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Long be Boston Financial Leader

(Photo by Bachrach)

Henry Parkman

For Years Treasurer of the Provident Institution for Savings, a Diréctor af Several Banks and Trusts and Active in Many Ways to Promote Busine’s and Worthy Public Institutions, Mr. Parkman Died at Phillips House Late Yesterday.

I

HENRY PARKMAN 74, BANKER, DIES

“Sie

Long Served as Treasurer of Provident Institu- tion for Savings

LAWYER, BUSINESS MAN, CIVIC LEADER

Funeral services for Henry Park- man, for years one of ‘Boston’s lead- ing citizens, who died Monday night at the Phillips House, Massachu- setts General Hospital, will be held tomorrow at2 o’clock in Trinity Cure,

Mr. Parkman, a lawyer by profession. had long been treasurer of the Provi- dent Institution for Sayings, Temple place. On both sides of his family he traced his ancestry to old New England stock. Born in Boston, May 23, 1850, he Was the son of Dr. Samuel Parkmah, noted physician of his day, and Mary | Eliot (Dwight) Parkman 4

HARVARD GRADUATE IN 1876

After preparing for college at the pri-- vate school of Epes Sargent Dixwell, he entered Harvard and was graduated in 1870, and from the law school four years later. He was immediateiy admitted to the bar. In 1873 was awarded the degree of master of arts,

He began his law career with the firm. of Russell & Putnam, but in 1882 en- tered into practice alone. His was- largely administration work and the handling of trust funds.

He entered politics in 1879) when he became a member of the Boston com-= mon council, serving five’ years. He was then elected state representative, serving in the House from 1887! to 1889. From 1892 to 1898, inclusive, he was a member of the state Senate.

Mr. Parkman was one of the leading Boston Republicans, serving for several years as chairman of the Republican city committee and taking an active part in both state’ and city elections. Gov. Greenhalge made him a member of the state prison commission in 1894, a position he held until 1915. For many

years he was chairman of the commis-

| Frances Parker of Newark. For many

jman, Jr, of 182 Beacon street, and, | three daughters, Mary BE. Peabody, wife.

| rence; Edith W. Homans, wife of Will- |

HAD MANY INTERESTS :

Mr. ‘Parkman was active in. many business . enterprises, which gradually took him away from active practice of | law. Besides being treasurer of the

| Provident Institution for Savings, he

was president and a member of the board of managers of the Adams Ner- vine Asylum, a member of the advisory council of the Boston Real Estate Bx- change, which body he had served as president; a trustee of the Fenway Stu- dios Trust, treasurer and a member of the board of managers of the Massa- chusetts Charitable Hye and War In- firmary, a director of the Massachu- setts Hospital Life Insurance Company, a director of thé Merchants National Bank, a ditector of the New Bngland Mutual Life Insurance Company and a trustee of the Municipal Real Estate Trust. :

He was a member of the Union, St. Botelph and The Brookline Country Clubs, the Hastern Yacht Club and the Boston Athletic Association; also many other organizations. 4 |

Mr. Parkman, on Aug. 21, 1890, at, Perth Amboy, N. J., married. Miss Mary

years they made their home at 15 Charles street, later at 56 Chester street. In recent years they lived as 30 | Commonwealth avenue,

Mrs. Parkman, two sons, Henry Park-

Franeis Parkman of Brookline, and of the Rev. Maleolm H. Peabody of Laws | iam P. Homans, and Penelope B. Gris- |

wold, wife of Roger Griswold, survive him. |

THE ‘BOSTON HERALD

A

ETE : 2 PUBLIC BEQUESTS IN HENRY PARKMAN WILL Public ®equests of $6000 are made in the ‘will, filed for probate yesterday, of Henry Parkman, treasurer of the Proyi- dent Institution for Savings. _ Bequests of $2500 each are made to the Massachusetts Charitable Eye and Har Infirmary and.the Adams’ Nervine Hospital. Another bequest of $1000 is} made-to the trustees of the endowment fund of Emmanuel Church. ley The residue is left in trust for the benefit of the testator’s widow and chil- dren, -

N—At “Phillipa House, Moaday: ; ah Parkman. Funeral services Church at 2 or o' clocks. Thursday,

OF

ees

= PARKMAN DIED AT PHILLIPS HOUSE MONDAY NIGHT

ecumbed ois “iliicke Which Was Pra longed Through Sev- eral Months |

\

Parkman, treasurer since 1895, Provident: Institution for Savings place and widely known in nking and business circles, died at the Phillips House of the etts General Hospital, after an @ months. Mr. Parkman was esident of this city and was on both his father's and his sides from early POW. England

8 born in Boston on May 23, 1850, son of ;Dr. Samuel Parkman

| Blot (Dwight) Parkman. His ther was Senator Jonathan

ith Harrison Gray Otis, helped

ap Beacon Hill asa residential see-

Giese heme was in Mount | opposite Walnut street.

1 great-great-grandfather,

r Parkman, was pastor of the

estboro, for more than fifty

er ancestor of Mr. Parkman,

mother’s side, was Governor Dud-|

of ‘the early provincial governors setts before the Revolution. an's father, as a young man, and assisted at the first oper- hich a patient was etherized at poe General Hospital.

ae receiyed his elementary es Chauncy Hall, also in Mr. School and under private tu-

er which he entered Harvard Col- During, his college days he was

in social affairs, as a member! sty Pudding Club and of the!

fitute of 1770. He was graduated in r ‘with the degree of A. B. Mr. Park-: sec quently took up the study of law | aa Law School and received

aie: of Li, B. in 18738. He took a

er of arts degree the following year.

entered the law office of Russell & d was admitted to the bar in

“1874. Slog while in college in the French ey wand after his graduation assisted ‘s cousin, Francis Parkman, the n the mite stp ut old French

r ERE. upon active prac= : ee building up a suc-

\Amendmen a chairman of the Committees on Cities and on Rules, and was a member of the Com- mittees on Hlection Laws and on’ Parishes land Religious Societies. | !) He was president of the training school , for nurses connected with the Massachu-— setts General Hospital up to the time that it was taken over by the hospital as a part | of its own organization. This school was founded by his mother, Mrs. Samuel Park- man, and others.

Active in Republican Affairs

In politics, he was always a Republican, ' active in the party organization, He was at various times, president of the Repub- \lican City Committee, besides holding other offices of that body. In 1894, he

| Was appointed a member of the Massachu- setts Prison Commission, in which capacity he was continued until 1915.

On Dec. 24, 1895, Mr. Parkman was ap- pointed by Mayor Edwin U. Curtis to fill the vacancy in the board of trustees of, the, Boston City Hospital, cauesd by the | death of George B. Nichols. In the spring oi the same year, when Mayor Curtis was selecting persons to be appointed members of the commission to examine the city finnancés, he wrote to the Citizens’ Assa- elation and asked It to recommend the man | whom it considered best qualified to repre- sent the large real estate owners and tax- payers of the city, The association recom- | mended -Mr. Parkman, because of his! knowledge of city affairs and of financial | matters in general and he was appointed | to the commission, afterward | being elected chairman.

Mr. Parkman had been a director and vice president of the Boston Real Hstate Bxchange and served on many important

committees af the exchange, such as ar legislative and, executive committees. He} Was considered as one of the best-informed | men on real estate matters in this city. -

Had Many Interests

In addition to his responsibilities as treasurer of the Proyident Institution for Savings, Mr, Parkman had numerous other business interests. He was a director’ of the Massachusetts Hospital Life Insurance Company, also of the Merchants National Bank of Boston and the New England Mutual Life Insurance Company, and was a trustee of the Municipal Real Bstate | HTrust, was treasurer and member of the board of managers of the Massachusetts "Charitable Bye. and Har Infirmary ; also

| president and member of the board ot managers of the Adams Nervine Asylum, a trustee of the Fenway Studios Trust, and) |member of the advisory council of the Bos- |ton Real Hstate Exchange. In 1917 he was | ja delegate to the Massachusetts CoAstitu- | tional Convention. | In his club interests, Mr. Parkman was ‘a member of the Union, St. Botolph, ‘Lnion oBat and The Country clubs and belonged also to the Boston Athletic Asso- ‘ciation, of which he had been president, as 'he had been of The Union Boat Club. He alwave was deeply interested in athlétics. Mr, Parkman made many trips abroad and served at one time as executor of the |property of, Hon, Edward Twistleton, whose ; | widow wak Mr, Parkman's aunt, Hllen Dwight Twistleton, _ Just before he was taken ill, Mr Park- |man had planned to spend the summer at jthe. Northeast Harbor on Mount Desert | |Tsland, Me., where he had a cottage, known jas “Windward.” After the final arrange- | ‘ments for the trip had been completed, his |physician advised its postponement: Up to

| within a few days of his death, his condi-

|

? ad meny genie 15 56 Chester street.

ues lived at 30 pie Tae A

Mx. Parkman is suryived by two sons and three daughters. are Henry Parkman, Jr., of 182. street, who married Mrs. Arthur and Francis Parkman, who married Hleanor M. Bremer and who now li Brookline. The daughters are M Parkman, now the wife of Rey, EL Peabody of Lawrence: Edith man, who married William P. I and Penelope B. Parkman, the Roger Griswold. Mr, and Mrs. and Mr. and Mrs. Griswold live in | Mr. Parkman leaves also a ‘sister, William W. Vaughan of354 eBacon who before her marriage was Miss 1 ], Parkman.

The funeral will take place on

at Trinity Church.

Henry Parkman

An estimable and most useful citiz 5 typically Bostonian in charac 2 virtues, has been lost in the dea h of |Parkman, whose name will long be. ciated with the “solid men of 0 whose family “he- belonged, ‘ai the foundations of - dine city’s” C0 and financial greatness. | ; i

Mr. Parkman was not merely a fi administrator of the highest class: served the city . and the State u and well in the Commén Council, General Court and for a long tir Prison Commission. Private th absolute rellability were in him unit the civic spirlt. He sprang from of men who gave as high a dis! the word “merchant"’ as it ever talned in the history of mankind. ;

In association with the Shaws, | uy dikes, Amorys and others in enterprises of world-wide scope. Sas Parkman, had, in a time of great fin cial uneertainty, made Boston bs quoted the country over.on a -gold and well above their own bank | their word was better than the bon the rest. of the world. From such a s ard of reliability Henry Parkman, as successor and continuator of those

departed. He has left a record of y any citizen might well be proud.

li er

HENRY PARKMAN MOURNED

At \ riends and Business Associates Pay Last

' ‘Tribute at Services Conducted by Bishop Lawrence at Trinity Church

Several hundred relatives and friends of Henry Parkman, treasurer of the Provident | Institution for Savings for twenty-nine | years and a leading financier in Boston, | attended the funeral services held at noon bee Trinity Whurch. Previously a’ private service had been held at the Parkman residence in Commonwealth avenue.

The Providen Institution was closed dur- ing the services and the officers and many of the employees weer at the church to | pay their last tribute. There were present

also representatives of most of the savings banks and commercial banks in Boston, | to all of whom Mr. Parkman was a friend. The Boston Real Estate Exchange was represented by Charles W. Whittier, Fran- cis Peabody and Moses Williams. Mr. | Parkman had been a director and vice | president of the Exchange and had served on important committees. Fifteen fellow members of the executive committee of the New England Liberty Loan Committee, -who served with ‘Mr. Parkman, were pres- ent, as follows: Charles A. Morss, former governor of the Federal Reserve Bank of Eoston; John R. Macomber, Clarence E. , Perkins, John K, Allen, Philip S. Dalton, James Nowell, Thomas B, Gannett, Jacob 4, Barbey, Allen Curtis, Frederic H. Cur- tiss, chairman of the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston; Philip Stockton, James J. ‘Phelan, Robert C. Morse, Robert S. Weeks aud Frank W. Remick, Senator Henry Cabot Lodge, a personal friend of Mr, Parkman for many years, also was among the mourners. Although Mr, Park- man had not actively practised law for | many years, a number of his friends in the |legal profession were at the church. Among close personal friends were Wilmot R. Byans, president, and Joseph C, Holmes, treasurer, of the Boston Five

Cents Savings Bank; A. P. Weeks and Frederie €C. Waite, vice presidents of the

Merchants National Bank, of which Mr.

Parkman had been a director for a number

of years. The New Hngland Mutual Life

Thsurance Company, the ‘Massachusetts = Life Insurance Company, Massa-

chusetts Charitable Hye and Ear Infirmary and other organizations which he had served as a director or officer were repre- sented.

The honorary pallbearers were: John S. Adams, Charles F, Adams, Daniel F. Appel, Joseph Bigelow, Louis Curtis, Lawrence Curtis, Edward Grew, Augustus P. Loring, George H. Lyman, Howard Stockton, Henry Vaughan and Alonzo 1B Weeks. The ushers were: J. Wells Farley, Francis Gray, Ronald T, Lyman, Charles Weston, Roger Wolcott and Samuel H. Wolcott.

Bishop Lawrence conducted the service, assisted by Rev. Henry K. Sherrill, rector. Francis W. Snow was at the organ and the vested choir sang the following hymns: “Jerusalem the Golden,’ ‘The King of Love My SSE) Is,” and “I Heard the | Sound of Voices.”

The casket rested just ineide the chancel, with a beautiful cross of white lilies given by Mr. Parkman's children at its head. ' The casket was blanketed in smilax set off with two small wreaths. There were many other beautiful flowers, including a sheaf of roses from those who served under Mr. Parkman at the Provident Institution for Savings and other flowers‘from the same bank, other banks and various institutions and individuals.

‘The body was taken to Forest Hills Cemetery, where Mr. “Sherrill conducted the committal service at the family lot.

Ws

Letters to the Editor

AN IMPORTANT SERVICE OF HENRY PARKMAN’S

| To the Editor of the Transcript: In an appraisal.of the public services of Henry Parkman, there should be included | his. valuable, painstaking,’ conscientious work as chairman’ of the Committee on State Finance in the Constitutional Conven- tion. . Under the leadership of Mr. Park- man, all of- the. recommendations of the committee were adopted by the convention and afterwards ratified by the people and are now a part of the Constitution of the Commonwealth, These include the amend-| | ™ent providing that the credit of the Com-, | monwealth shall not be given or loaned to the aid of any individual, private asso-| ciation or corporation; the requirement of a two-thirds vote in each branch of the | Legislature on the matter of loans to the | Commonwealth ; the limitation of the expen- | diture of porrowed money by the State to | no other purpose than that for which it was | | borrowed or for reduction or payment of the loan; the constitutional _establishment of the executive budget; and the right to | 2 Separate’ veto by the governor of items 'in appropriation bills. In the advocacy and drafting of these propositions Mr, Parkman found a happy and congenial task, {

Characteristic of the man was his brief statement made during the debate on the so-called anti-aid amendment. When speak-| ing for a charitable organization that had received great help from the Commonwealth, he said for the friends of that institution, . “I believe they would | heartily support the amendment as offered now: and want to say that I further believe that friends of other private institutions would put pa- triotism above other things and vote so as to remove any religious or sectarian ques- tions outside of future political discussions.”

Mr. Parkman was a man without guile, broad and sympathetic and quick to accept whatever merit lay in an opponent’s ar- gument. He commanded the utmost confi- dence of his associates in office,

oper J. Lmonann

* Boston, June 25.

——— ~\

THE BOSTON HERALD . Boston Granserigt

SS S ATURD AY, JULY 19, 1924 B24 Weep S.Reer, Bosrow ‘8, Masa, ai = i = = , webs,

——

| ELIoT—At ieee Harbor, Maine, July (Entered gt the Pox Oftce, Boston, Maas.,

ae TR, Grace Hopkinson Eliot, in her 78th if wl wife of Charles W, Eliot of core

Gs Second lees Mail Matter)

“Service at Eliot's Cotta ee = Ty ; | Northeast: Harbor, July 20, at 4 PO FRIDAY, JULY. 18, 1924 o at ‘j ae ar ;

RS. ¢ ¥. ELOT “HLIOT—At Noathoas Harbor, oe Tuly 18),

Grace Hopkinson Wliot, in her 78th year, wif of Charles W. Eliot of Cambridge, | Garvies 4 at Bilot's cottage, Northeast Harbor, July 20, SEE ae ee E

Wite: of Noted Edueator Was WIFE OF PRES. EMERITUS _ Lotig Tavalid CHARLES W. ELIOT DEAD

vrs

Vise

SHE SUCCUMBS A NORTHEAST ares oniie Ww. Eliot, wite of the HARBOR, ME., WHERE THE FAMILY

eee ere HAD GONE FOLLOWING “HARVARD

ve ‘Harbor, ‘Me, She was the sti COMMENCEMENT wife of the ‘noted educator. Before 4 ; a4 mT Pat marriage, which took place Oct. aay Pi? = giait ie sing 0 5 }, 1877, she was Grace Mellen Hop- SPUN EASE EERE Or 5 Pe son. of. ‘Cambridge. Mrs. Eliot Mrs. Grace Mellen Hopkinson Hliot, wife eae 7B years old. i 4, of Charles W. Eliot, president emeritus of | | Bie. was the younger daughter of Harvard University. Mrs, Eliot was in Judge Thomas. Hopkinson, who was the her seventy-eighth year and she and Dr. first scholar in the class of 1830, and Eliot went immediately following the Har- “who becamo first 2 judge of the court vard commencement, to Northeast Harbor} (ef common pleas and. then be ae te of where they long had a summer home. Mrs. | eaieer and Worcester Rellroad | Hliot was a native of Cambridge and was married to Dr. Hliot on Oct. 30, 1877, | ‘The residence: in | Northeast Hasies : Seen: -Sfount Desert island, and has been rani years after the death of his first he Eliot summer place for many years. | j ' ‘Mrs. Eliot had for many. years been an aerate Poe shagd nai RB Ache daughter ‘‘nvalid, and for that reason rarely ap- & lato Judge Thomas Monkinsem who ‘peared tn connection with the many was the: first scholar in the Harvard class events in which her shusband was so of 1830, and for some time judge of the ‘prominent. | Court of Common Pleas, ““Presidet-emeritua Eliot. er —_ ooo her when the end came. The funeral will _be held at Northeast Harbor on meester at 4 P. Mw

Mrs. Eliot, before her marriage, was

Grace -Mellen Hopkinson of Cambridge,

Boston (ike taat daughter of Judge Hopkinson of the Court of Common Pleas and later president of

nae Wasninetom Siamer, Bosrom 8, Masa, the Boston & Albany Railroad. She was the youngest of four children, all of whom

she survived. She was nearly seventy-

Is ston, Mass. : Ciintered at the Post Oftce, Bo 7 u eight years old. Mrs. Eliot was especially

i as Seoond Close Mail Matter)

VF fond of singing and before her marriage to Dr. Eliot, wie 30, Cobh ae pee in =, . ny concerts and in church choirs in an |

"SATURDAY, IGEN 18; 1824 mentee way. Probably her happiest days eo University, Bie were spent at the summer home in North- were held this afte rn

or east Harbor, Me., where she and Dr. Eliot Eliot summer home at WIFE OF DR. CHARLES W. ELIOT had gone for many years. bor. The Rev. Dr. Frauete The funeral services will be held at the of ioe eee Mass,, a life

Eliot cottage at Northeast’ Harbor Sunday | officiated,

Before. Her Marriage to the President afternoon, Rev. (Francis G. Peabody, a Eliot bore the oS Em D. D., professor emeritus at Harvard, will will not, however, accom eritus of Harvard She Was Grace officiate, Burial is to be In Mt. Auburn to Mount Avburn tomor services, but will spend

-Mellen Hopkinson h - | pkingon, and. Her Death Oc cemetery at Cambridge. of the summer in Northea

curred at Northeast Harbor, Me. = The burial service wil ; : the Rev, Dr. Samuel A, ‘Mrs. Charles W. Eliot, wife of the bridge, a son, Ushers president emeritus of Harvard, whose ices were Dr. FB. W. death at Northeast Harbor, Me.,, was an- Greene, Theodore Eliot, W nounced in the Transcript yesterday, had | jena: Roger ‘Pierce. for some time been a sufferer from heart = . ‘disease and had required constant care! and attention. Mrs. Hiiot accompanied her husband on his travels; went with | him several times to Hurope and went | /arouna the world with him fourteen years 4 ; _ While on that. trip it was) largely her ca¥e’that he survived a surgi- for appendicitis in Ceylon.

THE BOSTON HERALD

Snpaee®

“TUESDAY, JULY 22, 1924

Mrs. Charles W. Eliot

| The simplest of commitment cere-_ monies was conducted over the ‘body of Mrs. Charles W:, Eliot, wife of the . president emeritus of Harvard, at the | Eliot family plot at Mt. Auburn ceme-_

\ tery yesterday. it oe Need eres ie, : The Rey. Dr. Samuel A. Eliot,son of | the deceased, conducted the services at | the grave. Only immediate relatives and a few friends, who had accompanied the: /body from Bar Harbor, where Mrs, “Eliot passed away, were in attendance, Mrs. Eliot died last week in North- | east Harbor, Me., where funeral ser= ‘|vices were held Sunday. a tF i 3 ee iS

Step-

344 WasHINaTo:

' Vchks (Entered at the Gs Second

MRS. ELIO? IS BURIED Wife of President Emeritus of Harvard Is Laid at Rest in Mount Auburn Ceme- | tery saat : teeta

Mrs, Charles W. Eliot, wife of the pres- ident emeritus of Harvard University, “who died Friday at Northeast Harbor Me., was bur-ed this morning at Mount Auburn Ceme- tery, Cambridge. The interment, which was without ceremony, was attended by Dr. Samuel A. Eliot, Mr. and Mrs, Roger Pierce and Dr. M. V. Pierce. The funeral | party went to the cemetery directly from | the North Station, to which the body was: brought on the Bar Harbor express. Dr. Eliot spoke briefly at the grave, which Be on a shaded hillside at a plain. marker | bearing the inscription: “Samuel Atkins Eliot, 1798-1862; Mary Lyman Eliot, 4802. 1875; Frances Wliot, 1829-1882: a’ child. born Dec. 10, died Dee. 18, 1840.7 |

Funeral services for Mrs. Eliot were held yesterday afternoon at the Eliot cottage at Northeast Harbor. | Rey, Francis & Peabody, D. D., professor emeritus at Haz: vard, and a life-long friend, officiated. Ushers at yesterday's service were Dr, Pea ‘body, J. D. Greene, Theodore Bliot, William | 'G, Rice and Roger Pierce. Dr. Eliot did not accompany his wife's body to Mount Auburn, but will spend the remainder of

| the summer at Northeast Harbor.