward 14. John C Cook, James E.
Brown.
DiST. 24. The whole of Ward 15. Charles O. Burrill, John H.
HOUT.
DiST. 25. That part of Ward 16 lying northerly and easterly of the
centre lines of Norfolk avenue and Cottage street. William B.
Smart, Simon C. Weil.
DiST, 26. That part of Ward 16 lying southerly and westerly of the
centre lines of Norfolk avenue and Cottage street. A. Glendon Dyar,
John S. McDonough.
DiST. 27. The whole of Ward 17. Thomas H. Bond, John J.
DOWD.
DiST. 28. The whole of Ward 18. Joseph T. Lyons, John P.
Geishecker.
DiST. 29. That part of Ward 1 9 lying northerly and westerly of a
line beginning at the boundary line between Boston and Brookline;
thence by the centre lines of Huntington avenue, Tremont street and
the centre line of the location of the Providence Division of the New
York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad to Prentiss street. James
P. Fox, John J. Sullivan.
DiST. 30. That part of Ward 19 lying southerly and easterly of a line
beginning at the boundary line between Boston and Brookline; thence
by the centre lines of Huntington avenue and Tremont street, and the
centre line of the location of the Providence Division of the New
York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad to Prentiss street. Richard
F. HoGAN, George W. Crocker.
DiST. 31. That part of Ward 20 lying northerly and easterly of a
line beginning on the boundary line of Ward 16, at the junction of
Quincy street and the Midland Division of the New York, New Haven
and Hartford Railroad; thence by the centre line of said railroad and
the centre lines of Washington, Bowdoin, Topliff, Longfellow, Draper,
Robinson, Adams, Ellet streets and Dorchester avenue to the boundary
line of Ward 24. George C. Bowden, Bartholomew F. Roach.
DiST. 32, That part of Ward 20 lying southerly and westerly of a line
beginning on the boundary line of Ward 16, at the junction of Quincy
street and the Midland Division of the New York, New Haven and
Hartford Railroad; thence by the centre line of said railroad and the
42 MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
centre lines of Washington, Bowdoin, Topliff, Longfellow, Draper,
Robinson, Adams, Ellet streets and Dorchester avenue to the boundary
line of Ward 24. James I. Mooke, John L. Stiles.
DiST. 33. That part of Ward 21 lying northerly of a line beginning
at the junction of Washington and Valentine streets; thence by the
centre lines of Washington, Dale, Warren and Savin streets to the boun-
dary line of Ward 16. At.onzo F. Andrews, Louis Burkhardt.
DiST. 34. That part of Ward 21 lying southerly of a line beginning
at the junction of Washington and Valentine streets; thence through
Washington, Dale, Warren and Savin streets to the boundary line of
Ward 16. John H. Griggs, Harry C. Byrne.
DiST. 35. That part of Ward 22 lying northerly and easterly of a line
beginning at the junction of Day street and Grotto glen; thence by the
centre lines of Day and Centre streets and the centre line of location of
the Providence Division of the New York, New Haven and Hartford
Railroad to the boundary line of Ward 23. John E. Heslan, Walter
E. Merriam.
DiST. 36. That part of Ward 22 lying southerly and westerly of a line
beginning at the junction of Day street and Grotto glen; thence by the
centre lines of Day and Centre streets and the centre line of location
of the Providence Division of the New York, New Haven and
Hartford Railroad to the boundary line of Ward 23. Frank S.
Pratt, William Doonan.
DiST, 37. That part of Ward 23 lying northerly and westerly of a line
beginning at the boundary line between Boston and Newton; thence by
the centre lines of Baker, Gardner and Spring streets, the centre line
of location of the West Roxbury Branch, Providence Division of the
New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad, and the centre line of
location of the Providence Division of the New York, New Haven and
Hartford Railroad to Green street. Edward P. Butler, James F.
DOWLING.
DiST. 38. That part of Ward 23 lying northerly and easterly of a
line beginning at the boundary line between Boston and Hyde Park;
thence by the centre lines of Metropolitan avenue, Kittredge and Norfolk
streets, and Dudley avenue, and the centre line of location of the West
Roxbury Branch, Providence Division of the New York, New Haven and
Hartford Railroad; and the centre line of location of the Providence
Division of the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad, to
Green street. Dennis F. Brennan, George Uriot.
DiST. 39. That part of Ward 23 lying southerly of a line beginning at
the boundary line between Newton and Boston; thence by the centre
lines of Baker, Gardner and Spring streets, the centre line of location of
the West Roxbury Branch, Providence Division of the New York, New
Haven and Hartford Railroad, the centre lines of Dudley avenue, Nor-
folk and Kittredge streets, and Metropolitan avenue, to the boundary
line of Hyde Park. Michael F. Dolan, Charles A. Gardiner.
AUDITING DEPARTMENT. 43
DiST. 40. That part of Ward 24 lying northerly and easterly of a line
beginning at the junction of Dorchester avenue and Greenwich street;
thence by the centre lines of Dorchester avenue, Ashmont, Carruth,
New Minot, Adams and Granite streets, to the ward line in Neponset
river. Daniel A. Downey, Albert W. Huebener.
DiST. 41. That part of Ward 24 lying within the following-described
lines: Beginning at the boundary line between Boston and Milton;
thence by the centre lines of Washington, Morton, Corbet, Norfolk,
and Centre streets, Dorchester avenue, Ashmont, Carruth, New Minot,
Adams and Granite streets, to the boundary line between Boston and
Milton; thence by said boundary line to the point of beginning.
Joseph T. Preston, Edward J. Thompson.
DiST. 42. That part of Ward 24 lying southerly and westerly of a
line beginning at the junction of Talbot avenue and Norfolk street;
thence by the centre lines of Norfolk, Corbet, Morton and Washington
streets, to the boundary line between Boston and Milton. William
N. Goodwin, Michael C. Broughal.
DiST. 43. That part of Ward 25 lying northerly and easterly of a line
beginning at the boundary line between Boston and Watertown; thence
by the centre lines of North Beacon, Parsons, Washington and Cam-
bridge streets to Charles river. Benjamin M. Fiske, Patrick F.
Cakley.
Dist. 44. That part of Ward 25 lying southerly and westerly of a
line beginning at the boundary line between Cambridge and Boston;
thence by the centre lines of Cambridge, Washington, Parsons
and North Beacon streets, to Charles river. George W. Warren,
J. Harris Aubin.
AUDITING DEPARTMENT.
Office, City Hall, first floor.
[Rev. Ord., 1898, Chap, 6.]
James H. Dodge, City Auditor. Appointed annually. Salary, $6,000.
The office of Auditor was established by ordinance on August 2, 1824.
Regular annual reports of receipts and expenditures have been
published by the Auditor since 1825. These reports show the annual
receipts of the City and County, the debt, and the public property.
Similar, but less complete, reports were published by finance com-
mittees from 1811 to 1824, inclusive. Since June 1, 1867, the Auditor
has published monthly exhibits of all City and County expenditures.
The City Auditor is also Auditor of the County of Suffolk and Secre-
tary of the Board of Commissioners of Sinking-Funds. See pages 96
and 79, respectively. (R. L. Chap. 21, § 44; Rev. Ord., 1898, Chap. 3, § 5.)
44 MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
BATH DEPARTMENT.
Office, 64 Pemberton square.
[Rev. Ord., 1898, Chap. 7.]
BATH TRUSTEES.
Thomas J. Lane, Chairman.
Charles F. Morse, Secretary.
TRUSTEES.
Robert A. Woods, Mrs. Lawrence J. Logan. Terms end in 1907.
William W. Whitmarsh. Term ends in 1906.
Mrs. Jacob H. Hecht, Henry Ehrlich, M.I). Terms end in 1905,
Thomas J. Lane. Term ends in 1904.
Leonard D. Ahl. Term ends in 1903.
The Trustees have the care and custody of all bath-houses and indoor
gymnasia; also of twelve urinals and four public convenience stations
established by the City.
The Bath Department has charge of the following:
BEACH baths.
Wood Island Park, East Boston, Ward 1, two houses, for men and
women, and one house for boys.
North End Park, City proper, Ward 6 (opposite Copp's Hill
burial-ground. Commercial street), two houses, for men and women.
A laundry connected with these bath-houses launders all the bathing
suits used in the Department during the sunamer bathing season.
Medford street, Charlestown, Ward 4 (opposite Charlestown
Heights), two houses, for men and women.
L street. South Boston, Ward 14, for men.
K STREET, South Boston, Ward 14, for women.
Freeport STREET, Dorcliester, Ward 24, two houses, for men and
women.
Savin Hill Beach, Dorchester, Ward 20, one house for men.
RIVER BATHS.
Charles River, Spring street. Ward 23, two houses, for men and
women.
SWIMMING-POOLS .
Orchard Park, Ward 17, two houses, for men and women, at differ-
ent hours.
Cabot street, Ward 18, two houses, for men and women, at different
hours.
FLOATING BATHS.
Brighton, Western avenue bridge. Ward 25, one house, for men and
women, at different hours.
BUILDING DEPAKTMENT. 45
DovEK-STBEET BRIDGE, Ward 9, two houses, for men and women.
West Boston bridge, Ward 8, one house, for men and women, at
different hours.
Cbaigie's bridge, Ward 8, one house, for men.
Warren bridge. Ward 5, two houses, for men and women.
Malden bridge, Ward 4, one house, for men and women, at different
hours.
Chelsea bridge. Ward 3, one house, for men and women, at different
hours.
Border street. East Boston, Ward 2, two houses, for men and
women.
Maverick street. East Boston, Ward 2, one house, for men and
women, at different hours.
DOVER-STREET BATH-HOUSE.
Dover-street bath-house, Ward 9, near Harrison avenue, shower
and tub baths for both men and women, is fitted for use throughout
the year. This bath-house was completed in 1898, and opened to the
public, in October, 1898. A laundry connected with this bath-house
launders all the towels used in the department.
GYMNASIA.
East Boston Gymnasium, Paris street. Ward 2.
Commonwealth Park Gymnasium, Ward 13, D street, South Boston.
Gymnasium, Ward 7, Tyler street.
Gymnasium, Ward 9, Harrison avenue, corner Plympton street.
Gymnasium, Ward 19, Elmwood-street ward-room.
BUILDING DEPAKTMENT.
OfBce, Old Court House, second floor, Koom 15.
{Stat. 1892, Chap. 419, § 2; Stat. 1895, Chap. 449, § 24; Eev. Ord.,
1898, Chap. 8, and Chap. 45, §§ 28-39.]
John S. Damrell, Buildiyig Commissioner. Term ends in 1904.
Salary, $5,000.
It is the duty of the Building Commissioner to issue permits for and
inspect the erection and alteration of buildings in the City, and the set-
ting of boilers, engines and furnaces; to keep a register of the names
of all persons carrying on the business of plumbing and gasfitting, and
of all persons working at said business, and to issue licenses to master
and journeymen plumbers and gasfltters; to issue permits for and
inspect the plumbing and gasfitting in a building; to inspect elevators
in buildings and report upon elevator accidents.
46 MUNICIPAL REGISTEK.
BUILDING LIMITS.
[Stat. 1892, Chap. 419; Rev. Ord., 1898, Chap. 45, § 27.]
Among other restrictions imposed by statute on the erection of build-
ings, it is provided that no wooden building shall be erected within
such limits as shall from time to time be defined by ordinance. These
limits at present are :
All that portion of the City which is included within a line beginning
at the intersection of the centre lines of Dover and Albany streets, and
thence running east through the centre of said Dover street to the
Harbor Commissioners' line ; thence by the said Harbor Commissioners'
line around the northerly portion of the City to a ,point on Charles river,
at the intersection of said line with the easterly line of St. Mary's street
extended; thence along said easterly line of St. Mary's street and the
boundary line between Brookline and Boston to the centre of Long-
wood avenue ; thence through the centre of said avenue to the centre of
St. Alphonsus street; thence through the centre of said street to the
centre of Ward street; thence through the centre of said Ward street to
the centre of Parker street; thence through the centre of said Parker
street to the centre of Euggles street; thence through the centre of
said Ruggles street to the centre of Washington street; thence through
the centre of said Washington street to a point opposite the centre of
Palmer street; thence through the centre of said Palmer street and
through the centre of Eustis street to the centre of Hampden street;
and thence through the centre of said Hampden street and the centre
of Albany street to the point of beginning.
CEMETERY DEPARTMENT.
Office, City Hall, top floor.
[Stat. 1897, Chap. 375, Rev. Ord., 1898, Chap. 9.]
BOAKB OF CEMETERY TRUSTEES.
Jacob Morse, Chairman.
Albert E. Smith, Secretary.
TRUSTEES.
Charles E. Phipps. Term ends in 1907.
Jacob Morse. Term ends in 1906.
William J. Fallon. Term ends in 1905.
Albert W. Hersey. Term ends in 1904.
Frederick E. Atteaux. Term ends in 1903.
James H. Morton, Superintendent of Cemeteries.
Office of Superintendent, at Mt. Hope Cemetery, Mattapan.
By Chap. 375 of the Acts of 1897, the Mayor was authorized to ap-
point a board of five trustees, subject to confirmation of the Board of
CHILDREN'S INSTITUTIONS DEPARTMENT. 47
Aldermen, to have charge of Mt. Hope Cemetery and all other burial-
grounds owned by or in charge of the City of Boston.
Mt. Hope Cemetery was bought by the City in 1857 for $35,000, and
additional land has been purchased since; this cemetery now contains
about IHyV acres, and is situated in Ward 23, West Roxbury. The
board of trustees was first appointed under the ordinance of December
21, 1857, and annual reports have been published since 1859.
The other burial-grounds formerly under control of the Board of
Health, but now under the jurisdiction of this Department, are as
follows :
Bennington Street, East Boston.
Bunker Hill, Charlestown.
Phipps Street, Charlestown.
Copp's Hill, Charter and Hull streets.
King's Chapel, Tremont street, near School street.
Granary, Tremont street, opposite Bromfield.
Central, Boston Common.
South, Washington and East Concord streets.
Eliot, Washington and Eustis streets.
Warren, Kearsarge avenue, Roxbury.
Walter Street, Walter street, Roslindale.
Westerly, Centre, near LaGrange street. West Roxbury.
Evergreen, Commonwealth avenue, Brighton.
Market Street, Market street, Brighton.
Dorchester North, Upham's Corner.
Dorchester South, Dorchester avenue, opposite Brook street.
Hawes, Emerson street, corner of L street.
CHILDREN'S INSTITUTIONS DEPARTMENT.
Office, 32 Tremont Street.
[Stat. 1897, Chap. 395; Rev. Ord., 1898, Chap. 10.]
TRUSTEES FOK CHILDREN.
Charles P. Putnam, M.D., Chairman.
Miss Ellen H. Bailey, Secretary.
TRUSTEES.
Hasket Derby, M.D, Term ends in 1907.
Charles P. Putnam, M.D., Mrs. George F. H. Murray. Terms end
in 1906.
Lee M. Friedman. Term ends in 1905.
Miss Ellen H. Bailey, Miss Helen Cheever. Terms end in 1904.
John O'Hare. Term ends in 1903.
The trustees have the charge and control of the house for the
employment and reformation of juvenile offenders, known as the House
48 MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
of Reformation at Rainsford Island, the Parental School for Truants at
West Roxbury, and purchase all the fuel and other supplies required
for these institutions.
' They have the charge and control of several hundred children placed
in country homes, and the general supervision of the defective children,
placed in institutions throughout the State, for whose care the City
pays.
CITY CLERK DEPARTMENT.
Office, City Hall, second floor.
[Stat. 1854, Chap. 448, § 30; Stat. 1885, Chap. 266, § 2; Rev. Ord., 1898,
Chap. 11; R. L., Chap. 26, §§ 15, 16.]
Edward J. Donovan, City Clerk. Salary $5,000.
John T. Priest, Assistant City Clerk. Salary $.3,800.
The City Clerk, chosen January 6, 1902, for the term of three years,
by concurrent vote of the two branches of the City Council, has the
■care and custody of the records of the Board of Aldermen, and of all
City records, documents, maps, plans and papers, except those other-
wise provided for. He also records chattel mortgages, assignments of
wages, liens upon vessels, and performs other duties imposed by statute.
The City Clerk is, ex officio, Clerk of the Board of Aldermen and of
meetings of both branches of the City Council when met in joint con-
vention.
The Assistant City Clerk is appointed annually by the City Clerk,
subject to the approval of the Mayor, and discharges the duties of the
City Clerk in his absence, or in case of a vacancy in . that office [Rev.
Ord,, 1898, Chap. 11 § 4]. By R. L., Chap. 26, § 16, the certificate or
attestation of the Assistant City Clerk has equal effect with that of
the City Clerk.
CITY MESSENGER DEPARTMENT.
Office City Hall, second floor.
[Rev. Ord., 1898, Chap. 12.]
Edward J. Leary, City Messenger. Salary $4,000.
The City Messenger, chosen annually by concurrent vote of the two
branches of the City Council, is the official messenger of the City Coun-
cil and its committees, and attends all meetings of the same, has the
care and distribution of all documents printed for the use of the
City Council, and is the custodian of the City Hall Building. He has
charge of the city flag-staffs, display of flags in the public grounds,
and of the ropes and stakes used in closing streets and squares on
public occasions. The office was established by an ordinance of
October 14, 1852.
ELECTION DEPARTMENT. 49
CLERK OF COMMITTEES DEPARTMENT.
Office, City Hall, second floor.
[Rev. Ord., 1898, Chap. 13.]
John F. Deveb, Clerk of Committees. Salary $4,000.
Wilfred J. Doyle, Assistant Clerk of Committees. Salary $2,000.
The Clerk of Committees, chosen annually by concurrent vote of the
two branches of the City Council, acts as the clerk of all committees of
the City Council, keeping the records of the same, and has charge
of the City Hall Reference Library. He also has charge, under the
direction of the Committee on Licenses of the Board of Aldermen, of
the licensing of minors to sell newspapers and small wares and to
black boots, and has supervision and control of all licensed minors.
He appoints all his subordinates.
The Assistant Clerk discharges the duties of the Clerk when that
officer is absent and when there is a vacancy in his office. [Rev. Ord.,
Chap. 13, § 4].
COLLECTING DEPARTMENT.
Office, City Hall, first floor.
[Stat. 1875, Chap. 176; Stat. 1888, Chap. 390; Rev. Ord., 1898, Chap. 14.]
Edmund A. MacDonald, City Collector. Appointed annually. Salary,
$5,000.
The Collector collects and receives all assessments, betterments,
rates, dues and money payable on any account to the City of Boston or
the County of Suffolk. The separate office of Collector was established
by statute in 1875. Annual reports have been published since 1876.
ELECTION DEPARTMENT.
Office, Old Court House, first floor.
[Rev. Ord., 1898, Chap. 15; R. L., Chap. 11, §§ 69-79.
BOARD OF ELECTION COMMISSIONERS.
John M. Minton, Chairman.
Melancthon W. Buelen, Secretary.
COMMISSIONERS.
John M. Minton. Term ends in 1906. Salary, $4,000.
Charles R. Saunders. Term ends in 1905. Salary, $3,500. >
David B. Shaw. Term ends in 1904. Salary, $3,500.
Melancthon W. Burlen. Term ends in 1903. Salary, $3,500.
The Board of Registrars of Voters was appointed in May, 1874, and
was succeeded July 1, 1895, by the Board of Election Commissioners.
This department exercises all the powers and duties formerly con-
ferred upon the Board of Registrars of Voters, including the prepara-
tion of the jury list, together with all the powers and duties formerly
50 MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
conferred upon the Mayor, Board of Aldermen and City Clerk, relating
to elections in tlie Ciiy of Boston, except the power and duty of giving
notice of elections, and fixing the days and hours for holding th* same.
The board also exercises all the powers and duties formerly conferred
upon the City Clerk and other officers by Chapter 504 of the Acts of
1894, and acts in amendment thereof, relating to political committees
and caucuses, and all laws relating to the registration of voters in the
City of Boston.
ENGINEERING DEPARTMENT.
Office, City Hall, fourth floor.
[Stat. 1870, Chap. 337; Stat. 1895, Chap. 449, § 21; Rev. Ord., 1898,
Chap. 16.]
William Jackson, City Engineer. Appointed annually. Salary,
$6,000.
The duties of the City Engineer include the designing and superin-
tending the construction of new bridges, retaining walls, city wharves,
and such other public engineering works as the City Council may
authorize; the making of such surveys, plans, estimates, statements
and descriptions, and taking such levels as the City Government or any
of its departments or committees may require; the custody of all sur-
veys and plans relating to the laying out, locating anew, altering,
widening or discontinuing of streets ; and the new engineering con-
structions for all departments of the city. He must be consulted on all
work where the advice of a civil engineer would be of service. The
office of City Engineer was established by ordinance on October 31,
1850, and by Chapter 449 of the Acts of 1885. Regular annual reports
have been issued since 1868.
FIRE DEPARTMENT.
Office, City Building, Bristol street.
[Stat. 1850, Chap. 262; Stat. 1895, Chap. 449, §§9-11; Rev. Ord., 1898,
Chap. 17.]
Henky S. Russell, Fire Commissioner. Salary, $5,000. Term ends
in 1904.
William T. Cheswell, Chief of Department.
John A. Mullen, Assistant Chief.
Nathan L. Hussey, Second Assistant Chief.
Bkown S. Flandeks, Superintendent of Fire Alarms.
Heney M. Hawkins, Superintendent of Repairs.
George W. Stimpson, Veterinary Surgeon.
The Boston Fire Department was organized in 1837. It is in charge
of one Commissioner, who has entire control of the department, a
Chief, First and Second Assistant Chiefs, eleven District Chiefs, each in
charge of a Fire District, Superintendent of Fire Alarms, and officers,
enginemen, telegraph operators, etc. Annual reports have been pub-
lished since 1838.
FIRE DEPARTMENT. 51
FIRE DISTRICTS AND CHIEFS.
District 1. Patrick E. Keyes, Chief. All that part of Boston known
as East Boston.
Dist. 2. C. H. W. Pope, Chief. All that part of Boston formerly
known as Charlestown.
Dist. 3. Joseph M. Garkity, Chief. The territory bounded on the
north and east by the water front, on the south by Summer street,
and on the west by Washington and Charlestown streets.
Dist. 4. Peter F. McDonough, Chief. The territory bounded on
the north by the Charles river, on the east by Charlestown and
Washington streets, on the south by Winter, Park and Beacon
streets, and on the west by the Charles river and Berkeley street.
Dist. 5. N. L. Hussey, Chief. The territory bounded on the north
by Beacon, Park, Winter and Summer streets, on the east by Fort
Point channel, on the south and west by Broadway, Way, Motte,
Castle and Ferdinand streets, Columbus avenue and Berkeley street.
Dist. 6. Edwin A. Perkins, Chief. All that part of Boston known as
South Boston, and running south as far as Dorset and Locust streets.
Dist. 1. John Grady, Chief. The territory bounded on the north
by Berkeley street, Columbus avenue, Ferdinand, Castle, Motte
and Way streets and Broadway, on the east by Fort Point channel
and South bay, on the south by Massachusetts avenue, and on the
west by the Charles river.
Dist. 8. Hiram D. Smith, Chief. The territory bounded on the north
by the Charles river and Massachusetts avenue, on the east by Wash-
ington street, on the south by Atherton and Mozart streets. Chestnut
avenue, Sheridan and Centre streets, Hyde square, Perkins, Catalpa
and Castleton streets, across Jamaicaway to the Brookline line, and
on the west by the Brookline line. Beacon and Deerfield streets.
Dist. 9. Edward H. Sawyer, Chief. The territoiy bounded on the
north by Massachusetts avenue. South bay, Dorset and Locust
streets, on the east by Dorchester bay, on the south by Freeport,
Hancock, Bowdoin and Quincy sti'eets, Columbia road, and on the
west by Seaver street, Columbus avenue and Washington street.
Dist. 10. W. A. Gaylord, Chief. That part of Dorchester bounded
on the north by Seaver street, Columbia road, Quincy, Bowdoin,
Hancock and Freeport streets, on the east by Dorchester bay, on the
south by the Neponset river and the Hyde Park line, and on the west
by Harvard street and Blue Hill avenue.
Dist, 11. John F. Ryan, Chief. All that part of Boston known
as Brighton, and extending east as far as Deerfield and Beacon
streets.
Dist. 12. L. P. Abbott, Chief. All that part of Boston known as
West Roxbury, bounded on the north by a line from the Brookline
line across Jamaicaway to Castleton street, through Castleton,
Catalpa and Perkins streets, Hyde square, Centre and Sheridan
streets. Chestnut avenue, Mozart and Atherton streets, Columbus
avenue and Seaver streets, on the east by Blue Hill avenue and
Harvard street, on the south by the Hyde Park and Dedham lines,
and on the west by the Newton and Brookline lines.
52
MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
STEAM FIRE-ENGINES.
Number.
Location.
Officers.
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26 and 35
27
28
29
30
321
33
34
Dorchester street, cor. Fourth, So. Boston.
Fourth street, cor. O, South Boston
Harrison avenue, cor. Bristol street
Bulfiuch street
Marion street, East Boston
Leverett street
East street
Salem street
Paris street. East Boston
Mt. Vernon street, cor. River
Cor. Saratoga and Byron streets, E. B —
Dudley street, Eoxbury
Cabot street, Roxbury
Centre street, Roxbury
Cor. Broadway and Dorchester avenue. ..
Temple street, Dorchester
Meeting House Hiil, Dorchester
Harvard street, Dorchester
Norfolk street, Dorchester
Walnut street, Dorchester
Columbia road, Dorchester
Warren avenue
Northampton street
Cor. Warren and Quincy streets
Fort Hill square
Mason street
Elm street, Charlestown
Centre street. West Roxbury
Chestnut Hill avenue, Brighton
Centre street. West Roxbury
Bunker Hill street, Charlestown
Boylston street
Western avenue, Brighton
( Charles Ingersoll, Capt.
I M. P. Mitchell, Lieut.
J. H. Ewers, Capt.
(John J. Flannagan, Capt.
( Joseph A. Kelley, Lieut.
( P. Callahan, Capt.
( Frank Sweeney, Lieut.
John W. Godbold, Capt.
I Henry A. Fox, Capt.
; M. J. Lawler, Lieut.
(J.J. O'Connor, Capt.
\ Peter E. Walsh, Lieut,
j R. A. Ritchie, Capt.
( W. M. McLean, Lieut.
E. B. Smith, Capt.
j F. J. Jordan, Lieut,
j M. C. Leonard, Capt.
( T. J. Fitzgerald, Lieut.
C. H. Leary, Capt.
( A. R. Johnson, Capt.
\ J. N. Lally, Lieut.
( W. J. Gaffey, Capt.
( T. E. Conroy, Lieut.
( Daniel F. Sennott, Capt.
I Ed. F. Richardson, Lieut.
C. P. Smith, Capt.
( M. F. Mulligan, Lieut.
J. F. O'Connell, Capt.
( Alexander Glover, Capt.
\ R. W. Adams, Lieut,
il. A. Williams, Capt.
\ H. W. Adams, Lieut.
Maurice Hetfernan, Capt.
J. M. Littleton, Capt.
( F. E. Hibbard, Capt.
} G. H. Hutchings, Lieut.
( M. J. Mulligan, Capt.
( M. R. Jov, Lieut.
( M. Walsh, Capt.
1 P. J. V. Kelley, Lieut.
< .James H. Le Favor, Capt.
} R. J. Carleton, Lieut.
\ M. J. Kennedy, Capt.
J. J. Caine, Lieut.
J. T. Byron, Capt.
George N. Dunn, Lieut.
George B. Norton, Lieut.
I John O. Taber, Capt.
I B. F. Hayes, Lieut.
J. E. Madison, Capt.
Joseph M. Gargan, Capt.
T. M. McLaughlin, Capt.
i Geo. F. Titus, Capt.
I E. D. Pope, Lieut.
i R. E. Handy, Capt.
I P. F. Goggin, Lieut.
E. H. Whitney, Capt.
H. P. Pitcher, Lieut.
1 31. Fire-boat (out of service) .
FIRE DEPAETMENT.
53
STEAM FIRE-ENGINES.— Concluded.
Number.
Location.
Officers.
36
John Ready, Capt.
C. H. Moning, Capt.
(S.J. Ryder, Capt.
W. M. Lynch, Lieut.
( A. J. Caulfleld, Lieut.
) J. H. Elliott, Capt.
37
38 and 39
40 ...
41 ...
\ T. J. Lannery, Lieut.
George W. Frost, Capt.
William Childs, Capt.
William Coulter, Capt.
42
43
Andrew square, South Boston
Berth at India Wharf, Fire-Vjoat
44
f I. Sparks, Capt.
J W. D. Eaton, Lieut.
45
1 P. F. Shaw, Engineer,with
t rank of Lieut.
George J. Wall, Capt.
LADDER TRUCKS.
Iso. 1. Friend street. E. J. Shallow, Captain; J. F. Gillen, Lieu-
tenant.
No. 2. Paris street, East Boston. James P. Dean, Captain ; F-
W. Battis, Lieutenant.
No. 3. Harrison avenue, corner of Bristol street. C. H. Webber,
Captain; James F. Ryan, Lieutenant.
No. 4. Dudley street, Roxbury. J. P. McManus, Captain; M. J.
Cronin, Lieutenant.
No. 5. FourLb street, near Dorchester street. E. D. Locke, Cap-
tain; E. Connors, Lieutenant.
No. 6. Temple street, Dorchester. F. P. Stengel, Lieutenant.
No. 7. Meeting House Hill, Dorchester. G. H. Nichols, Lieutenant.
No. 8. Fort Hill square. J. H. Kenney, Captain; Joseph A. Dolan,
Lieutenant.
No. 9. Main street, Charlestown. Thomas W. Conway, Captain.
No. 10. Centre street, Jamaica Plain. T. B. Flannagan, Lieutenant.
No. 11. Chestnut Hill avenue, Brighton. Peter Murjahy, Liewienanf.
No. 12. Tremont street, Roxbury. James P. Bowles, Cap)tain ; D.
McLean, Lieutenant.
No. 13. Warren avenue. C. W. Conway, Lieutenant.
No. 14. Fort Hill square. P. W. Lanegan, Lieutenant.
No. 15. Boylston and Hereford streets. John S. Cleverly, Captain;
F. M. O'Lalor, Lieutenant.
No. 16. Poplar street, West Roxbury. T. P. Lally, Lieutenant.
No. 17. Harrison avenue. Charles T. Adams, Captain; A. J.
McDonald, Lieutenant.
No.
1.
No.
2.
No.
4.
No.
5.
No.
6.
lynn
, ii
No.
7.
No.
8.
No.
9.
No.
10.
No.
12.
54 MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
CUEMICAL ENGINES.
Bulfiiicli street. Avery B. Howard, jr., Lieutenant.
Church street. A. J. Burns, Lieutenant.
Shawmut avenue. D. M. Shaughnessey, Lieutenant.
Egleston square. F. H. Smith, Lieutenant.
Harvard avenue, near Cambridge street, Brighton. P. G.
utenant.
Chelsea street. East Boston. John Neal, Lieutenant.
B street, South Boston. T. J. Muldoon, Lieutenant.
Main street, Charlestown. John E. Cassidy, Lieutenant.
Eustis street, Roxbury. C. C. Springer, Lieutenant.
Tremont street, Roxbury, in charge of Ladder 12.
OTHER APPARATUS.
Combination Company No. 1. Dorchester avenue, Ashmont. S. F.
Ridler, Lieutenant.
Combination Company No. 2. Fourth street, near K street. South
Boston. J. W. Murphy, Lieutenant.
Combination Company No. 3. Andrew square. South Boston. M.
Norton, Lieutenant.
Combination Company No. 4. Corner Saratoga and Byron streets,
East Boston. E. J. McKendrew, Lieutenant.
Combination Company No. 5. Monument street, Charlestown. T.
H, Ramsay, Lieutenant.
Combination Company No. 6. Grove Hall, Dorchester. George R.
Bancroft, Lieutenant.
Combination Company No. 7. Winthrop street, Charlestown. J. F.
Hines, Lieutenant.
Combination Company No. 8. North Grove street. J. F. McMahon,
Lieutenant.
Combination Company No. 9. Centre street. West Roxbury. Had-
win Sawyer, Lieutenant.
Combination Company No. 10. Longwood avenue. T. II. Weltch,
Lieutenant.
Combination Company No. 11. Walnut street, Dorchester. J. F.
Mitchell, Lieutenayit.
Water tower No. 1. Bulfinch street. C. J. O^Biien, Lieutenant.
Water tower No. 2. Fire headquarters, Bristol street. A. J. Porler,
Lieutenant.
Wrecking wagon. Fire headquarters, Bristol street.
HEALTH DEPARTMENT.
Office, Old Court House, second floor.
[Stat. 18.54, Chap. 448, § 40; Stat. 1895, Chap. 449, § 19; Rev. Ord., 1898,
Chap. 18.]
BOARD OF HEALTH.
Samuel H. Durgin, M.D., Chairman.
Charles E. Davis, jr., Secretary.
HEALTH DEPAETMEJSTT. 55
COMMISSIONERS.
Samuel H. Dubgin, M.D. Term ends in 1905. Salary, $4,500.
Edwin L. Pilsbury. Term ends in 1904. Salary, .|4,000.
Egbert Cox. Term ends in 1903. Salary, $4,000.
The first Board of Health in Boston was established in 1799, under
the special statute of February 13, 1799. The first collected edition of
the statutes under which this board acted was published in 1811, and
contained also the regulations of the board. That board had in sub-
stance the same powers as the present Board of Health, and was
abolished by the first city charter. From 1822 to 1873 the functions of
the board were exercised through the City Council. The present Board
of Health was established by an ordinance of December 2, 1872, and
organized January 15, 1873. It has published annual reports since 1873.
MoKTON Prince, M.D., City Physician.
Thomas B. Shea, M.D., Chief Medical Inspector. Office, Koom No. 11,
Old Court House.
David D. Brou&h, 'M.D., Medical Insxtector. Office, Room No. 11, Old
Court House.
George A. Sargent, M.D., Medical Inspector. Office, City Building,
Chardon street.
Alexander Burr, M.D.V., Health Inspector for the Inspection of Pro-
visions and Animals. Office, Eoom No. 11, Old Court House.
John C. Grouse, Health Inspector for the Inspection of Provisions.
Office, Room No. 11, Old Court House.
Charles Harrington, M.D. , Health Inspector for the Inspection of
Milk and Vinegar. Office, 30 Hvmtington avenue.
HiBBERT W. Hill, M.D., Director of Bacteriological Laboratory. Office,
Sudbury Building.
Paul Cakson, M.D., Port Physician; William N. Gay, M.D.,
Assistant Port Physician. Eesident at Deer Island.
John McLoughlin, Superintendent of Pedlers. Office, City Stables,
North Grove street.
QUARANTINE GROUNDS.
The Quarantine Grounds comprise that part of Boston Harbor known
as the President Eoads, lying between Long, Deer, and Spectacle
Islands. The steamer "Vigilant," George T. Ranlett, Captain, em-
ployed in the quarantine service, is subject to the orders of the Board
of Health.
MEDICAL INSPECTORS OF SCHOOLS.
J. L. Ames, M.D., 72 Chestnut street, Brimmer School, Kindergarten,
Parochial, Fayette-street School.
H. J. Perry, M.D., 171 Massachusetts avenue, Roxbury High School,
Lewis Grammar School ; Primary, Quincy street ; Primary, Monroe
street ; Primary, Winthrop street ; Primary and Kindergarten, Warren
street.
S. H. Ayer, M.D., 318 Shawmut avenue, Franklin, Waite, Cook,
Parochial Cathedral, German Parochial.
W. B. Bancroft, M.D., 597 Broadway, Hart, Capen, Bird, Parochial.
56 MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
J. P. Broidrick, M.D., 67 South street, J. P., West Roxbury High,
Creighton street, Leo XIII. Parochial.
J. S. Brownrigg, M.D., 16 Delle avenue, Parochial, Kindergarten.
W. S. Boardman, M.D., .57 Hancock street, Eliot, Ware, Freeman,
Parmenter, North Bennet Kindergarten.
J. E. Butler, M.D., 310 Warren street, George Putnam, St. Joseph
Parochial, St. Francis Parochial.
A. B. Cofifin, M.D., 555 Washington street, Dorchester High, school
in store on Washington street, Gibson on School street, Gibson on
Morse street, Atherton, Glenway Primary, Glenway Kindergarten.
R. M. Cole, M.D., 456 Broadway, Shurtleff, Lincoln, Clinch, and
Burnham.
J). A. Collins, M.D., 11 Parmenter street, St. Mary's Parochial, St.
Stephen's Parochial, Moon-street Primary.
J. T. Cutler, M.D., 20 Crawford street, Edward Everett, Harbor View,
Savin Hill and Athenaeum.
William P. Coues, M.D., 90 Charles street, Wells, Winchell, Poplar
street, North Russell street, Chambers-street Primary, Chambers-street
Kindergarten.
J. G. Dearborn, M.D., 2 Wood street, Charlestown, Harvard, Harvard
Primary, and Common-street Primary.
W. H. Parker, M.D., Ashmont, Minot, Bailey-street Primary, and
Kindergarten in the Henry L. Pierce district.
David N. Blakely, M.D., 579 Tremont street, Mt. Pleasant avenue.
Yeoman street. Dearborn, Eustis street.
John Duff, M.D., 5 Dexter row, Warren Grammar, Mead street, Cross
street, and Charlestown High.
D. G. Eldredge, M.D., 15 Monadnock street, Mather, Quincy-street
Primary.
Theo. C. Erb, M.D., 551 Columbus avenue, Everett, Dwight, Rutland
street. Concord street, Joshua Bates.
Wm. H. Ensworth, M.D., 40 Princeton street, E. B., Adams, Plummer
Primary, Assumption Parochial.
Arthur W. Fairbanks, M.D., 422 Massachusetts avenue, Hyde, Sher-
win, Leon-street Branch, Parker-street Branch, Day Nursery.
Wm. H. Grainger, M.D., 408 Meridian street, E. B., Chapman,
Tappan, Parochial.
E. M. Greene, M.D., 49 Hancock street, Bowdoin, Somerset, Sharp,
Phillips, Grant, Baldwin on Chardon street.
J. S. Greene, M.D., 1107 Washington street, Dor., Gilbert Stuart,
Morton-street Primary, Stoughton, Tileston, Adams-street Primary.
L. G. Haskell, M.D., 335 Centre street, J. P., Lowell," Wyman street,
Lucretia Crocker, Heath street. Centre street, Sunnyside street. Baptist
Chapel.
F. A. Higgins, M.D., 22 Marlborough street, Quincy, Winthrop, Way-
street Primary, Genesee-street Primary, Tyler-street Primary, Den-
nison Kindergarten.
E. M. Holden, M.D., 176 Huntington avenue, Comins, Martin.
HEALTH DEPARTMENT. 57
F. C. Jillson, M.D., Hastings street, W. Rox., Robert G. Shaw, Mt.
Vernon street. Baker street.
J. S. H. Leard, M.D., 16 Weld Hill street, Agassiz, Forest Hills
Primary, Margaret Fuller Primary, Bowditch, Hillside Primary, Chest-
nut avenue.
Francis Magurn, M.D., 112 Main street, Frothingham, Moulton-street
Primary.
Wm. J. McNally, M.D., 31 Monument square, Prescott, Medford-street
Primary, Polk-street Primary.
R. M. Merrick, M.D., 15 Adams street, Harris School, Dorchester-
avenue Primary, Henry L. Pierce, Thetford-avenue Primary, Lauriat-
avenue Kindergarten.
H. E. Marion, M.D., 5 Sparhawk street, Brighton High, Bennett
Grammar and Annex, Winship Primary, Union-street Primary and
Kindergarten.
O. H. Marion, M.D., 22 Harvard avenue, No. Harvard street, Brent-
wood street, Allstoil Grammar, Webster.
G. P. Morris, M.D., 702 Broadway, Andrew, Ticknor, Roger Clap.
T. J. Murphy, M.D., 372 Dudley street, Hugh O'Brien, George-street
Primary, Howard avenue, St. Patrick's Parochial.
J. F. O'Brien, M.D., 401 Bunker Hill street. Bunker Hill Grammar,.
Parochial.
E. F. O'Shea, M.D., 5 Chelsea street, E. B., Lyman, East Boston High,
Cudworth, Fitton.
H. L. Plummer, M.D., 728 Saratoga street, Emerson, Noble, Chapel
in Bennington street, Blackinton, and Star of the Sea.
J. C. D. Pigeon, M.D., 130 Warren street, Dudley, Dillaway.
H. S. Rowen, M.D., 237 Market street. Oak-square Primary, Will-
iam Wirt Warren Grammar, Faneuil Primary, St. Joseph's Academy,
Auburn Primary.
J. H. Sherman, M.D., 534 Broadway, Bigelow, Hawes, Simonds.
C. M. Smith, M.D., 15 Charles street, Horace Mann,' Prince, Perkins.
Henry B. Stevens, M.D., corner of Centre and Park streets, Long-
fellow, Charles Sumner.
F. W. Stuart, M.D., 550 Broadway, Norcross, Cyrus Alger, Drake.
W. F. Temple, M.D., 240 Huntington avenue. Rice, Boys' Latin, Boys'
High, Girls' Latin, Girls' High.
H. F. R. Watts, M.D., 372 Dorchester street, Gaston, Tuckerman,
Pope, Kindergarten.
F. J. Weller, M.D., 580 Broadway, Lawrence, Mather, Howe, ParochiaL
F. W. White, M.D., 416 Marlborough street, Hancock, Cushman,
Parmenter-street Kindergarten, Sheafe street and Moon street.
DIPHTHEBIA CULTUKE STATIONS.
For convenience of physicians, boxes containing culture tubes may be^
obtained of the following apothecaries:
G. H. Alexander, 100 Dorchester street. South Boston.
58 MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
Fred W. Archer, 1181 Washington street, Dorchester.
Chester Baker, Massachusetts avenue and Boylston street.
Connelly's Pharmacy, 146 Harrison avenue.
C L. Brackett, Heath and Bromley streets, Roxbury.
Henry Canning, 57 Chambers street.
Clark & Mahoney, 101 Saratoga street. East Boston.
Frank S. Colley, 610 Tremont street.
Connelly & Davis, 1442 Dorchester avenue, Dorchester.
Connelly & Davis, 64 Walnut street, Neponset.
Connelly & Davis, 760 Washington street, Dorchester.
A. H. Copley, 45 Hancock street, Dorchester.
C. J. Countie, 25 Charles street.
Max Cramer, 1212 Columbus avenue, Roxbury.
Downey & McCormick, Thompson square, Charlestovrn.
William Draper, Sullivan square, Charlestown.
Frank O. Ernst, 186 Lamartine street, Jamaica Plain.
Frank O. Ernst, 281 Centre street, Jamaica Plain
C P. Flynn, Dorchester avenue and Dorchester street, South Boston.
French & Corner, 1759 Washington street, Roxbury.
A. L. Gavin, Warren and Regent streets, Roxbury.
A. H. Tripp, 573 Talbot avenue, Ashmont.
S. T. Jeffers, 728 South street, Roslindale.
James T. Jones, 855 Fourth street. South Boston.
Thomas Joyce, 141 West Broadway, South Boston.
G. H. Malley, 113 Cambridge street.
Theodore Metcalf, Copley square.
Theodore Metcalf, 36 Court square.
S. W. Moore, 377 Cambridge street, AUston.
Perry & Co., Norfolk and Corbet streets, Dorchester.
Fred L. Pratt, 575 Columbus avenue.
T. T. Reid, 3101 Washington street, Roxbury.
C. B. Rogers, 701 Centre street, Jamaica Plain.
W. F. Sawyer, 1152 Tremont street, Roxbury.
S. A. D. Sheppard, Dover and Washington streets.
M. W. Somers, 210 Blue Hill avenue, Roxbury.
F. O. Swallow, 1904 Centre street. West Roxbury.
Tessier Bros., Dorchester and Savin Hill avenues, Dorchester.
A. W. Tilton, Hanover and Parmenter streets.
A. W. Tilton, 71 Prince street.
Walker Drug Co., 648 Warren street, Roxbury.
G. W. Warren, 343 Washington street, Brighton.
W. D. Wheeler, Massachusetts avenue and Beacon street.
The City Morgue is located on North Grove street. F. L. Briggs,
Superintendent.
HOSPITAL DEPARTMENT. 59
HOSPITAL DEPARTMENT.
Office at the Boston City Hospital, Harrison avenue.
[Stat. 1880, Chap. 174; Rev. Ord., 1898, Chap. 19; Stat. 1893, Chap. 91.]
TUUSTEES OF THE CITY HOSPITAL.
A. Shuman, President.
Conrad J. Rueter, Secretary.
TRUSTEES.
IFrancis J. Keany, M.D. Term ends in 1907.
Lamont G. BuR]srHAM. Term ends in 1906.
A. Shuman. Term ends in 1905.
Henry H. Sprag-ue. Term ends in 1904.
Conrad J, Rueter. Term ends in 1903.
The trustees have charge of The Boston City Hospital, on the south-
east side of Harrison avenue, opposite Worcester square, occupying
four city squares between East Concord street, Albany street, Northamp-
ton street and Harrison avenue. The Hospital w^as begun September 9,
1861. It consists of many pavilions, connected vrith the central struct-
ure. This Hospital vi^as established for the reception of those in need
of temporary relief during illness or from injuries. The trustees also
have charge of the South Department for infectious diseases, the Con-
valescent Home, at 2150 Dorchester avenue, Milton Lower Mills, and
the Relief and Ambulance Station, Haymarket square.
The trustees are incorporated by Chap. 174 of the Acts of 1880, and
Chap. 91 of the Acts of 1893, as The Boston City Hospital, and are
authorized to receive and hold real and personal estate bequeathed or
devised to said corporation to an amount not exceeding $1,000,000.
HOSPITAL officers.
'George H. M. Rowe, M.D. — Superintendent and Resident Physician.
Residence and office at the Hospital. Salary, $4,000.
JE. Stanley Abbot, M.D. — Assistant Superintendent.
T'rank H. Holt, M.D. — First Executive Assistant.
Kobert Hazen, M.D. — Second Executive Assistant.
MEDICAL AND SURGICAL STAFF.
Consulting Physicians and Surgeons. — William Ingalls, M.D., Edward
H. Bradford, M.D., Thomas M. Rotch, M.D., Charles F. Folsom, M.D.,
Tincent Y. Bowditch, M.D.
Senior Physician. — John G. Blake, M.D.
Visiting Physicians. — A. L. Mason, M.D., George B. Shattuck, M.D. ,
^. M. Buckingham, M.D., F. H. Williams, M.D., C. F. Withington,
M.D., Henry Jackson, M.D.
Assistant Visiting Physicians. — George G. Sears, M.D., John L.
Horse, M.D., John L. Ames, M.D., H. D. Arnold, M.D.
Physicians to Out-Patients. — J. W. Bartol, M.D., J. N. Coolidge, M.D.,
60 MUNICIPAL EEGISTEE.
Elliott P. Joslin, M.D., William H. Robey, jr., M.D., Ralph C. Larrabee,
M.D., Franklin W. White, M.D.
Senior Surgeons. — Da'vid W. Cheever, M.D., George W. Gay, M D.
Advisory Surgeon. — J. Orne Green, M.D.
Senior Visiting Surgeons. — William P. Bolles, M.D., Abner Post, M.D.,
M. F. Gavin, M.D.
Junior Visiting Surgeons. — H. L. Burrell, M.D., Francis S. Watson,
M.D., H. W. Gushing, M.D.
First Assistant Visiting Surgeons. — George H Monks, M.D., John
C. Munro, M.D., Paul Thorndike, M.D.
Second Assistant Visiting Surgeons. — Edwin W. Dwight, M.D.,
J. Bapst Blake, M.D., Fred B. Lund, M.D.
Third Assistant Visiting Surgeons. — Edward H. Nichols, M.D.,
Howard A. Lothrop, M.D. , John T. Bottomley, M.D., Frederic J. Cotton,
M.D., William E. Faulkner, M.D., Joshua C. Hubbard, M.D.
Senior Visiting Physician for Diseases of Women. — Charles M. Green,
M.D.
Junior Visiting Physician for Diseases of Women. — George Haven,,
M.D.
Second Assistant Visiting Physician for Diseases of Women. — Frank
A. Higgins, M.D.
Third Assistant Visiting Physician for Diseases of Women. — Franklin
S. Newell, M.D.
Visiting Ophthalmic Surgeon. — Oliver F. Wadsworth, M.D.
Ophthalmic Surgeons. — Allen Greenwood, M.D., John C. Bossidy,
M.D. , Edward R. Williams, M.D.
Assistant to the Ophthalmic Surgeons. — Robert G. Loring, M.D.
Aural Surgeons. — George A. Leland, M.D., Edgar M. Holmes, M.D.
Assistant to the Aural Surgeons. — Charles D. Underbill, M.D.
Surgeons for Diseases of the Throat. — Thomas Amory DeBlois, M.D.,
J.W. Farlow, M.D. Assistants. — George A. Leland, M.D., Rockwell
A. Coffin, M.D.
Physicians for Diseases of the Nervous System. — Morton Prince, M.D.,
Philip Coombs Knapp, M.D., William N. Bullard, M.D. Assistants. —
John J. Thomas, M.D., Joseph W. Courtney, M.D.
Physicians for Diseases of the Skiyi. —James S. Howe, M.D., George
F. Harding, M.D.
Assistant. — Harvey P. Towle, M.D.
Visiting Pathologist. — W. T, Councilman, M.D.
First Assistant Visiting Pathologist. — F. B. Mallory, M.D.
Second Assistant Visiting Pathologist. — Joseph H. Pratt, M.D.
First Assistant in Pathology. — Henry A. Christian, M.D.
Second Assistant in Pathology. — Walter R. Brinckerhoff, M.D.
Assistant in Clinical Pathology. — Robert L. Emerson, M.D.
Medico-Legal Pathologist. — F. W. Draper, M.D.
Medical Registrar . — John W. Bartol, M.D.
Surgical Registrar. — J. Bapst Blake, M.D.
INSTITUTIONS REGISTRATION DEPARTMENT. 61
SOUTH DEPABTMENT.
Besident Physician. — Jolin H. McCollom, M.D.
Assistant Resident Physicians. — "William E. Currier, M.D., Howard
H. Smith, M.D.
BELIEF STATION, HAYMAllKET SQUARE.
■ Supervising Surgeon. — John T. Bottomley, M.D.
Resident Surgeon. — Harry H. Germain, M.D.
Assistant Resident (Sztrfifeon. -^Richard Collins, M.D.
PHYSICIANS TO THE CONVALESCENT HOME.
Edward T, Tw-itchell, M.D., James A, Mahon, M.D., .
John P. Treanor, M.D.
INSANE HOSPITAL DEPARTMENT.
[Stat. 1897, Chap. 451; Rev. Ord., 1898, Chap. 20.]
Office, Harvard and Austin streets, West Roxbury.
INSANE HOSPITAL TRUSTEES.
Philip Coombs Knapp, M.D., Chairman.
Mrs. Horace E. Marion, Secretary.
TRUSTEES.
George H. Sargent. Term ends in 1907.
Mrs. Emily P. Howaed, Philip Coombs Knapp, M.D. Terms end
in 1906.
C. J. Connolly. Term ends in 1905.
George A. Sanderson, Mrs. Horace E. Marion. Terms end in 1904.
George A. Goddard. Term ends in 1903.
Edward B. Lane, M.D. Salary, $2,500. Superintendent.
William Noyes, M.D. Salary, $2,000. Associate Superintendent.
The trustees have charge and control of the Boston Insane Hospital
at West Roxbury, and purchase all fuel and other supplies required for
that institution.
INSTITUTIONS REGISTRATION DEPARTMENT.
Office, 28 Court square.
[Stat. 1897, Chap. 395, § 6; Rev. Ord., 1898, Chap. 21.]
William P. Fowler, Institutions Registrar.
settlement division.
Charles F. Gaynor, Chief.
Office, 28 Court square.
statistical division.
John Koren, Chief.
Office, 64 Pemberton square.
- It is the duty of the Institutions Registrar to investigate all questions
relating to the settlement of paupers, to the commitment of the insane,
62
MUNICIPAL REGISTEK.
to the agency for discharged prisoners or to any rights, duties or lia-
bilities connected therewith; to report the results of his investigations
to the department interested therein, and perform such services relat-
ing to the accounts, and to the collection, registration and tabulation
of statistics relating to the Children's Institutions Department, the
Insane Hospital Department, the Pauper Institutions Department, and
the Penal Institutions Department, or any of them, as may be required
of Mm by the Mayor, or jjy the officer or trustees in charge of such
departments, with the approval of the Mayor.
LAMP DEPARTMENT.
Office, City Hall, fifth floor.
[Rev. Ord., 1898, Chap. 22.]
JohnDrohan, Superintendent of Lamps. Appointed annually. Salary^
13,500,
The department was first legalized by statute on June 29, 1773. The-
office of Superintendent of Lamps has existed since the year 1843,
though it was first formally established by ordinance on October 26,
1869. The department was separated from that of the Police in 1854.
Annual reports of the department have been published since 1870.
The public lamps are distributed in the various sections of the City,
as follows :
January 10, 1902.
.2-'
* 00
o
Si
5^
O '3 rA
00
a
S
CS
a
a
o
-S
S
a
<u .
O to
00 o,
■C a
a oi
OS -3
o^
a
Total.
1,500
1,697
2,422
1,206
565
498
380
691
2
1,106
548
419
412
362
266
233
312
100
89
7
2
2
4
11
4
2,795
7
2,259
460
898
135
52
218
8
22
21
3,377
West Roxbury
South Boston
2,757
1,081
775
107
148
3
13
727
14
1,180
Totals
8,961
3,658
1,848
294
43
28
121
14,953.
LIBRARY DEPARTMENT. 63
LAW DEPARTMENT.
Office, 73 Tremont street.
[Rev. Ord., 1898, Chap. 23.]
Andrew J. Bailey, Corporation Counsel. Appointed annually.
Salary, $7,500.
Thomas M. Babson, City Solicitor. Appointed annually. Salary,
$7,500.
Samuel H. Hudson, Assistant Solicitor. Salary, $4,500.
Samuel M. Child, Assistant Solicitor. Salary, $3,500.
Arthur L. Spring-, Assistant Solicitor. Salary, $3,500.
Phillip Nichols, Assistant Solicitor. Salary, $1,500.
Charles F. Day and Roscoe P. Owen, City Conveyancers. Salaries,
$3,500 each.
Elizabeth M. Taylor, City Conveyancer. Salary, $1,500.
Lyman H. Bigelow, Legislative Clerk. Salary $2,500.
Fisher Ames, Secretary. Salary, $2,000.
The office of " Attorney and Solicitor for the City of Boston " was
established by the ordinance of June 18, 1827; the office of Corporation
Counsel and the office of City Solicitor by the ordinance of March 30,
1881. The department is under the chai'ge of the Corporation Counsel
and the City Solicitor jointly.
LIBRARY DEPARTMENT.
Office, Central Library Building, Copley Square.
[Stat. 1878, Chap. 114; Rev. Ord., 1898, Chap. 24.]
trustees of the public library.
Solomon Lincoln, President.
James De Nobmandie, Vice-President.
trustees.
Thomas F. Boyle. Term ends in 1907.
Solomon Lincoln. Term ends in 1906,
James De Nobmandie. Term ends in 1905.
Josiah H. Benton, .jr. • Term ends in 1904.
Thomas Dwight, M.D. Term ends in 1903.
James Lyman Whitney, Librarian.
Otto Fleischner, Assistant Librarian.
The trustees of the Public Library of the City of Boston, who are five
in number, are appointed by the Mayor, one each year, for a term of five
64 MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
years. They were incorporated by an act of the General Court passed April
4, 1878, and are authorized to receive and hold real and personal estate
which may be given, granted, bequeathed or devised to the said corpora-
tion, to an amount not exceeding $1,000,000. The first trustees were
appointed under an ordinance of October 14, 1852. The old Library
Building on Boylston street was opened to the public in September, 1858,
and closed finally in January, 1895. The new Library Building on Copley
square was first opened on March 11, 1895. The Library is maintained
by an annual appropriation voted out of the general funds of the City
biy the City Council. About $34,600 was used in 1901 for the purchase
of books and periodicals. The Library also holds trust funds aggre-
gating 1280,150, the interest of which is devoted to the purchase of
books.
The annual reports, the first of which appeared in 1852, have been con-
tinued without interruption.
Of the Quarterly Bulletins, which were begun in 1867, fourteen volumes
have been published. The series closed in 1896.
A Monthly Bulletin is now issued. The trustees have issued also general
and special catalogues of the Central Library, and of its branches and
special collections, as well as hand-books for readers, and other docu-
ments.
LIBRARY SYSTEM.
The Library system consists of the Central Library in Copley square;
ten branch libraries with independent collections of books; twenty-one
stations, all of which contain deposits of books from the Central Library,
while ten contain deposits, reference books and periodicals and are
olassed as reading-rooms. Excluding the twenty-one stations, there
were, on February 1, 1902, in the Central Library and Branches, includ-
ing the evening and Sunday service, 342 employees.
Between the Central Library and these thirty-one stations, by Library
wagons and local expresses, there is a daily exchange of books
and cards, whereby persons living in outlying districts can draw books
from the Central Library without the necessity of coming in person.
The delivery or deposit of books is also undertaken in forty-four
schools, eight city institutions, thirty-three fire-company houses, and
in certain vacation schools and sand gardens.
Cards allowing the use of two books without restriction as to class,
ior two weeks, are issued to all residents of Boston with no further
attendant delay than is involved in identification. No guaranty is
asked, except in case of a sojourner. Such cards are also issued to
non-resident pupils attending Boston schools who furnish guaranties.
For reading and reference the Library is open to all without formality.
Special cards for more extended jarivileges are issued to clergymen
officiating in the City, and to teachers giving instruction in Boston
institutions of learning; a special card is also issued in certain cases
by the trustees. On February 1, 1902, there were 72,902 card-holders
LIBKAEY DEPAETMENT. 65
having the right to draw boolcs for home use. The total number of
volumes was 812,264, of periodicals currently received, about 2,261.
Books issued in 1901, for home use, numbered 1,483,513; of reference
use, on account of the freedom with which books may be consulted, no
adequate statistics are kept.
CENTBAL LIBRARY, COPLEY SQUARE.
Lending and reference, 685,501 volumes (including the Patent
Library) .
Periodical reading-rooms, about 1,350 periodicals.
Newspaper reading-room, 378 current newspapers.
Patent Library, 7,783 volumes.
Bates Hall, fob Beading and Reference. Some 8,000 volumes
are on open shelves. The Fine Arts Department has facilities for
copying and photographing, a collection of photographs of architecture,
sculpture and painting, numbering about 20,000, besides illustrated
books, portfolios, etc. Special assistance is offered to classes, travel
clubs, etc. The room for younger readers has some 8,200 volumes on
open shelves, for reading and circulation. The Bindery has nineteen
and the Printing Department five employees.
The library is open from 9 A.M. to 10 P.M.; Sundays from 2 to 10 P.M.
-Closed at 9 P.M. during June, July, August and September.
BRANCH LIBBAEIES.
The Branch Libraries are open on week days from 9 A.M. to 9 P.M.,
with some variation of hours in summer; most of them are open on
Sundays, from 2 to 10 P.M., November to April.
Brighton Branch, 15,218 volumes. Reading-room, 54 periodicals.
Holton Library Building, Rockland street.
Charlestown Branch, 29,527 volumes. Reading-room, 56 period-
icals. Old City Hall, City square.
Dorchester Branch, 17,107 volumes. Reading-room, 56 period-
icals. Arcadia, corner Adams street.
East Boston Branch, 12,623 volumes. Reading-room, 59 period-
icals. Old Lyman School Building, 37 Meridian street.
Jamaica Plain Branch, 13,607 volumes. Reading-room, 55 period-
icals. Curtis Hall, Centre street.
RoxBUBY Branch, 34,832 volumes. Reading-room, 77 periodicals,
46 Millmont street.
South Boston Branch, 15,520 volumes. Reading-room, 55 period-
icals. 372 West Broadway.
South End Branch, 13,415 volumes. Reading-room, 52 periodicals.
English High School Building, Montgomery street.
West End Branch, 12,514 volumes. Reading-room, 72 periodicals.
Cambridge, corner Lynde street.
66 MUNICIPAL KEGISTER.
West Roxbury Branch. § to 10 A.M., 3 to 6 P.M. 5,028 volumes,
Eeading-room, 33 periodicals. Centre, near Mt. Yernon street.
DELIVERY STATIONS.
Station A. Lower Mills Reading-room. 8 to 9 A.M., 4 to 8
P.M. Closed from 6 to 7, except Thursdays. 128 volumes. Reading-
room,' 28 periodicals. Washington, corner Richmond street.
Station B. Roslindale Reading-room. 2 to 6, 7 to 9 P.M.
1,906 volumes. Reading-room, 30 periodicals. Washington, corner
Ashland street.
Station D. Mattapan Reading-room. 8 to 10 A.M., 3 to 6 and
7 to 9 P.M. 126 volumes. Reading-room, 28 periodicals. River, corner
Oakland street.
Station E, Neponset Delivery. All day. Shop station, 49 Wal-
nut street.
Station F. Mt. Bowdoin Delivery and Eeading-room. 2 to 9
P.M. 1,014 volumes. Reading-room, 28 periodicals. Washington,
corner Eldon street.
Station G. Allston Delivery. All day, also Sunday. Shop
station, 14 Franklin street.
Station H. Ashmont Delivery. All day. Shop station, 4 Talbot
avenue.
Station J. Dorchester Station Delivery. All day. Shop
station, 157 Norfolk street.
Station K. Bird Street Delivery. All day. Shop station,
6 Wayland street.
Station L. North Brighton Reading-room. 4 to 8 P.M. Satur-
days, 2 to 9 P.M. 103 volumes. Reading-room, 31 periodicals. 5&'
Market street.
Station M. Crescent Avenue Delivery. All day, also Sunday.
Shop station, 1011 Dorchester avenue.
Station N. Mt. Pleasant Delivery. 2 to 6 and 7 to 9 P.M. 114
volumes; 10 periodicals. Corner Dudley and Magazine streets.
Station P. Broadway Extension Delivery. 2 to 6 and 7 to 9
P.M. 2,270 volumes. Reading-room, 17 periodicals, 13 Broadway
Extension.
Station Q. Upham's Corner Delivery. All day. Shop station,,
752 Dudley street.
Station R. Warren Street Delivery. All day, also Sunday.
Shop station, 329 Warren street.
Station S. Roxbury Crossing Delivery. 2 to 6 and 7 to 9 P.M.
350 volumes, 10 periodicals. 1154 Tremont street.
Station T. Boylston Delivery. All day, also Sunday. Shop
station, Lamartine, corner of Paul Gore street.
Station U. Ward Nine Delivery. 2 to 6 and 7 to 9 P.M. 322
volumes. 62 Union Park street.
Station W. Industrial School Delivery. 4 to 6 and 7 to 9 P.M.
67 volumes. 39 North Bennet street.
OVERSEEING OF THE POOR DEPARTMENT. 67
Station T. Andrew Square Reading-koom. 2 to 6 and 7 to 9
P.M. 216 volumes, 10 periodicals. John A. Andrew School-house,
Dorchester street.
Station Z. Orient Heights Reading-room. 2 to 6 and 7 to 9
P.M. 756 volumes; 10 periodicals. 1030 Bennington street.
MARKET DEPARTMENT.
Office, Faneuil Hall Market.
[Rev. Ord., 1898, Chap. 25 and Chap. 47, §§ 60-65.]
George E. McKay, Superintendent of Markets. Appointed annually.
Salary, $3,000.
Faneuil Hall Market, proposed in Mayor Quincy's message of July 31,
1823, and completed in 1826, was under the charge of a Clerk of the
Market, until an ordinance of September 9, 1852, established the office
of Superintendent.
MUSIC DEPARTMENT.
Office, 64 Pemberton square.
[Rev. Ord., 1898, Chap. 26.]
MUSIC trustees.
Charles T. Dolan, Chairman.
William A. Leahy, Secretary.
trustees.
John A. O'Shea. Term ends in 1907.
Harold E. Brenton. Term ends in 1906.
Charles T. Dolan. Term ends in 1905.
Alfred De Voto. Term ends in 1904.
Philip Greely. Term ends in 1903.
The Music Department was established by ordinance April 23, 1898.
It is placed in charge of a board of five commissioners known as the
Music Trustees. The board is given charge and control of the
selection of public music, to be given either indoors or in the open air,
for parades, concerts, public celebrations and other purposes under the
authority of the City Council, except entertainments for children on the
Fourth of July. It determines the parties to furnish the same, makes
the contracts and expends all moneys to be paid from the City treasury
for such music.
OVERSEEING OF THE POOR DEPARTMENT.
Office, Charity Building, Chardon street.
[Stat. 1864, Chap. 128; Rev. Ord. 1898, Chap. 27.]
overseers of the poor.
"William P. Fowler, Chairman.
Benjamin Pettee, Secreiar?/. Salary, $3, 500.
EiOHARD C. Humphreys, Treasurer. Salary, $1,000.
68 MUNICIPAL EEGISTER.
OVERSEERS.
Terms end in 1905.
Annie E. Quinn, Patrick J. Greene,
William H. Spooner, Bernard Hyneman.
Terms end in 1904.
William P. Fowler, Thomas Downey,
Thomas Sproules, John S. Patton.
Terms end in 1903.
Frederick W. Stuart, M.D., Martha W. Folsom,
James H. Conley, Michael J. Jordan.
The Overseers of the Poor in the Town of Boston, a corporation
established in 1772, by act of the Legislature, in 1864, were succeeded
by the corporation called the "Overseers of the Poor in the City of
Boston, ' ' consisting of twelve residents of Boston, four of whom are
appointed annually within sixty days from the first Monday in Febru-
ary, to serve for the term of three years from the first day of May.
The board has issued annual reports since 1865.
The Overseers of the Poor are also incorporated as a Board of Trus-
tees of John Boylston's and other charitable funds, left for the assist-
ance of persons of good character and advanced age, "who have been
reduced by misfortune to indigence and want."
A Lodge for Wayfarers who apply at station-houses for accommo-
dations has been established in Hawkins street, where work of some
kind is exacted as the equivalent for food and shelter.
PARK DEPARTMENT.
Office, Pine Bank, Olmsted Park, Jamaica Plain.
[Stat. 1875, Chap. 185; Rev. Ord., 1898, Chap. 28.]
BOARD OF PARK COMMISSIONERS.
Charles E. Stratton, Chairman,
George F. Clarke, Secretary.
COMMISSIONERS.
Charles E. Stratton. Term ends in 1905.
James M. Pbendergast. Term ends in 1904.
Laban Pratt. Term ends in 1903.
John A. Pettigrew, Superintendent.
Charles E. Putnam, Engineer.
Power to establish parks in this City was granted by the Common-
wealth on May 6, 1875, subject to acceptance by the people. This act
PARK DEPARTMENT. 69
was accepted by a vote of the citizens on June 9, 1875. Yeas, 3,706;
nays, 2,311. The first Board of Park Commissioners was appointed on
July 8, 1875, and confirmed on July 15, 1875.
PARKS, BOULEVAKDS AND PLAYGROUNDS.
Commonwealth Avenue, Arlington street to Beacon street . 30.00 acres
Back Bay Fens 115.00 "
Riverway 40.00 "
Olmsted Park 180.00 "
Arborway 36.00 "
Arnold Arboretum and Bussey Park 223.00 " ~
West Rosbury Parkway 150.00 "
Franklin Park 527.00 "
Columbia Road '^
Dorchesterway y .■ 294.00 "
Strandway, land and flats )
Marine Park (including Castle Island), land and flats . . 288.00 "
Wood Island Park, land and flats 211.00 "
Charlesbank 10.00 "
Trinity Triangle 0.12 "
Charlestown Heights, land and flats lO'.OO "
Charlestown Playground, land and flats . . ... 18.00 "
Chestnut Hill Park 42.00 "
Dorchester Park . . , 26.00 "
Franklin Field . . . 77.00 "
North End Beach and Copp's Hill Terraces, land and flats, 7.30 "
North Brighton Playground 14.00 "
Neponset Playground 18.00 "
Billings Field 11.00 "
First-street Playground 4.60 "
Freeport-street Triangle . 0.14 "
Prince-street Playground 0.40 "
Mystic Playground 2.30 "
Fellows-street Playground . . . , ' . . . 0.85 "
Christopher Gibson Playground 5.80 "
Columbus-avenue Playground 4.80 "
Ashmont Playground 2.20 "
Savin Hill Playground, land and flats 18.60 "
Roslindale Playground 3.70 "
Forest Hills Playground 10.30 "
Rogers Park 6.90 "
Berner's Square "^ . . . . 1.20 "
The total expenditure for park purposes to January 31, 1902, was
$17,260,692,39, expended as follows: For land, $7,567,881.05; for con-
struction, 19,679,455.24; for betterment expenses, $13,356.10.
The Arnold Arboretum, containing originally 122.6 acres, belonged to
70 ISrUNICIPAL REGISTER.
Harvard University. This, together with other land, vras taken in 1881
for a public park. The Arnold Arboretum was enlarged in 1895 by the
addition of about 68 acres of the Bussey land on Peters' Hill, belonging
to Harvard College, and the name Bussey Park was added to the title.
All the land in these tracts not needed for driveways and walks, a
quarry reservation and traffic road, was leased to Harvard College, to
be used only for the purposes of an arboretum under the trusts created
by the wills of Benjamin Bussey and James Arnold. The arboretum
is open to visitors daily from 7 A.M. until sunset.
The Park Commissioners have charge of the following-named bridges,
statues and fountains, which are in the public parks:
BRIDGES.
THE FENS.
Agassiz, carrying Agassiz road over the Fens water.
BoYLSTON, carrying Boylston road over outlet of the Fens.
Chaklesgate, over Boston and Albany Railroad and Ipswich street.
Commonwealth avenue, over outlet of the Fens.
Fen, over outlet of Muddy river.
Stony brook, over outlet of Stony brook.
BIVEBWAY.
Audubon, over Newton circuit of Boston and Albany Railroad.
1 Bellevue, over Muddy river from Bellevue street.
Bridle path, carrying the ride over Muddy river, near Audubon road.
1 Brookline avenue, over Muddy river.
Chapel arch, carrying walk over ride, near Bernier street.
1^ Chapel bridge, over Muddy river.
LoNGWOOD bridge, over Muddy river.
1 Tbemont street, carrying Huntington avenue over outlet of Leverett
pond.
OLMSTED PARK.
Foot-bridges, at Leverett-pond cove and outlets of Willow pond and
Ward's pond.
ARBORWAY.
Railroad viaduct, near Forest Hills.
Stony brook, temporary bridge over Stony brook.
franklin park.
Ellicott arch, carrying Circuit drive over walk to Ellicottdale.
Forest Hills, entrance to Franklin Park over traffic road.
Overlook, carrying walk over entrance to Overlook Shelter.
Scarboro', carrying Circuit drive over Scarboro' pond.
ScARBORO' POND foot-bridge, carrying the walk over Scarboro' pond.
1 The department constructed and maintains the parts of these bridges within the
City limits.
PAUPER INSTITUTIONS DEPARTMENT. 71
MARINE PARK.
Castle Island, temporary bridge to Castle Island.
WOOD ISLAND PARK.
Neptune, carrying Neptune road over Boston, Revere Beach and Lynn
Railroad.
Poot-bridge from Prescott street over Boston, Revere Beach and Lynn
Railroad.
STATUES AND FOUNTAINS.
COMMONWEALTH AVENUE.
Alexander Hamilton. General John Glover.
William Lloyd Garrison. Leif Ericson.
BACK BAY FENS.
John Boyle O'Reilly.
OLMSTED PARK.
Fountain on the terrace at Pine Bank.
MARINE PARK.
Admiral Farragut.
PAUPER INSTITUTIONS DEPARTMENT.
Office, 28 Court square.
[Stat. 1897, Chap. 395, § 4; Rev. Ord., 1898, Chap. 29.]
PAUPER INSTITUTIONS TRUSTEES.
Mrs. R. C. Lincoln, Chairman.
Walter Hunnewell, Secretary.
TRUSTEES.
Mrs. R. C. Lincoln. Term ends in 1907.
W. Prentiss Parker, William H. Grainger, M.D. Terms end in
1906.
Arthur G. Everett. Term ends in 1905.
Miss Frances R. Morse, Henry Dobbins. Terms end in 1904.
Walter Hunnewell. Term ends in 1903.
The trustees have charge and control of the Boston Almshouse and
Hospital on Long Island and the Boston Almshouse for Women and
Aged Couples at Charlestown, and the superintendents of these institu-
tions act as their agents in purchasing all fuel and other supplies.
72 MUNICIPAL EEGISTER.
PENAL INSTITUTIONS DEPARTMENT.
Office, 32 Tremont street.
[Stat. 1889, Chap. 245; Stat. 1895, Chap. 449, §§ 14-16; Stat. 1897, Chap.
395, § 5; Rev. Ord., 1898, Chap. 30.]
John B. Martin, Penal Institutions Commissioner. Term ends in 1904.
Salary, |5,000.
Herbert S. Carruth, Assistant Commissioner.
Hubert Pope, Secretary.
From 1857 to 1885 the public institutions were in charge of a Board of
Directors, twelve in number; from 1885 to 1889, in charge of a board,
consisting of nine members ; from 1889 to 1895, in charge of the Board
of Commissioners of Public Institutions, three in number. By Chap.
449 of the Acts of 1895, the institutions were placed under the charge
of one commissioner, known as the Institutions Commissioner. By
Chaps. 395 and 451 of the Acts of 1897, the control of the institutions
was divided, and they were placed under the Children's Institutions
Department, the Pauper Institutions Department, the Insane Hospital
Department and the Penal Institutions Department.
The Penal Institutions Commissioner has the charge and control of
Deer Island, the House of Correction at South Boston and the House
of Correction at Deer Island. He purchases all supplies required for
the Institutions in his charge; and also has charge of the steamer
"J. Putnam Bradlee," which is used to transport passengers and
freight to Deer, Long and Rainsford Islands.
PRINTING DEPARTMENT.
Office, 152 Purchase street.
[Rev. Ord., 1898, Chap. 31.]
Thomas A. Whalen, Superintendent of Printing. Appointed an-
nually. Salary, $3,000.
The Superintendent of Printing has charge of all the printing for the
departments of the City, and supplies all stationery, postage and
binding.
PUBLIC BUILDINGS DEPARTMENT.
Office, Old Court House, fourth floor.
[Stat. 1895, Chap. 449, § 22; Rev. Ord., 1898, Chap. 32.]
Hugh Montague, Superintendent of Public Buildings. Appointed
annually. Salary, $3,600.
The office of the Superintendent of Public Buildings was established
by ordinance on July 1, 1850, and annual reports have been published
by the Superintendent since 1851.
PUBLIC BUILDINGS DEPARTMENT. 7S
The public buildings of the City and County in charge of this Depart-
ment comprise the City Hall, the Old Probate Court Building, the
Historical Society Building, the Old Court House, Faneuil Hall and
Faneuil Hall Market-House, the Jail and Reception House, the Old
State House, Curtis Hall, Old City Hall (Charlestown), the Armories,
Ambulance Station (South Boston), Repair Division work-shop. Repair
Shop annex, City Temporary Home, Old Town Hall (Dorchester), West-
erly Hall, stable on Chauncey place (Charlestown), Smith School-house
(Joy street). Engine-house lot (Soley street), besides other buildings
used for public purposes, including ward-rooms.
LIST OF WABD-EOOMS.
Ward 1. — Chapman School-house, Eutaw street.
Ward 2. - — Armory Building, Maverick street.
Ward 3. — Old Winthrop School-house, Bunker Hill street.
Ward 4. — Bunker Hill Grammar School-house, Baldwin street.
Ward 5. — Harvard Grammar School-house, Devens street.
Ward 6. — Ware Primary School-house, North Bennet street.
Ward 7. — Pierpont School-house, Hudson street.
Ward 8. — Wells School-house, Blossom street.
Ward 9. — Old Franklin School-house, Washington street.
Ward 10. — Rice School-house, Appleton street.
Ward 11. — Prince School-house, Exeter street.
Ward 12. -^ School-house, West Concord street.
Ward 13. — Spelman Hall, West Broadway.
Ward 14. — Gray's Hall, East Broadway.
Ward 15.^ — Court-room, Dorchester and West Fourth streets.
Ward 16. — Winthrop Hall, Upham's Corner.
Ward 17. — Old Church Building, Dudley street.
Ward 18. — Bath-house, Cabot street.
Ward 19. — Old Pumping-station, Elniwood street.
Ward 20. — Ward-room building. Meeting House Hill.
Ward 21. — Dudley Street Opera House.
Ward 22. — Tomf ohrde Hall, Boylston Station.
Ward 23. — Minton Hall, Hyde Park avenue.
Ward 24. — Dorchester Hall, Field's Corner.
Ward 25. — Old Town Hall, Washington street, Brighton.
AECHITECTUKAL DIVISION.
Office, Old Court House, fourth floor.
C. J. Bateman", Consulting Architect.
This division was detached, by order of Mayor Hart, from the Engi-
neering Department, May 11, 1900, and placed under the Public Build-
ings Department. The work of this division is that of a consulting or
expert force. It may be called upon by any department for technical
advice on matters relating to building, heating or ventilating. Plans or
specifications for work to be done by the Public Buildings Department
are prepared by this division.
74 MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
PUBLIC GROUNDS DEPARTMENT.
East Cottage street, Dorchester.
[Rev. Ord., 1898, Chap. 33.]
"William Doogue, Superintendent of Public Grounds. Appointed
annually. Salary, $4,000.
The Superintendent has charge of, and is the only person authorized
to trim the trees in the streets of the City and of all the public grounds,
except the parks established under Stat. 1875, Chap. 185. (*See Park
Department.) He has charge, also, of all the public grounds. The
office of the Superintendent of [the Common and] Public Grounds was
established by ordinance on February 28, 1870. The first annual report
of the Superintendent was published in 1879.
PUBLIC GKOUNDS.
City Peopeb. — The Common and Malls, containing forty-eight and
two-fifths acres, exclusive of the cemetery, which includes one and two-
fifths acres. The length of the exterior boundary of the Common is
one mile and one-eighth.
Public Garden, on the west side of Charles street, containing about
twenty-four and one-quarter acres.
Franklin Square, on the east side of Washington street, between East
Brookline and East Newton streets, containing about 105,205 square
feet.
Blackstone Square, on the west side of Washington street, between
West Brookline and West Newton streets, containing about 105,100
square feet.
St. Stephen's Square, at the corner of St. Stephen street and Batavia
street, containing about 100 square feet.
Massachusetts Avenue Park Malls, between Albany street and Colum-
l3us avenue, containing about 106,500 square feet. Four sections.
Concord Square, between Tremont street and Columbus avenue, con-
taining about 5,000 square feet.
Rutland Square, between Tremont street and Columbus avenue, con-
taining about 7,400 square feet.
Berwick Park, between Columbus avenue and New York, New Haven
and Hartford Railroad, containing about 3,800 square feet.
Union Park, between ,Shawmut avenue and Tremont street, contain-
ing about 16,000 square feet.
Worcester Square, between Washington street and Harrison avenue,
■containing about 16,000 square feet.
Lowell Square, on Cambridge street, containing about 5,772 square
feet.
Fort Hill Square, between Oliver and High streets, containing about
29,480 square feet.
PUBLIC GROUNDS DEPAETMENT. 7o
Park Square, at the corner of Columbus avenue, Eliot and Pleasant
streets, containing about 2,867 square feet.
1 Montgomery Square, at the junction of Tremont, Clarendon and
Montgomery streets, containing about 550 square feet.
Copley Square, between Huntington avenue and Dartmouth and
Boylston streets, and between Huntington avenue, Trinity place and St.
James avenue, containing about 33,809 square feet. Trinity Triangle,
containing 5,410 square feet, is in the care of the Park Department.
City Hall Grounds, School street, about 7,700 square feet.
Square, Harrison avenue, between Union Park and Waltham streets,
5,000 square feet.
South Boston. — Telegraph Hill, containing the reservoir. Inde-
pendent of the reservoir there is a lot named Thomas Park, containing
about 234,925 square feet, reserved for a public walk.
Independence Square, between Broadway, Second, M and N streets,
containing about six and one-half acres. Enclosed by shrubbery hedge.
Lincoln Square, between Emerson, Fourth and M streets, and east of
the primary school-house, containing about 9,510 square feet.
East Boston. — ^ Maverick Square, between Sumner and Maverick
streets, containing about 4,398 square feet.
Central Square, between Meridian and Border streets, containing
about 40,310 square feet.
Putnam Square, between Putnam, White and Trenton streets, con-
taining about 11,628 square feet.
Prescott Square, between Trenton, Eagle and Prescott streets, con-
taining about 12,284 square feet.
Belmont Square, between Webster, Sumner, Lamson and Seaver
streets, containing 30,000 square feet.
EoxBUEY. — Madison Square, between Sterling, Marble, Warwick
and Westminster streets, containing about 122,191 square feet.
Orchard Park, between Chadwick, Yeoman and Orchard Park streets,
containing about 104,492 square feet.
Washington Park, between Dale and Bainbridge streets, containing
about 396,125 square feet.
Lewis Park, between Highland street. Highland avenue and Linwood
street, containing about 5,600 square feet.
Longwood Park, between Park and Austin streets, containing about
21,000 square feet.
Walnut Park, between Washington street and Walnut avenue, con-
taining about 5,736 square feet.
Bromley Park, between Albert and Bickford streets, containing about
20,975 square feet. Three enclosures.
Fountain Square, on Walnut avenue, between Munroe and Townsend
streets, containing about 116,000 square feet.
1 Now a part of the street.
76 MUNICIPAL EEGISTEK.
Cedar Square, on Cedar street, between Juniper and Thornton streets,
containing about 26,163 square feet.
Linwood Park, at the junction of Centre and Linwood streets, con-
taining about 3,625 square feet.
Public Ground, Centre and Perkins streets, containing about 3,200
square feet.
Highland Park is the Old Fort lot, containing about 114,065 square
feet, and is occupied partly by the Roxbury standpipe.
Public Ground, at the junction of Huntington avenue, Tremont and
Francis streets, containing about 1,662 square feet.
Public Ground, Warren, St. James and Eegent streets, containing
1,380 square feet.
Square, Albany street, near Mall street.
Square, at junction of Old Heath, New Heath and Parker streets,
containing 2,419 square feet; enclosed by iron fence.
Square, at junction of Abbotsford, Crawford and Harold streets, con-
taining 966 square feet.
DoRCHESTEB. — Dorchester Square, on Meeting House Hill, between
Church, Winter and Adams streets, containing about 56,200 square feet.
The Soldiers' Monument is on this square.
Eaton Square, between Church, Bowdoin and Adams streets, contain-
ing about 13,280 square feet.
Mt. Bowdoin Green, on top of Mt. Bowdoin, containing about 25,170
square feet.
Richardson Square, between Pond and Cottage streets, 45,982 square
feet.
1 Dorchester Field, so-called, on Dorchester avenue, containing about
274,000 square feet.
Public Ground, on Magnolia street, containing about 3,605 square feet.
Adams Square, junction of Adams and Granite streets, containing^
2,068 square feet.
Public Ground, junction of Adams and Codman streets, containing^
700 square feet.
Algonquin Square, junction of Algonquin and Bradlee streets, con-
taining 1,728 square feet.
Tremlett Park, Tremlett street, between Hooper and Waldeck streets,
containing about 7,107 square feet.
Peabody Square, junction of Dorchester avenue and Ashmont street,
containing l,963i square feet.
Public Ground, Florida street, between King street and Rosemont
road, containing 3,300 square feet; between Rosemont road and Lonsdale
street contains 2,790 square feet.
Charlestown. — City Square, in front of Old City Hall, head of Bow
and Main streets, containing about 8,739 square feet; enclosed by stone
curb and iron fence.
1 Property Gibson School Tund.
PUBLIC GROUNDS DEPARTMENT. 77
Sullivan Square, bounded by Main, Cambridge, Sever and Gardner
streets, containing about 56,428 square feet.
Winthrop Square, bounded by Winthrop, Adams and Common streets,
■containing about 38,450 square feet; enclosed by iron fence. The
Soldiers' Monument is on this square.
Public Ground, between Essex and Lyndeboro' streets, containing
about 930 square feet.
Hayes Square, Bunker Hill, Vine and Moulton streets, containing
about 4,484 square feet.
West Roxbuky. — The Soldiers' Monument lot, bounded by South
and Centre streets, containing about 5,870 square feet.
Mt. Bellevue, public ground, containing about 27,772 square feet.
Bbighton. — Jackson Square, between Chestnut Hill avenue, Union
and Winship streets, containing 4,300 square feet; enclosed by stone curb.
Brighton Square, between Chestnut Hill avenue and Rockland street,
containing about 25,035 square feet.
Franklin Square, between Franklin and Fern streets, containing 1,900
square feet.
Square, bounded by Cambridge, Brighton, Murdock and Sparhawk
streets, containing 7,449 square feet.
Square, at junction of Cambridge and Mansfield streets, containing
13,948 square feet.
Massachusetts avenue and Cottage street, Dorchester, used for office,
greenhouse and nursery, hotbeds, storehouse and stable, contains
102,531 square feet.
Storehouse grounds, on Massachusetts avenue, adjoining location of
New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad, contain 74,279 square
feet.
STATUES AND MONUMENTS.
In addition to the Soldiers and Sailors' Monument on Monument Hill,
Common, and the Soldiers' Monuments in the Charlestown, West Rox-
bury and Dorchester districts, there are the following in charge of this
department: The Crispus Attucks and tlie Robert G. Shaw Monuments
on the Common; statues of Edward Everett, George Washington, Charles
Sumner and Thomas Cass in the Public Garden; Benjamin Franklin and
Josiah Quincy in front of the City Hall; Samuel Adams in Adams square,
John Winthrop in Scollay square, the Emancipation Group in Park
square, and the Ether Monument in the Public Garden.
FOUNTAINS.
The public fountains or vases in charge of this department are in
Franklin, Blackstone, Independence, Central, Sullivan and Jackson
squares, Massachusetts avenue and Union Park ; the Lyman Fountain in
Eaton square, the Brewer Fountain on the Common, the " Maid of the
Mist " and three other fountains in the Public Garden.
78 MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
REGISTRY DEPARTMENT.
Office, Old Court House, first floor.
[Stat. 1892, Chap. 314; Rev. Ord., 1898, Chap. 34.]
Edward W. McGlenen, City Registrar. Appointed annually. Salary,
$4,000.
-James O. Fallon, First Assistant Registrar.
John M. Ludden, Second Assistant Registrar.
The City Registrar keeps the records of births, deaths and marriages,^
and issues certificates of all intentions of marriage. Annual reports
have been published since 1849, except in 1860 and 1861.
By lavr, in the absence of the Registrar, the Assistant Registrars may
perform his duties and give certificates of attestation..
By Ordinance, approved July 12, 1892, the Department of Ancient
Records and the office of Record Commissioners (established July 6,
1875) were abolished, and the duties of the Record Commissioners,
including the publication of documents relating to the early history of
Boston, were transferred to the City Registrar.
SCHOOL-HOUSE DEPARTMENT.
Office, 120 Boylston street.
[Stat. 1901, Chap. 473.]
SCHOOL-HOUSE COMMISSIONERS.
R. Clipston Stukgis, Chairman.
Horace B. Fisher, Secretary.
R. Clipston Sturgis. Term ends in 1905. Salary, .14,000.
Frederic O. North. Term ends in 1904. Salary, $3,500.
John H. Colby. Term ends in 1903. Salary, $3,500.
This department, which was established by Chapter 473 of the Acts
of 1901, is in charge of a board of three Commissioners, appointed by
the Mayor without confirmation. After 1902 one Commissioner will
be appointed in each year for a term of three years, beginning with
June 1 in the year of appointment. The salaries of the Commissioners
and the ordinary expenses of the department are met by appropriations
of the School Committee.
The authority and duties of the board are those formerly conferred
and imposed upon the City Council and the School Committee in rela-
tion to selecting lands for school purposes and requesting the Street
Commissioners to take the same, providing temporary school accom-
modations, and making, altering and approving designs and plans for
school purposes; erecting, completing, altering, repairing, furnishing.
SOLDIEES' EELIEF DEPARTMENT. 79
and preparing yards for school buildings, and making contracts and
selecting architects for doing said work.
The board is required to take measures to secure proper ventilation,
proper sanitary conditions, and protection from fire, for existing school
buildings. The board is charged with the duty of making annual
reports to the Mayor to be published as public documents.
SINKING-FUNDS DEPARTMENT.
Office, City Hall, first floor.
[R. L. Chap. 27, § 14; Rev. Ord., 1898, Chap. 35.]
BOARD OF COMMISSIONEES OF SINKING-FUNDS.
Nathaniel J. Rust, Chairman.
James H. Dodge, Secretary. Salary, $700 per annum.
George U. Crocker, Treasurer. Salary, $700 per annum.
commissioners,
Joseph H. O'Neil, James W. Dunphy. Terms end in 1905.
Nathaniel J. Rust, Ubert K. Pettingill. Terms end in 1904.
Charles H. Allen, Frank G. Webster. Terms end in 1903.
The Board of Commissioners of Sinking-Funds for the payment of
redemption of the City debt was established by Ordinance on December
24, 1870. This board consists of six members, two of whom are
appointed annually in February for a term of three years from May 1.
The board has published annual reports since 1871.
SOLDIERS' EELIEF DEPARTMENT.
Office, Charity Building, Chardon street.
[Stat. 1897, Chap. 441; Rev. Ord., 1898, Chap. 36.]
John E. Gilman, Soldiers'' Belief Commissioner. Appointed annually.
Salary, $3,500.
The Soldiers' Relief Department was created as a department of the
City of Boston by Chapter 441 of the Acts of 1897, and is under the
charge of a commissioner, who is appointed by the Mayor. He exercises
all powers and duties for the distribution of State and City aid to
soldiers in the City of Boston, such as were formerly vested in the
Mayor and Board of Aldermen, by certain acts of the Legislature of
previous years. The Board of Aldermen determine the amount of
relief in Individual cases.
80 MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
STATISTICS DEPARTMENT.
Office, Room 73, City Hall.
[Rev. Ord., 1898, Chap. 37.]
STATISTICS TBUSTEES.
Laukence Minot, Chairman.
Edward M. Haktwell, Secretary.
XiAURENCE Minot. Term ends in 1907.
Davis R. Dewey. Term ends in 1906.
B. Rodman Weld. Term ends in 1905.
Gordon Abbott. Term ends in 1904.
Ohables F. Folsom, M.D. Term ends in 1903.
William Jackson, ex officio.
This department is in charge of a board of six members, one of whom
shall be the City Engineer, ex officio, whose duty it is to collect, com-
pile and publish such statistics relating to the City of Boston and such
other statistics of other cities, for purposes of comparison, as they may
deem of public importance. The department publishes Special Publi-
cations from time to time and also a Monthly Bulletin of municipal
statistics. The Municipal Register is compiled by the department.
STREET DEPARTMENT.
Office, 47 City, Hall, third floor.
[Stat. 1895, Chap. 449, § 25; Rev. Ord., 1898, Chap. 38.]
James Donovan, Sziperintendent of Streets. Appointed annually.
Salary, $7,500.
By Ordinance, approved March 9, 1891, in amendment of Chapter 18
of the Revised Ordinances of 1890, and by Chapter 449 of the Acts of
1895, the Superintendent of Streets was given administrative control of
the Street Department, with the following divisions :
Central Office, Bridge Division, Cambridge and Boston Bridges, Ferry
Division, Paving Division, Sanitary Division, Sewer Division, Street
Cleaning Division, Street Watering Division.
The purchase of all supplies for the entire department is under the
immediate supervision of the Superintendent, and is in charge of John
A. Keliher, purchasing agent, Room 47, City Hall. The Deputy Super-
intendents in charge of divisions are appointed by the Superintendent,
with the approval of the Mayor.
bridge division.
Office, 928 Tremont Building.
J. P. Lomasney, Deputy Superintendent. Salary, $3,000.
The Deputy Superintendent of this division has charge of the high-
way bridges within the limits of the city, whether constructed over
STREET DEPARTMENT. 81
navigable waters or railroads ; and has charge of all repairs except such
as affect the structure of the bridges. The latter are made under the
supervision of the City Engineer. The following-named bridges are
under the charge of the Deputy Superintendent.
1 LIST OF BOSTON BRIDGES UNDER THE CHARGE OF THE BRIDGE
DIVISION.
I. — BRIDGES MAINTAINED WHOLLY BY THE CITY.
[In the list those marked with an asterisk (*) are over navigable waters,
and are each provided with a draw.]
Allston, over Boston and Albany Railroad, at Cambridge street,
Brighton.
Ashland street, over. New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad,
Providence Division, West Roxbury.
Athens street, over New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad,
Midland Division.
Baker street, at Brook Farm, West Roxbury.
Beacon street, over outlet to Back Bay Fens.
Beacon street, over Boston and Albany Railroad.
Berkeley street, over Boston and Albany Railroad.
Berwick-park foot-bridge, over New York, New Haven and Hart-
ford Railroad, Providence Division.
Blakemore street, over New York, New Haven and Hartford Rail-
road, Providence Division.
Bolton street, over New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad,
Midland Division.
Boylston street, over Boston and Albany Railroad.
* Broadway, over Fort Point channel.
Broadway, over Boston and Albany Railroad.
Brookline avenue, over Boston and Albany Railroad.
Byron street, over Boston, Revere Beach and Lynn Railroad.
Charlesgate, over Ipswich street.
* Charlestown Bridge, from Boston to Charlestown.
* Chelsea (South), over South channel. Mystic river.
* Chelsea street, from East Boston to Chelsea.
Columbus avenue, over Boston and Albany Railroad.
* Commercial point, orTENEAN, over Tenean creek, Dorchester.
* Congress street, over Fort Point channel.
Cottage farm, over Boston and Albany Railroad at Commonwealth
avenue.
J^For other bridges, see Park Department, page 70; and Boston and Cambridge
Bridges, page 95.
82 MUNICIPAL EEGISTER.
Cottage steeet foot-bridge, over flats, East Boston.
Dartmouth street, over Boston and Albany Railroad.
* Dover street, over Fort Point channel.
Elmwood street Cprivate way), over Stony brook, Roxbury.
* Federal street, over Fort Point channel.
Ferdinand street, over Boston and Albany Railroad.
Florence street, over Stony brook. West Roxbury.
Gold street foot-bridge, over Nevs^ York, New Haven and Hartford
Railroad, Midland Division.
Huntington avenue, over Boston and Albany Railroad.
Hyde park avenue, over Stony brook, West Roxbury.
Ipswich street, over waterway.
Irvington street foot-bridge, over New York, New Haven and
Hartford Railroad, Providence Division.
Eeyes street, over Stony brook. West Roxbury.
*L STREET, over reserved channel at junction of Congress and L
streets.
Leyden STREET, over Boston, Revere Beach and Lynn Railroad.
Linden Park street, over Stony brook, Roxbury.
* Malden, from Charlestown to Everett.
Massachusetts avenue, over Boston and Albany Railroad.
Massachusetts avenue, over New York, New Haven and Hartford
Railroad, Providence Division.
* Meridian street, fi-om East Boston to Chelsea.
* Mount Washington avenue, over Fort Point channel.
Shawmut avenue, over Boston and Albany Railroad, and New York,
New Haven and Hartford- Railroad, Providence Division.
Silver street, over New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad,
Midland Division.
Summer street, over A street.
Summer street, over B street.
Summer street, over C street.
* Summer street, over Fort Point channel.
Southampton street, east of New York, New Haven and Hartford
Railroad, Midland Division.
Southampton street, west of New York, New Haven and Hartford
Railroad, Midland Division.
* Warren, from Boston to Charlestown.
West Newton street, over New York, New Haven and Hartford
Railroad, Providence Division.
West Rutland square foot-bridge, over New York, New Haven
and Hartford Railroad, Providence Division.
Williams street, over Stony brook. West Roxbury.
WiNTHROP, from Breed's Island to Winthrop.
i
STREET DEPARTMENT. 83
II. — BEIDaES OF WHICH BOSTON MAINTAINS THE PART WITHIN ITS
LIMITS.
Central avenue, from Dorchester to Milton.
* Chelsea (North), from Charlestown to Chelsea.
* Granite, from Dorchester to Milton.
Mattapan, from Dorchester to Milton.
Milton, from Dorchester to Milton.
* Neponset, from Dorchester to Quincy.
* North Beacon street, from Brighton to Watertown.
Spring street, from West Roxbury to Dedham.
* Western avenue, from Brighton to Watertown.
III. — BRIDGES, whose COST OF MAINTENANCE IS PARTLY PAID BY
BOSTON.
Albany street, over Boston and Albany Railroad.
AsHMONT, junction Dorchester avenue and Talbot avenue, over New
York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad, Plymouth Division.
Boston street, over New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad,
Plymouth Division.
Cambridge street, over Boston and Maine Railroad.
Chelsea bridge, over Boston and Maine Railroad.
Dorchester avenue, over New York, New Haven and Hartford Rail-
road, Plymouth Division.
Dorchester street, over New York, New Haven and Hartford Rail-
road, Plymouth Division.
Everett street, over Boston and Albany Railroad, Brighton.
Harvard street, over New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad,
Midland Division.
Perkins street (foot-bridge), over Boston and Maine Railroad.
Summer street, over New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad,
Midland Division.
Southampton street, over New York, New Haven and Hartford Rail-
road, Plymouth Division.
West Fourth street, over New York, New Haven and Hartford Rail-
road, Plymouth Division.
IV. — bridges maintained by railroad corporations.
1. — By the Boston and Albany Railroad.
Harrison avenue.
Market street, Brighton.
Tremont street.
Washington street.
2. — By the Boston and Maine Railroad, Eastern Division,
Main street.
Mystic avenue.
Note. — There are eight bridges in the care of the Boston and Cambridge Bridge
Commissioners. See page 95.
84 MUNICIPAL KEGISTER.
3. — By the Boston and Maine Railroad, Western Division.
Main stbeet.
Mystic avenue.
4. — By the Boston, Bevere Beach and Lynn Railroad.
EVEKETT STREET.
5. — By the Neio York, Neib Haven and Hartford Railroad, Midland
Division.
DORCHESTEE AVENUE, South. BOStOn.
Morton street, Dorchester.
Norfolk " " (North).
Norfolk "■ " (South).
Washington street, Dorchester.
West Broadway, South Boston.
West Fifth street,
West Fourth street, "
West Second street, "
West Sixth street.
West Third street,
6. — By the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad, Plymouth
Division.
Adams street.
Freeport street.
Savin Hill avenue.
7. — By the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad, Providence
Division.
Albany street (new part).
Beech street, West Roxbury.
Bellevue street, West Roxbury.
Berkeley street (new part).
Broadway (new part).
Canterbury street. West Roxbury.
Castle street.
Centre and Mt. Vernon streets, West Roxbury.
Chandler street.
Columbus avenue (new part).
Dartmouth street (new part).
Dudley avenue. West Roxbury.
Ferdinand street (new part).
Harrison avenue (new part).
Park street. West Roxbury.
Tremont street.
Washington street (new part).
STEEET DEPARTMENT. 85
RECAPITULATION.
I. Number maintained wholly by Boston 57
II. Number of which Boston maintains the part within its limits, 9
III. Number of those whose cost of maintenance is partly paid
by Boston 13
IV. Number maintained by railroad corporations:
1. Boston and Albany 4
2. Boston and Maine, Eastern Division .... 2
3. Boston and Maine, Western Division .... 2
4. Boston, Eevere Beach and Lynn . . . . . 1
5. New York, New Haven and Hartford, Midland
Division ......... 11
6. New York, New Haven and Hartford, Plymouth
Division . . . . . . * . . . 3
7. New York, New Haven and Hartford, Providence
Division . ' 17
Total number 119
FERRY DIVISION.
OfBce, North Ferry Head-house, East Boston.
[Stat. 1895, Chap. 449, § 25.]
William J. Donovan, Deputy Superintendent. Salary, $3,000.
The Deputy Superintendent of this division has the care and manage-
ment of the ferries owned by the City, makes necessary repairs on all
ferry-boats, slips, drops, tanks and buildings used for ferry purposes,
and pays all moneys received from tolls and other sources to the City
Collector.
By Chapter 449, Acts of 1895, the department was placed in charge
of the Superintendent of Streets.
PAVING division.
Office, 44 City Hall, third floor.
Henry V. Macksey, Deputy Superintendent. Salary, 13,500.
Joshua Atwood, 3d, Chief Engineer. Salary, $3,000.
The Deputy Superintendent of this division has charge of the con-
struction and maintenance of all highways, the placing of street signs
and numbering of buildings, the notification of all departments and
persons authorized to place structures in streets when the division con-
templates the construction or resurfacing of streets, the issuing of per-
mits to open, occupy and obstruct portions of streets, the removal of
snow and ice from the streets, gutters and all plank sidewalks.
86 MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
SANITARY DIVISION.
Office, 920 Tremont Building.
Daniel P. Sullivan, Deputy Superintendent. Salary, $3,000.
The Deputy Superintendent of this division has charge of the re-
moval and disposal of house offal, ashes, vraste, and rubbish, and other
refuse from yards and areas, and the care of the City teams, dumping-
boats, and stables used for these pvirposes; also the care and main-
tenance of shops for the construction and repair of the rolling stock of
the Street Department, horse-shoeing shops and street sign painting.
SEWER DIVISION.
Office, 30 Tremont street.
George Phillips, Deputy Superintendent. Salary, $3,500.
Edgar S. Dorr, Chief Engineer. Salary, $3,000.
The Sewer Division has charge of the preparation of plans for sewerage
works, the construction and maintenance of all drainage works, includ-
ing the investigation of complaints in regard to defective drainage, the
granting of permits for sewer connections and the preparation of plans
for the assessment of the cost of sewer construction; also the exami-
nation of the plans of other corporations proposing to construct works
in public streets, with reference to their probable interference with
sewerage works, and the approval of lines and grades of private streets
with reference to the requirements of the division.
STREET CLEANING DIVISION.
Office, 923 Tremont Building.
Joseph J. Norton, Deputy Superintendent. Salary, $3,000.
The Deputy Superintendent of this division has charge of keeping
the highways clean and in good sanitary condition; removing all street
sweepings, sweeping crossings, shovelling snow from the sidewalks in
front of certain public buildings and around certain public grounds;
and the care of its City teams, stables, and other property used for
these purposes.
STREET WATERING DIVISION.
Office, 904-5 Tremont Building.
Ambrose Woods, Deputy Superintendent. Salary, $2,500.
The Deputy Superintendent of this division has charge of the water-
ing of streets within the City limits ; the supervision of the inspection
force, regulation of the manner of doing the work ; also the care of
the City water-carts and horses, the hire of private carts, location and
care of water-posts, and the care of all other apparatus pertaining to
street watering.
TKEASURY DEPARTMENT. 87
STREET LAYING-OUT DEPARTMENT.
Office, City Hall, third floor.
[R. L., Chap. 48, §§ 88-90; Stat. 1870, Chap. 337; Stat. 1888, Chap. 397;
Stat. 1891, Chap. 323; Stat. 1895, Chap. 449, § 23; Stat. 1896, Chap.
204; Rev. Ord., 1898, Chap. 39.]
BOAED OF STREET COMMISSIONEES.
Sai,em D. Chaeles, Chairman.
John J. O'Callaghan, Secretary.
COMMISSIONERS.
Salem D. Chaeles. Term ends in 1905. Salary, $4,500.
James A. Gallivan. Term ends in 1904. Salary, $4,000.
Edward W. Peesho. Term ends in 1903. Salary, $4,000.
Feank O. Whitney, Chief Surveyor.
The Street Laying-Out Department is under the charge of the Board
of Street Commissioners. One member of the board is chosen by
popular vote at the annual municipal election to serve for a term of
three years from the first Monday in January. By Section 23, Chapter
449, Acts of 1895, the duties and powers of the Board of Survey were
transferred to the Board of Street Commissioners.
TREASURY DEPARTMENT.
Office, City Hall, first floor.
[Rev. Ord., 1898, Chap. 40.]
Geoege U. Crocker, City Treasurer. Appointed annually.
Salary, S6,000.
The City Treasurer has the care and custody of the current funds of
the City, of all moneys, properties, and securities placed in his charge
by any statute or ordinance, or by any gift, devise, bequest, or deposit;
he pays all drafts and all checks and other orders directed to him from
the Auditing Department for the payment of bills and demands against
the City; he pays all executions against the City when duly certified as
correct by an officer of the Law Department, even if the appropriation
to which the execution is chargeable is not sufficient. He pays the
principal and interest of the City debt, as the same becomes due, and
has charge of the issue, transfer, and registration of the City debt. He
receives and invests all trust funds of the City, and holds the income
thereof subject to expenditure for the purposes designated in the gift.
He disposes of the balance remaining at the end of each financial year
as the City Council may direct.
The City Treasurer is also County Treasurer and Treasurer of the
Sinking-Funds Commissioners. (See pp. 96 and 79 respectively.)
The Treasurer publishes reports yearly. Since 1882 he has published
monthly statements.
88 MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
VESSELS AND BALLAST DEPARTMENT.
Office, 175 Commercial street.
[R. L., Chap. 66, §§ 8-16; Rev. Ord., 1898, Chap. 41.]
Edwakd Hughes, Chief Weigher. James Collins, Weigher. Ap-
pointed annually.
This department is under the charge of the Weighers of Vessels and
Ballast, two in number, one of whom is designated by the Mayor as
chief. They receive the fees, after payment of expenses, as compensa-
tion for their services.
WATER DEPARTMENT.
Office, City Hall, fourth floor.
[Stat. 1895, Chap. 449, §§ 12-13; Rev. Ord., 1898, Chap. 42.]
Eugene S. Sullivan, Water Commissioner. Term ends in 1904.
Salary, $5,000.
Isaac Rosnosky, Assistant Water Commissioner. Salary, $3,000.
John J. Leahy, Assistant Water Commissioner. Salary, $3,000.
Walter E. Swan, Chief Clerk and Secretary. Salary, 3,000.
Joseph H. Caldwell, Superintendent of the Income Division. Office,
City Hall. Salary, $3,000.
William J. Welch, Superintendent of the Distribution Division.
Office, 710 Albany street. Salary, $3,000.
The first water document published by the City of Boston appeared
in 1825. The public introduction of water from Lake Cochituate took
place on October 25, 1848. The history of the Boston Water Works up
to January 1, 1868, has been written by Nathaniel J. Bradlee ; from 1868
to 1876, by Desmond FitzGerald; of the "Additional Supply from Sud-
bury River," by A. Fteley. In addition to the annual reports on the
Cochituate supply, from 1850, and of the Mystic supply, from 1866,
there are numerous special reports. By Chapter 449, Acts of 1895, the
Boston Water Board, the Water Income Department, and the Water
Registrar were abolished, and the Water Department created, a single
commissioner being intrusted with all the powers previously exercised
by the Boston Water Board and the Boston Water Registrar.
WEIGHTS AND MEASURES DEPARTMENT.
Office, basement of Old Court House, Court square.
[R. L., Chap. 62, § 18; Stat. 1882, Chap. 42; Rev. Ord., 1898, Chap. 43.]
Henry B. Lovering, Sealer. Appointed annually. Salary, $3,000
per annum.
WIKE DEPARTMENT. 89
John J. Higgins, William J. Campbell, Jekemiah J. Ckowley,
William E. Kenealy, Charles Mintz, Daniel J. Moynihan,
jK., John L. Donovan, Jekemiah Brosnahan, Edwabd Calla-
han, John E. Ansell, Deputy Sealers. Appointed annually. Sala-
ries, $1,600 each per annum.
This department is under the charge of the Sealer, The Sealer and
Deputy Sealers are appointed also to seize illegal charcoal measures.
{R. L., Chap. 57, § 93.)
The standards in use are supplied by the Commonwealth, and are
determined by the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey, Washing-
ton, D.C. The office was authorized by the statute of February 26,
1800. Annual reports have been published since 1868.
WIRE DEPARTMENT.
Office, 11 Wareham street.
[Stat*1890, Chap. 404; Stat. 1894, Chap. 454; Stat. 1895, Chap. 228; Stat.
1898, Chap. 249; Stat. 1898, Chap. 268; Rev. Ord., 1898, Chap. 44.]
Patrick J. Kennedy, Commissioner of Wires. Term ends in 1903.
Salary, $5,000.
The office of Commissioner of Wires was established August 4, 1894.
The department issues annual reports; the first was issued February 1,
1895.
The duties of the Commissioner of Wires are as follows:
To have all unexempted electric wires, cables, and conductors in the
City north of Dover and Berkeley streets, and between the Charles river,
the harbor and Fort, Point channel, placed, maintained, and operated
underground and to remove all unexempted poles and structures in the
streets within the above-named district; to supervise and inspect all
wires, cables, and conductors, whether underground or overhead; to
designate the distances between overhead electric wires, cables, and
conductors; to regulate the direction in which such wires, cables, or
conductors shall be run, and the keeping and maintenance of all struct-
ures, especially those placed upon any roof, for the support of electric
wires or cables in a safe and satisfactory condition, and to prevent,
abate, or remove any electrical danger; to decide upon requests for exemp-
tion of wires and cables from going underground, and of poles, sup-
ports, etc., from removal; to see that all wires, cables, and conductors
are suitable and sufficiently insulated; to see that all wires are tagged
with name of owner; to secure the removal of all dead or abandoned
wires, and the protection of all buildings by fuses, or some other safety
device, with the exception of the wires of the Fire and Police tele-
90 MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
graphs, or those of series arc lights circuits; to inspect all wires carry-
ing electric light, heating, or power currents within buildings ; to see
that all poles and posts used for the transmission of electricity or the
support of electric lamps are insulated in such a manner as to protect
employees and other pei-sons from injury; to see that all wires, posts,
machinery, and appliances are kept at all times in good order and con-
dition; and to keep, in his office, maps showing the location of all wires
and cables laid over, in or under the streets and public grounds.
In the month of January, in each of the years 1900-1909 inclusive,
he shall prescribe the limits of a district within which, for not more
than two miles of streets, avenues, or highways, certain wires, cables,
and conductors shall be removed or placed under ground during that
calendar year. He may at any time issue requests on the Superintend-
ent of Streets for permits to any person, firm, or corporation duly
authorized by law to lay or erect and maintain wires in the streets,
for the removal of any wires, cables, conductors, poles, or structures
in any of the streets of the City, and the placing of the same under
ground.
The Commissioner is sole judge of what constitutes proper and
safe insulation of electric conductors and appliances within buildings,
and is authorized to make such rules and regulations as he may deem
necessary to make them as safe as possible.
OTHER PUBLIC OFFICERS.
91
OTHER PUBLIC OFFICERS.
The following table shows the manner in which public officers, other
than executive officers of the City, serving in the City, are appointed or
elected as prescribed by statute, ordinance, or regulation, the time of
appointment or election, the term of office, and the salary, if any, of
each officer. All the appointments marked with a * are subject to
confirmation by the Board of Aldermen.
Appointed or
Elected.
Term.
Officers.
How
Created.
Salary.
By Wliom.
When.
Begins.
Length of
Art Commissioners . . .
Statute . .
Mayor
Annually
one.. ..
May 1...
Five years.
None.
Board of Appeal*
"
Mayor
Annually
one.. ..
May 1...
Three yr's.
$5«
Board of Police
Boston Transit Com-
missioners
County Officers. See
pp. 96, 97.
" .,
Governor. 1
Mayor and
Governor. 3
One in
1895,1898,
1900, re-
spec'v'ly
July,1894.
" 1...
-July 1...
Five years.
Two years.
4,000 2
5,000
Court Officers. See pp.
97-101.
Loan Association,
Workingmen's, one
Director
:::
Mayor
Annually
3d Thurs-
day in
April . .
3d Wed'y
in Dec.
One year..
Loan Company.Collat-
eral, one Director. . .
None.
Managers of Old South
Association
" ..
City Coun-
cil.B
"
When
elected.
,,
"
Medical Examiners. . .
"
Governor. 1
June30,98
Seven yr's.
$4,000
1 With the advice and consent of the Executive Council.
2 Chairman, $500 additional.
- 3 Three were appointed by the Mayor, subject to confirmation by the Board of
Aldermen, and two by the Governor, with the advice and consent of the Executive
Council. (See p. 95.)
* The member of the board appointed by the Mayor is siibject to confirmation by
the Board of Aldermen. (See p. 94.)
' By concurrent vote.
" Salary Ave dollars per hour, but not to exceed $1,000 per year.
92
MUNICIPAL KE6ISTER.
Officeks.
How
Created.
Appointed or
Elected.
By Whom. When
Term.
Begins.
Salary.
Length ol'.
Pilot Commissioners.
School Committee. See
p. 110
Undertakers
Officer to Transport
Insaije Persons. .
Officers Paid by Pees:*
Beef, Weighers of..
Boilers, Weighers of,
etc
Coal, Weighers of . . .
Constables
Fence- Viewers
Field-Drivers and
Pound-keepers . . .
Fish, Salt-water,
Weigher of
Grain, Measurers of.
Hay and Straw, In-
spectors of
Hay Scales, Superin-
tendent of
Hoops and Staves,
Cullers of
JLiime, Inspectors of,
Marble, etc.. Survey-
ors of
Petroleum, etc.. In-
spectors of
UpperLeather,Meas-
urers of..'
Wood and Bark,
Measurers of
Statute ,
Reg'lat'n
Statute
Governor..
Elected
Bd.ofH'lth
Mayor.
Trienni-
ally....
City elec-
tion . . .
A,nnuallv
1901.
2d Mon-
day in
Jan'y.
May 1. .
Three yr's.
Three yr's
One year.
Fixed by
Marine
Society.
None.
$1,200
Fees.
ART DEPARTMENT. 93
OTHER DEPARTMENTS.
ART DEPARTMENT.
Office, 64 Pemberton square.
[Stat. 1898, Chap. 410; Rev. Ord., 1898, Chap. 4.]
BOARD OF ART COMMISSIONERS.
Samuel D. Warren, Chairman.
John T. Coolidge, jr., Secretary.
commissioners.
John Templeton Coolidge, .jr., named by the Trustees of the Public
Library. Term ends in 1906.
Alexander Wadsworth Longfellow, named by the Boston Society
of Architects. Term ends in 1905.
Francis W. Chandler, named by the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology. Term ends in 1904.
Samuel D. Warren, named by Trustees of Museum of Fine Arts.
Term ends in 1903.
1 Charles A. Cummings, named by the Boston Art Club. Term ends
in 1902.
The Art Department was established by Chapter 410 of the Acts of
the Legislature of 1898. It is in charge of five commissioners, who are
appointed by the Mayor, without confirmation. Each of the follow-
ing-named bodies, namely, the Trustees of the Museum of Fine Arts,
the Trustees of the Boston Public Library, the Trustees of the Massa-
chusetts Institute of Technology, the Boston Art Club, and the Boston
Society of Architects, submits a list of three persons to the Mayor;
and the Mayor appoints one person as Art Commissioner from each of
the lists so submitted. Whenever the term of a member of the board
expires the Mayor appoints his successor from a list selected by the
body which made the original selection as aforesaid. The board may
appoint a secretary outside of its own membership, who serves without
compensation.
No work of art can become the property of the City without the
approval of the Art Department; which may also be requested by the
Mayor or the City Council to pass upon the design of any municipal
building, bridge, approach, lamp, ornamental gate or fence, or other
structure to be erected upon land belonging to the City. Moreover, all
contracts or orders for the execution of any painting, monument, statue,
bust, bas-relief, or other sculpture, for said City, shall be made by said
board, acting by a majority of its members, subject to the approval of
the Mayor.
1 At time of going to press, the Boston Art Club had not submitted list to Mayor
from which successor to present incumbent may be selected.
94 MUNICIPAL KEGISTER.
BOARD OF APPEAL.
[Stat. 1892, Chap. 419, §§ 12, 14.]
BOAKD OF APPEAL.
Geokge R. Swazey, Chairman.
Akthuk G. Everett, Secretary.
William H. Sayward. Term ends in 1905.
George R. Swazey. Term ends in 1904.
Arthur G. Everett. Term ends in 1903.
Oifice of Secretary, 60 Devonshire street.
One member is appointed by the Mayor, subject to confirmation by
the Board of Aldermen, one by the Boston Society of Architects and
one by the Master Builders' Association ; the two latter being subject
to approval by the Mayor. The term of office is three years. Their
compensation is fixed at five dollars for each hour of actual service, the
total not to exceed one thousand dollars each.
Any applicant for a permit from the Building Commissioner whose
application has been refused, any person who has been ordered by the
Commissioner to incur any expense, and any person the value of whose
property may be affected by work to be done under permit granted by
the Commissioner, may appeal to the Board of Appeal by giving notice
in writing to the Commissioner within the time fixed by the statute.
All cases of appeal are referred to this board, which may, after a hear-
ing, direct the Commissioner to issue his permit under such conditions,
if any, as the board may require, or to withhold the same. Permits to
restore damage by fire can only be issued with the approval of the board.
The board has authority to enter any building or premises in Boston.
BOSTON AND CAMBRIDGE BRIDGES.
^ Office, City Hall, third floor.
[Stat. 1870, Chap. 300, 302; Stat. 1898, Chap. 467, § 14.]
James Donovan, Commissioner for Boston.
William J. Marvin, Commissioner for Cambridge.
This commission was established by statute in 1870, to have charge
of the maintenance of the West Boston, Canal or Craigie's and the
Prison Point bridges. (Statutes of 1870, Chap. 300, 302.) In 1892 the
Harvard bridge was placed in their charge (Stat, of 1882, Chap. 155).
The powers of the commission were greatly enlarged by Statutes
of 1898, Chapter 467, Sect. 14. This Act places all bridges and draws
between the two cities in their charge, to support, manage and keep in
repair, and to authorize exclusively the placing of poles, wires and other
structures upon them. The expense of maintenance is borne equally
by the City of Boston and the City of Cambridge. The two commission-
ers are appointed by the Mayors of Boston and Cambridge, and they
serve without compensation.
BOSTON TKANSIT COMMISSION. 96
BRIDGES IN CHARGE OF THE COMMISSIONERS.
1 Cambridge-street bridge, from Brighton to Cambridge.
Canal, or Craigie's bridge, from Boston to Cambridge.
1 Essex-street bridge, from Brighton to Cambridge.
Harvard bridge, from Boston to Cambridge.
1 North Harvard-street bridge, from Brighton to Cambridge.
Prison-Point bridge, from Charlestown to Cambridge.
1 Western-avenue bridge, from Brighton to Cambridge.
West Boston bridge, from Boston to Cambridge.
BOSTON TEANSIT COMMISSION.
Office, 20 Beacon street.
[Stat. 1894, Chap. 548; Stat. 1899, Chap. 375; Stat. 1902, Chap. 534.]
BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS.
George O. Crocker, Chairman.
B. Leighton Beal, Secretary,
H. A. Carson, Chief Engineer.
COMMISSIONERS.
George G. Crocker, Horace G, Allen. Appointed by the Governor.
Charles H. Dalton, Thomas J. Gargan, George F. Swain. Ap-
pointed by the Mayor.
The commissioners were originally appointed for the term of five
years from the first of July, 1894. By Stat. 1899, Chap. 375, the term
was extended to July 1, 1902. By Stat. 1902, Chap. 534, the term of the
commission was further extended to July 1, 1904, and in the event of
the acceptance of the act by the voters of Boston, at the Municipal elec-
tion of 1902, the term shall be extended to July 1, 1906.
The commission had charge of the construction of the Tremont-street
subway and of the Charlestown bridge; and is at present engaged on
the completion of the tunnel to East Boston.
The Act of 1902 provides for a subway so designed as to be adapted
for the accommodation of two tracks especially for use by elevated
cars and two tracks especially for use by surface cars, from a point
near the junction of Broadway and Washington street and connecting
with the present subway at Adams square, Haymarket square, or
Causeway street.
In case of the acceptance of the act the structure for the two tracks
for elevated cars shall be begun immediately, and the structure for the
two tracks for surface cars shall not be begun until the expiration of
at least one year after the completion of the subway for . elevated cars.
But the structure for all four tracks may be begun immediately after
the acceptance of the act if the Boston Transit Commission and the
Boston Elevated Railway Company agree so to do.
1 Placed in charge of the commission July, 1898, under Chapter 467 of the Acts of
1898. All of the bridges named in this list are over navigable waters.
96 MUNICIPAL KEGISTER.
CAMBEIDGE BRIDGE COMMISSION.
[Stat. 1897, Chap. 500, § 5; Stat. 1898, Chap. 467; Stat. 1899, Chap. 180.]
CAMBBIDGE BRIDGE COMMISSION.
Patrick A. Collins, Chairtnan.
John H. H. McNamee, Secretary.
COMMISSIONERS.
Patrick A. Collins, Mayor of Boston {ex officio),
John H. H. McNamee, Mayor of Cambridge {ex officio).
E. D. Leavitt.
The commission has charge of the construction of a new bridge, not
less than 105 feet in width, across the Charles river, to be known as the
Cambridge bridge, at or near the site of the present West Boston
bridge, from Cambridge street in Boston to Main street in Cambridge.
Approaches not less than 100 feet in width are to be laid out by the
commission and constructed by the City Engineers of Boston and Cam-
bridge, at the expense of each city respectively. The cost of the
bridge is to be paid by three parties. The Boston Elevated Railway
Company pays such portion of the cost as shall be rendered necessary
by reason of the bridge being of additional size and strength for the use
of the elevated railroad, and shall construct or pay for constructing its
railway, both elevated and surface, across the bridge. The balance of
the cost is to be paid, one-half by the City of Boston and one-half by
the City of Cambridge.
COLLATERAL LOAN COMPANY.
[Stat. 1859, Chap. 173, § 6; Stat. 1865, Chap. 14; Stat. 1889, Chap. 428.]
The Collateral Loan Company is managed by seven directors, selected
annually, Ave chosen by the corporators at the annual meeting in
December, one appointed by the Governor and one by the Mayor.
Robert F. Clark, Director. Appointed by the Mayor.
COUNTY OFFICERS.
County Commissioners for the County of Suffolk. — The Mayor and
Aldermen of Boston.
County Auditor. — James H. Dodge.
County Treasurer. — George U. Crocker.
district attorney.
[R. L., Chap. 7, §§ 12, 13.]
District Attorney. — Oliver Stevens. Salary, $5,000. Paid by the Com-
monwealth. Elected by the people in 1901 for three years from the
first Wednesday of January, 1902.
First Assistant. — Michael J. Sughrue. Salary, $8,300.
Second Assistant. — John D. McLaughlin. Salary, $3,300.
Clerk to the District Attorney. -^ Frederic H. Chase. Salary, $1,800.
COURT OFFICERS. 97
REGISTER OF DEEDS.
[R. L. Chap., 22; Stat. 1895, Chap. 493.]
Eegister of Deeds. — Thomas F. Temple. Salary, $5,500. Elected by
the people in 1900 for three years.
Assistant Eegister. — Charles W. Kimball. Salary, $3,000. Appointed
by the Register.
COURT OF LAND REGISTRATION.
[R. L., Chap. 128.]
Judge. — Leonard A. Jones. Salary, $4,500. Appointed by the Gov-
ernor.
Associate Judge. — Charles T. Davis. Salary, $4^000, Appointed by
the Governor.
Recorder. — Clarence C. Smith. Salary, -$4,500. Appointed by the
Governor for a term of five years.
INDEX COMMISSIONERS.
[R. L., Chap. 22, § 31.]
Commissioners. — Charles A. Welch, term ends in 1905. John T. Has-
sam, term ends in 1904. Francis L. Hayes, term ends in 1993.
Appointed by the Justices of the Superior Court for the County of
Suffolk for a term of three years and serve without pay.
SHERIFF.
[R. L., Chap. 23.]
Sheriff and Jailer. — Fred H. Seavey,' elected by the people for a term
of three years until first Wednesday of January, 1905.
Deputy Sheriffs for Service of Writs. — Jeremiah G. Fennessey, John F.
Kelly, Joseph P. Silsby, jr., Francis Martin, Robert E. Maguire,
Albert C. Tilden.
Deputy Sheriffs for Court Duty. — William W. Campbell, Daniel A.
Cronin, Robert Herter, Frederick P. Knapp, Daniel Xoonan, Joseph
S. Paine, John R. Rea, William G. Tyler, James A. Hussey, Henry A.
Silver, Patrick E. Lynch, Richard J. Murray, Samuel Canning, Charles
F. Dolan.
All debts and expenses of the County of Suffolk are borne by the City
of Boston, unless otherwise specified.
COURT OFFICERS.
Oflces in Court House, Pemberton square, except as otherwise specified.
SUPREME JUDICIAL COURT.
Clerk for the Commonwealth. — Henry A. Clapp. Salary, $3,000, paid
by the Commonwealth. Appointed by the Court.
Clerk for the County of Suff'olk. — John Noble. Salary, $5,000 from the
County and $1,500 from the Commonwealth. Elected by the people
in 1901 for five years from first Wednesday of January, 1902.
98 MUNICIPAL EEGISTER.
Assistant Clerk. — Clarence H. Cooper. Salary, $2,500.
Reporter of Decisions. — Henry W. Swift. Salary, $4:.000.
SUPEKIOR COURT FOR CIVIL BUSINESS.
Clerk. — Joseph A. Willard. Salary, $6,500. Elected by the people in
1901 for five years.
Assistant Clerks. — Edward A. Willard, Francis P. Ewing, Guy H.
Holliday, George P. Drnry, George E. Kimball, Allen H. Bearse,
Arthur P. Hardy, Stephen Thacher.
Assistant Clerk in Equity. —Henry E. Bellew. Salary, $3,000.
Stenographers. — Frank H. Burt, James P. Bacon, Charles E. Barnes,
Charles C. Beale, Fred W. Card, Cora E. Burbank, Appointed by
the Court.
SUPERIOR COURT FOR CRIMINAL BUSINESS.
[R. L., Chap. 11, § 318; Chap. 165, § 34.]
Clerk. — John P. Manning. Salary, $6,000. Elected by the people in
1901 for five years.
Assistant Clerks. — John R. Campbell, Julian Seriack.
Stenographer. — John H. Farley.
COURT OF PROBATE AND INSOLVENCY.
[R. L., Chap. 11, § 319; Chap. 164, § 2.]
Judge. — John W. McKim. Salary, $5,000.
Judge. — Robert Grant. Salary, $5,000.
Register. — Elijah George. Salary, $5,000.
Assistant Register. — Eugene Tappan.
Clerk. — James L. Crombie.
The Judges of Probate are appointed by the Governor. They are
paid by the Commonwealth. The Register was elected by the people
in 1898 for five years.
MUNICIPAL COURT OF BOSTON.
[The Judicial District comprises the territory bounded as follows, viz. : Beginning
at the intersection of Massachusetts avenue with the Charles river; thence by said
Massachusetts avenue, the Providence Division of the New Yori:, New Haven and
Hartford Railroad, Camden, Washington, East Lenox, Fellows, Northampton and
Albany streets, Massachusetts avenu6, the Roxbury canal, East Brookline street
extended, the New England Railroad, the water line of South Boston, Bristol street
extended and the water line of the City proper, to the point of beginning. Juris-
diction within district (Acts of 1876, Chap. 240), and throughout the City (Acts of 1877,
Chap. 187). J
Chief Justice. — John Freeman Brown. Salary, $4,300.
Associate Justices. — William J. Forsaith, Frederick D. Ely, John H.
Burke,. George Z. Adams, Henry S. Dewey, George L. Wentworth,
James P. Parmenter. Salary, $4,000 each.
[Stat. 1887, Chap. 163; Stat. 1899, Chap. 313.]
Special Justices. — John A. Bennett, William Sullivan.
COURT OFFICERS. 99
Terms of the Court.
For Civil Business. — Every Saturday at 9 A.M., for trial of civil
causes not exceeding $2,000.
Clerk. — Orsino G. Sleeper. Salary, $3,000. Appointed by the Governor.
Assistant Clerks. — Oscar F. Timlin, Henry R. W. Brovrne, Walter F.
Frederick, Warren C. Travis.
For Criminal Business. — Every day in the vreek (Sundays and legal
holidays excepted) at 9 A.M., for the trial of criminal causes.
CZerfc. — Frederic C. Ingalls. Salary, |3,000. Appointed by the Gov-
ernor.
Assistant Clerks. — Edvrard J. Lord, Sydney P. Brown, Edward H.
Cutler, John F. Barry, Harvey B. Hudson.
MUNICIPAL COURT, BRIGHTON DISTRICT.
Cambridge street, corner of Henshaw street.
Jurisdiction, Ward 25.
Justice.^ Charles A. Barnard. Salary, $1,600.
Special Justice. — James H. Rice.
Clerk. — Henry P. Kennedy.
The Court sits for the transaction of criminal business every week-
day, except holidays, commencing at 9 A.M.
For the return and entry of civil actions, every Saturday at 9 A.M.
For trial of juvenile offenders, Tuesdays and Fridays.
MUNICIPAL COURT, CHAELESTOWN DISTRICT.
Old City Hall, City square.
Jurisdiction, Wards 3, 4, 5.
Justice. — Henry W. Bragg. Salary, $2,200.
Special Justices. — Simon Davis and William H. Preble.
Clerk. — Mark E. Smith. Appointed by the Governor.
The Court sits for the transaction of criminal business each day at
9 A.M.
For civil business, every Thursday at 9 A.M.
MUNICIPAL COURT, DORCHESTER DISTRICT.
Adams street, corner of Arcadia street.
[Jurisdiction comprises the territory bounded as follows, viz.: Beginning at the
intersection of the private way known as Carleton street, with the harbor line; thence
by said Carleton street, Mt. Vernon, Boston, Columbia and Quincy streets, Blue Hill
avenue, Harvard street, the boundary lines between Boston and Hyde Park, Milton
and Quincy and the harbor line, to the point of beginning.]
Justice. — Joseph R. Churchill. Salary, $1,600.
Special Justices. — George M. Reed, George A. Fisher.
Clerk. — N. Thomas Merritt, jr. Appointed by the Governor.
The Court sits for the transaction of criminal business each day at
9 A.M.
For civil business, on Saturday at 9.30 A.M.
100 MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
EAST BOSTON DISTRICT COURT.
Public Library Building, Meridian street, East Boston.
Jurisdiction, Wards 1 and 2, Boston, and Town of Wintbrop.
jMsiice. — William H. H. Emmons. Salary, $2,200.
Special Justices. — Albert E. Clary and Josepb H. Barnes, jr.
Clerk. — Willard S. Allen. Appointed by the Governor.
The Court sits for the transaction of criminal business every week-
day, except legal holidays, commencing at 9 A.M.
For the return and entry of civil actions, every Saturday at 9 A.M.
(See Stat. 1886, Chap. 15.)
MUNICIPAL COURT, ROXBURY DISTRICT.
Old Washington School-house, Roxbury street.
[Jurisdiction comprises the territory bonnded as follows, viz. : Beginning at the
intersection of Massachusetts avenue with the Charles river; thence by said Massachu-
setts avenue, the Providence Division of the New York, New Haven and Hartford
Railroad, Camden, Washington, East Lenox, Fellows, Northampton and Albany
streets, Massachusetts avenue, the Roxbury- canal, East Brookline street extended,
the Midland Division of the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad, Willow
court extended, Willow court, Boston, Columbia and Quincy streets. Blue Hill avenue,
Seaver street, Columbus avenue, Washington, Dimock, Amory, Centre and Perkins
streets, that portion of Leverett park which was formerly Chestnut street, the bound-
ary line between Boston and Brookline, Ashby street and the Charles river, to the
point of beginning.]
Justice. — Solomon A. Bolster. Salary, $-3,000.
Special Justices. — A. Nathan Williams and Joseph N. Palmer.
Clerk. — Maurice J. O'Connell. Appointed by the Governor.
Assistant Clerk. — Fred E. Cruff.
The Court sits for the transaction of criminal business every week-
day, except legal holidays, commencing at 9 A.M.
For the return and entry of civil actions, every Saturday at 10 A.M.
For the trial of civil actions, every Tuesday at 10 A.M.
MUNICIPAL COURT, SOUTH BOSTON DISTRICT.
Dorchester street, at the corner of West Fourth street.
[Jurisdiction comprises the territory bounded as follows, viz.: Beginning where
the private way known as Carleton street intersects the water line in Boston harbor;
thence by said Carleton street, Mt. Vernon street. Willow coiut. Willow court
extended, the Midland Division of the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad,
the shore line of the South Bay, Fort Point channel and Boston harbor, to the point of
beginning.]
Justice. — Joseph D. Fallon. Salary, $2,500.
Special Justices. — Charles J. Noyes and Josiah S. Dean.
Clerk. — Frank J. Tuttle. Appointed by the Governor.
Assistant Clerk. — Adrian B. Smith.
The Court sits for the transaction of cnminai business every week-
day, except legal holidays, commencing at 9 A.M.
For the return and entry of civil actions, every Saturday from 9 A.M.
until 12 M.
For the trial of civil actions, every Tuesday at 10 A.M.
JUSTICES OF THE PEACE. 101
MUNICIPAL COUBT, WEST EOXBUKT DISTRICT.
Seaverns avenue, Jamaica Plain.
[Jorisdiction comprises the territory bounded as follows, viz.: Beginuing at the
boundary line between Boston and Brookline at Leverett park, formerly known as
Chestnut street; thence by said Leverett park, Perkins, Centre, Amory, Dimock and
Washington streets, Columbus avenue, Seaver street, Blue Hill avenue. Harvard
street, the boundary lines between Boston and Hyde Park, Dedham, Needham, New-
ton and Brookline, to the point of beginning.]
Justice. — J. M. F. Howard. Salary, $1,600.
Special Justices. — Henry Austin and J. Albert Brackett.
Clerk. — Edward W. Brewer. Appointed by the Governor.
The Court sits for the transaction of criminal business every week-
day, except legal holidays, commencing at 9 A.M.
For the return and entry of civil business, except ejectment, every
Saturday, 9 A.M. until 12 M.; ejectment before 10 A.M. Saturdays.
For the trial of civil actions, every Monday at 2.30 P.M.
PROBATION OFFICERS.
[Stat. 1891, Chap. 356; Stat. 1892, Chaps. 242, 276; Stat. 1897, Chap. 266.]
These officers are appointed by the judges of the respective courts to
ascertain all facts relating to the offenders brought before the courts.
They are also constables, and serve without bonds.
Boston. — Richard Keefe. Assistants: Joshua T. Fuller, Charles E.
Grinnell, Mary Agnes Maynard, Elizabeth L. Ti;ttle, Richard J. Walsh,
Charles M. Warren, James F. Wilkinson.
Brighton . . Henry P. Kennedy . 669 Cambridge st., Brighton.
Charlestown . Nathaniel Leonard . 97 Main st., Charlestown.
Dorchester . . Alvin I. Phillips . . 3 Freeman st., Dorchester.
Uasi Boston . Calvin A. Littlefiield . 34 Princeton st.. East Boston.
Boxbury . . . William A. Blossom . 21 Kenilworth st., Roxbury.
South Boston . George N. Parker . 437 W. Fourth st., South Boston.
West Roxbury . C. H. D. Stockbridge, Court-room, Jamaica Plain.
JUSTICES OF THE PEACE DESIGNATED TO SOLEMNIZE
MARRIAGES.
[R. L., Chap. 151, § 31.]
By virtue of an act of the Legislature of 1899, the Governor has
power to designate persons as Justices of the Peace who may sol-
emnize marriages in the City of Boston. The following-named i3ersons
have been so designated:
Adams, Joseph F., 19 Wakullah street.
Anderson, John W., 13 St. Charles street.
Andrews, John E., 65 Walnut avenue.
Atkins, Charles H., 18 Gladstone street.
102 MUNICIPAL EEGISTER.
Ayers, Geokge D., 24 Mt. Vernon street.
Baldwin, James G., 95 Gainsborough street.
Bakon, Wolf, 106 Union Park street.
Bartholomew, Harry A., 48 Cambridge street.
Billings, George B., 70 Long Wharf.
BiNNS, Walter H., 1043 Tremont street.
Blinn, Albert P., 61 Dartmouth street.
Bloch, Nathan, 82 Chelsea street.
Blossom, William A., 59 Dudley street.
BOROFSKY, Samuel H., 34 Parmenter street.
Brigham, Charles H., 230 Huntington avenue.
Cangiano, Michael, 5 North square.
Cashman, William P., 62 North Beacon street.
Cherry, James B., 197 Shawmut avenue.
Curtis, William D. C, 7 Highland avenue.
DoLAN, Charles F., 50 West Cedar street.
Emerson, Freeman O., 36 Appleton street.
Epple, Louis, 543 Beech street.
Fallon, James O., Old Court House.
Farrar, D. Foster, 42 Everton street.
Felt, David O., 22 Ash street.
Feyhl, Charles A., 449 Shawmut avenue.
Forte, Achille, 151 North street.
Frederickson, Peter A., 686 Shawmut avenue.
Hague, John R., 15 Dorr street.
Harding, Egbert E., 20 Walnut street.
Herter, Robert, 15 Catawba street.
Holland, Edward J., 290 West Newton street.
HouRiN, Christopher D. A., 24 Chestnut avenue.
Hubbard, Henry W., 25 Monadnock street.
* HuRLL, John C, 27 Cobden street.
Jaeger, Charles V., 1174 Columbus avenue.
Jordan, Horace A., 95 Washington street.
Kalmus, Otto, 1 Alfred street.
Kattelle, Charles E., 95 Court street.
Kehew, Alfred R., 6 Reedsdale street.
Kurtz, Charles C, 121 Newbury street.
Macdonald, Edmund A., 677 Cambridge street.
Magnitzky, Gustave, 127 Chestnut avenue.
Mahoney^, Jeremiah J., 130 F street.
McLeish, Robert M., 214 K street.
Newcomb, Harry H., 104 Norfolk street.
Newsman, Max H., 24 Davis street.
Pease, Oscar E., 1 Bowdoin street.
Pennini, Lewis, 160 Tyler street.
Powell, Benjamin F., 5 Anderson street.
OFFICERS PAID BY FEES. 103
PowEKS, James E., 1059 Tremont street.
Prud'homme, Hippolyte M., 840 Huntington avenue.
QuiNN, John, jr., 88 Esmond street.
Eat, James, 267 Lamartine street.
Egberts, Thomas D., 17 Davis street.
EoBiNSON, Nathaniel G., 103 Eevere street.
Eose, John W., 1 Irwin avenue.
EowLEY, Clarence W., 567 Tremont street.
Sands, Edward P., 91 Worcester street.
Schubert, Adolph L., 3 Adelaide terrace.
Scott, Frank N., 2 Endicott terrace.
Shaw, Charles A., 3 Wyoming street.
Shepakd, Henry W., 145A Tremont street.
SiLLOWAY, Charles E., 87 Eockland street.
SiLSBY, Joseph P., 766 Shawmut avenue.
Sproul, Thomas J., 270 Parker Hill avenue.
Sturgeon, Charles H. Kemp, 4 Alexander street.
Van Buren, Josiah, 15 Munroe street.
Washburn, Isaac, 42 Crawford street.
Wright, Curtis J., 61 Phillips street.
Wyman, Albert L., 78 Chandler street.
MEDICAL EXAMINEES.
[E. L., Chap. 24.]
The City is divided into two districts by a line running from the
Essex-street bridge, through Brighton avenue, to Beacon street; thence
through Beacon street to Park street; thence through Park, Tremont,
Winter and Summer streets, to the water. [See Proceedings of the
Board of Aldermen, September 5, 1881.]
Medical Examiners. — Francis A. Harris, M.D., 479 Beacon street;
Frank W. Draper, M.D., 304 Marlborough street. Salary, $4,000 each.
Associate Medical Examiner. — George Stedman, M.D., 110 Newbury
street. Salary, -^666. All are appointed by the Governor.
OFFICEES PAID BY FEES.
Appointed annually by Mayor, subject to confirmation by the Board
of Aldermen, for one year beginning with the first day of May, in the
year appointed, and until their successors are confirmed.
Beef, Weighers o/. — [E. L., Chap. 57, §§1,2.] Joel W. Bent, Fred-
erick L. Dodge, Charles Warren Hapgood.
Boilers and Heavy Machinery., Weighers of. — [E. L., Chap. 62, §42.]
Harold B. Anderson, James T. Appleby, Thomas W. Carey, Nelson
C. Clement, Fred Cutter, James Donovan, John F. Donovan, L. T.
104 MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
Farnum, Charles W. Furlong, William E. Horton, John Hurley, Fred-
erick A. Jones, J. F. Jones, Matthew A. Lawless, Robert P. McCann,
Justin McCarthy, Edward P. Murphy, Dennis O'Neil, Dennis O'Sulli-
van, Walter J. Ripley, Thomas F, Sullivan, Edwin F. Tarbox, John
P. Tully, Bert Walbridge.
Coal, Weighers of. — [R. L., Chap. 57, §§ 83-93.] Morton Alden, Frank-
lin W. Anderson, Harold B. Anderson, Revere E. Atwood, Thomas E.
Bates, William G. Bail, Albert E. Baker, George E. Baker, James
E. Barnett, Frank P. Black, Allen G. Boyd, Barney M. Brennan,
Michael J. Brennan, George W. Bridges, Ira W. Brown, Walter
W. Bryant, P. J. Caldwell, Jeremiah J. Callahan, Donald S.
Campbell, William A. Campbell, John T. Caulfield, Charles A.
Chadwick, Charles Taft Chapin, Fred L. Childs, Constantine J.
Church, James J. Chute, Frederick E. Cleaves, Paul G. Coblenzer,
Nelson B. Coll, John D. Costello, jr., Hugh F. Crane, Arthur R.
Crooks, Fred Cutter, James B. Dana, Andrew Davidson, John J.
Doherty, Edgar F. Drown, Isabel Drown, Andrew H. Dwelley, Rich-
ard W. Edds, John W. Edson, William H. Eltz, Thomas J. Fallon,
John C. Felker, jr., Arthur L. Fish, Joseph Flores, Henry A. Frost,
Charles W. Furlong, Benjamin A. Gardner, Martin Gilbert, Thomas
F. Golding, Henry F. Gould, William A. Gove, Albert W. Grant,
Charles T. Grant, John V. Haley, Charles A. Hamann, Hiram A.
Henderson, Stephen Henton, Sidney C. Higgins, Arthur W. Hobbs,
Samuel Hosea, jr., John W. Hunter, Frank B. Ingalls, William P.
Jenkins, Frederick A. Jones, William W. Kee, John Kelly, John F.
Kelly, jr., William J. Kennedy, John A. Keyes, Edward A. Lathrop,
Daniel F. Lauten, Matthew A. Lawless, Thomas H. Lawton, William
D. Leeds, William Lewis, Clarence J. Libby, Jeremiah C. Long, Jere-
miah L. McCarthy, Joseph McGreevey, William H. McNamara, James
P. Mooney, Richard J. Moore, Fred C. Morgan, John Morrison,
Charles E. Morse, Fred L. Moses, Edward P. Murphy, John F.
Nelson, John B. Nickels, Timothy J. O'Connell, William E, O'Neil,
Gertrude Peterson, William H. Pierce, Edward E. Piper, James T.
Pond, Horace L. Porter, Hugh H. Ralph, Winsor W. Raymond, John
Rea, Frank B. Reynolds, Walter J. Ripley, Dennis D. Ruddy, James
Russell, Frank O. Seavey, John Smith, Lucius W. Smith, William A.
Stearns, William Graydon Stetson, James P. Stewart, Norman Q.
Stewart, Clinton G. Stickney, Charles E. Stone, G. Louis Stowers,
Frank E. Sullivan, Henry J. Tagen, Harry L. Thayer, Henry F.
Thomas, Hollis O. Thomas, Frank O. Thompson, Charles F. Tirrell,
Harry Triptoe, Walter D. Vance, Joel F. Vinal, Howard Wade, G.
Clarence Webb, Charles S. Wellington, J. Clarence Whitney, George
A. Whitten, Arvid A. Williams, Charles R. Williams, Thomas H.
Williams, Walter S. Wilmot, Henry G. Wilson, Clark D. Wood, Harry
M. Wood, Frederick A. Worden, Frederick T. Wort, Charles W.
Zeigler.
OFFICERS PAID BY FEES. 105
Constables. — [Stat. 1802, Chap. 7, § 1; R. L., Chap. 25, §§ 87-94; Chap.
26, § 14.] The following give bond in $3,000, and are therefore
authorized to serve civil process: Charles A. Bancroft, IVathan E.
Bates, Lyde W. Benjamin, Austin Bigelow, Joseph H. Blatt, John
F. Bowen, James E. Bowe, Henry A. Brovrn, William R. Browne,
Michael Cangiano, William Carroll, James M. Carter, William H.
Chick, James J. Clark, Peter H. Clark, John J. Conroy, James A.
Corcoran, Timothy S. Cronin, George W. Crawford, James W. Cur-
rier, George C. Davis, Henry H. Dewey, Robert J. Dooley, George
G. Drew, John A. Duggan, Thomas A. Dunn, William P. Dwyer,
Peter P. Fee, Charles G. Goussebaire, Sears H. Grant, George W.
Green, Lewis G. Grossman, Charles A. Grover, Joseph Guttentag,
Charles F. Hale, John S. Harkin, Edward L. Hopkins, Charles E.
House, Lewis J. N. Hurie, Edwin Jaquith, Charles C. Kammerer,
Clarence G. Kellogg, Gusteen I. Kenerson, George E. Kerr, Russell
R. Knapp, Clarence H, Knowlton, Joseph A. Langone, James F.
Larkin, Morris F. Lewenberg, George M. Locke, Stephen E. Lucet,
William H. Lyon, Thomas L. Lyons, Thomas F. Malone, George R.
Mathews, William M. Macdonald, James McDonough, Robert M.
McLeish, Arthur P. Moran, James J. Morgan, John Mundy, Osborn A.
Newton, Isaiah Paine, jr., Robert Reid, Peter H. Reinstein, Thomas
D. Roberts, John J. Rogers, Andrew D. Rooney, Louis M. Roth,
George Henry Royce, Charles A. Savery, David Schapero, Henry
W. Shepard, Eugene LeForest Stafford, Anson Stern, Joseph P. Swift,
William H. Swift, Charles F. Taylor, Frederic S. Walker, John J.
Walsh, James H. Waugh, Ernest L. Weis, George L. Wrighton, Frank
Tennaco.
Constables connected with official j)ositions.^ — Jacob Barbei", Daniel F.
Breen, Frederick A. Breen, Cornelius J. Bresnahan, Carlan A. Brown,
William W. Campbell, William W. K. Campbell, Daniel B. Carmody,
John F. Clark, William A. Coburn, Thomas A. Crawford, Joseph P.
Dever, Thomas J. Donnellon, Aaron A. Downs, Charles A. Downs,
William L. Drohau, Charles H. Filisetti, Thomas Folger, John J.
Franey, James Graham, John C. Grouse, John F. Harrigan, Charles
P. Harrington, George E. Harrington, Joseph M. Harrington, John
J. Henry, George M. Hosmer, Joseph Houghton, Thomas Jordan,
James P. Keliher, Samuel Kelley, Edward A. Kennedy, James
M. Kilroy, Edward J. Leary, James F. McCarthy, John B. McDon-
ough, John McLoughlin, George H. Nason, James E. Norton, James
J. O'Brien, James O'Connor, James A. O'Donnell, Alvah H. Peters,
Alvin I. Phillips, Patrick F. Reddy, John H. Riley, Henry J. Schenck,
Charles J. Smith, Forest E. Starr, Cornelius F. Sullivan.
1 Give bonds and have legal authority to serve civil process. They are not supposed
to do so, however.
106 MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
Constables connected with the Society for Prevention of Cruelty to
Animals.^ — Lemuel B. Biirrill, Charles F. Clark, James Duckering,
James R. Hathaway, Thomas Langlan.
Constables connected with the Society for Prevention of Cruelty to
Children.^ — Edwin R. Smyth, Monsier D. Mami, William K. Critch-
erson.
Constable connected luith the St. Vincent de Paul Society.^ — John B. F.
Emery .
Constable connected with United States Recruiting Officer. — William S.
Sampson.
Fe7ice-viewer^. — ['R. L., Chap. 11, § 334; Chap. 33, §§ 1-19.]
Field-drivers and Pound-keepers. — [R. L., Chap. 11, §834; Chap. 33,
§§ 20-40; Chap. 123, § 21.] John F. Rooney in East Boston, William
Cotter in the Back Bay District.
Grain, Measurers of. — [R. L., Chap. 57, §§ 25-31.] William H. Blanch-
ard, Lawrence A. Bragan, Stephen T. Campbell, John H. Cavanagh,
Michael Collins, Charles R. Clifford, Michael F. Codire, Charles R.
Davis, Robert J. Desmond, Alton F. Dow, L. T. Farnum, Michael
Finn, Harry P. Frothingham, Carroll W. Gates, John H. Gillogly,
Henry F. Gould, Alden H. Harding, Benjamin Hay, Lawrence N.
Hennessy, Joseph G. Herrick, Sidney B. Keene, George W. Keith,
Harry R. Kidder, Martin J. Leggett, Cornelius Murphy, William
T, McLaughlin, Leslie A. Pike, Frank A. Quimby, George P. Rollins,
Joseph Rourke, Frank O. Seavey, Alfred J. Sidwell, Henry Soutter,
John Steele, Charles E. Stone, Clarence A. Tenny.
Hay and Straw, Inspectors of Pressed or Bundled. — [R. L., Chap. 57,
§§ 36-39. Morton Alden, Charles E. Avery, William H. Blanchard,
John H. Cavanagh, Michael F. Codire, Charles R. Davis, Robert J.
Desmond, John H. Dunn, Patrick R. Dunn, William M. Dunn, Elmer
E. Flanders, John H. Gillogly, William C. Glover, Amos S. Hubbard,
Michael F. Hurley, Frank B. Ingalls, Louis W. Jordan, William Lin-
coln, Sidney B. Keene, Richard J. Mackin, William T. McLaughlin,
Richard J. Moore, John C. Pike, 3d, Leslie A. Pike, Joseph Rourke,
Edwin H. Smth, Augustus Woods Sprague, Charles F. Thompson,
Willard P. Whittemore, Andrew N. Wyeth, jr.
Hay Scales, Superintendents of. — [R. L., Chap. 57, § 35; Rev. Ord.,
Chap. 45, §§ 23-25.] Herbert C. Davis, North scales; Timothy F.
Dunn, South scales; William J. Mathers, East Boston.
Lime, Inspector of . — [R. L., Chap. 57, §§ 47-53.] Patrick J. McCarthy.
Marble, Freestone and Soapstone, Surveyor of. — [R. L., Chap. 57, § 54.]
Frank L. Bowker.
1 Those connected with S.P. C. T. C, and S. P. C. T. A., the St. Vincent de Paul
Society, and the Truant Officers serve without bonds, and do not serve civil process.
(See page 113.)
" Vacant.
PILOT COMMISSIONERS. 107
Petroleum and its Products, Inspectors of. — [R. L., Chap. 102, §§ 109-
112; Rev. Ord., 1898, Chap. 45, § 6.] James H. Cleaves, Orria E.
Hodsdon, William Park.
Upper Leather, Measurers of. — [R. L., Chap. 59.] Daniel J. Cameron,
John J. Powers, Sewall B. Farnsworth, Edward R. Maxwell.
Wood and Bark, Measurers of. — [R. L., Chap. 57, §§ 75-82; Rev. Ord.,
1898, Chap. 45, § 26.] Morton Alden, Revere E. Atwood, Jeremiah J.
Callahan, John T. Caulfield, James B. Dana, William H. Eltz, Joseph
Flores, Sidney C. Higgins, Samuel Hosea, jr., JohnW. Hunter, Frank
B. Ingalls, William P. Jenkins, Albert T. Orrall, Horace L. Porter,
Dennis D. Ruddy, Frank E. Sullivan, Harry L. Thayer, Frank O.
Thompson, Howard Wade, J. Clarence Whitney, George A. Whitten.
OFFICER TO TRANSPORT INSANE PERSONS.
James Graham. Salary, |1,200. Appointed by the Mayor.
OLD SOUTH ASSOCIATION IN BOSTON.
[Stat. 1877, Chap. 222, §§ 1, 2.]
The Mayor, ex officio, and James H. Doyle and Arthur W. Dolan,
Managers on the part of the City of Boston.
The association is managed by a board of managers, consisting of
fifteen, of whom the Mayor of the City of Boston is one, ex officio, two
are elected annually by the City Council for the municipal year, and the
others are chosen as provided by Chap. 222, of the Acts of 1877.
PILOT COMMISSIONERS.
Office, 716 Chamber of Commerce.
[R. L., Chap. 67, §§ 1-6.]
commissioners.
Justus A. Bailey. Term ends in 1904.
John C. Ross. Term ends in 1904.
Edmund S. Manson, Secretary.
Two Commissioners of Pilots for the harbor of Boston, having the
recommendation of the trustees of the Boston Marine Society, are ap-
pointed by the Governor for the term of three years. They appoint a
Secretary. The Commissioners grant commissions as pilots for Boston
Harbor to such persons, approved by the trustees of the Boston Marine
Society, as they consider competent, and cause the laws of pilotage to be
observed. The compensation of the Commissioners and their allow-
ance for office rent, clerk hire, etc., is fixed by the trustees of the
108 MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
Boston Marine Society, and is paid from the amounts received from
pilotage returned by the pilots. Any surplus therefrom is paid to the
Boston Marine Society.
POLICE DEPARTMENT.
Office, 37 Pemberton square.
[R. L., Chap. 31; Chap. 100, § 3; Stat. 1878, Chap. 244; 1885, Chap. 323;
1895, Chap. 449, § 26.]
BOARD OF POLICE.
Robert F. Clark, Chairman.
Joseph Warren, Attorney.
Thomas Ryan, Clerk.
commissioners.
Charles P. Curtis, jr. Term ends in 1905. Salary, $4,000.
Harry F. Adams. Term ends in 1904. Salary, $4,000.
Robert F. Clark. Term ends in 1903. Salary, $4,500.
The Board of Police for the City of Boston was established by
Chapter 323 of the Acts of 1885, and is composed of three citizens of
Boston, appointed from the two principal political parties by the Gov-
ernor, with the advice and consent of the Executive Council, and the
full term of office is five years from the first day of May. The Board
assumed office on July 23, 1885. The Governor designates one of the
Commissioners to serve as Chairman.
The City is divided into sixteen Police Districts, in each of which is a
station-house, the headquarters of a captain and force of men. The
Board appoints a Harbor-Master and assistants from the police force,
and they receive pay in accordance with their rank in the force. The
police boats "Guardian" and "Watchman" are employed in this
service.
EXECUTIVE staff.
William H. Pierce, Superintendent of Police. Salary, $4,000.
Orinton M. Hanscom, James M. Coulter, Byron F. Bragdon,
Deputy Superintendents. Salary, $3,000 each.
BUREAU OF criminal INVESTIGATION.
William B. Watts, Chief Inspector. Salary, $2,800.
Capt. Joseph Dugan, Assistant. Salary, $2,500.
Walter A. Abbott, Thomas J. Barry, Joseph D. Bogan, William
BuRKE, Cornelius T. Cleary, James J. Collins, Alfred N.
Douglas, Patrick J. Gaddis, Charles Glidden, John H. Har-
ris, Andrew Houghton, Joseph H. Knox, William T. Leggett,
Patrick A. Mahoney, Lebeus B. McCausland, John R. McGarr,
Michael J, Morrissey, George F. Pinkerton. George M. Robin-
son, Thomas A. Sheehan, Michael C. Shields, Oliver J. Wise,
Morris Wolf, Inspectors. Salary, $1,600 each.
POLICE DEPARTMENT. 109
SPECIAL SEKVICE AT HEADQUAETERS. '
Capts. Henry Dawson, Dennis Donovan, Thomas H. Brown,
Thomas C. Evans, Sergt. George E. Saxton, Special Service.
Charles W. Boter, Inspector of Carriages.
Capt. William H. Dyer, Inspector of Claims and Medical Examiner'^s
Assistant.
Capt. George E. Savory, Property Clerk.
Lieut. James O'Neill, Clerk in Superinlendenf s Office.
John Weigel, Director of Signal Service.
POLICE stations.
First Division, Hanover street. Frederick G. Hoffman, Captain.
Second Division, Court square. Ira C. Foster, Captain.
Third Division, Joy street. Edward F. Gaskin, Captain.
Fourth Division, La Grange street. Laurence Cain, Captain.
Fifth Division, East Dedham street. George W. Wescott, Captain.
Sixth Division, Broadway., near C street, South Boston. John T.
O'Lalor, Captain.
Seventh Division, Meridian, near Paris street, East Boston. Richard
F. Irish, Captain.
Eighth Division (including the islands in the harbor and the harbor
service), corner Commercial and Battery streets. Byron F. Bragdon,
Deputy Superintendent and Harbor blaster. John W. Jackson, Itha-
mer A. Mereen, Nicholas C. Tallon, George H. Adams, Edward A.
Pease, James Russell, Gorham H. Everbeck, Thomas Connor, John J.
McCarthy, James Nannery, James H. O'Neill, Peter K. Smith, Assist-
ant Harbor-Masters. (See R. L., Chap. 66, §§ 17-28; Stat. 1882, Chap.
216; 1889, Chap. 147.)
Ninth Division, Mt. Pleasant avenue and Dudley street. Thomas W.
Coleman, Captain.
Tenth Division, 1168 Columbus avenue. John J. Hanley, Captain.
Eleventh Division, corner Adams and Arcadia streets. Charles W.
Hunt, Captain.
Twelfth Division, Fourth street, near K street. South Boston. Otis
F, Kimball, Captain.
Thirteenth Division, Seaverns avenue, Jamaica Plain. Irving A. H.
Peabody, Captain.
Fourteenth Division, Washington street, junction Cambridge street,
Brighton. Philemon D. Warren, Captain.
Fifteenth Division, Old City Hall, Charlestown. George A. Wyman,
Captai7i.
Sixteenth Division, Boylston street, near Hereford street. George A.
Hall, Captain.
House of Detention. [Stat. 1887, Chap. 234.] Basement of Court
House, Pemberton square. Amelia B. White, Chief Matron. Salary,
$1,000.
110 MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
City Prison. [R. L., Chap. 26, § 40.] Basement of Court House, Pem-
berton square. William H. Brown, Keeper of the I^ock-up. Salary,
$2,500.
Salaries: Captains, $2,500 per annum; lieutenants, $1,000 per annum
sergeants, $1,400 per annum; patrolmen, first year's service, $1,000
second year's service, $1,100; third and successive years' service, $1,200
reserve men, $2.00 per day, first year; $2.25 per day, second year; third
year and after, $2.50 per day.
SCHOOL DEPARTMENT.
Rooms of the Committee, Mason street.
[Stat. 1875, Chap. 241; Stat. 1898, Chap. 400.]
OFFICERS.
Geafton D. Gushing, President.
Thornton D. Apollonio, Secretary. Salary, $3,300.
William J. Porter, Auditing Clerk. Salary, $3,300.
Edwin P. Seaveb, Superintendent. Salary, $6,000.
Edward C. Baldwin, Schoolhouse Custodian. Salary, $2,004.
Alvah H. Peters, Messenger.
1 Ellis Peterson,
1 Robert C. Metcalf,
George H. Conley,
supervisors.
George H. Martin,
Walter S. Parker,
Ellor E. Carlisle.
Salarv of Supervisors, $3,780 each.
school committee.
Term ends in January, 1905.
John A. Brett, | Mark B. Mulvey,
George E. Brock, Robert T. Paine, jr.
Thomas J. Kenny,
William F. Merritt,
Phineas Pierce,
James J. Storrow.
Term ends in January, 1904.
Anna Barrows,
Wilfred Bolster,
Charles L. Bukrill,
-Julia E. Duff,
George A. O. Ernst,
William J. Gallivan,
Daniel S. Harkins,
Frank Vogel.
Term ends in January. 1903.
WiLLARD S. Allen,
Augustine J. Bulger,
Francis L. Coolidge,
Grafton D. Cushing,
Emily A, Fifield,
James A. McDonald,
Joseph Morrill,
Randall G. Morris.
iTo retire from service iu September, 1902.
SCHOOL DEPAKTMENT. Ill
Eight members of the School Committee are elected annually at the
City election, by the voters at large, including such women as may
qualify for that purpose. Vacancies in the School Committee are filled
for the remainder of the municipal year in a convention of the School
Committee and the Board of Aldermen.
Kegular meetings of the School Committee are held on the evenings
of the second and fourth Tuesdays in each month, except in July and
August.
STANDING COMMITTEES.
Accounts. — Willard S. Allen, Chairman ; Messrs. Brock, Gallivan,
Merritt, and Pierce.
Courses of Study and Text-Books. — Frank Vogel, Chairman; Mrs.
Fifield, Messrs. Kenny, Paine, and Storrow.
Dkavfing. — James A. McDonald, Chairman; Messrs. Allen, Brock,
Bulger, and Mulvey.
Evening Schools. — John A. Brett, Chairman ; Messrs. McDonald,
Mulvey, Paine, and Vogel.
Horace Mann School. — Anna Barrows, Chairman ; Messrs. Bulger,
Harkins, Morrill, and Mulvey.
Hygiene and Physical Training. — James A. McDonald, Chairman;
Miss Barrows, Mrs. Duff, Messrs. Harkins and Storrow.
Legislative Matters. — Wilfred Bolster, Chairman; Messrs. Brett,
Morrill, Paine, and Pierce.
Manual Training. — Emily A. Fifield, Chairman; Miss Barrows,
Messrs. Brock, Morris, and Mulvey.
Music. — Frank Vogel, Chairman ; Miss Barrows, Messrs. Cushing,
Ernst, and Kenny.
Names of Buildings. — Messrs. Coolidge, Ernst, Gallivan, and Pierce,
and the President, Chairman, ex-officio.
New Buildings. — Charles L. Burrill, Chairman ; Messrs. Coolidge,
Brett, Morris, and Storrow.
Rules and Regulations. — George A. O. Ernst, Chairman; Messrs.
Bolster, Cushing, Merritt, and Morrill.
Salaries. — George A. O. Ernst, Chairman; Mr. Allen, Mrs. Fifield,
Messrs. Kenny and Morris.
School-houses. — Charles L. Burrill, Chairman ; Messrs. Coolidge,
Brett, Morris, and Storrow.
Supplies. — Thomas J. Kenny, Chairman; Messrs. Coolidge, Burrill,
Harkins, and Morrill.
Truant-Officers. — Charles L. Burrill, Chairman; Messrs. Allen,
Brock, Bulger, and Morrill.
normal, high school and division committees.
Normal School. — Wilfred Bolster, Chairman ; Mr. Brett, Mrs. Dufi:,
Messrs. Paine and Storrow.
High Schools. — William J. Gallivan, Chairman ; Messrs. Bolster, Bur-
rill, Merritt, and Vogel.
112 MUlSriCIPAL REGISTER.
First Division. — Willard S. Allen, Chairman ; Messrs. Bulger, Mc-
Donald, Morrill, and Storrow.
Second Division. — James A. McDonald, Chairman; Messrs. Allen,
Burrill, Mrs. Duff, and Mr. Ernst.
Third Division. — diaries L. Burrill, Chairman ; Miss Barrows, Mr.
Bolster, Mrs. Duff, and Mr. Kenny.
Fourth Division. — Francis L. Coolidge, Chairman ; Messrs. Gushing,
Harkins, Mulvey, and Pierce.
Fifth Division. — Robert T. Paine, jr., Chairman; Miss Barrows,
Messrs. Gallivan, Morris, and Pierce.
Sixth Division. — Thomas J. Kenny, Chairman; Messrs. Brock, Cool-
idge, Gallivan, and Vogel.
Seventh Division. — Wilfred Bolster, Chairman; Messrs. Brett, Mer-
ritt, Morrill, and Paine.
Eighth Division. — Frank Vogel, Chairman ; Messrs. Brock, Ernst,
Morris, and Mulvey.
Ninth Division. — William F. Merritt, Chairman ; Mr. Brett, Mrs.
Fifield, Messrs. Harkins and Storrow.,
special committees.
Special, Committee on Vacation Schools. — Francis L. Coolidge,
Chairman ; Messrs. Brock, Bulger, Mrs. Fifield, and Mr. McDonald.
Special Committee on Extended Use of School Buildings. —
James J. Storrow, Chairman; Mr. Brett, Mrs. Fifield, Messrs. Morris
and Paine.
schools.
Normal School and Rice Training School.
Public Latin School, Girls' Latin School, English High, Girls' High,
Roxbury High, Dorchester High, Charlestown High, West Roxbury
High, Brighton High, East Boston High, and South Boston High
Schools, and Mechanic Arts High School.
First Division. — Adams, Chapman, Emerson, Lyman.
Second Division. — Bunker Hill, Frothingham, Harvard, Prescott,
Warren.
Third Division. — Bowdoin, Eliot, Hancock, Phillips, Wells.
Fourth Division. — Brimmer, Prince, Quincy, Winthroj).
Fifth Division. — Dwight, Everett, Franklin, Hyde, Sherwin.
Sixth Division. — Bigelow, Gaston, John A. Andrew, Lawrence, Lin-
coln, Norcross, Shurtleff, Thomas N. Hart.
Seventh Division. — Comins, Dearborn, Dillaway, Dudley, George
Putnam, Hugh O'Brien, Lewis, Martin, Phillips Brooks.
Eighth Division. — Agassiz, Bennett, Bowditch, Charles Sumner,
Longfellow, Lowell, Robert G. Shaw, Washington Allston.
Ninth Division. — Christopher Gibson, Edward Everett, Gilbert Stuart,
Henry L. Pierce, Mary Hemenway, Mather, Minot, Roger Clap,
Tileston.
Special Schools. — Horace Mann, Spectacle Island.
SCHOOL DEPARTMENT. 113
SUPEBINTENDENT OF SCHOOLS.
Edwin P. Seavek, Waban, Mass. Office hours, Mondays to Fridays,
1 to 2 P.M.
BOABD OF SUPERVISORS.
1 Ellis Peterson, 305 Chestnut avenue, near Green street, Jamaica
Plain. Office hour, Thursday, 4.30 to 5.30 P.M.
1 Robert C. Metcalf, 17 Kenwood street, Dorchester. Office hour,
Tuesday, 4.30 to 5.30 P.M.
George H. Conlet, Osborn road, Brookline. Office hour, Monday,
4.30 to 5.30 P.M.
George H. Martin, 388 Summer street, Lynn. Office hour, Thurs-
day, 4.30 to 5.30 P.M.
Walter S. Parker, Reading. Office hour, Wednesday, 4.30 to 5.30
P.M.
Ellor E. Carlisle, Hotel Kempton, Berkeley street. Office hour,
Wednesday, 4.30 io 5.30 P.M.
Office hours at School Committee Building, Mason street.
From the first Monday in November to and including the last Friday
in January, the office hours of the respective Supervisors will begin
one-half hour earlier than as above specified.
Regular meetings of the Board of Supervisors on the Friday preced-
ing each regular meeting of the School Committee, at 9 A.M.
truant-officers.
These officers are appointed by the School Committee, and under
their directions enforce the laws relating to truant children and absen-
tees from school. They are also constables, and serve without bonds,
George Murphy, Chief, 70 Bowdoin street, Dorchester. Office, 276
Tremont street. Office hour from 1 to 2 P.M.
George W. Bean, 42 Sagamore street, Dorchester. Edward Everett,
Mather, and Roger Clap Districts.
Henry M. Blackwell, 107 Brook avenue, Dorchester. Comins, Dil-
laway, and Dudley Districts.
James Bragdon, 125 K street, South Boston. Gaston, Lincoln, and
Thomas N. Hart Districts.
Maurice F. Corkery, 173 Charles street. Mary Hemenway, Minot, and
Phillips Brooks Districts.
Frank A. Dothage, 627 Massachusetts avenue. Charles Sumner,
Longfellow, and Robert G. Shaw Districts.
Frank Hasey, 9 Dyer street, Dorchester. Dearborn, George Putnam,
and Lewis Districts.
John T. Hathaway, 105 Falcon street. East Boston. Bunker Hill,
Prescott, and Warren Districts.
David L. Jones, 42 Hancock street, Dorchester. Hyde, Martin,
Prince, and Sherwin Districts.
1 To retire from service in September, 1902.
114 MUNICIPAL KEGISTEK.
Timothy J. Kenny, 296 West Fifth street, South Boston. Hugh
O'Brien, John A. Andrew, and Shurtleff Districts.
David F. Long, 286 Bunker Hill street, Charlestown. Bowdoin,
Phillips, and "Wells Districts.
John McCrillis, 514 Park street, Dorchester. Eliot and Hancock
Districts.
Amos Schaffer, 695 Washington street, Dorchester. Bigelow, Law-
rence, and Norcross Districts.
William B. Shea, 119 Millet street, Dorchester. Christopher Gibson,
Gilbert Stuart, Henry L. Pierce, and Tileston Districts.
Warren J. Stokes, 1850 Centre street. West Eoxbury. Agassiz, Bow-
ditch, and Lowell Districts.
Daniel J. Sweeney, 237 Webster street, East Boston. Chapman and
Emerson Districts.
Charles E. Turner, 741 Saratoga street. East Boston. Adams and
Lyman Districts.
Eichard W. Walsh, 5 Woodville street, Eoxbury. Brimmer, Quincy,
and Winthrop Districts.
John H. Westfall, 24 Ashford street, Allston. Bennett and Washing-
ton Allston Districts.
Charles B. Wood, Burlingame way, Eoslindale. Dwight, Everett,
Franklin, and Eice Districts.
Charles S. Wooiindale, 83 Green street, Charlestown. Frothingham
and Harvard Districts.
Truant office, 276 Tremont street. Office hour, 1 to 2 P.M.
SCHOOL DEPARTMENT.
115
PUBLIC SCHOOLS, TEACHERS AND PUPILS.
January 31, 1902.
to
o
o
o
m
o
6
"A
No. of Kegular
Teachers.
3iS !»
C
03 -
bca
6
<
0 P
Ph
General Schools.
a
a
a
o
O
^1
30j
1
12
58
652
84
1
94
125
10
103
793
652
161
11
197
918
652
161
208
6,208
41,858
31,545
4,455
203
5,922
38,812
28,003
3,493
5
286
3,046
3,542
962
97.6
95.3
92.7
88.7
78.4
187
5,989
Grammar
41,749
Primary
32,241
Kindergarten
4,612
Totals
807
220
1,719
1,939
84,274
76,433
7,841
90.6
84,778
Special Schools.
«.S
bcH
03 a>
OJ
<H ^
beg
5 °
03 ffl
W OJ
§3^
<^
Ph
Horace Mann
Spectacle Island
Evening High, Central..
Charlestown Branch.
East Boston Branch..
Evening Elementary
Evening Drawing
Special Classes
Totals ,
15
1
*26
10
182
30
3
274
122
19
1,999
297
180
3,871
673
49
7,210
106
16
86.8
17
2
89.4
1,578
421
78.9
233
64
78.4
. 140
40
77.7
2,558
1,313
66.0
527
146
78.3
39
10
79.5
5,198
2,012
72.0
127
14
47
188
*Each teacher was in charge of two classes, one of which met on Monday, Wednes-
day and Friday evenings; the other on Tuesday and Thursday evenings.
116 MUNICIPAL EEGISTER.
HOLIDAYS AND VACATIONS.
Every Saturday; the half-day before Thanksgiving day and the
remainder of the week; the half-day before Christmas; one week,
beginning with Christmas day; New Year's day; the twenty-second
of February; Good Friday; the nineteenth of April; the week immedi-
ately preceding the second Monday in April; Decoration day; the
seventeenth of June; and for the Primary Schools from the Friday
preceding the week of graduating exercises of the schools, and for the
Normal, High and Grammar Schools from their respective graduating
exercises to the second Wednesday in September.
For the list of the Medical Inspectors of Schools, see Health Depart-
ment, page 55.
A full list of the schools and teachers will be found in the " Manual
of the Public Schools of the City of Boston, 1902."
MANUAL TRAINING SCHOOLS.
There are thirty-two rooms used for instruction in wood-working, of
which two are in East Boston; two in Charlestown; four in Boston
proper; five in South Boston; four in Roxbury; seven in Dorchester;
three in Jamaica Plain; one in Allston; one in Brighton; one in Matta-
pan; one in Roslindale; and one in West Roxbury.
SCHOOLS OF COOKERY.
There are twenty-six rooms fitted as kitchens and used for the
purposes of instruction in cookery; of which two are in East Boston;
two in Charlestown; six in Boston i^roper; one in South Boston; three
In Roxbury; six in Dorchester; two in Jamaica Plain; one in Allston;
one in Brighton; one in Roslindale; and one in West Roxbury.
EVENING SCHOOLS.
The Evening High School is on Montgomery street, and has branches
in East Boston and Charlestown High Schools.
ORDINARY EVENING SCHOOLS.
There are fourteen of these schools, held in the following-name^
school buildings:
Bigelow School, E street. South Boston; Comins School, Tremont
street, Roxbury Crossing; Dearborn School, Dearborn place, Roxbury;
Eliot School, North Bennet street; Franklin School, Waltham street;
Hancock School, Parmenter street; Lincoln School, Broadway, South
Boston; Lyman School, Paris and Gove streets, East Boston; Mather
School (Lyceum Hall), Meeting House Hill; Minot School, Neponset
avenue, Dorchester; Quincy School, Tyler street; Warren School,
Pearl and Summer streets, Charlestown; Washington Allston School,
Cambridge street, Allston; Wells School, Blossom street.
UNDERTAKEES.
11'
EVENING DRAWING SCHOOLS.
The term of the evening drawing schools begins on the third Monday
in October, and continues for sixty-six working nights.
There are six evening drawing schools. They are held at the follow-
ing-named places:
Charlestown, City Hall, City square; East Boston, old School-house,
Meridian street; Columbus avenue, 147 Columbus avenue; Roxbury,
2301 Washington street; Warren avenue, Public Latin School; School of
Design, Public Latin School.
SPECIAL LAW DEPARTMENT.
BOAED OF COMMISSIONERS.
Andrew J. Bailey, Chairman.
Albert E. Pillsburt.
The board was appointed by the Mayor as a special commission to
■draft a revision or consolidation of all the special laws relating to the
City.
UNDERTAKERS.
Appointed annually by the Board of Health, in accordance with R. L.,
Chap. 78, § 44.
list OF
Abrams, Barnett
Alexander, Alexis
Alexander, J. H.
Avdon, Samuel
Badaracco, Andrew A.
Balfe, Thomas J.
Banks, Walden
Barry, Michael
Barry, William
Belgard, Philip
Bennison, Charles E.
Bernstein, Morris H.
Brady, Patrick J.
Briggs, Frederick L.
Brown, Edwin G.
Brown, Frank E.
Bryant, Charles A.
Bryant, John E.
Bryant, T. Weston
JBurke, Edmund C.
JBurke, John B.
undertakers, city OF BOSTON.
Burke, Richard J.
Burroughs, Samuel M.
Callahan, Timothy F.
Cangiano, Michael
Caro, Solomon M.
Carpenter, George S.
Casey, Francis P.
Cassidy, William J,
Cavanaugh, John P.
Celler, Gustave
Chester, Charles E.
Cleary, James P.
Cobb, Charles W.
Cobb, Frank L.
Cobe, William
Colbert, Charles E.
Cole, Harry H.
Council, Austin H.
Crane, Frank E.
Crane, Horace R.
Crogan, James P.
1 Vacancy caused by the resignation of Patrick A. Collins.
118
MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
Crosby, Elizabeth A.
Crosby, Joseph P.
Curtis, David H.
Dacey, Charles M.
Dalzell, Fred W.
Dolan, Charles B,
Dolan, James W.
Dooley, David J.
Doolin, John
Dovraes, Aaron A.
Doyle, Thomas
Eastman, Alman L.
Fallon, John D.
Farrell, Michael A.
Feeley, Thomas
Feeney, John
Field, George P.
Field, George V.
Fitzgibbon, Edward D.
Flax, Harris
Gallivan, Joseph C.
Galvin, John J.
Gilmore, Edward J.
Gleason, Edward F.
Gleason, Reuben
Grace, Charles H.
Guggenheim, Joseph
Haynes, John O.
Hill, George
Hogue, Alphonse
Hutchins, Basil F.
Jacobovitz, Myer
Jacobs, Louis
Jones, Lewis L.
Keating, Thomas J.
Kelly, Bernard
Kelly, Michael J.
Lane, Thomas J.
Langone, Joseph A.
Lavery, Frank W.
Lavery, John TV.
Leary, Lewis W.
Lewers, Frank A.
Linnehan, Cornelius P.
Lippa, William
Long, George W.
Maloney, Frank S.
Mann, Lewis A.
Mannheimer, Herman
Marsh, William W.
McArdle, Henry
McCaffrey, Christopher P.
McCartney, Timothy
McGowan, John S.
McMackin, Bernard S.
Metcalf, Eugene H.
Mitchell, Michael J.
Morris, John J.
Morris, Lawrence F.
Muldoon, Joseph L.
Mullen, James
Mullen, Matthew J.
Mullen, Patrick H.
Murdock, James E.
Murphy, Joseph H.
Murphy, Michael J.
Murray, Edward A.
Murray, Frank A.
Nolan, John E.
Norton, Patrick H.
O'Donnell, James F.
Peak, John H. , jr.
Peyser, Jacob
Porchella, Michael J.
Rafferty, Patrick H.
Raftery, Thomas E.
Reade, George E.
Reade, Vincent de P.
Reade, Vincent de P., jr.
Regan, Martin
Repetto, J. A.
Ring, Timothy F.
Roach, Edward E.
Roeder, John R.
Roles, Roswell
Ruemker, Frank H.
Silverstein, Myer L.
Slyne, William F.
Smith, Priscilla M.
Spencer, William F.
Sprague, John W.
Stanetsky, Jacob
Stokes, Waldo J.
Sullivan, Jeremiah F.
WORKINGMEN'S LOAN ASSOCIATION. 119
Sullivan, Samuel J.
Sullivan, Timothy J.
Tinkham, Charles F.
Tinkham, Jeremiah
Tondorf, Joseph B.
Vinal, Frederick
Walsh, John F.
Waterman, Frank S.
Waterman, George H.
Watson, Bernard L.
White, Harry M.
Whitman, Lewis H.
Willard, George A.
Williams, Nicholas M.
Wittenburg, Solomon
VOTING MACHINE COMMISSIONERS.
Office, Old Court House, first floor.
[E. L., Chap. 11, § 271; Stat. 1901, Chap. 531.]
BOARD -OF COMMISSIONERS ON VOTING MACHINES.
John M. Minton, Chairman.
Melancthon W. BuRiiEN, Secretary.
COMMISSIONERS,
Patrick A. Collins, Mayor of Boston, ex officio.
Melancthon W. Burlen, Election Commissioner, ex officio.
David B. Shaw, Election Commissioner, ex officio.
John M. Minton, Election Commissioner, ex officio.
Charles R. Saunders, Election Commissioner, ex officio.
By Chapter 5'31 of the Acts of 1901, the power to determine upon,
purchase and order the use of voting and counting machines in Boston
is vested in a board consisting of the Election Commissioners and the
Mayor of the City. Expenditures under the act shall be deemed expen-
ditures of the Election Department. The machines purchased are to
be used at such caucuses and elections in Boston as the Election Com-
missioners may from time to time determine.
WORKINGMEN'S LOAN ASSOCIATION.
[Stat. 1888, Chap. 108, § 4.]
The Workingmen's Loan Association is managed by sixteen directors,
selected annually, fourteen chosen by corporators at the annual meeting
on the third Thursday in April, one appointed by the Governor, and one
appointed by the Mayor.
Charles C. Jackson, Director. Appointed by the Mayor.
120 MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
NEW ALDERMANIC DISTRICTS.
By Chapter 355 of the Acts of 1899, the Board of Aldermen of the
City of Boston is to consist of thirteen aldermen elected in eleven
aldermanic districts. Sections 1 and 2 of the Act show how the dis-
tricts are composed and how the aldermen are to be elected therein, as
follows :
" Section 1 . The Board of Aldermen of the City of Boston shall
consist of thirteen aldermen, and the city is hereby divided into eleven
aldermanic districts. The districts shall be composed, and the aldermen
shall be elected therein as follows:
" The first aldermanic district shall consist of wards one and two, and
one alderman shall be elected therein.
"The second aldermanic district shall consist of wards three, four
and five, and one alderman shall be elected therein.
"The third aldermanic district shall consist of wards six and eight,
and one alderman shall be elected therein.
" The fourth aldermanic district shall consist of wards seven, nine
and thirteen, and two aldermen shall be elected therein.
" The fifth aldermanic district shall consist of wards ten and nine-
teen, and one alderman shall be elected therein.
" The sixth aldermanic district shall consist of wards eleven and
twenty-five, and one alderman shall be elected therein.
"The seventh aldermanic district shall consist of wards twelve and
eighteen, and one alderman shall be elected therein.
" The eighth aldermanic district shall consist of wards fourteen and
fifteen, and one alderman shall be elected therein.
"The ninth aldermanic district shall consist of wards sixteen, twenty
and twenty-four, and two aldermen shall be elected therein.
"The tenth aldermanic district shall consist of wards seventeen and
twenty-one, and one alderman shall be elected therein.
"The eleventh aldermanic district shall consist of wards twenty- two
and twenty-three, and one alderman shall be elected therein.
" Section 2. The qualified voters of each district at every annual
municipal election shall give in their ballots for qualified voters of the
district, for aldermen, to the number to be elected therein as herein-
before specified, and the candidate receiving the greatest number of
such ballots shall be elected alderman, except that in the fourth dis-
trict and in the ninth district the person receiving the greatest number
of such ballots, and the person receiving the next greatest number of
such ballots, shall be elected aldermen."
WAKDS. 121
WARDS.
'New wards were established for the city in the year eighteen hundred
and ninety-five, the first division into new wards since the year 1875.1 An
attempt was made by the City Council to make a new division of wards
in the year 1885, and an ordinance to that effect was prepared by a
special committee appointed for the purpose and passed by the City
Council, and approved by the Mayor.^ Certain questions were raised,
however, in the General Court of 1886, relative to establishing State,
senatorial and representative districts, and as to whether such districts
should be established according to the territorial boundaries of cities
and towns and their wards as they existed on the first day of May, 1885,
or whether new ward lines, as in the case of the city of Boston, should
be followed. On May 21, 1886, the opinion of the Justices of the
Supreme Judicial Court was asked by the Legislature on this matter,
and they decided that the district divisions referred to must be made
according to territorial and other boundaries existing on the first day of
May, 1885, and that the new ward divisions were illegal. ^ On account
of this opinion of the Justices of the Supreme Judicial Court, an act
was passed by the Legislature in June, 1886,* which provided that the
several wards, precincts, and assessment districts of the several cities
of the Commonwealth, existing May 1, 1885, should be established as
the wards, precincts, and assessment districts of said cities, any acts or
ordinances of the city councils of said cities to the contrary notwithstand-
ing. The new division of wards was thus set aside and the ward lines
established in 1875 remained in effect until they were changed in 1895,
and established under the provisions of Chap. 417, of the Acts of 1893,
as follows :
WARD ONE.
Beginning at the intersection of the Harbor Commissioners' line and
the division line dividing the property of the Alonzo Crosby heirs and
Kichard F. Green; thence by the Harbor Commissioners' line to the
1 An ordinance providing for a new division of the city into wards, passed Nov. 16,
1857. An ordinance to make Breed's Island, so-called, part of Ward 1, passed Dec. 4,
1875. By Chap. 242, of the Acts of 1876, the City Council were directed to divide Ward
Twenty-two into two wards to toe called Wards 22 and 25. The division was accord-
ingly made by an ordinance passed May 27, 1876.
2 An ordinance making a new division of the city into wards, passed Dec. 23, 1885.
[Doc. 174 of 1885.]
3 Mass. Reports, vol. 142, p. 601.
* An act to establish wards, precincts and assessment districts in the cities of the
Commonwealth, Chap. 283, Acts of 1886.
122 MUXICIPAL KEGISTEK.
boundary line between Boston and Chelsea and the boundary line be-
tween Boston and Revere and the boundary line between Boston and
Winthrop to the shore line of Boston; thence by said line to Front
street; thence through the centre of Front street to Marion street;
thence through the centre of Marion street to Bennington street; thence
through the centre of Bennington street to Central square; thence across
Central square to Border street; thence through the centre of Border
street to the dividing line between the property of the Alonzo Crosby
heirs and Eichard F. Green; thence by said line to the point of beginning.
WARD TWO.
Beginning at the intersection of the Harbor Commissioners' line and
the division line dividing the proi^erty of the Alonzo Crosby heirs and
Eichard F. Green; thence by said line to Border street; thence through
the centre of Border street to Central square; thence across Central
square to Bennington street; thence through the centre of Bennington
street to Marion street; thence through the centre of Marion street to
Front street; thence through the centre of Front street to Porter street;
thence through the centre of Porter street to the Boston, Eevere Beach
& Lynn Eailroad; thence through the centre of the location of said
railroad to the shore line ; thence by the shore line to the Harbor Com-
missioners' line; thence by the Harbor Commissioners' line to the point
of beginning. The islands in Boston harbor are included in Ward Two.
WAKD THREE.
Beginning at the intersection of High and Pegitl streets in that part
of the city known as Charlestown; thence by the centre of Pearl street
to Medford street; thence by the centre of Medford street to the
easterly line of Brooks' wharf; thence by said line extended to the
boundary line in the Mystic river between Boston and Everett ; thence
along said boundary line and the line of the boundary between Boston
and Chelsea to the easterly side of Chelsea bridge ; thence by the water
to the south-westerly boundary line of the IS'avy Yard; thence by the
south-westerly boundary line of the Navy Yard to Chelsea street;
thence across Chelsea and Adams streets toMt. Vernon street; thence
through the centre of Mt. Vernon street to Mt. Vernon avenue;
thence through the centre of Mt. Vernon avenue and Chestnut street to
the street on the easterly side of Monument square ; thence through the
centre of said last described street to the street on the southerly side of
Monument square; thence through the centre of said last described
street and the centre of High street to the point of beginning.
WARD FOUR.
Beginning at the intersection of Lincoln street extended and the
boundary line between Boston and Somerville ; thence by said boundary
line to the boundary line between Boston and Everett; thence by said
WARDS. 123
boundary line to the extension of the easterly line of Brooks' wharf;
thence by said line to Medford street; thence through the centre of
Medford street to Pearl street; thence through the centre of Pearl street
to High street; thence through the centre of High street to Walker
street; thence through the centre of Walker street to Main street;
thence through the centre of Main street to Lincoln street; thence
through the centre of Lincoln street and Lincoln street extended to the
point of beginning.
WABD FIVE.
Beginning at the intersection of Lincoln street extended and the
boundary line between Boston and Somerville; thence through the
centre of Lincoln street extended and Lincoln street to Main street;
thence through the centre of Main street to Walker street; thence
through the centre of Walker street to High street; thence through the
centre of High street and the street on the southerly side of Monument
square to the street on the easterly side of Monument square ; thence
through the centre of said street to Chestnut street; thence through
the centre of Chestnut street and Mt. Yernon avenue to Mt. Vernon
street; thence through the centre of Mt. Vernon street to Adams street;
thence across Adams and Chelsea streets to the south-westerly boundary
line of the Navy Yard; thence by said boundary line to the water;
thence by the water to the boundary line between Boston and Cam-
bridge; thence by said boundary line and the boundary line between
Boston and Somerville to the point of beginning.
WARD SIX.
Beginning at the intersection of Beacon street and Bowdoin street;
thence through the centre of Bowdoin street to Cambridge street;
thence through the centre of Cambridge street to Bowdoin square;
thence across Bowdoin square to Chardon street; thence through the
centre of Chardon street to Portland street; thence through the centre
of Portland street to Travers street; thence through the centre of
Travers street to Charlestown street; thence through the centre of
Charlestown street to Causeway street; thence through the centre of
Causeway street to Prince street; thence through the centre of Prince
street to Charles-river bridge ; thence through the centre of Charles-
river bridge to the water; thence by the water and Harbor Commis-
sioners' line to the southerly side of Long wharf ; thence by said line
to Atlantic avenue; thence through the centre of Atlantic avenue to
Central street; thence through the centre of Central street to India
street; thence through the centre of India street to Milk street; thence
through the centre of Milk streetto Washington street; thence through
the centre of Washington street to School street; thence through the
centre of School street and Beacon street to point of beginning.
124 MUNICIPAL KEGISTEK.
WAKD SEVEN.
Beginning at the intersection of Charles street and Beacon street;
thence through the centre of Beacon street and School street to Wash-
ington street; thence through the centre of Washington street to Milk
street; thence through the centre of Milk street to India street; thence
through the centre of India street to Central street; thence through
the centre of Central street to Atlantic avenue; thence through the
centre of Atlantic avenue to the southerly side of Long wharf; thence
by said line to Harbor Commissioners' line ; thence by Harbor Commis-
sioners' line and the centre of Fort Point channel to Broadway ; thence
through the centre of Broadway to Way street; thence through the
centre of Way street to Harrison avenue ; thence through the centre of
Harrison avenue to Mott street; thence through the centre of Mott
street and Castle street to Tremont street; thence through the centre
of Tremont street to Pleasant street; thence through the centre of
Pleasant street to Columbus avenue; thence through the centre of
Columbus avenue to Park square ; thence across Park square to Charles
street; thence through the centre of Charles street to the point of
beginning.
WARD EIGHT.
Beginning at the intersection of Beacon street and Joy street; thence
through the centre of Joy street to Cambridge street; thence through
the centre of Cambridge street and West Boston bridge to the centre of
Charles river; thence through the centre of Charles river to Charles-
river bridge; thence through the centre of Charles-river bridge to
Prince street; thence through the centre of Prince street to Causeway
street; thence through the centre of Causeway street to Charlestown
street; thence through the centre of Charlestown street to Travers
street; thence through the centre of Travers street to Portland street;
thence through the centre of Portland street to Chardon street; thence
through the centre of Chardon street to Bowdoin square ; thence across
Bowdoin square to Cambridge street; thence through the centre of
Cambridge street to Bowdoin street; thence through the ceptre of
Bowdoin street to Beacon street; thence through the centre of Beacon
street to the point of beginning.
WARD NINE.
Beginning at the intersection of West Dedham and Tremont streets;
thence through the centre of Tremont street to Castle street; thence
through the centre of Castle street and Mott street to Harrison avenue ;
thence through the centre of Harrison avenue to Way street; thence
through the centre of Way street to Broadway ; thence through the
centre of Broadway to Fort Point channel; thence by Fort Point
channel to the southerly side of Dover-street bridge; thence by
the southerly side of Dover-street bridge to the Harbor Commis-
sioners' line on the easterly side of Fort Point channel; thence by
WARDS. 125
Baid line to the Kew York & New England Railroad ; thence through
the centre of the location of the Xew York & New England Railroad
to East Brookline street extended ; thence through the centre of East
Brookline street extended to the shore line ; thence by the shore line
to the extension of East Canton street ; thence through the centre of
East Canton-street extension and East Canton street to Shawmut
avenue ; thence through the centre of Shawmut avenue to West Ded-
ham street; thence through the centre of West Dedham street to the
point of beginning.
AVABX) TEN.
Beginning at the intersection of the centre of Muddy river and Boyl-
ston road; thence through the centre of Boylston road to Boylston
street; thence through the centre of Boylston street to Exeter street;
thence through the centre of Exeter street to Blagden street; thence
through the centre of Blagden street to Copley square ; thence across
Copley square to St. James avenue ; thence through St. James avenue
to Berkeley street; thence through the centre of Berkeley street to
Providence street; thence through the centre of Providence street to
Park square; thence across Park square to Pleasant street; thence
through the centre of Pleasant street to Tremont street; thence through
the centre of Tremont street to Dartmouth street; thence through the
centre of Dartmouth street to Warren avenue; thence through the
centre of Warren avenue to Columbus square ; thence across Columbus
square to West Xewton street; thence through the centre of West
Newton street to the Providence Division of the New York, New
Haven & Hartford Railroad; thence through the centre of the location
of the Providence Division of the New York, New Haven & Hart-
ford Railroad to Rogers avenue ; thence through the centre of Rogers
avenue to Huntington avenue ; thence through the centre of Plunting-
ton avenue to the Huntington entrance to Back Bay Fens; thence
through the centre of said entrance to the centre of Muddy river;
thence through the centre of Muddy river to the point of beginning.
WARD ELEVEN.
Beginning at the intersection of the centre of Charles river and St.
Mary's street oxtended; thence through the centre of Charles river
to the West Boston bridge ; thence through the centre of West Boston
bridge and Cajnbridge street to Joy street; thence through the centre of
Joy street to Beacon street; thence through the centre of Beacon street
to Charles street; thence through the centre of Charles street to Park
square; thence across Park square to Providence street; thence
through the centre of Providence street to Berkeley street; thence
through the centre of Berkeley street to St. James avenue; thence
through the centre of St. James avenue to Copley square ; thence across
Copley square to Blagden street; thence through the centre of Blagden
street to Exeter street; thence through the centre of Exeter street
226 MUNICIPAL EEGISTER.
to Boylston street; thence through the centre of Boylston street and
Boylston road to Muddy river; thence through the centre of Muddy
river to extension of St. Mary's street; thence through the centre of
the extension of St. Mary's street and St. Mary's street and St. Mary's
street extended to the point of beginning.
WAKD TWELVE.
Beginning at the intersection of the Providence Division of the Xew
York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad and West Newton street ; thence
through the centre of West Newton street to Columbus square ; thence
across Columbus square to Warren avenue ; thence through the centre of
Warren avenue to Dartmouth street; thence through the centre of
Dartmouth street and West Dedham street to Shawmut avenue ; thence
through the centi-e of Shawmut avenue to East Canton street; thence
through the centre of East Canton street and East Canton street ex-
tended to the shore line ; thence by the shore line and the centre of the
Eoxbury canal to Massachusetts avenue ; thence through the centre of
Massachusetts avenue to Albany street; thence through the centre of
Albany street to Northampton street; thence through the centre
of Northampton street to Fellows street; thence through the centre
of Fellows street to East Lenox street; thence through the centre of
East Lenox street to Washington street; thence through the centre
of Washington street to Camden street; thence through the centre of
Camden street to the Providence Division of the New York, New
Haven & Hartford Railroad ; thence through the centre of the location
of the Providence Division of the New York, New Haven and Hartford
Railroad to the point of beginning.
WABD THIRTEEN.
Beginning at the intersection of F street extended and the Harbor
Commissioners' line; thencethrough the centre of F street extended and
F street to West Broadway ; thence through the centre of West Broad-
way to E street; thence through the centre of E street to the Old Colony
Division of the New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad ; thence
through the centre of the location of the Old Colony Division of the
New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad to D street; thencethrough
the centre of D street to Dorchester avenue ; thence through the centre
of Dorchester avenue to the Old Colony Division of the New York,
New Haven & Hartford Railroad ; thence through the centre of the
location of the Old Colony Division of the New York, New Haven &
Hartford Railroad to the New York & New England Railroad ; thence
through the centre of the location of the New York & New England
Railroad to the Harbor Commissioners' line ; thence by said line to the
southerly side of Dover-street bridge ; thence by the southerly side
of said bridge to the centre of Fort Point channel; thence through
the centre of Fort Point channel to Harbor Commissioners' line; thence
by the Harbor Commissioners' line to the point of beginning.
WARDS. 127
WARD FOURTEEN.
Beginning at the intersection of F street extended and the Harbor
Commissioners' line ; thence by the Harbor Commissioners' line to the
southern extension of K street; thence through the centre of K street
extended and K street to East Sixth street; thence through the centre
of East Sixth street to H street; thence through the centre of H street
to East Broadway; thence through the centre of East Broadway to
Dorchester street; thence through the centre of West Broadway to F
street; thence through the centre of F street and F street extended to
the point of beginning.
WARD FIFTEEN.
Beginning at the intersection of the Old Colony Division of the Kew
York, New Haven & Hartford Eailroad and the New York & New Eng-
land Railroad ; thence through the centre of the location of the Old
Colony Division of the New York, New Haven & Hartford Eailroad
to Dorchester, avenue ; thence through the centre of Dorchester
avenue to D street; thence through the centre of D street to the Old
Colony Division of the New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad ;
thence through the centre of the location of the Old Colony Division of
the New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad to E street; thence
through the centre of E street to West Broadway ; thence through the
centre of West Broadway to Dorchester street; thence through the
centre of East Broadway to H street ; thence through the centre of H
street to East Sixth street; thence through the centre of East Sixth
stireet to K street; thence through the centre of K street and K street
extended to Harbor Commissioners' line ; thence by Harbor Commis-
sioners' line to proposed Strandway ; thence through the centre of pro-
posed Strandway to Old Harbor street extension; thence through the
centre of Old Harbor street extension and Old Harbor street to Burn-
ham street; thence through the centre of Bvirnham street to Mercer
street; thence through the centre of Mercer street to Newman street;
thence through the centre of Newman street to Dorchester street;
thence through the centre of Dorchester street to Andrew square;
thence across Andrew square to Swett street; thence through the
centre of Swett street to the New York & New England Railroad;
thence through the centre of the location of the New York and New
England Railroad to the point of beginning.
WARD SIXTEEN.
Beginning at the intersection of the New York & New England Eail-
road and Swett street; thence through the centre of Swett street to
Andrew square; thence across Andrew square to Dorchester street;
thence through the centre of Dorchester street to Newman street; thence
through the centre of Newman street to Mercer street ; thence through
the centre of Mercer street to Burnham street; thence through the
centre of Burnham street to Old Harbor street; thence through the
128 MUmCIPAL REGISTER
centre of Old Harbor street and Old Harbor street extended to the pro-
posed Strandway; thence through the proposed Strandway to the Old
Colony Division of the New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad;
thence through the centre of the location of the Old Colony Division of
the New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad to Crescent avenue;
thence through the centre of Crescent avenue and East Cottage street to
Boston street; thence through the centre of Boston and Columbia
streets to Quincy street; thence through the centre of Quincy street to
Blue Hill avenue; thence through the centre of Blue Hill avenue to
West Cottage street; thence through the centre of West Cottage street
and East Cottage street to the Ne-^^ York & New England Railroad;
thence through the centre of the location of the New York & New
England Railroad to the point of beginning.
WAKD SEVENTEEN.
Beginning at the intersection of Washington street and East Lenox
street; thence through the centre of East Lenox street to Fellows
street; thence through the centre of Fellows street to Northamp-
ton street; thence through the centre of Northampton street to Albany
street; thence through the centre of Albany street to Massachu-
setts avenue; thence through the centre of Massachusetts avenue to
the Roxbury canal ; thence through the Roxbury canal to East Brookline
street extended; thence through the centre of East Brookline street
extended to the New York & New England Railroad; thence by the
centre of the location of the New York & New England Railroad to
East Cottage street; thence through the centre of East Cottage and
West Cottage streets to Blue Hill avenue ; thence through the centre
of Blue Hill avenue to Moreland street; thence through the centre of
Moreland street to Warren street; thence through the centre of Warren
street to Washington street; thence through the centre of Washington
street to the point of beginning.
WAKD EIGHTEEN.
Beginning at the intersection of the Providence Division of the New
York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad and Camden street; thence
through the centre of Camden street to Washington street; thence
through the centre of Washington street to Warren street; thence
through the centre of Warren street to Dudley street ; thence through
the centre of Dudley street to Washington street; thence through the
centre of Washington street to Bartlett street; thence through the cen-
tre of Bartlett street to Eliot square; thence through the centre of
Roxbury street to Gay street; thence through the centre of Gay street
to Linden Park street; thence through the centre of Linden Park street
to Tremont street; thence through the centre of Tremont street to
Prentiss street; thence through the centre of Prentiss street to the
Providence Division of the New York, New Haven & Hartford Rail-
WARDS. 129
road ; thence through the centre of the location of the Providence Divi-
sion of the New York, New Haven cfe Hartford Railroad to the point of
beginning.
WARD NINETEEN.
Beginning at the intersection of the boundary line between Brookline
and Boston and Jamaicaway; thence by said boundary line and the
centre of Muddy river to the extension of the Huntington entrance to
Back Bay Fens ; thence by said entrance to Huntington avenue ; thence
through the centre of Huntington aveni;e to Rogers avenue; thence
through the centre of Rogers avenue to the Providence Division of
the Xew York, Jfew Haven & Hartford Railroad; thence through the
centre of the location of the Providence Division of the Xew York,
Xew Haven & Hartford Railroad to Prentiss street; thence through the
centre of Prentiss street to Tremont street ; thence through the centre
of Tremont street to Linden Park street; thence through the centre of
Linden Park street to Gay street; thence through the centre of Gay
street to Roxbury street; thence through the centre of Roxbury street
to Eliot square; thence across Eliot square to Highland street; thence
through the centre of Highland street to Marcella street; thence
through the centre of Marcella street to Centre street; thence through
the centre of Centre street to New Heath street; thence through the
centre of New Heath street and Heath street to Bickford street; thence
through the centre of Bickford street to Minden street; thence through
the centre of Minden street to Day street ; thence through the centre of
Day street to Grotto Glen; thence through the centre of Grotto Glen
and Grotto Glen extended to Jamaicaway; thence through the centre of
Jamaicaway to the ijoint of beginning.
WARD TWENTY.
Beginning at the intersection of the Old Colony Division of the New
York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad and proposed Sti-andway;
thence by the said Strandway to the Harbor Commissioners' line;
thence by the Harbor Commissioners' line to Greenwich street ex-
tended; thence through the centre of Greenwich street extended and
Greenwich street to Dorchester avenue ; thence through the centre of
Dorchester avenue to Centre avenue; thence through the centre of
Centre avenue and Centre street to Talbot avenue; thence through the
centre of Talbot avenue to Blue Hill avenue ; thence through the centre
of Blue Hill avenue to Quincy street; thence through the centre of
Quincy street to Columbia street; thence through the centre of Colum-
bia street and Boston street to Edward Everett square ; thence through
the centre of East Cottage street and Crescent avenue to the Old
Colony Division of the New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad ;
thence through the centre of the location of the Old Colony Division of
the New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad to the point of beginning.
130 MUNICIPAL EEGISTER.
WAKD TWENTY-ONE.
Beginning at Eliot square at the intersection of Highland street and
Bartlett street; thence through the centre of Bax'tlett street to "Washing-
ton street; thence through the centre of Washington street and Dudley-
street to "Warren street; thence through the centre of Warren street to
Moreland street; thence through the centre of Moreland street to Blue
Hill avenue; thence through the centre of Blue Hill avenue to Seaver
street; thence through the centre of Seaver street to Walnut avenue;
thence through the centre of Walnut avenue to Westminster avenue;
thence through the centre of Westminster avenue to Washington
street; thence through the centre of Washington street to Valentine
street; thence through the centre of Valentine street to Thornton street;
thence through the centre of Thornton street to Ellis street; thence
through the centre of Ellis street to Hawthorn street; thence through
the centre of Hawthorn street to Highland street; thence through the
centre of Highland street to the point of beginning.
WABD TWENTY-TWO.
Beginning at the intersection of the boundary line between Brookline
and Boston and Jamaicaway; thence through the centre of Jamaica-
way to the extension of Grotto Glen ; thence through the centre of the
extension of Grotto Glen and Grotto Glen to Day street; thence through
the centre of Day street to Minden street; thence through the centre
of Minden street to Bickford street; thence through the centre of
Bickf ord street to Heath street ; thence through the centre of Heath
street and New Heath street to Centre street; thence through the
centre of Centre street to Marcella street; thence through the centre
of Marcella street and Highland street to Hawthorn street; thence
through the centre of Hawthorn street to Ellis street; thence through
the centre of Ellis street to Thornton street; thence through the centre
of Thornton street to Valentine street; thence through the centre of
Valentine street to Washington street; thence through the centre of
Washington street to Westminster avenue; thence through the centre
of Westminster avenue to Walnut avenue; thence through the centre of
Walnut avenue and Sigourney street to Glen road; thence through
the centre of Glen road and Green street to the Providence Division of
the New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad ; thence through the
centre of the location of the Providence Division of the New York, New
Haven & Hartford Railroad to Carolina avenue; thence through the
centre of Carolina avenue to South street; thence through the centre
of South street to Centre street; thence through the centre of Centre
street to Myrtle street; thence through the centre of Myrtle street to
Pond street; thence through the centre of Pond street to Jamaicaway;
thence through the centre of Jamaicaway to Perkins street; thence
through the centre of Perkins street to Chestnut street; thence through
the centre of Chestnut street to the boundary line between Brookline
and Boston; thence by said line to the point of beginning.
WARDS. 131
WABD TWENTY-THREE.
Beginning at the intersection of the boundary line between Brook-
line and Boston and Perkins street; thence through the centre of
Perkins street to Jamaicaway ; thence through the centre of Jamaica-
way to Pond street; thence through the centre of Pond street to Myrtle
street; thence through the centre of Myrtle street to Centre street;
thence through the centre of Centre street to South street; thence
through the centre of South street to Carolina avenue, to the Provi-
dence Division of the New York, ISTew Haven & Hartford Railroad;
thence throvtgh the centre of the location of the Providence Division of
the New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad to Green street;
thence through the centre of Green street and Glen road to Sigourney
street; thence through the centre of Sigourney street and Walnut
avenue to Seaver street ; thence through the centre of Seaver street to
Blue Hill avenue; thence through the centre of Blue Hill avenue to
Back street; thence through the centre of Back street to the boundary
line between Hyde Park and Boston ; thence by the said boundary and
the boundary line between Boston and Dedham, and the boundary line
between Boston and Newton, and the boundary line between Boston
and Brookline to the point of beginning.
WARD TWENTY-FOUR.
Beginning at the intersection of Greenwich street extended and the
Harbor Commissioners' line; thence by the Harbor Commissioners'
line to the boundary line between Boston and Quincy; thence by the
said boundary line and the boundary line between Boston and Milton
and the boundary line between Boston and Hyde Park to Back street;
thence through the centre of Back street to Talbot avenue; thence
through the centre of Talbot avenue to Centre street; thence through
the centre of Centre street and Centre avenue to Dorchester avenue ;
thence through the centre of Dorchester avenue to Greenwich street;
thence through the centre of Greenwich street and Greenwich street
extended to the point of beginning.
WARD TWENTY-FIVE.
Beginning at the intersection of St. Mary's street extended and the
boundary line between Cambridge and Boston; thence by St. Mary's
street extended to the boundary line between Brookline and Boston ;
thence by said boundary line and the boundary line between Newton
and Boston, and the boundary line between Watertown and Boston,
and the boundary line between Cambridge and Boston to the point of
beginning.
132 MUNICIPAL KEGISTER.
WARD PRECINCTS.
The new wards established by Chap. 2 of the Ordinances of 1895 were
divided into precincts by the Board of Aldermen, as follows :
WAKD ONE.
Nme Precincts — 3,897 Voters.
Precinct One. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line: Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Marion and Bennington streets; thence by the centre line of Bennington
street to Central square; thence across Central square to Border street;
thence by the centre lines of Border, Eutaw, Meridian, Lexington, and
Marion streets to the point of beginning — 430 voters.
Precinct Two. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line: Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Marion and Lexington streets; thence by the centre lines of Lexington,
Meridian, Eutaw, Brooks, Saratoga, and Marion streets to the point of
beginning — 427 voters.
Precinct Three. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line : Beginning at the intersection of Brooks and Eutaw
streets; thence by the centre lines of Eutaw and Border streets to the
ward line separating Ward One from Ward Two; thence by said ward
line through Boston harbor to the centre line of Meridian-street bridge;
thence by the centre line of Meridian-street bridge ; thence by the cen-
tre line of said bridge and the centre lines of Condor and Brooks streets
to the point of beginning — 483 voters.
Precinct Four. — All that part of said ward lying within the f ollowing-
•described line.: Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of Lex-
ington and Brooks streets; thence by the centre lines of Brooks and
Condor streets and Meridian-street bridge to the ward line in Chelsea
creek; thence by said ward line to the line separating the Third from
the Fourth sections, as shown by the plans of the East Boston Company;
thence by said line to the centre line of Eagle street; thence by the
centre lines of Eagle, Trenton, Prescott, and Lexington streets to the
point of beginning — 451 voters.
Precinct Five. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line: Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Brooks and Lexington streets ; thence by the centre lines of Lexington,
Prescott, Chelsea, Putnam, Bennington, and Brooks streets to the point
of beginning — 497 voters.
WARD PRECINCTS. 133
Precinct Six. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line: Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Marion and Bennington streets ; thence by the centre lines of Marion,
Saratoga, Brooks, Bennington, and Putnam streets, and Putnam street
extended to the ward line in Boston harbor; thence by said ward line
and the centre lines of Marion street extended and Marion street to the
point of beginning — 456 voters.
Precinct Seven. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Putnam and Chelsea streets; thence by the centre lines of Chelsea,
Prescott, Trenton, and Eagle streets to Eagle square; thence across
Eagle square and by the centre lines of Chelsea street, Glendon place,
Bremen, Saratoga and Swift streets, and Swift street extended to the
ward line in Boston harbor; thence by said ward line to the centre line
of Putnam street extended ; thence , by said line of Putnam street
extended and the centre line of Putnam street to the point of begin-
ning— 490 voters. '
Precinct Eight. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line : Beginning in Boston harbor at the intersection of
the ward line and Swift street extended ; thence by the centre line of
Swift street extended and the centre lines of Swift, Saratoga, and Bre-
men streets, Glendon place and Chelsea street to Eagle square; thence
across Eagle square to the line separating Section Three from Section
Four, as shown by the plans of the East Boston Company ; thence by
said line extended to the ward line in Chelsea creek; thence by said
ward line through Chelsea creek and Boston harbor to the point of
beginning — -490 voters.
Precinct Nine. — All that part of said ward known as Breed's island
bounded by Chelsea creek, Belle Isle inlet, and Boston harbor — 173
voters.
WAKB TAVO.
Eight Precincts — 3,596 Voters.
Precinct One. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line: Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Meridian and Gove streets; thence by the centre lines of Meridian
street to Central square; thence across said square and by the centre
lines of Porter, Orleans, Decatur, and Gove streets to the point of
beginning — 479 voters.
Precinct Two. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line: Beginning in Boston harbor at the intersection of
the centre line of New street extended and the ward line; thence by
said ward line to the line separating Ward Two from Ward One ; thence
by said ward line to the centre line of Border street; thence by the cen-
tre line of Border street to Central square ; thence across Central square
and by the centre lines of Meridian, Maverick, Border, Cross, and Xew
streets, and Kew street extended to the point of beginning — 450 voters.
134 MUXICIPAL KEGISTEK
Precinct Three. — All that part of said ward lying -vvithin the follow-
ing-described line : Beginning in Boston harbor at the intersection of
the centre line of Lewis street extended and the ward line ; thence by
said ward line to the centi-e line of ISTew street extended; thence by
the centre lines of 'New street extended, New, Cross, Border, and Mav-
erick streets, Maverick square, Lewis street, and Lewis street extended
to the point of beginning- — -451 voters.
Precinct Four. — All that jiart of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line : Beginning in Boston harbor at the intersection of
the centre line of Orleans street extended and the ward line ; thence by
said ward line to the centre line of Lewis street extended and the centre
lines of Lewis street, Maverick square. Meridian, Gove, Decatur, Or-
leans, Maverick, Cottage, Everett, and Orleans streets, and Orleans
street extended to the point of beginning — 437 voters.
Precinct Five. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line: Beginning in Boston harbor at the intersection of
the centre line of Cottage street extended and the ward line; thence by
said ward line to the centre line of Orleans street extended; thence
by said extended line and the centre lines of Orleans, Everett, and
Cottage streets, and Cottage street extended to the point of begin-
ning— 366 voters.
Precinct Six. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line : Beginning in Boston Harbor at the intersection of the
centre line of Cottage street extended and the ward line; thence by
said ward line to the centre line of Everett street extended ; thence
by said extended line and the centre lines of Everett, Lanison. Webster,
and Cottage streets, and Cottage street extended to the point of begin-
ning— 456 voters.
Precinct Seven. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line : Beginning in Boston harbor at the intersection of the
centre line of Everett street extended and the ward line ; thence by said
extended line and the centre lines of Everett, Lamson, Webster, Cot-
tage, Maverick, Orleans, and Porter streets, and Porter street extended
to the ward line in Boston harbor; thence by said ward line to the point
of beginning — 474 voters.
Precinct Fight. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line: Beginning in Boston harbor at the intersection of
the ward line and the centre line of Porter street extended ; thence by
said extended line and the centre lines of Porter, Bennington, and
Marion streets, and Marion street extended to the ward line in Boston
harbor ; thence by said ward line to the point of beginning, including
the islands in Boston harbor — 483 voters.
WARD PEECIXCTS. 135
WARD THREE.
Six Precincts — 3,036 Voters.
Precinct One. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line: Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of Cross
and High streets; thence by the centre lines of High, Pearl, Bunker
Hill, Trenton, and Cross streets to the point of beginning — 494 voters.
Precinct Two. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line: Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Monument and Bunker Hill streets ; thence by the centre lines of Bun-
ker Hill, Pearl, Medford, and Monument streets to the point of begin-
ning— 531 voters.
Precinct Three. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Bunker Hill and Edgeworth streets ; thence by the centre lines of Edge-
worth and Tremont streets, Monument square, High, Cross, Trenton,
and Bunker Hill streets to the point of beginning — 477 voters.
Precinct Four. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line: Beginning at the intersection of the Harbor Commis-
sioners' line in Mystic river and Chelsea bridge ; thence by the centre
lines of Chelsea bridge, Chelsea, Medford, Corey, Moulton, Vine, Bun-
ker Hill, Monument, and Medford streets, the ward line between Ward
Three and Ward Four, and the Harbor Commissioners' line in Mystic
river to the i^oint of beginning — 523 voters.
Precinct Five. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line: Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Bainbridge and Chelsea streets; thence by the centre line of Chelsea
street and the ward line between Wards Three and Five, Monument
square, Tremont, Edgeworth, Bunker Hill, Vine, Decatur, and Bain-
bridge streets to the point of beginning — 540 voters.
Precinct Six. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line: Beginning at Charles river at the line dividing Ward
Three from Ward Five ; thence following said ward line by the south-
westerly boundary line of the Navy Yard to Chelsea street; thence by
the centre lines of Chelsea, Bainbridge, Decatur, Vine, Moulton, Corey,
Medford, and Chelsea streets, and the centre line of Chelsea bridge to
the ward line; thence by said ward line to the point of beginning —
471 voters.
WARD FOUR.
Six Precincts — 2,795 Voters.
Precinct One. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of Pearl
and Bunker Hill streets; thence by the centre lines of Bunker Hill,
Quincy, Medford, and Pearl streets to the point of beginning — 491
voters.
136 MUNICIPAL EEGISTEK.
Precinct Two. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line: Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Bunker Hill and Pearl streets; thence by the centre lines of Pearl, High,
Walker, Main, and Lincoln streets, Eutherford avenue, Tibbetts Town
Way, Hancock square, Eden, Russell, Walker, Wall, Sullivan, and Bun-
ker Hill streets to the point of beginning — 446 voters.
Precinct Three. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of Bun-
ker Hill and Sullivan streets; thence by the centre lines of Sullivan, Wall,
Walker, Eussell, and Eden streets, Hancock square, Tibbetts Town Way,
Eutherford avenue, Middlesex, Auburn, and Bunker Hill streets to the
point of beginning — 517 voters.
Precinct Four. — -AH that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Medf ord and Quincy streets ; thence by the centre lines of Quincy, Au-
burn, and Middlesex streets, Eutherford avenue, Thorndike, Main,
Charles, Bunker Hill, Baldwin, and Medford streets to the point of
beginning — 501 voters.
Precinct Five. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line : Beginning at the North channel in Mystic river, at the
line dividing Ward Three from Ward Four; thence by said ward line to
the centre line of Medford street; thence by the centre lines of Medford,
Baldwin, Bunker Hill, Charles, Main, and Thorndike streets and Euth-
erford avenue to the centre line of location of Boston & Lowell Freight
Eailroad ; thence by the said centre of location and the centre lines of
Main street and Mystic avenue to the boundary line between Boston and
Somerville ; thence by said boundary line and the boundary line between
Boston and Everett to the point of beginning — 444 voters.
Precinct Six. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line: Beginning at the intersection of the centre line of
Eutherford avenue and the ward line between Wards Four and Five;
thence by said ward line to the boundary line between Boston and
Somerville ; thence by said boundary line to the centre line of Mystic
avenue; thence by the centre lines of Mystic avenue and Main street
and the centre of the location of the Boston & Lowell Freight Eailroad
to the centre line of Eutherford avenue; thence by said centre line to
the point of beginning — 396 voters.
WARD FIVE.
Six Precincts — 2,720 Voters.
Precinct One. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line: Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Monument avenue and Main street; thence by the centre lines of Main,
Walker, High, Pleasant, and Warren streets, and Monument avenue to
the point of beginning — 4.31 voters.
Precinct Two. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
WARD preci:n'cts. 137
described line: Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Chelsea street and City square; thence by the centre lines of City square, .
Main street, Monument avenue, Warren and Pleasant streets, Monument
square, Chestnut street, Mt. Vernon avenue, Mt. Vernon, Adams, Com-
mon, Park, Joiner, and Chelsea streets to the point of beginning — 541
voters.
Precinct Three. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line : Beginning at Charles river at the intersection of the
centre line of Warren bridge with the ward line; thence by the centre
lines of Warren bridge, Warren avenue, City square, Chelsea, Joiner,
Park, Common, and Adams streets to the ward line; thence fol-
lowing the said ward line along the south-westerly boundary of the
jSTavy Yard and through Charles river to the point of beginning — 470
voters.
Precinct Four. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre line of
Warren bridge and the ward line separating Ward Five from Ward
Eight; thence by the ward line of Ward Five to the centre line of Ar-
row street extended ; thence by said centre line and the centre lines of
Arrow, Bow, Devens, and Main streets, City square, Warren avenue,
and Warren bridge to the point of beginning — 339 voters.
Precinct Five. — -All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line: Beginning at the intersection of the centre line of Arrow
street extended and the ward line ; thence following the ward line to its
intersection with the centre line of Austin street; thence by the centre
lines of Austin and Chapman streets, Eutherford avenue, Austin, Main,
Devens, Bow, and Arrow streets, and Arrow street extended to the point
of beginning — 516 voters.
Precint Six. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line: Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Main and Austin streets ; thence by the centre lines of Austin street,
Eutherford avenue. Chapman and Austin streets to the ward line;
thence by said ward line to the division line between Wards Four and
Five ; thence by said division line to its intersection with the centre line
of Main street; thence by the centre line of Main street to the point of
beginning — 423 voters.
WAKD SIX.
Eight Precincts — 3,498 Voters.
Precinct One. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line: Beginning in Boston harbor at the intersection of the
ward line and the centre line of Hanover street extended; thence by
said centre line extended and the centre lines of Hanover, Commercial,
and ISTorth streets, Hanover avenue. Charter, Foster, and Commercial
streets, to the centre line of Charles-river bridge ; thence by said centre
line to the ward line in Charles river; thence by said ward line to the
point of beginning — 400 voters.
238 MUNICIPAL EEGISTEK.
Precinct Tioo. — All that part of said ward lying within tlie following-
described line: Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of Com-
mercial and Foster streets; thence by the centre lines of Foster, Charter,
Salem, Sheafe, Margaret, Prince, and Commercial streets to the point of
beginning — 424 voters.
Precinct Three. — All that part of said Avard lying within the follow-
ing-described line: Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Charter and Hanover streets ; thence by the centre lines of Hanover,
Prince, Margaret, Sheafe, Salem, and Charter streets to the point of
beginning — 449 voters.
Precinct Four. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line: Beginning in Boston harbor at the intersection of the
ward line and the centre line of Eastern avenue extended ; thence by
said extended centre line and the centre lines of Eastern avenue, Com-
mercial, Lewis, and North streets. North square. Prince and Hanover
streets, Hanover avenue. North, Commercial, and Hanover streets, and
Hanover street extended to the ward line in Boston harbor; thence by
said ward line to the point of beginning — 432 voters.
Precinct Five. — ^All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line: Beginning in Boston harbor at the line dividing Ward
Six from "Ward Seven; thence following said ward line to Milk street;
thence by the centre lines of Milk, Washington, School, and Tremont
streets to Scollay square; thence through Scollay square and by the
centre lines of Court, Hanover, Salem, and Prince streets, North square.
North, Lewis, and Commercial streets, Atlantic and Eastern avenues,
and the line of Eastern avenue extended to the ward line in Boston har-
bor; thence by said ward line to the point of beginning — 432 voters.
Precinct Six. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line: Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Tremont and Beacon streets; thence by the centre lines of Beacon,
Bowdoin and Cambridge streets to Bowdoin square ; thence across said
square and by the centre line of Court street to Scollay square; thence
through Scollay square and by the centre line of Tremont street to the
point of beginning — 424 voters.
Precinct Seven. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line: Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Hanover and Court streets; thence by the centre line of Court street to
Bowdoin square ; thence across Bowdoin square and by the centre lines
of Chardon, Portland, Travers, Beverly, Cooper, North Margin, Thacher,
Prince, Salem, and Hanover streets to the point of beginning — 453
voters.
Precinct Eiglit. — All that partof said ward lying within the following-
described line : Beginning at the centre lines of Commercial and Prince
streets ; thence by the centre lines of Prince, Thacher, North Margin,
Cooper, Beverly, Travers, Charlestown, and Causeway streets to the
point of beginning — 484 voters.
WARD PRECINCTS. 139
■\VAKD SEVEN.
Six Precincts — 3,036 Voters.
*Precinct One. — All that part of said ward lying witliin the following-
described line: Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Atlantic avenue and Beach street ; thence by the centre lines of Beach,
Washington, La Grange, Tremont, Boylston, Charles, Beacon, School,
Washington, Milk, India and Central streets, and Atlantic avenue, to the
ward line between Long wharf and Central wharf; thence by said ward
line and the ward line in Boston harbor to the centre line of Congress
street; thence by the centre line of Congress street and Atlantic avenue
to the point of beginning — 545 voters.
Precinct Two. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line: Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Tremont and Boylston streets; thence by the centre lines of Tremont
and Pleasant streets to Park square; thence across Park square and by
the centre line of Boylston street to the point of beginning — 437 voters.
Precinct Three. — All that part of said ward lying witliin the follow-
ing-described line: Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Harrison avenue and Beach street; thence by the centre lines of Har-
rison avenue. Pine and Warrenton streets, Shawmut avenue, Tremont,
La Grange, AYashington and Beach streets to the point of beginning —
443 voters.
Precinct Four. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line: Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Harrison avenue and Pine street; thence by the centrelines of Harrison
avenue, Motta, Castle and Tremont streets, Shawmut avenue, Warren-
ton and Pine streets to the point of beginning — 518 voters.
Precinct Five. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line: Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Albany and Harvard streets; thence by the centre lines of Albany and
Way streets, Harrison avenue and Haiward street to the point of begin-
ning— 528 voters.
* Precinct Six. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line: Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Albany street and Broadway; thence by the centre lines of Albany and
Harvard streets, Harrison avenue and Beach street, Atlantic avenue
and Congress street and Congress-street bridge to the ward line in Fort
Point channel; thence by said ward line to the centre line of Broadway;
thence by said centre line to the point of beginning — 565 voters.
WARD EIGHT.
Six Precincts — 3,548 Voters.
Precinct One. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Causeway and Charlestown streets ; thence by the centre lines of Cause-
* The lines of Precincts One and Six were revised as set fortli above, by vote of
the Board of Aldermen, April 4, 1S9S, and approved by the Mayor, April 6, 1898.
140 MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
way, Wall, Minot, .and Leverett streets to Craigie's bridge; thence by
the centre of Craigie's bridge to the ward line in Charles river; thence
by said ward line to the centre line of Charles-river bridge ; thence by
said line to Causeway street; thence by the centre line of Causeway
street to the point of beginning — 546 voters.
Precinct Two. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line: Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines
of Causeway and Charlestown streets; thence by the centre lines of
Charlestown, Travers, Portland, and Chardon streets to Bowdoin
square; thence across Bowdoin sqviare to Cambridge street; thence
through the cientre lines of Cambridge, Chambers, Green, Leverett, and
Causeway streets'to the point of beginning — 642 voters.
Precinct Three. — All that part of said Avard lying within the follow-
ing-described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Cambridge and Bowdoin streets; thence by the centre lines of Bowdoin,
Beacon, Joy, and Cambridge streets to the point of beginning — 583
voters.
Precinct Four. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Wall and Causeway streets ; thence by the centre lines of Causeway,
Leverett, Green, Chambers, Eaton, North Russell, Parkman, Blossom,
Allen, Spring and Chambers streets to Hammond avenue; thence by
the centre line of Hammond avenue, Leverett, Cotting, and Wall streets
to the point of beginning — 614 voters.
Precinct Five. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line: Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Spring and Poplar streets; thence by the centre lines of Poplar street
and Poplar street extended to the ward line in Charles river; thence by
said ward line to the centre of Craigie's bridge; thence by the centre
lines of Craigie's bridge, Leverett, Minot, Wall, Cotting, and Leverett
streets, Hammond avenue, Chambers and Spring streets to the point of
beginning — 556 voters.
Precinct Six. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line: Beginning at the intersection of the centxe lines of
Chambers and Cambridge streets; thence by the centre line of Cam-
bridge street to the ward line in Charles river; thence by said ward
line to the centre line of Poplar street extended; thence by the centre
lines of Poplar street extended. Poplar, Spring, Allen, Blossom, Park-
man, North Russell, Eaton, and Chambers streets to the point of begin-
ning— 607 voters.
WAKD NINE.
Seven Precincts — 3,700 Voters.
Precinct One. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line: Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Harrison avenue and Florence street; thence by the centre lines of
WAED PKECIXCTS. 141
Florence, Washington, Compton, Tremont, Castie. and Motte streets,
and Harrison avenue to the point of beginning — 522 voters.
Precinct Tiuo. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line: Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Harrison avenue and Fay street; thence by the centre lines of Fay,
Dover, Washington, and Groton streets, Shawmut avenue, Dover, Tre-
mont, Compton, Washington, and Florence streets, and Harrison avenue
to the point of beginning — 591 voters.
Precinct Three. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre line of
Broadway bridge and the ward line ; thence by said ward line through
Fort Point channel to its intersection with the centre line of Bristol
street extended ; thence by said centre line extended and the centre lines
of Bristol street, Harrison avenue. Way street, Broadway, and Broadway
bridge to the point of beginning — 513 voters.
Precinct Four. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre line of
Bristol street extended and the ward line in Fort Point channel; thence
by said ward line through Fort Point channel and South Bay to its inter-
section with the centre line of Wareham street extended ; thence by said
centre line extended and the centre lines of Wareham, Maiden, Wash-
ington, Waltham, and Bi-adford streets, Shawmut avenue, Groton,
Washington, Dover, Fay, and Bristol streets, and Bristol street extended
to the point of beginning — 486 voters.
Precinct Five. — All that part of said ward lying within -the follow-
ing-described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Tremont and Dover streets; thence by the centre lines of Dover street,
Shawmut avenue, Bradford, Waltham, and Tremont streets to the point
of beginning — 508 voters.
Precinct Six. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line: Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of West
Dedham and Tremont streets; thence by the centre lines of Tremont,
Waltham, AVashington, and West Dedham streets to the point of begin-
ning— 541 voters.
Precinct Seven. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Shawmut avenue and West Dedham street; thence by the centre lines
of West Dedham, Washington, Maiden, Wareham, and Wareham street
extended to the centre line of location of the New York & New England
Kailroad ; thence by said centre line of location to its intersection with
the centre line of East Brookline street extended; thence by said ex-
tended centre line to its intersection with the harbor line ; thence by
said harbor line to its intersection with the centre line of East Canton
street extended; thence by said extended centre line and the centre
lines of East and West Canton streets and Shawmut avenue to the point
of beginning — 539 voters.
1^2 MUNICIPAL REGISTER
WAKD TEN.
Nine Precincts — 3,931 Voters.
Precinct One. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line: Beginning at the intei'section of the centre lines of
Pleasant and Tremont streets ; thence by the centre lines of Tremont,
Church, Winchester, and Ferdinand streets, Columbus avenue, Berkeley
and Providence streets to Park square; thence across Park square to the
centre line of Pleasant street; thence by the centre line of Pleasant
street to the point of beginning — 464 voters.
Precinct Two. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Tremont and Church streets; thence by the centre line of Tremont
street to the centre line of location of the Boston & Albany Railroad ;
thence by said centre line of location to its intersection with the centre
line of location of the Providence Division of the New York, New
Haven & Hartford Railroad; thence by said centre line of location to
its intersection of the centre line of Berkeley street; thence by the
centre lines of Berkeley street, Columbus avenue, Ferdinand, Winches-
ter, and Church streets to the point of beginning — 446 voters.
Precinct Three — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Tremont and Appleton streets; thence by New York, New Haven &
Hartford Railroad ; thence by the centre lines of Appleton, Dartmouth,
Chandler, and Clarendon streets, and Columbus avenue, to the centre
line of the location of the Boston & Albany Railroad; thence by said
centre line of location to its intersection with the centre line of Tremont
street; thence by the centre line of Tremont street to the point of
beginning — 420 voters.
Precinct Four. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Tremont and Appleton streets; thence by the centre lines of Tremont,
Dartmouth and Appleton streets to the point of beginning — 444 voters.
Precinct Five. — Beginning at the intersection of the centre line of
Columbus avenue and the centre line of location of the Boston & Albany
Railroad; thence by said centre line of location to the centre line of
location of the Providence Division of the New York, New Haven &,
Hartford Railroad ; thence by said centre line of location to the centre
line of Yarmouth street; thence by the centre lines of Yarmouth street,
Columbus avenue. Chandler and Clarendon streets and Columbus ave-
nue to the point of beginning — 456 voters.
Precinct Six. — Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Warren and Dartmouth streets ; thence by the centre lines of Dartmouth
street, Columbus avenue, and Yarmouth street to the intersection of
the centre line of Yarmouth street with the centre line of location of
the Providence Division of the New York, New Haven & Hartford Rail-
WARD PRECIjSTCTS. 243
road ; thence by said centre line of location to the centre line of West
iSTewton street; thence by the centre line of AVest Newton street to and
across Columbus square and by the centre line of Warren avenue to the
point of beginning — 411 voters.
Precinct Seven. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line: Beginning at the intersection of the centre line of
location of the Providence Division of the New York, New Haven &
Hartford Railroad and the centre line of West Newton street; thence by
the centre lines of West Newton street, Huntington avenue, Norway,
Falmouth, and Dalton streets, and Dalton street extended across the
Boston & Albany Railroad to the centre line of Boylston street; thence
by the centre lines of Boylston, Exeter, and Blagden streets across
Huntington avenue to the centre line of St. James avenue ; thence by
the centre lines of St. James avenue and Berkeley street to the centre
line of the location of the Providence Division of the New York, New
Haven & Hartford Railroad ; thence by said centre line of location to
the point of beginning — 519 voters.
Precinct Eight. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line: Beginning at the intersection of the centre line
of West Newton street and the centre line of location of the Providence
Division of the New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad; thence
by the said centre line of location to the centre line of Massachusetts
avenue; thence by the centre lines of Massachusetts avenue and
Boylston street to the centre line of Dalton street extended; thence by
said extended centre line across the Boston & Albany Railroad, and by
the centre lines of Dalton, Falmouth, and Norway streets, Huntington
avenue and West Newton street to the point of beginning — 473
voters.
Precinct Nine. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre line of
Massachusetts avenue and the centre line of location of the Providence
Division of the New York, New Haven, & Hartford Railroad; thence
by the said centre line of location to the centre line of Rogers avenue ;
thence by the centre lines of Rogers and Huntington avenues and Hunt-
ington entrance to Back Bay Fens, and the centre line of Huntington
entrance extended to the centre line of Muddy River; thence by the
centre line of Muddy River to its intersection with the centre line of
Boylston road; thence by the centre lines of Boylston road, Boylston
street and Massachusetts avenue to the point of beginning 298
voters.
WARD ELEVEN.
Nine Precincts — 3,710 Voters.
Precinct One — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line: Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of Joy
and Mt. Vernon streets; thence by the centre lines of Mt. Vernon
street, Louisburg square, Pinckney, Anderson, Revere, Irving, Cam-
bridge and Joy streets to the point of beginning — 454 voters.
144 MUXICIPAL EEGISTER.
Precinct Tioo. — All that part of said ward lying witliin the following-
described line: Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Irving and Revere streets; thence by the centre lines of Revere, Ander-
son, Myrtle, Grove, Phillips, West Cedar, Cambridge and Irving
streets to the point of beginning — 530 voters.
Precinct Three. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Anderson and Pinckney streets ; thence by the centre lines of Pinckney
street, Louisburg square, Mount Vernon, West Cedar and Pinckney
streets to the ward line in Charles river ; thence by said ward line to the
West Boston bridge ; thence by the centre lines of said bridge, Cam-
bridge, West Cedar, Phillips, Grove, Myrtle and Anderson streets to
the point of beginning — 503 voters.
Precinct Four. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Joy and Beacon streets ; thence by the centre lines of Beacon and Otter
streets and of Otter street extended to the ward line in Charles river ;
thence by said ward line to the centre line of Pinckney street extended ;
thence by the centre lines of Pinckney street extended, Pinckney, West
Cedar, Mount Vernon and Joy streets to the point of beginning — 481
voters.
Precinct Five. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Arlington street and Commonwealth avenue ; thence by the centre lines
of Commonwealth avenue and Exeter street and Exeter street extended
to the ward line in Charles river ; thence by said ward line to the centre
line of Otter street extended ; thence by the centre lines of Otter street
extended, Otter, Beacon and Arlington streets to the point of begin-
ning— 374 voters.
Precinct Six. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of Park
square and Providence street ; 'thence by the centre lines of Providence
and Berkeley streets, St. James and Huntington avenues, Dartmouth
street. Commonwealth avenue, Arlington, Beacon and Charles streets
and Park square to the point of beginning — 334 voters.
Precinct Seven. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Dartmouth street and Huntington avenue ; thence by the centre lines of
Huntington avenue, Blagden, Exeter and Boylston streets, Massachu-
setts and Commonwealth avenues and Dartmouth street to the point of
beginning — 428 voters.
Precinct Eight. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Exeter street and Commonwealth avenue ; thence by the centre lines of
Commonwealth and Massachusetts avenues and Harvard bridge to the
ward line in Charles river ; thence by said ward line to the centre line
WAKD PRECIN'CTS. 145
of Exeter street extended ; tlieuce by the centre lines of Exeter street
extended and Exeter street to the point of beginning — 355 voters.
Precinct Nine. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Massachusetts avenue and Boylston street ; thence by the centre lines of
Boylston street, Boylston road and Muddy river to the extension of St.
Mary's street ; thence by the easterly line of the extension of St. Mary's
street and St. Mary's street to Ashby street ; thence by the centre line
of Ashby street and Ashby street extended to the ward line in Charles
river ; thence by said ward line to the centre line of Harvard bridge ;
thence by the centre lines of Harvai'd bridge and Massachusetts avenue
to the point of beginning — 251 voters.
WARD TWELVE,
Seven Precincts — 3,778 Voters.
Precinct One. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of Con-
cord square and Tremont street ; thence by the centre lines of Tremont
and Camden streets to the centre line of the location of the Providence
Division of the Xew York, New Haven & Hartford Eailroad ; thence by
said centre line of location to Greenwich park ; thence by the centre
lines of Greenwich park and Concord square to the point of beginning —
545 voters.
Precinct Two. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
West Brookline and Tremont streets ; thence by the centre lines of
Tremont street, Concord square and Greenwich park to the centre line
of the location of the Providence Division of the New York, New
Haven & Hartford Railroad ; thence by said centre line of location to
West Newton street ; thence by the centre line of West Newton street
to and across Columbus square to Warren avenue ; thence by the centre
line of Warren avenue to West Brookline street ; thence by the centre
line of West Brookline street to the point of beginning — 529 voters.
Precinct Three. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
West Canton and Washington streets ; thence by the centre lines of
Washington and West Brookline streets, Warren avenue, Dartmouth
and West Dedham streets, Shawmut avenue and AVest Canton street to
the point of beginning — 560 voters.
Precinct Four.- — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
West Brookline and Washington streets ; thence by the centre lines of
Washington and West Springfield streets, Shawmut avenue, Worcester,
Tremont and West Brookline streets to the point of beginning — 572
voters.
146 MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
Precinct Five. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of West
Springfield and Washington streets ; thence by the centre lines of Wash-
ington, Camden, Tremont and Worcester streets, Shawmut avenue and
West Springfield street to the point of beginning — 544 voters.
Precinct Six. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre iines of East
Concord and Albany streets ; thence by the centre lines of Albany,
Northampton, Fellows, East Lenox, Washington and East Concord
streets to the point of beginning — 541 voters.
Precinct Seven. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre line of
East Canton street extended to the ward line in South bay ; thence by
said ward line and the centre line of Roxbury canal to its intersection
with the centre line of Massachusetts avenue ; thence to the centre lines
of Massachusetts avenue, Albany, East Concord, Washington and East
Canton streets and East Canton street extended to the point of begin-
ning— 487 voters.
WARD THIRTEEN.
Eight Precincts — 3,803 Voters.
Precinct One. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
F and West Second streets ; thence by the centre lines of West Second,
E, West Third, B and West Second streets, Dorchester avenue, Broad-
way and Broadwny bridge to the centre of Fort Point channel ; thence
by the centre line of Fort Point channel and the Harbor Commissioners'
line to the centre line of F street extended ; thence by the centre lines
of F street extended and F street to the point of beginning — 482 voters.
Precinct Tioo. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line: Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
C and West Seventh streets ; thence by the centre lines of West Seventh
and B streets to the centre line of location of the Old Colony Division of
the New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad ; thence by said centre
line of location to the centre line of the location of the New York & New
England Railroad; thence by said centre line of location to the Harbor
Commissioners'" line ; thence by said Harbor Commissioners' line to the
southerly side of Dover-street bridge ; thence by the southerly side of
Dover-street bridge to the centre line of Fort Point channel ; thence by
the centre line of Fort Point channel to the centre line of Broadway
bridge ; thence by the centre lines of Broadway bridge, Broadway, A
and West Fourth streets to the centre line of location of the New York
& New England Railroad ; thence by said centre line of location to the
centre line of West Fifth street ; thence by the centre lines of West Fifth
and C streets to the point of beginning — 489 voters.
WARD PRECINCTS. 147
Precinct Three. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
B and West Fourth streets ; thence by the centre lines of West Fourth
and A streets, West Broadway, Dorchester avenue, West Second and B
streets to the point of beginning — -486 voters.
Precinct Four. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
West Fifth and C streets ; thence by the centre line of West Fifth street
and the centre line of the location of the New York & New England
Railroad and the centre lines of West Fourth, B, West Third and C
streets to the point of beginning — 469 voters.
Precinct Five. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
F street and West Broadway ; thence by the centre lines of West Broad-
way, C, West Third, E, West Second, and F streets to the point of be-
ginning— 497 voters.
Precinct Six. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line: Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
E and West Fifth streets ; thence by the centre lines of West Fifth and
C streets. West Broadway and E street to the point of beginning —
427 voters.
Precinct Seven. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
D street and Dorchester avenue ; thence by the centre lines of Dor-
chester avenue, B, West Seventh, C, West Fifth and D streets to the
point of beginning — 484 voters.
Precinct Fight. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
West Fifth and E streets ; thence by the centre line of E street and the
centre line of location of the Old Colony Division of the New York,
New Haven & Hartford Railroad and the centre lines of D and West
Fifth streets to the point of beginning -^469 voters.
WARD FOUBTEEN.
Eight Precincts — 3,603 Voters.
Precinct One. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
H street and East Broadway ; thence by the centre lines of East
Broadway, West Broadway, F street and F street extended to the
ward line in Boston harbor ; thence by said ward line to the centre line
of I street extended ; thence by said centre line extended and by the
centre lines of East First and H streets to the point of beginning —
573 voters.
Precinct Two. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
148
MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
K street and East Broadway ; thence by the centre lines of East Broad-
way, H, East First and I streets, and I street extended to tlie ward
line ; thence by said ward line to the centre line of K street extended ;
thence by the centre line of K street extended and of K street to the
point of beginning — 442 voters.
Precinct Three. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
K and East Sixth streets ; thence by the centre lines of East Sixth and
H streets, East Broadway and K street to the point of beginning —
400 voters.
Precinct Four. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre line of
L street extended to the ward line in Dorchester bay and said M-ard
line ; thence by said ward line to the centre line of K street extended ;
thence by the centre lines of K street extended, K street, East Broad-
way, L street and L street extended to the point of beginning — 409
voters.
Precinct Five. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre line of
N street extended to the ward line in Dorchester bay and said ward
line ; thence by said ward line to the centre line of L street extended ;
thence by the centre lines of L street extended, L street. East Broad-
way, M, East Sixth, and N streets and N street extended to the point
of beginning — 446 voters.
Precinct Six. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre line of
O street extended to the ward line in Dorchester bay and said ward line ;
thence by said ward line to the centre line of N street extended ; thence
by the centre lines of N street extended, N, East Sixth, and M streets,
East Broadway, O street and O street extended to the point of begin-
ning — 425 voters.
Precinct Seven. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of O
street and East Broadway ; thence by the centrelines of East Broadway,
K street and K street extended to the ward line in Boston harbor ;
thence by said ward line to the centre line of O street extended ; thence
by the centre lines of O street extended and O street to the point of
beginning — 428 voters.
Precinct Eight. — All that part of said ward lying easterly of the
centre line of O street from the ward line in Boston harbor to the ward
line in Dorchester bay — 480 voters.
WAKD FIFTEEN.
Eight Precincts— 3,563 Voters.
Precinct One. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre line of Dor-
WARD PRECINCTS. 149
Chester street and the centre line of location of the Old Colony Division
of the New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad ; thence by the
centre line of Dorchester street to and across Andrew square ; thence by
the centre line of Swett street and the centre lines of the locations of the
New York & New England Railroad and the Old Colony Division of
the New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad and the centre lines of
Dorchester avenue and D street and the centre line of location of the
Old Colony Division of the New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad
to the point of beginning — 366 voters.
Precinct Two. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of Old
Harbor and East Ninth streets ; thence by the centre lines of East Ninth,
Burnham, Mercer, Newman and Dorchester streets, and the centre line
of location of the Old Colony Division of the New York, New Haven
& Hartford Railroad, and the centre lines of E, West Eighth, East
Eighth and Old Harbor streets to the point of beginning — 442 voters.
Precinct Three. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of F
and West Eighth streets ; thence by the centre lines of West Eighth
and E streets, West Broadway, and F street to the point of beginning
— 490 voters.
Precinct Four. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Dorchester and West Eighth streets ; thence by the centre lines of West
Eighth and F streets. West Broadway and Dorchester street to the point
of beginning — 435 voters.
Precinct Five. — All that part of .oaid ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line : Beginning at tho intersection of the centre lines of
Old Harbor and East Eighth streets ; thence by the centre lines of East
Eighth, Dorchester and Old Harbor streets to the point of beginning —
474 voters.
Precinct Six. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of East
Broadway and G streets ; thence by the centre lines of G street and G
street extended to the Harbor Commissioners' line ; thence by the Har-
bor Commissioners' line to proposed Strandway and to Old Harbor-street
extension ; thence through the centre line of Old Harbor-street exten-
sion, Old Harbor and Dorchester streets and East Broadway to the point
of beginning — 400 voters.
Precinct Seven. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
East Broadway and H street ; thence through the centre lines of H, East
Eighth and I streets and I street extended to the Harbor Commission-
ers' line ; thence by the Harbor Commissioners' line to the centre line of
G street extended ; thence through the centre lines of G street extended,
G street and East Broadway to the point of beginning — 480 voters.
150 MUNICIPAL KEGISTER.
Precinct Eight. — All that part of said wai'd lying within the following-
described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of East
Sixth and K streets ; thence through the centre of K street and K street
extended to the Harbor Commissioners' line ; thence by the Harbor
Commissioners' line to I street extended ; thence through the centre of
I street extended, I, East Eighth, H and East Sixth streets to the point
of beginning — 476 voters.
WARD SIXTEEN.
Seven Precincts— 3,098 Voters.
Precinct One. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of Old
Harbor and Burnham streets ; thence through the centre lines of Old
Harbor street and Old Harbor street extended to the proposed Strandway ;
thence through the centre line of the proposed Strandway to the centre
line of location of the Old Colony Division of the New York, New
Haven & Hartford Eailroad ; thence through the centre of said location
and the centre lines of Hyde street, Dorchester avenue, Dorchester,
Newman, Mercer and Burnham streets to the point of beginning — 432
voters.
Precinct Two. — All that part -of said ward lying within the follow-
ing described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre line of
Hyde street and the centre line of location of the Old Colony Division
of the New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad ; thence by the cen-
tre line of said location to the centre line of Crescent avenue ; thence by
the central lines of Crescent and Dorchester avenues, Howell, Boston,
EUery and Swett streets, Dorchester avenue and Hyde street to the
point of beginning — 410 voters.
Precinct Three. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Dorchester avenue and East Cottage street ; thence by the centre lines of
East Cottage street and Norfolk avenue and the centre line of location
of the New York & New England Railroad to Swett street ; thence by
the centre lines of Swett, Ellery, Boston and Howell streets and
Dorchester avenue to the point of beginning — ^431 voters.
Precinct Four. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Boston and Dudley streets ; thence by the centre lines of Dudley and
East Cottage streets and the centre line of location of the New York &
New England Railroad to Norfolk avenue ; thence by the centre lines of
Norfolk avenue. East Cottage and Boston streets to the point of begin-
ning— 419 voters.
Precinct Five. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Magnolia and Robin Hood streets ; thence by the centre lines of Robin
WAKD PRECINCTS. 152
Hood, Hartford and Brookford streets, Blue Hill avenue. West Cottage,
Dudley and Magnolia streets to the point of beginning — 489 voters.
Precinct Six. — All that part of said v^ard lying within the following-
described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Columbia and Quincy streets ; thence by the centre lines of Quincy,
Magnolia, Wayland, Hartford, Robin Hood, Magnolia, Dudley, Han-
cock and Columbia streets to the point of beginning — 413 voters.
Precinct Seven. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Magnolia and Quincy streets ; thence by the centre lines of Quincy
street. Blue Hill avenue, Brookford, Hartford, Wayland and Magnolia
streets to the point of beginning — 504 voters.
WAKD SEVENTEEN.
Nine Precincts— 3,864 Voters.
Precinct One. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Washington and Hunneman streets ; thence by the centre lines of Wash-
ington, East Lenox, Fellows, Korthampton, Albany and Hunneman
streets to the point of beginning — 414 voters.
Precinct Tivo. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Washington and Hunneman streets ; thence by the centre lines of Hun-
neman, Albany, Palmer, Wiuslow, Taber, Warren and Washington
streets to the point of beginning — 428 voters.
Precinct Three. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Warren and Taber streets ; thence by the centre lines of Taber, Wins-
low, Palmer, Eustis, Dearborn, Dudley, Greenville, Winthrop, Fair-
land, Moreland and Warren streets to the point of beginning — 403
voters.
Precinct Four. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Moreland and Fairland streets ; thence by the centre lines of Fairland,
Winthrop, Greenville, Dudley, Adams, Eustis, Hampden and Dudley
streets. Blue Hill avenue and Moreland street to the point of beginning
— 464 voters.
Precinct Five. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Dearborn and Dudley streets ; thence by the centre lines of Dearborn,
Eustis, Albany, Yeoman, Hampden, Eustis, Adams and Dudley streets
to the point of beginning — 402 voters.
Precinct Six. ■ — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Albany and Yeoman streets ; thence by the centre lines of Albany
street, Massachusetts avenue and Roxbury canal to its intersection with
152 MUNICIPAL EEGISTEK.
the centre line of East Brookline street extended ; thence by the centre
line of East Brookline street extended to its intersection -with the centre
line of location of the JSTew York & New England Railroad ; thence by
the centre line of said location to its intersection with Massachusetts
avenue ; thence by the centre lines of Massachusetts avenue, Magazine
street, Norfolk avenue and Yeoman street to the point of beginning —
405 voters.
Precinct Seven. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Blue Hill avenue and Huckins street ; thence by the centre lines of Blue
Hill avenue, Dudley street, Hampden street, Norfolk avenue, Magazine,
George, Langdon, Dennis and Huckins streets to the point of begin-
ning— 464 voters.
Precinct Eight. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
East Cottage and Dudley streets ; thence by the centre Ikies of Dudley,
Langdon, George and Magazine streets and Massachusetts avenue to
the centre line of location of the New York & New England Eailroad ;
thence by said centre line of location to East Cottage street ; thence by
the centre line of East Cottage street to the point of beginning — 475
voters.
Precinct Nine. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
West Cottage street and Bhie Hill avenue ; thence by the centre lines of
Blue Hill avenue, Huckins, Dennis, Dudley and West Cottage streets to
the point of beginning — 409 voters.
WAKD EIGHTEEN.
Six Precincts — 3,743 Voters.
Precinct One. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line: Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines' of
Cabot and Weston streets; thence by the centre lines of Weston,
Tremont, and Ruggles streets, and the centre line of location of the
Providence Division of the New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad
to Camden street; thence by the centre lines of Camden, Tremont,
Hammond, Warwick, Windsor, and Cabot streets to the point of begin-
ning— 673 voters.
Precinct Two. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line: Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Washington and Woodbury streets; thence by the centre lines of Wood-
bury street, Shawmut avenue, Kendall, Tremont, Camden, and Wash-
ington streets to the point of beginning — 642 voters.
Precinct Three. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Washington and Sterling streets; thence by the centre lines of Sterling
street, Shawmut avenue, Windsor, Warwick, Hammond, Tremont, and
WARD PRECINCTS. 153
Kendall streets, Shawmut avenue, Woodbury and Washington streets
to the point of beginning — 603 voters.
Precinct Four. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line: Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Washington and Vernon streets; thence by the centre lines of Vernon,
Auburn, Ruggles, Cabot, and Windsor streets, Shawmut avenue.
Sterling and Washington streets to the point of beginning — 605
voters.
Precinct Five. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of Cabot
and Linden Park streets; thence by the centre lines of Linden Park,
Tremont, and Prentiss streets to the centre line of location of the Provi-
dence Division of the New York, ISTew Haven & Hartford Railroad;
thence by the said centre line of location to Ruggles street; thence by
the centre lines of Ruggles, Tremont, Weston, and Cabot streets to the
point of beginning — 019 voters.
Precinct Six. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line: Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Warren and Dudley streets; thence through the centre lines of Dudley,
Washington, and Bartlett streets to Eliot square ; thence through the
centre lines of Roxbury, Gay, Linden Park, Cabot, Ruggles, Auburn,
Vernon, Washington, and Warren streets to the point of beginning —
601 voters.
WARD NINETEEN.
Eight Precincts— 3,741 Voters.
Precinct One. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line: Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Parker and Conant streets; thence by the centre lines of Conant street
and Huntington avenue to the boundary line between Boston- and Brook-
line; thence by said boundary line and centre of Muddy River to the
extension of Huntington entrance to Back Bay Fens; thence by said
entrance to Huntington avenue ; thence by the centre line of Parker
street to the point of beginning — 448 voters.
Precinct Two. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line: Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of the
location of the Providence Division of the New York, New Haven &
Hartford Railroad and Station street; thence by the centre lines of
Station and Parker streets, Huntington and Rogers avenues to the centre
line of location of the Providence Division of the New York, New
Haven & Hartford Railroad; thence by the centre line of the location of
said railroad to the point of beginning — 509 voters.
Precinct Three. — All that part of said wai"d lying within the follow-
ing-described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Phillips and Tremont streets; thence by the centre lines of Tremont
street, Huntington avenue, Conant and Phillips streets to the point of
beginning — 497 voters.
154 MUNICIPAL KEGISTEE.
Precinct Four. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of the
location of the Providence Division of the New York, New Haven &
Hartford Kailroad and Cedar street; thence by the centre lines of Cedar,
Terrace, Alleghany, and Parker streets, Delle avenue, Bnrney, Phillips,
Conant, Parker, and Station streets to the centre line of location of the
Providence Division of the New York, New Haven & Hartford Rail-
road; thence by said centre line of location to the point of beginning —
510 voters.
Precinct Five. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line: Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Highland and Linwood streets; thence by the centre lines of Lin wood,
Centre, Gardner, and Roxbury streets, and Columbus avenue to the
centre line of location of the Providence Division of the New York, New
Haven & Hartford Railroad; thence by the centre line of location of
said railroad to Prentiss street; thence by the centre lines of Prentiss,
Tremont, Linden Park, Gay, Roxbury, and Highland streets to the
point of beginning — 489 voters.
Precinct Six. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line: Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Highland and Marcella streets ; thence by the centre lines of Marcella
and New Heath streets to the centre line of location of the Providence
Division of the New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad; thence by
said centre line of location to Columbus avenue; thence by the
centre lines of Columbus avenue, Roxbury, Gardner, Centre,
Linwood, and Highland streets to the point of beginning — 527
voters.
Precinct Seven. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
location of the Providence Division of the New York, New Haven &
Hartford Railroad and New Heath street; thence by the centre lines of
New Heath and Parker streets, Fisher, Parker Hill, and Huntington
avenues, Tremont and Burney streets, Delle avenue, Parker, Alleghany,
Terrace, and Cedar streets to the centre line of location of the Provi-
dence Division of the New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad;
thence by said centre line of location to the point of beginning — 356
voters.
Precinct Fight. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Parker and Heath streets ; thence by the centre lines of Heath, Bick-
ford, Minden, and Day streets. Grotto Glen and Grotto Glen extended
to Jamaica way; thence by the centre lines of Jamaicaway to the boun-
dary line between Boston and Brookline ; thence by said boundary line
to Huntington avenue; thence by the centre lines of Huntington, Parker
Hill, and Fisher avenues and Parker street to the point of beginning —
405 voters.
WAED PEECINCTS. 155
* WARD TWENTY.
, Ten Precincts — 7,341 Voters.
Precinct One. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Greenwich and Freeport streets ; thence by the centre lines of Freeport
street, Dorchester avenue, Ronisey, and Sydney streets, and Crescent
avenue, to the centre line of the location of the Old Colony system of
the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad ; thence by said cen-
tre line of location to its intersection with Columbia road ; thence by
said Columbia road to the Harbor Commissioners' line ; thence by the
Harbor Commissioners' line to Greenwich street extended ; thence
through the centre of Greenwich street extended to the point of begin-
ning— 724 voters.
Precinct Two. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Dorchester avenue and Thornley street ; thence by the centre lines of
Thornley, Pleasant, Stoughton, and Salcombe streets. Gushing avenue,
Jerome, and Hancock streets, and Columbia road, to Edward Everett
square ; thence through the centre of East Cottage street, Crescent ave-
nue, Sydney, and Eomsey streets, and Dorchester avenue to the point of
beginning — 756 voters.
Precinct Three. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Dorchester ayenue and Hancock street ; thence by the centre lines of
Hancock, High, Church, Bowdoin, and Quincy streets, Columbia road,
Hancock, and Jerome streets. Gushing avenue, Salcombe, Stoughton,
Pleasant, and Thornley streets, and Dorchester avenue to the point of
beginning — 717 voters.
Precinct Four. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Greenwich and Freeport streets ; thence by the centre lines of Green-
wich street, Dorchester avenue, Ellet, Adams, Piobinson, Draper, Long-
fellow, Topliff, Bowdoin, Church, High, and Hancock streets, Dorchester
avenue, and Freeport street to the point of beginning — 696 voters.
Precinct Five. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Dorchester avenue and Charles street ; thence by the centre lines of
Charles street, Geneva avenue, Tonawanda, Greenbrier, Bowdoin, Top-
liff, Longfellow, Draper, Eobinson, Adams, and Ellet streets, and Dor-
chester avenue to the point of beginning — 714 voters.
Precinct Six. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of Bow-
*The lines of the precincts of Ward Twenty were revised as set forth above, by an
order adopted by the Board of Aldermen, April 7, 1902, and -approved by the Mayor
April 9, 1902.
156 MUNICIPAL KEGISTEK.
doin and Washington streets ; thence by the centre line of Washington
street to the centre line of the location of the Midland Division of the
New York, New Haven and Hartford Eailroad ; thence by said centre
line of location to its intersection with the centre line of Quincy street ;
thence by the centre lines of Quincy and Bowdoin streets to the point
of beginning — 747 voters.
Precinct Seven. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Elmo street and Blue Hill avenue ; thence by the centre lines of Blue
Hill avenue and Quincy street to the centre line of the location of the
Midland Division of the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad ;
thence by said centre line of location to its intersection with the centre
line of Washington street ; thence by the centre lines of Washington,
Erie, and Elmo streets to the point of beginning — 769 voters.
Precinct Eight. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of Tal-
bot and Blue Hill avenues ; thence by the centre lines of Blue Hill ave-
nue, Elmo, Erie, and Washington streets to the centre line of location of
the Midland Division of the New York, New Haven and Hartford Rail-
road ; thence by said centre line of location to its intersection with the
centre line of Talbot avenue ; thence by the centre line of Talbot ave-
nue to the point of beginning — 782 voters.
Precinct Nine. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Washington street and Talbot avenue ; thence by the centre line of Tal-
bot avenue to the centre line of the location of the Midland Division of
the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad ; thence by said
centre line of location to its intersection with the centre line of Wash-
ington street ; thence by the centre line of Washington street to the
point of beginning — 736 voters.
Precinct Ten. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Dorchester and Centre avenues ; thence by the centre lines of Centre
avenue, Centre, Washington, Bowdoin, Greenbrier, and Tonawanda
streets, Geneva avenue, Charles street, and Dorchester avenue to the
point of beginning — 700 voters.
WAED TWENTY-ONE.
Nine Precincts — 3,984 Voters.
Precinct One. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Regent and Circuit streets ; thence by the centre lines of Circuit, Wash-
ington, Dudley, Warren, and Regent streets to the point of beginning —
480 voters.
Precinct Two. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
WARD PRECINCTS. 157
described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Regent and Dale streets; thence by the centre lines of Dale, Washing-
ton, Cedar, Highland, Dudley, Bartlett, Washington, Circuit, and Regent
streets to the point of beginning — 430 voters.
Precinct Three. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Mayfair and Elmore streets ; thence by the centre lines of Elmore,
Washington, Valentine, Thornton, Ellis, Hawthorn, Highland, Cedar,
Washington,' Dale, Bainbridge, and Mayfair streets to the point of be-
ginning— 319 voters.
Precinct Four. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Walnut avenue and Bainbridge street; thence by the centre lines of
Bainbridge, Dale, Regent, and Warren streets. Walnut avenue. Dale,
Laurel, and Bower streets, and Walnut avenue to the point of begin-
ning — 453 voters.
Precinct Five. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Bower and Warren streets ; thence by the centre lines of Bower, Laurel,
and Dale streets. Walnut avenue, and Warren street to the point of
beginning — 439 voters.
Precinct Six. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Edgewood and Warren streets; thence by the centre lines of Warren
and Moreland streets. Blue Hill avenue, Southwood and Edgewood
streets to the point of beginning — 465 voters.
Precinct Seven. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line: Beginning at the intersection of the centre 'lines of
Intervale and Warren streets; thence by the centre lines of Warren,
Edgewood, and Southwood streets. Blue Hill avenue, and Intervale
street to the point of beginning — 489 voters.
Precinct Eight. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line: Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Seaver street and Humboldt avenue ; thence by the centre lines of Hum-
boldt avenue, Bower, Warren, and Intervale streets, Blue Hill avenue,
and Seaver street to the point of beginning — 495 voters.
Precinct Nine. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line: Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of Hum-
boldt avenue and Seaver street; thence by the centre lines of Seaver
street. Walnut and Westminster avenues, Washington, Elmore, Mayfair,
and Bainbridge streets, Walnut avenue. Bower street, and Humboldt
avenue to the point of beginning — 414 voters.
WARD TWENTY-TWO.
Eight Precincts— 3,814 Voters.
Precinct One. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line: Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
158 MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
Chestnut and Spring Park avenues; thence by the centre lines of Spring
Park avenue, Centre, Perkins, and Chestnut streets to the boundary line
between Boston and Brookline; thence by said boundary line to the
centre line of Jamaica way; thence by the centre line of Jamaicaway to
Grotto Glen extended; thence through the centre lines of Grotto Glen
extended, Grotto Glen, Day, Round Hill, Edge Hill, Gay Head, Centre,
and Forbes streets, and Chestnut avenue to the point of beginning —
49S voters.
Precinct Two. — All that part of said ward lying within tlie following-
described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre line of loca-
tion of the Providence Division of the New York, New Haven and
Hartford Railroad and the centre line of Centre street; thence by the
centre lines of Centre, Gay Head, Edge Hill, Round Hill, and Day
streets to the ward line; thence by said ward line through Day, Minden,
Bickford, Heath, and New Heath streets to the centre line of location of
the Providence Division of the New York, New Haven and Hartford
Railroad; thence by said centre line of location to the point of begin-
ning — 490 voters.
Precinct Three. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line: Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines
of Marcella and Washington streets; thence through the centre lines
of Marcella and Ritchie streets to the intersection of the centre line of
Centre street and the centre line of location of the Providence Division
of the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad; thence by the said
centre line of location to the ward line; thence by said ward line
through New Heath, Centre, Marcella, Highland, Hawthorn, Ellis,
Thornton, Valentine, and Washington streets to the point of beginning
— 503 voters.
Precinct Four. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre line of
School street and the ward line; thence by the centre lines of School,
Washington, and Boylston streets. Baker court, Germania, Bismarck,
and Porter streets, Boylston avenue, and Boylston street to the centre
line of location of the Providence Division of the New York, New Haven
and Hartford Railroad; thence by said centre line of location to the centre
line of Centre street; thence by the centre lines of Centre, Ritchie,
Marcella, and Washington streets, Westminster and Walnut avenues to
the point of beginning — 489 voters.
Precinct Five. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Boylston street and Chestnut avenue; thence by the centre lines of
Chestnut avenue, Forbes and Centre streets to the centre line of location
of the Providence Division of the New York, New Haven and Hartford
Railroad; thence by said centre line of location to Boylston street;
thence by the centre line of Boylston street to the point of beginning —
488 voters.
WAED PRECINCTS. 159
Precinct Six, — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of Per-
kins street and the ward line; thence by the centre lines of Perkins and
Centre streets, Spring Park and Chestnut avenues, and Boylston street
to the centre line of location of the Providence Division of the New
York, New Haven and Hartford Eailroad; thence by said centre line of
location to Oakdale street; thence by the centre lines of Oakdale, Lam-
artine and Bell streets. Chestnut avenue. Green, Eockview, St. John, and
Centre streets to the ward line ; thence by said ward line through Myrtle
and Pond streets and Jamaicaway to the point of beginning — 411'voters.
Precinct Seven. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line : Beginning at the ward line at the junction of Cen-
tre and Green streets; thence through the centre lines of Centre, St.
John, Rockview, and Green streets, Chestnut avenue, Bell, Lamartine,
and Oakdale streets to the centre line of location of the Providence
Division of the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad; thence
by said centre line of location to Carolina avenue; thence through the
centre lines of Carolina avenue. South and Centre streets to the point
of beginning — 456 voters.
Precinct Eight. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre line of School
street and the ward line; thence by said ward line through Walnut
avenue, Sigourney street, Glen road, and Green street to the centre line
of location of the Providence Division of the New York, New Haven and
Hartford Railroad; thence by said centre line of location to Boylston
street; thence through the centre lines of Boylston street and Boylston
avenue. Porter, Bismarck, and Germania streets. Baker court, Boylston,.
Washington, and School streets to the point of beginning — 479 voters.
WARD TWENTY-THREE.
Nine Precincts — 3,350 Voters.
Precinct One. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line: Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of South
and Custer streets; thence by the centre lines of Custer, Goldsmith,
Centre and Allandale streets to the boundary line between Boston and
Brookline; thence by said boundary line to the centre line of Chestnut
street; thence by the centre lines of Chestnut and Perkins streets,
Jamaicaway, Pond, Myrtle, Centre, and South streets to the point of
beginning — 329 voters.
Precinct Two, — All that part of said ward lying within the following
described line: Beginning at the intersection of the centre line of Keyes
street and the centre line of location of the Providence Division of the
New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad; thence by said centre line
of location and the centre line of location of the West Roxbury Branch
of said railroad to the centre line of South street; thence by the centre-
160 MUNICIPAL EEGISTER.
lines of South, Bussey, Walter, Centre, Goldsmith, and Custer streets,
Carolina avenue, Lee and Keyes streets to the point of beginning — 395
voters.
Precinct Three. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing described line: Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Glen road and Forest Hills street; thence by the centre lines of Forest
Hills and Morton streets, the Arborway, and Washington street to the
centre line of location of the Providence Division of the New York, New
Haven and Hartford Railroad ; thence by said centre line of location to
the centre line of Keyes street; thence by the centre lines of Keyes and
Lee streets and Carolina avenue to the centre line of location of the
Providence Division of the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad;
thence by said centre line of location to the centre line of Green street;
thence by the centre lines of Green street and Glen road to the point of
beginning — 419 voters.
* Precinct Four. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line: Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Seaver street and Blue Hill avenue; thence by the centre lines of Blue
Hill avenue and Harvard street to the boundary line between Boston
and Hyde Park; thence by said boundary line to its intersection with
the centre line of Ashland street; thence by the centre lines of Ash-
land, Sutton, Berry, Canterbury, Bourne, Florence and Hunter streets,
and Hyde Park avenue to the centre line of Stony Brook; thence by the
centre lines of Stony Brook, Whipple avenue, Washington and South
streets to the centre line of location of the West Roxbury Branch of the
Providence Division of the New York, New Haven and Hartford Rail-
road; thence by said centre line of location to the centre line of Wash-
ington street; thence by the centre lines of Washington street, Arbor-
way, Morton and Forest Hills streets, Glen road, Sigourney street. Wal-
nut avenue and Seaver street to the point of beginning — [450 voters].
Precinct Five. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line: Beginning at the intersection of the centre line of
Ashland street and the boundary line between Boston and Hyde Park;
thence by said boundary line and the centre line of the Stony Brook
Reservation, Washington and Rockland streets, Farrington avenue,
Beech, Kittredge, Sycamore, Ashland, South and Washington streets,
and Whipple avenue, to the centre line of Stony Brook; thence by said
centre line and the centre line of Hyde Park avenue. Hunter, Florence,
Bourne, Canterbury, Berry, Sutton and Ashland streets to the point of
beginning — [489 voters].
Precinct Six. — All that part of said ward lying within the following
described line: Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Ashland and Sycamore streets; thence by the centre lines of Sycamore,
* Boundaries of Precincts Four, Five, Six, Seven and Eight were changed by vote
of the Board of Aldermen of March 14, 1898, which was approved by the Mayor on
March 16, 1898. The numbers in brackets remain unchanged.
WARD PEECIlSrCTS. 161
Kittredge and Beech streets, Farrington avenue, Rockland and Wash-
ington streets, the West Roxbury Parkway, Beech, Centre and Central
streets to the centre line of location of the West Roxbury branch of
the Providence Division of the New York, New Haven and Hartford
Railroad; thence by said centre line of location and the centre lines of
South and Ashland streets to the point of beginning — [384 voters].
Precinct Seven. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line: Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines
of South and Bussey streets; thence by the centre lines of South,
Washington and South streets to the centre line of location of the West
Roxbury Branch of the Providence Division of the New York, New
Haven and Hartford Railroad ; thence by said centre line of location to
the centre line of Central street; thence by the centre lines of Central,
Centre and Church streets to the boundary line between Boston and
Brookline; thence by said boundary line to the centre line of Allan-
dale street; thence by the centre line of AUandale, Centre, Walter and
Bussey streets to the point of beginning — [246 voters].
Precinct Eight. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line: Beginning at the intersection of the centre line of
the Stony Brook Reservation and the boundary line between Boston
and Hyde Park; thence by said boundary line to the centre line of
Grove street; thence by the centre lines of Grove and Washington
streets. Cottage avenue, Lorette, Perham and Baker streets to the
boundary line between Boston and Newton; thence by the boundary
lines between Boston and Newton and between Boston and Brookline
to the centre line of Church street; thence by the centre lines of
Church, Centre, and Beech streets, West Roxbury Parkway and Stony
Brook Reservation to the point of beginning — [376 voters].
Precinct Nine. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line: Beginning at the intersection of the centre line of
Grove street and the boundary line between Boston and Hyde Park;
thence by said boundary line and the boundary lines between Boston
and Dedham and Boston and Newton to the centre line of Baker street;
thence by the centre lines of Baker, Perham, and Lorette streets, Cot-
tage avenue, Washington and Grove streets to the point of beginning —
262 voters.
WARD TWENTY-FOUE.
Nine Precincts— 3,755 Voters.
Precinct One. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line: Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Dorchester avenue and Greenwich street; thence by the centre lines of
Greenwich street and Greenwich street extended to the Harbor Com-
missioners' line; thence by the Harbor Commissioners' line to a point
opposite the middle of Commercial Point bridge; thence to the middle
of said bridge by a line at right angles thereto ; thence by the centre
lines of said bridge, Freeport and Preston streets to the centre line of
location of the Old Colony Division of the New York, New Haven and
162 MUNICIPAL KEGISTER.
Hartford Railroad; thence by said centre line of location to Park street;
thence by the centre lines of Park street and Dorchester avenue to the
point of beginning — 418 voters.
Precinct Two. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line: Beginning at the intersection of the centre line of Ash-
mont street and Neponset avenue; thence by the centre lines of
Neponset avenue, Pope's Hill and Freeport streets to the middle of
Commercial Point bridge; thence by a line at right angles thereto to
the Harbor Commissioners' line; thence by the Harbor Commissioners'
line to the centre line of location of the Old Colony Division of the New
York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad; thence by said centre line of
location to the boundary line between Boston and Quincy; thence by
said boundary line to the middle of the Neponset bridge; thence by the
centre lines of said bridge, Neponset avenue, Chickatawbut and Plain
streets. Pierce avenue, Newhall and Ashmont streets to the point of
beginning — 419 voters.
Precinct Three. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Dorchester avenue and Wrentham street; thence by the centre lines of
Dorchester avenue and Park street to the centre line of location of the
Old Colony Division of the New York, New Haven and Hartford Rail-
road; thence by said centre line of location to the centre line of Preston
street; thence by the centre lines of Preston and Freeport streets,
Commercial Point bridge, Freeport and Pope's Hill streets, Neponset
avenue, Ashmont, Adams, Shelton, and Wrentham streets to the point
of beginning — 437 voters.
Precinct Four. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing described line: Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Dorchester avenue and Wrentham sti-eet; thence by the centre lines of
Wrentham, Shelton, Adams, Ashmont, and Newhall streets. Pierce
avenue. Plain and Chickatawbut streets, and Neponset avenue to the
middle of the Neponset bridge ; thence by the boundary line between
Boston and Quincy through the centre of Neponset river to the middle
of Granite bridge; thence by the centre lines of said bridge, Granite
avenue, Adams, Minot, Carruth, and Ashmont streets to Peabody
square; thence across Peabody square to the centre line of Dorchester
avenue; thence by the centre line of Dorchester avenue to the point of
beginning — 428 voters.
Precinct Five. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line: Beginning at the intersection of the centre line of
Milton bridge and the boundary line between Boston and Milton;
thence by the centre lines of said bridge, Washington street, and
Dorchester avenue to Peabody square; thence across Peabody square
and by the centre line of Ashmont, Carruth, Minot and Adams streets
and Granite avenue to the middle of Granite bridge; thence by the
boundary line between Boston and Milton through Neponset river to
the point of begini»ng — 415 voters.
WARD PRECINCTS. 163
Precinct Six. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line: Beginning at the intersection of the centre line of
Central-avenne bridge and the boundary line between Boston and
Milton; thence by the centre lines of said bridge, Central avenue,
River, Cedar, Sanford, Washington, and Ashm<pnt streets, Dorchester
avenue, and Washington street to the middle of the Milton bridge;
thence by the boundary line between Boston and Milton through Ne-
ponset river to the point of beginning — 401 voters.
Precinct Seven. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centrelines of
Armandine street and Milton avenue; thence by the centre lines
of Milton avenue, Edson, Norfolk and Bernard streets, Talbot avenue.
Centre street. Centre and Dorchester avenues, Ashmont, Washington
and Armandine streets to the point of beginning — 429 voters.
Precinct Eight. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Morton and Sanford streets; thence by the centre lines of Morton,
Corbet, Norfolk, Morton and Back streets, Talbot avenue, Bernard,
Norfolk, and Edson streets, Milton avenue, Armandine, Washington,
and Sanford streets to the point of beginning — 407 voters.
Precinct Nine. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre line of
Central-avenue bridge and the boundary line between Boston and Mil-
ton; thence by the boundary line between Boston and Milton through
Neponset river to the boundary line between Boston and Hyde Park;
thence by said boundary line to Back street; thence by the centre lines
of Back, Morton, Norfolk, Corbet, Morton, Sanford, Cedar, and River
streets, Central avenue, and Central-avenue bridge to the point of begin-
ning— 401 voters.
WARD TWENTY-FIVE.
Seven Precincts— 3,025 Voters.
Precinct One. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line : Beginning at the intersectio-n of the centre lines of
Aldie and Everett streets ; thence by the centre lines of Everett street,
Western avenue and Western-avenue bridge to the ward line in Charles
river; thence by said ward line to its intersection with the centre line of
an old creek, which formerly formed the boundary line between Brook-
line and Brighton; thence by said centre line to the centre line of loca-
tion of the Boston and Albany Railroad; thence by said centre line of
location to the centre line of Cambridge street; thence by the centre
lines of Cambridge, Mansfield, Bradbury, and Aldie streets to the point
of beginning — 470 voters.
Precinct Two. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre lines of
Brighton avenue and Everett street; thence by the centre lines of
164 MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
Everett, Aldie, Bradbury, Mansfield, and Cambridge streets to the
centre line of location of the Boston and Albany Railroad; thence by said
centre line of location to its intersection with the centre line of an old
creek, which formerly formed the boundary line between Brookline and
Brighton; thence by said centre line to the ward line in Charles river;
thence by said ward line and the centre line of Ashby street extended,
and the centre line of Ashby street and the southerly line of Common-
wealth avenue and the centre line of Brighton avenue to the point of
beginning — 483 voters.
Precinct Three. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line : Beginning at the intersection of the boundary line
between Boston and Brookline and the centre line of Summit avenue;
thence by the centre lines of Summit and Commonwealth avenues, War-
ren, Cambridge, Dustin, and North Beacon streets, and Brighton avenue
to Commonwealth avenue; thence across Commonwealth avenue to the
boundary line between Boston and Brookline; thence by said boundary
line to the point of beginning — 385 voters.
Precinct Four. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line : Beginning at the intersection of the centre line of
North Beacon-street bridge and the ward line in Charles river; thence
by said ward line through Charles river to its intersection with the cen-
tre line of Western-avenue bridge; thence by the centre line of Western-
avenue bridge, Western avenue, Everett and North Beacon streets and
North Beacon-street bridge to the point of beginning — 427 voters.
Precinct Five. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line: Beginning at the intei'section of the centre lines of
Parsons and North Beacon streets ; thence by the centre lines of North
Beacon, Dustin, Cambridge, Sparhawk, Market, Washington, Oakland,
Faneuil and Parsons streets to the point of beginning — 376 voters.
Precinct Six. — All that part of said ward lying within the following-
described line: Beginning at the intersection of the ward line in
Charles river and North Beacon-street bridge; thence by the centre
lines of North Beacon-street bridge. North Beacon, Parsons, Faneuil,
Oakland and Washington streets, Chestnut Hill avenue. South street
and Commonwealth avenue to the boundary line between Boston and
Newton; thence by said boundary line and the ward line in Charles
river to the point of beginning — 452 voters.
Precinct Seven. — All that part of said ward lying within the follow-
ing-described line: Beginning at the intersection of the boundary line
between Boston and Newton and the centre line of Commonwealth
avenue; thence by the centre lines of Commonwealth avenue. South
street. Chestnut Hill avenue, Market, Sparhawk, Cambridge and War-
ren streets, Commonwealth and Summit avenues to the boundary line
between Boston and Brookline; thence by said boundary line and the
boundary line between Boston and Newton to the point of beginning —
432 voters.
CITY GOVERNMENT.
City Government, 1892-1901.
165
18 9 2.
Mayor.
NATHAN MATTHEWS, jR.
Aldekmen.
John H. Lee, Chairman.
First District. —
Second District. ■
Third District. —
Fourth District.-
Fifth District. —
Sixth District. —
John H. Sullivan.
— Michael J. Mitchell.
-Thomas F. Keenan.
— Jacob Fottler.
Nathaniel J. Rust.
Edward J.Leary.
Seventh District. — Thomas W. Flood.
Eighth District. — Weston Lewis.
Kinth District. — 'WiYLinm. A. Folsom.
Tenth District. — John F. Dever.
Eleventh District. — John H. Lee.
Twelfth District. — Otis Eddy.
J. Mitchel Galvin, City Clerk.
Ward 1.
John L Bates,
Hugh L. Stalker,
James A. Cochran.
Ward 2.
Thomas Arthur,
William J. Donovan,
Cornelius J. Flynn.
Ward 3.
Michael J. Tierney,
Frank McGinniss,
John M. O'Hara.
Ward 4.
Myron D. Cressy,
Albert W. Forbush,
Frank A. Teeling.
Ward 5.
William T. Graham,
John Hurley,
James W. O'Brien.
Ward 6.
Neil F. Doherty,
Charles Carroll,
John F. Fitzgerald.
Ward 7.
Cornelius H. Toland,
Cornelius Doherty,
Timothy F. Murphy.
Ward 8.
Patrick Higgins,
Hugh McLaughlin,
William F. Donovan.
Ward 9.
Seth P. Smith,
Walden Banks,
Sidney B. Everett
COtJNCILMEN.
David F. Baery, President.
Ward 10.
Arthur L. Spring,
Clarence P. Weston,
William C. Parker.
Ward 11.
Charles W. Hallstram,
Frank H. Briggs,
Royal Bobbins.
Ward 12.
John Quinn, jr.,
Michael T. Callahan,
William J. Welch.
Ward 13.
Michael W. Norris,
John Merrill,
William J. Sullivan.
Ward 14.
James H. Coughlin,
John A. Daunt,
Josiah S. Dean.
Ward 15.
Timothy J. Sullivan,
Frederick S. Gore,
John J. Healy.
Ward 16.
David F. Barry,
James Keenan,
Charles H. Reinhart.
Ward 17.
Charles E. Clark,
Andrew J. Patterson,
Nicholas J. Quinn.
Joseph O'Kane, Clerk.
Ward 18.
Abraham C. Ratshesky,
Thomas Talbot,
Albert C. Smith.
Ward 19.
Thomas F. Lyons,
Mark H. Lynch,
Hubert B. Curley.
Ward 20.
Charles H. Dolan,
William B. McClellan,
Thomas H. Boyd.
Ward 21.
Melancthon W. Burien,
Albert C. Burrage,
George M. Scates.
Ward 22.
Frederick C. Bleiler,
William F. Finneran,
Patrick F. Gormley.
Ward 23.
Franklin P. Pierce,
Frank F. Proctor,
Edward F, Draper.
Ward 24.
Charles E. Folsom, jr.,
Fred H. Young,
John B. Patterson.
Ward 25.
Henry B. Goodenough,
Edward Farrell,
Frank H. Ricker.
166
MUNICIPAL KEGISTER.
1893.
Mayor.
NATHAN MATTHEWS, JK.
Aldermen.
John H. X,ee, Chairman.
First DistHct. —
Second District.
Third District. ■
Fourth District
Fifth District.—
Sixth District. —
Charles T. Witt.
— jNlichael J. Mitchell.
-Martin M. Lomasney.
— .Jacob Fottler.
Charles W. Hallstram.
•John J. Maguire.
Seventh District. — Thomas W. Flood.
Eighth District. — Alpheus Sanford.
Ninth District. — William L. Mooney.
Tenth District. — John F. Dever.
Eleventh District. — John H. Lee.
Twelfth District.— Charles E. Folsom, jr.
Ward 1.
George K. W. Battis,
James A. Cochran,
David H. Jones, jr.
Ward 2.
Thomas Arthur,
Manassah E. Bradley,
Cornelius J. Flynn.
Ward 3.
Michael W. Collins,
William H. Fallon,
John M. O'Hara.
Ward 4.
Timothy J. Donovan,
William H. Marnell,
Frank A. Teeling.
Ward 5.
William T. Graham,
John Hurley,
James W. O'Brien.
Ward 6.
Jeremiah E. Mahoney,
Christopher F. O'Brien,
Daniel D. Rourke.
Ward 7.
Cornelius Doherty,
Bernard McMackin,
Timothy F. Murphy.
Ward 8.
John J. Boyle,
William F. Donovan,
David T. King.
Ward 9.
Walden Banks,
Sidney B. Everett,
Seth P. Smith.
J. Mitchel Galvin, City Clerk.
COUNCILMEN.
David F. Barry, President.
Ward JO.
William C. Parker,
Arthur L. Spring,
Clarence P. Weston.
Ward 11.
Frank H. Briggs,
Charles H. Hall,
Joshua B. Holden.
Ward 12.
Michael T. Callahan,
Timothy .J. Crowley,
William J. Welch.
Ward 13.
John H. Griffin,
John 3Ierrill,
William J. Sullivan.
Ward 14.
John B. Collins,
William E. Mansfield,
John P. O'Connor.
Ward 15.
Charles H. Dirksmeyer,
Daniel A. McCarthy,
Timothy J. Sullivan.
Ward 16.
David F. Barry,
James Keenan ,
Charles H. Eeinhart.
Ward 17.
William Berwin,
Freeman O. Emerson,
Andrew J. Patterson.
Joseph O'Kane, Clerk.
Ward 18.
John H. Colby,
Henry S. Fisher,
Albert C. Smith.
Ward 19.
Charles C. Collins,
Thomas F. Lyons,
Norman Mintz.
Ward 20.
Michael J. Lyons,
Patrick E. Riddle,
Albert Wise.
Ward 21.
Richard F. Andrews, jr.,
Walter C. Brown,
George M. Scates.
Ward 22.
William F. Finneran,
Patrick F. Gormley,
Charles J. Jacobs.
Ward 23.
William A. Davis,
Edward F. Draper,
.James H. Kelly.
Ward 24.
Herbert M. Manks,
John B. Patterson,
George I. Robinson, jr.
Ward 25.
.J. Harris Aubin,
Henry B. Goodenough,
Samuel H. Mitchell.
CITY GOVERNMENT.
167
18 94
John H. Lee,
Jacob Fottler,
John F. Dever,
Alpheus Sanford,
Charles W . Hallstram,
Charles E. Folsom,
Mayor.
NATHAN 3IATTHEWS, jR.
Aldermen.i
Alpheus Sanford, Chairman.
Martin M. Lomasney,
Charles T. Witt,
David F. Barry,
Charles H. Bryant,
Bordman Hall,
Edward W. Presho.
J. Mitchel Galvin, City Clerk.
Ward 1.
James A. Cochran,
George R. W. Battis,
David H. Jones, jr.
Ward 2.
Manassah E. Bradley,
John W. Hayes,
Michael J. Leary.
Ward 3.
John M. O'Hara,
Michael W. Collins,
Peter F. Tague.
Ward 4.
Timothy J. Donovan,
William H. Marnell,
Martin F. Connorton.
Ward 5.
John Hurley,
William J. Miller,
James T. Roche.
Ward 6.
Jeremiah E. Mahoney,
Christopher F. O'Brien
Daniel D. Rourke.
Ward 7.
Bernard McMackin,
Patrick J. Carroll,
George F. Coleman,
Ward 8.
John J. Boyle,
David T. King,
Daniel A. Whelton.
Ward 9.
Sidney B. Everett,
J. Henderson Allston,
Stanley Ruffln.
COUNCILMEN.
Christopher F. O'Brien, President.
Ward 10. Ward 18.
Calvin M. Lewis, Albert C. Smith,
Edward H. McGuire, John H. Colby,
Walter L. Sears. Henry S. Fisher.
Ward 11.
Frank H. Briggs,
Charles H. Hall,
Joshua B. Holden.
Ward 12.
Cornelius F. Desmond,
Michael T. Callahan,
Timothy J. Crowley.
Ward 13.
Michael W. Norris,
John H. Griffin,
John J. Browne.
Ward 14.
John B. Collins,
John E. Baldwin,
Jeffrey R. Eager, jr.
Ward 15.
Timothy J. Sullivan,
Daniel A. McCarthy,
Michael J. Reidy.
Ward 16.
James Keenan,
Charles H. Reinhart,
Timothy J. Wholey.
Ward 17.
S. Edward Shaw,
William Berwin,
Freeman O. Emerson.
Joseph O'Kane, Clerk.
Ward 19.
Mark H. Lynch,
Joseph L. Bartlett,
Daniel F. Connor.
Ward 20.
Patrick E. Riddle,
Albert Wise,
Edwin S. Fields.
Ward 21.
Richard F. Andrews, jr.,
William W. Davis,
William M. Mclnnes.
Ward 22.
Patrick F. Gormley,
Edward H. Costello,
Thomas Reynolds.
Ward 23.
William A. Davis,
James H. Kelly,
Frederick A. Wood.
Ward 24.
John B. Patterson,
Herbert M. Manks,
George I. Robinson, jr.
Ward 25.
Henry B. Goodenough,
Samuel H. Mitchell,
Eugene A. Reed, jr.
1 Statutes of 1893, Chap. 473, provides for the election of Aldermen-at-large, instead
of by districts.
168
MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
John H. Lee,
John F. Dever,
Alpheus Sanford,
Charles E. Folsom,
Martin M. Lomasney,
Charles T. Witt,
18 9 5.
Mayok.
EDWIN U. CURTIS.
Aldekmen.
Alpheus Sanford, Chairman.
David F. Barry;,
Charles H. Bryant,
Edward W. Presho,
Thomas W. Flood,
Horace G. Allen,
Perlie A. Dyar.
J. Mitchel Galrin, City Clerk.
Ward 1.
George R. W. Battis,
Joseph H. Barnes, jr.,
John B. Lowden.
COUNCILMEN.
Christopher F. O'Brien, President
Ward 10.
Edward H. McGuire.
Walter L. Sears,
Edward S. Crockett.
Ward 2.
Michael J. Leary,
Joseph A. Conry,
John L. Kelly.
Ward 3.
Peter F. Tague,
James F. Haley,
John J. O'Callaghan.
Ward 4.
Martin F. Connorton,
George A. Garland,
William E. Mahoney.
Ward 5.
William J. MiUer,
James T. Roche,
James J. Brock.
Wards.
Jeremiah E. Mahoney,
Christopher F. O'Brien,
James A. Doherty.
Ward 7.
Patrick J. Carroll,
George F. Coleman,
James C. Murphy.
Ward 8.
David T. King,
Daniel A. Whelton,
Simon Hirshon.
Wa,rd 9.
J. Henderson Allston,
Stanley Ruffin,
John R. Foster.
Ward 11.
Frank H. Briggs,
Charles H. Hall,
George U. Crocker.
Ward 12.
Michael T. Callahan,
Timothy J. Crowley,
Timothy J. Butler.
Ward 13.
Michael W. Norris,
John J. Browne,
William H. Woods.
Ward 14.
John E. Baldwin,
John H. Dunn,
John P. O'Connor.
Ward 15.
Michael J. Reidy,
Edward C. Cadigan,
John J. Mahoney.
Ward 16.
Timothy J. Wholey,
Patrick Bowen,
.John J. Gartland, Jr.
Ward 17.
William Berwin,
Freeman O. Emerson,
Benjamin C. Lane.
Joseph O'Kane, Clerk.
Ward 18.
John H. Colby,
John W. Johnson,
G. Waldon Smith.
Ward 19.
Daniel F. Connor,
George W. Bennett,
Michael E. Gaddis.
Ward 20.
Patrick E. Riddle,
Edwin S. Fields,
Timothy E. McCarthy.
Ward 21.
Richard F. Andrews, jr.,
Samuel C. Jones,
Alfred Newmarch.
Ward 22.
Edward H. Costello,
Thomas Reynolds,
Charles Jacobs.
Ward 23.
Frederick A. W^ood,
Chauncy K. Bullock,
Edward Orchard.
Ward 24.
Herbert M. Manks,
Franklin L. Codman,
Walter W. Strangman,
Ward 25.
Eugene A. Reed, jr.,
William M. Farrington,
Francis F. Morton.
CITY GOVERNMENT.
169
18 0 6
John H. Lee,
Charles E. Folsom,
David F. Barry,
Charles H. Bryant,
Edward W. Presho,
Horace G. Allen,
Ward 1.
Joseph H. Barnes, jr.
John E. Lowden,
Collingwood C. Millar.
Ward 2.
Joseph A. Conry,
John L. Kelly,
William B. Whitney.
Ward 3.
Peter F. Tague,
James F. Haley,
John J. O'Callaghan.
Ward 4.
Martin F. Connorton,
William E. Mahoney,
John E. McCarthy.
Ward 5.
William J. Miller,
James J. Brock,
Dennis J. Falvey.
Ward 6.
James A. Doherty,
John A. Ryan,
James H. Shannon.
Ward 7.
James C. Murphy,
Michael J. McColgan,
John A. Eowan.
Ward 8.
Simon Hirshon,
Francis J. Horgan,
Daniel J. Kiley.
Ward 9.
Stanley Ruffin,
John R. Foster,
Nelson I. Southwick.
Mayor.
JOSIAH QUINCY.i
Aldermen.
John H. Lee, Chairman.
Perlie A. Dyar,
Bordman Hall,
William F. Donovan,
William J. Donovan,
John J. Mahoney,
Salem D. Charles.
J. Mitchel Galvin, City Clerk.
COUNCILMEN.
Joseph A. Conry, President.
Ward 10.
Edward H. McGuire,
Alfred H. Colby,
Calvin M. Lewis.
Ward 11.
Frank H.Brlggs,
George U. Crocker,
Alfred F. Kinney.
Ward 12.
Michael T. Callahan,
Timothy J. Butler,
John J. Falvey.
Ward 13.
Hugh W. Bresnahan,
James T. Mahony, jr.
Partrick J. O'Toole.
Ward 14.
John E. Baldwin,
John H. Dunn,
William P. Hickey.
Ward 15.
Edward C. Cadigan,
John J. Mahoney,
Thomas F. Donovan.
Ward 16.
Patrick Bowen,
John Dugan,
David McCarthy.
Ward 17.
Benjamin C. Lane,
George Y. Banchor,
Charles H. Innes.
Joseph O'Kane, Clerk.
Ward 18.
G. Waldon Smith,
Sidney Moulthrop,
Arthur G. Wood.
Ward 19.
Michael E.Gaddis,
Thomas L. Koonan,
George O. Whittaker.
Ward 20.
Patrick E. Riddle,
Timothy E. McCarthy,
Timothy L. Connolly.
Ward 21.
Samuel C. Jones,
Alfred Xewmarch,
Albert C. Sawyer.
Ward 22.
Edward H. Costello,
Charles Jacobs,
Charles P. Nangle.
Ward 23.
Edward Orchard,
Charles W. Dennis,
John A. Maier, jr.
Ward 24.
Franklin L. Codman,
Walter W. Strangman,
Thomas C. Bachelder,
Ward 25.
William M. Farrington.
Francis F. Morton,
Elmer E. Chain.
I Elected for two years. (See Chap. 449, Acts of 1895.)
170
MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
189T
John H. Lee,
David F. Barry,
Edward W. Presho,
Perlie A. Dyar,
William F. Donovan,
William J. Donovan,
Ward 1.
Collingvcood C. Millar,
Charles I. Albee,
A. Dudley Bagley.
Ward 2.
Joseph A. Conry,
William J. Cronin,
James H. Donovan.
Ward 3.
John J. O'Callaghan,
Henry B. Carroll,
John 1. Toland.
Ward 4.
William E. Mahoney,
John W. Donohue,
Joseph A. Turnbull.
Ward 5.
William J. Miller,
James J. Brock,
Dennis J. Falvey.
Ward 6.
John A. Rowan,
James H. Shannon,
Michael J. Donovan.
Ward 7.
William T. A. Fitzgerald,
Thomas Mackey,
William H. Roth.
Ward 8.
Francis J. Horgan,
Daniel J. Kiley,
Louis Sounahend.
Ward 9.
Patrick Bowen,
Michael Leonard,
Maurice J. McCarthy.
Mayor.
JOSIAH QUINCY.i
Aldermen.
Perlie A. Dyar, Chairman.
William Berwin,
Franklin L. Codman,
John H. Colby,
Josiah S. Dean,
William H. Lott,
Milton C. Paige.
J. Mitchel Galvin, City Clerk.
COUNCILMEN.
Joseph a. Conry, President.
Ward 10.
Alfred F. Kinney,
George S. Brooks,
Walter E. Nichols.
Ward 11.
Frank H. Briggs,
Charles R. Saunders,
George Holden Tinkhfim.
Ward 12.
Arthur G. Wood,
.John B. Dumond,
Edward P. Sands.
Ward 13.
Hugh W. Bresnahan,
James T. Mahony, jr.,
Patrick J. O'Toole.
Ward 14.
John H. Dunn,
William P. Hickey,
James F. Mulcahy.
Ward 15.
Edward C. Cadigan.2
John J. Mahoney,
Daniel V. Mclsaac.
Ward 16.
Oliver F. Davenport,
Frederick W. Farwell,
Arthur P. Russell.
Ward 17.
Timothy E. McCarthy,
Timothy L. Connolly,
John P. Lanergan.
Joseph O'Kane, Clerk.
Ward 18.
Michael E. Gaddis,
James J. Casey,
John H. Daly.
Ward 19.
Charles P. Nangle,
JohnF. Dempsey,
John J. Flanagan.
Ward 20.
Wilbur F. Adams,
Edwin D. Bell,
Louis T. Howard.
Ward 21.
Samuel C. Jones,
Alfred Newmarch,
Albert C. Sawyer.
Ward 22.
John A. Maier,
Charles F. Adams,
William Dallow, jr.
Ward 23.
Edward Orchard,
Charles W. Dennis,
Konrad Young.
Ward 24.
William E. Harvey,
Willard W. Hibbard,
Harry B. Whall.
Ward 25.
William M. Farrington,
Ezra N. Rolland,
William D. Wheeler.
^ See foot-note, preceding page.
2Died July 2, 1S97
CITY GOVERNMENT.
171
Edward W. Presho,
Perlie A. Dyar,
William Berwin,
Franklin L. Codman,
William H. Lott,
Milton C. Paige,
Ward 1.
Collingwood C. Millar,
Charles I. Albee,
A. Dudley Bagley.
Ward 2.
William J. Cronin,
James H. Donovan,
Joseph F. Hickey.
Ward 3.
John I. Toland,
William F. Harrington,
Gharles A. Horrigan.
Ward 4.
Joseph A. Turnbull,
John F. Desmond,
John P. Sullivan.
Ward o.
Dennis J. Falvey,
William E. Bennett,
Edward H. Madden.
Ward 6.
Michael J. Donovan,
Samuel H. Borofsky,
Michael J. McColgan.
Ward 7.
Michael T. Callahan,
Daniel J. Donnelly,
John L. Donovan.
Ward 8.
Louis Sonnahend,
William H. Cuddy,
Michael F. Hart.
Ward 9.
Michael Leonard,
Frank H. Cowin,
Samuel Kasanof.
1808.
Mayor.
JOSIAH QUINCY.i
Aldermen.
Perlie A. Dyar.s i „, .
Joseph a. Conry,3 f (chairmen.
Salem D. Charles,
Michael H. Cleary,
Joseph A. Conry,
Edward W. Dixon,
Joseph J. Norton,
Frank J. O'Toole.
J. Mitchel Galvin, City Clerk.
COUNCILMEN.
Timothy L. Connolly, President.
Ward 10. Ward 18.
Walter E. Nichols, James J. Casey,
Charles A. Atkins, John J. Curley,
David R. Robinson. James A. Watson.
Ward 11.
George Holden Tinkham,
Edward A. Armistead,
William S. B. Stevens.
Ward 12.
Arthur G. Wood,
Edward P. Sands,
David B. Chamberlain.
Ward 13.
Thomas J. Collins,
Michael J. Lydon,
Michael W. Norris.
Ward 14.
John H. Dunn,
WiUiam P. Hickey,
James F. Mulcahy.
Ward 15.
Daniel V. Mclsaac,
John D. Fenton,
William Martin.
Ward 16.
Frederick W. Farwell,
Arthur P. Russell,
Charles E. Eddy.
Ward 17.
Timothy L. Connolly,
John P. Lanergan,
Patrick H. Brennan.
Joseph O'Kane, Clerk.
Ward 19.
Charles P. Nangle,
Michael T. Athridge,
John J. Flanagan.
Ward 20.
Wilbur F. Adams,
Edwin D. Bell,
Louis T. Howard.
Ward 21.
Samuel C. Jones,
Alfred Newmarch,
Frederick W. Klemm.
Ward 22.
Charles F. Adams,
Paul F. Folsom,
Abram Jordan.
Ward 23.
Charles W. Dennis,
Konrad Young,
Andrew Brauer.
Ward 24.
William E. Harvey,
Willard W. Hibbard,
Harry B. Whall.
Ward 2o.
William D. Wheeler,
Austin Bigelow,
Clarence W. Sanderson.
1 Elected for two years. (See Chap. 449, Acts of 1S95.)
2 From January 25 to April 1, and from October 1 to end of year,
s From April 1 to October 1.
172
MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
Wilbur F. Adams,
David F. Barry,
William Berwin,
Franklin L. Codnian,
John H. Colby,
Edward W. Dixon,
189 9.
Mayor.
JOSIAH QUINCY.
Aldermen.
David F. Barry, Chairman.
Frederick W. Day,
James H. Doyle,
Patrick F. McDonald,
Frank J. O'Toole,
Edward W. Presho,
Michael W. Brick.
J. Mitchel Galvin, City Clerk.
Ward 1.
A. Dudley Bagley,
George H. Battis,
David W. Simpson.
Ward 2.
Joseph F. Hickey,
Frank J. Johnson,
Thomas F. Eice.
Ward 3.
Henry B. Carroll,
Francis J. Doherty,
Charles A. Horrigan.
Ward 4.
Thomas A. Kelley,
John P. Sullivan,
Joseph A. Turnbull.
Ward 5.
William E. Bennett,
John F. Gibbons,
Edward H. Madden.
Ward 6.
Andrew A. Badaracco.
Patrick H. Bradley,
William J. O'Brien.
Ward 7.
John. L. Donovan,
James H. Stone,
James A. Sweeney.
Ward 8.
William H. Cuddy,
Daniel J. Kiley,
Martin Leltovith.
Ward 9.
Samuel Kasanof,
Michael Leonard,
John J. Tobin.
COUNCILMEN.
Daniel J. Kiley, President.
Ward 10.
John Bordman, jr.,
Walter R. Mansfield,
George H. Moore.
Ward 11.
Edward A. Armistead,
William S. B. Stevens,
Lawrence M. Stockton.
Ward 12.
David B. Chamberlain,
Donald N. MacDonald,
Arthur K. Peck.
Ward 13.
Thomas J. Collins,
Frank J. Linehan,
Michael J. Lydon.
Ward 14.
George A. Donahoe,
Edward L. Logan,
James F. Mulcahy.
Ward 15.
John D. Fenton,
John H. Giblin,
AVilliam Martin.
Ward 16.
Frank S. Atwood,
Charles E.Eddy,
Frank E. Wells.
Ward 17.
Patrick H. Brennan,
Timothy L. Connolly,
George A. Flynn.
Joseph O'Kane, Clerk.
Ward 18.
James J. Casey,
John J. Curley,
James A. Watson.
Ward 19.
William H. Doyle,
James Mclnerney,
Charles P. Nangle.
Wa^rd 20.
Louis T. Howard,
George R. Miller,
George O. Wood.
Ward 21.
Fred A. Emery,
Frederick W. Klemm,
Temple A. WInsloe.
Ward 22.
Abram Jordan ,
George W. Lorey,
William G. Roemer.
Ward 23.
Andrew Brauer,
John H. Broderick,
Guy F. ISTewhall.
Ward 24.
William E. Harvey,
WiUard W. Hibbard,
Samuel H. Mildram.
Ward 25.
Ezra N. Rolland,
Clarence W. Sanderson,
Harvey W. Walker.
CITY GOVERNMENT,
173
Wilbur F. Adams,
Patrick Bowen,
Franklin L. Codman.
Frederick W. Day,
Edward W. Dixon,
James H. Doyle,
Ward 1.
George H. Battis,
David W. Simpson,
William B. Jackson.
Ward 2.
Frank J. Johnson,
William C. S. Healey,
Daniel J. Sheehan.
Ward 3.
Francis J. Doherty,
Charles A. Horrigan,
William J. Carley.
Ward 4.
Thomas A. Kelley,
John P. Sullivan,
George H. Cadigan.
Ward 5.
John F. Gibbons,
Arthur W. Dolan,
John C. Hurley.
Ward 6.
Andrew A. Badaracco,
Patrick H. Bradley,
Thomas J. Grady.
Ward 7.
Daniel J. Donnelly,
James H. Stone,
James A. Sweeney.
Ward 8.
Daniel .J. Kiley,
Michael P. Hart,
Martin Leftovith.
Ward 9.
Samuel Kasanof,
John J. Tobin,
Daniel L. Flanagan.
1900.
Mayor.
THOMAS N. HART. 1
Aldekmen.
Michael J. O'Brien, Chairman.
E. Peabody Gerry,
Kobert A. Jordan,
Michael W. Norris,
Joseph J. Norton,
Michael J. O'Brien,
Philip O'Brien,
George Holden Tinkham.
Edward J. Donovan, City Clerk.
Councilmen.
Daniel J. Kilet, President.
Ward 10.
Alfred F. Kinney,
Walter R. Mansfield,
Osborn A. Newton.
Ward 11.
Edward A. Armistead,
William S. B. Stevens,
Lawrence M. Stockton.
Ward 12.
Donald N. MacDonald,
Arthur K. Peck,
Harry S. Upham.
Ward 13.
Frank J. Linehan,
Lawrence J. Kelly,
John E. L. Monaghan.
Ward 14.
George A. Donahoe,
Edward L. Logan,
J. Frank O'Hare.
Ward IS.
John D. Fenton,
John H. Giblin,
William L. White.
Ward 16.
Frank S. Atwood,
Frank E. Wells,
William McG. Grant.
Ward 17.
Timothy L. Connolly,
George A. Flynn,
James M. Curley.
Joseph O'Kane, Clerk.
Ward 18.
John J. Curley,
William E. Good,
Michael W. Kelley.
Ward 19.
William H. Doyle,
James Mclnerney,
William O'S. Hennigan
Ward 20.
George R. Miller,
George O. Wood,
Oliver F. Davenport.
Ward 21.
Fred A. Emery,
William M. Curtis,
Clarence W. Starratt.
Ward 22.
William G. Roemer,
AVilliam H. Nitz,
William L. Strickland.
Ward 23.
Walter E. Henderson,
J. Henry Smith,
Frederick W. Whiteley.
Ward 24.
Samuel H. Mildram,
Herbert W. Burr,
William E. Hannan.
Ward 2.5.
Clarence W. Sanderson,
Harvey W. Walker,
Frank H. Howe.
1 Elected for two years.
174
MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
1901.
Patrick Bowen,
James H. Doyle,
Perlie A. Dyar,
E. Peabody Gerry,
Robert A. Jordan,
John L. Kelly,
Ward 1.
George H. Battis,
William B. Jackson,
Walter J. Staples.
Ward 2.
Daniel J. Sheehan,
Joseph F. Carter,
Thomas F. Clark.
Ward 3.
Francis J. Doherty,
Ed%Tard L. CaiUey,
Henry M. Wing.
Ward 4.
George H. Cadigan,
Philip C. MoMahon,
John J. Mullen.
Ward 5.
Arthur W. Dolan,
Frank P. Murphy,
Maurice J . Power.
Ward 6.
Thomas J. Grady,
Henry S. Fitzgerald,
George A. Scigliano.
Ward 7.
Daniel J. Donnelly,
James F. McDermott,
John L. Sullivan.
Ward 8.
Daniel J. Kiley,
Michael F. Hart,
Hvman Weinberg.
Mayor.
THOMAS K. HART.
ALDERMEN.
JAMES H. DOYLE, Chairman.
Martin M. Lomasney,
George R. Miller,
Michael W. Norris,
Joseph J. Norton,
Philip O'Brien,
Joseph I. Stewart,
George Holden Tinkham.
Edward J. Donovan, City Clerk.
COUNCILMEN.
Daniel J. Kiley, President
Ward 9.
Daniel L. Flanagan,
John L. Curry,
Edward F. Fitzgerald.
Ward 10.
Osborn A. Newton,
Harry O. Alexander,
James H. Phelan.
Ward 11.
March G. Bennett,
Robert Honians,
S.William Simms.
Ward 12.
Donald N. MacDonald,
Harry S. Upham,
Frank E. Gaylord.
Ward 13.
Lawrence J. Kelly,
John E. L. Monaghan,
Andrew L. O'Toole.
Ward 14.
J. Frank O'Hare,
Patrick J. Shiels,
John J. Teevens, jr.
Ward 15.
William L. White,
William E. Hickey,
James M. Lane.
Ward 16.
Frank S. At wood,
William H. Gavin,
Hugh J. Young.
Joseph O'Kaue, Clerk.
Ward 17.
George A. Flynu,
James M. Curley,
William H. Murphy.
Ward 18.
William E. Good,
William J. Barrett,
Thomas E. Raftery.
Ward 19.
John F. Egan,
Peter A. Hoban,
Bernard W. Kenney.
Ward 20.
Oliver F. Davenport,
George O. Wood,
Frank W. Thayer.
Ward 21.
William M. Curtis,
Clarence W. Starratt,
Edmund Weber.
Ward 22.
George W. Lorey,
William H. Nitz,
Thomas D. Roberts.
Ward 23.
Frederick W. Whiteley,
George P. Beckford,
Edward J. Bromberg.
Ward 24.
Samuel H. Mildram,
Herbert W. Burr,
William E. Haunan.
Trace? 25.
Frank H. Howe,
Edward W. Brown,
George McKee.
MAYORS OF BOSTON.
175
Mayors of the City of Boston.
From 1822 to the Present Time.
*John Phillips
* Josiah Quincy
*Harrison Gray Otis
*Cliarle8 Wells
♦Theodore Lyman, jr
*Saniuel T. Armstrong-. . .
♦Samuel A. Eliot
*Jonathan Chapman
*Martin Brimmer
*Thomas A. Davis
*Josiah Quincy, jr
»John P. Bigelow
♦Benjamin Seaver
*Jerome V. C. Smith
*Alexander H. Rice
*Frederic W. Lincoln, jr.
♦Joseph M. Wightman . . .
•Frederic W. Lincoln, jr.
*Otis Norcross
♦Nathaniel B. Shiirtleff..
♦William Gaston
♦Henry L. Pierce
♦Samuel C. Cobb
♦Frederick O. Prince
♦Henry L. Pierce
♦Frederick O. Prince
Samuel A. Green
♦Albert Palmer
Place and Date of Birth.
Boston Nov. 26, 1770
Boston Feb. 4,1772
Boston Oct. 8,1765
Boston Dec. 30, 1786
Boston Feb. 19,1792
Dorchester Apr. 29, 1784
Boston Mar. 5,1798
Boston Jan. 23,1807
Roxbury June 8,1793
Brookline Dec. 11, 1798
Boston Jan. 17,1802
Groton Aug. 25, 1797
Roxbury. Apr. 12, 1795
Conway, N. H July 20, 1800
Newton Aug. 80, 1818
Boston. Feb. 27, 1817
Boston Oct. 19,1812
(See above)
Boston Nov. 2, 1811
Boston June 29, 1810
Killingly, Conn Oct. 3, 1820
Stoughton, Aug. 23, 1825
Taunton May 22, 1826
Boston Jan. 18, 1818
(See above)
(See above)
Groton Mar. 16, 1830
Candia, N. H Jan. 17, 1831
'Deceased.
Died.
May 29, 1823
July 1, 1864
Oct. 28, 1848
June 3, 1866
July 17, 1849
Mar. 26, 1850
Jan. 29, 1862
May 25, 1848
April 25, 1847
Nov. 22, 1845
Nov. 2, 1882
July 4, 1872
Feb. 14, 1856
Aug. 20, 1879
July 22, 1895
Sept. 13,1898
Jan. 25, 1885
(See above)
Sept. 5, 1882
Oct. 17, 1874
Jan. 19, 1894
Dec. 17, 1896
Feb. 18, 1891
June 6, 1899
(See above)
(See above)
May 21, 1887
Term of
Service.
1822.... 1
1823-28.6
1829-31.3
1832-33.2
1834-35.2
1836.... 1
1837-39.3
1840-42.3
1843^4.2
1845.... 1
1846-48.3
1849-51.3
1852-53.2
1854-55.2
1856-57.2
1858-60.3
1861-62.2
1863-66.4
1867.... 1
1868-70.3
1871-72.2
1873.... 1
1874-76.S
1877.... 1
1878... .1
1879-81.3
1882.... 1
1863....!
176 MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
MAYORS OF THE CITY OF BOSTON. — Concluded.
Name.
Place and Date of Birth.
Died.
Term of
Service.
•Augustus P. Martin .
*Hugh O'Brien
Thomas N. Hart
Nathan Matthews, jr.
Edwin U. Curtis
t Josiah Quincy
fThomas N. Hart
tPatrlck A. Collins....
Abbot, Me Nov. 23, 1835
Ireland July 13, 1827
North Reading Jan. 20, 1S29
Boston Mar. 28, 1854
Roxbury Mar. 26, 1861
Qiaincy Oct. 15, 1859
(See above)
Ireland
Mar. 13, 1902
Aug. 1, 1S95
1884.... 1
1885-88.. 4
1889-90. .2
1891-94.. 4
1895 .... 1
1896-99. .2
1900-01..1
1902
* Deceased, t Elected for two years. Stat. 1895, chap. 449.
Chairmen of the Board of Aldermen.
Name.
Place and Date of Birth.
Died.
Term of
Service.
*William Washburn
*Pelham Bonney
*Joseph Milner Wightman
*Silas Peirce
♦Otis Clapp
*Silas Peirce
*Thomas Phillips Rich. . . .
*Thomas Coffin Amory, jr.
*Otls Norcross
*George "Washington
Messinger
*Charles Wesley Slack
*George Washington
Messinger
*Benjamin James
Newton Talbot
*Charle8 Edward .lertkins,
Samuel Little
*L e o n a r d Richard son
Cutter.
•John Taylor Clark
Lyme, N. H Oct. 7, 1808
Pembroke Feb. 21, 1802
Boston Oct. 19, 1812
Scituate Feb. 15, 1793
Westhampton March 3, 1806
(See above)
Lynn March 31, 1803
Boston Aug. 16, 1812
Boston Nov. 2, 1811
Boston Feb. 5, 1813
Boston .Feb. 21, 1825
(See above)
Scituate Aug. 22, 1814
Stoughton March 10, 1815
Scituate July 29, 1817
Hingham Aug. 15, 1827
Jaifrey, N. H July 1, 1825
Sanbornton, N. H., Sept. 19, 1825
Oct. 30, 1890
April 29, 1861
Jan. 25, 1885
Aug. 27, 1879
Sept. 18,1886
(See above)
Dec. 11, 1875
Oct. 10, 1899
Sept. 5, 1882
April 27, 1870
April 11,1885
(See above)
April 13, 1901
Aug. 1, 1882
July 13,1894
Oct. 29, 1880
1855
1856-57
1858
1859
1860
1861
1862
1863
1864
1865-66
1867
1868
1869
1870
1871
1872
1873
1874-77
CHAIRMEN OF THE BOARD OF ALDERMEN. 177
CHAIRMEN OF THE BOARD OF ALDERMEN. — Concluded.
Xame.
Place and Date of Birth.
Died.
Term of
Service.
Solomon Bliss Stebbins
*Hugh O'Brien
Solomon Bliss Stebbins
*Hugh O'Brien
*Charle8 Varney WMtten
Charles Hastings Allen
Patrick John Donovan
Charles Hastings Allen
Homer Eogers
William Power Wilson
Herbert SchawCarruth
John Henry Lee
Alpheus Sanford
John Henry Lee
fPerlie Appleton Dyar.
tJoseph Aloysius Conry
David Franklin Barry.
Michael Joseph O'Brien
James Henry Doyle.
Warren Jan. 18, 1830
Ireland July 13, 1827
Warren Jan. 18, 1830
(See above)
Vassalboro', Me . . . .May 10, 1829
Boston June 14, 1828
Charlestown April 9, 1848
(See above)
Sudbury Oct. 11, 1840
Baltimore, Md Nov. 15,1852
Dorchester Feb. 15, 1855
Boston April 26, 1846
North Attleboro'....July 5, 1856
(See above)
Lynn March 26, 1857
Brookline Sept. 12, 1868
Boston F«b. 29, 1852
Ireland Feb. 11, 1855
Boston June 17, 1867
Aug. 1, 1895.
rSee above)
Mar. 18, 1891
1878
1879-81
1882
1883
1884-85
1889
1890
1891
1892-93
1894-95
1896
1897-98
1898
1899
1900
1901-
NOTE. — Although the Mayor was ex-offlcio Chairman of the Board of Aldermen from
the incorporation of the city until 1885, the Board has elected a permanent Chairman
since 1855.
* Deceased.
t Perlie A. Dyar from January 25, 1898, to April 1, 1898, and October 1, 1898, to end of
year. Joasph A. Conry from April 1, 1898, to October 1, 1898.
178
MUNICIPAL EEGISTER.
Presidents of the Common Council.
Name.
Place and Date of Birth.
Died.
Term of
Service.
♦William Preecott
*John Welles
*Francis Johonnot Oliver,
*John Richardson Adan. .
*Eliphalet Williams. . . .
♦Benjamin Toppan Pick-
man
*John Prescott Bigelow..
*J08lah Quincy, jr
*Philip Marett
*Edward Blake
*Peleg Whitman Chandler
♦George Stillman Hillard,
♦Benjamin Seaver
♦Francis Brinley
♦Henry Joseph Gardner. .
♦Alexander Hamilton
Rice
Joseph Story
Oliver Stevens i .
♦Samuel Wallace Wald
ron, jr
♦Josiah Putnam Bradlee,
♦Joseph Hildreth Bradley,
♦Joshua Dorsey Ball
♦George Silsbee Hale
♦Wm. Bentley Fowle, jr..
Joseph Story
♦Weston Lewis
Charles Hastings Allen. . .
♦William Giles Harris ....
Melville Ezra Ingalls
Pepperell Aug. 19, 1762
Boston Oct. 14, 1764
Boston Oct. 10, 1777
Boston July 8, 1793
Taunton March 7, 1778
Salem Sept. 17, 1790
Groton Aug. '25, 1797
Boston Jan. 17, 1802
Boston Sept. 2.'5, 1792
Boston Sept. 28, 1805
New Gloucester, Me., April 12,
1816
Machias, Me Sept. 22, 1808
Ro xbur y April 12, 1795
Boston .^ Nov. 10, 1800
Dorchester June 14, 1818
Newton Aug. 30, 1818
Marblehead Nov. 11, 1822
Andover June 22, 1825
Portsmouth, N. H. . . Oct. 24, 1828,
Boston June 10, 1817
HaverhiU March 5, 1822
Baltimore, Md July 11, 1828
Keene, N. H Sept. 24, 1825
Boston July 27, 1826
(See above)
Hingham April 14, 1834
Boston June 14, 1828
Revere May 15, 1828
Harrison, Me Sept. 6, 1842
Dec. 8, 1844
Sept. 26, 18.55
Aug. 21, 1858
July 4, 1849
June 12, 1855
Mar.
July
Nov.
Mar.
Sept.
May
Jan.
Feb.
June
July
22, 1835
4. 1872
2, 1882
22, 1869
4. 1873
28, 1889
21, 1879
14, 1856
14, 1889
19, 1892
July 22, 1895
Aug. 24,1882
Feb. 2, 1887
Oct. 5, 1882
Dec. 18,1892
July 27, 1897
Jan. 21, 1902
April 6,1893
Oct. 29, 1897
1822
1823
1824-25
1826-28
1829
1830-31
1832-33
1834-36
1837-40
1841-43
1844-45.
1846-47 1
1847 2-49
1850-51
185-2-53
1854
1855
1856-57
1858
1859-60
1861
1862
1863-64
1865
1866
1867
1868
1869
1870
* Deceased.
iTo July 1.
2 From July 1.
PRESIDENTS OF THE COMMON COUNCIL. 179
PRESIDENTS OF THE COMMON COUNCIL. — Concluded.
Name.
Place and Date of Birth.
Died.
Term of
Service.
Matthias Rich
Marquis Fayette Dickin
son, jr
Edward Olcott Shepard.
*Halsey Joseph Boardman
John Quincy Adams
Brackett
♦Benjamin Pope
*William H. Whitmore . . .
Harvey Newton Shepard:.
Andrew Jackson Bailey. .
*Charles Edward Pratt. . .
*Jame8 Joseph Flynn
Godfrey Morse
John Henry Lee
Edward John Jenkins
David Franklin Barry
Horace Gwynne Allen...
David Franklin Barry
♦Christopher F. O'Brien..
Joseph A. Conry
Timothy L. Connolly
Daniel Joseph Kiley
Arthur W. Dolan
Truro June 8, 1820
Amherst Jan. 16, 1840
Hampton, N. H. . . .Nov. 25, 1835
Norwich, Vt May 19, 1834
Bradford, N. H June 8, 1842
Waterford, Ire Jan. 13, 1829
Dorchester Sept. 6, 1836
Boston July 8, 1850
Charlestown July 18, 1840
Vassalhoro, Me.. .March 13, 1845
St. John, N. B 1835
Wachenheim, Germany, May
17,1846
Boston April 26, 1846
London, England.. Dec. 20, 1854
Boston Feb. 29, 1852
Jamaica Plain July 27, 1855
(See ahove)
Boston Feb. 17, 1869
Brookline Sept. 12, 1868
Boston October 5, 1871
Boston July 27, 1874
Boston Sept. 22, 1876
Jan. 15, 1900
Sept. 24,1879
June 14, 1900
Aug. 20,1898
Mar. 26,1884
April 25, 1899
1871
1872
1873-74
1875
1876
1877-78
1879
1880
18811
1881 2-82
1883 »
1883*
1884
1885-86
1887-88
1889-90
1891-93
1894-95
1896-97
1898
'99-1901
1902-
iTo Oct. 27.
2 From Oct. 27
3 To June 11.
* From June 14.
* Deceased.
180
MUNICIPAL EEGISTER.
Alphabetical List of Members of the City Council, since the
Incorporation of the City.
BOARD OF ALDERMEN.
CHAIRMEN.
[The figures^ being the two last of each year, indicate memhership in those
years. ^Deceased.]
Allen, Chables H 86, 88
*Amory, Thomas C, jr 63
Bakky, David F 99
*BoisrNEY, Pelham 56, 57
C AKUUTH, Herbert S 91
*Clapp, Otis 60
»Clakk, JoHisr T 74, 75, 76, 77
CoNRY Joseph A ^ 98
*Cutter, Leonard R 73
Donovan, Patrick J 87
Doyle, James H 1901, 02
Dyar, Perlie a 97, - 98
*J AMES, Benjamin 69
*Jenkins, Charles E 71
Lee, John H 92, 93, 96
Little, Samuel 72
*MESSiNaER, George W., 65, 66, 68
*NoRCROSs, Otis 64
*0'Brien, Hugh. ... .79, 80, 81, 83
O'Brien, Michael J 1900
*Peirce, Silas 59, 61
*RiCH, Thomas P 62
Rogers, Homer 89
Sanford, Alpheus 94, 95
*Slack, Charles W 67
Stebbins, Solomon B 78, 82
Talbot, ISTewton 70
*Washburn, William 55
*Whitten, Charles V 84, 85
*WiGHTMAN, Joseph M 58
Wilson, William Power 90
MEMBERS OF BOARD OF ALDERMEN.
*Adams, Paul ^ 54
Adams, Wilbur F 99, 1900
*Alger, Cyrus 24, 27
*Allen, Benjamin L 52, 54
Allen, Charles H .... 85, 86, 87, 88
Allen, Horace G 95, 96
*Allen, William W 59
*Amory, Charles 40, 41
*Amory, Thomas C, jr.,
59, 60, 61, 62, 63
*Andrews, William T 40, 41
*Anthony, Benjamin F 82, 83
*Armstrong, Samuel T.,
28, 29, 30, 31
*Atkins, Ebenezer 58, 59, 60
*Ayer, Joseph C 45
B
*Bailey, Joseph T 59, 60
*Baldwin, George P
Barr, Michael
Barry, David F. .94, 95, 96, 97,
*Baxter, Daniel 23, 24, *
»Bell, George E 79, ^
*Bellows, John 25, 26,
*Benjamin, Asher 23, ''
*Bent, Adam
Berwin, William 97, 98,
*Bigelow, Abraham 0 75,
*Bigelow, Alanson 73,
*BiIlings, Samuel
*Binney, John 31, 32,
*Blake, George 25, *
*Boies, Jeremiah S
*Bonney, Pelham 56,
*Bowdoin, James
Bowen, Patrick 1900, 01 ,
*Bradf ord, Ruf us B «
Bradlee, John T
69
86
99
25
80
27
24
31
99
76
74
22
33
26
27
57
32
02
58
69
See note on page 177.
1 From April 1 to October 1.
2 From January 2.5 to April 1, and from October I to end of the year.
3 Elected but did not qualify; declined to serve.
* Declined to serve.
s Died in ofHce.
•5 Resigned.
ALPHABETICAL LIST OF ALDERMEN.
181
»Braman, G. T. W 70
*Brainan, Jarvis D 67, 68
«Breck, Charles H. B., 77, 79, 80, 81
*Brewster, Osmyn 56, 57, 58
Brick, Michael' W 99
*Briggs, Billings.. 47, 48, 49, 50, 51
*Briggs, Harrison 0 60
*Brimmer, Martin 38
Broniwich, Charles M 86, 87
Brooks, William F 74
*Brown, John 73
Bryant, Charles H 94, 95, 96
*Bryant, John 25
*Burnham, Choate 76, 77
*Burrage, Alvah A 75, 76
C
*Calclwe]l, Joseph 80, 81, 82
*Calrow, William H 56
Capen, Samuel J. . T 86, 87
*Carney, Daniel 25, 26
*Carpenter, George O 70
*Carroll, William P ... .86, 87, i 88
Carruth, Herbert S 90, 91
*Carter, Solomon 57
*Cary, Isaac 52, 53
*Caton, Asa H 80
Charles, Salem D 96, 98
*Cheever, .lames 56
«Chi]d, David W 23, 24
*Clapp, Otis 59, 60
*Clapp, William W., jr 64, 65
*Clark, Calvin W 51
*C]ark, James 40, 41
*CIark, John M 2 55
*Clark, John T.,72, 73, 74, 75, 76, 77
*Clark, Moses 61, 63
Cleary, Michael H 98
*Cobb, Samuel C 68
Codman, Franklin L. 97,98,99,1900
*Codman, Robert 56
Coe, Henry F 86
Colby, JohnH 97, 99
*Connor, Christopher A 70
Conry, Joseph A 98
*Cooke, Benjamin F 55
*Cowdin, Robert 55, 70, 71
*Crane, Larra 42, 44
*Crane, Samuel D .... 58, 59, 60, 66
*Cumston, William 67
*Curtis, George 81, 84, 85
*Curtis, George A 58, 59
Ciishing, Sydney 90
*Cutter, Benjamin F 85
*Cutter, Leonard R. . .71, 72, 73, 74
D
*Dana, Charles F 64, 65
*Davies, Daniel 64, 65, 66
*Day, Frederick W 99, 1 1900
Dean, Josiah S 97
*Denio, Sylvanus A 63, 64, 65
*Dennie, George 58, 59
Dever, John F 92, 93, 94, 95
Devlin, Thomas H 83
*DingIey, John T .54, 56, 57
Dixon Ed-ward W 98, 99, 1900
Doherty, Philip J 88
Donovan, Patrick J 85, 86, 87
Donovan, William F 96, 97
Donovan, William J 96, 97
*Dorr, Joseph H 23, 24, ^ 25
Dowd, Thomas H 1902
Doyle, James H...99, 1900, 01, 02
*Drake, Tisdale 54
*Drew, Joseph L 55
*Dunbar, George 77
*Dunham, Josiah 34, 35, 36
*Dunham, Josiah, jr 54, 55
Dyar, Perlie A., 95, 96, 97, 98, 1901
*Dyer, John D 25
E
*Eddy, Caleb 23, 24
Eddy, Otis 88, 89, 92
*Eliot, Ephraim 22
*Eliot, Samuel A 34, 35
*Ellis, Jabez 32, 33, 34
*Emerson, Charles 68, 59
*Emery, Hiram 73, 74
F
^Fairbanks, Moses 68, 69, 72
*Fales, Samuel 33, 34
Farmer, Lewis G 91
*Farnam, Henry,
31, 32, 33, 37, 38, 39
Farwell, Frederick W 1902
*Faunce, George B 78
*Faxon, Francis E 60
*FennelIy, Robert 27, 1 28
*Fernald, Oliver G 84, 85
*Fiske, Benjamin 33
*Fitch, Jonas 66, 67
«FitzgeraId, John E 77
Flood, Thomas W. . .90,91,92,93,95
*Flynn, James J 79, 80, 81
Folsom, Albert A 89, 90
Folsom, Charles E., jr.,
93, 94, 95, 96
1 Died in office.
2 Resigned.
'Declined to serve.
182
MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
Folsom, William A 92
Fottler, Jacob 92, 93, 94
Freeman, James G 86
*Frost, Oliver 53, ^ 54, 57
*Frost, William 81, 82
G.
*Gaffield, Thomas .... 65, 66, 67, 73
Gerry, E. Peabody 1900, 01
*Gibson, Nehemiah, 61,70, 71, 73, 77
*Gould, Frederick 46, 47, 48
*Gould, Salma E 55
Gove, Jesse M 88, 89
*Gove Wesley A 90
*Grant, Moses 48, 49, 50, 51
*Greele, Samuel 34, 35, 36
Greenough, Malcolm S 84
Guild, Curtis 78
*Gurney, Nathan
34, 35, 36, 37, 38, 39, 40, 42
H.
*Haldeman, Cyrus S 81, 82, 83
*Hall, Andrew J 74, 82, 83, 84
Hall, Bordman 94, 96
*Hall, Jacob 22
*Hall, James 28, 29
*Hall, Samuel 49, 50
Hallstram, Charles W 93, 94
*Hanson, James L 60, 61, 62
*Harris, Isaac 38, 39
*Harris, James 39
«Harris, Richard D 31, ^ 32
*Harris, Thomas B 74, 75, 78
Hart, Thomas N 82, 85, 86
*Hatch, Samuel 57, 58, 61
*Hathaway John 45, 46, 47, 48
*Hawes Walter E 67, 69, 70
*Hayden Charles 78, 79
*Haynes, Tilley 87
*HayvFard, Joseph H.
35, 36, 37, 38, 39
*Head, George E 46, 47, ^ 48
*Head Joseph 22
Heath, William B 1902
*Henshaw, Joseph L 62, 63
Hersey, Charles H 81, 82, 84
*Holbrook, Henry M 50, 51
*Holbrook, Jesse 58, 59, 60
*Hooper, Stephen 23, 2 24
*Hulbert Charles 73
*Hull, Liverus 76
*Hunting, Thomas
36, 37, 38, 39, 40, 41
J,
* Jackson, Eben 56
* Jackson. Francis 26
Jacobs, Francis W 70
*James, Benjamin
52, 53, 57, 58, 66, 67, 68, 69
*Jenkins, Charles E 70, 71
*Jenkins, Joseph , . 22
*Jenks, Thomas L 72
*Jones, Thomas 46, 47
Jordan, Robert A 1900, 01
*Joy, Albion K. P 55
K.
Keenan, Thomas F 91, 92
*Kelly, Daniel D 79
Kelly, John L 1901, 02
Kelley, Samuel 88, 89
*Kendall, Thomas 28, 29
»Kendall, Timothy C 56
Kendricken, Paul H 83
*Kimball, Moses 51
L.
Leary, Edward J 90, 91, 92
*Leavitt, Benson 41, 45
Lee, John H.,
87, 91, 92, 93, 94, 95, 96, 97
*Leighton, Charles 34, 35
*Leighton, Edwin F .... 83, 84, 2 85
*Lewis, Weston 91, 92
*Lewis, Winslow 29, 30, 35, 36
Little, Samuel 71, 72
Lomasney, Martin M.,
93, 94, 95, 1901, 02
*Longley, James 42, 43, 44
*Loring, John F. . .26, 27, 28, 29, 30
Lott, William H 97, 98
*Loveriug, Joseph 22
*Lowe, Abraham T.,
40, 41, 42, 43, 44
M.
Maguire, John J 93
Maguire, P. James 86, 87
Mahoney John J 96
*Marsh, Robert 63, 64, 65
«Marshall, Josiah 25, 26
*Mayo, Noah, jr 66
McCarthy, Timothy E 1902
*McCleary, John B.,
30, 31, 32, 35, 36
Resigned.
2 Died during term of oflice.
ALPHABETICAL LIST OF ALDERMEN.
183
*McDonald, John W 84
McDonald, Patrick F 99
McLaughlin, John A.,
87, 88, 89, 90
*McLean, Charles R 67, 78
*Merriani, Levi B ^ 56
*Messinger, George W.,
55, 64, 65, 66, 67, 68
Meyer, George von L 91
Miller, George R 1901, 02
Mitchell, Michael J 92, 93
*Mooney, William L 93
Morton, Andrew M 84
Mullane, Jeremiah H 85
*Munroe, Abel B 51, 54
Murphy, James A 88, 89
N
*]Srash, Nathaniel C 64, 65, 66
*Norcross, Otis ... .^ 62, 63, 64
Norris, Michael W 1900, 01, 02
Norton, Joseph J 98, 1900, 01
*Nugent, James H 84, 85
*Nute, James 57, 2 58
O
*Ober, JohnP 48,49, 52
*0'Brien, Hugh,
75, 76, 77, 79, 80, 81, 83
O'Brien, Michael J 1900
O'Brien, Philip 1900, 01
*Odiorne, George 23, 24
*Odiorne, George 54
*01iver, Henry J.,
25, 26, 29, 30, 31, 32
O'Toole, Frank J 98, 99
P
Paige, Milton C 97, 98
*Parker, William, 42, 43, 2 45, 46, 47
*Parmenter, George W 61, 62
*Patterson, Enoch 23, 24
*Paul, Joseph F 62,63,68
*Peirce, Silas. .57, 58, 59, 60, 61, 63
*Perkins, James 50
*Perkins, Samuel C 1 78
*Perkins, Samuel S 45, 49, 50
*Perry, Lyman 52, ^ 53
*Peters, Francis A 74
*Pickering, John 28
*Pierce, Henry L 70, 71
*Piper, Solomon 50
*Plumer, Avery 71
*Plummer, Farnham 56
1 Died in office. - Resigned.
« Declined to serve. ^ Resigned ;
»Poland, William C 72
*Poi:)e, Benjamin 79
*Pope, George W 70, 71
*Pope, William 45, 46, 48, 49
*Pope, William 75, 76
Porter, Edward F 65, 66
*Power, James 72, 73, 74, 75
Pratt, Albert S 67, 68, 69, 70
Pratt, Laban 82
*Pray, Francis W 83, 84
*Pray, John F 61, 62
*Prescott, Charles J 74, 75
Presho, Edward W.,
94, 95, 96, 97, 98, 99
*Preston, Jonathan,
43, 44, 46, 60, 61
Q
Quigley, Edward L 1902
*Quincy, Samuel 36, 37, 39
*Quincy, Samuel M 73, 75
R
*Reed, Lyman 45
*Reed, Sampson 52, 53
Reed, William Gardner 89, 90
Regan, Martin 91
*Revere, Josejjh W 33
*Rice, Lewis 69
»Rich, Otis 56, 57, 58
*Rich, Thomas P 52, 53, 61, 62
*Richards, Calvin A 62
*Richards, Francis 62, 68, 69
*Richardson, Thomas 37, 38
*Ricker, George D 71, 72
*Robbins, Edward H., jr 26
*Robinson, Josiah S 78, 79
*Robinson, Richard W 77
*Robinson Simon W 44
*Rogers, Henry B.,
44, 48, 49, 50, 51
Rogers, Homer 88, 89
*Russell, Benjamin... 29, -SO, 31, 32
*Russell, Nathaniel P. . .22, * 25, 40
Rust, Nathaniel J 91, 92
S
Sampson George T 76
Sanford, Alpheus 93, 94, 95
*Savage, James 27, 28, * 34
*Savage, James S 45
*Sayward, William 72, 73
*Seaver, Benjamin ^52
s Died before entering office.
Alderman-elect to become Mayor.
184
MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
*Seaver, Nathaniel 68, 69
*Sliipley, Simon G 45
*Sliort, John C 88, 89
*Slack, Charles W 66, 67
Slacle, Lucius,
77, 78, 79, 80, 81, 82, 83, 84
Slattery, Charles H 1902
*Sleeper, Jacob 52, 53
*Smith, Benjamin 51
Smith, Charles W. . .87, 88, 89, 90
*Sniith, James 85
Smith, Nathan G 86, 87, 88
*Spaulding, John P 78
*Spinney, Samuel R 61, 62, 63
*Sprague, George W 64, 65
*Sprague, Thomas 55
*Squires, Sidney 72
Stacey, Benjamin F. . . .89, 90, 91
*Stackpole, Stephen A 72
*Standish, Lemuel M ... .63, 64, 65
Stebbins, Solomon B.,
73, 74, 75, 76, 78, 79, 82
*Stedman, Josiah 43
*Stevens, Hiram A 63, 64
*Stevens, John ^-32
Stewart, Joseph 1 1901
*Sullivan, John H. . ..86, 87. 91, 92
*Sumner, Timothy A 57, " 59
T
Talbot, Newton 67, 68, 69, 70
*Talbot, Samuel, jr 71
*Thompson, Francis 76, 77
*Thorndike, George L 80
*Tilden, Bryant P 22
*Tilden, Joseph 42
*Tileson, William 32, 33
Tinkham, George H . . 1900, 01, 02
*Topliff, Samuel 55
*Torrey, George W -56
*Tucker, .Joseph A 79, 80, 81
*Tyler, John S 63, 65, 66
U
*Upham, Phineas 28
*Urann, Richard 42, 43
*Van Nostraud, William T 69
Viles, Clinton,
75, 76, 77, 78, 79, 80, 81
W
*Wait, Gilbert 66
*Walbridge, Frederick G 80
*Wales, Thomas B-. ^ 25, ^7
*Warren, George W 64
*Washburn, William 54, ^ 55
*Webster, Redford '^25
Welch, William J 83, 85
* Wells, Charles 29, 30
*Wells, Charles A 46
* Wells, John B 37
*Welsh, Thomas, jr 25, 26, 27
*Wetmore, Thomas 33, 34, 1 35
37,- 38, 39, 41, 42, 43, 44, 47
*Whidden, Thomas J 76, 78
*White, Benjamin F 53
White, Clinton 82
*White, Edward A. . .67, 68, 69, 71
*Whiting, James 53
*Whiton, Lewis C 78
*Whitten, Charles V.,
SO, 81, 3 82, 83, 84, 85
*Wightman, Joseph M. ..56, .57, 58
* Wilder, Charles W 77
*Wilkins, Charles 40, 41
*Wilkins, John H 47, 48, 49
*Wilkinson, Simon 4-3, 44
*Williams, George F 54
*Williams, Moses 30
*Willis, Cleriient 59, 60
*Wilson, Elisha T 61, 62
Wilson, William Power. .88, 89, 90
Witt, Charles T 93, 94, 95
*Woodberry, Charles 55
*Woodman, Charles T 55, 68
Wooley, Charles B 90
*Wooley, William,
71, 72, 80, 81, 82, 83
*Worthington, Roland 74, 75
1 Resigned.
•Declined to serve.
^UnBeated.
ALPHABETICAL LIST OF COUXCILMEN.
185
COMMON COUNCIL.
PRESIDENTS.
*Adan, .John R 26, 27, 28
Allen, Charles H.. 68
Allen, Horace G 89, 90
Bailey, Andrew J.,
to October 27, 1881
«Ball, Joshua D 62
Barry, David F., 87, 88, 91, 92, 93
*BiGELO\v, John P 32, 33
*Blake, Edavard 41, 42, 43
*Boardman, Halsey J 75
Brackett, J. Q. A. . . 76
*Bradlee, J. Putnam 59, 60
*Bradley, Joseph H 61
*Brinley, Francis 50, 51
*Chandler, Peleg W 44, 45
Connolly, Timothy L 98
CoNRY, Joseph A 96, 97
Dickinson, Marquis F., jr. . . .72
Dolan, Arthur W 1902
*Flynn, James J., to June 11 , 1883
*FowLE, William B., jr 65
*Gardner, Henry J 52, 53
*Hale, George S 63, 64
*Harris, William G 69
*HiLLARD, George S.,
1846, to July 1, 1847
Ingalls, Melville E 70
Jenkins, Edward J 85, 86
KiLEY, Daniel J 99, 1900, 01
Lee, John H 84
*Lewis, Weston 67
*Marett, Philip 37, 38, 39, 40
Morse, Godfrey,
from June 14, 1883
*0'Brien, Christopher F., 94, 95
*Oliver, Francis J 24, 25
*PiCKMAN, Benjamin T 30, 31
*P0PE, Benjamin 77, 78
*Pratt, Charles E.,
from October 27, 1881, 82
*Prescott, William 22
*Q,uiNCY, Josiah, jr 34, 35, 36
*RiCE, Alexander H 54
Rich, Matthias 71
*Seaver, Benjamin,
from July 1, 1847, 48, 49
Shepard, Edward O 73, 74
Shepard, Harvey N 80
Stevens, Oliver ... 56, 57
Story, Joseph 55, 66
*Waldron, Samuel W., jr 58
*Welles, John 23
*Whitmore, William H 79
*WiLLiAMS, Eliphalet 29
MEMBERS OF COMMON COUNCIL.
*Abbot Andrew 51, 52
*Abbot, Samuel Leonard, 29, 30 31
*Abbott, George W 47, 48
*Abbott, Jacob 73, 74
*Adams, Aaron 42, 43
*Adams, Asa 26, 27
Adams, Charles F 97, 98
Adams, Ebenezer 73, 74, ^78
*Adams, Freeborn, jr 65, 71, 72
*Adams, George W 28, ^ 29
*Adams, Joseph T 37,41
*Adams, Nathaniel 63, 64, 65
*Adams, Paul 52, 53
*Adams, Philip 33
*Adams, Seth 46
Adams, Sidney E 76
Adams, Wilbur F 97, 98
*Adan, John R ,
23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28
*Ainsworth, Andrew ^61
Albee, Charles 1 97, 98
*Albertson, William S 56
Albree, John 83, 84, 85
Alexander, Harry 0 1901, 02
*Alger, Cyrus 22
Allen, Charles H 67, 68
Allen, Horace G 88, 89, 90, 91
*Allen, James B 51, 52
*Allen, Joseph 63, 64, 65
*Allison John 60
Allston, J. Henderson 94, 95
*Amee, Jacob 29, 30, 31, 32, 33
*Araee, Josiah Lee Currell,
34, 39, 40
*Amory, Jonathan 22, 23
*Amory, Thomas Coffin,
36, 37, 38, 39, 40, 41, 42
Anderson, Thomas J. . . .72, 73, 75
*Andrews Henry 33
Andrews, Richard F., jr., 93, 94, 95
1 Unseated.
- Died in office.
3 Resigned.
186
MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
* Anthony, Benjamin F 79, 80
*Appleton, Benjamin B ^ 44
*Appleton, Ebenezer 28
*Appleton, Samuel 22
*Appleton, Samuel A 50
Armistead, Edward A., 98, 99,1900
Armstrong, William O 85, 86
*Arnold, Charles 38
Arthur, Thomas 91, 92, 93
*Aspinwall, Samuel 26, 27, 28
Athridge, Michael T 98
Atkins, Charles A 98
*Atkins, Ebenezer 54
*Atkins, John 49
Atwood, Frank S 99, 1900, 01
Atwood, Lewis L. P 87
Aubin, J. Harris 93
*Austin, Charles F 79, 80
*Austin, Elbridge Gerry,
36, 37, 38, 239
*Austin, Samuel, jr 29, 30
*Ayer, Adams 70, 71
*Ayer, Joseph Cullen. . . .42, 43, 44
B
Bachelder, Thomas C 96
Bacon, George E 83, 2 84
Bacon, Horace 90, ^ 91
«Bacon, John A 27, 28
Badaracco, Andrew A 99, 1900
Bagley, A. Dudley 97, 98, 99
Bagley, Frank E 88, 89
Bailey, Andrew J.. 80, 2 81
*Bailey, Davis W 57
*Bailey, Ebenezer 31, 32, 35
*Bailey, Edwin C 47, 48
*Baker, Joel, jr 59
Baker, John 26
*Baker, Ruel. .33, 34, 35, 39, 40, 41
*Baldwin, Aaron 23, 26
Baldwin, John E 94, 95, 96
*Ball, Jonas 66
*Ball, Joshua D 61, 62
*Ballard, Daniel 29, 30, 31, 38
*Ballard, John 24
Banchor, George Y 96
*Banister, John F 52, 53
Banks, Walden 92, 93
*Barker, Prescott,.. .58, 60, 61, 71
^Barnard, Charles 26
Barnard, Coolidge 77, 78
*Barnard, George M., jr 70
*Barnes, Hillman B 73, 1 74
Barnes, Joseph H 70, 71
Barnes, Joseph H., jr 95, 96
*Barnes. Loring B 62, ^ 63
Barr, Michael 76, 83
Barrett, William J 1901, 02
Barry, David F. .80, 81, 82, 83, 84,
85, 86, 87," 88, 89, 90, 91, 92, 93
Barry, Edward P 89, 90
Barry, Edward W : 74
Barry, James J 77, 78, 79
Barry, John H 57, 58
*Barry, Patrick 75
*Barry, William. .22, 24, 25, 26, 27
*Bartlett, Daniel, jr 43, 48
*BartIett, John W 58, 59
Bartlett, Joseph L 94
*Bartlett, Levi .... 31, 32, 33, 34, 37
Bartlett, William E 81
*Bassett, Francis 26
*Bassett, Joseph 36
*Batchelder, Edward E..67, 68, 69
Batchelder, John L 59, 60
Bates, Benjamin P 82
*Bates, Ezekiel 39
Bates, John L 91, 92
*Bates, Joseph L 58, 59
*Bates, Martin 22, 23
Battis, George H 99, 1900,01
Battis, George R. W 93, 94, 95
*Battles, Jason D 36, 37
*Baxter, George, jr 67
*Bayley, Henry E 57, 58, 59
*Bazin, George W 34
*Beal, Alexander 74, 75
*Beal, Benjamin 49, 50, 51
*Beal, Jairus 58, 59, 60
Beal, James H .57, 58
Beal, Leander 81, 82
*Beal, Thacher 53, 54, 56
Beal, Thomas P 85
*Bean, Aaron H 50, 51, 52
*Bean Ivory 67, 68
*Bean, Jedediah P 55
*Bean, Nicholas J 63, 65
*Bearce. Horace M 74
Beck, Tobias 89
Beckford, George P 1901
Beeching, Richard.. 62, 63, 76, 77
*Belknap, John 28
Belknap, Lyman A 68, 69
Bell, Edwin D 97, 98
*Bell, William A 55
*Bemis, Charles 24
Bennett. George W 95
Bennett, March G 1901, 02
Bennett, William E 98, 99
*Bent, Adam 25, 26, 27
1 Died in office.
^Resigned
' Unseated and re-elected.
ALPHABETICAL LIST OF COUNCILMEN.
187
*Bent, James 74, 75
Berwin, William 93, 94, 95
*Betliune, George ^ 28
*Betteley, Albert 58
*Betton, Ninian C 28, 29, 30
Bickford, Charles D. . . .70, 71, 72
*Bicknell, William E.,
62, 63, 64, 70, 71, 72, 73
Bigelow, Austin 80, 81, 82, 98
*Bigelo'w, George Tyler 43
*Bigelow, John Prescott,
27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33
Bigelow, Lucius A 56
Bigelow, Lyman H 84, 85
Binney, Matthew 53
Bird, Lewis J 63
*Bishop, Robert 68, 70
Blackmar, Wilmon W 72, 73
*Blake, Edward,
33, 39, 40, 41, 42, 43
*Blake, James 33, 34
*Blake, William 47, 48
*Blakemore, John E 79, 80
*Blanchard, Abraham W .... 35, 36
Blanchard, George D. B., 48, 49, 50
*Blanchard, William 76, 77
Blaney, Osgood C 90
Bleiler, Frederick 73, 74
Bleiler, Frederick C 92
*Bliss, Levi 30, 31
*Blodget, Luther 41, 42, 43
Blodgett, Warren K 76, 77
Blume, Andreas, 83, 84, 85, 86, 87
*Boardman, Benjamin G .... 60, 61
*Boardman, Charles 44, 45, 46
*Boardman, Halsey J. . . .73, 74, 75
Boardman, William H 91
*Boies, Jeremiah S 25, 26
*Boles, John. 36, 37, ^38
*Boles, Levi 54
Bond, George H 83, 84
*Bond, Sewall B 67, 69, 70
Bonner, Dennis 62, 63, 70, 71
*Bonney, Pelham, 41, 42, 53, 54, 58
Bordman, John, jr 99
Borofsky, Samuel H 98
*Borrowscale, John 61, ^63
*Bosworth, Hiram 51
*Bourne, Abner 33
*Bowdlear, Samuel G 62
Bowen, Patrick 95, 96, 97
*Bowker, Albert 61,62,66
*Bowker, Horace L 65
Bowker, John E 79, 80, 81
*Bowker, John H ^48
*Bowles, Hiram A 73
*Bowjnau, Alfonso 66, 67
Bowman, Robert H 87, 88
*Boyce, Cadis B 64, 65
»Boyd, John P 23
Boyd, Thomas H 92
Boyle, John J. . .81, 82, S3, 93, 94
Boynton, George W 88
*Boynton, Horace E 82, 83
*Boynton, James 44, 47, 48
*Boynton, Perkins 42, 45
Brackett, J .Q. A., *72,73,74,75,76
*Brackett, Richard 39, 40, 41
*Bradbury, Samuel A 52
*Bradford, Gamaliel 27
*Bradford, Rufus B 56, 57
*Bradf ord, William B s 22
*Bradlee, David W 22, 27
*Bradlee, Henry E 66
*Bradlee, John R 42, 43
Bradlee, John Tisdale 63, 64
*Bradlee, Joseph 44, 45
■*Bradlee, Josiah 25
*Bradlee, Josiah Putnam,
48, 49, 50, 58, 59, 60
*Bradlee, Samuel 23, 24
*Bradley, Joseph 29
*Bradley, Joseph H 60, 61
Bradley, Manassah E 93, 94
Bradley, Patrick H 99, 1900
Bradt, Herman D 70, 71, 72
*Brady, Hugh E 84, 85, 86
*Bragg, Samuel A. B 60
*Brainard, Edward H 54, 55
*Braman, Granville T. W 69
*Braman, Jarvis D 65, 66
Brauer, Andrew 98, 99
*Brawley, John P 78, 1 79
*Breed, Aaron 36, 37
*Breed, Horace A 52, 53
Breen, Daniel F 89, 90
Brennan, Patrick H 98, 99
Brennan, Thomas 71, 72, 73
Bresnahan, Hugh W 96, 97
*Brewer, Nathaniel . .48, 49, 50, 61
*Brewer, Thomas 26
Briggs, Frank H.,
91, 92, 93, 94, 95, 96, 97
*Brigham, Benajah 35, 36, 41
*Brigham, Frank E 84, 85
*Brigham, Levi 29, 30
*Brimbecom, Nathaniel. .80, 81, 82
*Brimmer, George W 22
*Brinley, Francis, jr., 32, 49, 50, 51
*Brinley, George 27
1 Resigned.
'•Unseated.
2 Declined to serve. s Unseated and re-elected.
E Declined to be sworn, did not qualify.
188
MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
*Brintnall, Benjamin. . .78, 79, i 80
*Brintnall, Norman Y 77, 78
Brock, James J 95, 96, 97
Broderick, John H 99
Brogan, Patrick F 91
Bromberg, Edward J 1901, 02
Bromwich, Charles M , .83, 84
*Brooks, Charles 37, 38, 39, 40
*Brooks, Charles J 88,-89
*Brooks, Edward 26
Brooks, George S 97
*Brooks, Noah 23
Brooks, Paul C 90
*Brooks, Peter C 22
Brooks, William F 70, 71, 72
*Brooks, William G. .47, 48, 49, 50
Brown, Alfred S.,
77, 78, 79, 80, 81, 82
*Brown, Asa 44
*Brown, Benjamin B 58
Brown, Benjamin F 89, 90, 91
*Brown, Charles 49, 50, 51
*Brown, Charles H 44, 45
Brown, E. Gerry 84
Brown, Edward W 1901, 02
*Brown, Francis 37, 38, 48, 49
Brown, Frank B 74
*Brown, Gilbert C 63, 64, 65
*Brown, James 32
Brown, John C.J 61
Brown, John F 85, 86
Brown, Joseph A 62, 63
Brown, Thomas W., jr 70, 71
Brown, Walter C 93
Browne, John J 94, 95
Browne, William R 91
Bryant, Charles H 90
*Bryant, David 54, 57
Bryden, William R 67, 68
*Bryent, Walter 46, 47, 48
*Buckley, Joseph. . . .55, 56, 62, 63
*Bullard, Asa 22, 23
*Bullard, Calvin 37, 38
*Bullard, Silas 33
*Bullock, Chauncy K 95
Bunten, Charles V 79
Bunten, Robert 64
*Burbank, Robert 1 55, 56
*Burchstead, Benjamin 42, 43
Burditt, Charles A. .72, 73, 74, 75
*Burgess, Charles S 55, 58, 59
*Burgess, William C,,
59, 60, 65, 74, 75, 76
Burk, Walter F 83, 84
Burke, John J 1902
Burke, Michael H 84, 85
Burke, William J 76, 77, 78
Burlen, Melancthon W.,
89, 90, 91, 92
Burnham, Andrew 52, 53
Burnham, Lewis 89, 90
Burr, Herbert W 1900, 01, 02
Burr, Sidney L 87
*Burr, Theophilus 38
*Burr, Theophilus, jr... .59, 60, 61
Burrage, Albert C 92
*Burrage, William, 53
Burt, George L 70, 71, 72, 73
*Butler, Charles S 68, 69
Butler, Edward P 85
*Butler, Thomas C 74
«Butler, Timothy J 95, 96
*Buttrick, Cyrus 42, 45, 53
*Cadigan, Edward C 95, 96, 97
Cadigan, George H. . .1900, 01, 02
Cadigan, John B 91
Callahan, Michael T.,
92, 93, 94, 95, 96, 98
*Callender, Richard B 49
*Calrow, William H 51, 52
Campbell, John A 89, 90
Cannon, John ' 79
*Cannon, John J 82
Cannon, Patrick 88, 89
*Cannon, Peter 77, 78
Carley, William J 1900
*Carlisle, George 46, 47
Carnes, William R 45
*Carney, Michael (Wd. 2) . . .67, 68
*Carney, Michael (Wd. 7)... 66, 67
*Carpenter, William,
59, 60, 62, 63, 64
Carr, Daniel, jr 61
Carroll, Charles 90, 91, 92
Carroll Henry B 97, 99
Carroll, Joseph H 86
Carroll, Michael J 87, 88, 89
Carroll, Patrick J 94, 95
*Carruth, Nathan 36, 37
Carstensen, Henry 87, 88
Carter, Joseph F 1901
*Carter, Richard B 47, 48, 49
*Carter, Solomon 50, 51
*Cary, Alpheus 28
*Cary, Isaac 43, 44
*Casey, Frank 88, 89
Casey, James J 97, 98, 99
Casey, John T ^2
Casey. Joseph J 90, 91
*Cassidy. Patrick L 83, 84, 85
*Caton, Asa H 72, 73, 74
Resigned.
- Died in otlice.
3 Unseated.
ALPHABETICAL LIST OF COUNCTLMEN.
189
Cauley, Edward L 190] , 02
Cavanagli, George H 79
*Caverly, Charles, jr 66, 67
*Cawley, Dennis, jr.. 66, 67, 74, 75
*Center. John 32
Cham, Elmer E 96
Chamberlain, David B 98, 99
Chamberlain, John T 87, 88
Chance, Charles J 89
*Chandler, Peleg W 43, 44, 45
*Chapin, David 50, 51, 52
*Chapman, Jonathan,
35, 36, 37, 38, 39
Cherrington, William P. . . .85, 86
*Chessman, Samuel. .31, 32, 33, 34
Chickering, Munroe 82, 83
*Child, Dudley R 80, 81. 82
*Child, Linus M 62
*Child, Stephen 36
*Chipman, George W 54, 55
Christal, James . . ." ..... 79, 80
*Clapp, George P 62
*Clapp, Horace B 80, 81
*Clapp, Howard 78, 79, 80, 81
*Clapp, Otis 44, 45, 46
«Clapp, William, W., jr 59, 60
*Clark, Benjamin 25, 26, 27
*Clark, Calvin W 49, 50
Clark, Charles E 92
Clark, Edward P 90, 91
Clark Henry S 1902
*Clark, James 31, 32, 33
*Clark, John M 54
Clark, Louis M 87, 88, 89
Clark, Thomas F 1901, 02
*Clark, William A. 61
Clarke, Isaac P 75, 76, 77
*Clarke, Manlius S 49, 50
*Clatur, Alfred A 71, 72
*Coburn, Daniel J i 56
Cobb, James J 57, 58
Cochran, James A 92, 93, 94
Cochran, Samuel J 86, 87, 88
Codman, Franklin L 95, 96
Coe, Henry F. . . .77, 78, 79, 80, 85
*Coffin, George W 22
*Coffin, Nathaniel W 46
*Cofran, George 46, 48, 49
Colby, Alfred H 96
*Colby, John F 78, 79
Colby, John H 93, 94, 95
Cole, Albert F 69
Cole, Milford J ;69
»Cole, Morrill 54
Coleman, George F 94, 95
Coleman, Jeremiah F 87
*Collamore, John, jr 32
Collins, Charles C 93
Collins, John B 93, 94
Collins, Michael D 74, 75
Collins, Michael W 93, 94
*Collins, Patrick 72, 73
Collins, Thomas J 98, 99
Collison, Harvey N 83, 84, 85
Colman, Moses 64
Comerford, John 88
*Conant, Nathan D 69
*Coney, Jabez 47, 50
Conley, Charles C 53, 54
Conlin, Christopher P 81
*Connell, Joseph P 81, 82, 84
Connolly, Bartholomew J. .86, 87
Connolly, Timothy L.,
96,' 97, 98, 99, 1900
*Connor, Christopher A 66, 67
Connor, Daniel F 94, 95
*Connorton, Martin F 94, 95, 96
Conry, Joseph A 95, 96, 97
Conway. John J. . . .(Ward 3) 1902
Conway, John J. ..(Ward 23) 1902
*Cook, Charles Edw., 42, 43, 44, 45
*Cook, Zebedee, jr 35
Coolidge, David" H 63, 64
«Coolidge, Joseph .... 22, 23, 24, 25
*Coolidge, William D 47, 48
*Copeland, Elisha, jr 39
*Cornell, Walter 28, 29
Costello, Edward H 94, 95, 96
Costello, Michael W 79, 81
Costello, Patrick H 85
Cotter, John J 90
Cotton, Henry W. B 81, 82
Coughlin, James H 91, 92
*Cowdin, Robert,
42, 43, 53, 54, 59, 60, 61
Cowin, Frank H 98
Cox, Guy W 1902
Cox, Pvobert 77, 78
Coyle, George J 75
Coyle, Patrick 86, 87, 88
*Crafts, John W 46
*Cragin, Daniel 56
*Cragin, Lorenzo S 55
Crandall, H. Burr 67
*Crane, Horatio N 39, 40
*Crane, Larra 30, 31, 82, 33
*Crane, Samuel D 49, 50, 51
Cressy, Myron D 91, 92
*Critchett, Thomas 48, 49
Crocker, George U 95, 96
*Crocker, Uriel H . . 74, 75, 76, 77, 78
Crockett, Edward S 95
*Crockett, George W 43, 44
*Crockett, Seldon 61, 62
1 Resigned.
190
MUNICIPAL EEGISTER.
Cronin, Patrick H SO, 81
Cronin, William J 97, 98
*Crosby, Frederick 49
*Crosby. Sumner 56, 61, 62, 65
*Cross, Jolin 77
Crowley, James K 69, 74
Crowley, Timothy J 93, 94, 95
Crowley, William A. H 1902
*Crowninshield, F. B. . . .42, 43, 44
*Cruft, Edward, jr 34, 35
Cuddy, William H 98, 99
*Cudworth, Samuel S 73, 74
*Cullen, Bernard 62, 63
*Cumings, Bradley N 38, 51
*Cummings, Cyrus 45
*Cummings, John A 53
Cummings, Prentiss. . . .81, 82, 83
*Cumston, William 63, 64
*Cunningham, A., jr 28, 29
*Cunningham, Nathaniel F 34
Cunningham, William 71, 72
Curley, Hubert B 92
Curley, James M 1900, 01
Curley, John J 98, 99, 1900
*Curry, Francis W 84
Curry, John L 1901, 02
Curtis, Charles F 75, 76
*Curtis, Charles P.. .23, 24, 25, 26
*Curtis, Thomas B.,
37 38 43 44 45
Curtis, William M.! . .190o' 01^ 02
Cushing, Albus R 75, 76
*Cushing, Henry W 46, 47, 48
*Cushing, John 50, 51
Cushing, Sidney 88, 89
Cushman, Rufus 74, 75
*Cutler, Amos, 52
*Cutler, Lucius A 62, 63
*Cutter, Ammi 34
*Cutter, Samuel L 37
D
Dacey, James F 74
*Dacey, John 60, 61
*Dacey, Timothy J 72, 73
*Dale, Ebenezer 50, 51
*Dall, William 42
Dallow, William, jr 97
*Dalton. Henry L 56, 57
Daly, James F 81, 82
Daly, John H 97
*Daly, William A 85
Damon, George L 75
Damrell, John S 57
*Dana, Otis D 81, 82
*Danforth, Isaac 29, 30
Danforth, James H 77, i 78
Daniels, Nathan H 69
Darrow, Charles 72, 73
*Darrow, George P . . .64, 65, 66, 68
«Dascomb, Thomas R 33. 34
Daunt, John A 91,' 92
Davenport, Hartford 72
Davenport, Oliver F., 97,1900,01, 02
Davern, James F 86, 87
*Davies, Daniel 61, 62, 63
Davis, Charles G 73, 74
*Davis, David P 69
Davis, Francis A 76
*Davis, George ... 45
*Davis, Henry 43, 44, 48, 49, 50
Davis, Herbert C 277
*Davis, J. Amory 54
*Davis, John 54
*Davis, Jonathan 22, 23, 24
*Davis, William A 93, 94
Davis, William W 94
*Davison, Elias E 61, 62
Day, Frederic B. (Wd. 4) . . .77, 78
Day, Frederic B. (Wd. 1) . . .74, 75
*Day, Marcellus 76
*Dean, Benjamin 65, 66, 73, 74
*Dean, Benjamin W 83
Dean, Josiah S 91, 92
Decatur, George W -71
Dee, John H 77
*Demerest, Samuel C 45
*Demond, Charles 53, 54
Dempsey, John F 97
*Denio, Sylvanus A 61
*Denney, Thomas J.,
78, 79, 80, 81, 82, 83, 84, 85, 86
Dennis, Charles W 96, 97, 98
*Dennison, James 45
*Denny, Daniel 45, 46
*Denny, George P. . . .68, 69, 73, 74
*Derby, Eliaa H 30
Desmond, Cornelius F.,
87, 88, 89, 94
Desmond, John F 98
*Devereux, John N 75, 76
«Devine, James... 70, 71, 72, 79, 80
Devlin, Thomas H., 78,79,80,81,82
Dewey, Henry S 85, 86, 87
*Dexter, Franklin 25
Dexter, George S 55
Dexter, John B., jr 50, 51
*Dexter, Theodore 22, 23, ^ 25
*Dickenson, Daniel 31, 32
Dickinson, M. F., jr 71, 72
*Dillaway, William 39, 41
Dillon, Francis H 88, 89
*Dimmock, John L 32
^Resigned.
- Unseated.
ALPHABETICAL LIST OF COUNCILMEN.
191
*Dingley, John T 37, 40, 42
Dinsmore, Thomas 68, 69
Dirksmeyer, Charles H 91, 93
tDixon, Edward 80
tDixon, Edward W 90
*Dodd, Benjamin 38, 39, 41
Dodd, Horace 61
*Dodd, James 46
*Doe, Howard A 67
*Doggett, John 33
*Doherty, Cornelius 59, 60
Doherty, Cornelius 92, 93
*Doherty,Cornelius F., 79,80,81, 1 83
*Doherty, Daniel 76
Doherty, Francis J. . .99, 1900, 01
Doherty, James A 95, 96
Doherty, James D 89, 90
Doherty, James J 77, 78, 79
*Doherty, John, 1st 79, 80, 81
Doherty, John, 2d 84, 85
*Doherty, Joseph . /. 76
*Doherty, Neil 72, 73
Doherty, Neil F 89, 91, 92
*Doherty, Thomas 69, 70
*Doherty, Thomas H 2 73
Doherty, William J 89, 90, 91
Dolan, Arthur W. . . . . 1900, 01, 02
Dolan, Bartholomew % . . 72
Dolan, Charles H., 87, 88, 89, 91, 92
*Dolan, Thomas 68, 70, 71
Donahoe, George A 99, 1900
Donahoe, Charles W 80, 82
Donnelly, Daniel J., 98,1900,01,02
*Donnelly, Eugene C 70
*Donnelly, James J 89
Donnelly, James J 1902
Donnelly, Robert 83, 84
Donohue, John W 97
Donovan, James 82
Donovan, James H 97, 98
Donovan, John L . 98, 99
*Donovan, Michael J 97, 98
Donovan, Patrick J 82, 83, 84
Donovan, Thomas F 96
Donovan, Timothy J 93, 94
Donovan, William F 92, 93
Donovan, William J 91, 92
*Doolittle, Lucius 40
*Dorr, Joseph H 26
*Dorr, Samuel 27
*Dorr, William B 35
*Dorrance, Oliver B 51
*Dowd, Daniel 2 72
Doyle, William H 99, 1900
*Drake, Andrew 22
*Drake, Henry A 62, 63
*Drake, Jeremy 38, 42, 43, 44
«Drake, Tisdale...47, 48, 49, 58, 59
Draper, Edward F 92, 93
*Dresser, Jacob A 56, 57
Drew, Edward E 89, 90
*Drew, Elijah 58
*Drew, Joseph L 53, 54
Driscoll, Michael J 68
*Drury, Gardner P 1 53
*Drynan, John 78
*Dudley, James H 43, 44
*Dudley, Otis B 79, 80, 81
Dugan, John 96
*Duggan, John A 75, 77
Duggan, Thomas H ... .86, 87, 88
*Dumond, John B 97
*Dunbar, Peter 40
*Dunham, Josiah 33
*Dunham, Josiah, jr., 37, 49, 50, 51
Dunn, Edwin F 86, 87
Dunn, John H 95, 96, 97, 98
*Dunnels, Amos A 55, 56
*Dupee, Charles 53, 54, 58
*Dupee, Horace 35, 36, 37
*Durant, Henry F 53
*Dutton, Henry W.,
42, 43, 44, 45, 46, 47
Dyar, Perlie A 89, 90
*Dyer, Ezra 25, 26
*Dyer, John D 23, 24, 27, 1 28
*Dyer, Oliver 44
Eagar, Jeffrey R., jr .94
Eaton, Frederic 90, 91
*Eaton, William (Wds. 1 and 3),
36, 38, 46
*Eaton, William (Wd 12) . . . .46, 47
«Eaton, William G 36, 37
Eddy, Charles E 98, 99
Eddy, Otis 81, 82, 83
*Edmands, Benjamin F 61, 62
*Edmands, George W 36
*Edwards, Henry 36, 37, 38
*Edwards, Pierpont .73, 75
Egan, John F 1901, 02
Egan, John J 86
*Eldredge, Edward H 52
»Elliot, John 23, 24, 25, 27
^Elliott, William W 64, 65
*Ellis, Ebenezer 36, 37
*Ellis, Jabez 30, 31
*Ellis, Jonathan 42, 43, 44
*Ellis, Rowland 38
*Ellis, Samuel 29, 30
*Ellis, William J 66
*Emerson, Charles 50, 57
t Same person.
Resigned.
2 Died in office.
192
MUNICIPAL EEGISTER.
Emerson, Freeman O. . .93, 94, 95
*Emerson, Romanus 43
Emerson, William H., 67, 68, 69,70
Emery, Fred A 99, 1900
*Emery, Stephen L 71, 72
Emery, Thomas J 81, 82, 83
*Emmes, Samuel 39, 40, 41, 42
*Emmons, John L 46
♦Emmons, Joshua 22
Emmons, William H. H ... .84, 85
♦English, William 85, 86
Erskine, Bedfield 85, 86
*Erving, Edward S.,
41, 43, 44, 46, 47, 48, 51, 52
*Eustis, William T.,
33, 34, 35, 36, 42, 46
*Eveleth, Joseph,
26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33
♦Everett, Otis 28, 29, 30, 31
♦Everett, Sidney B 92, 93, 94
Fagan, James 77
♦Fallon, John C 61, 62
Fallon, Thomas F 85, 86, 88
Fallon, William H 93
Falvey, Dennis J 96, 97, 98
♦Falvey, John J 96
Fanning, Robert C 88, 89
Farley, Charles B 55
♦Farley, Noah W 65, 66
Farmer, Lewis G 84
♦Farnsworth, Amos 25, 26
♦Farnsworth, Ezra 56
♦Farnam, Henry 23
Farrar, D. Foster 84, 85, 86
Farrell, Edward 92
Farren. Patrick H 64
Farrington, William M., 95, 96, 97
Farwell, Frank F. . . .80, 81, 82, 83
Farwell, Frederick W 97, 98
♦Faxon, Francis E 57, 58, 59
♦Faxon Isaiah 49, 50
♦Faxon, Nathaniel 26
Faxon, Theodore C 71, 72
♦Fay, Richard S 35
♦Felt, George W 47
Felt, J. Augustus 75, 76, 77
♦Fennelly, Robert 25
♦Fenno , John 25, 26
♦Fenton, John D 98, 99, 1900
♦Fernald, Oliver G 77, 78
♦Fessenden, Benjamin 52
♦Field, Walbridge A 65, 66, 67
Fields, Edwin S 94, 95
Finneran, William F 92, 93
Finnerty, Edward 83, 84
♦Firth, Abraham 76
Fisher, George A 79, 80
Fisher, George N., jr.,. .85, 86, 87
Fisher, Henry S 93, 94
Fisher, Horace B 62, 1 63
♦Fisher, Oliver 25, 26, 29
♦Fisher, Willard N 43, 44
♦Fisk, Edward P 82, S3, 84, 85
Fisk, William C 81, 82
♦Fiske, John M 63, 64
♦Fitch, Jeremiah 24
♦Fitch, Jonas 59, 60, 64, 65
Fitch, Morris C 61, 62, 63
Fitzgerald, Edward F 1901, 02
Fitzgerald, Henry S 1901
Fitzgerald, James E 82, 83, 84
♦Fitzgerald, John E 72, 75
Fitzgerald, John F 92
Fitzgerald, William T. A 97
Fitzpatrick, John B., 80, 81, 82, 83
♦Fitzpatrick, Thomas J 75, -76
Flaherty, John J 1902
Flanagan, Daniel L 1900, 01
Flanagan, John J 97, 98
♦Flanders, William M.,
68, 69, 70, 71, 72
♦Flatley, Michael J 73, 74
♦Fletcher, Henry W 44
♦Flint, Joshua B 31, 32
Flint, Waldo ^28
Flynn, Cornelius J 92, 93
Flynn, Dennis A 77, 78
Flynn, George A.. ..99, 1900, 01, 02
♦Flynn, James J 65, 66, 68, 69,
71,72,73,74,75, 76,77, *81, ^83
♦Flynn, John F 65, 66
Folan, Martin T., 80, 81, 85, 86, 89
♦Foley, Henry W 61, 62
♦Follett, Dexter 40
Folsom, Charles E., jr 91, 92
Folsom, Paul F 98
Forbush, Albert W 92
♦Ford, William C 50, 57, 58, 59
Ford, AVilliam H 81,82
♦Forristall, Ezra 3 53
Foss, William A., 83, 85, 86, 87, 88
Foster, Alfred D 84
Foster, John R 95, 96
♦Foster, William & 31
Fottler, Jacob 85, 86, 87
♦Fowle, Henry, jr ^ 28
♦Fowie, James 43
♦Fowle, Joshua B M3
♦Fowle, William B., jr., 60, 62, 65
♦Fowler, George R 87
♦Fox, Horace ^28
1 Unsealed and re-elected. - Died in office. s Resigned. * Unseated.
5 Declined. "^ Seat declared vacated on acceptance of a city ofllee.
ALPHABETICAL LIST OF COUNCILMEX.
193
Fox, James W 76
»Foye, Jolin W ; 71
*Francis, David 23
*Franklin, Benjamin 68
Fraser, John W.,
76, 77, 82, 83, 84, 85, 88, 89
*Frederick, Jabez., 59, 60, 61, 62, 63
Freeman, James G., 80,81,82,83,84
*Frencli, Benjamin 57, 58
*French, Charles 31, 32
*French, George P 58, 66, 67
*French, John 22
*French, John D. W..82, 83, 84, 85
French, Jonas H 53, 55, 56
Frizzell, William H 82
*Frost, Henry 86, 87
*Frost, Jairus A ■. . . . 55
*Frost, Oliver 56
*Frost, Walter 29
*Frost, William 69, 70
*Frothingham, G. W 46, 47, 48
*Frothingham, Samuel 24, 25
*Fuller, Abraham W 25
*Fuller, Henry W 74
Furlong, Nicholas 79
G-
Gaddis, Michael E 95, 96, 97
*Gaffield, Thomas 64
*Gallagher, James H 83, 84, 85
*Gallagher, John 85, 86, 87
*Gallagher, Peter J 87
*Gallagher William 63, 64
*Gardiner, Henry D 53
*Gardner Francis 47, 48, 49
*Gardner, Henry J... 50, 51, 52, 53
*Gardner, John 44, 46
Garland, George A 95
Gartland, John J. , jr 95
Gaskins, Nelson G 91
Gavin, Arthur L 1902
Gavin, William H 1901
Gay, Albert 1 68, 69, 70
*Gay, George 27
Gaylord, Frank E 1901, 02
*Gibbons, Daniel L., 22,28,29,35,36
Gibbons, John F 99, 1900
Giblin, John H 70
Giblin, John H 99, 1900
*Gibson, Kimball 43, 44, 45
*Gibson, Nehemiah 57, 58
*Gilbert, Samuel, jr 33
Gilbert, Sylvester P 55, 56
*Gilbride, Michael B 90, 91
*Gill, Perez 28, 29, 30, 31
*Gillespie, Neil J ^gs
Gilligan, Hugh 91
*Glancy, John 62, 63, 64
*Goddard, William 24, 25
»Gogin, Thomas 64, 67
Going, George 69, 70
*GoldtWait, John 74, 75
Gomez, Joseph B i 81, 87
Good, Jeremiah J 1902
Good, John 82
Good, William E 1900, 01
Goodenough, Henry B.,
89, 90, 91, 92, 93, 94
*Goodhue, Samuel 29
*Goodman, James 83, 84, 85
*Goodnough, Jacob N 90
Goodwin, Daniel 60
*Goodwin, William F 53, 54
Gordon, George F 74
*Gordon, George W., 35,36, 37,38,339
Gordon, William 91
*Gore, Christopher 29,30
Gore, Frederick S 92
*Gore, Stanley 62
Gormley, Patrick F 92, 93, 94
*Goss, Emory 49, 50
*Gould, Benjamin A., 34, 35, 36, 37
*Gould Frederick 28, 31
*Gould, Thomas 27, 28, 29, 30
*Gove, Austin 55
Gove, Jesse M 81
Gove, Robert J 1902
Grady, Thomas J 1900,01, 02
*Grafton, Daniel G 66, 67
Gragg, Isaac P 71, 72, 76
»Gragg, Washington P 30, 31
Graham, James B., 76, 84,85,86,90
Graham, Wilham T 89, 92, 93
Grant, Frederick 61
*Grant, Moses,
35, 36, 37, 38, 39, 40, 41, 42
Grant, W. McG 1900
Graumann, John 1902
*Gray, Henry D ^28. 34, 35
Gray, Hollis R. . . 61, 68, 69, 70, 76
*Gray, Joel 65
*Gray, John C .... 24, 25, 26, 27, 28
*Gray, Solomon S 66
*Greeley, Philip, jr 37, 40, 48
*Green, John, jr. .35, 45, 46, 47, 48
Green, Thomas H 84
Greenough, Malcolm S.,
79, 80, 81, 82, 83
*Greenough, William W., 47, 48, 49
Griffin, John H 90, 91, 93, 94
*Grosvenor, L. P 26, 37, 38
Guild, Curtis 75, 76
*Guild, Samuel E 47
1 Unseated.
2 Died in office.
Resigned.
* Declined.
194
MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
H
Ilagar, Eugene B 80, 81
Haggerty, Roger 87, 88
Halilo, Maurice J 89
«Hale, Elam W 66
*Hale, George S 57, 63, 64
*Hale, Theodore P 51, 52
Haley, James F 95, 96
Hall, Albert H 89, 90, 91
Hall, Andrew 65, 67, 69, 70
*Hall, Andrew J 73
*Hall, Andrew T 43, 44, 45
Hall, Charles H 93, 94, 95
»Hall, Daniel 55
*Hall, Edward F 58
Hall, James, jr 76
*Hall, Martin L 53, 54
*Hall, Samuel W., 44, 45, 46, 47, 48
*Hallet, George 25, 26, 27, 32
Hallstram, Charles W. .90, 91, 92
Ham, Lemuel M 78
Ham, Martin L 76, 77
*Hamblen, David 52
Hamilton, James B 90
*Hammond, Nathaniel . . 38, 39, 40
Hancock. Martin M 79, 80
Hannan, William E. . .1900, 01, 02
*Hapgood, Lyman S 60, 61
Harding, Herbert L 84, 85, 86
*Harding, William B 41
*Harding, William L 81, ^82
Harlow, Ezra 56
*Harmon, Walter 75
Harrigan, Jeremiah 75
Harrington, Edward J 87
*Harrington, Henry W 73, 74
*Harrington, W. A. . .47, 48, 49, 50
Harrington, William F 98
Harris, Charles E . . .• 89, 90
*Harris, Isaac, ^ 28, 35, 37, 41, 43. 44
*Harris, James 35, 36, 37, 38
*Harris, Joseph, jr 32, 33, 34
*Harris, Leach 30, 31
*Harris, Samuel 44
*Harris, William G. . .55, 57, 68, 69
Harrison, Samuel J 81, 82
*Harrod, Noah 46, 47
Hart, Michael F. .98, 1900, 01, 02
Hart, Thomas N 79, 80, 81
Hart, William H 72
*Hartshorn, E. P 24, 32, 33
Harvey, William E 97, 98, 99
*Haskell, Daniel N. . .49, 50, 51, 52
*Haskell, Elias 23, 24
*Haskell Levi B 30, 31, 32
*Haskell, William O 37
*Hastings, Edmund T 37
^Hastings, Joseph S.,
23, 24, 2.5, 26, 31, 32, 33, 34
Hatch, Benjamin F 89, 90
*Hatch, Henry 26, 30, 31, 32
*Hatch, Samuel 53, 54, 55, 56
*Hatch, Windsor, 2d 62
Hathorne, Edward J .... 83, 84, 85
*Haughton, James 89, 40, 41
*Haven, Calvin W 45
*Haviland, Thomas 46, 47, 48
*Hay, Joseph 30, 31, 32
*Hayden, William. . . .42, 43, 44, 45
*Hayes, James B 88, ^ 89
Hayes, John T 79
Hayes, John W.(Wd.l6), 86, 87, 88
*Hayes, John W. (Wd. 2) 94
Hayes, Walter L 89, 90, 91
Haynes, Henry W 58
Haynes, John C....63, 64, 65, 66
*Hayward, Ebenezer 32
*Hayward, James 45, 46
Healy, John J 92
*Healy, John P 41, 42
*Healy , Joseph 79, i 80
Healy, William C. S 1900
Heath, Benjamin 72
Heffernin, Patrick J 90
Henderson, Walter E . . . . 1900, 02
Hennigan, William O'S 1900
*Hennessey, Edward 49, 50
Henry, William P 85
*Henshaw, Joseph L. . . .58, 60, 61
Hersey, Albert W 85, 86
Hersey, Charles H 71, 72
*Hewes, Jabez F 64, 65
*Heywood, Zimri B 68
*Hibbard, Salmon P 77, 78
Hibbard, Willard W. . . .97, 98, 99
Hichborn, Samuel 83, 84
Hickey, Joseph F 98, 99
Hickey, Thomas H 86
Hickey, William E 1901, 02
Hickey, William P 96, 97, 98
Hicks, Cyrus 62, 75
Hicks, John T 74
Higgins, Patrick 91, 92
*Hildreth, Richard 32
*Hill, Thomas 78
«Hillard, George S 45, 46, 47
Hills, William S 66, 67
*Hilton, John P.,
79, 80, 81, 82, 83, 84
*Hinckley, Holmes 40, 2 45
1 Died in oflice.
Declined.
' Unseated.
ALPHABETICAL LIST OF COUNCILMEN.
195
*einds, Calvin P 53, 54
Hine, Elijah B 73, 74
*Hinks, Edward W 55
Hinman, George 62, 63
Hirshon, Simon 95, 96
*Hiscock, Lowell B 75, 77
Hoar, John F 1902
Hoar, John J 88, 89
Hoban, Peter A 1901, 02
*Hobart, Aaron 52
*Hobart, Enoch 34, 35
*Hobart, James T 36, 37
*Hobbs, John W. F 54, 55
*Hobbs, William, jr 68, 69
«Hodges, Samuel W 66, 67
Hodgkins, William E 85
*Holden, Joel M 51
Holden, Joshua B 93, 94
Hollis, George W 78, 80
*Hollis, Thomas . . .^ 35
*Holmes, Barzillai 22
*Holmes, Edward J 72, 73
Homans, Eobert 1901
*Homer, Samuel J. M 53
*Hooper, Henry N 41, 45
Hopkins, Samuel B 68, 69
*Hopkins, Solomon 48
Horgan, Dennis A 84, 85
Horgan, Francis J 96, 97
Horrigan, Charles A. 98, 99, 1900
*Hosley, Henry E 80, 81
Houghton, Michael J 82, 83
*Hovey, James G 51
*Howard, Charles 23
*Howard, Eleazer i 28
*Howard, Joseph W 60
Howard, Louis T 97, 98, 99
*Howard, Thomas M 58
Howard, William H.(Wd.4), 79, 80
*Howard, William H. (Wd. 12), 41
Howard, William P 54, 55
Howe, Frank H 1900, 01, 02
*Howe, John 22
*Howe, Joseph N 28
♦Howe, Joseph X., jr.. .41, 42, 43
*Howe, William 26, 27
*Howes, Osborne 59
Howes, Osborne, jr 75, 76, 77
*Howes, Willis 42
Howland, Charles W 78
Howland, J. Frank 82, 83
*Hudson, Thomas 37, 38
*Hughes, Frank M 72, 73
*Hull, Barney 70, 71
Hunnewell, Francis 74
*Hunting, Thomas. ..32, 33, 34, 35
Huntress, George L 81, 82
^Huntress, Joseph F 61
Hurley, John 91, 92, 93, 94
Hurley, John C 1900
^Hutchins, Ezra C 39, 40, 41
Hutchinson, Isaac P 90
*Hyde, Henry D 66, 67
Ingalls, Melville E 69, 70
Innes, Charles H 96
Ireland, William H 62
Irving, John J 90, 91
Jackson, Andrew 77
*Jackson, Eben 40, 43
*Jackson, Francis 23, 24
*Jackson, Patrick T 22
*Jackson, Patrick T 64
Jackson, William B. .1900, 01, 02
Jacobs, Charles 93, 95, 96
Jacobs, Francis W 68, 69
*Jacobs, Thomas R 71
*James, Benjamin 48, 49
*James, John W.,
26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35
Janes, Henry B 58, 59
*Jaques, Francis 75, 76
* Jarvis, John F 67
Jenkins, Edward J 85, 86, 89
*Jenkins, Horace 59, 60
*Jenkins, Joshua 53, 54
*Jenkins, Solon 36, 37, 46
Jenks, Benjamin B 85
*Jenks, Thomas L 68, 69
*Jennings, Richard 74
Jenney, Everett H . 1902
*Jepson, Samuel 55
*Jewell, Harvey 51, 52
* Jewett, Darwin E 47, 48
Jewett, Nathaniel M 86
*Johnson, Caleb S 54
*Johnson, Ebenzer 54, 56, 57
Johnson, Frank J 99, 1900
*Johnson, George W 28
Johnson, John W 95
* Johnston, George H 69
Jones, David H. , jr 93, 94
*Jones, Eliphalet 47
* Jones, George S 54, 55
*Jones, Isaac 44
Jones, James G 90
*Jones, Josiah M 42, 43
*Jones, Justin 59, 60, 61
*Jones, Peter C 51, 52, 53
* Jones, Samuel , 22, 28
1 Declined.
196
MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
Jones, Samuel C 95, 96, 97, 98
Jones, Stephen G 76
*Jones, Thomas 45
Jones, William H 72, 73
Jordan, Abram 98, 99
Josselyn, F. M., jr 56, 57
*Josselyn, Lewis 35, 36, 37, 38
Jxidson, Gurdon C 69
K
Kane, John J 91
Kasanof, Samuel 98, 99, 1900
*Keany Matthew . . 62, 63, 64, 68, 69
Kearins, Patrick 84, 85, 86
Keef e, John A 89
Keenan, James 92, 93, 94
Keenan, Thomas F 88, 89
«Keith, James M 68, 69
*Keith, Robert 34, 35
Keliher, Thomas J.. 85, 86, 87, 88
Kelley, Francis B 85, 86
*Kelley, John (Wd. 3) . . .75, 76, 77
Kelley, John (Wd. 6) 77, 78
Kelley, John P 88, 89
*Kelley, Michael 73
Kelley, Michael W 1900
Kelley, Roger J 79
Kelley, Samuel 84, 85, 86
Kelley, Thomas A. : 99, r900
Kelley, Thomas F 87, 88
*Kelly, Daniel D 53, 54, 59
Kelly, James H 93, 94
Kelly, John L 95, 96
Kelly, Lawrence J 1900, 01
Kelly, Patrick C 90, 91
*Kendall, Ezekiel 51, 52
*Kendall, George S 71
*Kendall, Thomas 22, 23
*Kendall, Timothy C 44, 54
Kendricken, Paul H .... 78, 79, 80
*Kennedy, John J 87
Kenney, Bernard W 1901, 02
*Kent, Henry S 29
*Kent, William H 74
*Kent, William V 39, 40
*Kidney John A 77, 78, 79, 1 80
*Kilduff, William J 2 84
Kiley, Daniel J.,
96, 97, 99, 1900, 01
*Killion, Michael J 82, 83
*Kimball, Benjamin 36
*Kimball, Daniel 40, 41
Kimball David P 74, 75
*Kimball, Moses 49, 50
*Kimball, Otis 51, 52
King, David T 93, 94, 95
1 Resigned.
*Kingsbury, Everett C,
68, 69, 70, 71, 75, 76
Kingsley, Charles M 75
Kingsley, George P 72, 73
Kinney, Alfred F 96, 97, 1900
Kinney, John F 89, .90, 91
*Kinsman, Henry W 32
Klemm, Frederick W 98, 99
Knapp, Frederick P 89
*Knight, Lucius W 67, 68
Krogman, Samuel B 59
*Krueger, William A 56, 57
L
Ladd, Nathaniel W 86, 87
Lamb, Abraham J 72, 73
*Lamb, Thomas 28
*Lamson, Benjamin 22, 23
Lane Benjamin C 95, 96
Lane, Daniel W 1902
»Lane, George 27, 28, 29
Lane, James M 1901 , 02
*Lane, John I 80
Lanergan, John P 97, 98
Lappen, J. Edward 83, 84, 85
*Lappen, James A 75, 76
Lattimore, Andrew B 87, 88
*Lauten, Albert F.,
78, 79, 80, 81, 82, 86, 87
*Lawrence, Abbott 31
*Lawrence, James 51, 52
*Lawrence, S. Abbott 45
Leach, Henry L 74
*Leahy, John 60
*Learnard, George E 69, 70
*Learnard, George W 55
»Learnard, William H 43, 44
Leary, Edward J 86, 87
Leary, Michael J 94, 95
*Leavens, Simon D., 37, 38, 44,45,46
*Leavitt, Joseph M 34
*Leavitt, Thomas 66
Lee, John H. ... .82, 83, 84, 85, 86
*Leeds, Henry 40
*Leeds, Samuel : 41
Leftovith, Martin. .->. 99, 1900
*Leighton, Charles 30, 31, 32, 33
Leighton, Emery D 75
«Leighton, John W., 61,62,63,68,69
Leonard, Michael 97, 98, 99
*Lerow, Lewis 25, ^ 26
Levy, Abraham 91
*Lewis, Asa 34
*Lewis, Calvin M 94, 96
*Lewis, George W 34
*Lewis, Joseph W 27
-Died in office.
ALPHABETICAL LIST OF COUNCILMEK
197
*Lewis, Weston 65, 66, 67
*Lewis, Winslow 22
*Lewis, Winslow, jr 39
*Libby, J. G. L MS
«Liglit, James B 90
Light, Kobert W 86, 87, 88
*Lincoln, Ezra, 37, 38, 39, 40, 41, 42
*Lincoln, Ezra, jr 47 , 51, 52
«Lincoln, Hawkes 22, 23, 24
*Lincoln, Henry. . .35, 36, 50, 51, 52
*Lincoln, Jared 29, 30
*Lincoln, Levi R 28, 29, 30
*Lincoln, Noah, jr 47, 48
Linehan, Frank J. . . .99, 1900, '02
*Little, William, jr 24, 27
*Littlehale, Sargent S 45
Livermore, Charles W 64, 65
Livermore, Oliver C 67
*Locke, John H 71, 72, 79
Lodge, Giles .24, 25, 26, 27
Logan, Edward L 99, 1900
*Logan, Patrick F ^ 63
Lomasney, Joseph P 88
Lombard, Samuel 83, 84, 85
*Long, Edward J 71, ^ 75
Long, George H 74
Lorey, George W....99, 1901, '02
*Loring, Caleb G 35
Loring, Harrison 73, 74
Loring, Horace 72
*Loring, Jonathan 27
*Loring, Omar 75, 76
*Loring, Perez 33
*Loring, Samuel H 64, 65
*Lothrop, Ansel 59, 60
*Loud, Andrew J 51
Lougee, Henry C 67
Loughlin, James W 77
*Lounsbury, William H 55
*Lovejoy, Reuben 49, 50
*Lovejoy, William R 40
Lovering, George H 78, 79
Lovell, Clarence P 80, 81, 82
*Lovell, Michael 30
Lovett, George E 89, 90, 91
Lowden, John E 95, 96
Lowell, Francis C 89, 90, 91
*Lowell, John, jr 28, 29, 30
Lucas, Winslow B 69
Lydon, Michael J 98, 99
Lynch John E 84, 85
Lynch, Mark H 91, 92, 94
Lynch, Martin * 74
Lynch, Michael G 84, 85
Lyons, Michael J 93
Lyons, Thomas F., 88, 89, 91, 92, 93
Lyons, William J 1902
M
Maccabe, Joseph B 88
MacDonald, Donald IST.,
99, 1900, 01
Mackey, Thomas 97
Mackin, William 84
Madden, Edward H 98, 99
Madden, Hugh A 66
*Madden, John 73
Maguire, Francis P 83, ^ 84
Maguire, P. James,
79, 80, 81,82, 83, 84
*Mahan, Benjamin F 54
»Mahan, John W 73
Mahoney, Jeremiah E. .93, 94, 95
*Mahoney, Jeremiah S 88
Mahoney, John J. (Wd3). . .90, 91
Mahoney, John J. (Wd 15),
95, 96, 97
Mahoney, William E 95, 96, 97
»Mahoney, William J .86, 87, 88, 89
*Mahony, James T., jr 96, 97
Maier, John A, jr 96, 97
*Malone, Edward 68, 69
Manks, Herbert M 93, 94, 95
*Mann, Nehemiah P 38
*Manning, Francis C 51
Mansfield, Walter R 99, 1900
«Mansfield, William E 93
Marble, William 55
Marley, James F 83, 84
Marnell, William H 93, 94
*Marett, Philip,
34, 35, 36, 37, 38, 39, 40
*Marsh, Robert 49, 50
Marshall, Ernest C 82, 83
Marston, James F 72, 73
Martin, John B 72, 73, 74
*Martin, Israel 33, 34, 35, 6 36
Martin, William 98, 99
*Marvin, Theophilus R.,
41, 42, 43, 47, 48, 49
*Mason, Henry 57
Mason, Julian O 56
*Matheson, Murdock 66, 67
«Mathews, Thomas A 60
Mathews, Thomas R 81, 82
*May, J. Wilder 76
*Maynard, Jesse 48
Maynard, Joseph A 1902
*Mayo, Charles 54, 55
Mayo, Watson G 54
*McAllister, James 38, 39
«McCarthy, Charles J.,
59,60,61,6 62,64
McCarthy, Daniel A 93, 94
1 Unseated and reinstated.
* Unseated.
' Unseated and re-elected.
5 Resigned.
3 Died in oflice.
198
MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
McCarthy, David F 96
♦McCarthy, John E 96
McCarthy, Maurice J 97
McCarthy, Nicholas F 89
McCarthy, Timothy E. .,95, 96, 97
McCarty, Michael H 74
McCauley, Andrew P 89
McClellan, William B 91, 92
McCluskey, James F 77
McColgao, Michael J 96, 98
McCormick, Martin S 81
*McCue, Robert 73
McDermott, James F 1901, 02
*McDevitt, Robert 71
McDonald, Daniel J 1902
McDonald, Patrick F 77, 78
McDonald, Peter A 1902
McEnaney, Thomas 0 86, 87
*McGahey, Alexander B 78, 79
*McGaragle, Patrick F. ..77, 78, 79
McGeough, James A 78
*McGilvray, David F 56, 57
McGinniss, Frank 92
McGonagle, Philip J 1902
McGowan, William S 58
McGrady, Edward F 1902
McGuire, Edward H 94, 95, 96
Mclnerney, James 99, 1900
Mclnnes, William M 94
Mclsaac, Daniel V 97, 98
McKay, Nathaniel 64, 65, 67
McKee, Henry J 84
McKee, George 1901, 02
McKenna, Maurice J 87, 88
McKenney, William 73
McLaughlin, Daniel 82, 83
McLaughlin, Hugh 91, 92
McLaughlin, John A 81, 82
*McLaughlin, Patrick 63, 65
*McLaughlin, Philip J. . .80, 81, 88
McLaughlin, Stephen F 79
*McLean, Charles R 63, 64, 65
*McLellan, George W 49, 50
*McLellan, Isaac, jr 34
McMackin, Bernard 93, 94
McMahon, Philip C 1901
McNamara, Jeremiah J.,
80, 81, 83, 85
*McNamara, John 88
McNary, William S 86, 87
McNelley, John E 84
*McNutt, John J 72
*Meads, John B 70
Means, Arthur F 81
*Means, James 28, 35
Means, James 88
*Mears, Granville. . . .63, 64, 65, 66
1 Unseated and re-elected,
*Meriam, Edward P 41
*Meriam, Levi 25, 26, 27
*Merriam, Joseph W 50
Merrill, John 92, 93
Merrill, William B 55, 57
*Merritt, Edward R i 67
*Messinger, Daniel 33, 34
*Messinger, George W 54
Meyer, George von L 89, 90
Mildram, Samuel H..99, 1900, 01
Millar, Collingwood C. .96, 97, 98
Miller, George R 99, 1900
*Miller, John 65, 06
*Miller, William H 85
Miller William J ... .94, 95, 96, 97
Milmore, Martin 1902
«Milton, Ephraim 31, 32
*Minns, Thomas 29, 30, 31, 32
*Minon, Michael G 68
»Minot, Albert T 49, 50, 51
*Minot, William, jr 74
Mintz, Norman 93
Mitchell, George F 89
Mitchell, Michael J 88
Mitchell, Samuel H 93, 94
*Moley, Patrick 74, 75
Monaghan, John E. L. . . .1900, 01
«Moody, David 28
*Mooney, Thomas (Wd. 3) 59
Mooney, Thomas (Wd. 2). . .74, 75
*Mooney, William 64, 65
Moore, George H 99
*Moore, Ira L 89
*Morey, George, jr 25, 26, 27
Morgan, Evan H 79
*Morison, Frank 87, 88
Morrill, Joseph, jr 76, 77
Morrison, Albert P 60
Morrison, Frank R 87, 88
*Morrison, John W 79, 80
*Morrison, Nahiim M.,
56, 57, 65,66, 67, 75, 76, 81, ^82
*Morrison, Peter 81, 82, 83
»Morse, Elijah 24, 25
Morse, Godfrey 82, 83
Morse, L. Foster 68
Morse, Lewis W 83
*Morse, Nathan 63
*Morse, William 70, 73, 74
Morton, Francis F 95, 96
*Moseley, David C 22
*Motley, Thomas 22
Moulthorp, Sidney 96
Moulton, John S 70, 71, 72
*Moulton, Thomas... 36, 37, 38, 39
Mo wry, Oscar B... 77, 78, 79
Mulcahy, James F 97, 98, 99
2 Resigned.
ALPHABETICAL LIST OF COUNCILMEN.
199
Mulhall, John F. J 89, 90, 91
Mullane, Jeremiah H.,
77, 78, 79, 84
*Mullane, Jeremiah M.,
69, 170, 71, 72
Mullen, James F 88
Mullen, John 76, 78
Mullen, John J 1901, 02
Mullett, George F 81, 82
*Munin, John E 54, 56, 57, 58
*Munroe, Abel B 48, 49, 50
*Munroe, Francis J 66
*Munroe, James 45
Murdock, George A 1902
*Murphy, Cornelius 61, 62
Murphy, Francis J.,
81, 82, 83, 84, 85
*Murphy, Frank P - 1901
Murphy, James A 82, 83, 84
Murphy James C 95, 96
*Murphy, James F ; . . 85
Murphy, John 86, 87
Murphy, John J 70
Murphy, John J 87
Murphy, Timothy A 79, 80
Murphy, Timothy F 92, 93
Murphy, William H. . . .85, 86, 87
*Murphy, William H 1901
Murphy, William J 88, 91
Murray, George F. H. . .83, 84, 85
Murray, George H 91
Murray, Jeremiah A 75
Murray, Eichard J 85, 86
Myers, Aaron E 1902
N
Nangle, Charles P.. .96, 97, 98, 99
*]Srash, ^^athaniel C 56
Xason, Hiram 1 80
Nason, J. Byron 68
Nason, Jesse L 78, 79
*Nazro, John G .41
*Nelson, Ebenezer 68, 69
*Nevers, Benjamin M 36
*?y'ewcomb, Norton 42
*N'ewell, Joseph E 30, 31
Newhall, Guy F 99
Newmarch, Alfred. .95, 96, 97, 98
*Newton, Jeremiah L 66, 67, 68
Newton, John F 75, 76
Newton, Osborn A 1900, 01
Nichols, George N 57
Nichols, Walter E 97, 98
*Nicholson, Samuel 52, 53
*Niles, Stephen E 70, 71
Nitz, William H 1900, 01
Noonan, Thomas L 96
*Norcross, Loring 44, 45, 46
Norris, Michael W.,
88, 89, 90, 91, 92, 94, 95, 98
Norton, John H 87
*Nottage, Samuel C 46, 47
*Nowell, Charles 55
*Nowell, George 66, 67
Noyes, Amos L.,
69, 70, 71, 72, 74, 75
Noyes, Bernice J 90
*Noyes, George N 52
Noyes, Increase E 66, 67
*Noyes, Nicholas 39
*Nugent, James H 77
*Nurse, Gilbert 3 36
«Nunan, Thomas F 87, 88, 89
Oakes, William H 88, 89, 90
Oakman, Henry P 84, 85
*Ober, John P 44, 46, 47
O'Brien, Christopher 86
*0"Brien, Christopher F., 93, 94, 95
O'Brien, Francis 79
O'Brien, James M 89, 90
«0'Brien, James W 91, 92, 93
O'Brien, John 70, 71
*0'Brien, John P 83
O'Brien, William J 99
O'Callaghan, John J 95, 96, 97
O'Connor, Dennis 78
*0 'Connor, John P 93, 95
*0'Connor, Patrick 70, 71
O'Connor, Thomas 77
«Odin, John, jr 52, 54
O'Donnell, Edward 77
*0'Donnell, James 76
»0'Donnell, Philip 61, 62, 63
O'Dowd, Andrew A 79, 80
*0'Flynn, Thomas 83, 84, 85
O'Hara, John M 92, 93, 94
O'Hare, J. Frank 1900, 01
*01iver, Francis J ... .23, 24, 25, 28
*01iver, Henry J 34
^Oliver, Samuel P 45, 46, 47
*01ney, Stephen W 35
O'Mealey, John W 87
Orchard, Edward 95, 96, 97
*Ordway, John P 63, 64, 65
*Orne, Henry 3 22
Orr, Charles H 82, 83
*Orrok, James L. P 28
Osborn Francis A 67, 68, 69
*Osborne, John, jr 75, 76
*Osborne, William M 84, » 85
^Unseated.
' Died in office.
3 Resigned.
200
MUNICIPAL KEGISTER.
*Otis, George W 24, 28
*Otis, George W., jr 40, 41
O' Toole, Andrew L 1901, 02
O'Toole, Patrick J 96, 97
Owens, David M 1902
*Page, Chauncy 58
*Page, Cyrus A 72, 73, 74, 75
*Page, Edward 24
*Page, George 39, 40
*Page, Thaddeus 22, 23, 24
*Page, Timothy E 58, 59, 61
*Paige, Harlan P 89, 90
*Paine, Robert T 28, 33, 34
*PaIfrey, Francis W 65
*Palfrey, William 48, 1 49
*Palmer, Benjamin F 57, 58
*Palmer, Julius A 49, 50
Park, Francis E 90
*Park, John C 35, 36
Park, William D 65, 66
*Parker, Amos B 29
*Parker, Augustus.. .68, 70, 75, 76
*Parker, Benjamin -SO
Parker, Bowdoin S 89, 90, 91
Parker, Charles H 46, 47, 48
Parker, Francis J 56
*Parker, Isaac, 24,25,26,32,38,39,40
*Parker, John B 38, 39, 44, 45
*Parker, William (Wd. 5).
26, 27, 28, 29, 31, 32
*Parker, William ( Wd. 10). .27, 28
*Parker, William C 92, 93
Parkman, Henry,
79, 80, 81, 82, 83, 84
*Parkman, William,
49, 50, 56, 57, 58, 59
*Parks, Luther 33
*Parmelee, Asaph 42
»Parrott, William W 39, 40, 41
Patch, Daniel A 70, 71
Patterson, Andrew J 92, 93
Patterson, John B 92, 93, 94
*Paul, .Joseph F 59, 60
*Peabody, Augustus 22, 26
*Peabody, Francis H 74, 75, 76
*Peabody, O. W. B 33, 34
*Peak, John 56
*Pear, John S 61, 62
Pearl, Edward 76, 77, 78
*Pearson, George C 69
Pease, Frederick,71, 72,73, 74, -75
Peck, Arthur K 99, 1900
*Penniman, Scammell ... .25, 26, 27
Perham, Charles S 77, 78
Perkins, Augustus G. . .86, 87, 88
Perkins, Charles B 70
*Perkins, George T 79, s 80
*Perkins, James 22
*Perkins, John S 23, 25
*Perkins, Samuel 22, 23
*Perkins, Samuel C 74, 75
*Perkins, Samuel S 47, 48
*Perkins, William E 71, 72, 73
*Perrin, Payson 28, 29
Perry, Alfred H 71
*Perry, Augustus L 87
Peters, Anton 88
Peterson, Joseph W 83
Phelan, James H 1901, 02
*Phelps, Abel 33, 46
Phelps, Henry B 68
*Phillips, George W 40
*Phillips, John L 32
*Phillips, Thomas W 27
*Pickering, Henry W., 68, 69,72,73
*Pickman, Benjamin T.,
28, 29, 30, 31
Pierce, Franklin P. .89, 90, 91, 92
*Pierce, Gilbert E 59, 60
Pierce, Israel F 88, 89, 90
Pierce, J. Homer 76, 77, 78
*Pierce, Josiah 31, 32, 33
*Pierce, Otis H 75, 76, 77
*Piper, Solomon 26, 35, 36, 37
Plimpton, Charles H. . . 78, 79, 80
*Plumer, Avery, jr .50, 51
*PIummer, Farnham, 52, 53, 54, 55
*Plympton. Henry 42, 43
*Poland, Horace 58, 59
*Pollard, Abner W 42, 43, 44
*Pond, Albert C 70, 71
*Pond, Benjamin 57, 58
*Pond, Joseph A 55, 56, 57
Poor, John 0 69, 70
*Pope, Benjamin 60, 76, 77, 78
Pope, James W 81
*Pope, Richard 76, 77
*Pope, Thomas B 46
*Pope, William ( Wd. 11) 44
*Pope, William (Wd. 16).. ..70, 71
Porter, Edward F 55, 56
*Porter, Jonathan 32
Pote, Jeremiah H 69
Power, Maurice J 1901, 02
*Power, Richard 75
*Powers, Cassius C 86, 87, 88
Powers, Charles A 81, 82
*Powers, Charles E 73, 74
Powers, Edward J 86, 87, 88
Pratt, Albert S 64
«Pratt, Charles E.,77, 79, 80, 81, 82
*Pratt, Eleazer. . .28, 29, 30, 37, 38
^Resigned.
2 Unseated.
3 Died iu office.
ALPHABETICAL LIST OF COUNCILMEN.
201
*Pray, Francis W. . . .74, 79, SO, 81
*PraY, Lewis G 27, 28
s^Preble, N. C. A 60
*Prescott, Bradbury G 55, 56
*Prescott, Edward G.,
30, 31, 32, 38, 34
Prescott, Washington L.,71, 72, 73
*Prescott, William 22
*Preston, Jonathan. .38, 39, 40, 41
*Preston, Joshua P 64, 65
*Prince, Hezekiah 54, 55
*Pritchard, Gilman 32
*Proctor, Alfred N 82
Proctor, Frank F 91, 92
Proctor, John 52
*Prouty, Joel 23, 24
Provan, Robert 86, i 87
Putnam, Edwin M 46
Putnam, Henry W 74
*Putnam, John P. .. .48, 49, 50, 51
Quigley, Charles F 81, 82, 83
Quigley, Edward L 85, 86
*Quincy, Josiah, jr. . .33, 34, 35, 36
Quinn, Andrew J 91
*Quinn, John 70
Quinn, John, jr 91, 92
Quiim, Nicholas J 92
Quinn, Patrick H 89, 90
Pvaftery, Thomas E 1901
Ratshesky, Abraham C, 90, 91,' 92
Raymond, Freeborn F.,
39, 40, 41, 48, 49, 50
*Raymond, Thacher R. . .36, 37, 38
*Raymond, Zebina L 39, 40
*Rayner, John 29, 30, 31, 32
*Rayner, John J 52, 53
Reagan, William J 84, 85, 86
*Reed, Augustus 62, 63, 64
*Reed, Charles H 77
*Reed, Edward 51
Reed, Eugene A., jr 94, 95
*Reed, Franklin O 76
Reed, John P i 89, 90
*Reed, Oliver 24, 25
*Reed, Reuben 56
*Reed, Thomas 2 29
*Reed, William 34
Reed, William Gardner 88
Reidy, Michael 94, 95
Reilly, Edward F 86, 87, 88
Reinhart, Charles H 92, 93, 94
Reynolds, Thomas 94, 95
*Rice, Alexander H 53, 54
Rice, Charles E 75, 76
*Rice, Henry 32, 33, 34, 38
*Rice, Israel C ^ 53
*Rice, John P 25, 26, 30
*Rice, Lewis 64, 66, 67, 68
»Rice, Samuel 68
Rice, Thomas F 99
*Rich, Giles H 69
Rich, Matthias 66, 70, 71
Richards, A. Francis 83
*Richards, Calvin A 58, 59, 61
*Richards, Francis,
49, 50, 51, 60, 61
*Richards, Joel 53, 56, 62, 69
Richards, William R. . . .86, 87, 88
*Richardson, Benjamin P.,
38, 40, 41, 42, 43, 44
*Richardson, Bill 32, 33
*Richardson, James B. (Wd. 8),
29, 30, 31, 34
Richardson, James B. (Wd. 10),
77, 78
*Richardson, Jeffrey 25
*Richardson, Joseph 63
*Richardson, Josiah B 57
Richardson, Moses W.,
64, 65, 66, 77, 78
Richardson, Thomas F 64
Richardson, William F., 56, 57, 59
Ricker, Frank H 92
*Ricker, George D 55
*Riddle, Patrick E., 85,93, 94, 95, 96
Riley, Allen 65
*Riley, James 59, 60, 61, 62
Risteen, Frederick S 3 72, 73
Roach, Richard 77, 78
*Robbins, Edward H 31, 32
Robbins, Elliott D 91
*Robbins, Isaac H 70, 71, 72
*Robbins, Joseph 59, 60, 76
Robbins, Royal 92
Roberts, Davis B 56, 57
*R.oberts, J. Milton 60, 61
♦Roberts, John G 41
♦Roberts, Joseph D 52, 53
Roberts, Peter S 77, 78
Roberts, Thomas D 1901
Roberts, William C 70, 71
♦Robertson, John 71, 72
Robinson, Andrew J 88
Robinson, David R 98
♦Robinson, Edward F 58, * 61
Robinson, George I., jr.... 93, 94-
♦Robinson, John H 59
Robinson, Nathaniel G 89, 90
♦Robinson, Simon W., 30, 31, 32, 33
1 Unseated.
2 Died in oiHce.
3 Unseated and reinstated.
'Resigned.
202
MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
Robinson Wallace F 71, 72
*Roby, Dexter 52, 53
Roche, James T 94, 95
Rockwell, Horace T 68
Roemer, William G 99, 1900
Rogan Edward A 86
Rogers, Abraham T. . .80, 81, i82
*Rogers, Charles O 54, 55
Rogers, John ^61
Rogers, J. Austin 68, 69
*Eogers, Patrick H 70
Rolland, Ezra N 97, 99
Ropes, Samuel W 55
Rosnosky, Isaac,
78, 79, 81, 84, 85, 89, 90
*Ross, Jeremiah 46
Roth, William H 97
*Roulstone, Michael 34
Roiirke, Daniel D 93, 94
Rowan, John A 96, 97
Rowe, Solomon S 70, 71
*Rowell, Whittemore 86
*Ruffin, George L 76, 77
Ruffin, Stanley 94, 95, 96
Russell, Arthur P 97, 98
*Russell, Benjamin,
22, 23, 24, 27, 28
*Russell, Benjamin F 53
*Russell, James W 56
*Russell, John B i 38
Russell, Samuel H 74
Rust, Nathaniel J 78, 79
*Ryan, Edward 62 , 63
Ryan, John A 96
*Ryan, Joseph T 68, 69, 70, 71
S
Salmon, Stephen D., jr 71, 72
*Sampson, Eugene H., 75, 76, 77, 78
Sampson, George R.,
45, 46, 47, 48, 49
*Sampson, George T 60, 61
Sampson, Oscar H 78
Sanborn, Erastus W 40, 41
*Sanborn, Greenleaf C. .43, 44, 45
Sanderson, Clarence W.,
98, 99, 1900
Sands, Edward P 97, 98
Sanf ord, Alpheus 86
*Sanger, George P 60
Sanger, George P., jr 86, 87
*Santry, John P 78
*Sargent, Ensign 31
*Sargent, Henry 34
*Sargent, Lucius M "-^ 27
Saunders, Charles R 97
*Savage, George 36, 37, 40
*Savage, James 23, 24, 25
Sawyer, Albert C 96, 97
Sawyer, Henry N 78, 79, 80
Sawyer, John A 79
*Sawyer, Nathan 78, 79, 80
*Sayward, William 70, 71
Scates, George M 92, 93
Scigliano, George A 1901, 02
ScoUans, William 86
*Sears, Joshua 27, 34
Sears, Philip H 59
Sears, Walter L 94, 95
*Seaver, Benjamin,
45, 46, 47, 48, 49
*Seaver, Joshua 30
*Seaver, Nathaniel 49, 50, 61
*Seaver, Norman 28
*Seaverns, Joel 70
*Sever, James W 50, 51
*Severance, Jonathan B 55
Shackford, Richard 51
Shannon, James H 96, 97
*Shattuck, George 0 62
*Shattuck, Lemuel,
37, 38, 39, 40, 41
*Shaw, George A.,
57, 73, 74, 75, 76
*Shaw, G. Howland 60
«Shaw, Jesse 22, 34, 35
*Shaw, Robert G 22, 23, 24, 33
Shaw, S. Edward,
87, 88, 89, 90, 91, 94
Shay, William E 76
Sheehan, Daniel J 1900, 01
*Shelton, Stephen. . . .38, 39, 40, 41
*Shelton, Thomas J. .38, 39, 40, 41
Shepard, Edward 0 72, 73, 74
Shepard, George F 76, 77
Shepard, Harvey N 78, 79, 80
Shiels, Patrick J 1901, 02
*Shipley, Simon G.,
34, 35, 39, 40, 41, 42
*Short, JohnC 87
*Sibley, Edwin,
74, 75, 76, 77, 78, 79, 80
*Silsby, Enoch 22, 23
*Simmons, Hiram 54
Simms, S. William 1901, 02
*Simonds, Alvan 47, 48
*Simonds, Jonathan. .25, 27, 28, 29
*Simonds, William 25
Simpson, David W 99, 1900
Simpson, Thomas M : . . . -^ 53
Slade, John, jr 43
Slade, Lucius 58, 59
*Slade, Robert 56
Slattery, John A 79
^Resigned.
•Declined.
3 Unseated.
ALPHABETICAL LIST OF COUNCILMEN.
203
Sloan, Samuel W 45
Smardon, John A 76, 77
Smith, Albert C 92, 93, 94
Smith, Edwin G 83
*Smith, George W 34, 35
Smith, G. Waldon 95, 96
*Smith, Horace 64
Smith, J. Henry 1900
*Smith, James 71, 72
Smith, John J 78
»Smith, Joseph. . .48, 49, 50, 51, 57
Smith, Nathan G 81, 82
Smith, Seth P 91, 92, 93
Smith, William J 70, 71
*Smith, Zenas E 74, 75
«Snelling, Enoch H., 33,34,36,42,143
*Snelling, John,
34, 35, 39, 40, 41, 42, 43, M6
*Snow, Asa B 36, 37, 38
Snow, Edmund F. 87, 88
*Snow, Ephraim L 3 39
*Snow, Samuel T 68, 69
Sonnabend, Louis 97, 98
*Southard, Zibeon 51, 52
*Souther, Henry 60, 61
Souther, Joaquin K 77
*Souther, Job T 65
Southwick, Nelson 1 96
*Spear, William T 35
Spenceley, Christopher J.,
76, 77, 78
*Spinney, Samuel R 52, 59
*Spooner, William B 42, 47
*Sprague, Charles 23, 24, 27
*Sprague, Charles F. 89, 90
Sprague, Francis W., 2d. . .88, ^89
Sprague, Franklin H 62, 63
*S Prague, George W..60, 61, 62, 63
Sprague, Henry H 74, 75, 76
*Sprague, Thomas 51, 52, 53
*Sprague, W^illiam 24, 26
Spring, Arthur L. . .90, 91, 92, 93
*Squires, Sidney 68, 69, 70, 71
Stacey, Benjamin F 75
Stack, James H 82
Stalker, Hugh L 91, 92
*Standish, L. Miles 56, 58, 59
Staples, Walter J 1901, 02
*Starbuck, Charles C 29
Starratt, Clarence W., 1900, 01, 02
Stearns, Albert T 79
*Stearns, Charles H 51
*Stearns, Elijah 52, 53
*Stearns, Jacob 39, 40, 41, 42
*Stebbins, John B 35
Stebbins, Solomon B 64, 65
*Stedman, Francis D 58, 59, 60
^Unseated.
2 Died in office.
»Stedman, Josiah 23, 24
*Stetson, Alpheus 36
*Stetson, Sydney A 57, 60
*Stevens, Benjamin 28
Stevens, Benjamin F.,
55, 65, 66, 67, 68
*Stevens, Isaac 22
Stevens, James M 56, 57
*Stevens, John (Ward 6 and 12)
23 25 '^ 26 ■^ 31
«Stevens, John (Ward 11). .^39, 40
Stevens, Oliver 56, 57
*Stevens, Seriah 41
Stevens, William Stanford, 88, 89
Stevens, William S. B.,
98, 99, 1900
*Stimpson, Frederick H 52
*Stimson, Augustine G 65, 66
Stockton, Lawrence M...99, 1900
*Stockwell, Stephen N 61
Stodder, John W. T 54, 55
*Stodder, Joseph 22, 23
*Stone, Artemas 54, 55
Stone, Henry N 71
Stone, James H 99, 1900
*Stone, Joseph 24
*Stone, Phinehas J., jr 76, 77
Story, Joseph 55, 56, 65, 66
*Stover, Theophilus 45
*Stowe, Freeman 41
Strange, Felix A 82, 83, 85
Strangman, Walter W 95, 96
Strater, Francis A 83, 84
Strickland, William L 1900
*Sturtevant, Noah 42, 43
*Sullivan, Benjamin J 86
Sullivan, Edward 87, 88
*Sullivan, Eugene D 333
Sullivan, James H 87, 89
«Sullivan, John H 84, 85
Sullivan, John L 1901
Sullivan, John P 98, 99, 1900
Sullivan, Richard ... 87, 88, 89, 90
Sullivan, Timothy J., 91, 92, 93, 94
*Sullivan, William 22
Sullivan, William J 92, 93
Sundberg, John F 87
Suter, Hales W 55, 56
*Swallow, Asa.... 31, 32, 45, 51, 52
Swan, Reuben S 81
Sweeney, Daniel J., 1st,
63, 64, 67, 79, 80
*Sweeney, Daniel J., 2d. . ..80, *81
Sweeney, James A 99, 1900
Sweetser, Frank E 79, 80
*Sweetser, John 74, 75, 76
fSwett, Samuel 23
-Resigned.
* Died before qualifying.
204
MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
*Sweat, Thatcher F 74
Swift, Henry W 79, 80
Tague, Peter F 94, 95, 96
*Talbot, Samuel, jr 57, 69, 70
Talbot, Thomas 90, 91, 92
*Tappan, Lewis 23
*Tarbell, Eben 55
*Tarbell, Silas P 33
Taylor, Albert H 76
*Taylor, Frederick B 82
*TayIor, Jacob F 78
Taylor, John 78, 79, 80, 82
*Taylor, William 70, 71, 76
Taylor, William, jr 84, 85, 86
Teeling, Frank A 92, 93
Teevan, James 81, 82
Teevens, John J 87, 88, 89
Teevens, John J, jr 1901, 02
Temple, Thomas F 70
*Thacher, William G.,
72, 73, 74, 75
*Thacher, William S 53
*Thaxter, Jonathan 26, 27, 29
*Thaxter, Samuel. . .25, 26, 27, i30
*Thayer, Elias B 34, 35, 36
Thayer, Frank B 86, 87, 88
Thayer, Frank W 1901, 02
*Thayer, Frederick F 56, 57
*Thayer, Gideon F.,
39, 44, 45, 46, 47, 48
*Thayer, Joel 22
*Thayer, Joseph H 26, 1 28
*Thayer, Sereno T 68
*Thom, Isaac 24
*Thomas, Chauncey 83
*Thomas, George P 33
*Thomas, William 52
*Thomes, William A 83, 84
*Thompson, Erasmus ^37
*Thompson, John 35, 36
*Thompson, N. A.,
38, 39, 40, 341, 51, 52, 57, 58
Thompson, Robert M 77, 78
Thompson, Thomas C 90
*Thompson, Thomas H . . . , 33
*Thorndike, George L 77, 78
*Thorndike, John H 53
*Thurston, Caleb 42
Ticknor, Benjamin H 76
Tierney, Michael J 91, 92
»Tillson, John 42, 43
Tilton, Hubbard W 66
*Tilton, Stephen, jr 53, 54
Tinkham, George H 97, 98
*Titcomb Stephen 31, 35
Tobin, John J 99, 1900
Toland, Cornelius H 91, 92
Toland, John I 97, 98
*Tombs, Michael 24
Toomey, Daniel P 90, 91
*Topliff, Samuel,
44, 45, 46, 47, 48, 49
Toppan, Nathaniel D 78
*Torrey, Charles 26
*Torrey, Samuel D 29, 30
Tower, Moses B 66, 73
Tower, Warren L 67
Towle, William W 89, 90
*Townsend, Isaac P 29
Townsend, Samuel R 42
*Tracy, Charles 25, 26
Tracy, Thomas F 87, 88
*Traf ton, Israel S 66
*Train, Charles R 67, 68
*Train, Enoch 41, 42
*Train, William G 73, 74, 75, 76
*Tremere, John B 31, 32, 34
*Trull, Ezra 34
*Trull, Ezra J 75, 76, 83
*Truman, John F 27
*Tubbs, Mical *53, 54
*Tucker, Horace G 68, 69, 70
*Tucker, John C,
553, 58, 59, 60, 61, 62, 3 63, 67
Tucker, Lewis R 80
*Tucker, Stephen 46, 47, 48
*Tufts, Quincy 27, 28, 29, 30
Turnbull, Joseph A. . . .97, 98, 99
Turner, Charles A 53
* Turner, Job 44
*Turner. John (Wd. 2) . . .45, 46, 47
Turner, John (Wd. 1) 64, 65
»Turner, Otis 28, 29
Tuttle, Frank J 87
*Tuttle, Jedediah 35, 36, 37
Tuttle, William 76
*Tuxbury, George W 57, 58
*Tyler, John 57, 58
*Tyler, John S 59, 60, 62
*Tyler, Jerome W 55, 56
U
Upham, Harry S 1900, 01, 02
*Upham, Henry 36
Upham, James H 73, 77
*Upham, Phineas 24
*Upton, Albert F 67
*Urann, Richard 41
1 Declined. 2 Died in office.
* Unseated and re-elected.
3 Resigned.
5 Unseated.
ALPHABETICAL LLST OF COUNCILMEN.
205
*Vannevar, Edmund B. . . 69, 70, 71
*Vau ^STostrand, William T 68
Vialle. William H 88
Viles.AldenE 80, 81
*Vinal, Alvin 55
*Vinson, Thomas M 30, 31
*Vose, Edward A 52
*Vose, Joshua 25,26,27
*Vose, Josiah 27
*Vose, Kobert, jr 77
*Vose, Thomas 37, 38
W
*Wadsworth, Alexander,
58, 60, 63, 64, 65, 66, 68, 69
Wadsworth, Alexander F 75
*Wakefield, Enoch H 42, 43
Wakefield, Nelson S.,
81, 82, 83, 84, 86
*Walbridge, Frederick G.,74, 75, 76
*Waldron, Samuel W., jr; . .57, 58
*Wales, Samuel, jr 47, 48
«Wales, Thomas B 23, 24
*Walker, Harvey W 99, ^1900
* Walker, Horace E 72
Walsh, Charles E 1902
*Walsh, John H . 75
* Walsh, Matthew 80, 81, 82
*Ward, Artemas 45
»Ward, Francis H 61
Ward, Francis J 78, ^ 79
*Ward, John P. J 80
*Ward, Samuel D . . 27
*Ward, Thomas W -^ 28
*Ware, Ephraim G 25
*Ware, Horatio G 22
Ware, Ptobert J 1902
Warner, Barnet F 56, 57
Warren, Alonzo 73, 74
*Warren, Daniel 54
*Warren, George W 52, 53, 54
*Warren, John A 58
Warren, Webster F 77
*Warren, William W 63, 64, 65
*Washburn, Calvin 34, 35
*Washburn, Cyrus 51,52
*Washburn, Frederick L.,
55, 56, 57
*Washburn, William .53
*Washburn, William R. P. . .24, 25
*Waters, Isaac 25, 26, 27
28, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 36, 37
Watson, James A 98, 99
*Watts, Francis O 33
Wayne, John D 90
Weber, Edmund 1901, 02
Webster, David L 71, 72
*Webster, Edwin R 76, 77
Webster, George B 77, 78
Webster, John A 86, 87
*Webster, John G.. 56,59
Webster, William E 60
*Wedger, John B 57, 58
«Weeks, William A 42, 43
Weinberg, Hyman 1901, 02
Welch, William J. (Wd. 7),
80, 81, 82
Welch, William J. (Wd. 12).. 92, 93
Weld, A. Spalding 83, 84
*Welles, John 22, 23
*Wellington, Alfred A. . .39, 40, 41
*Wells, Charles 22
Wells, Frank E 99, 1900
t*Wells, John 29
t *Wells, John B 30, 33, 39
*Wells, Michael F.,
62, 63, 64, 67, 68, 69, 70, 73
*Wells, Thomas 25
*West, William H. . . .71, 72, 73, 74
Weston, Clarence P 91, 92, 93
*Weston, Joshua 68, 72, 73, 74
*Wetmore, Thomas.. 29, 30, 31, 32
Whall, Harry B 97, 98
Whall, William B. F 86, 87
Wharton, William F.,
80, 81, 82, 83, 84
*Wheeler, Charles.. .78, 79, 80, 81
*Wheeler, Joseph 23, 24
*Wheeler, Samuel 38, 39
Wheeler, William D 97, 98
*Wheelwright, George. .42, 43, 44
Whelton, Daniel A 94, 95
Whicher, Wilham E .78
♦Whipple, Julius D 86
*Whiston, David 72, 73, 74
Whitcomb, Charles W 84, 85
*Whitcomb, Ephraim D 75
«White, Edward A 66
White, Francis L 83, 84, 85
White, Horace H 68
White, John 68
*White, Warren 38, 39
White, William L 1900, 01
Whiteley, Frederick W. . . 1900, 01
Whiteley, George A 90
*Whiting, James . . 43, 44, 45, 46, 47
*Whitman, Samuel P 55
*Whitmore, William H.,
75, 79, 80, 81, 82, 83, 86, 87
* Whitney, Daniel H 61, 62
*Whitney, Moses, jr 41, 42
*Whitney, William 46
t Same person.
iDied in office.
2 Resigned.
206
MUNICIPAL KEGISTER.
Whitney, William B 96
Whiton, David 54
*Whitoii, James M 38
*AVhiton, Lewis C 56, 57
Whittaker, George 0 96
*Wliittemore, George, 44, 45, 46, 47
*Whittemore, James F 53, 54
«Wholey, Timothy J 94, 95
Wiggin, Charles E., jr 90
*Wilbur, Edward P 72, 73, 74
*Wilbur, Xathan S 74, 75, 77
*Wildes. William 47, 48
« Wiley, Thomas 24, 25, 26
*Wilkins, Charles 39
*Wilkius, Frederick A. . .67, 69, 70
*Wilkins, John H .... 40, 41, 42, 43
* Wilkinson, Simon 22, 23, 27
»Willard, Aaron, jr 29, 30, 31
Willcutt, Levi L. . . 59, 74, 75, 76
*Willett, Joseph 23
Williams, Charles H ....... 80, 81
*Williams, Elijah, jr 40
*Williams, Eliphalet. ...23, 24, 25
27, 28, 29, 33, 34, 35
36, 37, 38, 39, 40, 41
* Williams, Franklin 70
*Williams, Horace . . .39, 44, 45, 46
*Williams, Moses 22
*Williams, Samuel K.23, 24, 28, 29
Williamson, William C 58, 59
*Willis, Benjamin 24, 25
«Willis, Clement,
43, 44, 45, 46, 65, 66
*Willis, Horatio M 35
Willis, J. D. K 71
*Wilson, George 52
Wilson, Henry W 67, 68, 75
Wilson, Thomas E 78
Wilson, Wm. Power 86, 87
*Winch, Calvin M 70, 71
Wing, Henry M 1901
Winsloe, Temple A 99
Winslow, Frank E 88
*Wiuslow, Isaac 22, 23
*Winter, Francis B 53
*Winthrop, G. T 32, 33, 34
Wise, Albert 93, 94-
Wise, Charles H. .82, 83, 84, 85, 86
Wise, Samuel H 89, 90
*Wolcott, Roger 77, 78, 79
*Wood, Amos 35, 36
W^ood, Arthur G 96, 97, 98
*Wood, Benjamin, 2d 45, 46
Wood, Frank C 89. 90, 91
Wood, Frederick A 94, 95
Wood, George 0..99. 1900, 01, 02
Woodbury, Alfred 1 76
*Woodbury, Charles 63, 64
Woodbury, Henry W 90, 91
*Woodman, Charles T 53, 54
* Woodman, George 49, 50
Woods, Edwin H 73, 74, 75
Woods, Solomon A 69, 70, 71
Woods, William H 95
*Woodward, W. Elliot 73, 74
Woolley, James 78, 79
*Woolley, William ... 67, 68, 69, 70
*Wrlght, Albert J 68
Wright, Hiram A 72
*Wright. James 30
Wright^ John M. . . .49, 50, 51, 52
*Wright, William 23, 24, 27
*Wright, Winslow . 24, 30, 31
*Wyman, Abraham G. . .50, 51, 52
*Wyman, George H 78, 79, 80
Y
*Yeaton, Benjamin 36, 37, 38
Young, Fred H 91, 92
*Young, George E 67, 68, 69
Young, Hugh J 1901, 02
Young, J. Granville, jr 84
Young, Konrad 97, 98
ORATORS OF BOSTON.
207
Orators of Boston.
APPOINTED BY THE PUBLIC AUTnOKITIES.
For the Anniversary of the
1771 James Lovell.
1772 Dr. .Joseph Warren.
1773 Dr. Benjamin Church.
1774 John Hancock.
1775 Dr. Joseph Warren.
1776 Rev, Peter Thacher.
1777 Benjamin Hichborn.
Boston Massacre^ March 5, 1770.
1778 Jonathan Williams Austin
1779 William Tudor.
1780 Jonathan Mason, jr.
1781 Thomas Dawes, jr.
1782 George Richards Minot,,
1783 Dr. Thomas Welsh.
For the Anniversary of National Independence^ July 4, 1776.
Benjamin Pollard.
Edward St. Loe Livermore.
Benjamin Whitwell.
Lemuel Shaw.
George Sullivan.
Edward T. Channing,
Francis C. Gray.
Franklin Dexter.
Theodore Lyman, jr.
Charles G. Loring.
John C. Gray.
Charles Pelham Curtis.
Francis Bassett.
Charles Sprague.
Josiah Quincy, Mayor of the
City.
William Powell Mason.
Bradford Sumner.
James T. Austin.
Alexander H. Everett.
Rev. John G. Palfrey.
Josiah Quincy, jr.
Edward G. Prescott.
Richard S. Fay.
George S. Hillard.
Henry W. Kinsman.
Jonathan Chapman.
Rev. Hubbard Winslow. '
Ivers James Austin.
1783 Dr. John Warren.
1812
1784 Benjamin Hichborn.
1813
1785 John Gardiner.
1814
1786 Jonathan L. Austin.
1815
1787 Thomas Dawes, jr.
1816
1788 Harrison Gray Otis.
1817
1789 Rev. Samuel Stillman.
1818
1790 Edward Gray.
^ 1819
1791 Thomas Crafts, jr.
1820
1792 Joseph Blake, jr.
1821
1793 John Quincy Adams.
1822
1794 John Phillips.
1823
1795 George Blake.
1824
1796 John Lathrop, jr.
1825
1797 John Callender.
1826
1798 Josiah Quincy.
1799 John Lowell, ji*.
1827
1800 Joseph Hall.
1828
1801 Charles Paine.
1829
1802 Rev. William Emerson.
1830
1803 William Sullivan.
1831
1804 Dr. Thomas Danforth.
1832
1805 Warren Dutton.
1833
1806 Francis Dana Channing.
1834
1807 Peter 0. Thacher.
1835
1808 Andrew Ritchie, jr.
1836
1809 William Tudor, jr.
1837
1810 Alexander Townsend.
1838
1811 James Savage.
1839
208
MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
1840 Thomas Power.
1871
1841 George Ticknor Curtis.
1872
1842 Horace Mann.
1873
1843 Charles Francis Adams.
■1874
1844 Peleg TV. Chandler.
1875
1845 Charles Sumner.
1876
1846 Fletcher Webster.
1877
1847 Thomas G. Gary.
1878
1848 Joel Giles.
1879
1849 William W. Greenough.
1880
1850 Edwin P. Whipple.
1881
1851 Charles Theodore Russell.
1882
1852 Rev. Thomas Starr King.
1883
1853 Timothy Bigelow.
1884
1854 Rev. A. L. Stone.
1885
1855 Rev. A. A. Miner.
1886
1856 Edward Griffin Parker.
1887
1857 Rev. William Rounseville
1888
Alger,
1889
1858 John S. Holmes.
1890
1859 George Sumner.
1891
1860 Edward Everett.
1892
1861 Theophilus Parsons.
1893
1862 George Ticknor Curtis.
1894
1863 Oliver Wendell Holmes.
1895
1864 Thomas Russell.
1896
1865 Rev. Jacob M. Manning.
1897
1866 Rev. S. K. Lothrop.
1898
1867 Rev. George H. Hepworth,
1899
1868 Samuel Eliot.
1900
1869 Ellis W. Morton.
1901
1870 William Everett.
Horace Binney Sargent.
Charles Francis Adams, jr.
Rev. John F. W. Ware.
Richard Frothiugham.
Rev. James Freeman Clarke.
Robert C. Winthrop.
William Wirt Warren.
Joseph Healy.
Henry Cabot Lodge.
Robert Dickson Smith.
George Washington Warren.
John Davis Long.
Rev. H. Bernard Carpenter.
Harvey N. Shepard.
Thomas J. Gargan.
George Fred Williams.
John E. Fitzgerald.
William E. L. Dillaway.
John L. Swift.
Albert E. Pillsbury.
Josiah Quincy.
John R. Murphy.
Henry W. Putnam.
Joseph H. O'jSTeil.
Rev. Adolph Augustus Berle,
John F. Fitzgerald.
Rev. Edward Everett Hale.
Rev. Denis O'Callaghan.
Nathan Matthews, jr.
Stephen O'Meara.
Curtis Guild, jr.
Note. — All the addresses delivered by the annual orators were published, except
those of 1S06, 1812 and 1852. The orations of 1792, 1793, 1798, 1799, 1804, 1807, 1808, 1809,
1811, 1816, 1821, 1823, 1850, 1854, 1858, 1859, 1876 and 1891 went through a second edition
each; those of 1863 and 1876 were published also in a more elegant form; those of 1842
and 1845 went through four editions each ; that of 1857 through live. The orations from
1771 to 1788, and the large-paper editions of the orations of 1863, 1876 and 1900 are in
quarto ; all others in octavo.
The names given above are copied from the orations as officially published. The
Massacre orations were reprinted in a volume in 1785 by Peter Edes, and again in
1807. For the orators from 1771 to 1851, inclusive, see " The Hundred Boston Orators,"
by James Spear Loring (Boston, 1852), and tlie appendix to the oration of 1889 for the
full names of the orators from 1773 to 1889, inclusive. See also list of " Fourth of July
Orations" in Index to the City Documents, 1834 to 1897; and " A List of Municipal
Orators " in large-paper edition oration of 1900.
JUSTICES OF COUNTY AND CITY COURTS. 209
Justices of the Police, Justices' and Municipal Courts.
The Police Court of the City of Boston was established in 1822, and
at the same time the Justices' Court for the County of Suffolk (civil
business) was established. The duties of the Justices of the Justices'
Court were discharged by the Justices of the Police Court. The juris-
diction of the Justices' Court was transferred to the Police Court for
civil business, June 1, 1860. In 1866 this court was succeeded by the
Municipal Court of the City of Boston. The names of the successive
Justices and their terms of office are as follows:
JUSTICES OF THE POLICE COURT OF THE CITY OF BOSTON, SERVING-
ALSO AS THE JUSTICES OF THE JUSTICES' COURT FOR THE COUNTY
OF SUFFOLK.
Benjamin Whitman, 1822 to 1833, Senior Justice.
William Simmons, 1822 to 1843.
Henry Orne, 1822 to 1830.
John Gray Eogers, 1831 to 1866.
James Cushing Merrill, 1834 to 1852.
Abel Cushing, 1834 to 1858.
Thomas Eussell, 1852 to 1858.
Sebeus C. Maine, 1858 to 1866.
George D. Wells, 1858 to 1864.
Edwin Wright, 1864 to 1866.
JUSTICES OF THE MUNICIPAL COURT OF THE CITY OF BOSTON.
John W. Bacon, Chief Justice, 1866 to 1871.
Mellen Chamberlain, 1866 to 1878. Chief Justice, 1871 to 1878.
Francis W. Hurd, 1866 to 1870.
Joseph M. Churchill, 1870 to 1886.
William E. Parmenter, 1871 to 1902. Chief Justice, 1883 to 1902.
J. Wilder May, Chief Justice, 1878 to 1883.
William J. Forsaith, 1882.
Matthew J. McCafferty, 1883 to 1885.
John H. Hardy, 1885 to 1896.
Benjamin R. Curtis, 1886 to 1891.
Frederick D. Ely, 1888.
John H. Burke, 1891.
John F. Brown, 1894. Chief Justice, 1902.
George Z. Adams, 1896.
Henry S. Dewey, 1899.
George L. Wentworth, 1899.
James P. Parmenter, 1902.
210
MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
Members of the Fifty-seventh Congress from Massachusetts,
1901-03.
George F. Hoar
Henry Cabot Lodge
SENATORS.
REPRESENTATIVES.
of Worcester
of Nahant
of North Adams
of Springfield
of Worcester
of Natick
of Lawrence
of Chelsea
of Winchester
of Boston
of Boston
of Newton
of Taunton
of Fall River
District 1 — George P. Lawrence
2 — Frederick H, Gillett
8 — John R. Thayer .
4 — Charles Q. Tirrell
5 — William S. Knox .
6 — 1
7 — Ernest W. Roberts
8 — Samuel W. McCall
9 — Joseph A. Conry .
10 — Henry F. Naphen
11 — Samuel L. Powers
12 — William C. Lovering
13 — William S. Greene
The Congressional Districts of the Commonwealth, referred to above, were estab-
lished by Chap. 396, Acts of 1891, as amended by Chap. 519, Acts of 1896. The districts
in which the City of Boston lies are as follows:
District 7 — The City of Lynn and the towns of Nahant and Saugus in the County of
Essex; the City of Maiden and the towns of Everett, Melrose [both are now cities],
Stonehaui and Wakefield in the County of Middlesex; and the wards numbered 4 and
5 in the City of Boston, the City of Chelsea and the Town of Revere in the County of
Suffolk.
Districts — The citie's of Cambridge, Medford and Somerville, and the towns of
Arlington and "Winchester in the County of Middlesex, and the wards numbered 10
and 11 in the City of Boston in the County of Suffolk.
District 9 — The wards numbered 1, 2, 3, 6, 7, 8, 9 and 13 in the City of Boston, and
the Town of W^inthrop in the County of Suffolk.
District 10 — The wards numbered 12, U, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20 and 24 in the City of
Boston in the County of Suffolk, and the City of Quincy and the Town of Milton in
the County of Norfolk.
District 11 — The wards numbered 21, 22, 23 and 25 in the City of Boston in the
County of Suffolk; the City of Newton and the towns of Belmont, Holliston, Sherborn
and Watertown in the County of Middlesex; the towns of Hopedale and Milford in
the County of Worcester; the towns of Bellingham, Brookline, Dedham, Dover, Fox-
borougli, Franklin, Hyde Fark, Medfleld, Medway, Millis, Needham, Norfolk, Nor-
wood, Sharon, Walpole and Wrentham in the County of Norfolk, and the Town of
North Attleboro in the County of Bristol.
Under Chap. 511, Acts of 1901, the Commonwealth was divided into fourteen Con-
gressional Districts, from which representatives in the Fifty -eighth Congress will be
elected in the fall of 1902. The districts in which the City of Boston lies are as follows :
District 9 — The wards numbered 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, S, 9, and precincts 6 and 7 of the
ward numbered 12 in the City of Boston, and the Town of Winthrop in the County of
Suffolk.
District 10— The wards numbered 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 20 and 24 in the City of Boston in
the County of Suffolk, and the City of Quincy and the Town of Milton in the County
of Norfolk.
District 11 — The wards numbered 10, 11, and precincts 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5 of the ward
numbered 12, and the wards numbered 18, 19, 21, 22, 23 and 25 in the City of Boston in
the County of Suffolk.
1 Vacancy caused by the resignation of William H. Moody, of Haverhill.
FOREIGN CONSULS. 211
Foreign Consuls in Boston.
Argentina — William McKissock, 92 State street, Consul.
Austria-Hungary — Arthur Donner, 70 State street, Consul.
Belgium — E. Sumner Mansfield, 42 Court street, Consul.
Brazil — Jaime Mackay D'Almeida, 382 Hanover street, Vice-Consul.
Chile — Horace IST. Fisher, 60 Congress street, Consul.
China — S. W. Nickerson, 92 State street, Vice-Consul.
Colombia — Jorge Vargas H., 474 Columbus avenue, Consul.
Costa Eica — Joseph J. Corbett, 68 Pemberton square, Consul.
Denmark — Custaf Lundberg, 19 Kilby street. Consul.
Ecuador — Gustavo Preston, 37 Central street, Consul.
France — Duncan Bailly-Blanchard, 103 State street, Vice-Consul.
Germany — Wm. Theo. Reincke, 70 State street. Consul.
Great Britain — John E. Blunt, C. B., 247 Atlantic avenue, Consul-
General; Willoughby H. Stuart, 247 Atlantic avenue, Vice-Consul.
Greece — D. T. Timayenis, 270 State street. Consul.
Guatemala — B. Preston Clark, 55 Kilby street. Consul.
Hayti — B. C. Clark, 55 Kilby street. Consul.
Italy — Dr. Rocco Brindisi, 225 Hanover street, Consular Agent.
Liberia — Charles Hall Adams, 23 Court street, Consul-General.
Mexico — Arthur P. Gushing, 23 Court street, Consul; Frederick O.
Houghton, 115 State street, Vice-Consul.
Netherlands — Charles V. Dasey, 7 Broad street, Consul.
Nicaragua — Charles Hall Adams, 23 Court street, Consul.
Peru — Matthew Crosby, 45 Kilby street, Consul.
Portugal — Viscount de Valle da Costa, 382 Hanover street. Consul;
Jaime Mackay D'Almeida, 382 Hanover street, Vice-Consul.
Russia — Charles F. Wyman, 27 Kilby street, Vice-Consul.
Santo Domingo — Edwin M. Fowle, Newton Centre, Mass., Commer-
cial Agent.
Spain — Pedro Mackay D'Almeida, 382 Hanover street, Vice-Consul.
Sweden and Norway — Giert Lootz, 161 Milk street, Vice-Consul.
Turkey — Frank Gair Macomber, 147 Milk street, Consul-General.
Uruguay — Arthur Carroll, 178 Devonshire street, Vice-Consul.
Venezuela — Dr. William B. Mackie, 675 Tremont street, Vice-Consul.
212
MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
STATISTICS RELATING TO THE CITY.
Area of Boston, by Wards. — (In acres.)
(From the Engineering Department — Surveying Division.)
Ward.
Land.
Flats.
Water.
Areas to
Ward Lines.
Between Ward
and
Harbor Lines.
1,188
357
332
301
205
293
394
166
186
394
638
235
604
385
243
564
423
220
760
1,716
640
760
7,615
3,252
2,739
163
58
1.59
1,510
415
388
467
216
293
412
236
287
394
864
235
713
899
350
673
460
220
760
2,110
640
760
7,660
3,480
2,855
384»
2
57*
3
56
78
11
— 25t
4
88
5
6
7
18
70
79
8
9
22
10 .
11
226
12
13
74
449
107
109
37
35
65
-6t
14
— 65t
15
16
17
18
19
20
394
21
22
23
45
92
116
24
136
25
Total
24,610
1,637
1,050
27,297
345
* Inside of harbor line.
t Outside of harbor line.
PRINCIPAL ISLANDS IN BOSTON HARBOR.
213
Principal Islands in Boston Harbor.
Name.
Area.
Ownership.
Remarks.
Governor's Island.
72.0 acres
United States
Fort Winthrop.
Castle Island
21.6 "
■' "
Fort Independence.
Now under jurisdic-
tion of Park Com'rs.
Long Island Head.
43.5 "
U 11
Lt. -house & Batteries.
Loveirs Island
71.1 "
"
Gov't. Buoy Station.
George's Island. . .
39.7 "
u u
Fort Warren.
Raiusf ord Island . .
-17.4 "
City of Boston ....
House of Reformation.
Purchased in 1871 for
140,000.
Gallop's Island . . .
25.1 "
>i (( '
Quarantine Station.
Purchased in 1860 for
$6,600.
Long Island
172.0 "
a u
Almshouse and Hospi-
tal. Purchased in
1885 for $164,600.
10.5 acres of which
were conveyed to
the U. S. Govern-
ment in 1900.
Deer Island
182.3 "
(1 (I
House of Correction.
Conveyed to the in-
habitants of Boston,
March 4, 1634-35.
Apple Island
8.9 "
U ((
Purchased in 1867 for
$3,750.
Spectacle Island . .
61.4 "
N. Ward & Co,
Thorn pson's Is-
land
146.5 "
Boston Asylum and
Farm School for
Indigent Boys.
Farm School. Annexed
to Boston by Act of
March 15, 1834.
Little Brewster . . .
3.6 "
United States
Boston Light-house.
Great Brewster . . .
23.1 "
City of Boston.. . .
Purchased in 1848 for
$4,000.
Outer Brewster . . .
17.5 "
Benjamin Dean.
214
MUNICIPAL KEGISTER.
Principal Islands in Boston Harbor. — Concluded.
Name.
Area.
Ownership.
Remarks.
Calf Island
Little Calf Island.
17.1 acres
1.1 "
i J. S. Weeks.
Green Island
1.8 "
James Yoting.
Moon Island
30.0 "
City of Boston. . . .
Taken by right of emi-
nent domain in 1879.
It constitutes the
point of discharge of
the Main Drainage
System.
POPULATION OF BOSTON.
215
iHC'icc'^mot^QoaiOr
i'?»CO'*»C!X5l'OOa50^'M*07*lO
"Itsjox
■eaiuuxaj:
•sat^K
-CO'Mir^CCCO'Mr-(XiC'lC5C:OOrHt--OCOCCO'^OCOwiOi
^ G^l t- t- t' O f^M
»t'G0'*»OlCiC!r)'*"*35"*r-l
<^^rf«?^CO(MOOiCCl«5'MCCt'Ir-O^CO:OCiC5I:'Xi(
cc o OQ*^ -^i CO a: c: c
t- t^ CO GO 1
■lOiCMiit'-^lCrHGiT— It-
CO'»rT-HCOCOOi-H-rt^O'*«CiX-^COaD!OMrj6'ri'^rH;^CO^
(T: o" '^i GO O O O ^ CO O t-^ t^ r-4 O ir: T}'' <*! CO
•l^JOX
■sai^iua^
'sai^K
■'*OOa5-*QOrHr-HOOCSCO«C'4<t'0:CO'*-^r-f
iotr-o-"ioio^^t'coco»-nc"*'^-^'*»r:;:i^w»ccc'
CCTItH— fO-^C^OOGOT— fCOOOCSOO-
:c o t- t^ ^ '^ L
•<:Dt-ic:ocDt':o:oot'r-coc£'t*c;:;
Gooococo^'Mir:Gcot-r-icooO'*0'-'7"i:ot-t--**^=D
CO t-COOT
■Ol-^r-lt-'-rft-i— (lOTjiOCO^OCOCOOOOlO:
COtDiCmOOOCOf— ICCC-OOOGOCO'^CDCO'nCIOC;'"*'*!:-'*
COOICOCOCOi— IC'"I01CQCOCOCOOICOCOCOCOCOCOCO'*COCOCOCO
ioascot^QOcOw"^coGO-rt^ot^ococ:icco»:::;'*w2cooo»c
ClOGOCOOCDOOt'i— i-OC0Or-iCC)OCli— iiOCO^O^OICOGC
COi— flCl^t— I— <i— lOOr-HCOOlCOOlOCO^C-ifMCl^OIOl'^lC-*
COCOCOCOCO^lCOO-ICOCOCOCOCOCOCOCOCOCOO-ICOC'tieOCOCOCO
o
o
3
o
M
Si
:zi
s
M
&
^
M
S^
C;
D
M
M
D
O
05
ta
•l«iox
OI^'^OOOCDOlt^CO
coc^ccf^-^— ■-'
■:o C5^ ic oi_ c» ic^
oi d" -*" CO' O r O-rlH" go" '
01 01 rH r-( rH CO 1—f 01 r
CO T~( (XJ -rti t^ -rt<
lOi— liOCOOt^GOrHXCD'X'Ot-Oai
t^ 'T*^ CO irr o fH CO o t-- lo lo r-i CO on--
d a:: x- '^t- o c; '* r-t u:^ gc_cd ^i-h^o"i
fc^cff '7i'i-H*cfo'tr:'''rTt--^o-f co'irfco't-^oT
J rH d Ol -M 1— I O^ 0-1 Ol Tl CO C^ Ol CI 0^1 1— i
■'O'toc-ioco^r— t— II
•89T^iuaj;
"Tt< !*■ -T I- ^ CO lO ^^ o -^ cti
rH 1:0 t-' C2 IC -^ r-l O' -f r: --C
CD t— (^ '^'^' 1^ "^ 1— ' X c. r:
r^' o* t^ CO irf CO CO co' — ' •: r — " -c — " 3' o" — ' * r — "" '-^
—. — c. X — - O CO
•eai^H
00 cs o i—i '^ o t-- -;f CO X CO t-- »r: r: o ir: X X 01 3: t- *~ xi I- -^"^
r-f tc c irt X o o rH ^ o o »^ CO »r: o -t CO I-- X CO I- 01 CO !— < 1— i
oit— i'Ticoc:OT-it-t^rH~-*coX'*iCi-H — xxi-Hr-'-^r:'*
1 t- CO CD t- X iC 01 O t- O T— I O C5 C5 'M r-H -M -*■ O OT
*TO0X
■satTjiuaj;
•sai^H
'I^^ox
•sai^maj;
•3ai^K
C: Ol X X CO CO O i-H CO i-H C5 X C: Ol 01 Cr- pH C- rH O rH t- C CD Ol
i-HOCi-^OCOXrHt-XXXOOt—CiO'^OCDiClOT— (IC'M
t^Cr'*"co"'*CCrCD'*"ofcOCD'cOCrcO*'50lc"x"t^o"GOCO"x't-t^o'
CO'Tt^COC^C'tC^C: X ~ * :0C0OC0C0t'01Ir-CiOC0C0'*CDX
CiCOCO'^fX :0 0 t-r: — l~O''^00-r'I:-XX-<#<3lCXCDrH04
c;cDi-HCi — 1-— r:x x -rn— iCD-^oi»— t-^ocooococst— (— ^
CO''!iro^"rH'rH"l— Co'cD^'H^CO '^"^■^Co'co"c«^'^'*'o"»i:r
^^co ?t_-T ^_co c^oix^L-^r-^^r:^'^^:^ i: '
ic"co"o" cC x"o Tx -*'-rt-"oco" CO'co"-^ cc'-
■COuOi-HirtCOrHOp
t-^ooiOi— irixcOf— iocixcO'^thcoc:':
rHdCOrJHlflCOIr-X^O'— fO^CO-^iCCOl-XOSOi— ((MCO-H-in
216
MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
CO 3 CO
as
or!??
j" o to
^ P
hj2
.3 o
o § 5 i' © S
<^ CO
•sjBai
o ino
:c ?^ -31
00 ir^ iO ^
oo
I -^ CO Xj
riic^'co"
- — = (- X ^5 «0 C5
~ 'JOiOCO
_ , X ^5 lO C5
_ — . -^_ x__o_co 00
:r ciT «■ r — ' irT ir^ go" ■
"O iiCSlI^
:d— < CO X '^c*
_ iccot^-^oua
^1 1— O CO CO IC L^ ;C' so CO ^
c-^— TirTcD otTco co't-^Qo'oo'
rHC^O^^^COCOCOCO-*^*
CDtOiO'*t^CC0CC'MrHC3
»oc;t^ic:Doc;^coc:it—
coxcoxoio^:^tcoc^ffi«
.f-H^ — aoX;COC^C5CDcO
• 0^ O -M ^ CO -N -
-^ ^ — ' 00 X; CO t
co_ 3s_ :i^_ t ~^ o^ '^ Ci^ i-^ (5j
r :£" ^ xT f^" -^ t-^ -^ c^t-T
r^ ^^ 1— I <?> CO ca
n o 35 1^ -^ X o t^ X rs ou
t-^oif of cT of lo't^-^o^rTio" l^^
•*C5t^:Dcocr:cox^Xcra
CO-*_«_^-*^t-^'*^— __~^-*^=_OI
co" xT irT oo" -^ cT t-^ irf co" o^" irf"
r-H^^^C0O»OCDt^05^
rr:-:) — co£:t-r;-; — Mas
344
277
292
325
530
000
300
700
927
545
139
m
rt __ _i^ ,_,cs|
iNaaT
"""
O'C5-^0^C0'l^C^^H0^XXC000lr—
;d -^o "^■^^^^oo^"*^^'^^^"^
I— lf-t(NCNO^(M(MCOCO-^
co't-^urTco'-.jrTir— ri-r^icrco"t-7"cD aS
rHO^CO-^lO^— ,— l-^XCOOi;
f-iefli?>oje^cooa
t- IC' ^ ^H CD CO CO rH rs IC X O OS |>-
lO t* CO 0» 05 ^ X X CD l-^ CO CO -^ U3;
O -<*' O C^ Ol^O^O t^?^^^'~^co^^c*
o^'o'cTco'cd'co"— "oo cTc-^t-^T— "cTt-T
t^XOl^C^CO-JiCO-^^'^CDCDcO,
o ci y o o
S p- P o a o o o f- •;="•- •"
0OOiH«t-i-fc<O"a
_3 • as
03 -OE
ooona-i-i--,o-^ =,''5 .•s'a :« o ^ «is'ns'aii ^S a
^ 'a "S a ci „ _^ ^- _^ „
33 C^ef
POPULATION BY WARDS.
217
Population of Boston.
The following table shows the population of Boston in 1885, 1890,
1895, with the legal and registered voters in the new wards of December
10, 1895:
Ward.
1.
2.
3.
i.
5.
6.
7.
8,
9,
10,
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
Old Wakds,
Census of
1885.
15,659
19,633
15,760
17,297
12,328
13,094
12,518
12,842
12,827
12,412
17,256
18,447
12,088
13,145
11,986
13,026
11,239
12,660
9,746
8,205
17,863
21,660
13,845
12,585
22,547
22,375
22,741
26,867
16,237
18,049
16,459
18,048
14,747
15,638
14,140
16,035
20,557
23,016
20,994
24,335
15,627
22,930
15,838
20,011
17,425
24,997
21,500
29,638
8,516
12,032
1895.
23,821
18,774
13,943
13,375
12,986
18,194
12,965
13,990
11,S57
5,883
25,729
10,748
20,506
27,906
19,501
16,343
16,715
17,725
22,622
30,261
28,364
26,012
32,761
40,938
15,001
New Wards,
Census of 1895.
Males.
Fe-
males.
10,363
10,644
11,505
10,083
6,841
7,102
6,654
6,721
6,994
5,992
14,805
13,055
9,049
7,924
12,143
10,987
11,398
11,776
10,070
12,484
7,375
12,555
9,188
12,403
12,695
12,205
9,635
9,551
8,975
9,648
7,664
8,656
10,128
10,986
10,641
11,038
10,508
11,864
9,893
11,635
8,079
11,195
10,445
11,844
8,786
9,547
8,589
9,651
7,293
7,708
Total.. 390,393 448,477 496,920 239,666 257,254 496,920 113,393 91,341 ....Total
Total.
21,007
21,588
13,943
13,375
12,986
27,860
16,973
23,130
23,174
22,554
19,930
21,591
24,900
19,186
18,623
16,320
21,114
21,679
22,372
21,528
19,274
22,289
18,283
18,240
15,001
Legal
"Voters,
New
Wardsi
Regis-
tered
Voters,
New
Wards=
4,785
4,357
3,538
3,311
3,266
4,190
4,237
5,173
5,504
6,007
4,886
5,731
4,795
4,381
4,324
3,933
4,801
4,830
4,467
5,225
4,793
4,879
4,032
4,371
3,577
4,088
3,703
3,047
2,749
2,882
3,527
3,057
3,587
3,888
3,941
3,751
3,802
3,893
3,716
3,600
3,193
4,003
3,640
4,029
4,058
4,105
3,999
3,585
4,214
3,284
Ward.
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
,24
.25
1 Legal voters are citizens witli the constitutional qualifications to vote.
' Registered voters are citizens registered as voters for the Municipal Election of
1895. These figures are furnished hy the Board" of Election Commissioners.
218
MUNICIPAL KEGISTER.
Table Showing (1) Population of Boston in 1895 and in 1900,
by Wards (2) Increase or Decrease since 1895, and (3) Per
Cent, of Population in Each Ward.
Ward.
1
2
3
4
5
6 ;
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
Total
21,007
21,588
13,943
13,375
12,986
27,860
16,973
23,130
23,174
22,554
19,930
21,591
24,900
19,186
18,623
16,320
21,114
21,679
22,372
21,528
19,274
22,289
18,283
18,240
15,001
496,920
a '^ p
4.23
4.34
2.81
2.69
2.61
5.61
3.42
4.65
4.66
4.54
4.01
4.35
5.01
3.86
3.75
3.28
4.25
4.36
4.50
4.42
3.88
4.49
3.68
3.67
3.02
« OS S
cSOrt •
22,832
22,924
14,564
13,248
12,840
30,546
14,782
28,817
24,588
22,142
19,275
23,641
22,835
31,453
19,700
20,017
25,038
22,401
27,178
32,556
23,868
25,610
23,637
27,126
19,279
560,892
o^ o
a pS.
®±: P .
00 =
Ph
4.07
4.09
2.60
2.36
2.29
5.45
2.64
5.14
4.38
3.95
3.44
4.22
4.07
3.82
3.51
3.57
4.46
3.99
4.85
5.80
4.26
4.57
4.21
4.83
3.44
+ :
SO'
+ 1,825
+ 1,336
+ 621
— 127
— 146
+ 2,686
— 2,191
+ 5,687
+ 1,409
— 412
— 655
+ 2,050
— 2,065
+ 2,267
+ 1,077
4- 3,697
+ 3,924
+ 722
+ 4,806
+ 11,028
+ 4,594
+ 3,321
+ 5,354
+ 8,886
+ 4,278
+ 63,972
Ward.
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
Total
SCHOOL CENSUS.
219
E
v
U)
3
(0
C
u
4>
0^
•moi
•safBuiaj
•sat'Bpi
•tt'iox
•saieraaji
•98[T3IV;
•mox
•sai^tnaj:
•sa^BH
•It!^ox
•sai^rag^q^
•eaiBxvr
'looqog
•stooqog
•sxooqog
oiiqn J ni
jaqiunK i-bjox
0
5
rH 1- -M -+ -^ CO ^ I- ~; -+ — ■ -t -f r:
CD u- w ?c t~ -T c^ cc lt; -1- rc I - r: X
e0t0lf:c0rtOrtt-t^3:-<*00t-'35l-G0OC0tMff5^OOC
■ COaZ^CCt^OQOt'^
CO ■* C-l rt --I t- r
CTlrH — c-OCOt^'^XC-l 55
iirjccao^i^icocscocccO"-
rHOI:~0:c0C:e-1«lO-*rH00rHi3:mmr-00i-IMC0t-rH-*>O
t^^'rlC;CC"MG000ir;lr"-H^HOO^r^»0-^CDOrHO«(— (CD
I— I -M i—i CO C-l ri -^ rH r^ Ol rH i-H -^1 T-S C-I C-l CO t' CO (M ffl ^
fflCOOOt'ld— iSl-^OlOCOOCDO^llCGOOr
I— ^1 CO X QO I
CO (Ml— i'^^r^r-^i— If
■OGOT-ICDCC^ICCOOCO
( rH rH C^ O^ (M L-™ (M C^ C-1 rH
rMCOiaOOO;'nOCO->t-*CO-*Oi— lt^^t^CCC5^0f:rHi-l-*CD
ODcDC^cDt^'MO-^t'CocDi^^it:;!— icoicinr-c-i^i'*-^'-':^-*
rH_t-;^CD ir; (^^Ci^rH^'^^CO^lO 0^(M CO^CO^CD CO rH^t-^O^CD^O r^ 'M^'^CO
eo^T't-<*rH'.-TcorHctf ffT r-TrtoTffi'fff (jf co(yrco'"eo"r-rco''eo''co'of
^iir:-r*JOM't^^iC-<*-<iioocit^a5iccococoiCc;GOC2t^co
r-H;Dcoc;aoo-^Grj'M;D"^oocifN>ooococococo(^Offi'^
CD'*OOt'»r;a;Ol^'M^IOCOCO-*COC1CDCCQOt^lCO'*t^rH
IC ^1 00 1> IC Gi O GC r-H (?1 O iO -ell ,-^ (?1 rH O CO l^
CD Ci CO <>> r— CO
trt 00 li^ cc -r"* L—
rt CiJ 00 •* CO -
. _, _ > i-H :C CC 01 rH CD Ol t- r-( CO CD -
:COCDrH-Tt^OOCDO-"IL--t^OC5XC;r-^rHt^':
^ O CO Ol CO 00 t^ ^1 CO CO O O t- X O GC *l ^ -^ O 'C5 O 'Xt
OOOi—fOCOOt^C^'^CDOCD^t-CSOOi— ll^lCur^p^'^O^rHl
t^GC-*-^XCDfr^l^Ot^l^COCtt^T*C;Xf^lC^^-'&IOOO;
'^CD'MO-l'— ICDrHXeOrHrHr-lliT-^CO-^'^-*CD»OC^O'^OC
COCDI-C^t^^XCDCOCOOXC'Cit'-^Oast'CIOCi^COOl
-*t-ff1C^r-<CDi-HOCOrH^(MOtOCO"^»C-*CDCO<M-^'^lO'*
3:xcoxxo■*lCt^c:coc^co-*colCt~^out■Xlr^coco-*
:^-co^^T-#r^oio^ioco^-*ococ;iccoi
:C-1:Df— ICDlCCO"^-*00C^CDCDCDr-<(MC0fMU^'
- X C5 rH CO <T1
r-< X C^ CD 0-1 "C C; CO Ci c:: OliO ^ X 'T'l CO Clt^ X 0^1 O '^ r
O^lXCSXClfMt'OCOO^^HOXlC'^-^l^CO'Mt^XC^r .-...
o^'>i_^co^ir^co_co^co o-i_-^C5 cD^oo^-^ic^t-^co^io ci^'^co a c^co^o^
CO'^^i'i-Tr-r-.t'rH'-^Co'T-r r-rc^^Co'tfTcM^crco'cc'-^fyrcC -^"^CC
lOiCXXCOCDCDlCXO^lOCOXCDOrHCO^COOL^-^t^COr--
"-1-rticDC10COO'*lCfMt^^XCO^OC5XrHL^-^^C5 0l
<'NcO'^>^cDt—Xw5 0^H(Meo-«*irt:ot-xoio»-^^co"^o
< IN IN (M IM !N (N
220
MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
H >
I' I- o
cT oT o
m CO o
-<* C^ L'^ CO'
'^ cq QO o
lO^ 00^ S^l^ o
CfT cc" c<^ co"
C5 O »0 CO
rH lO OO
Oi CO CO O GO CO IC
CO O-I "TT" QO -^ t- :C>
t^ t^ 00 CS 05 CO (M
(M C^ 1— I r- 1 i-H
C3 lO O CD
CO 05 CD CO
O CO CO t^
(M C5 i:C CO
O CO lO T-H CD Ol
00 O ;D' O 'Tt^ rH
00 Ci CO 05 OO 00
Oi 05 Ci
Xi i-H CO CD
00 00 I- O CO •«*
r-t 0> ^^ OT 00 1— I
»— < CO 05 C5 'X) GO
c: CO 05
00 CO CO lO
POLLS AND VOTERS, 1901.
221
Assessed Polls, Registered Voters and Total Vote at
Election, 1901.
State
Ward.
oO
Ph
1901.
?^p;
. oj o
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
13
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
Total
22,832
22,924
14,564
13,248
12,840
30,546
14,782
28,817
24,583
22,142
19,275
23,641
22,835
21,453
19,700
20,017
25,038
22,401
27,178
32,556
23,868
25,610
23,637
27,126
19,279
6,492
6,775
4,388
4,174
4,224
9,468
5,479
12,126
8,715
7,543
6,286
7,723
7,123
6,605
5,611
5,804
7,026
7,311
7,657
9,953
7,253
7,821
6,405
7,983
5,921
4,408
4,377
3,415
2,843
2,782
3,632
2,492
4,277
4,110
3,891
4,014
4,002
3,954
4,881
4,001
4,178
4,520
4,341
5,074
7,180
5,305
5,179
4,808
5,810
4,068
3,011
3,109
2,503
2,073
2,008
2,618
1,672
3,083
2,945
2,537
2,937
2,713
3,135
3,461
2,786
3,000
3,232
3,106
3,817
4,703
3,668
4,006
3,965
3,874
3,204
67.90
64.61
77.83
68.11
65.86
38.36
45.48
35.27
47.16
51.58
63.86
.51.82
55.51
73.90
71.31
71.98
64.33
59.38
66.27
72.14
73.14
66.22
75.07
72.78
68.70
68.31
71.03
73.29
72.92
72.18
72.08
67.09
72.08
71.65
65.20
73.17
67.79
79.29
70.91
69.63
71.80
71.50
71.55
75.23
65.50
69.14
77.35
82.47
66.68
78.76
560,892
175,8
107,542
77,166
61.15
71.75
222
MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
General Ward Statistics of Boston, 1901 — Absolute Numbers.
Area
(Acres).
Wakd.
a
OS
.J
o
o
1
1,188
357
332
301
205
293
394
166
186
394
638
235
604
385
243
564
423
220
760
1,716
640
760
7,615
3,252
2,739
163
58
88
159
56
78
11
1,510
415
388
467
216
293
412
236
287
394
864
235
713
899
350
673
460
220
760
2,110
640
760
7,660
3,480
2,855
2
3
4
5
g
7
22
18
70
79
8
9
10
11
12
226
13
74
449
107
1(.9
37
35
65
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
394
21
22
23
136
45
92
116
24
25
Total....
24,610
1,637
1,050
27,297
Pi
22,832
22,924
14,564
13,248
12,840
30,546
14,782
28,817
24,583
22,142
19,275
23,641
22,835
21,453
19,700
20,017
25,038
22,401
27,178
32,556
23,868
25,610
23,637
27,126
19,279
560,892
1 Population.
So
19.2
64.2
43.9
44.0
62.6
104.3
37.5
173.6
132.2
56.2
30.2
100.6
37.8
55.7
81.1
35.5
59:2
101.8
35.8
19.0
37.3
33.7
3.1
8.3
7.0
22.8
PERSONS
5-15 TEARS OF AGE.
3,164
2,270
1,246
1,134
837
2,960
833
3,168
1,695
808
794
902
2,114
2,103
1,827
1,745
2 202
2,024
2,659
2,747
1,414
2,325
2,545
2,4.54
1,724
46,694
2,261
2,355
1,202
1,134
856
2,946
803
2,687
1,753
844
831
974
2,134
3,083
1,903
1,866
2,301
2,068
3,734
2,663
1,463
2,419
2,172
2 112
1,703
46,587
4,425
4,625
2,448
2,268
1,693
5,906
1,636
5,855
3,448
1,653
1,625
1,876
4,248
4,186
3,730
3,611
4,503
4,092
5,383
5,410
2,877
4,744
4,717
4,896
3,427
93,281
iThe ligures regarding total population are taken from the National Census for
1900. Those relating to persons between 5 and 15 years of age are taken from the
School Census of 1901, for further detail of which see p. 219.
GENERAL WARD STATISTICS.
223
General Ward Statistics of Boston, 1901 — Absolute Numbers.
Continued.
Ward.
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
Total
6,492
6,775
4,388
4,174
4 224
9,468
5,479
12,126
8,715
7,543
6,286
7,723
7,123
6,605
5,611
5,804
7,026
7,311
7,657
9,953
7,253
7,821
6,405
7,983
5,921
175,8
Voters at Municipal Election.
REGISTERED
VOTERS.
S
4,516
690
- 4,458
201
3,446
444
2,873
350
2,850
225
3,749
270
2,627
296
4,360
181
4,289
294
4,164
. 779
4,173
1,539
4,145
810
4,041
139
4,918
622
4,068
553
4,223
539
4,583
426
4,427
379
5,229
591
7,306
1,417
5,386
1,248
5,252
767
4,917
947
5,927
1,109
4,204
776
110,131
15,.592
5,206
4,659
3,890
3,223
3,075
4,019
2,923
4,541
4,583
4,943
5,712
4,955
4,180
5,540
4,621
4,762
5,009
4,806
5,820
8,723
6,634
6,019
5,864
7,036
4,980
125,723
ACTUAL VOTERS.
3,763
3,736
2,808
2,200
2,320
3,192
2,024
3,391
3,429
3,199
3,291
3,210
3,363
4,043
3,205
3,338
3,754
3,416
4,399
5,678
4,374
4,302
4,174
4,727
3,547
88,883
473
151
326
246
157
223
228
113
211
564
1,170
603
88
497
414
392
303
279
497
1,087
926
622
682
799
569
11,620
4,236
3,887
3,134
2,446
2,477
3,415
2,252
3,504
3,640
3,763
4,461
3,813
3,451
4,540
3,619
3,730
4,057
3,695
4,896
6,765
5,300
4,924
4,856
5,526
4,116
100,503
224 MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
General Ward Statistics of Boston, 1901 — Absolute Numbers. — Concluded.
Assessed Valuation.
Taxes.
aj
i
1
3
i
•<
"3
a
o
00
(^
o
o
a
O
a
o
m
0)
3
o
1
$12,051,100
S776,600
il2,827,700
$12,984
$179,561 39
$11,571 34
$204,116 73
2
12,697,300
772,200
13,469,500
13,538
189,189 77
11,505 78
214,233 55
3
8,982,300
925,900
9,908,200
8,772
133,836 27
13,795 91
156,404 18
4
12,083,300
674,400
12,7.57,700
8,342
180,041 17
10,048 56
198,431 78
5
12,617,200
2,186,500
14,803,700
8,448
187,996 28
32,.578 85
229,023 13
6
128,011,600
35,142,500
163,1.54,100
18,902
1,907,372 84
523,623 25
2,449,898 09
7
224,735,200
.50,100,900
274,836,100
10,940
3,348,.564 48
746,503 41
4,105,997 89
8
28,019,500
2,624,600
30,644,100
24,140
417,490 55
39,106 54
480,737 09
9
25,677,700
1,439,900
27,117,600
17,444
3S2,.597 73
21,4.54 .51
421,496 24
10
57,061,300
3,.519,400
60,580,700
15,106
850,213 37
52,439 06
917,758 43
11
104,814,700
75,564,900
180,379,600
12,500
1,.561,739 03
1,125,917 01
2,700,156 04
12
24,247,400
3,288,100
27,.535,.500
15,420
361,286 26
48,992 69
425,698 95
13
22,491,300
2,490,600
24,981,900
14,248
335,120 37
37,109 94
386,478 31
14
11,152,900
764,100
11,917,000
13,212
166,178 21
11,385 09
190,775 30
15
9,466,000
585,900
10,051,900
11,220
141,043 40
8,729 91
160,993 31
16...,.
14,471,800
1,211,300
15,683,100
11,606
215,629 82
18,048 37
245,284 19
17
17,973,900
1,667,300
19,641,200
14,038
267,811 11
24,842 77
306,691 88
18
16,961,100
1,334,300
18,295,400
14,602
252,720 39
19,881 07
287,203 46
19
22,.582,700
2,313,800
24,896,500
15,344
336,482 23
34,475 62
386,301 85
20
34,035,200
4,285,000
38,320,200
19,908
507,124 48
63,846 .50
590,878 98
21
20,950,800
5,712,500
32,663,300
14,496
401,566 92
85,116 35
501,179 17
22
21,813,300
3,814,000
25,627,300
15,640
325,018 17
56,828 60
397,486 77
23
23,251,400
7,156,200
30,407,600
12,822
346,445 86
106,627 38
465,895 24
24
26,480,700
2,641,600
29,122,300
16,370
394,562 43
39,3.59 84
450,292 27
25
26,432,600
5,152,300
31,584,000
11,840
393,845 74
76,769 27
482,455 01
Total
$925,062,300
$216,144,800
$1,141,207,100
$3.51,882
$13,783,428 27
$3,220,557 52
$17,355,867 79
GENEKAL WAKD STATISTICS.
225
General Ward Statistics of Boston, 1901 — * Proportional
Numbers.
Ward.
4.83
1.45
1.35
1.2-2
0.83
1.19
1.60
0.67
0.76
1.60
2.59
0.95
2.45
1.56
0.99
2.29
1.72
0.89
3.09
6.97
2.60
3.09
30.94
13.21
11.13
AREA
(Acres).
9.96
4.52
27.42
6.54
6.66
2.26
8.31
5.58
5.38
7.77
1.10
1.79
6.67
1.34
7.87
21.52
3.49
6.47
4.48
9.16
11.55
5.54
1.52
1.42
1.71
0.79
1.08
1.52
0.86
1.05
1.45
3.17
0.86
2.62
3.30
1.28
2.47
1.69
0.80
2.79
7.74
2.35
2.79
28.11
12.77
10.48
Population.
4.07
4.09
2.60
2.36
2.29
5.45
2.64
5.14
4.38
3.95
3.44
4.22
4.07
3.82
3.51
3.57
4 46
3.99
4.85
5.80
4.26
4.57
4.21
4.83
3.44
PERSONS
5-15 TEARS OF AGE.
(School Census, 1901.)
4.63
4. 86
2.67
2.43
1.79
6.34
1.78
6.78
3.63
1.73
1.70
1.93
4.53
4.50
3.91
3.74
4.72
4.33
5.69
5.88
3.03
4.98
5.45
5.26
3.69
4.85
5.06
2.. 58
2.43
1.84
6.32
1.72
5.77
3.76
1.81
1.78
2.09
4.58
4.47
4.08
4.01
4.94
4.44
5.85
5.72
3.14
5.19
4.66
5.24
3.66
4.74
4.96
2.62
2.43
1.81
6.33
1.75
6.28
3.70
1.77
1.74
2.01
4.55
4.49
4.00
3.87
4.83
4.39
5.77
5.80
3.08
5.09
5.06
5.25
3.67
* These numbers show the per cent, of Area, Population, etc., in each Ward to the
whole City.
226
MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
General Ward Statistics of Boston, 1901
Numbers. — Continued.
Proportional
CO
o
•d
Voters at Municipal Election.
Wakd.
REGISTERED
VOTERS.
ACTUAL VOTERS.
a
a
a)
S
o
o
3
0
1
o
1
3.69
3.85
2.50
2.37
2.40
5.38
3.12
6.90
4.96
4.29
3.57
4.39
4.05
3.76
3.19
3.30
4.00
4.16
4.35
5.66
4.12
4.45
3.64
4.54
3.37
4.10
4.05
3.13
2.61
2.59
3.40
2.39
3.96
3.89
3.78
3.79
3.76
3.67
4.47
3.69
3. S3
4.16
4.02
4.75
6.63
4.89
4.77
4.46
5.38
3.82
4.43
1.29
2.85
2.24
1.44
1.73
1.90
1.16
1.89
5.00
9.87
5.19
0.89
3.99
3.55
3.46
2.73
2.43
3.79
9.09
8.00
4.92
6.07
7.11
4.98
4.14
3.71
3.09
2.56
2.45
3.20
2.32
3.61
3.65
3.93
4.54
3.94
3.32
4.41
3.68
3.79
3.98
3.82
4.63
6.94
5.28
4.79
4.66
5.60
3.96
4.23
4.20
3.16
2.48
3.61
3.59
2.28
3.82
3.86
3.60
3.70
3.61
3.78
4.55
3.61
3.76
4.32
3.84
4.95
6.39
4.93
4.84
4.70
5.32
3.99
4.07
1.30
3.81
2.12
1.35
1.93
1.96
0.97
1.82
4.85
10.07
5.19
0.76
4.28
3.56
3.37
3.61
2.40
4.28
9.35
7.97
5.35
5.87
6.88
4.90
4.21
2
3.87
3
3.12
4
5
2.43
2.46
6
3.40
7
2.34
8
3.49
9
3.62
10. ... :
3.74
11
4.44
12
3.79
13
3.43
14
4.52
15
3.60
16
3.71
17
4.04
18
3.68
19
4.87
6.73
21
5.37
4.90
23
4.83
5.50
25
4.10
* These numbers show the per cent, of Assessed Polls, Registered and Actual Voters
in each Ward to the whole City.
GENERAL WARD STATISTICS.
LA I
General Ward Statistics of Boston, 1901 — ^Proportional
Numbers. — Concluded.
Wakd.
Assessed Valuation
1
2
3
4
5
6,
7.
8,
9,
10,
11,
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
24.
25.
1.30
1.37
0.97
1.31
1.36
13.84
24.29
3.03
3.78
6.17
11.33
2.62
2.43
1.21
1.02
1.56
1.94
1.83
2.44
3.68
2.91
2.36
2.51
2.86
2.86
0.36
0.36
0.43
0.31
1.01
16.26
23.18
1.21
0.67
1.63
34.96
1.52
1.15
0.35
0.27
0..56
0.77
0.62
1.07
1.98
2.64
1.76
3.31
1.22
2.. 38
1.12
1.18
0.87
1.12
1.30
14.30
24.08
2.69
2.38
5.31
15.81
2.41
2.19
1.04
0.88
1.37
1.72
1.60
2.18
3.36
2.86
2.25
2.66
2.55
2.77
Taxes.
3.69
3.85
2.49
2.37
2.40
5.37
3.11
6.86
4.96
4.29
3.. 55
i.SS
4.05
3.75
3.19
3.30
3.99
4.15
4.36
5.66
4.12
4.44
3.64
4.65
3.36
1.30
1.37
0.97
1.31
1.36
13.84
24.29
3.03
2.78
6.17
11.33
2.62
2.43
1.21
1.02
1.56
1.94
1.83
2.44
3.68
2.91
2.36
2.51
2.86
0.36
0.36
0.43
0.31
1.01
16.26
23.18
1.21
0.67
1.63
34.96
1.52
1.15
0.35
0.27
0.56
0.77
0.62
1.07
1.98
2.64
1.76
3.. 31
1.22
2.38
1.18
1.23
0.90
1.14
1.33
14.13
23.66
2.77
2.43
5.29
15.56
2.45
2.23
1.10
0.93
1.41
1.77
1.65
2.23
3.40
2.89
2.29
2.68
2.59
* These numbers show the per cent, of Assessed Valuation and Taxes on Real and
Personal Estate in each "Ward to the whole City.
228
MUJflCIPAL REGISTEE.
Population, Polls and Voters by Wards and Precincts in 1901
Ward.
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8,
9
iO
11,
12
13
14,
15
16
17,
18,
19,
20.
21,
22.
23.
24.
25.
Precinct 1.
^1
1,749
2,961
1,779
2,255
1,919
3,233
1,731
4,958
4,235
2,057
2,261
3,633
3,279
3,804
2,109
2,291
3,634
3,174
3,732
4,472
2,659
4,230
1,794
2,845
3,674
(Municipal
Election.)
«
(Municipal
Election.)
556
891
573
688
689
976
569
1,439
1,440
699
946
1,299
1,001
1,109
596
584
928
1,092
1,000
1,415
831
1,348
518
879
1,091
364
594
445
513
435
413
292
695
697
376
499
705
.540
764
361
424
473
704
633
978
586
958
382
614
686
299
509
352
417
322
350
215
579
563
307
384
525
451
619
256
327
380
545
529
742
467
799
349
510
556
«
80
23
114
50
64
28
23
4
18
22
136
201
15
73
17
42
5
45
60
153
119
154
150
90
114
51
21
72
40
42
24
17
2
11
18
102
145
11
60
12
29
3
40
45
118
76
135
lis
75
71
Precinct 2.
1,879
2,280
2,354
2,026
2,076
3,959
2,655
5,404
3,986
2,462
2,853
3,024
2,945
2,707
3,071
3,060
2,408
3,826
3,149
4,028
2,593
3,211
2,806
2,286
2,679
<
(Municipal
Election.)
>•
o
o
!>
«
-a
So
o
rt
>
(JMuuicipal
Election.)
566
715
744
657
805
1,111
914
1,859
1,383
850
982
918
947
892
884
880
708
1,266
852
1,193
807
943
770
705
417
427
582
440
590
510
395
700
721
427
538
529
510
670
617
586
460
688
508
923
555
595
556
507
344
350
477
314
497
437
292
528
563
336
437
402
432
574
486
473
381
508
427
748
474
495
483
440
514
«
123
27
87
72
66
36
69
20
36
52
30
223
12
24
35
36
18
43
63
219
105
24
37
76
141
19
67
44
47
29
54
10
26
29
22
183
8
17
26
22
15
32
55
156
75
15
25
50
105
PRECINCT POPULATION AND VOTERS, 1901.
229
Population, Polls and Voters by Wards, etc.
Continued.
Ward.
1..
2..
3..
4..
5..
6..
7..
8..
9..
10 -
11..
12..
13..
14..
15..
16..
17..
18..
19..
20..
21..
22..
23..
24..
25..
F
§
m
o
p
fH
o
■c
cS
»
ID
a
o
Ch
<S
Precinct 3.
MEN.
(Municipal
Election.)
<o
o
>-
-C
<u
^
0)
■o
CO
m
0)
o
w
>
(Municipal
Election.)
2,574
753
564
450
157
2,030
850
^586
497
22
2,118
699
580
463
86
2,376
775
545
396
108
2,050
801
5.53
463
18
3,770
1,250
512
460
68
2,997
1,243
546
410
63
2,520
1,665
4S1
336
75
3,913
1,156
580
504
27
2,161
746
357
283
71
2,783
867
537
428
191
2,276
875
'437
340
100
2,588
903
483
403
12
1,800
602
494
425
77
2,794
817
521
391
51
3,547
1,061
798
616
52
1,976
644
425
338
108
3,616
1,186
652
.505
68
3,601
963
680
596
76
3,052
965
745
596
1.55
1,533
526
374
305
82
2,620
765
.534
438
26
2,639
750
556
513
26
3,986
1,031
876
635
191
2,124
684
520
433
147
113
13
66
79
15
e2
52
58
18
55
138
73
6
57
31
41
75
42
64
115
61
22
22
138
117
Precinct 4.
(Municipal
Election.)
(Municipal
Election.)
2,459
707
2,353
759
2,690
921
2,340
744
1,302
488
5,209
1,627
2,307
946
4,613
2,165
3,584
1,253
2,129
714
1,943
813
3,405
1,189
2,839
873
1,984
638
2,040
627
2,599
861
2,771
895
4,064
1,367
2,930
878
3,369
1,003
2,276
687
3,490
1,012
3,016
848
2,315
696
2,942
813
507
436
121
532
451
33
730
579
44
493
391
59
317
265
24
529
458
19
3S8
287
39
807
605
23
635
.520
21
364
298
72
561
447
247
619
462
106
510
429
15
494
418
79
492
385
79
577
466
98
618
475
114
846
633
.53
582
481
71
698
568
82
544
448
153
734
581
99
621
525
94
564
485
105
533
454
37
28
32
42
16
15
33
14
16
49
184
71
6
63
65
78
84
38
60
67
106
72
75
83
18
230
MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
Population, Polls and Voters by Wards, etc. — Continued.
Ward.
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8.
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
Precinct 5.
2,725
2,232
2,716
2,358
2,266
4,982
2,798
5,941
3,073
1,688
1,655
2,779
2,928
2,788
2,123
2,752
2,487
3,651
2,397
4,976
2,567
3,809
3,986
2,238
2,372
779
710
853
656
728
1,572
983
2,506
1,371
617
500
1,043
849
818
659
775
655
1,226
687
1,463
790
1,219
1,028
655
704
(Municipal
Election.)
«
553
457
666
470
506
562
563
777
577
329
395
538
521
608
520
563
443
793
474
1,045
561
709
780
524
574
(Municipal
Election.)
458
385
560
369
419
473
463
634
424
231
323
414
418
485
436
439
363
633
387
755
467
552
646
434
501
112
23
63
36
28
30
66
14
67
36
196
69
38
121
76
83
29
38
65
156
111
57
131
121
96
75
22
46
27
25
23
46
4
45
27
147
49
28
103
56
58
15
27
53
98
82
44
87
81
63
Precinct 6.
3,456
2,506
2,907
1,893
3,227
1,222
2,294
5,381
2,849
2,065
1,547
4,910
2,295
2,356
2,121
2,221
2,558
4,070
3,121
4,298
2,871
2,427
2,938
2,321
3,034
934
757
598
654
713
600
824
2,492
1,156
771
452
1,479
814
744
603
680
668
1,174
870
1,321
8S0
653
937
(Municipal
Election.)
«
587
534
443
412
449
300
443
900
469
445
325
786
'458
550
490
538
425
764
649
1,012
585
510
666
508
656
487
426
377
313
354
243
357
709
357
334
254
624
379
423
407
417
365
592
526
807
470
418
543
445
552
(Municipal
Election.)
151
53
25
88
116
185
15
132
69
240
189
131
106
94
108
26
43
14
12
25
26
25
78
62
121
34
20
77
94
133
11
100
54
196
136
104
80
63
80
PRECINCT POPULATION AND VOTERS, 1901.
231
Population, Polls and Voters by Wards, etc. — Continued.
Precinct 7.
Precinct 8.
1
a
.2
3
a
O
o
O
Ph
lU
CG
<
MEN.
(Mniiicipal
Election.)
WOMEN.
(Municipal
Election.)
1
a
o
ts
3
P<
O
Ph
o
rM
O
Ph
■a>
to
<
MEN.
(Municipal
Election.)
AVOMEN.
(Municipal
Election.)
Ward.
o
1
1
'So
O
m
■m
o
>
ID
1
o
>
o
, O
>
S
o
>
!h
o
1>
1
2
3
3,329
2,935
930
1,000
639
648
536
537
39
18
23
14
3,039
5,627
818
1,093
601
680
511
581
27
11
17
8
4
5
6
7
4,829
1,252
515
423
13
9
3,342
1,080
408
348
44
36
8
9
2,943
3,314
2,021
3,614
2,883
3,342
2,923
3,547
2,889
956
1,133
534
920
908
888
723
963
742
610
693
402
531
536
659
542
737
503
498
525
320
443
463
548
418
600
433
26
209
208
58
14
83
119
43
37
17
146
164
48
4
61
89
31
26
10
11
12
3,751
1,969
1,306
512
■ 722
409
541
317
138
216
107
171
13
14
15
16
3,078
2,722
2,519
828
914
702
483
679
525
388
551
426
8
77
60
5
60
41
17
18
4,070
1,096
734
605
44
34
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
4,250
3,968
2,972
2,567
2,053
3,667
2,454
1,267
1,205
886
813
483
1,100
828
943
884
669
554
471
782
620
811
675
553
466
394
604
537
158
230
108
213
154
197
133
143
187
84
172
105
147
115
3,998
4,393
3,258
3,256
2,475
4,596
1,140
1,388
955
1,029
638
1,411
760
1,021
757
658
533
932
642
787
591
553
440
711
29
182
235
63"
207
156
23
150
188
58
142
116
232
MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
Population, Polls and Voters by Wards, etc. — Concluded.
Precinct 9
Total.
MEN.
WOMEN.
MEN.
WOMEN.
o
05
1
£
o
(Municipal
Election.)
(Municipal
Election.)
o
o
S
CD
o
(Municipal
Election.)
(Municipal
Election.)
<
aj
o
>
S
o
o
>
u
3
o
>
_3
O
01
m
<
01
u
m
'6
-2
o
>
1
O
>
.2
o
p^
Ol
■5
-a
£
m
To
01
'6
o
>
1
•l
Ol
o
1....
1,622
449
284
242
15
13
22,832
6,492
4,516
3,763
690
473
2 . .
22,924
14,564
6 775
4,458
3,446
2 873
3 736
201
151
3
4,388
4,174
4,224
2,808
444
326
4....
18,248
12,840
2,200
350
246
5
2,850
2,320
225
157
6....
30,546
14,782
9,468
5,479
3,749
3,192
2,024
270
223
7....
2,627
296
228
8
28,817
24,583
22,142
12,126
4,360
4,289
3,391
3,429
3,199
181
113
9....
8,715
294
211
10....
2,515
707
451
344
97
71
7,543
4,164
779
564
11....
2,243
680
507
381
164
121
19,275
6,286
4,173
3,291
1,539
1,170
12....
23,641
7,723
4,145
3,210
810
603
13
22,835
21,453
19,700
20,017
25,038
7,123
6,605
5,611
5,804
7,026
4,041
4,918
4,068
4,223
3,363
4,043
3,205
3,338
139
622
88
14....
497
15 ...
553
539
414
16 ...
392
17....
2,245
690
502
414
56
40
4,583
3,754
426
303
18....
22,401
27,178
7 311
4,427
3,416
379
279
19....
7,657
5,229
4,399
591
497
20....
32,556
23,868
9,953
7,253
7,306
5 678
1,417
1,087
21. ..
3,139
994
755
599
146
118
5,386
4,374
1,248
926
22....
25,610
23,637
7,821
5,252
4,917
4,302
4,174
767
622
23....
1,930
490
352
281
42
28
6,405
947
682
24....
2,872
853
620
463
79
46
27,126
7,983
5,927
4,727
1,109
799
25....
19,279
5,921
4,204
3,547
776
569
Total
560,892
175,866
110,1,31
88,883
15,592
11,620
ASSESSOES' STATISTICS.
233
I O I I I
X I I i t-
IOI--1— (Or-i ^"ICOncCii— I COt-MCCCD »ncSOCDlC
; ^1 '^ »o 1— I Ci c-1 CD o Tt* CO ir: cJi o c-i C5 ci o c-'i (>i
d Si CO It- X)
?0';£:cicscD ccosocot
OOOOO O O O O C* OOOOO
OOOOO OOOOO OOOOO
:c^i--^c»QOO^ cc roocoo^ '^'^^^^*^«
OOOOO
ifi ZO ^'X ''Xj tT'
Op poo OOOOO
OOOOO
OOOOO
GO itO-^^O^X
'^ic^ccTic^o''
t— «:> rH 00 00
-^ o :o '— I -^
O O CC Ci Cfl
•^ -M GCl
oleics CO
'^ CiCCi— ( CO
^ z P
.'^ ,^ a
OlCOOOO CliTlOMlC CDi— lOO'^X (Mi-HX'r"I'-J CC^iCOOO
<M (M "TjH .— < Xi CO CO CI :?: CD t- ;c o — ^ c^ o t— co ■— i c-i cc i-h c-"i t-- c-i
?o_:D^oq_(M^-ri«^ x^^iTsoi^r-^T** c^co^io_a> CD cdc:l--o-^ cot--i— <i— (cc
cc 0-1 ri N r-< CM d rM c^ (^r cfif^c-Tc^^ o-xQ^oi^io co'coH^irf"^
o 2
CO CD CC lO C-l CiO if- CD' rl « "X t^ 'M CO -
'TM -M li^ t-- 00 CO C^ X CD CO
lOClX-OSi— I CO--fl'<:t<XiO
^r-l'— iir^ XOiTSCOO Ciri-— *COt— t XICD-^vfl CDt
■* CD CD'*'!*
-H iC CDOX
H CO re CI CD O O Ca
o^-icoioco c^a5i>-i-^x ir-oaso505
■^Xi— (C— GO O^C— CDOOS XOO^IM
CO CO CO'* CO
•CD b-CDCOOCO '*CDO'7-l(N O^Oi'<#3i
in cox X ^
-COCD COCOt— ll^t^ rHCO'MXX
'^ ir- CO t- Oi
H OO -* -^
oq
T-« -— I 1^ CO CD -*
xcooxcD ':o^ [iCO)
'Tf -*^ T— (I— I Tti
i-HC5COThlO CDtr-XCiO 1— 'C^cO-^iC CDr-XOiO
KM C^ C<i iM (M <M
234
MUNICIPAL" REGISTER.
H .2
CD
C3 ^
C <"
o 5
i o
rt O
■^ a;
O^ O O Sh
9 rt
»C ® r- GC Ct C rt 'M 0? •* I'S ^ o GC J: 0 1-1
GCaccCQC'X?:C55tc:c:c:s:CiC:C:^©
GC X GC X GC X X X 'X-X G^' (T^ GC X OC Ct Si
M f?J O CO i'^ iC' O (M '^ I
c^ o I- 1- in t- 1^
CiCDiCCC'Tt^'^CiOCC'n'MCOCOCOCO^OOI
ooooooooooooooooo
t-O t--^Oi
-irsi— iic-<*o?oioico
(M'<*lOlr-a)Q0l0t-ir'C00000OO05Ci05
OOOOOOOOOOOOrHi—lOOO
ir-ccoc:GO?Dic^c;t^iCioi— ir:iO':oi'-
OOi— lOOOOOOOOOOOOOO
5000000000000000
5lOOiOlO»OiOOOOOOOOOO
-QOmC^CCMt-CDGOOTt^ODOfMGOO
rOCMOCOC^t— lOI— (MiOOGCOOO
f--^ ^ cd" -*" 1ft" cc* cT cT -rl^ ^lo" cT irf C
C5lftlr'00'*Om'«*rHC-lQ0'<tOCC(MC^'^
r-eoi-(-^'<s<OrHoift'<*'r<'-HOi— loeoco
o^co^ ir^ tn^ t^ 00 -^ 1^ c^ o^ o^ a^ 1?^^ "*^ c^ 00^ 'X^
cT i-T f?J" (ja'' co' 1-H oT lo" CO o t-^ s^r c^ cT <:d lo* irT
t— c^-TjHioco^^t-o:iOO:ooo~eot-o
O^^O^CD^'^'^ O^O^C^O_^-H^CO_G^iO^O_^t-^rH^iq^
uiT o' t-^ TiT irT c^ irT cvT'^^co'r-rt-r c-T co" cTcT^
COi— l--*:D'31C^OOO'MC^OGC-HCOCyD(yiiC
cot't't^foDcococsasaiOTooo-Hr-i
I— I— I lO 1-H la CO CO
(MOC-TCCC5ir:OOO<NX-^OG0<MC^-rh
L-- CD ^ t- CO c^ -<* (M t-- c; I ■ ■"
CD^O^ CO_C^ I^irS^O QO_"^ r-4^C
lacC'^^c^coi-^y-iiSr-^iJZ':^ __ .
Oi— 't-cocoiccocicocoi— iO'n':Oi:NODCD
._ . . ,. "S CO^CD^O^t-- GC^as^CC '^
, . S^<iOr^'y^iO<7tiDtr^
ODCTiOOOOO-^^OO'— lOOC1(NC^
H^-^^-^ C0_^0_ CO_ O^ 00 c
Ci CO'cTr-ri-Tc^'"'*" CO* CD""
"scftooooo-^^';. _ ,.,.
tftOiCOOOOOOOO
t^r^t^irtiaovnoooo
t--Ot^i— l05CiC0C~-CD^<COCCiC0Oa:C0
— - — ■ ~)*^rMc-t^t " "^
. i^C^tr^CO-, ______ _.
Oii-iTtHOOi'-HmcoOiM-^t^OCOCDOC^
; to »«
"cTo'':
rcooT;
;Oi'-Hi ,^ ..
smocDcotr-C'ir-tr-ooooaoasc;
liSCSr-XCiOi-l^lMM^ii^OfXSSCiH
^
'^
o c oc o
CO ^ M« ID !?»
t^ M CO CO I— I
lO^QO ^»c: o^
OlMlO t^C
O; 35 05 050
G5 05 C5 05 05
CO 00 00 00 oo
o c: ooo
ooo oo
O0Tt< <N (MO
tO-*0005
O^-H ©4^(>I^CC^
CO 05 T— I in t-
I— It- 00 00 00
o>-iiMeo-*
05 05 C5 05 05
oo 00 00 CO 00
COOOO
OOOOO
(N O O -JS CO
t~OCOOOTt<
o_t-^o^o_(^
o'Qtr'*'F--'co'
t~ l~ 05 .-I CO
to CO CDC- t-
ir5 CO t-00 C5
CO CO CC 00 00
00 00,00 GO 00
O
o
II
CD
4»
'8
<u
p
<u
^^
^
-o
>5
e
S
<2)
<;i
^
'^H
eg.
s-
03
S'h
"
t^l
lo
^
«s.
■{^
u
o
t-
e
CD
^
aj
^
(i^
a^
■to
e
cc
aj
H
8
•+0
o
.g
^
O
<K
e
o
>5
05
O
^
^
t»3
O
^
O
o
^^-5
S
o
CO
05
■^
4»
^
^
^
^
s~
!U
»
^
o-
Oil 1
APPROPRIATIONS, TAXES AND REVENUE.
235
3
C
> ^
c
bn
a>
OJ
O
•o
o
c
i—t
CS
Jif
CO
u
„
X
;-i
CS
H
n
p
>»
<1
£
>.
a ^
o
a
<
2(22
^oa
2 >
H 2
si r-co o
S coos
CO ^ ^ I— (
QJij . .
■> ^ -tj -w
E-l !»(/}
OQ
I i
oooooo OC
i-H^S^C r^ Tl X "T — :
CO co'-t" =' i-' r; r' =' .
<^ o jr: ' - -M X r; r :
!0_10_;;_^-r^l- -7_1 - — ,-
OOOOOOOOOOOOOOIO
CO rt t^ -i< rH
— iC -)< C<I !a
■ — -i- -o O C2
— -t IM-
-co
CO-* 31
lO C^ CO
COCO 14
r-T 00 IC
oTaTcT
o o O' o o o o o o o o o o o :C'
OOOOOOOCO — OO'OOO
CO CO (M t ^ -rt "■ O
— I CO CO O -rt- ^ Ct -I . - . _ . . -
-Ml— <,-ccoc^c/;-T-t '_:_^t-~ — -^ c c:i
cT o"i-h" ^" ^"c4" c^ ci^co'co -*" -jT io'co cp
"C '- -^x -^ CC rH iC
iC t— (M
CC rH iC
CO <C 00
CO^O^t^
OO CO
OO :d
Ci CO t- 1" — - 1 — c X :j: — *3 i^ rtH 'Tl
■-a^OCrXttl-— C ox — — 3:!GO"^
coGo_:o I- 1- y^ic ~^t^^^co_io^cs^c^':o^
" o^ o'lc'TtT (>r co" c-^ c<r
CO GO^
ocTt^ocT
O CO -*
lOi— IfMCOCbCl^lOiCCCr-^^ast^CO oco
ooooooooooooooco coasw
oooooo o^rooooooco
o o-
_ _ r: o ; .
-f' X —" — "" y.' o' > -' -r ■^' o' /-' -f" QtTcc'l-^
o CO — - ■— o I- rt — 'C ~- ~- CO 1— I 00 00
00 lO CO c^^"^ 'sfcowSt— Tfiir^c— iM'^ij*'^
(?r irr(M"(?i"c^cX (^TirT (?r yTc^'tyf co" co'cc
iC C-1 Ol
O CO tr-
co_^o^t-^
05 CO"«J<
1-H t— -^
'^"co'co'
OOOOOOOOOOOOOO'O OiC— <
oooo~ocoooooooo OCOIr*
C5 CO t- lO — -I -t" i~ X --^ — C) t^ O CO
c^i^'^ o -r :■: 7 1 - 1 — X --- — -* IC c-1
o^co^Go^t- — ^— __^— _:t_x_^:o^— *i.»^„t>^'^
cT cT oo" ccT ctT ciT — " o" c-f o' -— " co" o" ^ o"
'^coo'^ooirsi— (I'-iocioJO'Cot'
05_ O^f-I^Cl^Ci^ -CO^ Or^^ 1^ CO CO^ 00 r-H^ co^ io_ c-^
, ic co'ccr<:o'':£rc£>c£ri>c-^t-^ir^co'ocrco"co'
CO 00 CO
--^oo
cs^coi.-^
o"r-'''r-r
^OOOOOOOOOO OOO
O O' O O O O O'
O' o S
O O O O O ■:
O O O O O O O O O' o o o o o x>
c: t- ir: 2 1 o "M --c c * x ~ r. x o x
LO CO ^^ «h_ ^^ 3^ C"-^ -^^ rl_ o^ ■: i_ t. <z o_ co
'-H ccT ic" L-^ oi o" t^ o*" cT co" X* <— ■'" t^"" -^ oT
t^t^Oli-t'^lCsXlOi— l<M J5COCOCOO
r— ( I— ' -^^O -^ O X i-^^Ci X O C-1 CO Oa O^
of 'N 'M" of iM* 01* of CO" of of CO* Co" CO ^ '^''
ooo
-* CO o
O OrH
CO CO r-l
!:or— l/j:jwc:i— irr-icO-^OCOt^XCtCi
XXXXCiClC3CiC5C5CSC5C5C:r-t
I I I I I I 1 [ I I I I I I I
lOCOt-XOiOi— IC<CO^iOCDI>.XC;
xxxxxcioscsocicicsoioo:
XXOGXXXXXXXOOXXXX
<B m g
.2 b ^^
<»'Scs.ao-g
X cQ r^ .^ _ ^
X S^^"^^^
--■cSa8=w
^r?v^ =s p o
si oil i
? s tH o g . -o x^-
^^ :;3 .S i^ * § S. p «
== -_ 5 - a3£ «
s « 5 " =»o o (>. a
g a o r'.S'^gaj *~
^ 5 a >,S.es o^&^o
aS?S^HaS^,„aj
a'"S='coco., s^o
a 2 gco as ="^=^
; to
.E;'o scbJo-i^
1 a c: aco <5 - ^ ;^ ,
o+j^a^ccj'r; 00
amcir5=i-"X'^'5»v-r
S'^l^lagig^
J20€&a)pj>jp "-1-.
>-g|oi^^g-^_^5,a
■3 o a rt .2 o o ^'';: g.2
ca « o a J bce o_~ o -«
o^SSao.SSa^'^S'
i^ jS _'E ^ iJ a; ft
^■2 5 s^=~"c 2 ^5— a
StS^r aSo^^'^g
« .7- ^ 1^ ► -^^ £ -" 5 ii
rt t>>^ ^ 5 £. z — ^ .° £
'^^■^ tr,2^ O S «^ a^ t>,
tu 2 ° s5 - ---2 ^^
&< a o si^ a 2 =^ f^ S"
=-=-:r f»-sfflarB2
>8e ':3iaa«'n
Qj-^ oi a aj 2 ^ ^^ (*
lH«'© cSSh'-G^OcS
236
MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
Expenditures
Since the Last Annexation^ January 5, 1S74.
(From the Report of the City Auditor.)
The following table shows the expenditures of the City, exclusive of
sums spent for redeeming debt and temporary loans: —
Year.
Interest on
Debt and
Temporary
Loans.
State Tax.
Other City
Expendi-
tures.
Total Actual
Expendi-
tures on
account of
City.
County.
Total City
and
County.
1874-75
.^(2,671,496 12
§802,120 00
811,542,694 17
$15,016,310 29
$372,321 99
815,388,632 28
1875-76
2,607,933 20
802,120 00
11,704,336 52
15,114,389 72
361,510 29
15,475,900 01
1876-77
2,572,057 28
742,932 00
10,805,276 07
14,120,265 35
345,976 34
14,466,241 69
1877-78
2,461,600 59
619,110 00
10,434,694 47
13,515,405 06
328,646 92
13,844,051 98
1878-79
2,352,160 26
412,740 00
9,413,015 15
12,177,915 41
327,833 50
12,505,748 91
1879-80
2,377,050 59
206,370 00
9,320,836 79
11,904,257,38
296,140 82
12,200,398 20
1880-81
2,220,171 43
619,110 00
10,252,967 39
13,092,248 82
305,871 68
13,398,120 50
1881-8-2
2,188,564 72
619,110 00
10,422,476 44
13,230,151 16
338,261 12
13,568,412 28
1882-83
2,184,580 49
825,480 00
11,879,562 33
14,889,622 82
362,908 06
15,252,530 88
1883-84
2,227,045 73
578,055 00
12,852,436 08
15,657,536 81
368,352 40
16,025,889 21
1884-85
2,238,518 17
770,740 00
12,456,798 17
15,466,056 34
393,785 77
15,859,842 11
1885-86
2,242,102 19
578,055 00
11,480,449 18
14,300,606 37
852,613 93
15,153,220 30
1886-87
2,237,479 04
555,870 00
11,542,638 27
14,335,987 31
999,056 20
15,335,043 51
1887-88
2,315,833 49
833,805 00
12,920,866 74
16,070,-505 23
1,086,026 43
17,156,531 66
1888-89. . . . .
2,324,476 50
833,805 00
12,974,131 56
16,132,413 06
1,334,640 21
17,467,053 27
1889-90
2,353,785,54
738,020 00
13,508,467 28
16,600,272 82
1,265,160 36
17,865,433 18
1890-91
2,447,882 87
645,767 50
14,585,464 60
17,679,114 97
1,133,121 18
18,812,236 15
1891-92
(9 months)
1,784,671 04
553,515 00
13,856,842 03
16,195,028 07
777,496 32
16,972,524 39
1892-93
2,522,587 58
640,062 50
16,954,626 31
20,117,276 39
1,183,388 65
21,300,665 04
1893-94
2,476,430 94
914,375 00
17,287,020 68
20,677,826 62
1,019,172 73
21,696,999 35
1894-95
2,341,623 81
731,500 00
19,026,419 75
22,099,543 56
985,044 21
23,084,587 77
1895-96
2,580,208 65
538,920 00
20,474,494 46
23.593,623 11
941,184 68
24,534,807 79
1896-97. ....
2,820,480 64
628,740 00
21,421,186 40
24,870,407 04
967,083 25
25,837,490 29
1897-98
3,107,953 19
628,740 00
24,105,749 58
27,842,442 77
1,183,478 06
29,025,920 83
1898-99
3,326,127 78
536,670 00
22,794,478 50
26,657,276 28
1,223,241 21
27,880,517 49
1899-1900. . .
3,258,486 47
536,670 00
24,246,070 47
28,041,226 94
1,284,496 76
29,325,723 70
1900-1901...
3,372,266 00
536,670 00
23,559,659 53
27,468,595 53
1,286,450 67
28,755,046 20
1901-1902...
3,131,100 88
632,240 00
25,279,578 .54
29,042,919 42
1,470,276 08
.30,513,195 50
DEBT STATEMEIS'T.
237
.be
-*
t—
Oi
f^
m
la
tr-
CO
CO
Oi
m
o
03
CO
j^
CO
PH
,_^
I
lO
c=
03
CO
CO
o
CO
id
in
o
01
I-
^.S .
o
t-
r:i
•M
o<
1^
io
<y^
,_«
to
00
CO
-*
^
in
f^
^
t-
OJ^ m
cc
00
(35
C2
CO
in
■^
O)
Oi
OO
CO
CO
o
OS'S
c
"*.
o
iS
CD
00
lO,
GO
■*
02_
"*-
05^
««a
IC
t^
o"
■^
O
O*
CO
CO
co'
CI
o
d"
CO
-*
CO
CJ
CO
OJ
05
05
CO
eo
CO
in
DQ J-'
IC
s
o?
00
t-^
•^
in
°i.
OS
cc
CO
■^
ir^
CO
-^
IC
CO
t-^
OO
o*
00
l^
s
iM
(M
01
o>
CM
O)
o>
05
05
CO
CO
CO
CO
CO
'^
—
Oi
-,
C2
^
CO
ei
lO
„
Tt<
CO
o
05
t^
(_
"^
o
05
CO
CD
ci
CO
-*
on
OJ
>o
Ol
t^
tr-
in
o
■*
r-
OS
lO
00
05
Oi
o
^
Tf
eo
o
-*
ee
OO
m
p^
05
t~-
eo
CO
c^
o
^
<M
o
00
CO
la
C-.
Ol
CO
i)
03
in
CO
CO 3 O
Eh
o
(B
0|
t-
00
oc
CO
in
c:
t-;_
CO
05_
io_
'rii'
co'
CO
05
en
cc
o'
in
32
CO*
'^
G5
CO
IC
t^
0^
o
Ol
o
CO
'Jj
Cij
05
IC
in
"^
o
00
>n
■*
^
CO
CO
CO
IT.
CO
CO
00
c:
oT
^'
in
in
cT
5
^^
'"'
05
o<
05
C5
OI
Ol
05
05
c^
.^ u
eo
CO
CO
-n
en
t.
(M
■^
05
m
lO
05
CO
lO
"^
CO
CO
•^
% ="'
(M
CO
o
o
o
o
t^
C5
05
o
CO
o
eo
OS
CO
^?
to
icr
03
■M
CO
C3
o
Ol
o>
CO
m
Ol
o
r-
cc
in
-^
-^
C>^
IC
CO
CO
o
t-
lO
2
2
CO
CO
co_
o
00
^
o^
id
t^
c;
o
05
CO
oJ
co"
C5
co'
d
o'
cc'
t-
s
oo
■^
CO
00
CO
o
C5
02
05
CO
cc
o
CO
l«
M
o
05
ei
Ol
05
CO
t-
C5
a
00
CO
-*
CO
CO
c^
ea
O
o
co'
DO
co'
cs
CO
in
CO
CD
■»^
OS
in
O £
_?
■^
•*
-*
-*
-*
"*
"*
'^
■rt-
lO
in
lO
lO
in
in
CO
'^
t-
CO
■^
cc
IS
lO
f-1
CO
CO
o
J^
^
Ci
CO
00
J,
j_,
OJ
(M
CO
o
Oi
o
o
CO
t-
00
05
00
05
CO
CO
m
c-
O
o
2?
o
CO
o
05
ei
o
o
,^
O
■^
t'
o
05
CO
cs
-t^ C3
o
s
05
CO
-^
t--
CO
m
a i5
(M_
t-;
c
<=
K
■*
CO
CO
s
O-J
o
CC
4j
i^i
t-^
o:
^ O
co'
CO
co'
CO
cc
c;
Tj?
s;
c:
■X>
IM
S£
00
05
-ri^
en
CO
o
4tH
o
CO
05
s
'M
CO
o
05
CO
OO
CJ
CR
o
o
OO
■*
5
m
^
#
*
^'
*
'-'
*
05
05'
*
■*
CD
-*
^
00
■*
OJ
>o
lO
CO
o
CO
XI
^_,
^^
00
CO
OS
'C
(M
CO
0-.
o
d
en
CO
C5
05
d
1^
CO
CO
-<*
05
'5
CO
O
CO
o
CO
03
03
t^
CT>
cn
00
o
in
05
ca
I-,
o
O
03
Ol
lO
GO
00
o
lO
■^
CO
-4<
b-
o
cc
CO
CO
co__
a
o:
CS
00
^
CO
C:
Ci
l^
35
irf
t-^
CO
in
o
OS
in
^
"rt*
cc
05
c;
"d
CO
CO
CO
in
o
o
05
^
IX
CO
3}
rt^
a
c
IS
c-
03
-J-J
CO
t-
c
OO
o
t'
"*
Q
(m'" CO
^
^
"
oi
''^
"^
'"
"^
"
05
cc
^
o
o
J-
o
o
o
o
o
o
^
o
o
J;,
o
o
o
_.
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
c
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
^
o
o
^
o
^
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
in
^
^
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
c
, o
o
o
o
o
o_
o
in
CO
=
o
o
o:
Cf.
co^
Q£
OJ
CO
c
t-T
CO
t;
C5
t-
d'
•^
in
co"
00
lO
o
-a
CO
o
CO
00
(c
in
CO
cc
OO
o
«
■^
CO
-<J
■^
00
O
t-
r
a-
in
t-
i^
CO
t-
CQ CO
ei
-*
(N"
CO
CO
C5
in
^^
co
in
cc
co"
^
cc
o-
CO
OJ
cr
CO
t-
CD
-*
o
oc
c
"*
in
t^
00
in
ur:
-<*
t^
-*
t-
fH
o
05
o
m
o
cc
CO
c
o
c
IC
oc
01
-^
t-
c
CO
^^
05
t-
IT
00
CO
t^
C£
oc
-«!J
o
O)
o-
o
cr
CO
(T
d
ir:
IC
c
ir
t-
CC
in
IT
CO
O
ir
t^ o 1
0*
t-
o
cc
-#
t- cc
OI
<:r
2
T*^
r--
-^
05
" oT
t--
<M
(^
cc
o-
CC
■^
CO
c
t- rt 1
''I ^.
. CO
o
>"
O)
o
s_
cr
c-
•«
ir
s_
cc
cc
^
=2
% ^
IM
(M
(N
(M
05
0<"
05
05
05
05
'"'
05
05
05
05"
ho
ca
c
cr
ir
a
o-
^
oc
^
O"
^
o
^ CS <= 1
e<-
o-
<M
c
cc
r-(
cc
o-
c:
c
05
0
O
o-
If
o-
c
oc
oc
O
cr
l^
o-
05
o
t'
CC
CC
o
P^
c
•? cr
It- LT
05
CC
•r
05
CO
o
05
cc
2'S a fl
<M
-*
IT
e^
o
t- o<
c:
-*
cr
in
OC
c:
o:
05_^
l"1^
0-
t^ 05
a-"
02
o
CC
CO OJ
oc
05
05"
CO
t- <=
cc
cc
ei
c
o
^
CS
S t- o=
cc
c
t- c
C
0
ih^ cc
ir
?
in
■^
^
*"
'"'
*"
'"
'"'
w
o
s
«
o:
-<
o-
<=
0-
-i
IT
CO
t^
a
o-
05
0"
T^
^^
CO
^
t-
c
^
a
Cf
a
cr
o
^
■?
o
o
o-
9
t^
a
or
CO
c
c
3
w
en
t-
o
^
cr
Tt
I
t-
t;
ce
V
or
cc
o.
00
cr
oc
oc
c
OS
o-
c
cs
>i
«
Cf
CM
oc
oc
c»
or
CO
OC
or
cc
a
oc
or
&
•<
c
CO
cr
<!
fl
g
cS
c-
£
<
c
o
C
rH
ci
"a
15
S
1
238
MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
'n*
— ^
10
»o
CO
rl>
c^
0
^
0
0
0
i^
I—*
O m^
^.
0
53
■*
62
?#
>o
■^
,^
10
en
0-1
(SI
•^
05
:d
ali
i^
a-a **>
(-i
£B 3 0
j^
^^
0
fc(
«■
O)
(N
(M
'-""
CO
. .
f.
ift
t-
0
0
0
rr
m
CI
m
~
C^
^
ora
0
--
■-J
0
05
■»
O)
CO
0
CR
IM
c^
lO
^
0
K
C*
!Zi ■■:!
10
1^
a
C£
K
0
0
^
1>
«
-*
*
ST
^
^
^
r^
'^
0
X
c:
t-
C
cj
— *
^-.
<—
to
Ph
p
cr
■H
IX
i;-
«.
_
_
0
0
=
0
0
■sj
0
„ —
02
0
«■
oc
r--
<-
CO
a 0 oD
0
t^ cc
tr
CO
23 ^
03^
tc
■^ »«
<N
«©
Q
C
r-
0
n 0 bOt£
§-" a^o
0 IT
^_^
tr
10
0
0-33 a
C
S '=s a r?
C5 ir-
00
10
c
t-
IT
c<
c-
1-t
■le
T
0
o>
■v
-
A
^
<<
06
s
«
CO
z
-<
K
1-5
Pm
2
i-l
4)
ta
1
00
t^
rjj
CD
32
0
0
■^
'iX
0
CO
CO
CO
c:
t—
^
0
01
CO
CO
00
CO
CO
CD
'^
Ol
00
<M
CJ
35
32
I;,
0
CO
00
I^
0
0
L^
CO
35
»c
10
■^
s
-f
CO_
l-_
o_
cn_
0
CO
a^
1
U-:
co'
35"
(m"
CO*
iS
cT
czT
10
0
.0
ta
00
32
IC
0
32
CO
0
0
o_
10
IC
-*_
00
CI
CO
l^
CO
•^
la
CD
^
^
m
IC
ic"
t-^
CO
40
0
„
2j
0
■n
35
'^
iM
0
J^
^
,_,
iC
CO
—
CO
CO
^
CD
32
CD
■^
t^
CO
31
eg
r~-t
la
CO
0
00
10
rvi
CO
in
cq
0
32
CO
00
CO
32
"^
CO_
s.
CO
t-;.
CD
CO
ec
32
t^
co'
urT
35
CD
co"
00"
CD
31
33
0
00
02
CO
35
^
e»
-*
00
CO
00
0
CO
co__
o_
1
CJ^
eo_
CO
r^
c<»
01
co"
co"
'^
^
0"
CO
CD*
CO*
t-^
•I&
us
00
—
~co"
-*•
;-,
-^
CO
^
t-
f^
^
00
CO
OJ
0
c5
0
0
-^
CI
CI
0
01
^H
CO
00
'^
0
CO
00
00
32
-^
^^
0
-*
»o
CO
CO
0
00
c^
0
c^
0
»o
<K
o_
o_
o_
CO
t^
00
CO
1C__
OJ_
00
co"
oT
irf
ic"
32*
la
00
>c
10
CO
0
35
10
t-
CO
00
32
t—
■*
IT-
^
C<I
0
0
33__
CO
CO
cT
Cl
CO
00
35"
35*
CO
0"
US
(M
01
iM
<M
(M
CI
CO
CO
eo
CO
CO
«■
'*
t^
C»
-*
00
10
IC
00
00
CO
~^
t^
-H
IM
»
0
a
0
32
CD
!»
32
00
CO
0
CO
0
CD
0
32
t-
0
0
00
3^
^
0:
35
CI
■^
in
■^
■*
CI
CD
r-:_
0
o_
CO
s_
00_
CO
CO
CO
0
co"
d"
-*"
CD*
0
CO
CO
t-
CO
35
10
s
c-
CA
!M
S-l
0
00
■*
CO
00
-*
»c
€©■
*
^
#
^
*
*
or
*
ci~
^
*
*
•*
~
CO
■*
"77
10
10
CO
~
~
0
CO
CO
CO
32
0
0
02
CO
C5
ca
0
CO
0
CO
0
CO
32
35
t^
35
32
00
0
la
0
03
32
IC
00
CO
IC
IC
CI
00
(N_
CO_
0
32
CO_
CO
co^
00
CD*
CO
of
t~
0"
^"
CO
00
0
CO
01
0
0
10
32
32
CO
35
°l
0
0
"^
35__
t-
co_
c-
t-
00
CO
00
0-5
*3
■»
0
~
^
0
0
0
0
0
~
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
^
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
^
^
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
■=
0
0
o_
o_
CO
o_
IC
o_
iC
>,
CO*
sf
C2
(N
t~^
C5
sf
uo"
co"
0
-^
10
10
•c
0
^1
U5
0
CO
OS
t—
CO
co__
N
0
s
(M
of
CO
CO
•^
'"'
'*
03
CO
•CD
^
CO
C5
~s^
0
^
CO
CO
CO
^
0
10
CO
32
32
CO
■^
c^
IC
""•
I>
C3
■^
^^
0
■*
t^
(M
0
CO
35
0
52
t;;
00
10
■^
t—
CI
l^
iO
CO
05
°i.
'*-
00_
CO
us
M_
0"
0
L-r
CO
0"
00
co"
co"
^
CO
C<I
35
CO
c:2
CO
us
CI
co^
CO
in
4C
^_
o_
ih
10
■^
us
us
IC
co_
^
^
^
^
ph"
ph"
p4*
^
1-^
^
r-T
rH*
r-T
«■
0
0
~^
10
0
0
0
0
0
0
"^
0
Q
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
C'
0
0
0
0
CO
'^
to
^^
C2
00
00
00
IC
l-
PH
32
iC
0
lO
O;
IC
32
^
0
0
CD
0
t-
CO__
c^
-^
o_
0
'HH
CO
CO
0
CO
03"
CO
IC
02
-*
S
5£
Ci
0
01
CO
00
s
at
•*
05
IC
00
CO
'*
ib
•^
IT-
t-
CO
t-
t-
00
«■
'^"
C5
0
CO
US
CO
t-^
00
05
0
CO
oo
CO
^
CO
%
s
4
0
pi,
oil
•^
uo
CO
t-
00
00
CO
CO
00
00
GO
00
00
32
<K
re
00
T— 1
00
00
00
00
00
s
00
00
0"
'u
Ot
<
0
I— (
X
CS
S
^ a
h5 ff)
o a> ti
a o a>
DEBT STATEMENT.
239
P^
C5 S
01 ci
o
3«S
2'ci a a
o o cc ws :d
CD «. t- CQ
32
t^
-N
fN
32
O
irJO^COt-GOCD_CC;i^t-
^ rH <M 0^
iC 00 -* O '* 00 OS
O O O M GO
00 C5
(M O CiD CO 1— [
cd3ioioc<):dc:!C3co
t''*C7SCiCrjCOC2X''M
C<1 C5 G<l »0 CO .. --
" "~ CO cc^ co^
of (>r ■*"
t-OQ01OCDC500Tt<OOO
COOCOGitOiOl^t-OOO
CO'*!— looocoxiiOiniio
C^t^OCSOOlCO-^OirtlO
C^CO^C^^CO^iO^CO^Xi UO t^OD ^
CD* O^^ lOl" ■^'" o" co" cT ^o" t^ r^ "^
O G5 'I* C5 lO e^ o
irTo'co't-^co'crcc'irrcD'
cocococo-^-^ir^cDO
-H ^ S
Oi Ci 00
C5 CO O O O
t-ooicjcsiooc;
O 1— t O^ o C-l 1— I o
O^ ^„ '"'-
tM -* _.
C-1 o^ m
CC O? Cw 1— ' X 00
-* CO CJ '^ O tA
r- CO :o -* c^i o 00 o I— o o
(MCSt-OO-^OO.— lOO
C0-TtiC0t--Tt<C-CCC^-^OO
OS^CCO^X) ^CiCNt'CO'^O
of r-T r-i" CO* CO* ^ o" f-"" d" Co" o"
I— lt-COCOCOOT*irHCOr-iO
ooooooooooo
ooooooooooo
^
^
o
O
•32
I/I
1—
O*
-H
I— 1
^
t/J
OU
!0
t- CO CO I— (
OOOt-r-l^0^lO(MCOO
CSw-^COCOOOOtr-CDOOOO
CO l^ CD O 04 CD ^ t^ O 00 O^
CD^iO^C^rH^OO^O^iO^CO fN T*< CD
2 cTco'crTt^'cTtyrcrr-rQo't-^
piQOOCDOCOiOCOOOCOOl
(J^CDCD-fl^^CDlr'aSi— ' Or- 1 i— •
r-j T^ T^ r^ 7-^ r^ i-h" Cq" (m" cT of
OOOOOOOOOOO
OOOOOOOOOOO
t- 00 O^ 01 -^ Ol CS O ifl CO 01
cO"!j''!*<l>-0(M(McocoCiu::i
■^(MGOCDt— COCDS^C— iCi— I
tCo'co'od'-iro"co'-*"ir:rcD'Go'
r- (COl— t— iOCiOS-^OOli— I
-^ C-l I-- i-< CJ Ol (M 00 CO 00 t'
s
o
g eo ■^ lo 50
GO w2 C2 02 C2
^C2C2CSC203C2C2rH^H^-
_L I I I I I I I I I I
^ 02 C2 C2 O O: '32 02 02 O O
^CCCCCCCO0OC/:>CC00C2'32
^ CO
p 2 a
cs o-r;
>>§ o
l=a^
as .
-, , a QD
a ca o
o o o
3=^:^5
a^H Jh
^q o ?
2 a 2
« rt S
t^ l/* CO
o >^-.
S a 3
~ .a
•r a „
^— a
ct °° a
*^ P.
*25 '^
- o o
^ c ■*^
-= © a
^ a *
a P-a
o o ® -g
P ^a a
■" £'3 '-M
'S. ta t^ ff? t- ic CO
p^ o 3ri>i— fcoc^
« S 320 — 0^
" a.2 o
^P9
gc;
: c^ t- (M o ^Jh "^ q -a
00 32 C2 32 02
G2 32 32 O O
CO O) 00 32 C2
. aj o t-i-H CO 000
^ <^-*"S
^-aa
2 "= 3; aj
r' a S aj
ffi
«-< a; a»
a S aj
aj eh3,'-i~'
* ;2i«ga
- -s f^
QQ
•w^ to (>i.g
5 5 2o !=
•O2 £*o
"+33 23
— -OS m
'i.^O ^--^
«H -k^ -C •" 2
o " s a 2
«s a > a
S« a "^.2
3 S ^^ 3
ncr-w*^ a
S^ o i>p
a^'S^M
a;5S2.S
n, ^ 2? sh a
; 1,^ aj'"
'citDOO(N!OOC3 r^H
(M CO -^ 10 CO l^
32 02 32 32 32 C2
I I I I I I
t-H C^ CO -4h »« CD
32 32 32 32 32 C2
00 00 GO CO 00 GC
a2?.2o
£ >-St- •>>
>■ pi O^-tJ
a-w a oj a
cs 3 o a »
ai « P 2 'cj
,a ij ,.''3
•^ a t;« a
OJ "^ 01 S W
^ C cj^
03 j^ o ^
r' >>a"S'«
■p; aj aj o o
S5S£2
240
MUNICIPAL KEGISTER.
o
c
^
X
^H
(M
(,
(M
rs
CO
^
(N
lo
X
CO
n
o
o
(M
o
*r:
^•^
O
>c
t-
^
-fl
t-
o
CO
CO
(^
o
o
<^
O
J^
tr-
■^
O
X
lO
OJ
I-,
c-
cc
IC
X
o^ m
^
ee
o:
X
o
c-
cc
X
p a-O
o
o
c:
o
X
cc
cc
cS
s
g^§
ir
X
t-
a
■*
(M
>o
a
-*
CO
QC
c^
-»d
o
t-
C5
IN
X
c
CO
•y
o
OJ
X
X
^
o
CC
■^
CO
cc
c-
x_
«■
e-
cc
cc
cc
CO
cc
cc
CO
eq
~ (m'
OS
oi
as
X
cc
X
I—
•^
cc
X
in
Ol
-*
t^
C5
^
X
OJ
-*
tfl
c-
eq
c:
CO
o
(T
X
IM
w
C2
,-H
^
t--
(M
c
X
CO
:5
,^
ir.
t-
CC
c=
cc
X
■^
X
cc
lO
X
x
o
t-
co_
o:
X
(M
t-
CO
CO
t-
c-
0-
cc
x
0J~
t-^
fa
-*
o-
c/!
CO
CB
ir-
X
Xj
t^
ae=
rH
(N
(M
cr
^
•*
^
CO
CO
. .
o
c;
^
o
o
O
c:
o
o
o
o
^
CO
CO
c
^
Srt
c
o
o
o
o
c
o
o
o
c
c
<=
CO
c
o
0) 4)
o
(^
o
o
o
o
o
o
c
CO
o
o
Q>>
c
o
o
o
c
o
c;
o
o
o
o
o
CO
o
o
m O
cr
Ci
cc
e-
CO
o
X
cc
CO
0-.
oc
er
•^
Ul
in
cc
-*
a
cc
cm
p-a
oc
X
"*
^
ff
?
"C
CO
CO
CO
lO
LT
in
OS
#:
*"
<M
CO
cc
cc
CO
CO
CO
cc
cc
cr
CO
cc
CO
o
c
^
^
^
o
o
o
o
CO
c
o
o
c
o
OJ
o
c
o
o
o
£
o
o
c
o
c:
o
o
o
c
Q
o
(3
o
o
o
CO
(O
c
c
o
o
-tJ rt
c
OJ o
c
c
o
c
c
o
o
CO
c:
<=
G
o_
o_
^S
iT
c
t-
CO
t--
-#
CO
CO
tr-
t^
t-
X
«r^
«
oc
rt
C/J
CO
X
(M
't
ir
a
X
. *
£^
X
t-
*
*
CO
*
*
#
*
*
*
*
„
o
o
o
o
o
o
;_
c
c
_
o
o
^
S
c
o
o
o
o
o
o
c
o
s
o
CO
rt
(3
c
o
o
o
o
o
c
CO
o
o
fM
o
o
CO
o
c:
<=
c
o
o
G
c
c
c
o
c
<=_
o^
c
i>
t-
t-
t- tr-
t^
Ir-
t-
t-^ t-
t^ c
X
t-^
Xi
IT
rH
-*
m
•»
■■
0
o
o
O
o
o
_;
c:
c
<=
C
o
c
o
d
c
o
(3
^
o
o
o
4J QJ
c
'o3 cj
c:
c
c
o
o
o
o
QS
o
o
X
X
^
o
X
¥
^•
c
L^
c
-^
ee
c:
t- cr
tr-
^
c
c
c
e
o
CO
c
tr
c
c^
<=
cc
X
<=
c
c
G
CO
iT
c^
CO X
a
c
-*
to
c
<o
c
c
<z
o
(M
'<:
c
c
o-
CO
o
c^
cr
CC
P
t-
c
X
cr
t-
V-
t-
If
t-
" tr ■=
cr
X
-*
X
c
CO
t-
to
CO
o.
>id
IT
c
cr
cr
CM
OJ
«J u
#
■^
'^
■"
"
p
~
c
^
cz
o
<=
o
c
c
CO
c
CO
c
o
o
be
a .Sx
<=
G
c
c:
c:
o
<=
o
c
a
c
CO
G
o
o
c
o
05 cr
o-
•**
^
t-
cc
IT
o-
tr-
c-
-*
CO
Amou
paid
to Sink
Fund
C
X
o
o-
^
1--
tr-
t-
^
X
cr
^
o
<=
<=
5
tr-
cc
cc
V
ee
t-
IT
c
c
■**
"l
^.
t'
t^
ee
o-
X
X
(>
cc
cc
cc
cc
c
cT
cT
5
'^
ir
ir
iC.
cc
cc
cc
cc
cc
lO
CD
■
^
<
?
a
a
y
9
o
i
t-
C"
!=
c^
-*
u-
cc
t;
<T
c
C35
Oi
oc
0
o
5
^
=■
■^
T
=[
c
0
^
=1
«
t-
c
IT
Ci
t-
. cJ
0
<3
rl^
a
a
O"
o-
c
O"
a
cr
o
0
Cf
X
X
0
o
•^
X
cc
^•
X
a
X
s
2
^
'"
'"
_
c
O
w
c-
«
«!
T
p
e
<
>
•2
^
1
E^
II
COCHITUATE WATER DEBT.
241
M
CO c:
^ <M e< o CO Ol
CO 05 -* i-< 00 ^
O rH CO CS OS r^
O CCi
O rH
0 i-H I— 1 1^
I •* w t-
o CO -a- ir
. 1-1 CO
CD r- -rt" IC CS OS
^ o
CS o
CO
^ CO --i^ »o (» o ^
t
- CS -H ^ CO' 00
IC CS O t' IC CO
-* o
CO ^
"as
C-1
00 C- t- O CO ir
m CO cc lo t^ (M
1^ CO c
:; o oc --^
iC IC
0
i^
-<*<
^ c: CS ic
- ^ IN
CO C2 --1 ^ -* (M
■^ IC CO 00 IC
1-H O
c*
il^
m
iC rH 00 t- IC CI CO
d t- t:~ O CO IM
CS IC CO rH CD 00
-* CO
'2 os"
So s
i> Tt< -* ^ c.
0 CO o
C3 CO c- ic 00 in
CO e:
;• 1-1 CD IC IC
to
OJ CO CO CO ^ c
J OJ CS
t- -s- c-
:_, 1-^ IC o
C2
03 o o c: o c: o
o o c
;• c CS
cs en c
S 00 cc
t
- c-
o^
*
"
^
"
"
■a
ir>
(M CO CO CO CO ^
1 CO
N Ci -* t- O '*
00 t' IC OS OS i-H
c
0 o
cc t^
2 tT «
GO
CO 00 00 »»■ lO QO O
05 o ir
5 ^ 00 CO
CO CO IC CO OS o
0 OS
o t-
t^
(M O C5 (K lO CO T— 1
CO -* o
J OS t- lO
CO -* CO CD IT' O
OS CO
I
- a
-*
G3 O C5 CO O O
4 O
i-i O C5 rH C: ^
IC O t- CD 00 CD
1-1 Ol
^ 3
cc
CO CO C^ t- lO CO ^
CO c
5 o c» oa lO
O lO t- CS CO L^
1-1 Ol
s-c^
CO
r-t C5 (N t— CO CO IC
t- CO •* c
OS rt
OS OS -^ en ^^ Ol
- o
^ d
.rt a^H
■^
t- OO CO O -d> O CO
-^ t
1^ 'n^ -* CS o IC
GO t-
"* Ol
aJi=o-
r-. en C) CO t- rH CO
en CO oo '^ c: -*i
O CO rj< o l~
- CO
"- ■»
r^ -^
^
(H
^ i-H M (M 0^ CO 01
CO ^ ^ 13 O CO
l-
- C^ OD CS CS OS
OS CS
o o
«■
•4^ ^
s
00 CO a
3 00 00 GO CO
00 CO CO 00 re CO
CC GO 00 GO C» GO
CO 00
00 OD
, ^S
C3
05 O CI Ci C5 C5 Oi
C-. en o: c
s en OS
OS OS OS CS ot
OS
OS OS
CS 01
0>i
CO
CO CO CO CO CO CO CO
CO CO CO CO CO CO
CO CO CO CO CO CO
CO CO
CO t^
- t- t- t^ I-
t- t^ t^ t^ t- c-
I-
t- t-
t- rH
0« (M (>» IM OQ ^ -*
!N O
J « 05 t- c^
t' Ol Ol oa d Ol
CI Ol
01 en
Oi''*-^
CO
m O
^,
t— tH .-
o
r ,-1 CO t- CO
00 lO -H rt 1.H 1-1
05 CO CO lO GO -^ C2
■* -<:H ''iH C
s CO Ol
IC IC CD CO CO 1-1
o
1 o
CD IC
O CO CO C2 00 O ^
i-H t- C3 c:
;_ <M -#
t- o ti 01 ^
03__
rH CO
OS CO
m
-
:: ?
CO
-
■' T
ce
S CD
S ir-
• t-
- oc
3 a
t^
t
- t^
.1 ^t
'■ ^
o
o o
• o c:
^ o
o c
s to o o <o
o o o o
o
o o
o o
0^
o
o o
1 o o o o
o o c
^ CO o o
o o o o
o
o o
o t-
m
o
o o
" O O O CO
O O O O O CO
^ o o c
o
o o
CD
■S "5
o o
o o o o
O G
^ O O C' o
o o o o
O lO
m aj
c^
o o
O O' c-
c_
CO <=■ O O lO o
O IC o o
o
o o
O CO
a
oc
CO CS
-* t- CO CO
O OS O IC i-H CD
lO CO CD O
cT
O IC
CD 00
o
lO CO
O) IN CO -»
ITS CS O lO t^ lO
CO OS o o
IC
CS 00
-* o
*
CO OS 1-1 ■*
CD IC C<l C^ in 1— (
CO Ol t- >c
CO
*
CO CO
IC *
-a
o
o o
o
_
O
o
o o
o o
o
o o
o
o
O
o
o o
o t-
'3
o
o o
o
o
o
o
o o
O CO
Ch
o
o o
o
o
o o
O iC
o
o o
o
o
o
CO' o
O CO
S
CO CO
I:~
05
o"
o
o o
CO cc
00 CO
CO
CD
o
OS ic
<a^
CO
iC
OS Ol
Cf
3 CD
Q
«■
o
o
<=
o o
o
CO
CO
c
o
c
CO
_
CO
o
o o
o
o
c
o o
o
CO
c
c:
CO
o
CO
c
c
o
o o
SB
<3
o
c
o c
o
c
c
c
(^
c
c
c
c
o
-
s o
o
o c
o
CO
c
o
o
o o
o
CO
c
CO
IT
CO
c
fig
o
o
r
" ^ cr
IC
c
IT
CD
ir
CO
o
O lO
o
CO
m CO
IC
ir
t^
c
c
IC
O CO
O
CO
CO
o-
05 r-
■*
CO
IT
s
c-
OJ
Ol
t-
o
1 T
^•
o
CO o
CO
I— i t-
CO
cc
cc
^
t-
00
a
1)
t-
■ a
d
01 ■*
cc
It. 2
^
Oi ir
t-
c?
^ c
t^
^
oc
c;
oc
c
c
o-
o
IC ■*
^
lO
00
t~ cc
Cf
CO oc
CO
^
c
a-
ir
t^
t-.
t-
p_
oc
0-
00
Ol o
«^
lO
CO t-
t^
u-
lO
a-
cr
a
t-
o-
CO
ejs Ol
o-
o'^'S
CO
O Tt
c-
c
01 CO
a-
CO
o
c
o
cr
CO
- <»
o
S p..:;
CO o-
00
c
a~. X
^
a-
cc
c
IT
CO
c
cc
cr:
1— ( OS
IC
Gi
I— I
•* 1-
c-
CO CO
CO
a-
Ol
cc
OC
CD
O)
cr
cc
t-
It* OS
c
■Tt<
. o
CO
1©
CO CO
li^
CO
CD CO
CO
X
r-
"^
t-
t>
-*
a
oc
oc
oc
crj
cc t-
a
IC
be
^
Tt
CO
OJ
c-
05
"^
^
t-
o
IC
c
^,
c-
o
o
o
o o
Ol
c-
CO
t-
CO
o-
r-
o
oc
OJ
CO
CO
o
o o
lO
t^ 00
o
00
en
cr
c
cr
ir
TJH
(--
oc
^
c
lO
IC .*
cr
cs
c
CO
'^
IC
cq
o
=
t-
cr
cc
c
Tl^
OS
OS 01
cc
o'ce p a
t- CO
00
, ^
o
a-
cc
c
c
CO
o_
•^
IT
t-
Ir-
co__
CO GC
''t
r-f
'^
IT
c;
c-
o"
c^
CO
05
c
c
b-
LT
^
CiO
co" en'
c-
o
c-
OJ
c
It
CO
-*
c
cr
ic
OT
OS
CS o
c
€&
« r-
(N
OJ
CO
O
CO
o
01
(N
r^ Ol
CO
o
s
PS
S-
o
^^
(M
o
C5
c:
(M
^
lO
CO
r^
00
en
Ol
CO
IC
CO
t^
CO
c-
m
OS
tr
cr
00
00
5
=1
00
CO
oo
00
CO
CS
CS
?
OS
OS
?
=f
OS
OS
o-
s
r^
ci
c
c:
^
-4<
lO
cj
fL
GO
o
A
CO
-*
IC
CD
t^
J
^
1
t'
1^
CO
GO
oc
GO
oc
oc
C3S
CS
OS
CS
OS
OS
(T
OS
o
00
or
cr
CC
CO
a
00
00
oc
OC
00
§
cr.
a
OC
cc
o:
o
o"
^-
3
CO
M
«
Iz;
, — i
<!
'S
a
p
1— 1
Eh
A
OS
cj
<
o
o
o
4^
-M
^
IH
PH
cS
03
1^
%
s
1
242
MUNICIPAL EEGISTER.
«-bO
IN
•^
^
C5
O)
in
^
t-
00
o
t-
in
to
o
^
to
So .
O
Ci
o
00
00
CO
o
CO
■*
CO
lO
o
cq
C5
r<)
,_(
as
■^
-^
•^
00
ir*
00
CO
o
00
o
O
<z
M
05
lO
•*
in
-»
CO
a
IC
C£
CO
CJ
■^
o
-*
o
S:
o
?
c:
fr"
CD
00
o
03
^
m
CJ
03
c«
OTj
CO
OO
40
fM
o
CO
r—
r-
CO
tl
t-
O
o
>o
CO
CO
ot
^
3 J
1
1
-a
CO
;D
c:
^
c<»
lO
_J
CO
?"
^
CO
lO
■*
o
^
to
■*
cc
la
rH
tb
C5
lO
to
■*
t-
o
e^
r-
fJD
n
iC
-,
CO
lO
ir:
to
o
cc
-*
o
cc
Ci
:;
O
^
lO
5
tc
o
£
r^
CX)
■rfi
lO
IC
c-
a
CO
ai
5
(>^
X
C£
cc
«3
o
•^
CO
SS
t-
O
o
C3
lO
lO
:d
O
T'^
■^
S
o
to
CO
lO
t;
?1 cc
cc
-^
IC
eo
•^
lO
!C
S
t'
c-
to
lO
S 3
o
o
c:
_
o
o
c
o
_
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
c
5
o
c
o
s
o
o
c
o
o
o
o
OJ o
o
—
o
^
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
^
o
o
0(H
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
c
o
o
o
c
c
c
c
c
c
o
o
Sq o
«
Ci-
c*
t^
t--
o
s
o-
o-
o-
3-
c
IC
ir
iC
c-
C-l
-^
cc
cr
w
cr
c-
X
^
o
g-d
o
00
tx
00
oc
oc
X
oc
to
OS
«■
o
^
o
o
o
c
c
c
<_
o
<=:
o
o
c
c
o
O
o
o
o
o
t^
C;
o
+= ci
O
o
o
o
o
o c^
O
o
o
<=
c
o
o
^i
vr:
to
o
I—
c-
oc
o-
of
IN
oc
*
5
cr
o
a
a^
CJ
^
cr
r^
M
*
^
*
*
*
*
*
^
j_
,_
o
c
o
c
c=
c=
c
t_
o o
'C
<=
o
o
c
c
<=
c
O
o o
'2
c
c
c
c
c
c
c
c
c
o
o
<=
o o
pi
o
- o
c
o o
c
<^
c
c
c:
c
c:
ir
cc
o
ir
s
cr
G-
cr
CCl lO
,a
<M
o
t;
c
5
o to
o
^
^
cr
Q
;_
<=
<z
o
o
c
c
o
o
c
c
o
c
o
r^ -^
<=
s
o_
O rf
fig
If
c
cr
iirT
C£
IT
to
O
«■
^
c
c
^
_
o
c:
<=
<=
c
c
c
c
^
c
o-
c
'jtt
jj 'S
>H
c:
o
c
<=
c
c
c:
IT
i?
IT
c^
ir
*r
c
■*
t^
IT
IT
^^
c
c
c
t-
t-
t^
e^
t-
jr
c-
f-
c
C5
cc
cc
cc
«:
cr
t-
-*
'J
iT
c
s -*
01
■^
oc
c-
0-
OC
a
X
IT
tr
iTJ
t~
CV
*r
w
(M
»■
oc
e^
cr
o-
e^
(M
cc
zi
ts
^
m ^
-*
'C
-«
^
ci-
OJ
^ M
#
o
'^
C£
c
a
c
c
cr
_j
■<i
o-
oc
_.
C
o
5
C
tc
s^
o-
t-
cr
-^
t-
5-
<Z
o
Cf
^
cr
—
Cs
CJ
■^
a
IT
t"
■ IT
C
o
p'C^'C
f*
t-
c
c
OC
If
o-
"2'S a a
t~
'^ C
<=
5
■«
-^
s
cr
C
c-
ir
c^
a
iT
a
ty
c
t-
c^
t-
e
0-
c-
C^
cr
IT
to
#
>
-is
. C
£
-y
a
^
•'
c
©5
■rt
C£
t-
a
c-
£
CI-
■<*
If
: to
P-
• 0
^ Cf
a
s
a
a
5
0
a
c
c
=
0
o
c
a
c
. c
J ^
^
3
t-
3
c
C(
-»
lA
t-
. t-
- ot
) cr
QC
g
0
oc
0
c-
c
a
a
Cf
oc
oc
o
CI
oc
■:>:
a
X
a
cr
3 CO
_
„
c
5
c
cr
z
<!
<
C
o:
1-
C
P
>
^ t
r
s
1
^
1
1
POLLS AND VOTES.
243
Assessed Polls, Registration, and Votes for President, Governor and
Mayor.
As Reported by the Registrars of Voters.
1891.
1892.
3
is
CO .
u o
PS
u
o
a
Si
ii
Registered for City
Election, 1891.
3.4
s .
>
to
Sco
<
C3
til
a
CD
si
o .
"■^ >
m o
>
ii
Ii
?=-
o .
« o
>
1
5,566
3,403
2,938
3,463
2,673
5,972
3,928
3,363
3,962
3,214
1
2
5,041
2,724
2,164
2,796
2,018
5,340
3,074
2,571
3,082
2,489
2
3
3,744
2,598
2,211
2,627
2,006
3,954
2,962
2,482
2,943
2,190
3
4
3,891
2,383
1,988
2,432
1,879
4,142
2,811
2,368
2,808
2,077
4
5
4,125
2,577
2,160
2,608
1,924
4,263
2,794
2,385
2,778
2,106
5
6
4,182
1,875
1,559
1,915
1,487
4,497
2,265
1,887
2,255
1,765
6
7
3,791
1,481
1,223
1,502
1,059
4,003
1,774
1,474
1,760
1,276
7
8
4,541
1,985
1,669
2,011
1,490
4,870
2,379
2,028
2,371
1,784
8
9
3,908
1,848
1,527
1,863
1,236
4,170
2,515
2,159
2,494
1,700
9
10
3,387
1,348
1,160
1,889
945
3,490
1,909
1,717
1,926
1,373
10
11
7,231
4,172
3,490
4,219
2,608
8,147
5,434
4,801
5,394
3,727
11
12
3,900
1,639
1,379
1,657
1,292
3,866
2,075
1,698
2,089
1,601
12
13
7,054
2,869
2,446
2,912
2,383
7,180
3,321
2,712
3,302
2,598
13
14
7,634
4,229
3,629
4,300
3,229
7,883
4,910
4,256
4,901
3,820
14
15
4,973
2,728
2,317
2,755
2,035
5,300
3,372
2,848
3,364
2,587
15
16
5,574
2,087
1,722
2,118
1,538
5,949
2,698
2,199
2,694
2,011
16
17
4,893
2,606
2,294
2,731
2,157
5,229
3,305
2,861
3,299
2,491
17
16
4,185
2,428
2,133
2,498
1,927
4,654
3,182
2,827
3,165
2,328
18
19
7,195
3,205
2,596
. 3,288
2,495
7,481
3,861
3,042
3,881
2,930
19
20
7,326
4,376
3,795
4,489
3,579
7,862
5,240
4,580
5,243
4,281
20
21
6,571
4,260
3,669
4,512
3,220
7,274
5,217
4,634
5,212
4,093
21
22
5,756
3,035
2,496
3,090
2,375
6,191
3,566
3,083
3,580
2,790
22
23
7,085
4,320
3,715
4,463
3,343
7,822
5,353
4,716
5,355
4,215
23
24
8,601
5,356
4,597
5,440
4,153
9,350
6,497
5,797
6,500
4,870
24
25
3,891
2,448
2,109
2,495
1,967
4,252
2,785
2,413
2,796
2,351
25
Total
134,045
71,980
60,986
73,373
55,018
143,141
87,227
74,833
87,154
66,667
Total
1 In 1892 the poll-tsix as a prerequisite for voting was abolished. - Assessed polls, 143,370.
Total Boston vote for Governor in 1892, 73,616. For gubernatorial vote by wards, see
page 258.
244
MUNICIPAL EEC^ISTER.
Assessed Polls, Registration, and Votes for Governor and Mayor.
As Reported by the Registrars of Voters.
1893.
1894.
IP
tf
o
>^
i
1
OX
o
«
Is
-4-3
3 .
Ox
Ig
w
3
■39.
0
a
0 X
O
<fH ^
O ?^
ci CO
o
't.t-I
oX
«w rH
Ct X
£h
« s
o^
7-, a"
S"l
Ph
-a ^-
a .
0 a"
s^.
V
•-2
p .
13
S.2
0 .
'""^
. fi
m
m ^
*^ >
"Sg
'^ 6
05
m g
"^ >■
1c c
-2 ;5
a
f«!
^
'" 3;
a) o
••-^ '^
ffl a
U
.rH **
s <=
Ml ^
a 03
M
<
CO
g^S
oi^;
5f3
^Q
m
^a
t^
g'H
^0
^
^
<
«
;>
«
>
<
fd
>
• M
>
^
1
6,213
4,043
3,293
4,123
3,216
6,463
4,290
3,320
4,329
3,455
1
2
5,212
3,034
2,359
3,083
2,338
5,200
3,135
2,326
3,163
2,380
2
3
4,099
3,014
2,505
3,030
2,299
4,084
3,026
2,291
3,036
2,329
3
4
4,126
2,799
2,250
2,814
2,125
4,081
2,787
2,092
2,795
2,123
4
5
4,280
2,705
2,213
2,746
2,075
4,201
2,710
2,055
2,720
2,093
5
6
4,588
2,153
1,656
, 2,192
1,727
4,179
2,016
1,610
2,070
1,692
6
7
3,678
1,618
1,277
1,653
1,235
3,650
1,515
1,075
1,542
1,169
7
8
4,785
2,260
1,861
2,310
1,819
4,504
2,127
1,653
2,147
1,749
8
9
4,040
2,385
1,862
2,439
1,680
3,819
2,230
1,577
2,260
1,654
9
10
3,154
1,717
1,407
1,761
1,290
2,993
1,512
1,145
1,526
1,169
10
11
7,964
5,121
4,092
5,187
3,749
7,761
4,712
3,394
4,807
3,462
11
12
3,600
1,947
1,578
2,015
1,540
3,471
1,773
1,372
1,792
1,356
12
13
6,953
3,296
2,635
3,332
2,580
6,672
3,166
2,357
3,193
2,491
13
14
7,961
4,995
3.986
5,083
3,962
7,863
5,184
4,098
5,216
4,104
14
15
5,343
3,415
2,784
3,454
2,707
5,295
3,475
2,787
3,533
2,746
15
16
5,944
2,478
1,962
2,558
1,959
5,305
2,373
1,737
2,410
1,856
16
17
5,220
3,270
2,682
3,358
2,547
4,942
2,981
2,283
2,997
2,272
17
18
4,613
2,990
2,452
3,039
2,264
4,806
3,026
2,331
3,060
2,322
18
19
7,531
3,826
2,914
3,934
2,940
7,415
3,854
2,881
3,905
2,947
19
20
8,320
5,497
4,571
5,586
4,436
8,259
5,548
4,348
5,600
4,431
20
21
7,677
5,478
4,536
5,534
4,278
7,746
5,517
4,015
5,588
4,488
21
22
6,448
3,781
3,053
3,858
3,056
6,570
3,937
2,998
3,972
3,102
22
23
8,185
5,612
4,577
5,762
4,555
8,455
5,847
4,334
5,926
4,789
23
24
10,141
6,999
5,741
7,145
5,483
10,790
7,530
5,770
7,602
5,991
24
25
4,363
2,919
2,469
2,951
2,368
4,499
3,008
2,365
3,025
2,418
25
Total
144,438
87,352
70,715
88,947
68,228
143,023
87,279
66,214
88,214
68,588
Total
POLLS AND VOTES.
245
Assessed Polls, Registration, and Votes for President, Governor
and Mayor.i
As Beported by the Board of Election Commissioners.
1895.
1896.
<
-2
■« .
COio
'^ a
£.2
o
a
^^
Orrj
go
O o
>
3
is
'^ 00
V
OM
r-
to
eS a"
II
CD
to a»
•tE.2S
1""
S
is
o
o .
g«
a
<
1
6,672
4,311
3,219
4,556
3,850
6,172
4,156
3,620
3,495
1
2
5,331
3,141
2,267
3,262
2,795
6,410
3,733
3,081
2,949
2
3
4,120
2,992
2,215
3,053
2,569
4,134
2,923
2,362
2,354
3
i
4,032
2,656
2,075
2,755
2,276
4,215
2,788
2,354
2 227
4
5
4,281
2,764
2,086
2,881
2,378
4,429
2,834
2,224
2,270
5
6
4,161
1,880
1,440
2,152
1,818
8,081
3,827
3,190
2,893
6
7
3,701
1,420
1,064
1,536
1,264
6,111
3,304
2,585
2,618
7
8
4,461
2,087
1,701
2,203
1,909
8,070
4,198
3,576
3,407
8
9
3,889
2,187
1,583
2,259
1,791
8,309
4,036
3,542
3,234
9
10
2,743
1,327
1,083
1,434
1,178
7,287
4,526
4,023
3,899
10
11
7,841
4,618
3,285
4,864
3,825
6,000
4,115
3,749-
3,634
11
12
3,477
1,659
1,273
1,827
1,521
6,474
4,314
3,743
3,639
12
13
6,453
3,186
2,399
3,280
2,738
7,856
3,848
3,048
3,070
13
14
7,910
5,191
4,039
5,348
4,566
5,846
3,939
3,261
3,303
14
15
5,302
3,473
2,737
3,569
3,022
5,311
3,623
3,021
2,978
15
16
5,730
2,476
1,890
2,630
2,103
5,123
3,699
3,209
3,153
16
17
5,075
2,936
2,312
3,031
2,507
6,253
4,107
3,242
3,374
17
18
4,802
2,983
2,355
3,057
2,561
7,272
3,817
3,201
3,049
18
19
7,130
3,632
2,701
3,795
3,150
6,670
3,994
3,131
3,120
19
20
8,570
5,637
4,524
5,831
4,983
6,414
4,574
4,173
4,075
20
21
7,911
5,588
4,294
5,796
4,944
6,266
4,486
4,092
4,022
21
22
6,954
4,117
3,127
4,305
3,625
6,443
4,221
3,616
3,574
22
23
8,908
6,032
4,610
6,280
5,285
5,453
3,916
3,394
3,427
23
24
11,768
8,075.
6,090
8,492
7,216
6,339
4,435
3,885
3,876
24
25
4,665
8,185
2,550
3,287
2,847
4,964
3,333
2,876
2,765
25
Total
145,887
87,553
06,619
91,483
76,721
155,902
96,746
82,198
80,405
Total
I The Mayor was elected in 1895 for two years. Stat. 1895, Chap. 419.
246
MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
Assessed Polls, Registration, and Votes for Governor and
Mayor.
As Beported hy the Board of Election Commissioners.
1897.
Ward.
-OH
go
"Is
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
Total . . .
6,328
6,364
4,223
4,122
4,422
8,228
5,945
7,876
7,991
7,617
5,981
6,313
7,628
6,009
5,233
5,401
6,892
7,229
6,954
7,005
6,335
6,793
5,640
6,734
5,191
158,454
4,043
3,710
2,944
2,745
2,761
3,760
2,974
3,889
3,775
4,116
3,940
3,751
3,654
4,111
3,528
3,757
4,077
3,704
4,163
4,830
4,462
4,259
3,956
4,632
3,393
94,934
5«
<0 O
>
<
2,472
2,336
1,907
1,903
1,760
2,358
1,963
2,682
2,479
2,196
2,660
2,355
2,490
2,691
2,272
2,583
2,693
2,267
2,637
2,848
2,734
2,664
2,746
2,787
2,305
60,788
6,413
6,549
4,262
4,188
4,521
8,760
6,116
8,069
8,293
7,765
6,045
6,409
8,050
6,127
5,323
5,461
7,025
7,352
7,113
7,074
6,387
6,853
5,692
6,805
5,287
161,939
4,335
4,215
3,071
2,878
2,942
4,403
3,118
4,205
4,255
4,486
4,142
4,002
4,472
4,397
3,790
3,945
4,440
4,036
4,526
5,061
4,689
4,455
4,106
4,858
3,646
102,473
3,473
3,403
2,492
2,286
2,322
3,241
2,263
3,289
3,136
3,142
3,143
2,966
3,382
3,547
2,942
3,174
3,577
3,042
3,654
3,930
3,640
3,415
3,351
3,919
3,034
79,763
1898.
-SW
6,311
6,496
4,302
4,068
4,479
8,966
5,198
7,876
8,297
7,356
6,277
6,227
7,624
6,210
5,427
5,505
6,951
7,243
7,103
7,584
6,326
6,980
5,877
7,002
5,479
161,164
£.2
OS
o .
OJ o
>
4,188
3,880
3,075
2,724
2,833
4,121
2,492
3,645
3,713
3,952
3,925
3,437
3,920
4,491
3,733
3,945
4,217
3,818
4,482
5,337
4,418
4,492
4,113
4,745
3,542
97,238
3,027
2,700
2,234
2,025
1,874
2,398
1,618
2,707
2,467
2,427
2,735
2,402
2,645
3,325
2,651
2,868
3,066
2,465
3,245
3,881
2,992
3,071
3,061
3,388
2,425
67,697
Ward.
... 1
... 2
... 3
... 4
... 6
... 6
... 7
... 8
... 9
... 10
... 11
... 12
... 13
... 14
... 15
... 16
... 17
... 18
... 19
... 20
... 21
... 22
... 23
... 24
... 25
...Total
POLLS AND VOTES.
247
Assessed Polls, Registration and Votes for President, Governor
and Mayor,
As Reported by the Board of Election Commissioners.
1899.
ei
Ph '^
cj ^ )z a
<1
o o
gS
oO
1900.
cocoS
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
Total,
6,284
6,548
4,453
4,119
4,518
9,609
5,500
8,562
8,591
7,419
6,237
7,013
7,459
6,429
5,509
5,614
7,112
7,452
7,150
8,350
6,705
7,339
. 6,052
7,263
5,550
166,837
4,116
2,581
4,128
2,862
3,27&
1,968
2,696
1,594
3,000
1,770
4,362
2,499
2,657
1,784
3,710
2,457
3,864
2,296
3,807
2,143
3,794
2,335
3,686
2,309
3,906
2,194
4,482
2,826
3,793
2,208
4,041
2,531
4,258
2,619
4,012
2,562
4,524
2,921
5,799
3,247
4,848
2,913
4,813
3,121
4,282
3,047
5,021
2,887
3,616
2,412
100,491
62,086
4,190
4,189
3,345
2,759
3,045
4,427
2,730
3,832
3,959
3,881
3,891
3,828
4,027
4,584
3,837
4,097
4,381
4,139
4,676
5,915
4,959
4,887
4,347
5,244
3,706
102,875
3,427
3,338
2,681
2,180
2,375
3,108
2,137
3,041
8,055
2,790
3,039
2,904
3,183
3,706
2,897
3,242
3,522
3,184
3,744
4,683
4,043
3,941
3,701
4,319
3,101
81,341
6,440
6,619
4,519
4,212
4,204
9,586
5,497
10,565
8,639
7,852
6,357
7,576
7,149
6,455
5,642
5,784
7,108
7,379
7,476
9,097
7,000
7,597
6,185
7,804
5,703
172,445
4,336
4,120
3,480
2,891
2,846
3,938
2,796
3,923
4,094
4,140
4,083
4,039
3,933
4,784
4,052
4,198
4,471
4,342
4,953
6,616
5,289
4,931
4,557
5,667
3,850
106,329
3,465
3,119
2,742
2,229
2,159
2,890
2,013
3,016
3,031
3,273
3,215
3,196
3,030
3,929
3,178
3,441
3,438
3,232
3,825
5,545
4,310
4,028
3,744
4,701
3,120
83,869
3,187
2,793
2,518
2,059
2,003
2,450
1,787
2,777
2,682
3,052
3,189
3,023
2,726
3,605
3,011
3,215
3,270
2,979
3,596
5,297
4,145
3,667
3,612
4,442
2,960
78,045
Total
248
MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
Assessed Polls, Registration and Votes for Governor and Mayor,
As Beported by the Board of Election Commissioners.
Wakd.
1901.
to «
c
OJ
o
oi
i»_;
^S
a]
>.
1§
!C g
'S)3
«
Gj O
O 05
«
Ward.
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21 ; .
22
23
24
25
Total
6,492
4,408
6,775
4,377
4,388
3,415
4,174
2,843
4,224
3,782
9,468
3,632
5,479
2,492
12,126
4,277
8,715
4,110
7,543
3,891
6,286
4,014
7,723
4,002
7,123
3,954
6,605
4,881
5,611
4,001
5,804
4,178
7,026
4,520
7,311
4,341
7,657
5,074
9,953
7,180
7,253
5,305
7,821
5,179
6,405
4,808
7,983
5,810
5,921
4,068
175,866
107,542
2,888
2,922
2,343
1,968
1,912
2,415
1,603
2,857
2,812
2,448
2,831
2,616
2.897
3,320
2,684
2,868
3,078
2,880
3,604
4,571
3,570
3,833
3,801
3,757
3,056
4,516
4,458
3,446
2,873
2,850
3,749
2,627
4,360
4,289
4,164
4,173
4,145
4,041
4,918
4,068
4,223
4,583
4,427
5,229
7,306
5,386
5,252
4,917
5,927
4,204
73,534
110,131
3,656
3,633
2,745
2,156
2,255
3,092
1,973
3,291
3,336
3,140
3,201
3,129
3,271
3,970
3,133
3,250
3,621
3,321
4,294
5,540
4,302
4,192
4,042
4,609
3,463
86,615
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
Total
VOTE FOR PRESIDENT.
249
Registration and Vote for President, 1880=1900.
Ward.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.,
16.
17.,
18.,
19.,
20.,
21..
22..
23..
24..
25..
1880.
«
Total .
2,388
2,296
2,120
2,003
2,042
2,113
2,005
1,965
1,868
1,937
2,733
2,030
2,855
3,008
2,350
2,378
2,468
2,487
2,993
3,084
2,568
1,676
2,523
3,203
1,274
58,367
2,145
2,013
1,967
1,835
1,864
1,898
1,831
1,719
1,649
1,786
2,479
1,844
2,701
2,787
2,176
2,200
2,294
2,326
2,776
2,840
2,396
1,520
2,307
2,904
1,078
53,335
89.82
87.67
92.78
91.61
91.28
89.83
91.32
87.48
88.28
92.91
90.71
90.84
94.61
92.65
92.59
92.51
92.95
93.53
92.75
92.09
93.30
90.69
91.44
90.67
84.62
91.38
1884.
2,790
2,559
2,499
2,374
2,462
2,186
1,904
2,658
2,058
1,919
3,352
2,218
3,078
3,351
2,548
2,483
2,660
2,634
3,032
3,403
3,134
2,129
8,006
3,721
1,716
65,574
2,490
2,287
2,255
2,141
2,186
1,996
1,712
2,085
1,830
1,689
2,911
1,945
2,735
3,031
2,253
2,214
2,359
2,335
2,676
2,060
2,777
1,899
2,677
3,321
1,504
58,368
89.25
89.37
90.24
90.19
88.79
91.31
89.92
78.44
88.92
88.01
86.84
87.69
88.86
90.45
88.42
89.18
88.68
88.65
88.26
60.54
88.61
89.20
89.06
89.25
87.65
89.04
1888.
ly
3,200
2,637
2,530
2,493
2,444
2,016
1,773
2,403
1,997
1,652
3,949
2,145
3,285
3,941
2,809
2,492
2,875
2,737
3,388
4,090
3,812
2,688
4,0.38
4,609
2,112
72,115
2,845
2,365
2,288
2,233
2,215
1,784
1,535
2,154
1,797
1,462
3,563
1,905
2,914
3,574
2,586
2,169
2,642
2,514
3,078
3,761
3,456
2,410
8,756
4,245
1,918
65,169
88.91
89.69
90.43
89.57
90.63
88.49
86.58
89.64
89.98
88.. 50
90.23
88.81
88.71
90.69
92.06
87.04
91.89
91.85
91.85
91.96
90.66
89.65
93.02
92.10
90.81
90.87
250 MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
Registration and Vote for President, 1880-1900. — Concluded.
Wakd.
1892.
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22 .,
23
24
25
Total
(^
3,928
3,074
2,962
2,811
2,794
2,265
1,774
2,379
2,515
1,909
5,434
2,075
3,321
4,910
3,372
2,698
3,305
3,182
3,861
5,240
5,217
3,566
5,353
6,497
2,785
87,227
3,363
2,571
2,482
2,368
2,385
1,887
1,474
2,028
2,159
1,717
4,801
1,698
2,712
4,256
2,848
2,199
2,861
2,827
3,042
4,580
4,634
3,083
4,716
5,797
2,413
85.62
83.64
83.79
84.24
85.30
83.31
83.09
85.25
85.85
89.94
88.35
81.83
81.66
86.68
84.46
81.50
86.57
88.84
78.79
87.40
88.83
86.46
88.10
89.23
86.64
1896.
4,156
3,620
3,733
3,081
2,923
2,362
2,788
2,354
2,834
2,224
3,827
3,190
3,304
2,585
4,198
3,576
4,036
3,542
4,526
4,023
4,115
3,749
4,314
3,743
3,848
3,048
3,939
3,261
3,623
3,021
3,699
3,209
4,107
3,242
3,817
3,201
3,994
3,131
4,574
4,173
4,486
4,092
4,221
3,616
3,916
3,394
4,435
3,855
3,333
2,876
96,746
82,198
Ph
87.10
82.53
80.81
84.43
78.48
83.36
78.24
85.18
87.76
88.89
91.11
86.76
79.21
82.79
83.38
86.75
78.94
83.86
78.39
91.23
91.22
85.67
86.67
86.92
86.29
74,833 85.79 96,746 82,198 84.96 106,329 83,869 78.88
1900.
4,336
4,120
3,480
2,891
2,846
3,938
2,796
3,923
4,094
4,140
4,083
4,039
3,933
4,784
4,052
4,198
4,471
4,342
4,953
6,616
5,289
4,931
4,557
5,667
3,850
3,465
3,119
2,742
2,229
2,159
2,890
2,013
3,016
3,031
3,273
3,215
3,196
3,030
3,929
3,178
3,441
3,438
3,232
3,825
5,545
4,310
4,028
3,744
4,701
3,120
79.91
75.70
78.79
77.10
75.86
73.39
72.00
76.88
74.04
79.06
78.74
79.13
77.04
82.13
78.43
81.97
76.90
74.44
77.23
83.81,
81.49
81.69
82.16
82.95
81.04
VOTE FOR PEESIDENT.
251
Vote for President, 1888-1900.
As reported by the Registrars of Voters.
Waed.
1888.
1,101
1,706
1,641
714
1,360
903
1,135
1,068
1,221
956
1,507
270
1,197
324
1,538
610
743
1,022
612
817
1,377
2,139
1,406
475
2,592
320
1,917
1,625
1,593
977
1,491
642
1,294
1,299
916
1,552
2,001
1,053
2,212
1,518
1,339
2,064
1,720
684
1,930
1,726
1,755
2,417
1,017
881
6,615
27,762
38
10
25
30
38
7
14
5
28
33
47
16
2
32
16
34
49
46
24
31
53
6
100
73
20
Total 36,615 27,762 777 41,931 31,555 517 710 170
1892.
1,523
1,809
1,593
1,255
1,429
1,534
1,104
1,430
950
748
1,932
1,186
2,291
2,544
1,906
1,392
1,493
1,144
1,838
2,788
2,072
2,057
2,241
2,459
1,213
a
o
u
'S
>
^
1,792
18
729
12
830
26
1,060
17
920
15
337
3
353
8
564
14
1,159
12
924
18
2,777
34
487
14
401
11
1,645
24
903
16
773
18
1,312
26
1,628
26
1,146
28
1,689
39
2,490
20
990
17
2,280
50
3,212
37
1,154
14
51,555
517
Ward.
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
30
21
22
23
24
25
Total
* Elected.
252
MUNICIPAL REGISTEK.
Vote for President, IS8S-1900. — Concluded.
As rejyorted by the Board of Election Commissioners.
1...
2...
3...
4...
5...
6...
7...
8...
9...
10...
11...,
12....
13....
14. . . ,
15....
16. ..
17....
18....
19....
20....
21....
22. . . .
23....
24. . . .
25....
Total
1896.
«
979
1,803
1,288
912
1,062
1,665
1,216
1,706
1,608
560
381
842
2,279
1,380
1,470
1,039
1,505
1,347
1,637
903
706
1,033
1,002
953
805
7
4
6
6
8
9
6
6
16
17
8
22
4
6
9
5
4
7
6
9
20
9
13
17
9
30,081 233
2,553
1,173
966
],343
1,086
1,396
1,262
1,706
1,633
3,282
3,043
2,696
685
1,722
1,431
2,029
1,623
1,713
1,333
3,015
3,154
2,383
2,241
2,754
1,933
48,155
76
91
95
65
66
72
81
88
82
153
309
175
71
137
86
123
101
94
115
240
201
126
116
148
123
3,034
3,620
3,081
2,362
2,354
2,224
3,190
2,585
3,576
3,542
4,023
3,749
3,743
3,048
3,261
3,021
3,209
3,242
3,201
3,131
4,173
4,092
3,616
3,394
3,885
2,876
82,198
1900.
CO
1,325
2,257
2,014
1,416
1,429
1,858
1,433
2,008
2,001
938
659
1,341
2,684
2,478
2,182
1,788
2,330
2,048
2,847
2,141
1,506
1,827
1,564
1,723
1,330
45,127
43
108
20
25
19
29
26
130
85
27
20
40
25
49
49
41
31
33
75
32
25
128
62
39
44
1,205
2,056
731
687
759
682
977
525
850
913
2,255
2,460
1,760
304
1,364
904
1,566
1,055
1,099
863
3,282
2,708
1,898
2,014
2,847
1,685
36,244
681
181
3,465
3,119
2,742
2,229
2,159
2,890
2,013
3,016
3,031
3,273
3,215
3,196
3,030
3,929
3,178
3,441
3,438
3,232
3,825
5,545
4,310
4,028
3,744
4,701
3,120
83,869
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
.... 9
....10
....11
....12
....13
....14
.... 16
....16
....17
....18
....19
....20
....21
....22
....23
....24
....25
Total
^Elected.
VOTE FOR GOVERNOR.
253
Registration and Vote for Governor, 1890=1901
Ward.
1890.
.A 0)
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
Total....
2,952
2,380
2,458
2,161
2,384
1,844
1,372
],919
1,786
1,283
3,811
1,619
2,551
3,770
2,545
1,980
2,364
2,240
3,047
3,817
3,696
2,726
3,949
4,680
2,200
65,534
b-*"
2,278
1,950
2,028
1,799
1,983
1,508
1,104
1,612
1,451
1,062
3,192
1,230
2,101
3,179
2,021
1,613
2,027
1,862
2,500
3,272
3,115
2,249
3,154
3,947
1,847
54,088
fM
77.17
81.93
82.51
83.25
83.18
81.78
80.47
84.00
81.24
82.77
83.76
75.97
82.36
84.32
79.41
81.46
85.74
83.12
82.05
85.72
84.28
82.50
79.87
84.34
83.95
82.54
1891.
«
3,403
2,724
2,598
2,383
2,577
1,875
1,481
1,985
1,848
1,348
4,172
1,639
2,869
4,229
2,728
2,087
2,606
2,428
3,205
4,376
4,260
3,035
4,320
5,356
2,448
71,980
aj o
>
2,938
2,164
2,211
1,988
2,160
1,559
1,223
1,669
1,.527
1,160
3,490
1,379
2,446
3,629
2,317
1,722
2,294
2,133
2,596
3,795
3,669
2,496
3,715
4,597
2,109
60,986
86.34
79.44
85.10
83.43
83.82
83.15
82.58
84.08
82.63
86.05
83.65
84.14
85.26
85.81
84.93
82.51
88.03
87.85
81.00
86.72
86.13
82.24
86.00
85.82
86.15
84.73
1892.
p CiD
II
s
9
s .
^ of
^>
>
13
O
>
«
3
Pi
3,928
3,309
84.24
3,074
2,509
81.62
2,962
2,503
84.50
2,811
2,290
81.47
2,794
2,320
83.03
2,265
1,808
79.83
1,774
1,405
79.20
2,379
1,966
82.64
2,515
2,103
83.62
1,909
1,678
87.90
5,434
4,735
87.14
2,075
1,674
80.67
3,321
2,671
80.43
4,910
4,184
85.21
3,372
2,785
82.59
2,698
2,173
80.54
3,305
2,813
85.11
3,182
2,799
87.96
3,861
3,140
81.33
5,240
4,484
85..57
5,217
4,599
88.15
3,566
3,041
85.27
5,353
4,607
86.06
6,497
5,654
87.02
2,785
2,366
84.96
87,227
73,616
84.40
254 MUNICIPAL REGISTEE.
Registration and Vote for Qovernor, 1890=1901. — Continued.
1
2
3
i
5
6
7
8
9 .....
10
11
12
1.3
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
Total
1893.
o o
>
4,043
3,034
3,014
2,799
2,705
2,153
1,618
2,260
2,385
1,717
5,121
1,947
3,296
4,995
3,415
2,478
3,270
2,990
3,826
5,497
5,478
3,781
5,612
6,999
2,919
87,352
3,293
2,359
2,505
2,250
2,213
1,656
1,277
1,861
1,862
1,407
4,092
1,578
2,635
3,986
2,784
1,962
2,682
2,452
2,914
4,571
4,536
3,053
4,577
5,741
2,469
70,715
81.45
77.75
83.11
80.39
81.81
76.92
78.92
82.35
78.07
81.95
79.91
81.05
79.95
79.80
81.52
79.18
82.02
82.01
76.16
83.15
82.80
80.75
81.56
82.03
84.58
80.95
1894.
M
4,290
3,135
3,026
2,787
2,710
2,016
1,515
2,127
2,230
1,512
4,712
1,773
3,166
5,184
3,475
2,373
2,981
3,026
3,854
5,548
5,517
3,937
5,847
7,530
3,008
87,279
0) o
3,320
2,326
2,291
2,092
2,0.55
1,610
1,075
1,652
1,577
1,145
3,394
1,372
2,357
4,098
2,787
1,737
2,283
2,331
2,881
4,348
4,015
2,998
4,334
5,770
2,365
66,213
Ph
77.39
74.19
75.71
75.06
75.83
79.86
70.96
77.72
70.72
75.73
72.03
77.38
74.45
79.05
80.20
73.20
76.59
77.03
74.75
78.37
72.78
76.15
74.12
76.63
78.62
75.86
1895.
«
4,311
3,141
2,992
2,656
2,764
1,880
1,420
2,087
2,187
1,327
4,618
1,659
3,186
5,191
3,473
2,476
2,936
2,983
3,632
5,6.37
5,588
4,117
6,032
8,075
3,185
87,553
OC5
<v o
>
3,219
2,267
2.215
2,075
2,086
1,440
1,064
1,701
1,583
1,083
3,285
1,273
2,399
4,039
2,737
1,890
2,312
2,355
2,701
4,524
4,294
3,127
4,610
6,090
2,550
66,919
74.67
72.17
74.03
78.12
75.47
76.59
74.93
81.50
72.38
81.61
71.13
76.73
75.30
77.81
78.81
76.33
78.75
78.95
74.37
80.26
76.84
75.95
76.43
75.42
80.06
76.43
VOTE FOE GOVEENOE. 255
Registration and Vote for Governor, 1890=1901. — Continued. %
Ward.
1
2
4 ,
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
Total
1896.
«
4,156
3,733
2,923
2,788
2,834
3,827
3,304
4,198
4,036
4,526
4,115
4,314
3,848
3,939
3,623
3,699
4,107
3,817
3,994
4,574
4,486
4,221
3,916
4,435
3,333
96,746
•51
» o
3,495
2,949
2,354
3,227
2,270
2,893
2,618
3,407
3,234
3,899
3,634
3,639
3,070
3,303
2,978
3,153
3,374
3,049
3,120
4,075
4,022
3,574
3,427
3,876
2,765
80,405
84.09
79.00
80.53
79.88
80.09
75.59
79.24
81.16
80.13
86.15
88.31
84.35
79.78
83.85
82.20
85.24
82.15
79.88
78.12
89.09
89.66
84.67
87.51
87.40
82.96
83.11
189<
«
4,043
3,710
2,944
2,745
2,761
3,760
2,974
3,889
3,775
4,116
3.940
3,751
3,654
4,111
3,528
3,757
4,077
3,704
4,163
4,830
4,462
4,2.59
3,956
4,632
3,393
94,934
03 O
2,472
3,336
1,907
1,903
1,760
2,358
1,963
2,682
2,479
2,196
2,660
2,355
2,490
2,691
2,272
2,583
2,693
2,267
2,637
3,848
2,734
2,664
2,746
2,787
2,305
60,788
61.14
62.97
64.78
69.33
63.75
62.71
66.00
68.96
65.67
53.35
67..51
62.78
68.14
65.46
64.40
68.75
66.05
61.20
63.34
58.96
61.27
62.55
69.41
60.17
67.93
64.03
1898.
4,188
3,880
3,075
2,724
2,833
4,121
2,492
3,645
3,713
3,952
3,925
3,437
3,920
4,491
3,733
3,945
4,217
3,818
4,482
5,337
4,418
4,492
4,113
4,745
3,542
97,238
>00
OS
<v o
!>
3,027
2,700
2,234
2,025
1,874
2,398
1,618
2,707
2,467
2,427
2,735
2,402
2,645
3,325
2,651
2,868
3,066
2,465
3,245
3,881
2,992
3,071
3,061
3,388
2,425
67,697
73.28
69.59
73.65
74.34
66.15
58.19
64.93
74.27
66.44
61.41
69.68
69.89
67.47
74.04
71.02
73.70
73.71
64.56
73.40
72.72
67.73
68.37
74.43
71.40
68.46
69.62
256 MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
Registration and Vote for Governor, 1890=1901. — Concluded.
1899.
1900.
1901.
a
Pi
i
m
n
o
p
OK
(U o
>
o
>
o
o
a
S •
il
>
o
o
o
a
11
SO
o!z;
>
1
o
p
0)
o
Pi
1....
4,116
2,581
62.71
4,336
3,187
73.50
4,408
2,888
65.52
.... 1
2....
4,128
2,862
69.33
4,120
2,793
67.79
4,377
2,922
66.76
.... 2
3....
3,276
1,968
60.07
3,480
2,518
72.36
3,415
2,343
68.61
.... 3
4....
2,696
1,594
59.12
2,891
2,059
71.22
2,843
1,968
69.22
.... 4
5....
3,000
1,770
59.00
2,846
2,003
70.38
2,782
1,912
68.72
.... 5
6....
4,362
2,499
57.29
3,938
2,450
62.21
3,632
2,415
66.49
.... 6
7....
2,657
1,784
67.14
2,796
1,787
63.91
2,492
1,603
64.33
.... 7
8....
3,710
2,457
66.23
3,923
2,777
70.79
4,277
2,857
66.80
.... 8
9....
3,864
2,296
59.42
4,094
2,682
65.51
4,110
2,812
68.42
.... 9
10....
3,807
2,143
56.29
4,140
3,052
73.72
3,891
2,448
62.91
....10
11....
3,794
2,335
61.54
4,083
3,189
78.10
4,014
2,831
70.53
....11
12....
3,686
2,309
62.64
4,039
3,023
74.85
4,002
2,616
65.37
....13
13....
3,906
2,194
56.17
3,933
2,726
69.31
3,954
2,897
73.27
...13
14....
4,482
2,826
63.05
4,784
3,605
75.36
4,881
3,320
68.02
....14
15....
3,793
2,208
58.21
4,052
3,011
74.31
4,001
2,684
67.08
....15
16....
4,041
2,531
62.63
4,198
3,215
76.58
4,178
2,868
68.65
....16
17....
4,258
2,619
61.51
4,471
3,270
73.14
4,520
3,078
68.10
....17
18....
4,012
2,562
63.86
4,342
2,979
68.61
4,341
2,880
66.34
....18
19....
4,524
2,921
64.57
4,953
3,596
72.60
5,074
3,604
71.03
....19
20....
5,799
3,247
55.99
■ 6,616
5,297
80.06
7,180
4,571
63.66
....20
21....
4,848
2,913
60.09
5,289
4,145
78.37
5,305
3,570
67.30
....21
22....
4,813
3,121
64.85
4,931
3,667
74.37
5,179
3,833
74.01
....22
23....
4,282
3,047
71.16
4,557
3,612
79.26
4,808
3,801
79.06
....23
24....
5,021
2,887
57.50
5,667
4,442
78.38
5,810
3,757
64.66
....24
25....
3,616
2,412
66.70
3,850
2,960
76.88
4,068
3,056
75.12
....25
Total
100,491
62,086
61.78
106,329
78,045
73.40
107,542
73,534
68.38
Total
YOTE FOR GOVERNOR.
257
Vote for Governor, 1889=1901.
As Reported by the Registrars of Voters.
1889.
1890.
1891.
Q
"3
CO
1
in
o
2
o
'3
0)
o
u
cq
o
s
O
"3
a
3
o
1
900
1,359
71
2,330
1,058
1,142
78
2,278
1,881
1,502
55
2,938
2
1,287
588
37
1,912
1,432
459
59
1,950
1,601
534
29
2,164
3
1,056
710
59
1,825
1,278
686
64
2,028
1,426
738
47
2,211
i
860
828
60
1,748
1,005
735
59
1,799
1,088
847
53
1,988
5
1,032
811
49
1,892
1,208
724
51
1,983
1,350
771
39
2,160
6
1,099
254
26
1,379
1,310
188
10
1,508
1,358
183
18
1,559
7
852
237
17
1,106
941
146
17
1,104
1,007
183
33
1,223
8
1,221
470
30
1,721
1,236
346
30
1,612
1,263
372
34
1,669
9
579
699
55
1,333
696
701
54
1,451
708
771
48
1,527
10
412
619
30
1,061
497
535
30
1,062
502
627
31
1,160
11
1,115
1,623
89
2,827
1,493
1,620
79
3,192
1,586
1,817
87
3,490
12
1,084
386
29
1,499
996
207
27
1,230
1,102
257
20
1,379
13
1,904
342
20
2,266
1,896
191
14
2,101
2,130
290
26
2,446
14
1,601
1,381
95
3,077
1,975
1,117
87
3,179
2,312
1,262
55
3,629
15
1,265
802
50
2,117
1,384
578
59
2,021
1,625
650
42
2,317
16
1,151
543
44
1,738
1,199
377
37
1,613
1,247
435
40
1,722
17
942
999
66
2,007
1,098
866
63
2,027
1,286
953
55
2,294
18
647
1,181
78
1,906
794
1,006
62
1,862
938
1,121
74
2,133
19
1,481
815
64
2,360
1,704
698
98
2,500
1,789
753
54
2,596
20
1,724
1,278
67
3,069
2,031
1,153
88
3.272
2,429
1,286
80
3,795
■21
1,098
1,723
110
2,931
1,424
1,552
139
3,115
1,698
1,878
93
3,669
22
1,350
625
24
1,999
1,663
544
42
2,249
1,735
715
46
2,496
23
1,412
1,525
171
3,108
1,762
1,325
67
3,154
1,859
1,714
142
3,715
24
1,407
2,056
121
3,584
1,873
1,947
127
3,947
2,073
2,418
106
4,597
25
829
800
54
1,683
1,021
783
43
1,847
1,146
925
38
2,109
Total.
28,308
22,654
1,516
52,478
32,974
19,626
1,484
1 54,084
36,639
23,002
1,345
60,986
* Elected.
1 This does not iuclude 4 scattering votes.
258
MUNICIPAL EEGISTER.
Vote for Governor, 1889=1901. — Continued.
As Reported by the Registrars of Voters.
1892.
1893.
1894.
'S
3
s
o
<
1
6
be
S
a
■3
1
u
a
.a
0
<
0
S
0
"3
1
0
0
1
1.671
1,600
38
3,309
1,798
1,420
75
3,293
1,991
1,241
88
3,320
1
2
639
1,846
24
2,509
624
1,691
44
2,359
673
1,576
77
2,326
2
3
815
1,646
42
2,503
838
1,589
78
2,505
752
1,441
98
2,291
3
4
983
1,270
37
2,290
966
1,232
52
2,250
961
1,047
84
2,092
4
5
827
1,467
26
2,320
837
1,327
49
2,213
737
1,245
73
2,055
5
6
287
1,508
13
1,808
269
1,341
46
1,656
292
1,277
41
1,610
6
7
297
1,090
18
1,405
283
953
41
1,277
263
753
59
1,075
7
8
489
1,450
27
1,966
451
1,322
88
1,861
391
1,166
95
1,653
8
9
1,050
999
54
2,103
999
791
72
1,862
902
597
78
1,577
9
10
821
821
36
1,678
731
629
47
1,407
717
359
69
1,145
10
11
2,613
2,046
76
4,735
2,475
1,459
158
4,092
2,281
982
131
3,394
11
12
443
1,205
26
1,674
844
1,182
52
1,578
339
912
121
1,372
12
13
347
2,305
19
2,671
323
2,235
77
2,635
323
1,897
137
2,357
13
14
1,499
2,621
64
4,184
1,456
2,346
184
3,986
1,680
2,261
157
4,098
14
15
796
1,959
30
2,785
778
1,930
76
2,784
940
1,743
104
2,787
15
16
653
1,491
29
2,173
599
1,268
95
1,962
650
958
129
1,737
16
17
1,215
1,545
53
2,813
1,187
1,413
82
2,682
1,186
997
100
2,283
17
18
1,519
1,224
46
2,799
1,413
949
90
2,452
1,453
768
110
1,331
18
19
1,050
2,038
52
3,140
1,027
1,802
85
2,914
1,091
1,594
196
2,881
19
20
1,557,
2,858
69
4^484
1,725
2,708
138
4,571
1,865
2,322
161
4,348
20
21
2,308
2,192
99
4,599
2,516
1,867
153
4,536
2,407
1,464
144
4,015
21
22
891
2,109
41
3,041
957
2,013
83
3,053
1,027
1,820
151
2,998
22
23
2,090
2,352
165
4,607
2,281
2,034
262
4,577
2,331
1,712
291
4,334
23
24
2,984
2,566
104
5,654
3,237
2,336
168
5,741
3,532
1,966
272
5,770
24
25
1,105
1,329
32
2,366
1,213
1,205
51
2,469
1,247
1,045
73
2,365
25
Total.
28,949
43,437
1,230
73,616
29,327
39,042
2,346
70,715
30,031
33,143
3,039
66,213
Total
Elected.
VOTE FOR GOVERNOR.
259
Vote for Governor, IS89-1901. — Continued.
As Reported by the Board of Election Commissioners.
1895.
1896.
p
<0
be
a
a
.a
o
<
"3
o
H
o
a
o
o
o
.2
1
o
"o
0
1
1,902
1,245
72
3,219
148
2,424
888
35
3,495
1
2
678
1,548
41
2,267
191
1,100
1,607
51
2,949
2
3
748
1,395
72
2,215
138
935
1,248
33
2,354
3
4
905
1,105
65
2,075
122
1,224
850
31
2,227
4
5
768
1,259
59
2,086
132
1,060
1,046
32
2,270
5
6
290
1,123
27
1,440
141
1,197
1,472
83
2,893
6
7
278
743
43
1,064
159
1,228
1,173
58
2,618
7
8
484
1,182
85
1,701
133
1,552
1,594
128
3,407
8
9
981
540
62
1,583
173
1,503
1,465
93
8,284
9
10
719
309
55
1,083
174
3,180
498
47
3,899
10
11
2,303
878
104
3,285
242
3.008
352
32
3,634
11
12
323
890
60
1,273
211
2,570
817
41
3,639
12
13
342
1,972
85
2,399
164
581
2,282
43
3,070
13
14
1,633
2,260
146
4,039
183
1,619
1,451
50
3,808
14
15
879
1,768
90
2,737
166
1,318
1,432
62
2,978
15
16
611
1,161
118
1,890
157
1,983
974
39
3,153
16
17
1,254
963
95
2,812
217
1,617
1,510
30
8,374
17
18
1,465
807
83
2,355
143
1,609
1,220
77
3,049
18
19
1,049
1,529
123
2,701
237
1,235
1,562
86
8,120
19
20
1,910
2,491
128
4.524
205
2,972
851
47
4,075
20
21
2,636
1,521
137
4,294
253
3,112
614
43
4,022
21
22
1,122
1,897
108
3,127
162
2,281
1,026
105
3,574
22
23
2,565
1,832
213
4,610
161
2,207
995
64
3,427
23
24
3,839
2,058
193
6,090
170
2,770
886
50
3,876
24
25
1,425
1,065
60
2,550
165
1,765
800
35
2,765
25
Total
31,059
38,541
2,319
66,919
4,347
46,050
28,613
1,395
80,405
Total
* Elected.
260
MUNICIPAL KEGISTER.
Vote for Governor, 1889-1901.— Consumed.
u-is Beported by the Board of Election Commissioners.
1897.
1898.
A
a
.2
1
o
i
o
<
1
o
1
All others.
3
o
1
98
651
1,684
39
2,472
970
1,978
79
3,027
1
2
162
1,365
752
57
2,336
1,881
736
83
2,700
2
3
124
1,045
695
43
1,907
1,479
703
52
2,234
3
4
118
839
902
44
1,903
1,068
850
107
2,025
4
5
114
872
733
41
1,760
1,098
721
55
1,874
5
6
113
1,332
842
71
2,358
1,548
762
88
2,398
6
7
69
1,078
763
53
1,963
942
617
59
1,618
7
8
103
1,539
927
113
2,682
1,591
940
176
2,707
8
9
85
1,251
1,052
91
2,479
1.447
917
103
2,467
9
10
138
299
1,705
54
2,196
429
1,922
76
2,427
10
11
302
292
2,030
36
2,660
436
2,261
38
2,735
11
12
157
588
1,560
50
2,355
761
1,580
61
2,402
12
13
102
1,858
473
57
2,490
2,051
460
134
2,645
1%
14
114
1,400
1,102
75
2,691
1,888
1,358
79
3,325
14
15
117
1,117
957
81
2,272
1,519
1,028
104
2,651
15
16
151
881
1,482
69
2,583
1,178
1,603
87
2,868
16
17
158
1,358
1,119
58
2,693
1,832
1,139
95
3,066
17
18
101
1,134
932
100
2,267
1,326
1,011
128
2,465
18
19
174
1,469
897
97
2,637
2,027
1,055
163
3,245
19
20
165
710
1,931
42
2,848
1,148
2,621
112
3,881
20
21
178
489
2,003
64
2,734
740
2,181
71
2,992
21
22
130
880
1,546
108
2,664
1,200
1,688
183
3,071
22
23
139
887
1,643
77
2,746
1,109
1,829
123
3,061
23
24
131
771
1,818
67
2,787
1,053
2,198
137
3,388
24
25
126
828
1,318
33
2,305
957
1,417
51
2,425
25
Total
3,369
24,933
30,866
1,620
60,788
31,678
33,575
2,444
67,697
Total
* Elected.
VOTE FOE GOVERNOR.
261
Vote for Governor, \S89-I90l. — Continued.
As Reported by the Board of Election Commissioners.
1899.
1900.
6
a
'3
*
6
a
a
o
S
o
<
o
a
'5
a
P
6
5
o
<
"3
0
0
M
1
829
1,641
111
2,581
1,034
2,011
142
3,187
1
2
2,007
688
167
2,862
1,919
723
151
2,793
2
3
1,384
504
80
1,968
1,723
654
141
2,518
3
4
929
596
69
1,594
1,224
749
86
2,059
4
5
1,151
569
50
1,770
1,246
669
88
2,003
5
6
1,754
589
156
2,499
1,644
665
141
2,450
6
7
1,235
469
80
1,784
1,195
498
94
1,787
7
8
1,619
630
208
2,457
1,789
745
243
2,777
8
9
1,447
697
152
2,296
1,676
816
190
2,682
9
10
482
1,582
79
2,143
715
2,235
102
3,052
10
11
529
1,738
68
2,335
668
2,458
63
3,189
11
12
884
1,347
78
2,309
1,146
1,760
117
3,023
12
13
1,823
232
139
2,194
2,301
301
124
2,726
13
14
1,768
949.
109
2,826
2,157
1,279
169
3,605
14
15
1,413
680
115
2,208
1,989
883
139'
3,011
15
16
1,206
1,188
137
2,531
1,512
1,582
121
3,215
16
17
1,725
775
119
2,619
2,045
1,079
146
3,270
17
18
1,595
792
175
2,562
1,729
1,071
179
2,979
18
19
1,998
699
224
2,921
2,506
864
226
3,596
19
20
1,128
2,021
98
3,247
1,816
3,351
130
5,297
20
21
1,079
1,749
85
2,913
1,311
2,694
140
4,145
21
22
1,321
1,559
241
3,121
1,467
1,916
284
3,667
22
23
1,276
1,606
165
3,047
1,314
2,110
188
3,612
23
24
1,051
1,724
112
2,887
1,456
2,790
196
4,442
24
25
971
1,348
93
2,412
1,114
1,694
152
2,960
25
Total
32,604
26,372
3,110
62,086
38,696
35,597
3,752
78,045
Total.
* Elected.
262
MUNICIPAL EEGISTER.
Vote for Governor, 1889=1901. — Conc^ucZed.
As Reported by the Board of Election Commissioners.
Ward.
1901.
o
Waed.
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10 ,
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19..'
20
21
22
23
24
2.T
Total
1,681
686
667
688
593
453
485
682
639
1,690
2,121
1,387
436
1,151
807
1,403
951
959
976
2,717
2,250
1,955
2,172
2,213
1,703
31,465
1,118
2,122
1,589
1,226
1,261
1,876
1,043
1,994
2,051
690
669
1,143
2,375
2,042
1,755
1,365
2,017
1,807
2,450
1,729
1,180
1,642
1,422
1,318
1.189
114
87
54
58
86
75
181
122
68
41
86
86
127
122
100
110
114
178
125
140
236
207
226
164
39,073
2,996
2,888
2,922
2,343
1,968
1,912
2,415
1,603
2,857
2,812
2,448
2,831
2,616
2,897
3,320
2,684
2,868
3,078
2,880
3,604
4,571
3,570
3,833
3,801
3,757
3,056
73,534
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
...... 9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
Total
* Elected.
REGISTRATION AND VOTE AT STATE ELECTION. 263
Assessed Polls, Registered Voters and Total Vote at State
Election, 1890=1901.
1....
2 . . . .
3....
4....
5. . . .
6....
7 ...
8....
9....
10....
11....
12....
13....
14....
15....
16....
17....
18....
19....
20 ... .
21....
22....
23....
24. . . .
25....
Total
1890.
5,311
4,694
3,659
3,797
3,817
4,910
3,572
4,416
3,763
3,120
6,663
3,594
6,111
7,404
4,783
5,508
4,737
4,044
7,021
6,948
6,039
5,386
6,553
7,655
3,598
127,103
2,952
2,380
2,458'
2,161
2,384
1,844
1,372
1,919
1,786
1,283
.3,811
1,619
2,551
3,770
2,545
1,980
2,364
2,240
3,047
3,817
3,696
2,726
3,949
4,680
2,200
65,534
H
!«1«
Ph
2,340
1,983
2,087
1,849
2,023
1,597
1,192
1,653
1,496
1,092
3,226
1,367
2,173
3,285
2,200
1,675
2,065
1,881
2,587
3,329
3,159
2,342
3,337
4,024
1,902
55,864
55.58
50.70
67.18
56.91
62.46
37.56
38.41
43.46
47.46
41.12
57.20
45.05
41.74
50.92
53.21
35.95
49.90
55.39
43.40
54.94
61.20
50.61
60.26
61.14
61.15
51.56
5«&
79.27
83.32
84.91
85.56
84.86
86.61
86.88
86.14
83.76
85.11
84.65
84.43
85.18
87.14
86.44
84.60
87.35
83.97
84.90
87.22
85.47
85.91
84.50
85.98
86.45
85.24
1891.
to
o
Bh-c
ns
aj
^^S
o
>
= g.2
^
i2
O
■5<^
K
H
Ph
5,566
3,403
2,997
61.14
5,041
2,724
2,290
54.04
3,74^
2,598
2,270
69.39
3,891
2,383
2,073
61.24
4,125
2,577
2,137
62.47
4,182
1,875
1,649
44.84
3,791
1,481
1,305
39.07
4,541
1,985
1,702
43.71
3,908
1,848
1,570
47.29
3,387
1,348
1,186
39.80
7,231
4,172
3,572
57.70
3,900
1,639
1,408
42.03
7,054
2,869
2,504
40.67
7,634
4,229
3,713
55.40
4,973
2,728
2,370
54.86
5,574
2,087
1,679
37.44
4,893
2,606
2,360
53.26
4,185
2,428
2,154
58.02
7,195
3,205
2,682
44.54
7,326
4,376
3,904
59.73
6,571
4,260
3,742
64.83
5,756
3,035
2,588
52.73
7,085
4,320
3,786
60.97
8,601
5,356
4,689
62.27
3,891
2,448
2,166
62.91
184,045
71,980
62,496
53.70
88.07
84.07
87.37
86.99
82.93
87.95
88.12
85.74
84.96
87.98
85.62
85.91
87.28
87.80
86.88
80.45
90. .56
88.71
83.68
89.21
87.84
85.27
87.64
87.55
88.48
86.82
264
MUNICIPAL KEGISTEK.
Assessed Polls, Registered Voters and Total Vote at State
Election, I890''l90l.— Continued.
1892.
1898.
d
PS
0
CD
-Si
■a
II
0
0
m
0
o-cg
iM
Oh
'zi'6
Ph
0
<
Ph
0
>
0
to
0
^■^^
^ CO a>
red
gtco
1....
5,972
3,928
3,514
65.77
89.46
6,213
4,043
3,355
65.07
82.98
2....
5,340
3,074
2,723
57.57
88.58
5,212
3,034
2,436
58.21
80.29
3....
3,954
2,962
2,629
74.91
88.76
4,099
3,014
2,577
73.53
85.50
4....
4,142
2,811
2,472
67.87
87.94
4,126
2,799
2,357
67.84
84.21
5....
4,263
2,794
2,486
65.54
88.98
4,280
2,705
2,293
63.20
84.77
6....
4,497
2,265
1,991
50.37
87.90
4,588
2,153
1,726
46.93
80.17
7....
4,003
1,774
1,580
44.32
89.06
3,678
1,618
1,365
43.99
84.36
8....
4,870
2,379
2,101
48.85
88.31
4,785
2,260
1,911
47.23
84.56
9....
4,170
2,515
2,230
60.31
88.67
4,040
2,385
1,893
59.03
79.37
10....
3,490
1,909
1,737
54.70
90.99
3,154
1,717
1,438
54.44
83.75
11....
8,147
5,434
4,909
66.70
90.34
7,964
5,121
4,176
64.30
81.55
12....
3,866
2,075
1,779
53.67
85.73
3,600
1,947
1,615
54.08
82.95
13....
7,180
3,321
2,893
46.25
87.11
6,953
3,296
2,733
47.40
82.92
14....
7,883
4,910
4,440
62.29
90.43
7,961
4,995
4,087
62.74
81.82
15....
5,300
3,372
2,992
63.62
88.73
5,343
3,415
2,891
63.92
84.66
16....
5,949
2,698
2,332
45.35
86.43
5,944
2,478
2,052
41.69
82.81
17....
5,229
3,305
3,002
63.21
90.83
5,220
3,270
2,771
62.64
84.74
18....
4,654
3,182
2,896
68.37
91.01
4,613
2,990
2,482
64.82
83.01
19....
7,481
3,861
3,411
51.61
88.34
7,531
3,826
3,076
50.80
80.40
20....
7,862
5,240
4,755
66.65
90.74
8,320
5,497
4,686
66.07
85.25
21....
7,274
5,217
4,772
71.72
91.47
7,677
5,478
4,607
71.36
84.10
22....
6,191
3,566
3,204
57.60
89.85
6,448
3,781
3,174
58.64
83.95
23....
7,822
5,353
4,891
68.44
91.37
8,185
5,612
4,697
68.56
83.70
24....
9,350
6,497
5,945
69.49
91.50
10,141
6,999
5,829
69.02
83.28
25....
4,252
2,785
2,555
65.50
91.74
4,363
2,919
2,561
66.90
87.73
Total . .
143,141
87,227
78,239
60.94
89.70
144,438
87,352
72,788
60.48
83.33
REGISTRATION AND VOTE AT STATE ELECTION. 265
Assessed Polls, Registered Voters and Total Vote at State
Election, 1890-1901. — Coniimtec?.
1894.
1895.
ft
o
S
CQ
CO
•5
tH CO
o
l>
o
ID
"o
a g m
■StS
2 "
^ Oj o
o
Ph
-is
o
>
s
o
_2
-o-d
.So
gUo
1....
6,463
4,290
3,444
66.38
80.28
6,672
4,311
3,298
64.61
76.50
2 ...
5,200
3,135
2,437
60.29
77.74
5,331
3,141
2,414
58.92
76.85
3....
4,084
3,026
2,354
74.09
77.79
4,120
2,992
2,284
72.62
76.34
4....
4,081
2,787
2,197
68.29
78.83
4,032
2,656
2,157
65.87
81.21
5....
4,201
2,710
2,094
64.51
77.27
4,281
2,764
2,150
64.56
77.79
6....
4,179
2,016
1,696
48.24
84.13
4,161
1,880
1,649
45.18
87.71
7....
3,650
1,515
1,116
41.51
73.66
3,701
1,420
1,163
38.37
81.90
8....
4,504
2,127
1,696
47.22
79.74
4,461
2,087
1,754
46.78
84.04
9....
3,819
2,230
1,633
58.39
73.23
3,889
2,187
1,635
56.24
74.76
10....
2,993
1,512
1,165
50.52
77.05
2,743
1,327
1,104
48..38
&3.20
U....
7,761
4,712
3,454
60.71
73.30
7,841
4,618
3,361
58.90
72.78
12....
3,471
1,773
1,406
51.08
79.3 0
3,477
1,659
1,343
47.71
80.95
13....
6,672
3,166
2,482
47.45
78.40
6,453
3,186
2,489
49.37
78.12
14....
7,863
5,184
4,209
65.93
81.19
7,910
5,191
4,132
65.63
79.60
15....
5,295
3,475
2,869
65.63
82.56
5,302
3,473
2,810
65.50
80.91
16....
5,305
2,373
1,837
44.73
77.41
5,730
2,476
2,039
43.21
82.35
17....
4,943
2,981
2,351
60.32
78.87
5,075
2,936
2,397
57.85
81.64
18....
4,806
3,026
2,364
62.96
78.12
4,802
2,983
2,395
62.12
80.29
19....
7,415
3,854
3,053
51.98
79.22
7,130
3,632
2,801
50.94
77.12
20....
8,259
5,548
4,491
67.18
80.95
8,570
5,637
4,677
65.78
82.97
21....
7,746
5,517
4,081
71.22
73.97
7,911
5,588
4,372
70.64
78.24
22....
6,570
3,937
3,163
59.92
80.34
6,954
4,117
3,259
59.20
79.16
23....
8,455
5,847
4,451
69.15
76.12
8,908
6,032
4,717
67.71
78.20
24....
10,790
7,530
5,857
69.79
77.78
11,768
8,075
6,191
68.62
76.67
25....
4,499
3,008
2,449
66.86
81.42
4,665
3,185
2,660
68.27
83.52
Total . .
143,023
87,279
68,349
61.02
78.31
145,887
87,553
69,251
60.01
79.10
266
MUNICIPAL KEGISTER.
Assessed Polls, Registered Voters and Total Vote at State
Election, 1 890= 1 90 1 . — Continued.
1896.
1897.
o
m
<
OP .
i
o
>
o
CO
o
©•eg
g CO to
to
o
Ph
-e
CO
a>
to
<
t3
li
o
>
o
o
a =0 m
^ to aj
fe<1P^
Ph
•CO
O QJ
. a3 o
gP<^&
Ph
1....
6,172
4,156
8,872
67.34
93.17
6,328
4,043
2,557
63.89
63.25
2....
6,410
3,733
3,441
58.24
92.18
6,864
3,710
2,482
58.80
66.90
3....
4,134
2,923
2,700
70.71
92.37
4,223
2,944
2,006
69.71
68.14
4....
4,215
2,788
2,591
66.14
92.93
4,122
2,745
2,074
66.59
75.56
5....
4,429
2,834
2,581
63.99
91.07
4,422
2,761
1,844
62.44
66.79
6....
8,081
3,827
3,548
47.36
92.71
8,228
3,760
2,642
45.70
70.27
7....
6,111
3,304
2,972
54.07
89.95
5,945
2,974
2,082
50.03
70.01
8....
8,070
4,198
3,871
52.02
92.21
7,876
3,889
2,848
49.38
73.23
9....
8,309
4,036
3,741
48.57
92.69
7,991
3,775
2,661
47.24
70.49
10....
7,287
4,526
4,173
62.11
92.20
7,617
4,116
2,239
54.04
54.40
11....
6,000
4,115
3,894
68.58
94.63
5,981
8,940
2,722
65.88
69.09
12....
6,474
4,314
3,982
66.64
92.30
6,313
3,751
2,429
59.42
64.76
13....
7,856
3,848
3,572
48.98
92.83
7,628
3,654
2,673
47.90
73.15
14....
5,846
3,939
8,674
67.38
93.27
6,009
4,111
2,807
68.41
68.28
15....
5,311
3,623
3,407
68.22
94.04
5,233
3,528
2,350
67.42
66.61
16....
5,123
3,699
3,487
72.20
94.27
5,401
3,757
2,697
69.56
71.79
17....
6,253
4,107
8,801
65.68
92.55
6,892
4,077
2,872
59.16
70.44
18....
7,272
3,817
3,529
52.49
92.45
7,229
8,704
2,408
51.24
65.01
19....
6,670
3,994
3,696
59.88
92.54
6,954
4,163
2,789
59.86
66.99
20....
6,414
4,574
4,330
71.31
94.67
7,005
4,830
2,940
68.95
60.87
21....
6,266
4,486
4,271
71.59
95.21
6,335
4,462
2,790
70.43
62.53
22....
6,443
4,221
3,949
65.51
93.56
6,793
4,259
2,762
62.70
64.85
23....
5,4.53
3,916
8,711
71.81
94.77
5,640
8,956
2,877
70.14
72.72
24....
6,339
4,435
4,198
69.96
94.54
6,784
4,632
2,883
68.79
62.24
25....
4,964
3,388
3,155
67.14
94.66
5,191
8,393
2,402
65.36
70.79
Total . .
155,902
96,746
90,141
62.06
93.17
158,454
94,934
63,836
59.91
67.24
KEGISTKATION AND VOTE AT STATE ELECTIOJST. 267
Assessed Polls, Registered Voters, and Total Vote at State
Election, 1890=1901. — Continued.
1898.
1899.
m
o
fin
0)
m
OJ
aj
<
It
•II
O
>
o
H
O
. a; S
" CO ©
re's
a m^
o
Ph
ta
m
o
<
73
CD .
11
o
>
o
H
o
Ph
03 03
. C3 O
§'5)0
~ a3.C
Ph
Q
1
6,311
4,188
3,157
66.36
75.38
6,284
4,116
2,691
65.50
65.38
1
2
6,496
3,880
2,983
59.73
76.88
9,548
4,128
3,281
63.04
79.48
2
3
4,302
3,075
2,378
71.48
77.33
4,453
3,276
2,108
73.57
64.35
3
4
4,068
2,724
2,128
66.94
78.12
4,119
2,666
1,709
65.45
63.39
4
5
4,479
2,833
1,993
63.25
70.35
4,518
3,000
1,916
66.40
63.87
5
6
8,966
4,121
2,995
45.96
72.68
9,609
4,362
2,934
45.40
67.26
6
7
5,198
2,492
1,747
ilM
70.10
5,500
2,657
1,961
43.31
73.81
7
8
7,876
3,645
2,916
46.28
80.00
8,562
3,710
2,585
43.33
69.68
8
9
8,297
3,713
2,620
44.75
70.56
8,591
3,864
2,419
44.08
62.60
9
10
7,356
3,952
2,485
53.72
62.88
7,419
6,807
2,232
51.31
58.65
10
11
6,277
3,925
2,842
62.53
72.41
4,237
3,794
2,416
60.83
63.68
11
12
6,227
3,437
2,495
55.20
72.59
7,013
3,686
2,427
52.66
65.84
12
13
7,624
3,920
2,970
51.42
75.77
7,459
3,906
2,343
52.37
59.98
13
14
6,210
4,491
3,505
72.32
78.04
6,429
4,482
2,985
69.72
66.60
14
15
5,427
3,733
2,800
68.79
75.01
5,509
3,793
2,311
68.85
60.93
15
16
5,505
3,945
3,002
71.66
76.10
5,614
4,041
2,642
71.98
65.38
16
17
6,951
4,217
3,232
60.67
76.64
7,112
4,258
2,777
59.87
65.22
17
18
7,243
3,818
2,628
52.71
68.83
7,452
4,012
2,729
53.84
68.02
18
19
7,103
4,482
3,543
63.10
79.05
7,150
4,524
3,116
63.27
68.88
19
20
7,584
5,337
4,013
70.37
75.19
8,350
5,799
3,345
69.45
57.68
20
21
6,326
4,418
3,072
69.84
69.53
6,705
4,848
2,993
72.30
61.74
21
22
6,980
4,492
3,225
64.36
71.79
7,339
4,813
3,340
65.58
69.40
22
23
5,877
4,118
3,211
69.98
78.07
6,052
4,282
3,215
70.75
75.08
23
24
7,002
4,745
3,519
67.77
74.16
7,263
5,021
2,985
60.13
59.45
24
25
5,479
3,542
2,564
64.65
72.39
5,550
3,616
2,549
65.15
70.49
25
Total
161,164
97,238
72,023
60.33
74.07
166,837
100,491
66,009
60.23
65.69
Total
268
JMUNICIPAL KEGISTER.
Assessed Polls, Registered Voters, and Total Vote at State
Election , 1 890- 1 90 1 . — Concluded.
1..
2..
3..
4..
5..
6..
7..
8..
9..
10..
11..
12..
13..
14..
15..
16..
17..
18..
19..
20..
21..
22..
23..
24..
25..
Total
1900.
6,440
6,619
4,519
4,212
4,204
9,586
5,497
10,565
8,639
7,852
6,357
7,576
7,149
6,455
5,642
5,784
7,103
7,379
7,476
9,097
7,000
7,597
6.185
7,804
5,703
172,445
4,336
4,120
3,480
2,891
2,846
3,938
2,796
3,923
4,094
4,140
4,083
4,039
3,933
4,784
4,052
4,198
4,471
4,342
4,953
6,616
5,289
4,931
4,557
5,667
3,850
106,329
3,720
3,395
2,9.56
2,412
2,373
3,180
2,163
3,183
3,227
3,419
3,466
3,358
3,335
4,148
3,398
3,650
3,791
3,591
4,240
5,799
4,.5.52
4,216
4,064
4,968
3,375
89,979
!<«Pi
67.33
62.25
77.01
68.64
67.70
41.08
50.86
37.13
47.39
5^2.73
64.23
53.31
55.01
74,11
71.82
72.58
62.90
58.84
66.25
72.73
75.56
64.91
73.68
72.62
67.51
61.66
3«^
85.79
82.40
84.94
83.43
83.38
80.75
77.36
81.14
78.82
82.58
84.89
83.14
84.80
86.71
83.86
86.95
84.79
82.70
85.60
87.65
86.07
85.50
89.18
87.67
87.66
84.62
1901.
6,492
6,775
4,388
4,174
4,224
9,468
5,479
12,126
8,715
7,543
6,286
7,723
7,123
6,605
5,611
5,80')
7,026
7,311
7,657
9,953
7,253
7,821
6,405
7,983
5,921
175,866
.So
4,408
4,377
3,415
2,843
2,782
3,632
2,492
4,277
4,110
3,891
4,014
4,002
3,954
4,881
4,001
4,178
4,520
4,341
5,074
7,180
5,305
5,179
4,808
5,810
4,068
3,011
3,109
2,503
2,073
2,008
2,618
1,672
3,083
2,945
2,537
2,937
2,713
3,135
3,461
2,786
3,000
3,232
3,106
3,817
4,703
3,668
4,006
3,965
3,874
3,204
77,166
+^ 3d ^
67.90
64.61
77.83
68.11
65.86
38.36
45.48
.35.27
47.16
51.58
63.86
51.82
55.51
73.90
71.31
71.98
64.33
59.38
66.27
72.14
73.14
66.22
75.07
72.78
68.70
61.15
u o
a £ «
-2 'So 2
68.31
71.03
73.29
72.92
72,18
72.08
67.09
72.08
71.65
65.20
73.17
67.79
79.29
70.91
69.63
71.80
71.50
71.55
75.23
65.50
69.14
77.35
82.47
66.68
78.76
71.75
Total
EEGISTRATION AND VOTE FOR MAYOR.
269
Registration and Vote for Mayor, 1891 = 1901.
Ward.
10.,
11..
12..
13..
14..
15..
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
24.
25.
1891.
Total 73,373
3,463
2,796
2,627
2,432
2,608
1,915
1,502
2,011
1,863
1,389
4,219
1,657
2,912
4,300
2,755
2,118
2,781
2,498
3,288
4,489
4,312
3,090
4,463
5,440
2,495
2,673
2,018
2,006
1^879
1,924
1,487
1,059
1,490
1,236
945
2,608
1,292
2,388
8,229
2,085
1,588
2,157
1,927
2,495
3,579
3,220
2,375
3,343
4,153
1,967
55,018
77.19
72.17
76.36
77.26
73.77
77.65
70.51
74.09
06.34
68.03
61.82
77.97
81.83
75.09
73.87
72.62
78.98
77.14
75.88
79.73
74.68
76.86
74.90
76.34
78.84
74.99
1892.
1
o
!>
1
o
"S
s
a
3,962
3,214
81.12
3,082
2,489
80.76
2,943
2,190
74.41
2,808
2,077
73.97
2,778
2,106
75.81
2,255
1,765
78.27
1,760
1,276
72.50
2,371
1,784
75.24
2,494
1,700
68.16
1,926
1,373
71.29
5,394
3,727
69.10
2,089
1,601
76.64
3,302
2,598
78.68
4,901
3,820
77.94
8,364
2,587
76.90
2,694
2,011
74.65
3,299
2,491
75.51
3,165
2,328
73.55
3,881
2,930
75.50
5,243
4,281
81.65
5,212
4,098
78.53
3,580
2,790
77.93
5,355
4,215
78.71
6,.50O
4,870
74.92
2,796
2,351
84.08
87,154
66,667
76.49
1893.
4,123
3,216
3,083
2,338
3,030
2,299
2,814
2,125
2,746
2,075
2,192
1,727
1,653
1,235
2,310
lj819
2,439
1,680
1,761
1,290
5,187
3,749
2,015
1,540
3,332
. 2,580
5,083
3,962
3,454
2,707
2,558
1,959
3,358
2,547
3,039
2,264
3,934
2,940
5,586
4,436
5,534
4,278
3,858
8,056
5,762
4,,555
7,145
5,483
2,951
2,368
88,947
68,228
78.00
75.84
75.87
75.52
75.56
78.79
74.71
78.74
68.88
73.25
72.28
76.43
77.43
77.95
78.37
76.. 58
75.85
74.50
74.73
79.41
77.30
79.21
79.05
76.74
80.24
76.71
270 MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
Registration and Vote for Mayor, i 1891 = 1901. — Continued.
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
Total
1S94.
4,329
3,455
3,163
2,380
3,036
2,329
2,795
2,123
2,720
2,093
2,070
1,692
1,542
1,169
2,147
1,749
2,260
1,654
1,526
1,169
4,807
3,462
1,792
1,356
3,193
2,491
5,216
4,104
3,533
2,746
2,410
1,856
2,997
2,272
3,060
2,322
3,905
2,947
5,600
4,431
5,588
4,488
3,972
3,102
5,926
4,789
7,602
5,991
3,025
2,418
88,214
68,588
79.81
75.25
76.71
75.96
76.95
81.74
75.81
81.46
73.19
76.61
72.02
75.67
78.01
78.68
77.72
77.01
75.81
75.88
75.47
79.13
80.31
78.10
80.81
78.81
79.93
(7.75
1895.
W
4,556
3,262
3,053
2,755
2,881
2,152
1,536
2,203
2,259
1,434
4,864
1,827
3,280
5,348
3,569
2,630
3,031
3,057
3,795
5,831
5,796
4,305
6,280
8,492
3,827
91,483
3,850
2,795
2,569
2,276
2,378
1,818
1,264
1,909
1,791
1,178
3,825
1,521
2,738
4,566
3,022
2,103
2,507
2,561
3,150
4,983
4,944
3,625
5,285
7,216
2,847
76,721
P^
84.50
85.68
84.15
82.61
82.54
84.48
82.29
86.65
79.28
82.15
78.64
83.25
83.48
85.38
84.67
79.96
82.71
83.77
83.00
85.46
85.30
84.20
84.35
84.97
86.61
83.86
1897.
«
4,335
4,215
3,071
2,878
2,942
4,403
3,118
4,205
4,255
4,486
4,142
4,002
4,472
4,397
3,790
3,945
4,440
4,036
4,526
5,061
4,689
4,455
4,106
4,858
3,646
102,473
3,473
3,403
2,492
2,286
2,322
3,241
2,263
3,289
3,136
3,142
3,143
2,966
3,382
3,547
2,942
3,174
3,577
3,042
3,654
3,930
3,640
3,415
3,351
3,919
3,034
79,763
80.12
80.74
81.15
79.43
78.93
73.61
72.58
78.22
73.71
70.05
75.89
74.12
75.63
80.67
77.63
80.46
80.57
75.38
80.74
77.66
77.63
76.66
81.62
80.68
83.22
77.84
■ The Mayor was elected in 1895, 1897, 1899 and 1901 for two years. Stat. 1895, Chap. 449.
KEGISTRATION AND VOTE FOR MAYOR. 271
Registration and Vote for May or, i 1891 = 1901. — Concluded.
Ward.
1
2
3
4
5
6
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
Total
1899.
«
4,190
4,189
3,345
2,759
3,045
4,427
2,730
3,832
3,959
3,881
3,891
3,828
4,027
4,584
3,837
4,097
4,381
4,139
4,676
5,915
4,959
4,887
4,347
5,244
3,706
3,427
3,338
2,681
2,180
2,375
3,108
2,137
3,041
3,055
2,790
3,039
2,904
3,183
3,706
2,897
3,242
3,522
3,184
3,744
4,683
4,043
3,941
3,701
4,319
3,101
81,341
81.79
79.69
80.15
79.01
78.00
70.21
78.28
79.. 36
77.17
71.89
78.10
75.86
79.04
80.85
75.50
79.13
80.39
76.93
80.07
79.17
81.53
80.64
85.14
82.36
83.68
79.07
1901.
4,516
3,656
4,458
3,633
3,446
2,745
2,873
2,156
2,850
2,255
3,749
3,092
2,627
1,973
4,360
3,291
4,289
3,336
4,164
3,140
4,173
3,201
4,145
3,129
4,041
3,271
4,918
3,970
4,068
3,133
4,223
3,250
4,583
3,621
4,427
3,321
5,229
4,294
7,306
5,540
5,386
4,S02
5,252
4,192
4,917
4,042
5,927
4,609
4,204
3,463
110,131
86,615
80.96
81.49
79.66
75.04
79.12
82.48
75.10
75.48
77.78
75.41
76.71
75.49
80.95
80.72
77.02
76.96
79.01
75.02
82.12
75.83
79.87
79.82
82.20
77.76
82.37
78.65
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
Total
1 The Mayor was elected in 1895, 1897, 1899 and 1901 for two years. Stat. 1895, Chap. 449.
272
MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
Vote for Mayor, 1888=1901.
As Reported by the Registrars of Voters.
1888.
1889.
1890.
1891.
<
*
u
a
I
6
*
.9
-J
*
to
Si
s
bo
3
0
=i
<
*
%
'S
OS
CO
0
1
1,853
991
1,701
859
1,175
1,374
56
2,605
1,315
1,328
29
2,673
1
2
783
1,593
795
1,264
1,519
598
28
2,145
439
1,554
25
2,018
2
3
1,085
1,095
966
1,007
1,216
670
66
1,952
614
1,367
25
2,006
3
4
1,303
803
1,08]
739
911
832
43
1,786
770
1,083
26
1,879
4
5
1,207
967
1,043
912
1,143
713
56
1,912
658
1,239
. 27
1,924
5
6
325
1,514
320
1,344
1,274
270
11
1,555
163
1,317
7
1,487
6
7
398
1,176
344
976
902
185
18
1,105
140
911
8
1,059
7
8
603
1,443
677
1,182
1,176
339
23
1,538
275
1,202
13
1,490
8
9
1,166
521
1,046
427
628
575
72
1,275
595
606
35
1,236
9
10
1,013
377
840
291
44]
466
62
969
533
394
18
945
10
11
2,721
615
2,373
486
1,343
1,128
241
2,712
1,299
1,261
48
2,608
11
12
518
1,380
469
1,137
1,071
266
21
1,358
195
1,080
17
1,292
12
13
298
2,661
433
2,250
1,937
250
7
2,194
205
2,169
9
2,383
13
14
1,762
1,772
1,826
1,542
2,094
1,247
66
2,407
1,061
2,135
33
3,229
14
15
1,051
1,494
1,080
1,171
1,454
695
42
2,191
552
1,468
15
2,035
15
16
806
1,394
756
999
1,138
464
28
1,630
382
1,136
20
1,538
16
17
1,505
1,029
1,315
767
1,086
801
86
1,973
827
1,262
68
2,157
17
18
1,802
545
1,615
385
728
881
126
1,735
1,054
840
33
1,927
18
19
1,262
1,753
1,314
1,401
1,698
913
44
2,655
700
1,777
18
2,495
19
20
1,735
1,960
1,741
1,550
1,882
1,128
199
3,129
1,084
3,437
58
3,579
20
21
2,496
861
2,305
757
1,284
1,550
238
3,072
1,674
1,489
57
3,220
21
23
808
1,546
990
1,193
1,619
643
60
2,322
629
1,731
15
2,375
22
23
2,883
1,253
2,270
1,141
1,782
1,159
205
3,146
1,467
1,810
66
3,343
23
24
2,888
1,169
2,791
1,151
1,682
2,046
223
3,951
2,163
1,914
76
4,153
24
25 .
941
924
1,042
742
1,027
764
102
1,893
738
1,197
32
1,967
25
Total
32,712
30,836
31,133
25,673
32,210
19,957
2,043
t 54,201
19,532
34,708
778
t55,0]8
Total
* Elected for one year.
t Not including 44 scattering votes.
X Not including 1 scattering vote.
VOTE FOE MAYOR.
27.
Vote for Mayor, 1888=1901. — ConimMed.
As Beported by the Begistrars of Voters.
1892.
1893.
1894.
i
*
i
o
o
o
*
S
<
-2
o
*
1
O
a
Ph
1
o
O
0
1
1,565
1,649
0
3,214
1,279
1,907
30
3,216
2,127
1,286
42
3,455
1
2
1,840
649
0
2,489
1,490
a33
15
2,338
874
1,477
29
2,380
2
3
1,489
701
0
. 2,190
1,395
891
13
2,299
891
1,399
39
2,329
3
4
1,179
898
0
2,077
1,104
994
27
2,125
1,050
1,043
30
2,123
4
5
1,337
768
1
2,106
1,219
840
16
2,075
832
1,231
30
2,093
5
6
1,512
252
1
1,765
1,360
362
5
1,727
382
1,289
21
1,692
6
7
990
286
0
1,276
840
390
5
1,235
373
778
18
1,169
7
8
1,445
839
0
1,784
1,249
558
12
1,819
559
1,154
36
1,749
8
9
890
810
0
1,700
838
823
19
1,680
926
702
26
1,654
9
10
697
675
1
1,373
606
669
15
1,290
743
399
27
1,169
10
11
1,705
2,020
2
3,727
1,758
1,929
62
3,749
2,118
1,296
48
3,462
11
12
1,227
374
0
1,601
1,027
502
11
1,540
460
867
29
1,356
12
13
2,233
362
3
,2,598
1,867-
709
4
2,580
683
1,748
60
2,491
13
14
2,440
1,379
1
3,820
2,084
1^41
37
3,962
1,897
2,139
68
4,104
14
15
1,770
817
0
2,587
1,606
1,091
10
2,707
1,140
1,567
39
2,746
15
16
1,434
577
0
2,011
1,214
733
12
1,959
833
980
43
1,856
16
17
1,452
1,039
0
2,491
1,291
1,221
35
2,547
1,285
929
58
2,272
17
IS
1,049
1,279
0
2,328
991
1,249
24
2,264
1,497
792
33
2,322
18
19
1,863
1,066
1
2,930
1,671
1,242
27
2,940
1,546
1,344
57
2,947
19
20
2,717
1,564
0
4,281
2,539
1,862
35
4,436
2,179
2,162
90
4,431
20
21
1,915
2,178
0
4,093
1,827
2,387
64
4,278
2,940
1,471
77
4,488
21
22
1,903
887
0
2,790
1,934
1,111
11
3,056
1,440
1,613
49
3,102
22
23
2,041
2,174
0
4,215
1,957
2,549
49
4,555
2,872
1,802
115
4,789
23
24
2,121
2,749
0
4,870
2,077
3,339
67
5,483
3,921
1,990
80
5,991
24
25
1,172
1,179
0
2,351
1,131
1,223
14
2,368
1,414
967
37
2,418
25
Total
39,986
26,671
10
66,667
36,354
31,255
619
68,228
34,982
32,425
1,181
68,588
Total
* Elected lor one year.
274
MUNICIPAL KEGISTER.
Vote for Mayor, ISS9-1901. — Continued.
As Reported by the Board of Election Commissioners.
1895.
1897.
1899.
*
a
'3
3
s
o
<
o
*
a
5
s
o
<
C3
O
.9
u
o
<
3
o
0
a
1
1,636
2,202
12
3,850
1,278
2,090
105
3,473
. 2,292
1,091
44
3,427
1
2
1,996
793
6
2,795
2,350
830
223
3,403
1,070
2,183
85
3,338
2
3
1,720
836
13
2,569
1,501
827
164
2,492
1,127
1,523
31
2,681
3
4
1,172
1,081
23
2,276
1,128
1,059
99
2,286
1,103
1,044
33
2,180
4
5
1,504
861
13
2,378
1,391
807
124
2,322
1,074
1,268
33
2,375
5
6
1,410
402
6
1,818
2,147
905
189
3,241
1,092
l,-955
61
3,108
6
7
920
335
9
1,264
1,258
835
170
2,263
936
1,151
50
2,137
7
8
1,464
421
24
1,909
1,989
1,075
225
3,289
988
1,878
175
3,041
8
9
670
1,106
15
1,791
1,867
1,059
210
3,136
1,107
1,834
114
3,055
9
10
359
807
12
1,178
899
2,161
82
3,142
2,069
678
48
2,790
10
11
1,102
2,683
40
3,825
1,132
1,940
71
3,143
2,087
930
22
3,039
11
12
1,083
425
13
1,521
1,161
1,687
118
2,966
1,722
1,124
58
2,904
12
13
2,285
440
13
2,738
2,446
626
310
3,382
734
2,378
71
3,183
13
14
2,736
1,797
33
4,566
2,110
1,260
177
3,547
1,588
2,022
96
3,706
14
15
2,011
988
23
3,022
1,636
1,115
191
2,942
1,245
1,578
74
2,897
15
16
1,353
726
24
2,103
1,460
1,563
151
3,174
1,817
1,361
64
3,242
16
17
1,199
1,280
28
2,507
1,960
1,371
246
3,577
1,558
1,889
75
3,522
17
18
937
1,600
24
2,561
1,673
1,187
182
3,042
1,318
1,758
108
8,184
18
19
1,835
1,277
38
3,150
2,292
1,176
186
3,654
1,176
2,430
138
3,744
19
20
2,806
2,147
30
4,983
1,572
2,252
106
3,930
2,964
1,649
70
4,683
20
21
1,812
3,110
22
4,944
1,149
2,409
82
3,640
2,561
1,411
71
4,043
21
22
2,218
1,388
19
3,625
1,499
1,771
145
3,415
2,240
1,490
211
3,941
22
23
2,243
2,980
62
5,285
1,390
1,863
98
3,351
2,286
1,320
95
3,701
23
24
2,615
4,528
73
7,216
1,415
2,389
115
3,919
2,809
1,442
68
4,319
24
25
1,184
1,651
12
2,847
1,281
1,690
63
3,034
1,875
1,175
51
3,101
25
Total
40,270
35,864
587
76,721
39,984
35,947
3,832
79,763
40,838
38,557
1,946
81,341
Total
♦Elected for two j'ears.
VOTE FOR MAYOE.
275
Vote for Mayor, 1888-1901. — Concluded.
As Reported by the Board of Election Commissioners.
Ward.
1901.
Ward.
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
Total
1,736
1,875
2,805
795
2,095
617
1,489
649
1,604
625
2,506
559
1,442
486
2,.521
661
2,513
757
1,079
2,019
1,072
2,112
1,503
1,571
2,794
439
2,593
1,308
2,207
866
1,774
1,425
2,630
950
2,255
998
3,295
891
2,452
3,033
1,838
2,419
2,175
1,909
1,917
2,033
2,019
2,.515
1,721
1,684
45
3,656
33
3,633
33
2,745
18
2,156
26
2,255
27
3,092
45
1,973
109
3,291
66
3,336
42
3,140
17
3,201
55
3,129
38
3,271
69
3,970
60
3,133
51
3,250
41
3.621
68
3,321
108
4,294
55
5,.540
45
4,302
108
4,192
92
4,042
75
4,609
58
3,463
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
....... 9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
Total
52,035
33,196
86,615
* Elected for two years.
276
MUNICIPAL KEGISTER.
Assessed Polls, Registration, and Vote for Mayor, 1895.
As Beported by the Board of Election Commissioner's.
Ward.
1...,
2....
3....
4...,
5....
6...,
7....
8....
9....
10....
11....
12....
13....
14....
15....
16....
17....
18....
19....
20....
21....
22 ... .
23....
24....
25....
Total
s 1=1
Ph-S
to >i
6,720
5,368
4,137
4,057
4,343
4,374
3,772
4,522
3,927
2,778
7,924
3,573
6,490
7,950
5,334
5,805
5,128
4,852
7,168
8,630
7,959
6,999
8,966
11,866
4,688
147,325
o -
«
4,.556
3,262
3,053
2,755
2,881
2,152
1,5.36
2,203
2,259
1,434
4,864
1,827
3,280
5,34cS
3,569
2,630
3,031
3,057
3,795
5,831
5,796
4,305
6,280
8,492
3,287
91,483
Vote for Mayor,
Dec. 10, 1895.
a
1,636
1,996
1,720
l,i72
1,504.
1,410
920
1,464
670
359
1,102
1,083
2,285
2,736
2,011
1,353
1,199
937
1,835
2,806
1,812
2,218
2,243
2,615
1,184
40,270
O
2,202
793
836
1,081
861
402
335
421
1,106
807
2,683
425
440
1,797
988
726
1,280
1,600
1,277
2,147
3,110
1,388
2,980
4,528
1,651
35,864
12
C
13
23
13
6
9
24
15
12
40
13
13
33
23
24
28
24
38
30
22
19
62
73
12
587
3,850
2,795
2,569
2,276
2,378
1,818
1,264
1,909
1,791
1,178
3,825
1,521
2,738
4,566
3,022
2,103
2,507
2,561
3,150
4,983
4,944
3,625
5,285
7,216
2,847
76,721
Ward.
..... 1
.... 2
.... 3
4
5
6
7
.... 8
... 9
10
11
....12
....13
....14
...15
.... 16
....17
....18
....19
. ..20
....21
....22
....23
....24
...25
Total
♦ Elected for two year^ Stat. 1895, Chap. 449.
VOTE FOR MAYOR.
277
Assessed Polls, Registration, and Vote for Mayor, 1897.
As Reported by the Board of Election Commissioners.
Warp.
9..
10..
11..
12..
13..
14..
15..
16..
17..
18..
19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
24.
25.
•C o
?>1
Total.
6,413
6,549 -
4,262
4,188
4,521
8,760
6,116
8,069
8,293
7,765
6,045
6,409
8,050
6,127
5,323
5,461
7,025
7,352
7,113
7,074
6,387
6,853
5,692
6,805
5,287
161,939
«
4,335
4,215
3,071
2,878
2,942
4,403
3,118
4,205
4,255
4,486
4,142
4,002
4,472
4,397
3,790
3,945
4,440
4,036
4,526
5,061
4,689
4,4.55
4,106
4,858
3,646
102,473
Vote for Mayor,
Dec. 21, 1897.
1,278
2,350
1,501
1,128
1,391
2,147
1,258
1,989
1,867
899
1,132
1,161
2,446
2,110
1,636
1,460
1,960
1,673
2,292
1,572
1,149
1,499
1,390
1,415
1,281
39,984
2,090
105
830
223
827
164
1,059
99
807
124
905
189
835
170
1,075
225
1,059
210
2,161
82
1,940
71
1,687
118
626
310
1,260
177
1,115
191
1,563
151
1,371
246
1,187
182
1,176
186
2,252
106
2,409
82
1,771
145
1,863
98
2,389
115
1,690
63
35,947
3,832
3,473
3,403
2,492
2,286
2,322
3,241
2,263
3,289
3,136
3,142
3,143
2,966
3,382
3,547
2,942
3,174
3,577
3,042
3,654
3,930
3,640
3,415
3,351
3,919
3,034
79,763
"Ward.
.... 1
.... 2
.... 3
4
.... 5
.... 6
.... 7
.... 8
.... 9
....10
....11
....12
....13
....14
....15
....16
....17
....18
.... 19
20
21
....22
....25
24
25
Total.
* Elected lor two years. Stat. 1895, Chap. 449.
278
MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
Assessed Polls, Registration, and Vote for Mayor, 1899.
Wakd.
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19......
20
21
22
28
24
25
Total
6,284
6,548
4,453
4,119
4,518
9,609
5,500
8,562
8,591
7,419
6,237
7,013
7,459
6,429
5,509
5,614
7,112
7,452
7,150
8,350
6,705
7,339
6,052
7,263
5,550
«
4,190
4,189
3,345
2,759
3,045
4,427
2,730
3,832
3,959
3,881
3,891
3,828
4,027
4,584
3,837
4,097
4,381
4,139
4,676
5,915
4,959
4,887
4,347
5,244
3,706
102,875
Vote for Mayor, December
12, 1899.
1,091
2,183
1,523
1,044
1,268
1,955
1,151
1,878
1,834
673
930
1,124
2,378
2,022
1,578
1,361
1,889
1,758
2,430
1,649
1,411
1,490
1,320
1,442
1,175
38,557
2,292
1,070
1,127
1,103
1,074
1,092
936
988
1,107
2,069
2,087
1,722
734
1,588
1,245
1,817
1,558
1,318
1,176
2,964
2,561
2,240
2,286
2,809
1,875
40,838
44
85
31
33
33
61
50
175
114
48
22
58
71
96
74
64
75
108
138
70
71
211
95
68
51
1,946
3,4-27
3,338
2,681
2,180
2,375
3,108
2,137
3,041
3,055
2,790
3,039
2,904
' 3,183
3,706
2,897
3,242
3,522
3,184
3,744
4,683
4,043
3,941
3,701
4,319
3,101
81,341
Ward.
1
2
.... 3
4
5
.... 6
7
8
9
....10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
.....18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
Total
* Elected for two years. Stat. 1895, Chap. 449.
V GTE FOR MAYOR.
279
Assessed Polls, Registration, and Vote for Mayor, 1901.
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
Total
6,492
6,775
4,388
4,174
4,224
9,468
5,479
12,126
8,715
7,543
6,286
7,723
7,123
6,605
5,611
5,804
7,026
7,311
7,657
9,953
7,253
7,821
6,405
7,983
5,921
175,866
«
4,516
4,458
3,446
2,873
2,850
3,749
2,627
4,360
4,289
4,164
4,173
4,145
4,041
4,918
4,068
4,223
4,583
4,427
5,229
7,306
5,386
5,252
4,917
5,927
4,204
110,131
Vote foe Mayor, December
10, 1901.
1,736
2,805
2,095
1,489
1,604
2,506
1,442
2,521
2,513
1,079
1,072
1,503
2,794
2,593
2,207
1,774
2,630
2,255
3,295
2,452
1,838
2,175
1,917
2,019
1,721
52,035
1,875
795
617
649
625
559
486
661
757
2,019
2,112
1,571
439
1,308
866
1,425
950
998
891
3,033
2,419
1,909
2,033
2,515
1,684
33,196
45
33
33
18
26
27
45
109
66
42
17
55
38
69
60
51
41
68
108
55
45
108
92
75
58
1,384
3,656
3,633
2,745
2,156
2,255
3,092
1,973
3,291
3,336
3,140
3,201
3,129
3,271
3,970
3,133
3,250
3,621
3,321
4,294
5,540
4,302
4,192
4,042
4,609
3,463
86,615
Ward.
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
Total
■■ Elected for two years. Stat. 1895, Chap. 449.
280
MUNICIPAL EEGISTER.
Vote for Mayor by Precincts, December 10, 1901.
As Reported by the Board of Election Commissioners.
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
U
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
Precinct 1.
a
O
OS
<
a
a
CO
■3
a
s
o
a a,
as ts
r
o
96
193
3
2
377
108
—
4
141
198
-
3
315
88
1
3
128
181
-
2
301
38
2
2
121
85
1
2
508
45
2
13
436
101
3
13
201
93
3
1
145
225
2
4
157
340
8
8
377
55
2
1
470
123
3
3
189
56
1
1
176
131
3
5
282
65
1
3
399
127
3
9
345
154
4
16
334
383
5
9
187
268
—
6
383
380
8
12
142
192
2
1
304
177
3
2
252
278
1
13
Precinct 2.
276
362
150
353
368
199
375
438
147
159
102
370
508
390
324
317
325
311
356
261
356
333
204
132
243
60
107
156
129
51
72
116
97
176
262
288
44
51
74
125
45
153
91
381
198
110
118
205
364
Precinct 3.
120
361
312
223
399
393
277
128
444
76
223
166
332
276
280
404
175
240
513
294
146
344
345
266
113
319
126
134
161
46
58
109
188
29
191
189
156
49
140
92
192
152
231
56
282
151
67
136
347
304
Precinct 4.
343
482
277
157
364
158
456
408
54
188
183
363
241
267
158
252
369
395
358
155
226
285
230
303
328
96
74
103
92
70
117
117
97
234
243
259
47
164
111
293
210
237
68
184
283
320
214
238
119
VOTE FOR MAYOR BY PRECINCTS.
281
Vote for Mayor by Precincts, December 10, 1901. — Continued.
As Reported hy the Board of Election Commissioners.
Precinct 5.
1..
2..
3..
4..
5..
6..
7..
8..
9..
10..
11..
12..
13..
14..
15..
16..
17..
18..
19..
20..
21..
22..
23..
24..
25.,
224
306
471
316
309
355
398
496
215
54
83
155
335
237
319
206
276
518
251
357
208
298
287
144
314
211
67
66
100
56
73
196
168
227
239
72
228
106
219
71
88
121
367
246
214
312
281
177
Precinct 6.
362
274
327
208
258
94
289
558
181
113
54
423
290
210
228
96
306
404
349
290
146
121
165
213
258
93
137
38
96
89
140
47
122
162
217
194
175
75
193
161
302
41
162
148
486
317
281
356
215
277
Precinct 7.
302
435
391
143
59
317
407
343
266
410
357
644
227
273
143
101
206
349
<1
209
84
75
376
252
114
45
185
127
163
60
142
426
255
311
273
379
165
Precinct 8.
347
433
286
197
65
320
308
268
487
236
198
304
105
257
oi si
S «
148
117
46
323
244
224
139
111
524
381
226
325
427
282
MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
Vote for Mayor by Precincts, December 10, 1901. — Concluded.
As Beported by the Board of Election Commissioners,
Ward.
Precinct 9.
154
195
241
276
166
320
107
246
Grand Total 52,035 33,196 426 957 1 86,615
1,736
2,805
2,095
1,489
1,604
2,506
1,442
2,521
2,513
1,079
1,072
1,503
2,794
2,593
2,207
1,774
2,630
2,255
3,295
2,452
1,838
2,175
1,917
2,019
1,721
Total.
1,875
795
617
649
625
559
486
661
757
2,019
2,112
1,571
439
1,308
866
1,425
950
998
891
3,033
2,419
1,909
2,033
2,515
1,684
.CO
a«
"SO
3,656
3,633
2,745
2,156
2,255
3,092
1,973
3,291
3,336
3,140
3,201
3,129
3,271
3,970
3,133
3,250.
3,621
3,321
4,294
5,540
4,302
4,192
4,042
4,609
3,463
* Elected.
D. eignifles Democratic. R., Republican. S..L., Socialist Labor. D. S., Demo
cratic Social.
YOTE FOR ALDERMElSr.
283
Vote for Aldermen, December 10, 1901.
As Reported by the Board of Election Commissioners.
FIRST I»ISTRICT. — T*^ards 1 and 2.
Precincts.
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
Total.
liincoln G. Demond, R.. .
Ward 1...
Ward 2 . . .
206
123
270
68
344
141
337
111
236
100
106
156
222
102
168
117
129
2,018
918
Total...
329
338
485
448
336
262
324
285
129
2,936
John L. KeUy,* D
Ward 1...
Ward 2...
82
359
63
264
96
326
90
323
202
269
338
256
288
406
323
420
103
1,585
2,623
Total....
441
327
422
413
471
594
694
743
103
4,208
William J. Powers, D. S..
Ward 1...
Ward 2...
8
7
1
7
4
5
1
6
4
3
17
2
6
6
6
12
2
44
48
Total....
10
8
9
7
7
19
12
18.
2
92
SECOIV© DISTRICT. — ^Vaids 3, 4, and 5.
,Ward 3...
Ward 4...
Ward 5...
196
65
168
86
132
88
102
132
27
41
99
80
33
26
72
16
90
74
474
John F. Briry R
544
509
Total....
429
306
261
220
131
180
1,527
Ward 3...
Ward 4...
Ward 5...
9
12
7
9
6
11
14
6
19
21
15
13
12
10
28
10
12
22
75
John T. Galvin, D. S
61
100
Total....
28
26
39
49
50
44
236
Ward 3...
Ward 4...
Ward 5...
137
311
136
377
164
381
326
243
384
478
257
150
476
302
295
332
198
237
2,126
1,475
1,583
Edward L. Quigley,* D..
Total....
584
922
953
885
1,073
767
5,184
Elected.
284
MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
Vote for Aldermen, December 10, 1901. — Continued.
As Reported by the Board of Election Commissioners.
THIRD MSTRICT.— ^Vards 6 and 8.
Precincts.
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
Total.
Jos^ M. Aguayo, R
AVard 6...
Ward 8. . .
31
32
45
101
88
161
52
100
69
71
125
95
51
19
480
560
Total....
63
146
249
152
140
220
51
19
1,040
Martin M. Lomasney,* D.
AVard 6...
Ward 8...
254
484
294
346
287
125
274
390
279
439
93
497
274
241
1,996
2,281
Total....
738
640
412
664
718
590
274
241
4,277
Sanl Touvin, D. S.
AVard 6...
Ward 8. . .
12
30
21
31
16
15
14
51
20
64
2
51
16
12
113
242
Total....
42
52
31
65
84
53
16
12
355
Scattering
AVard 6. . .
Ward 8. . .
—
—
1
-
—
-
-
-
-
1
Total ...
-
-
1
-
-
-
-
-
1
FOURTH DISTRICT -
-Wards 7, »,
and
13.
Ward 7..
Ward 9..
Ward 13..
101
362
310
144
390
304
246
354
277
115
397
307
326
203
280
243
165
273
1,175
2,254
Patrick Bo wen,* D .
383
316
268
2,335
Total....
773
838
877
819
809
681
699
268
5,764
AVard 7..
AVard 9..
Ward 13..
7
35
18
10
28
15
27
17
13
20
22
23
12
22
22
18
13
23
94
William A. Buckley, D. S.
20
29
157
21
164
Total...
60
53
57
65
56
54
49
21
415
AVard 7..
Ward 9..
Ward 13..
74
61
57
50
71
36
81
18
37
80
65
53
26
145
49
30
137
69
341
John J. Dowling,
D. I.N.P.,R....
41
59
538
41
401
Total...
192
157
136
198
220
236
100
41
1,280
* Elected.
VOTE FOR ALDERMEN.
285
Vote for Aldermen,
As Beported by the
FOURTH
December 10, 1901. — Continued.
Board of Election Commissioners.
DISTRICT. — Concluded.
Pkecincts.
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
Total.
Ward 7..
Ward 9..
Ward 13..
11
34
21
13
19
16
37
17
14
19
18
18
28
13
16
30
9
27
138
William H. Mulcahey,
D. S
24
25
134
18
155
Total...
66
48
68
55
57
66
49
IS
427
Ward 7..
Ward 9..
-Ward 13..
78
86
29
71
87
23
107
16
22
117
75
38
28
180
43
38
155
45
439
44
41
643
35
276
Total...
. 193 181
145
280
251
238
85
35
1,358
Ward 7..
Ward 9..
Ward 13..
104
287
326
164
353
326
211
336
292
112
387
304
331
177
285
229
148
242
1,151
1,988
2,368
INIichael W. Norris,*D.. . .
350
323
270
Total...
717
848
839
753
793
619
673
270
5,507
Ward 7..
Ward 9..
Ward 13..
2
-
-
-
3
-
. -
5
Total...
2
-
-
-
-
3
-
-
5
FIFTH DISTRICT. —Wards lO and 19,
Precincts.
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
Total.
Thomas H. Dowd,* D....
Ward 10..
Ward 19..
179
300
128
286
61
470
34
350
36
218
68
302
83
549
138
430
67
794
2,905
Total...
479
414
531
384
254
370
632
568
67
3,699
Joseph Moffle, D. S
Ward 10..
Ward 19..
3
18
3
5
8
12
3
15
3
7
2
17
15
12
34
-
34
123
Total...
21
8
20
18
10
19
15
46
-
157
* Elected.
286
MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
Vote for Aldermen, December 10, 1901. — Continued.
As Reported by the Board of Election Commissioners.
FIFTH DISTRICT. — Concluded.
Precincts.
1 ,
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
Total.
William D.
Wright, R....
Ward 10..
Ward 19..
109
203
191
118
203
99
242
106
176
150
255
197
427
222
373
152
263
2,239
1,246
Total...
311
309
302
348
326
452
649
525
^63
3,485
SIXTH DISTRICT.— Wards 11 and 25.
John S. Patton.D
Ward 11..
Ward 25..
105
224
116
136
171
100
121
2-.'4
37
267
23
223
21
307
23
45
662
1,481
Total...
329
252
271
345
304
246
328
23
45
2,143
John A. Rice, D. S
Ward 11..
Ward 25. .
6
15
8
10
4
9
3
24
1
10
14
1
11
-
2
25
93
Total...
21
18
13
27
11
14
12
-
2
118
George HoldenTinkham,*
R
Ward 11..
Ward 25..
256
298
279
347
232
307
303
184
273
210
223
'288
293
191
284
324
2,467
1,825
Total...
554
626
539
487
483
511
484
284
324
4,292
SEVEJVTH DISTRICT. — Wards 12 and 18.
Ward 12..
Ward 18..
312
lie
256
135
126
199
206
194
179
102
165
148
95
1,339
894
Total...
428
331
325
400
281
313
95
2,233
Ward 12..
Ward 18..
50
3
45
5
23
4
38
9
43
3
12
8
17
228
R. C.N. P
32
Total...
53
50
27
47
46
20
17
260
Ward 12..
Ward 18..
137
401
87
341
173
253
192
395
168
488
410
400
310
1,477
2,278
James H. Doyle,* D
Total...
538
428
426
587
656
810
310
3,765
* Elected.
VOTE FOE ALDEKMEN,
287
Vote for Aldermen, December 10, 1901. — Continued.
As Reported by the Board of Election Commissioners.
SEVE]VTH BISTBICT. — Concluded.
Precincts.
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
Total.
Ward 12..
Ward 18..
9
11
7
9
6
17
6
6
4
8
19
15
6
57
William Wixted, D. S....
66
Total...
20
16
23
12
12
34
6
123
EIGHTH DISTRICT. — ^Vards 14 and 1.5.
Herman Hormel, R
Ward 14..
Ward 15..
85
43
46
49
106
76
159
89
194
95
160
145
168
123
186
112
1,104
732
Total...
128
95
182
248
289
305
291
298
1,836
Charles H. Slattery,* T>...
Ward 14..
Ward 15..
503
198
499
395
307
295
233
280
252
309
222
241
347
270
339
276
2,702
2,264
Total....
701
894
602
513
561
463
617
615
4,966
IVIiVTH BISTRICT.— Wards 16, 20, and 24.
Ward 16..
Ward 20..
Ward 24..
16
20
20
16
14
11
15
17
26
6
23
19
13
25
7
6
17
13
33
11
11
105
William R. Collom, D. S...
15
18
6
142
131
Total....
56
41
58
48
45
36
55
33
6
378
Ward 16..
Ward 20..
Ward 24..
183
426
248
240
407
203
303
300
381
269
194
242
222
367
285
329
521
219
155
456
398
1,701
Frederick W. Farwell,* R.
543
437
262
3,214
2,675
Total....
857
850
984
705
874
1,069
1,009
980
262
7,590
Ward 16..
Ward 20..
Ward 24..
125
266
277
229
289
214
307
263
213
102
326
226
182
310
124
60
225
190
344
173
157
1,349
2,023
1,763
James P. Kelly, D
171
202
160
Total....
668
732
783
654
616
475
674
373
160
5,135
* Elected.
288
MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
Vote for Aldermen, December 10, 1901. — Continued.
As BeportecL by the Board of Election Commissioners.
BfllVTH DISTRICT.— Conchided.
Precincts.
1
0
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
•Total.
Ward 16..
Ward 20..
Ward 24..
113
286
200
227
290
161
310
258
195
112
312
174
182
322
115
76
261
174
334
184
158
1,354
Henry B. Lovering, D —
199
190
137
2,112
1,504
Total....
599
678
763
598
619
511
676
389
137
4,970
Ward 16..
Ward 20..
Ward 24..
■107
379
161
114
394
199
181
275
365
255
173
239
212
382
278
316
498
216
150
448
389
1,335
George E. Miller,* R
544
454
260
3,093
2,561
Total —
647
707
821
667
872
1,030
987
998
260
6,989
TEIVTH DISTRICT. — TiVards 17 and 21.
WiUiam W. Davis, R
Ward 17..
Ward 21..
69
298
60
233
167
183
239
311
77
274
21
356
79
298
160
420
176
377
1,048
2,750
Total....
367
293
350
550
351
377
377
580
553
3,798
Andrew Kosmecki, D. S..
Ward 17..
Ward 21..
5
11
7
4
4
2
9
6
11
5
5
5
6
12
16
4
10
73
49
Total....
16
11
6
15
16
10
18
20
10
122
Timothy E. McCarthy,* D.
Ward 17..
Ward 21..
281
143
300
218
157
106
211
123
267
175
306
93
325
220
395
147
219
208
2,461
1,433
Total....
424
518
263
334
442
399
545
542
427
3,894
ELEVEafTH DISTRICT.— Wards 22 and 23.
John Bleiler, C
Ward 22..
Ward 23..
34
5
17
2
9
2
15
6
23
17
10
20
8
14
22
8
15
23
8
124
89
Total....
39
19
11
21
40
30
8
213
*
Elect
ed.
VOTE FOR ALDERMEN.
289
Vote for Aldermen, December 10, 1901. — Concluded.
As Reported by the Board of Election Commissioners .
EIiEVEiVTH 'DIST'RICT.— Concluded.
Precincts.
1
2
3
4 5
6
7
8
9
Total.
WilUam B. Heath,* D
Ward 22..
Ward 23..
425
173
369
311
323
276
258
334
326
296
153
231
174
172
275
138
166
2,303
2,097
Total....
598
680
599
592
622
884
346
413
166
4,400
William P. Meehan, R.. ..
Ward 22..
Ward 23..
277
148
77
147
72
198
264
157
159
283
226
251
263
183
240
259
90
1,578
1,716
Total...
425
224
270
421
442
477
446
499
90
3,294
Richard D. Schmidt, D. S.
Ward 22..
Ward 23..
26
2
11
2
5
4
17
4
23
21
8
9
4
2
3
3
92
52
Total....
28
13
9
21
44
17
4
5
3
144
* Elected.
Note. — R. signifies Republican; D., Democratic; D. S., Democratic Social; D.I.X.P.,R.,
Democraticlndependent Nomination Paper, Republican; R. C. M.P., Republican Citizens'
Nomination Paper; C, Citizens.
290
MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
Vote for School Committee, December 10, 1901.
As Reported by the Board of Election Commissioners,
For Three Years.
Ward.
j: Sec
■£ > ■
5
..a
|Wa2
1
a .
1-5
George E.
Brock,*
A.,R.
S
o
1
1
Q.
H .
1-5
bo
o
1
1-5
1
388
619
458
264
296
437
366
545
574
267
179
356
753
675
494
389
617
551
766
470
321
511
466
415
353
114
197
152
116
100
140
176
205
199
95
60
138
306
231
229
144
218
215
297
201
109
230
181
163
138
1,405
2,306
2,006
1,363
1,423
1,857
1,129
1,894
1,918
726
623
1,170
2,253
2,263
1,992
1,495
2,321
1,854
2,977
2,111
1,471
1.667
1,601
1,729
1,391
2,288
803
713
715
702
580
608
752
876
2,509
3,480
2,140
304
1,602
1,058
1,674
1,146
1,133
1,177
3,816
3,378
2,480
2,672
3,120
2,503
2,223
791
722
702
672
531
590
742
857
2,459
3,447
2,101
290
1,534
1,040
1,666
1,109
1,127
1,100
3,910
3,317
2,417
2,635
3,047
2,117
1,310
2,247
1,899
1,269
1,332
1,753
1,037
1,903
1,826
747
609
l,l.o2
2,081
2,101
1,805
1,413
2,178
1,779
2,717
1,792
1,373
1,586
1,528
1,626
1,307
804
277
298
249
217
219
246
299
339
764
730
742
125
676
442
507
433
473
411
1,230
1,258
777
900
1,035
711
267
412
324
199
195
258
184
419
353
140
85
224
427
401
303
264
446
361
494
379
219
319
335
308
258
96
2
123
3
66
4
58
5
63
6
92
7
78
8
120
9
110
10
56
11
53
12
86
13
127
14
103
15
119
16
73
17
125
18
125
19
170
20
21
137
61
22
184
23
120
24
100
25
69
Total
11,530
4,354
42,945
42,229
41,146
40,370
14,162
7,574
2,514
* Elected.
VOTE FOR SCHOOL COMMITTEE.
291
Vote for School Committee, December 10, 1901. — Continued.
As Reported by the Board of Election Commissioners.
For Three Tears. — Continued.
Ward.
f ■
■S 3 J
— . o> r
oWQ
g!^0
-^H^
1
2
3
i
5......
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
Total
89
117
74
59
53
86
75
107
128
49
35
72
108
92
131
65
116
147
272
112
75
187
135
110
87
79
106
70
61
55
87
67
96
101
28
37
65
98
90
117
61
95
93
134
98
52
133
104
96
69
2,092
2,201
777
693
670
665
522
604
797
850
2,477
3,459
2,095
291
1,530
1,039
1,662
1,102
1,103
1,070
3,913
3,330
2,451
2,622
3,048
2,114
41,085
1,327
2,226
1,943
1,358
1,346
1,704
1,080
1,824
1,808
721
607
1,100
2,273
2,325
2,198
1,486
2,213
1,803
2,878
2,076
1,339
1,593
1,495
1,647
1,350
41,720
173
274
186
125
112
231
117
260
262
94
72
142
288
248
213
145
284
242
319
217
123
204
221
199
193
4,944
323
479
432
318
272
304
316
427
369
177
142
264
608
603
504
323
563
453
686
468
279
404
■393
367
311
9,785
156
247
201
139
118
190
133
260
220
104
78
141
258
255
191
160
329
225
299
216
136
220
187
194
195
4,852
1,351
2,218
1,891
1,297
1,352
1,671
1,053
1,827
1,810
744
640
1,119
2,115
2,168
1,957
1,562
2,170
1,765
2,773
2,600
1,467
1,606
1,528
2,123
1,337
42,144
77
86
45
40
37
82
54
77
99
48
45
76
76
75
114
59
99
96
133
129
61
157
93
92
91
2,041
* Elected.
292
MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
Vote for
School Committee, December 10, 1901. — Continued.
Beported by the Board of Election Commissioners.
For Tlii-ee Years. — Conchtded.
"Ward.
J3Sp^
o
O
Phiueas
Pierce,*
I. AV. v., P.S.
A., D., R.
James J.
l.W. v., P.S.
A.,D., R.
_o
>>
■OOQ
.s
3
"S
o
m
1
2,201
759
686
668
643
504
575
739
833
2,459
3,434
2,064
300
1,515
1,032
1,664
1,104
1,032
1,090
3,987
3,327
2,375
2,606
3,100
2,085
1,888
1,304
1,083
935
945
934
744
1,184
1,233
2,133
3,037
1,873
1,009
1,879
1,367
1,752
1,620
1,396
2,179
3,423
3,856
2,508
2,474
2,683
1,898
58
64
53
39
35
50
51
72
64
33
35
62
66
77
111
54
91
88
123
63
43
134
99
108
45
265
460
458
309
304
346
268
415
364
176
131
227
577
560
410
335
548
421
712
451
266
412
384
332
330
2,588
1,706
1,448
1,146
1,134
1,059
997
1,457
1,561
2,695
3,658
2,564
1,028
2,467
1,742
2,145
1,890
1,688
2,219
4,484
3,868
3,040
3,185
3,590
2,543
2,471
1,399
1,119
993
989
931
817
1,257
1,349
2,580
3,.578
2,392
754
2,128
1,503
1,958
1,680
1,403
1,795
4,258
3,690
2,802
3,995
3,448
2,350
2,438
1,342
1,130
978
951
909
846
1.250
1,805
2,566
3,593
2,354
789
2,060
1,448
1,904
1,643
1,414
1,791
4,199
3,648
2,763
2,917
3,327
2,3.55
218
351
316
205
243
235
218
351
312
146
78
199
425
407
313
242
426
315
476
276
177
306
298
242
229
o
3..
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
4
11
3
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
3
24
25
1
Total
40,782
44,337
1,708
9,461
55,902
50,639
49,919
7,004
11
* Elected.
VOTE FOR SCHOOL COMMITTEE.
293
Vote for School Committee, December 10, 1901. — Concluded.
As Reported by the Board of Election Commissioners.
For One Year.
Wakd.
S<1
o •
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15...
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24........
2.5
Total
431
711
414
272
299
455
317
504
454
183
135
289
644
514
431
301
592
486
837
452
320
473
386
373
348
2,230
793
742
710
666
554
618
794
886
2,513
3,388
2,101
326
1,575
1,062
1,658
1,219
1,138
1,149
3,802
3,3.58
2,472
2,581
2,992
2,118
2,392
1,244
1,022
926
882
856
791
1,202
1,266
2,543
3,428
2,250
666
1,951
1,393
1,901
1,632
1,420
1,659
4,160
3,379
2,714
2,903
3,388
2,271
1,204
2,011
1,603
1,205
1,276
1,886
958
1,708
1,724
532
493
1,060
2,010
2,047
1,790
1,321
1,784
1,587
2,410
1,798
1,192
1,456
1,371
1,496
1,157
282
470
513
394
359
349
408
525
517
231
156
346
773
758
614
436
736
596
886
590
346
571
488
462
464
41,445
48,239
37,079
12,270
* Elected.
D. Signifles Democratic; D. S., Democratic Social; I.W.V., IndependentWomen
Voters; P. S. A., Public School Association ; R., Republican; S. L., Socialist Labor.
294
MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
Women Registered and Voting for School Committee.
1887.
1888.
1889.
1890.
0
u
to
■a
-a
o
!>
o
>
CD
O
'6
■I
0}
o
>
-d
m
o
>
"S
8
!h
<V
Ph
'6
£
"So
1
'6
o
>
'6
o
>
g
Ph
-d
s
00
ri
O
>
•d
.2
o
>
a
<o
U
CD
1....
49
44
89.80
1,123
1,076
95.81
694
653
94.09
587
557
94.89
2....
18
15
83.33
623
607
97.43
221
195
88.24
130
123
94.62
3....
10
7
70.00
973
945
97.12
422
407
96.45
331
807
92.75
4....
23
20
86.96
849
826
97.29
450
481
95.78
385
315
94.03
5....
11
11
100.00
670
653
97.46
364
355
97.53
242
224
92.56
6....
18
4
22.22
851
821
96.47
44
37
84.09
24
21
87.50
7....
4
2
50.00
275
268
97.45
32
28
87.50
25
20
80.00
8....
5
4
80.00
391
380
97.19
108
104
96.80
72
65
90.28
9....
27
23
85.19
591
565
95.60
866
8.51
95.90
254
243
95.67
10....
30
25
83.33
297
279
93.94
160
142
88.75
89
84
94.38
n....
93
84
90.32
866
824
95.15
562
565
100.54
425
394
92.71
12....
9
5
55.56
456
442
96.93
135
121
89.68
75
71
94.67
13....
4
4
100.00
695
680
97.84
101
80
79.21
48
43
89.58
14....
86
34
94.44
1,464
1,420
96.99
811
782
96.42
632
595
94.15
15....
24
24
100.00
1,006
985
97.91
405
887
95.56
801
286
95.02
16....
21
9
42.86
427
407
95.32
187
169
90.37
112
109
97.32
17....
39
38
97.44
752
729
96.94
431
400
92.81
320
307
95.94
18....
72
65
90.28
860
815
94.77
5.50
519
94.36
404
375
92.82
19....
14
12
85.71
711
689
96.91
374
863
97.06
2.52
236
93.65
•20....
34
29
85.29
1,207
1,159
96.02
699
666
95.28
521
491
94.24
21....
101
90
89.11
1,500
1,427
95.13
1,148
1,096
95.47
904
850
94.03
22....
8
7
87.50
516
491
95.16
255
258
101.18
252
236
93.65
23....
74
70
94.59
1,056
1,009
95.55
665
627
94.29
500
461
92.20
24....
79
68
86.08
1,721
1,634
94.94
1,129
1,057
93.62
884
783
98.88
25....
34
31
91.18
372
359
96.51
276
258
93.48
256
243
94.92
Tot'l
837
725
86.62
20,252
19,490
96.24
10,589
10,051
94.92
7,925
7,439
93.87
WOMEN REGISTEKED AXD VOTING. 295
Women Registered and Voting for School Committee. — Continued.
1891.
1....
2....
3....
4....
5....
9....
10....
11....
12....
13....
14....
15....
16....
17....
18....
19....
20....
21....
22....
23....
24....
25....
Tot'l
M
451
105
230
270
161
21
14
57
210
83
326
58
30
497
265
68
243
270
187
402
634
141
383
707
193
427
97
218
258
153
17
12
49
191
75
282
40
30
435
242
56
217
247
164
371
568
125
358
625
171
5,428
1892.
92.38
94.78
95.56
93t87
80.95
85.71
85.96
90.95
90.36
86.50
68.97
100.00
87.53
91.32
82.35
89.30
91.48
87.70
92.29
89.59
88.65
93.47
88.40
88.60
90.35
tf
785
186
381
385
288
27
12
80
372
127
609
94
46
761
420
94
446
514
333
255
694
1,038
399
9,992
1893.
761
180
367
368
277
20
12
75
347
118
569
90
45
782
408
86
423
475
316
636
928
244
664
986
383
9,510
96.94
96.77
96.33
95.58
96.18
74.07
100.00
93.75
93.28
92.91
93.43
95.74
97.83
96.19
97.14
91.49
94.84
92.41
94.89
96.66
93.93
95.69
95.68
94.99
95.99
95.18
738
177
387
393
298
37
21
93
341
124
614
74
45
875
462
101
456
508
35'
681
1,048
254
693
1,135
376
10,296
599
157
341
341
263
35
21
82
295
104
479
62
38
761
400
86
395
446
325
612
926
211
612
992
332
8,915
1894.
81.17
88.70
88.11
86.77
88.26
94.59
100.00
88.17
86.51
83.87
78.01
83.78
84.44
86.97
86.58
85.15
86.62
87.80
91.04
88.82
88.36
83.07
88.31
87.40
88.30
86.59
«
784
186
375
392
335
35
30
89
363
140
649
80
61
904
446
117
488
523
400
759
1,148
297
786
1,311
393
11,091
619
151
300
31'
233
29
27
66
266
110
451
65
46
743
341
94
381
395
325
617
919
234
642
1,058
304
8,733
78.95
81.18
80.00
80.87
69.55
82.86
90.00
74.16
73.28
78.57
69.49
81.25
75.41
82.19
76.46
80.34
78.07
75.53
81.25
81.29
80.05
78.79
81.68
80.70
77.35
78.74
296 MUNICIPAL KEGISTEE.
Women Registered and Voting for Scliool Committee. — Continued.
1895.
1896.
1897.
1898.
T3
3
m
'So
as
o
>
1
o
>
3
o
o
73
■fco
1
'6
o
o
o
>
S
Ph
1
"So
■d
a>
o
>
o
>
a
O
U
1
"So
4)
13
0)
o
>
o
a
o
a>
Ph
1....
848
667
78.66
694
406
58.50
627
392
62.52
569
354
62.21
2....
219
183
83.56
187
130
69.52
151
98
64.90
129
86
66.67
3....
389
299
76.86
318
180
56.60
281
159
56.58
247
149
60.32
4....
398
307
77.14
367
231
62.94
322
204
63.35
289
174
60.21
5....
336
239
71.13
285
157
55.09
226
121
53.54
196
106
54.08
6....
77
66
85.71
92
38
41.30
77
32
41.56
76
28
36.84
7....
38
30
78.95
173
102
58.96
138
75
54.35
139
82
58.99
8....
81
71
87.65
177
113
63.84
123
72
58.54
113
55
48.67
9....
391
262
67.01
271
159
58.67
221
133
60.18
196
121
61.73
10....
165
113
68.48
593
300
50.59
466
276
59.23
403
237
58.81
U....
733
479
65.35
453
249
54.97
403
220
54.59
435
265
60.92
12....
104
80
76.92
563
349
61.99
494
299
60.53
444
294
66.22
13....
70
50
71.43
75
50
66.67
lis
99
83.90
122
59
48.36
14....
983
798
81.18
629
433
68.84
593
406
68.47
520
346
66.54
15....
466
370
79.40
515
361
70.10
477
342
71.70
436
282
64.68
16....
140
95
67.85
472
290
61.44
411
237
57.66
359
184
51.25
17....
506
363
71.74
332
209
62.95
295
174
58.98
288
162
56.25
18....
583
438
75.13
308
197
63.96
263
167
63.50
251
160
63.75
19....
366
283
77.32
265
164
61.89
222
139
62.61
216
137
63.43
20....
743
556
74.83
732
464
63.39
691
425
61.51
661
333
50.38
21....
1,239
902
72.80
899
541
60.18
862
489
56.73
729
422
57.89
22....
315
235
74.60
419
296
70.64
332
245
73.80
333
235
70.57
23....
959
730
76.12
482
340
70.54
452
272
60.18
437
266
60.87
24....
1,484
1,116
75.20
651
428
65.75
650
406
62.46
641
348
54.29
25....
440
317
72.05
388
230
59.28
367
239
65.12
494
316
63.97
Tofl
12,073
9,049
74.95
10,340
6,417
62.06
9,262
5,721
61.77
8,723
5,201
59.62
WOMEN KEGISTEKED AND VOTING.
297
Women Registered and Voting for School Committee. — Concluded.
1899.
1900.
1901.
WAKD.
2
o
"bli
■6
o
•6
o
>
a
a*,
■6
9
1
1
'6
o
>
1
o
>
a
8
'6
9
'So
o
>
'6
o
>
a
1
2
611
124
276
279
187
90
145
139
211
476
800
550
121
471
453
446
344
240
230
876
890
446
547
828
605
419
88
190
169
107
46
98
86
130
308
620
368
66
309
292
320
237
172
155
597
651
333
344
595
390
68.58
70.97
68.84
60.57
57.22
51.11
67.59
61.87
61.61
64.71
77.50
66.91
.54.55
65.61
64.46
71.75
68.90
71.67
67.39
68.15
73.15
74.66
62.89
71.86
64.46
036
145
307
273
207
109
181
164
239
653
1,290
648
128
495
488
522
383
313
250
1,052
1,088
604
711
936
651
444
lis
227
173
141
65
143
115
177
528
1,083
510
82
- 374
381
403
249
230
189
824
853
513
565
705
450
69.81
81.38
73.94
63.37
68.12
59.63
79.01
70.12
74.06
80.86
83.95
78.70
64.06
75.56
78.07
77.20
65.01
73.48
75.60
78.33
78.40
84.93
79.47
75.32
69.12
690
201
444
350
225
270
296
181
294
779
1,539
810
139
622
553
539
426
379
591
1,417
1,248
767
947
1,109
776
473
151
326
246
157
223
228
113
211
564
1,170
603
88
497
414
392
303
279
497
1,087
926
622
682
799
569
68.55
75.12
3
73.42
4
70.29
5
69.78
6
82.59
7
77.03
8
62.43
9
71.77
10
72.40
11
76.02
12
74.44
13
63.31
14
79.90
15
74.86
16
72.73
71.13
18
73.61
84.09
20
76.71
74.20
22
81.10
23
72.02
24
72.05
73.32
Total
10,385
7,090
68.27
12,473
9,542
76.50
15,592
11,620
74.53
298
MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
Vote Cast on the Question : Shall Licenses Be Granted for the
Sale of Intoxicating Liquors in this City? Municipal
Election, December 10, 1901.
As Beported by the Board of Election Commissioners.
Ward.
Yes.
No.
Total.
Per cent,
registered
who voted.
10..
11..
12..
13..
14..
15..
16..
17..
18..
19..
20..
21..
22.,
23.,
24.,
25.,
Total.
1,716
1,918
1,506
1,046
1,255
1,536
992
1,835
1,680
1,706
2,012
1,656
1,448
1,876
1,494
1,630
1,904
1,653
2,392
2,798
2,171
2,279
1,967
2,002
1,262
43,734
1,280
857
805
657
587
502
578
765
921
850
769
983
1,013
1,469
1,126
1,053
1,132
869
1,181
2,025
1,354
1,273
1,407
1,866
1,876
27,198
2,996
2,775
2,311
1,703
1,842
2,038
1,570
2,600
2,601
2,556
2,781
2,639
2,461
3,345
2,620
2,683
3,036
2,522
3,.573
4,823
3,525
3,5.52
3,374
3,868
3,138
70,932
66.34
62.25
67.06
59.28
64.63
54.36
59.76
59.63
60.64
61.38
66.64
63.67
60.90
68.02
64.41
63.53
66.24
56.97
68.33
66.01
65.45
67.63
68.62
65.26
74.64
64.41
VOTE ON LICENSE.
299
Vote on License.
As Reported by the Board of Election Commissioners.
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
24.
25.
1896.
Yes.
Total
1,.523
1,746
1,223
1,190
1,244
1,729
1,363
1,915
1,605
1,548
1,832
1,603
1,679
1,694
1,520
1,419
1,825
1,482
1,859
1,447
1,670
1,831
1,611
1,350
1,503
39,411
No.
1,356
931
878
802
720
779
731
923
995
997
713
1,067
1,017
1,232
1,094
1,249
1,150
1,115
947
1,757
1,278
1,123
1,189
1,817
1,001
26,861
1897.
Yes.
1,727
2,059
1,333
1,148
1,330
1,806
1,175
1,961
1,694
1,820
2,103
1,754
1,802
1,870
1,583
1,593
1,922
1,602
2,242
1,884
2,010
2,054
1,866
1,688
1,693
No.
43,719
1,380
839
849
811
681
735
696
771
911
972
766
933
921
1,246
1,035
1,211
1,136
996
931
1,753
1,327
1,073
1,262
1,879
1,063
26,177
1898.
Yes.
1,473
1,525
1,126
886
1,038
1,532
865
1,467
1,312
1,157
1,603
1,156
1,242
1,509
1,142
1,306
1,567
1,250
1,849
1,604
1,506
1,792
1,451
1,281
1,429
34,068
No.
1,204
763
795
734
613
662
463
674
810
807
698
823
966
1,357
1,081
1,096
1,038
906
989
1,724
1,248
1,132
1,397
1,627
865
24,472
1899.
Yes.
1,469
1,556
1,084
910
927
1,176
807
1,386
1,184
1,475
1,697
1,289
1,239
1,848
1,410
1,438
1,584
1,389
2,066
2,174
1,839
1,952
1,670
1,689
1,364
36,622
No.
1,084
815
715
610
553
603
529
686
821
835
692
904
900
1,281
1,061
1,024
1,094
986
1,149
1,791
1,313
1,124
1,338
1,616
967
24,491
1900.
Yes.
1,469
1,556
1,084
910
927
1,176
807
1,386
1,184
1,475
1,697
1,289
1,239
1,848
1,410
1,438
1,584
1,389
2,066
2,174
1,839
1,952
1,670
1,689
1,364
36,632
No.
1,084
815
715
610
553
603
529
686
821
835
692
904
900
1,281
1,061
1,024
1,094
986
1,149
1,791
1,313
1,124
1,338
1,616
967
24,491
... 1
.... 2
.... 3
.... 4
.... 5
.... 6
.... 7
.... 8
.... 9
....10
....11
....12
....13
....14
....15
. ... 16
....17
....18
....19
....20
...21
....22
....23
....24
....25
Total
The vote for license in 1889 was : Yes, 27,134; No, 17,875. In 1890, Yes, 29,159; No, 13,910. In
1891, Yes, 25,648; No, 21,552. In 1892, Yes, 31,616; No, 30,476. In 1893, Yes, 30,145; No, 20,556. In
1894, Yes, 48,982; No, 28,570. In 1895, Yes, 41,648; No, 26,366.
300
MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
Vote Cast on the Question : Shall Chapter 332 of the Acts of
the Year 1901 entitled, "An Act Relative to the Terms of
Office of City Clerks," be Accepted? Municipal Election,
December 10, 1901.
^.s Eeported by the Board of Election Commissioners.
Yes.
No.
Total.
Per cent,
registered
who voted.
1
2
3
4
5
6
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
Total
1,136
1,139
941
663
764
1,129
643
1,327
1,064
1,052
1,155
1,069
1,007
1,114
1,025
1,167
1,399
1,089
1,445
2,030
1,478
1,461
1,318
1,548
1,023
620
653
680
448
434
397
407
551
624
426
385
784
755
1,244
727
701
820
875
1,062
1,046
667
760
671
945
803
1,756
1,792
1,621
1,111
1,198
1,526
1,050
1,878
1,688
1,478
1,.540
1,853
1,762
2,358
1,752
1,868
2,219
1,964
2,.507
3,076
2,145
2,221
1,989
2,493
1,826
38.88
40.20
47.04
38.67
42.04
40.70
39.97
43.07
39.. 36
35.49
36.90
44.70
43.60
47.95
43.07
44.23
48.42
44.36
47.94
42. 10
39.83
42.29
40.45
42.06
43.43
29,186
17,485
46,671
42.38
SUMMARY OF ELECTIOIs^S.
301
Summary of the Results of Elections held in Boston in 1901
STATE EliECTIOIV,* IVOVEMBER 5, 1901.
Possible Vote.
Actual Vote.
Per cent.
of Actual Vote to
Possible Vote.
For Governor
107,542
73,534
71,892
276,037
68,098
71,149
129,157
68 38
For Liieut.-Governor
107,542
430,168
107,542
107,542
215,084
66.85
For Other State Officers
64.17
63 32
For Senators
66.16
60.05
Total
1,075,420
689,867
64 15
MtJlVICIPAX, ELECTIOIV, DECEMBER lO, 1901.
Number
of Registered
Voters.
Number of
Names
Checked.
Per cent, of Names
Checked to
Registered Voters.
Men
110,131
15,592
88,883
11,620
80 71
74 53
Total
125,723
100,503
79 94
Possible Vote.
Actual Vote.
Per cent.
of Actual Vote to
Possible Vote.
For Mavor
110,131
110,131
138,544
110,131
110,131
330,393
1,257,230
86,615
82,889
102,606
70,932
46,671
231,931
767,487
78 65
For Street Commissioner
75 26
For Aldermen
74 06
On licensing sale of liquor
On term of office of City Clerks.. .
For Councilmen.
64.41
42.38
70 20
For School Committee
61 05
Total
2,166,691
1,389,131
64 11
* At the State Election 77,166 names were checked, or 71.75 per cent, of the number
of registered voters.
302
MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
Results of Municipal Election, 1901.
Ward.
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
Total
Possible
Vote.
4,516
4,458
3,446
2,873
2,850
3,749
2,627
4,360
4,289
4,164
4,173
4,145
4,041
4,918
4,068
4,223
4,583
4,427
5,229
7,306
5,386
5,252
4,917
5,927
4,204
110,131
ACTUAL Vote.
o
o
!4
<o
a
.2
9 S
a
o
a
o
3,656
3,524
2,996
3,633
3,396
2,775
2,745
2,643
2,311
2,156
2,081
1,703
2,255
2,162
1,842
3,092
2,678
2,038
1,973
1,840
1,570
3,291
3,095
2,600
3,336
3,138
2,601
3,140
2,998
2,556
3,201
3,079
2,781
3,129
3,C49
2,639
3,271
2,949
2,461
3,970
3,824
3,345
3,133
3,056
2,620
3,250
3,115
2,683
3,621
3,497
3,036
3,321
3,139
2,522
4,294
4,087
3,573
5,540
5,481
4,823
4,302
4,217
3,525
4,192
4,062
3,552
4,042
3,936
3,374
4,609
4,527
3,868
3,463
3,316
3,138
86,615
82,889
70,932
oJS
1,756
1,792
1,621
1,111
1,198
1,526
1,050
1,878
1,688
1,478
1,540
1,853
1,762
2,358
1,752
1,868
2,219
1,964
2,507
3,076
2,145
2,221
1,989
2,493
1,826
46,671
For
Aldermen.
4,516
4,458
3,446
2,873
2,850
3,749
5,254
4,360
8,578
4,164
4,173
4,145
8,082
4,918
4,068
8,446
4,583
4,427
5,229
14,612
5,386
5,252
4,917
11,854
4,204
138,544
3,647
3,589
2,675
2,080
2,192
2,589
3,338
3,084
5,714
3,067
3,154
3,101
5,704
3,806
2,996
5,844
3,582
3,270
4,274
10,584
4,232
4,097
3,954
8,634
3,399
102,606
* In Wards 7, 9, 13, 16, 20, and 24, electors may vote for two Aldermen.
RESULTS OF MUNICIPAL ELECTIOISr, 1901. 303
Results of Municipal Election, 1901. — Continued.
Ward.'
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
13
IS
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24..
25
Total
For Councilmen.
,548
,374
,338
,619
550
,247
,881
,080
,867
,492
519
435
123
754
,204
669
749
,281
,687
918
158
756
751
781
612
330,393
9,949
9,611
7,619
5,791
5,901
7,295
4,686
8,752
8,376
8,316
8,905
8,705
8,150
10,620
8,499
8,651
10,069
8,495
11,362
15,687
11,754
11,205
11,410
12,682
9,431
231,921
For School Com-
mittee.
52,060
46,590
38,900
32,230
30,750
40,190
29,230
45,410
45,830
49,430
57,120
49,550
41,800
55,400
46,210
47,620
50,090
48,060
58,200
87,230
66,340
60,190
58,640
70,360
49,800
1,257,230
33,337
26,919
22,760
17,782
17,736
19,812
15,521
24,012
24,567
31,001
39,518
30,964
22,148
34,910
27,162
28,819
30,529
26,529
35,999
55,818
44,839
39,151
39,906
44,960
32,788
767,487
* Possible vote for Councilmen equals number of registered voters multiplied by 3.
t Possible vote for School Committee equals aggregate number of registered voters
(male and female, see p. 223) multiplied by 10.
304 MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
Results of Municipal Election, 1901. — Concluded.
Per cent, of Actual to Possible Vote.
Ward.
aj .
o ^
'j^^
OS
©s
*-!
^<H
c;
a o
O
O
a? S
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
Total
78.03
66.34
38.88
76.18
62.25
40.20
76.70
67.06
47.04
72.43
59.28
38.67
75.86
64.63
43.04
71.43
54.36
40.70
70.04
59.76
39.97
70.99
59.63
43.07
49.85
60.64
39.36
72.00
61.38
35.49
73.78
66.64
36.90
73.56
63.67
44.70
72.98
60.90
43.60
77.76
68.02
47.95
75.12
64.41
43.07
73.76
63.53
44.23
76.30
66.24
48.42
70.91
56.97
44.36
78.16
68.33
47.94
75.02
66.01
42.10
78.30
65.45
39.83
77.34
67.63
42.29
80.05
68.62
40.45
76.38
65.26
43.06
78.88
74.64
43.43
75.26
64.41
43.38
80.76
80.51
77.63
73.40
76.91
69.06
63.53
70.73
66.61
73.66
75.. 58
74.81
70.58
77.39
73.65
69.19
78.16
73.86
81.74
73.43
78.57
78.01
80.41
73.84
80.85
73.44
71.86
73.70
67.19
69.02
64.86
59.46
66.91
65.10
66.57
71.13
70.00
67.23
71.98
69.64
68.38
73.23
63.96
73.43
71.57
73.74
71.13
77.35
71.33
74.78
64.04
57.78
58.51
55.17
57.68
49.30
53.10
53.88
53.60
62.72
69.18
63.49
53.99
63.01
58.77
60.52
60.95
55.20
61.85
63.99
67.59
65.05
68.05
63.90
65.84
74.06
70.20
61.05
VOTES ON REFERENDA. 305
Votes on Acts and Questions Submitted to the People.
Chapter 110, Acts of i<?^i. — "An Act to Establish the Citv of
Boston." Adopted March 4, 1822. Yes, 2,797; no, 1,881.
Resolve of the Common Council of November 26, 1844. — Four propo-
sitions were submitted to the people December 9, 1844:
1. Whether the people were in favor of procuring a supply of water,
at the expense of the city, from Long Pond in Natick and Framingham
or from any of the sources adjacent thereto. Adopted. Yes, 6,".i60;
no, 2,204.
2. Whether the people would instruct the City Council to ai:)ply to
the Legislature for suitable legislation to carry the first proposition
into effect. Adopted. Yes, 6,252; no, 2,207,
3. Whether the people were in favor of procuring a supply of water,
at the expense of the city, from any other source which might be there-
after decided upon by the City Council. Defeated. Yes, 1,206; no, 7,081.
4. Whether the people would instruct the City Council to apply to
the Legislature foT suitable legislation to carry the third proposition
into effect. Defeated. Yes, 1,194; no, 7,144.
Chapter 167, Acts of 1846. — '■'■ An Act for Supplying the City of
Boston with Pure Water." Adopted April 13, 1846. Yes, 4,637; no,
348.
Chapter 448, Acts of 1854. — " An Act to Revise the Charter of the
City of Boston." Adopted November 13, 1854. Yes, 9,166; no, 990.
Chapter 185, Acts of 1875. — " An Act for the Laying Out of Public
Parks in or near the City of Boston." Adopted June 9, 1875. Yes,
3,706; no, 2,311.
Chapter 41-, Resolves of 1889. — Proposed Article of Amendment to the
Constitution "Forbidding the Manufacture and Sale of Intoxicating
Liquors to be used as Beverage." Defeated April 22, 1889. Yes,
10,669; no, 31,699.
Chapter 473, Acts of 1893. — "An Act relating to the Election of
Members of the Board of Aldermen." Adopted November 7, 1893.
Yes, 26,955; no, 19,622;
Chapter 481, Acts of 1893. — " An Act to Provide for Rapid Transit in
Boston and Vicinity." Defeated November 7, 1893. Yes. 24,012:
no, 27,588.
Chapter 548, Acts of 1894. — "An Act to Incorporate the Boston
Elevated Railway Company and to Promote Rapid Transit in the City
of Boston and Vicinity." Adopted July 24, 1894. Yes, 15,542; no,
14,162.
Chapter 436, Acts of 1895. — " Is it Expedient that Municipal Suffrage
be Granted to Women?" Defeated November 5, 1895. Yes, 22,401;
no, 42,502.
Chapter 410, Acts of 1896. — '' An Act Providing a Salary for the
Members of the Common Council of the City of Boston." Adopted
December 15, 1896. Yes, 35,152; no, 26,517.
Chapter 361, Acts of 1897. — " Act to Consolidate the Board of Alder-
men and the Common Council and to reorganize the City Government
of the City of Boston." Defeated November, 1897. Yes, 24,906:
no, 31,105.
306 MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
Chapter 344, ^cts of 1S99. — "An Act to Make Eight Hours a Day's
Work for City and Town Employees." Adopted December 12, 1899.
Yes, 60,386 ; no, 14,483.
Chapter 39S, Acts of 1S99. — "An Act to Authorize the Replacing of
Street Car Tracks on Boylston and Tremont Streets in the City of
Boston." Defeated December 12, 1899. Yes, 26,166 ; no, 51,643.
Chapter 33£, Acts of 1901.— ''An Act Relative to the Terms of Office
of City Clerks.'' Adopted December 10, 1901. Yes, 29,186; no, 17,485.
INDEX.
Page
A
Acts sulDinitted to people —
Vote on, 1821-1901 305,306
Aldermanic districts 120
Aldermen, Board of —
Chairmen of, 1855-1902 176, 177
Clerk of 10
Meetings, time of 14
Members of, 1892-1901 165-174
Past and present members of, 180-181
Present members of 9,10
Rules and orders of 15-18
Salary of members of 9
Special committees of 31
Standing committees of 31
Summary of vote for, 1901. .301, 302, 304
Vote for, by precincts, 1901... 283-289
Animals, Inspector of 55
Annexations 6
Appeal, Board of 94
Appointments, method of —
Executive officers 36, 37
Other officers 91, 92
Appropriation s —
Committee on 32
Met by taxes and general rev-
enue, 1885-1902 235
Architectural Division 73
Area —
Boston, by wards 212
Boston, land, flats and water, 222, 225
Islands in harbor. ... 213, 214
Armories and Military Affairs —
Committee on 31
Art Department 93
Committee on 32
Assessed polls. See Statistics.
Assessing Department 38
Committee on 32
Assessment districts 39-43
Assessors' statistics, 1901 233, 234
Auditing Department 43
Committee on 32
Page
B
Bacteriological Laboratory, direc-
tor of 55
Badges —
Committee on 31
Bark and wood. Measurers of 107
Bath Department 44
Committee on 32
Bath-houses, list of 44, 45
Beef, Weighers of 103
Births, Registrar of 78
Board of Aldermen. See Alder-
men, Board of.
Boilers and heavy machinery.
Weighers of 103, 104
Boston and Cambridge Bridges
Commission 94
Boston, City of —
Aldermanic districts 120
Animal inspector 55
Annexations 6
Appropriations met b.y taxes
and general revenue, 1885-
1902 235
Area by wards 212
Area, islands in harbor 213, 214
Area, land, flats and water. . . 222, 225
Assessed polls. See Statistics.
Assessors' statistics 233, 234
Bacteriological laboratory,
director of 55
Bridges of 70,71, 81-85, 95
Cemeteries of 47
Charter adopted 6
City Council, past and present
members 180-206
City Government, 1902 9-14
City Governments, 1892-1901. . 165-174
City Physician 55
Congressmen 210
Congressional districts 210
Constables 105, 106, 113
Consuls in 211
308
MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
Page
Boston, City of.— Continued.
Collateral Loan Company — 96
Cows, number of '233
Debt statistics 238, 239
Departments of. See Depart-
ments of the city.
Diphtheria culture stations.. . -57, -58
Election statistics. See Sta-
tistics.
ExecutiTB departments, list
of 38-90
Executive otlicers, salary,
term of oflice, etc ■ 36,37
Expenditures, 1874-1901 236
Horses, number of 233
Hotels and houses taxed 233
Interest aud sinking-funds... 237-242
Islands in Harbor 213, 214
Justices of the peace to solem-
nize marriages 101-103
Lamps, di stribution of 62
Mayors of, 1822-1902 175, 176
Medical examiners 103
Medical inspectors 55
Milk and vinegar inspector.. .55
Morgue 58
Municipal courts of 98-101
Otlicers paid by fees 103-107
Officers of, other than execu-
tive 91-119
Old South Association 107
Orators of 207, 208
Origin of 6
Parks, boulevards and play-
grounds 69, 74-77
Pedlers, Superintendent of... 55
Pilot Commissioners 107
Population, 163S-1900 216
Population, 1885, 1890, 1895.... 217, 218
Population of, 1900 215, 225
Population by precincts, 1900, 228-232
Population per acre of land.. 222
Police pepartment 108-110
Port Physician 55
Port statistics 220
Precinct lines 132-164
Prison 110
Probation officers of 101
Provisions inspectors 55
Public grounds in 74
Public officers, salary, term of
ottice, etc 36, 37, 91, 92
Referenda, votes on, 1821-1901, .305, 306
School census, 1901 219, 225
School Department 110-117
School tax, 1885-1901 234
Schools, list of 112, 116,117
Page
Boston, City of. — Continued.
Schools, teachers and pupils, 115
Seal of 7
Sinking-funds and interest. .. 237-242
Special Law Department 117
State election statistics. See
Statistics.
Statues, monuments and foun-
tains 71, 77
Stores taxed 233
Taxes and valuation, 188.5-
1901 234
Taxes and valuation, 1901 224, 227
Tax-rates, 188.5-1901 234
Truant officers 113, 114
Undertakers in 117-119
Vacant houses 233
Valuation and taxes, 1885-1901, 234
Valuation and taxes, 1901 224, 227
Votes. See Statistics.
Voting Machine Commission-
ers 119
Ward lines 121-131
Ward-rooms in 73
Water debt 241, 342
Working-men's Loan Associa-
tion 119
Bridge Division 80
Bridges 70, 71, 81-85, 95
Brighton —
Annexation of , etc 6
Municiiml Court 99
Building Department 45
Committee on 32
Building limits 46
Buildings taxed, 1901 233
Bunker Hill Day, Committee on.; 35
C
Cambridge and Boston Bridges
Commission 94
Cambridge Bridge Commission.. 96
Carriages, Inspector of 109
Cemeteries 47
Cemeterj' Department 46
Committee on 32
Charlestown —
Annexation of, etc 6
Municipal Court 99
Children's Institiitions Depart-
ment.: 47
City and county debt 238-240
City Clerk Department 48
Committee on 32
City Clerks, term of office —
Vote on, 1901 300, 301, 302, 304
INDEX.
309
Page
City Council —
Joint special committees of. . . 35
Joint standing committees of, 32-35
Past and present members of, lSO-206
Present members of 9-14
Rules and orders 26-80
Stenographer of 14
City Departments. See Depart-
ments of the city.
City Election Statistics. See Sta-
tistics.
City Government, 1902—
Aldermanic rules and orders
of 15-18
Committees of 31-35
Common Council rules and
orders 19-25
Joint rules and orders 26-30
City Hall, Committee on new 35
City Messenger Department 48
Committee on 32
City of Boston. See Boston, City
of.
City Physician 55
City Solicitor 63
Claims —
Committee on 32
Inspector of 109
Clerk of Committees Department, 49
Committee on 32
Coal, Weighers of 104
Coastwise arrivals 220
Cochituate water debt 241
Collateral Loan Company 96
Collecting Department 49
Committee on 32
Committees, Clerk of 49
Committees of City Government,
1902 31-35
Common Coimcll —
Clerkof 12
Meetings, time of 12
Members of, 1892-1901 165-174
Past and present members of, 185-206
Presidents of, 1822-1902 178, 179
Rules and orders of 19-25
Standing committees of. 31
Special committees of 31
Summary of vote, 1901. . . .301, 303, 304
Common Council, against aboli-
tion of —
Committee on 31
Congress of the United States —
Massachusetts delegation to.. 210
Congressional districts concern-
ing Boston 210
Constables 105, 106, 113
Page
Consuls in Boston 211
Corporation Counsel 63
Councillors —
Summary of vote for, 1901 301
County accounts, Committee on.. 31
County Commissioners 96
County and city debt 238-240
County officers —
Auditor 96
Commissioners 96
District Attorney 96
Index Commissioners 97
Register of Deeds 97
Sheriff 97
Treasurer 96
Court of Land Registration 97
Court officers —
Justices of Police, Justices'
and Municipal Coui'ts 209
Municipal Courts :
Boston proper 98
Brighton 99
Charlestown 99
Dorchester 99
EaslBoston 100
Roxbury 100
South Boston 100
West Roxbury 101
Probate and Insolvency
Court :
Clerkof 98
Judges of 98
Registers of 98
Probation officers 101
Superior Court, civil business :
Clerks of 98
Sten ographers of 98
Superior Court, criminal bus-
iness:
Clerks of 98
Stenographer of 98
Supreme Judicial Court:
Clerks of 97,98
Reporter of decisions 98
Cows, number of 233
Criminal investigation, bureau of, 108
D
Deaths, Registrar of 78
Debt —
City of Boston 238, 239
Cochituate water 241
County .. 240
Mystic water 242
Summary 237, 238
Deeds, Register of 97
310
MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
Page
Departments of the city —
Art 93
Assessing 38
Auditing 43
Batli 44
Board of Appeal 94
Boston and Cambridge
Bridges 94
Building 45
Cambridge Bridge 96
Cemetery 46
Children's Institutions 47
City Clerk 48
City Messenger 48
Clerk of Committees 49
Collecting 49
Election 49
Engineering 50
Fire 50
Health 54
Hospital 59
Insane Hospital 61
Institutions Registration 61
Lamp 62
Law 63
Library 63
Market 67
Mayor 38
Music 67
Overseeing of the Poor 67
Park 68
Pauper Institutions 71
Penal Institutions 72
Police 108-110
Printing 72
Public Buildings 72
Public Grounds 74
Registry 78
School 110-117
Schoolhouse 78
Sinking-funds 79
Soldiers' Relief 79
Special Law 117
Statistics , 80
Street 80
Street Laying-out 87
Transit 95
Treasury 87
Vessels and Ballast 88
Voting Machine 119
"Water 88
Weights and Measures 88
Wire 89
Diphtheria culture stations 57
District Attorney 96
Dorchester —
Annexation of, etc 6
Municipal Court 99
Page
Dwelling-houses, 1901 —
Erecting 233
Taxed 233
Vacant 233
E
East Boston, Municipal Court — 100
Election Department 49
Committee on 32
Election Statistics. See Statistics.
Elections, Committee on 31
Electric wires. Committee on 31
Engineering Department 50
Committee on 33
Evaciiation Day, Committee on.. 35
Executive Departments, List of.. 38-90
Executive officers —
Salary, term of office, etc 36, 37
Expenditures, 1874-1901 236
Exports and imports 220
F
Faneuil Hall, etc., Committee on.. 31
Fence viewers 106
Ferry Division , 85
Field drivers and poimd keepers, 106
Finance, Committee on 33
Fire apparatus 52-54
Fire Department 50
Committee on 33
Fire districts 51
Fountains, monuments and
statues 71,77
Fourth of July —
Committee on 35
Orators 207, 208
Franklin Fund, Committee on 31
G
Governor —
Assessed polls, registration
and vote for, 1891-1901 243-248
Registration and vote for,
1889-1901 2.53-262
Summary vote, 1901 301
Grain, Measurers of 106
Gymnasia, list of 45
H
Harbor of Boston —
Improvement of, committee
on 31
Islands in 213,214
Pilot Commissioners 107
Harbor Master 109
Hay and straw. Inspectors of
pressed 106
Hay scales. Superintendents of.. . 106
INDEX.
311
Page
Haymarket square relief station.. 61
Health Department 54
Animal inspector 55
Bacteriological laboratory,
director of 55
City Physician 55
Committee on 33
Diphtheria culture stations... 57,58
Medical inspectors 55
Milk and vinegar inspector. . . 55
Morgue 58
Port Physician 55
Provisions inspectors 55
Undertakers 117-119
High schools 112
Horses, number of 233
Hospital Department 59
Committee on 33
Relief station, Haymarket
square 61
Staff of 59
Hotels taxed, 1901 233
Houses, 1901 —
Erecting 233
Taxed -233
Vacant 233
Imports and exports 220
Index Commissioners 97
Insane Hospital Department 61
Insane persons, officer to trans-
port 107
Insolvency and Probate Court —
Clerk of 98
Judges of 98
Registers of : 98
Institutions Department —
Committee on 33
Institutions Registration Depart-
ment 61
Interest and sinking-funds 237-242
Introduction 5
Islands in Boston Harbor 213, 214
J
Jailer and Sheriff 97
Joint rules and orders 26-30
Joint special committees 35
Joint standing committees 32-35
Judiciary, Committee on 31
July Fourth —
Conunittee on 35
Orators on 207, 208
June Seventeenth, Committee on.. 35
Justices of Police, Justices' and
Municipal Courts 209
Page
Justices of the peace to solemnize
marriages 101-103
L
Labor Day, Committee on 35
Lamp Department 62
Committee on 33
Lamps —
Committee on 31
Distribution of 62
Land Registration, Court of 97
Law Department 63
Special 117
Law Department and Ordi-
nances, Committee on 33
Leather, Measurers of upper 107
Legislative matters, Committee on 33
Library Department 63
Branch libraries 65
Central library .- 65
Committee on 33
Delivery stations 66
System of 64
Licenses, Committee on 31
Lieutenant-Governor —
Summary of vote for, 1901 301
Liquor licenses —
Summary of vote on, 1901. .301, 302, 304
Vote on, 1889-1901 298, 299
Lime, Inspector of 106.
M
Marble, freestone and soap-
stone, Surveyor of 106
Market Department 67
Committee on 33
Markets, Committee on 31
Marriages —
Justices of the peace to sol-
emnize 101-103
Registrar of 78
Massachusetts delegation to Con-
gress 210
Mayor —
Assesssed polls, registration
and vote for, 1891-1901,
243-248, 276-279
Department of 38
Registration and vote for,
1891-1901 269-271
Salary of — 9
Summary of vote lor, 1901, 301, 302, 304
Vote for, 1888-1901 272-275
Vote for, by precincts, 1901.... 280-282
Mayors —
List of, 1822-1902 175, 176
Place and date of birth of — 175, 176
312
MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
Page
Mayor's Address, Committee on.. 35
Medical examiners 103
Medical inspectors 65
Memorial Day, Committee on 35
Milk and vinegar inspector 55
Monuments, statues and foun-
tains 71 , 77
Morgue 58
Municipal Courts —
Boston itroper 98
Brighton 99
Charlestown 99
Dorchester 99
East Boston 100
Koxbury ... 100
South Boston 100
AVest Roxbury 101
Municipal Election. See Statis-
tics.
Municipal Register —
Introduction 5
Music Department 67
Committee on 33
Mystic water debt 242
N
Normal School 112
O
Old South Association in Boston.. 107
Orators of Boston 207, 208
Ordinances and Law Depart-
ment, Committee on 33
Origin of City of Boston 6
Overseeing of Poor Department.. 67
Committee on 33
Park Department 68
Bridges of 70
Committee on 33
Statues and fountains of 71
Parks, boulevards and play-
grounds 69
Patriots' Day, Committee on 35
Pauper Institutions Department. . 71
Paving Division 85
Pedlers, Superintendent of 55
Penal Institutions Department ... 72
Petroleum, Inspectors of 107
Pilot Commissioners 107
Playgrounds, parks and boule-
vards 69
Police, Committee on 34
Police Department 108-110
Police stations 109
Polls assessed. Sec Statistics.
Page
Poor Department, Overseeing of, 67
Committee on 33
Population —
Boston, 1638-1900 216
Boston, 1885, 1890, 1895 217, 218
Boston, 1900 215, 225
Boston, 1900, by precincts.... 228-232
Boston, per acre of land 222
Port Physician 55
Port statistics 220
Poimd keepers and field drivers.. 106
Precinct lines 132-164
Precinct population, 1900 228-232
President —
Assessed polls, registration
and vote for, 1892-1900 243-247
Registration and vote for,
1880-1900 249, 250
Vote for, 1888-1900 251, 252
Printing, Committee on 34
Printing Department 72
Prison, City 110
Prison inspection. Committee on, 31
Probate and Insolvency Court —
Clerk of 98
Judges of 98
Registers of 98
Probation officers 101
Provisions inspectors 55
Public Buildings Department — 72
Architectural Division 73
Committee on 34
Public buildings in charge of, 73
Public Grounds Department 74
Committee on 34
Statues, monuments and foun-
tains 77
Public improvements —
Committee on 31
Public Lands, Committee on 34
Public officers 36-119
Public Schools —
Holidays and vacations 116
List of 112, 116, 117
Medical inspectors 55-57
Teachers and pupils, number
in 1902 115
Q
Quarantine grounds 55
R
Railroad bridges 83-85
Railroads, Committee on 31
Referenda, votes on, 1821-1901. . . . 305, 306
Register of Deeds 97
Registered voters. See Statistics,
INDEX.
313
Page
Registry Department 78
Committee on 34
Relief Station, Hay market square, 61
Representatives —
Summary of vote for, 1901 — 301
Roxbury —
Annexation of, etc 6
Municipal Court 100
Rules and Orders —
Board of Aldermen 15-18
Committee on 31
Committee on (joint) 35
Common Council 19-25
Joint 26-30
S
Salaries of public officers ...36, 37, 91, 92
Sanitary Division 86
Scales, Superintendents of hay.. 106
School Census, 1901 219, 225
School Committee —
Meetings, time of Ill
Summary of vote for, 1901,
301, 303, 304
Vote for by wards, 1901 290-293
Women registered and voting
1887-1901 294-297
School Department 110-117
Superintendent 113
Supervisors 113
Truant officers 113, 114
School-house Department 78
School tax, 1885-1901 234
Schools —
Holidays and vacations of 116
List of 112, 116, 117
Medical inspectors of 55
Teachers and pupils, number
in 1902 115
Schools and School-houses —
Committee on 34
Seal of City of Boston 7
Senators —
Summary of vote for, 1901 301
Sewer Division 86
Sheriff and jailor 97
Sinking-funds and interest 237-242
Sinking-funds Department 79
Small-pox Hospital, removal of —
Committee on 35
Soldiers' Relief Department 79
South Boston, Municipal Court.. 100
Special Law Department 117
State Aid, Committee on 31
State Election. See Statistics.
Statistics Department 80
Committee on 34
Page
Statistics —
Appropriations met by taxes
and general revenue, 1885-
1902 235
Area of Boston 212
Area of Boston, land, flats
and water 222, 225
Assessors', 1901 233, 234
Boulevards, etc 69, 74-77
Bridges 70, 71, 81-85, 95
Buildings taxed 233
Cochituate water debt 241
Debt, series of years 237-242
Executive officers, salary,
term of office, etc 36, 37
Expenditures, 1874-1901 236
Hotels taxed 233
Houses erecting, taxed and
vacant 233
Imports and exports 220
Islands in Boston Harbor — 213, 214
Lamps, number of 62
Monuments, statues, etc 71, 77
Municipal Election :
Aldermen, summary vote
for, 1901 301, 302, 304
Aldermen, vote for by pre-
cincts, 1901 283-289
Assessed polls, 1895-1901 .... 276-279
Assessed polls, 1901 223, 226
Assessed polls, 1901, by pre-
cincts 228-232
City Clerks, terms of office,
vote on, 1901 300, 301, 302, 304
Common Council, summary
vote for, 1901 301 , 303, 304
Liquor licenses, vote on,
1889-1901 298, 299, 301, 302, 304
Mayor, assessed polls, regis-
tration and vote for, 1891-
1901 243-248
Mayor, assessed polls, regis-
tration and vote for, 1895-
1901 276-279
Mayor, registration and vote
for, 1891-1901 269-271
Mayor, summary vote for,
1901 301, 302-304
Mayor, vote for, 1888-1901 . . . 272-275
Blayor, vote for by pre-
cincts, 1901 280-282
Referenda, votes on, 1821-
1901 305, 306
Registered voters, 1895 217
Registered voters, 1895-1901, 276-279
Registered voters, male and
female, 1901 223, 226
314
MUNICIPAL REGISTER.
Page
Statistics. — Continued.
Muiiici|)al Election.— Concluded.
Kegistered voters, male and
female, by precincts, I'JOl, 22S-232
School Committee, summary
vote for, 1901 301, 303, 304
• School Committee, vote for
by wards, I'JOl 200-293
School Committee, women
registered aud voting,
1SS7-1901 294-297
Sti'ect Commissioner, sum-
mary vote for, 1901 .... 301, 302, 304
Mystic water debt 242
Orators of Boston 207, 208
Parks, area of, etc 69, 74-77
Population of Boston, 1638-
1900 216
Population of Boston, 1885,
1890, 1895 217, 218
Population by precincts, 1900, 228-232
Popidation of Boston, 1900, by
nativity and sex 215, 225
Population per acre of land.. ' 222
Port statistics 220
Public grounds, area of 74-77
Public officers, list of, salaries,
manner of appointment,etc.,
36, 37, 91, 92
Referenda.votes on, 1821-1901.. 305, 306
School census, 1901 219, 225
School tax, 1885-1901 234
Schools, teachers and pupils. . 115
Sinking-funds and interest. . . 237-242
State Election :
Assessed polls, 1901 221
Assessed polls, registered
voters and vote, 1890-1901, 263-268
Councillors, summary vote
for, 1901 301
Governor, assessed polls,
registration and vote for,
1891-1901 243-248
Governor, registration and
vote for, 1890-1901 253-256
Governor, summary of vote 301
Governor, vote for, 1889-1901, 257-262
Lieutenant-Governor, sum-
mary vote for, 1901 301
President, assessed polls,
registration and vote for,
1892-1901 243-247
President, registration and
vote for, 1880-1900 249, 250
President, vote for, 1888-
1900 2.51,253
Registered voters, 1901 221
Registered voters, 1890-1901, 263-268
Page
Statistics. — Concluded.
State Election. — Concluded.
Representatives, summary
vote for, 1901 301
Senators, summary vote for,
1901 301
Tax-rates, 1885-1901 234
Valuation and taxes, 1885-
1901 234
Valuation and taxes, 1901.. .. 224, 227
Statues, fountains and monu-
ments 71, 77
Stores taxed, 1901 233
Straw and hay. Inspectors of 106
Street-cleaning Division 86
Street Commissioner —
Summary of vote for, 1901 . . 301 , 302, 304
Street Department —
Bridge Division SO
Central oilice 80
Committee on 34
Ferry Division 85
Paving Division 85
Sanitary Division 86
Sewer Divisiou 86
Street-cleaning Division 86
Street-watering Division 86
Street La>-ing-out Department 87
Committee on 34
Street-watering Division 86
Superior Court, civil business —
Clerksof 98
Stenographers of 98
Superior Court, criminal busi-
ness—
Clerks of 98
Stenographer 98
Supervisors of Schools 113
Supreme Judicial Court —
Clerks of 97, 98
Reporter of Decisions 98
Suffolk, County of —
Accounts, Committee on 31
Commissioners 96
Debt 240
Officers:
Auditor . . ; 96
Court of Land Registration, 97
District Attorney 96
Index Commissioners 97
Register of Deeds 97
Sheriff 97
Treasurer 96
T
Tax for schools, 1885-1901 234
Tax-rates, 1885-1901 234
Taxed buildings, 1901 233
INDEX.
315
Page
Taxes and general revenue —
Appropriations met by, 1885-
1902 235
Taxes and valuations, 1901 224, 227
Taxes and valuations, 1885-1901. . . 234
Transit Commission 95
Treasury Department 87
Committee on 34
Truant officers 113, 114
U
Undertakers, list of 117-119
United States Congress —
Massachusetts delegation to.. 210
Upper Lreather, Measurers of 107
V
Vacant dwellings, 1901 233
Valuation and taxes, 1901 224, 227
Valuation and taxes, 1885-1901 234
Vessels and Ballast Department.. 88
Committee on 34
Votes. See Statistics.
Voting Machine Commissioners . . 119
Page
Ward lines 121-131
Ward precincts 132-164
Ward-rooms 73
Water Debt —
Cocliituate 241
Mystic 242
Water Department 88
Committee on 34
Weights and Measures Depart-
ment 88
Committee on 34
West Roxbury —
Annexation of, etc 6
Municipal Court 101
Wire Department 89
Committee on 35
Women —
Registered and voting for
School Committee, 1887-1901, 294-297
Wood and Bark, Measurers of. . . 107
Workingmen's Loan Associa-
tion 119