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THE 2 61 4 75;

UN IO N L EA G UE C L UB

NEW YO RK

HOUSE

FIFTH AVENUE CORNER or EA T THIRTY-NINTH TREET , S S MDCCCLXXXVII Or a z uar 6 1 86 . g ni ed Febr y , 3

o ora ar 1 6 1 86 . Inc rp ted Febru y , 5

- No 2 6 as tr l o s . C ub H u e , E t Seventeenth S eet , M 1 2 1 86 O a . pened y , 3

- w -s x o s a so cor. as e Club H u e, M di n Avenue , E t T enty i th Stre t ,

O r I 1 868 . pened Ap il ,

- - o s cor. t tr t Club H u e, Fifth Avenue , Thir y ninth S ee .

O a 1 88 1 . pened M rch 5,

Press of

' P POTHM S ons G . . S

New York grzsiaznts.

R BERT B MINTURN O . JONATHAN STURG ES CHARLES H MARSHALL .

JOHN JAY 1 866 to KS 3 S UL Z JAC ON . CH T WILLIAM H PPIN J . O SEPH H CH ATE JO . O JOHN JAY GEORG E CABOT WARD HAMILTON FISH WILLIAM MEVARTS .

CHA NCEY MDEPEW U . O fftzm for 1 8 8 7 .

DE T P RE SI N .

CHAUNCEY M . DEPEW .

V -P DE N TS I CE RE SI .

L G . O O . O E RAND B CANN N , J SMEPH W H WE , O . . C RNELIUS N BLISS , JA ES C CARTER , VERMILYE H L O . . JAC B D , MARS AL B BLAKE , G . O HENRY BER H , WILLIAM W AST R,

O O O . L . EVI P M RT N , J HN H HALL ,

GM . L JESSE SELI AN , WILLIAM $ RIDD E .

E E TA Y S CR R .

P GRANVILLE . HAWES .

T EA S RE R R U .

GEORGE MONTAGUE .

X E TI VE COMMI TT E E CU E .

L VAN SANTVOO RD a a A FRED , Ch irm n . a — a of Secret ry the Secret ry the Club .

CLA SS OF 1 887 . H L M O E . GAY BIRDSEYE B AKE AN , J SEP , O RAY M L O BENJAMIN BREWSTER , R BERT HA I T N . VAN SANTVOORD ALFRED .

n ea e l 6 Tbe Unio L gu C M.

M I TE E N I BRA Y AN D P I T N S CO MT O L R UBL CA I O .

H a a . . G HENRY BRID MAN , Ch irm n

A . O a . SAMUEL G LDSCHMIDT , Secret ry

HABI R HAW G . . S WILLIAM M , DAVID FRANCIS ,

E O W . O SETH . TH MAS , ARGYLE WATS N ,

C O . EDWARD . SAMPS N

COMMI T E ON AR T T E .

H a ma WILLIAM . PAYNE , Ch ir n .

O F c a . GE RGE . CRANE , Se ret ry

W . O RICHARD BUTLER , HARRY WATR US G R O O L O . O . E RGE SHELD N , G RD N WENDEL

C MMI TTE E P AL E F ORM O ON OLI TI C R .

ma a . WHITELAW REID , Ch ir n C c a . CLARENCE . BUEL , Se ret ry

O O . O FRANCIS F RBES , TH MAS M N RTH ,

. . . O OO CEPHAS BRAINERD , D B ST J HN R SA, X Mc L . O . FRANKLIN A PADD CK , ALE ANDER AGNEW,

E . B . HINSDALE , RICHARD A . ELMER , O AY O X O J HN J KN , TH MAS L . JAMES , O OO THE DORE R SEVELT .

F I N AN CE COMMI TE E T .

O . J HN A WEEKES , SALEM H . WALES, G L O . LE RAND B . CANN N , WILLIAM H EE ,

GEO RGE BLISS .

01 TOR S A (1 .

O s. . O J HN BARNES , WILLIAM H R SS ,

JAMES H . DUNHAM . The i on ization of the math.

$11 2 (153mfor a g utinaal 0mm

NEW O 1 1 86 Y RK , January 5, 3. SIR

o f The urgency the present great national crisis, and the revolutionary schemes which unprincipled

men are plotting to accomplish , make it the imme diate duty of all loyal citizens so to organize them selves as to give the most efficient support to the

national cause . C o f It is , therefore, proposed to form in the ity New York a Club which may be known as the O to National Club, the bjects of which shall be f cultivate a pro ound national devotion , as distin gu ished from that of sectional feeling ; to strengthen

a love and respect for the Union , and discourage whatever tends to gi ve undue prominence to purely local interests ; to discu ss and urge upon public attention large and noble schemes of national ad vancement ; to elevate and uphold the popular faith in republican government ; to dignify politics as a pursuit and a study ; to reawaken a practical interest in public affairs in those who have become discouraged ; to enforce a sense of the sacred obliga tions inherent in citizenship ; and , finally, to bring

9 I O Tfze Union League Clab. to bear upon the national life all that a body of earnest and patriotic men can accomplish by united effort . It is believed that an association o f such men o f C under a simple organization a social haracter, frankly exchanging views upon great questions and ac actively engaged in disseminating them , could fo r complish a noble work . The only requisite membership , besides unblemished reputation , should be an uncompromising and unconditional loyalty to the Nation , and a complete subordination thereto a of all other politic l ideas . Should these objects meet with your cordial approbation and sympathy, and should you be dis posed to take part in the proposed organization , you will please address one o f the undersigned at e your earliest conveni nce . o Very respectfully your bedient servants,

O O 6 as 2 th W LC TT GIBBS , 5 E t 9 Street .

G O . as z l st O . E RGE T STR NG , 74 E t Street W as 2 oth . O r . HENRY BELL WS , 59 E t St eet

O R . 62 . C RNELIUS AGNEW, 3 Fifth Avenue h O C . O 8 as t . GE RGE ANTH N , 3 E t 35 Street O 2 61 G e GE RGE GIBBS , re ne Street .

G O G F . 2 as a th re . E R E ALLEN , 4 E t 4 St et

O 61 . WILLIAM J . H PPIN , Pine Street ma nion r s g g am.

The undersigned agree to associate under the n ame of The Union League , and to adopt the f ollowing fundamental articles of association , to wit 1 . The condition of membership shall be absolute and unqualified loyalty to the government of the n o f ff , and unwaveri g support its e orts fo r o f the suppression the rebellion . 2 r . The prima y object of the association shall be to discountenance and rebuke by moral and social

influences all disloyalty to the Federal Government , and to that end the members will use every proper

means in public and private . r n o u r 3. We pledge ourselves by eve y mea s in

power, collectively and individually , to resist to the uttermost every attempt against the territorial in

tegrity of the Nation . To the r meet necessa y expenditures , each mem T ber shall pay to the reasurer, annually in advance ,

the sum of ten dollars . There shall be a standing committee consisting o f

nine members, who shall have a general supervision f o f o the concerns the League . 2 Tfee Uni L e C I on eagu lub.

There shall also be for the present a committee

on admissions, consisting of seven members, whose duty it shall be to pass upon the name of each can didate , who may be presented for membership . The officers of the League Shall consist o f a a Secretary and a Tre surer, to be elected with the committees on the second Wednesday in January

in each year hereafter .

Members of similar organizations , elsewhere estab lished en and recognized by this League, shall be in New titled , when York , to all the privileges of as membership , subject to such regulations the

Standing Committee may determine .

O . MURRAY H FFMAN , EDWARD S BARMTLETT , O . O . J HN J CISC , FREEMAN J BU STEAD , X ALE . VAN RENSSELAER , ALFRED L . EDWARDS, AY WILLARD PARKER , CHARLES A . J ,

. O WILLIAM C BRYANT , W . S . BR WN ,

O . . O R BT L . KENNEDY, J J . J NES ,

O . CHARLES KING, J HN E WILLIAMS ,

O . WILLIAM CURTIS N YES, HENRY L JAC$UES , E G JAMES W . B EKMAN , FRANCIS B . CUTTIN , R O . O GE RGE T STR NG , FRANCIS LIEBE , M O O O O O P W . TE PLET N J HNS N , HAMILT N H PIN ,

H O . J . BUTLER WRMIG T , J HN A STEVENS , JR . G CHARLES D . S ITH , C . R ILMAN , H G O . O . . E RGE C ANTH N , W DRAPER , O M O HENRY W . BELL WS , BENJA IN C LLINS , O O O W LC TT GIBBS , CHARLES C LLINS , M oK AYE . JAMES , WIMLLIAM A BUDD , O . GE RGE GIBBS , SA UEL W BRIDGHAM ,

O . . . THE W DWIGHT , HENRY A SMYTHE , G A O K O . E RGE PETERS , GURD N BUC ,

1 4 The .

W G O O L . O . E RGE CAB T ARD , R BT KENNEDY , O . . O A . E TH MAS H FAILE J HN WE KS , OO O O JAMES B RMAN J HNST N .

MMI T I I CO TE E ON ADMSS ON S.

G O G F . N O O E R E ALLEN , . PENDLET N H SACK , O R O O C RNELIUS . AGNEW . W LC TT GIBBS , O G . G O . E RGE T STR N , FREDERIC DEPEYSTER

JONATHAN STURGES .

1 2 1 86 Committee appointed November , 3, to aid the government in raising and equipping the quota o f volunteers to be raised in the State of New York , pursuant to the proclamation o f the President o f the United States

X . VAN LE RA B. O ALE RENSSELAER , G ND CANN N .

. O . OO SHERMAN J BAC N , JAMES A R SEVELT , O O . CHARLES P . KIRKLAND , ELLI T C C WDIN ,

G O O 3 . Z E RGE BLISS , JACKS N SCHULT ,

EDWARD CRO MWELL . THE UNIO N LEAG UE C LUB HO U E NO 6 E 1 TH ST. S , . 2 . 7

O PEN ED MA Y 1 2 1 86 , 3 .

(Shat ter ana gettrlzs of associattnn.

dihartzr.

AN ACT

“ TO INCORPO RATE THE UNIO N LE AGUE CLUB O F T O F O THE CI Y NEW Y RK.

1 6 1 86 PASSED FEBRUARY , 5.

w As N . 1 60 LA s 1 86 H 2 6 1 86 AME DED BY CHAP , OF 7 , PASSED MARC , 7.

M CHAR. 2 1 8 1 1 1 8 AS A ENDED BY 4 3, LAWS OF 74 , PASSED MAY , 74 .

The Peo le o the State o New Yorh re resent d p f f , p e n enate and A sembl (1 0 enact as ollows i S s y , f

O . SECTI N I Cornelius R . Agnew, Horatio Allen ,

James W . Beekman , Henry W . Bellows, Francis B . W o lco t Cutting, John A . Dix, Gibbs, John C .

Green , George Griswold , David Hoadley, Murray

'

Ho fl man . K , William J Hoppin , Charles ing, Charles

H . Marshall , Willard Parker, George T . Strong, T Jonathan Sturges, Otis D . Swan , Moses aylor, and such other persons as now are members of an Asso c iatio n in the city of New York called The Union $ f League Club , and such persons as herea ter shall

become members of the corporation hereby created ,

are constituted a body corporate , by the name of “ $ The n the Unio League Club , to be located in I 9 2 The Union Lea e C b 0 gu lu .

c ity of New York , to promote , encourage , and sus tain , by all proper means , absolute and unqualified loyalty to the Government of the United States to discountenance and rebuke , by moral and social influences, all disloyalty to said Government , and every attempt against the integrity of the nation ; and in furtherance of these objects, to establish and maintain a Library and a Gallery of Art and Mili tary Trophies , especially devoted to the perpetua tion and illustration of the patriotic services and sacrifices by which the existing struggle against re has e bellion be n characterized .

E 2 . S C . Said corporation Shall have power to

d b - make and a opt a constitution , y laws, rules, and and regulations for the admission , suspension , ex l pu sion of its members , and their government , the c ollection of fees and dues, th e number and election ffi of its o cers , and to define their duties, and for the

- safe keeping of its property, and from time to time b to alter, modify, or change such constitution , y r le n u S . laws , , and regulatio s Until an election shall

b - a be held pursuant to such constitution , y l ws , rules, ffi and regulations , the o cers , for the time being, of the Association mentioned in the first section of this ffi act , Shall be the o cers of the corporation hereby created .

SEC . . 3 Said corporation may purchase and hold , n or lease , any real or personal estate ecessary and proper for the purpose of its incorporation , provided they shall not hold any real estate the value o f

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OF NEW YO RK .

O F O ARTICLES ASSOCIATI N .

I The . condition of membership Shall be absolute and unqualified loyalty to the Government of the o ff United States, and unwavering supp rt of its e orts

for the suppression of the Rebellion . 2 n be . The primary object of the Associatio shall n n and to discounte a ce rebuke, by moral and social influences , all disloyalty to the Federal Govern use ment , and to that end the members will every in and proper means public private .

3 . We pledge ourselves, by every means in our power, collectively and individually, to resist to the uttermost every attempt against the territorial in te rit o f n g y the ation .

O L O F O O O ADDITI NA ARTICLE ASS CIATI N, AD PTED 66 1 1 1 8 . JANUARY ,

4 . It shall be the duty o f the Club to resist and o t f exp se corruption , and promo e re orm in our Na tio nal ff , State , and Municipal a airs ; and to elevate o f n the idea America citizenship . ggfl gaws.

OF O AND FFICERS THEIR DUTIES .

1 o flic ers o f . The The Union League Club Shall be

- a President , twelve Vice Presidents, a Secretary, a

Treasurer, and the members of the following Stand : ing Committees Executive Committee , Finance n Committee, Committee on Admissio s, Committee

‘ o n on Library and Publications , Committee Art , o n Committee Political Reform , and Auditing Com mittee ; all o f whom shall be elected by the members the of the Club , at annual meetings, and shall serve until their successors Shall have been elected respec t iv el so y, except far as is otherwise provided by

- 1 . By law No . 5 2 n . The Preside t , or, in his absence, the Vice in President senior order of election , and present , shall preside at all meetings of the Club . In the

- absence of the President and all the Vice Presidents , a presiding officer shall be Chosen without ballot from the members of the Club . The President shall

’ ex o c zo and be , fi , a member of the Executive other

Standing Committees .

o o f the . ro 3 . The Secretary shall keep a rec rd p 2 3 T ni n ea e 2 4 he U o L gu Club.

c eedin s Co m g of the Club , and of the Executive mittee and the Committee o n Admissions (of which ’ ex o ezo Committees he shall be , fi , a member) , and of all matters of which a record shall be deemed advisable by the Club , or by said Committees . The ro records of the Secretary, except those of the p c eedin s g of the Committee on Admissions , shall , at all reasonable times , be open to the inspection of any member of the Club . It Shall be the duty of o f the Secretary to notify members their election , to keep a roll of the members of the Club , to issue notices for all meetings of the Club (with a brief mention of the business to be transacted when a is special meeting called) , and to conduct the corre s o ndenc e p . H e shall also be the keeper of the seal of the Club .

4 . The Treasurer shall collect , and , under the di rection of the Executive Committee , disburse the funds . He shall keep the accounts of the Club in S books belonging to it , which hall be at all times open to inspection of the Executive Committee ; he o f shall report in writing, at each quarterly meeting n the Executive Committee , the balance of mo ey on O f hand , and the outstanding obligations the Club as far as practicable, and he shall make a full report , O f at the annual meeting of the Club , the receipts

' such su and disbursements of the past year, with g gestions as to the financial management o f the Club n an as he may deem proper. He shall tur over nually to the Finance Committee all surplus money - aw 2 By L s. 5 accumulated from the current receipt s of the year ’

x . ex o ezo ne t preceding his report He shall be , fi , a member of the Executive Committee and Commit n tee o Admissions . res e 5. The Secretary and the Treasurer Shall p c tiv el y have power, with the approval of the Executive

Committee , to employ , at the expense of the Club , such clerical aid as may be necessary in the dis o f charge their duties . 6 f o f . The general a fairs the Club Shall be man o f aged by the Executive Committee , consisting S h fifteen members . The Executive Committee all , subject in all respects (except as to expenditures) to such instructions and limitations as may be from time to time prescribed by the Club , exercise a gen eral superintendence over the internal affairs of the Club ; shall control and man age its property ; and enforce the preservation of order and obedience to its rules . All appropriations of the funds of the

b 1 th B - Clu , except as provided in the s y law , and all directions for the use O f the Hall or Club - rooms for other than for Club purposes , shall be made by nec es the Execu tive Committee . It Shall make all sary purchases and contracts , but shall have no power to make the Club liable for any debt or debts to an amount exceeding one half that which at the time of contracting the same Shall be in the Treas ’ urer s liabili hands in cash , and not subject to prior it ties . At every annual meeting shall report its proceedings , and may, at any time , recommend 2 6 The Union Le e Cl agu ub.

such measures as it may deem advisable . The Ex ecutiv e Committee shall appoint a House Commit O f tee three members , and may from time to time declare their duties . Whenever a Special Commit tee Shall be appointed , a majority thereof shall be those not members of the Executive Committee . The Executive Committee is divided into three c e lasses of five members each , and her after each annual election shall be for five members o f said ffi e Committee , to hold o ce thre years , to supply the place of the class retiring each year, and for such as additional number , if any, may be necessary to O flic e fill vacancies, to hold during the remainder of the terms of the members whose places they fill . No member of the Club who may have served on the Committee for three successive years shall , after n the next annual election , be eligible again u til at least one year after the expiratio n O f his previous term of office .

7 . The Executive Committee Shall meet at least in once each month for the transaction of business , and eight members thereof Shall be a quorum , O f except during the months June , July, August ,

September, and October, when five members shall constitute a quorum .

8 . The Committee on Admissions shall consist of

fifteen members, and shall be divided into three

Classes of five members each . The annual election 1 1 88 to be held on the 3th day of January , 7 , Shall o ffi be for fifteen members, five of whom to h ld o ce - By Lazos. 2 7

Oflic e for one year, five to hold for two years , five to o flic e fo r hold three years , and thereafter each annual election Shall be for five members of said ffi Committee , to hold o ce for three years . The names and residences of all persons proposed for n admission , with the name and sig ature of the member proposing them , and of the member seconding them , and date of posting, shall be first

in - u posted in a conspicuous place the Club ho se, at least fifteen days . They shall then be referred to the Committee on Admissions, the proceedings of which Committee thereon shall be secret and c and no member o such ommittee shall onfidential , f C b es i ned o a ti t e e qu t o as t the c on of the Commi te . It shall be the duty of the Committee to make careful n examination , and to co sider all communications in reference to each individual proposed ; they Shall pass upon each name separately ; but they shall no t at any time pass upon any greater number of names than there are at that time vacancies to be filled u nder the 3oth By-law Two negative votes in the Committee Shall prevent the recommendation of any person for membership . The Committee shall fix its own place and time of meeting . At every monthly meeting the Committee shall report the names O f such persons proposed as they rec o m mend for admission ; and the Club shall thereupon proceed to vote , by ballot , upon the names so recommended . Negative votes to the number of

one third of those cast Shall exclude any person . e n i n e l 2 8 Th U o L ague C ub.

Members shall be elected only at the regular

- monthly meeting, but any non resident member may at any time be classed as a resident member, by Signifying his intention to that effect to the Treasurer and paying a further admission fee of one hundred and fifty dollars , and he shall hence forth pay the full annual dues .

9 . No person Shall be proposed or admitted to be a member of the Club who is not at the time a citizen of the United States, having a right to vote , and who does not answer to the following require ments of the original Articles of Association of the

Club . The conditi o n of membership shall be absolute and unqualified loyalty to the Government of the $ United States , And every person elected a member shall pledge himself to do all in his power to carry out the

disc o u n primary objects of the Club , which are to tenance a and rebuke by moral and soci l influences , and by all proper means, both in public and private , all disloyalty to the Federal Government , and to resist to the uttermost every attempt against the n territorial integrity of the ation . I NO O . candidate who shall have failed to be elected by the Club shall be again proposed for one year , except upon the recommendation of the

Executive Committee , such recommendation to be posted at least two weeks prior to a monthly meeting .

0 The Union Le e C 3 agu lub.

Article of the Association , with authority to expend such sums of money as shall be appropriated to them by the Executive Committee or obtained by voluntary subscription . 1 5. The Finance Committee shall c onsist of five o f members, none of whom shall at the time their election be members of the Executive Committee . They shall be elected by the Club by ballot at a ‘ regular meeting thereof, and only upon the nomi o f nation the Executive Committee , which nomi natio n shall be made at a regular meeting previous

to that at which such election takes place . The members of said Committee shall hold their

ffi fo r o ces until death , resignation , or removal cause , and every vacancy occurring in the said Committee shall be filled by the Club o n the nominati o n of the

Executive Committee , in the same manner and under the same restrictions as hereinbefore pro

v ided . The Treasurer of the Club shall at the end of each year pay over to the said Committee all surplus and unappropriated moneys which remain in his hands after payment in full of the disbursements n and expe ses of such year. o f The moneys , the securities, and the proceeds the securities so received by the said Finance Com mittee shall be invested in the securities o f the

United States or of the State of New York . Full power and authority is conferred upon the said Fi nance Committee to collect and receive such in - w By La s. 3 1

come , interest , and profits , and from time to time dispose of the said securities for the purposes afore said , and which shall continue to be invested as a reserve fund , until the further resolution of the in Club, relation thereto , adopted upon the same notice which is required for an amendment by these

- By laws . 6 fli er 1 . o c Any may be removed for cause , at any

meeting of the Club , upon two weeks notice , and any vacancy in any o flic e may be filled for the

residue of the term by the Club , at any meeting

thereof, except as herein otherwise provided . Neglect on the part of any member of a Standing . or Special Committee to attend three consecutive

meetings of such Committee , shall be deemed a his o flic e tender of resignation of his , which the n Committee may accept , unless an explanatio of

such neglect , satisfactory to the Committee , Shall be

given .

Every Standing Committee, except the Finance

Committee, Shall have power to fill any vacancy in n its membership until the ext annual election , which shall be more than ten days after the vacancy

occurs . F O MEETINGS .

1 7 . The annual meeting of the Club shall be held

on the second Thursday of January, for the election of o flicers and the transaction of such other business

as may come before it . The general meeting shall be held at eight o ’clock 2 The Onion Lea e 3 gu Club. M P. . , but the polls for the election shall be opened ' - M P. . at half past six o clock , and they shall remain

open for three hours . m At the onthly meeting in December, in each

year, a Committee of seven shall be chosen by the m Club at large , in such anner as shall then be de

t ermined c o ns i u , who shall select and post in a p c

- ous place in the Club house , at least ten days before

u m the ann al eeting, the name of a candidate for f each o fice to be filled at the ensuing election . At the same meeting three inspectors and canvassers of the ensuing election shall be elected in like man

ner, any two of whom shall be a quorum ; and , if

s neces ary, the Club may fill vacancies at or before

the election . The rules and orders of Cushing’s Manual shall m n govern the eeti gs of the Club , so far as they are

B - applicable and not inconsistent with these y laws . One hundred members shall be a quorum at all

u meetings of the Cl b .

1 8 . There shall be a monthly meeting, for the election of members and the transaction of busi

ness, on the second Thursday of every month, ex

8 R M. cept July and August , at 1 9 . Special meetings of the Club may be called at a any time by order of the President , with the p proval of three members of the Executive Com mitt ee , and shall be called by the Secretary when ever the President or any Vice- President shall be thereunto requested in writing by twenty-fiv e mem - a By L ws. 33

e bers, setting forth the purpose of such m eting . At

any such special meeting no business, other than that he specified in t call , shall be considered except by

unanimous consent .

2 0. At the meetings of the Club the order o f

business, so far as the character and nature of the ma meeting y admit , shall be as follows

1 . Reading the minutes of the last meeting , 2 . Election of new members .

3 . Reports of Standing Committees .

4 . Reports of Special Committees .

5. General business . But this order of business may be changed by a

majority of the meeting. All Special Committees for any purpose shall be n f appointed by the presidi g o ficer , unless otherwise

ordered . Whenever any resolution or action shall be pro o r posed pending in the Club , which calls for the expression of its O pinion touching any public mat

ter, if the same be objected to by any member, and n such objection be seconded , it Shall at o ce be the ffi duty of the presiding o cer to state the objection , and to call upon those who sustain the same to rise ; and if twenty-fiv e members shall rise in support of o f such objection , then such resolution , and subject

the proposed action , shall be referred to a Standing

or Special Committee , who shall report thereon at

the next meeting o f the Club . And upon the com in o n g in of such report , the same, and the resoluti s, T e Union Lea C 34 h gue lub.

and the subject referred to , shall be deemed before the Club for discussion and action thereon , without

further right of such objection . No member shall be permitted to speak more than once on the same subject , nor more than ten u minutes at one time , without the nanimous con

sent o f the Club .

2 1 . s No person , not a member of the Club , hall

be present at any meeting thereof, unless he shall be specially invited by the President o r the H o use

Committee . All 2 2 . elections, except as otherwise provided ,

shall be by ballot , and a majority of votes cast

' ' su flicient shall be , except for the election of new

members . The Secretary shall furnish to the inspectors of al hab eti elections , prior to the annual meeting, an p cal list o f all members entitled to vote for officers

at the ensuing election . The Secretary shall see that all By-laws regulating the elections of the as Club are published at least once , required by b e statute , and the inspectors of the election Shall ,

fore acting, take the oath also required by statute . 2 3. Proxies shall not be permitted .

F O MEMBERS .

2 emo lu 4 . No member shall receive any salary

ment , or profit from the funds of the Club , unless the same be especially appropriated by the Club

and the Executive Committee . - a By L ws. 35

2 5. No member shall give any money or gratuity to a servant of the Club . 6 2 . All resignations shall be made , in writing, to the Exec utive C o mmittee ; but if made after the second Thursday of January, such resignation Shall not discharge the member presenting it from his dues for the current year. All interest in the prop ert y of the Club ; of members resigning, or other wise ceasing to be members, shall be vested in the

Club . 2 7 . If the conduct of a member shall appear to the

Executive Committee to be disorderly , ungentle manly, in violation of the rules , prejudicial to the interests or character of the Club , or contrary to its

B - o r his Charter or y laws ; if, by acts or conversa tion , he shall seem to the Committee to manifest a spirit of disloyalty to the Government of the United

States, the Committee shall inform him thereof in o fl enc e writing, and , if the nature of the in its ma opinion require it , y suspend him from the privi leges of the Club for a period not exceeding six months, or request him to resign . 2 di r 8 . Should such information or request be s e garded , the Executive Committee Shall refer the matter to the next stated meeting of the Club , or to a special meeting thereof, of which reference not less than two weeks written notice shall be given ff to the o ending member . 2 9. At such meeting the nature of the offence shall be considered , and the member complained of 6 The Union Lea e l b 3 gu C u .

may be censured or expelled by a vote of a majority

of the members present . A vote involving censure or expulsion shall be decided by ballot .

0. o f for 3 The total membership the Club , liable

annual dues, shall not exceed sixteen hundred .

r The admission fee of members elected hereafte ,

shall be three hundred dollars. The annual dues of

r r -hv e esident membe s Shall be seventy dollars, and the annual dues of non - resident members shall be

-fiv e forty dollars, payable in advance , on the second o f Thursday January, at which time the fiscal year

shall commence . If not paid within thirty days

thereafter, the name of the delinquent shall be posted by the Treasurer in a conspicuous place in

- the Club house ; and should he neglect payment , r without good cause , until the first day of Ma ch , he

. Prov ided shall thereupon cease to be a member ,

That upon his written application , and the payment f of all dues to the date thereo , the Executive Com mittee may, upon such terms as it may deem

B - proper, remit the penalty of this y law ; of all

A nd ro which the Secretary shall make a minute . p

vided urther B - f , That the penalty of this y law Shall not apply to the case of a resident member who

may be ill or absent from the City of New York .

as - No member, while classed a non resident , shall be entitled to vote . fee 3 1 . Any member who has paid an admission and the annual dues for one year, and who may be absent from the city of New York in a foreign

e 38 The Union Leagu Club. expired shall pay only half the amount o f dues fo r that fiscal year otherwise required .

34. The Club may, at any regular meeting, elect honorary members , who shall be nominated by the

Executive Committee . Such honorary members shall have all the privileges of the Club except voting at meetings and being eligible fo r office .

O F R R ST ANGE S .

A n 35. y member may personally introduce non da residents to the rooms of the Club for one y , their names , and that of the member introducing them , and the date of such introduction , having been first entered in a book to be kept for that purpose . The Executive Committee may make regulations as to the extension of the privileges o f the Club to

- non resident strangers .

No resident of the city of New York, not a mem

-h ber of the Club , shall be admitted to the Club ouse ,

- r - except to the reception rooms, p ivate dining rooms, art and gallery , without the consent of the House

Committee first obtained .

36. The Executive Committee may give a written

invitation to any stranger, which shall entitle him to

- visit the Club house for one month , or such longer

period as the Committee may deem proper.

- No person , except a non resident foreigner, shall

- e be admitted into the Club house , who does not giv his unwavering support to the Government and if any person disloyal to the Government of the - By Laws. 39

United States be knowingly introduced to the

- o f Club house by a member the Club, such member fo r ff shall be expelled the o ence .

L O MISCE LANE US .

- 38 . No person shall take from the Club house a newspaper, pamphlet , book, or other article , the property of the Club , nor mutilate , deface , or destroy the same .

39. Books , pamphlets , and newspapers shall not

n - be removed from the readi g and drawing rooms . fo r 4 0. Any motion or resolution offered the con sideration of the Club shall , at the request of any is member, be reduced to writing before it acted u pon . 1 4 . The Club shall have a seal , badge , and stand ard , which shall be devised by the Executive Com mitt ee and approved by the Club .

B - 2 . 4 A y law of the Club may be amended , or a

B - new y law made , at any regular meeting of the

Club , the proposer having posted upon the notice board notice of the proposed alteration or addition , for at least thirty days immediately preceding said meeting, when , if two thirds of those present shall vote in favor of the proposed alteration o r amend ment , the same shall be adopted . A ny By-law may be suspended fo r the evening by the unanimous consent of th ose present at any meeting o f the Club .

4 3. The Executive Committee shall have power e n e 4 0 Th Unio Leagu Club.

inc o nsIStent to make such other regulations, not

o r B - w with the Charter these y la s, as may be deemed necessary fo r the protection of the property

- of the Club , the management of the Club house, r and the prese vation o f good order.

' efl ect 44 . No resolution , which , in , censures or o f instructs any the Committees of the Club, shall be considered except on notice . Notice shall be

- given by posting on the notice board , over the n sig ature of the mover, the general purport of the r fo r two esolution , , at least , days immediately pre ceding the meeting at which such resolution shall be introduced ; and a copy of the notice so posted o f shall, at the time posting , be sent to the Chair man of the Committee sought to be afiected thereby . z a s g au e g r s .

HO URS .

- 1 . The Club house will be open for members M A. . every day at 7 , from the first of May to the

8 AM. n first of November, at duri g the remainder ’

1 A M. of the year. After o clock . , admittance can be claimed only by lodgers .

The kitchen , wine room , billiard room , and bowl

- M A . ing alley will be closed at .

VISITO RS .

2 . No person residing within fifty miles of the o f city New York, not being a member of the Club,

b - shall be admitted to the Clu house , except to the

- - art reception room , private dining rooms, and gallery .

n - 3 . A member may personally i troduce non resi o f dents, not residing within fifty miles of the city

- New York , to the Club house for one day, recording ’ their names with his own in the visitors book ;

- such non residents may, upon the application of a member to , and consent of, the House Committee, be u se fo r admitted to the of the Club two weeks, and

4 1 2 T e U i 4 h n on League Club.

this privilege may be renewed after an absence from o f the city not less than three months . Residents two of foreign countries , upon the application of

members, and the approval of the Executive Com mittee ma , y be admitted to the use of the Club for

six months, on payment in advance of the annual

- m dues of non resident embers .

4 . Members introducing strangers into the Club will be considered responsible for their conduct w hile in the house, and for any debts that may

accrue on their account .

5. Ladies Shall be admitted only on Friday and Saturday following the regular monthly meetings

1 2 . P . M. of the Club , from M to 3 , by cards , which ffi will be provided at the o ce , and under such regu lati n o s as are printed thereon . 6 . No visitor shall give any entertainment in the

- Club house , nor shall he be present at any meeting

as B - of the Club , except provided for in y law 2 1 No . . T INDEBTEDNESS O THE CLUB .

7 . All indebtedness by members to the Club must

be paid by the end of every month . The names o f members failing to pay their indebtedness as afore said will be conspicuously posted on the tenth o f

every month , and notice thereof mailed to such t o members . A member thus notified , omitting pay the debt within five days after such posting,

may , in the discretion of the Executive Committee, o f be suspended from the privileges the Club , or be l House Ru es. 4 3

n requested to resign . The ames of members thus n suspe ded , and the reason therefor, shall be posted on the bulletin board of the Club ; and nothing herein is to be construed to interfere with the right

of the Executive Committee , at any time , to limit

or suspend the credit of any member .

- O PRIVATE DINING R O MS .

- 8 . Private dining rooms cannot be assigned to

parties numbering less than four persons .

O L DGINGS .

- 9 . Applications for lodging rooms must be made

at the office . THE CLUB HALL.

o f 1 0. The Hall the Club and Art Gallery shall W not be rented for any purpose hatever, but they may be opened for such objects as may be rec o m mended by any Standing Committee of the Club , with the consent of the House Committee, and sub j ect to such restrictions as that Committee may

deem proper .

SERVANTS .

1 I . Servants are not permitted to leave the house on errands for members, except on Club business , and then only on application to the Superintendent or House Committee .

O GRATUITIES F RBIDDEN .

1 o r 2 . No member visitor shall be allowed to i n a l 4 4 The Un o Le gue C ub.

give , under any pretence whatsoever, money or any gratuity to any one in the employ of the Club .

O RESTRICTI NS .

1 r b 3. No ente tainment shall be given in the Clu house to which any person not a member shall co n e tribut .

1 f - 4. No p erson shall take rom the Club house any o r article belonging to the Club , or from the library r - e eading room any book, pamphlet , or newspap r, or mutilate or deface the same . 1 c irc u 5. No subscription or petition shall be fo r lated , nor any article exposed sale , in the Club o f e house, without the permission the Executiv

Committee . 1 6 r n . No game for a wage of mo ey, and no gam e f o . cards whatever, will be allowed in the Club 1 7 . Smoking will not be permitted in the library e at any time, or in the restaurant until after nin ’ o clock R M.

1 8 . e be No wines, liquors, or min ral waters will

r - se ved , except in the restaurant and dining rooms ,

- - billiard room , chess room , and bowling alley. f o f 1 9 . No re reshments allowed to be sent out us the ho e .

O C MPLAINTS .

2 0 . Members are requested to make written com s to Su erin plaint the House Committee , or to the p

fishnets .

g arnet of the

xzr t nz nmmtttzz g n t U .

The Executive Committee in presenting its an . nual report have abundant reason to congratulate f the Club upon the prosperous state o its affairs . The finances have been carefully administered dur ing the year and are in a satisfactory and gratifying f n o f condition . Fi tee thousand dollars the bonded o ff debt has been paid out of the surplus revenue , leaving a balance o f twenty- fiv e thousand do llars to be hereafter liquidated ; and six thousand dollars o f the Club bonds in the hands of the Finance Com mi tee t . Notwithstanding the expenditure o f over ten thousand dollars in permanent improvements of

- n the Club house , and in the free receptio tendered by the Club to M . Bartholdi and representatives of r as the French Government there was a su plus, o f o shown by the Treasurer s report , ver fifteen r thousand dolla s . During the year the member e ship of the Club has been kept full , though ther i has been a marked loss by death and resignat on . o f u r 1 886 r On the first Jan a y, , the e were 4 9 T e n n l 50 h U io Leag ue C ub.

s s 1 6 Non-r sid 2 0 Re ident member 33 e ent , 3 Elections of the year 60 making up the limit

s Non- s Re ident . re ident . 2 2 7 2 0 1 1 5 2

Reinstated a s o non- s en to s Tr n ferred fr m re id t re ident ,

ans e o s to no n- s n Tr f rred fr m re ident re ide t ,

Exempt

c mm s an a 1 1 88 A tive e ber hip J u ry , 7 Entitled to qualify Vacancies

Total

The number o f applicants fo r membership o f the n 1 0 Club disposed of duri g the year were 3, while new 1 the number of applications was 94 , and the 86 total number now recorded is 4 . The internal concerns of the house have been managed during the year with careful consideration , and substantial improvements made in the appoint m - new n - u ents of the Club house . A wi e va lt has been constructed under the rear o f the building R ort the Exe t Co e 1 ep of cu ive mmitte . 5

C f enabling the lub in uture to store its own wine . A fire-proof carpenter shop has been built outside

C - of and adjacent to the lub house , thus eliminating a dangerous element from our premises . Venti lating fans and apparatus have been adjusted for the better ventilating of all parts of the house, the billiard room thoroughly renovated , and de vices introduced for economy in the consumption of coal and gas . The Art and Library departments have received their due share of the careful attention of their respective Committees , conducing to the increased m interest and pleasure of our embers .

In politics , the mayoralty contest of last fall was the only matter that presented special interest to

C — the lub during the year, no important questions on State or National polity arising to demand at

tention . The chief social occurrences of th e year were the ’ Ladies reception in January last , and the Bartholdi

reception in October . The latter was an unique ff a air, a graceful compliment to the distinguished n represe tatives of the French Republic , befitting ’ and the Club s hospitality, the early interest mani fested by the Club in the proffered gift of the

French nation to the American people , of the $ statue o f Liberty Enlightening the World . The recent death and obsequies of ex - President a Chester A . Arthur, called forth from the Club p

p ro p riate recognition o f that sad event . The Club e Union Lea e Clu b 52 Th gu .

n house was draped with the emblems of mour ing , n and a special meeti g had , and suitable action taken to express and record the honor and esteem enter tained by the Club for our distinguished fellow member .

Of the decease of Gen . Winfield Scott Hancock the Club also took suitable notice , and at a regular meeting appropriate resolutions were presented ex pressive o f the high Character of his military services as a general in the War of the Rebellion , and in recognition o f his honorary membership of the

Club . During the year we have been called to mourn the

- the loss by death of many fellow members , some of

s T who e names were early upon our roll . homas

Freeborn , Henry J . Scudder, William Heath , J . B .

C ff . . . . ha ee , S O Vanderpoel , Charles Spear, D C

Wilcox , Burr W . Griswold , H . P . Farnham , D . Van

n . Nostrand , Dexter A . Hawki s , James H Van Alen ,

Harrison Durkee , John H . Platt , E . T . Sherman , MKewan . c . . Owen B . Gibbs , John P , Wm C Arthur , L i er A . a mb e Joseph H . Weller , H . Baldwin , Wm . , Greac en R . B . Livermore , George H . Talman , John ,

r . J . , Charles Stanford , Henry C Ellis , Rowland John

son , Winthrop L . Slater , and Rev . John Forsyth . ratifi In conclusion , your Committee dwell with g cation upon the harmony which has prevailed in the

Club during the past year . That while we cultivate

social intercourse and generous hospitality, and seek to make our recreative hours genial and attractive to

g a unt of the g uarant ee.

NEW O 1 1 88 . Y RK, January , 7 To the Union League Club I have the honor to present herewith my report o f the finances o f the Club fo r 1 886 :

The amount received for admission fees and annual dues is 50 And fromother sourc es 63

Making a total of 1 3

The payments have been for Expenses 33 D ues refunded 90 00 Bonds bought and c anc elled 00 Surpl us paid over to F inance CommIttee 54 33 Ba an e h use a es u s an n 8 l c , o ch rg , o t t di g 75 4 7

1 3

The am o unt of bonds outstanding has been re d uc ed to of which is held by the

Finance Committee .

All of which is respectfu lly submitted . O E O GE RG M NTAGUE, Treasurer .

of t e 3 2 1mrt h auditors.

N W E O 1 1 88 . Y RK, January 3, 7

To the Union Leag ue Club The Audito rs fo r the year 1 886 beg respectfully t o report : That they have carefully examined the accounts f o the Finance Committee and of Mr. George Mon T t . ague , reasurer, and find them correct Also that the fifteen (1 5) bonds mentioned as paid by the Treasurer have been duly assigned o nd t the Club a cancelled .

oss. WM . H . R

JAMES H . DUNHAM .

J OHN S . BARNES . Committee on Librar and Public ti n y a o s.

FOR THE YEAR 1 886 .

The Library Committee respectfully reports that the Club is now supplied with newspapers and periodicals as follows :

F REI N O G .

Dailies Weeklies Semi - Monthlies Monthlies $ uarterlies A nnuals

DOME TIC S . Dailies Weeklies Semi - Monthlies Monthlies Bi- Monthlies 2 $ uarterlies 6 Annuals 3 2 Total

Total Foreign and Domestic

Of 2 6 d the above , are donate . Un n ea e l b 58 The io L g u C u .

During the past year there have been added to the Library :

By purchase By donation

Total

u Total number of vol mes in Library . Among the important acquisitions may be men “ $ “ tio ned : Ornamental Arts of Japan , Les Lettres $ “ c t C CIO mdia Les Arts , y p of Painters and Paint $ $ , . . . ; ings , Lamia presented by Mr C J Lawrence “ ’ ’ ’ Les Chefs-d CE uv re d A rt a l Expo sitio n Univer

. ort selle , presented by Mr. S . P Avery ; f y

volu mes . of miscellaneous works, presented by Dr

A . E . M . Purdy . The work of the Committee has been mainly directed towards putti ng the Library in better con

‘ dition — by the rebinding of many valuable books

nd - a pamphlets, and supplying a long needed want w in the furnishing of a ne catalogue .

In the careful compilation of the catalogue , the

Librarian , Mr . Ellsworth Totten , is deserving of much praise , and hereafter members will have no difficulty in finding any book in the Library .

The amount appropriated fo r the u se of the Library Committee the last year was Received fromsale of o ld periodicals and catalogues o t r m it ee Rep r of Lib ary Co m t . 59

The Committeehas expended

For newspapers and peri odic als

For b ooks For binding and renovating 60 v s and fi s 3 ol . le For new c atalogue For Mercantile Lib rary sub scription F r m n u 00 o isc ella eo s . 3

Leaving an unexpended bal ance of

During the past year valuable contributions have

. r been received from Mr Clark Bell , Mr. Hen y Bergh ,

Mr . Birdseye Blakeman , Mr. Henry H . Bridgman , Mr .

u . u C Cyrus B tler, Mr Richard B tler, Mr. Michael ol e o f n man , D pt . the Interior, Dr . J . W . Dowli g, Hon .

. . . . Far e n . o Wm M Evarts , Mr B L j , Fire Commis i r s o ne s . . of N Y City , Mr . E . Gest , Mr. R . R . Hamil

K r . n l . . . K eva s ton , Col H L end ick, Mr S . W . , Hon . n a K K o Joh J y nox , Mr . T . W . n x , Mr. C . J .

Laurence , Messrs . Levy Alden , Mr . George W . s M k . . cCo o Lyon , Gen An on G , Medical Director

— U . . . . George Peck S Navy , Mr . C L Merriam ,

Co . . r. Midland Railway , Mr Joseph Moore , J ,

. . . u m . A erican Messrs H V H . W Poor, P blishers of Re ister I nsurance Critic u g , Publishers of , P blishers

Me ican Financie t x r Northwe . s . of , Publishers of , Dr A 6 Uni e e 0 The on L agu Club.

’ E . Purdy, Messrs . G . P . Putnam s Sons, Messrs .

. . Co ...... G P Rowell , Mr W P St John , Mr Chas o f Sedelme er . . y , Mr Henry Stanton , Treasury Dept

. T . S. . . an U , Mr . E E . Thorne , Major Benj C rum ,

Mr . G . M . Van Nort . o u All f which is respectfully s bmitted .

New 1 1 88 . York, January 3, 7

m n G FAY ha ir a . O . C SI URNEY W ,

G Secretar . HENRY H . BRID MAN , y

6 2 The Union League Club.

American Prize Fund Exhibition , held last May , as an acknowledgment o f its services in this direction . In this connection your Committee desire to re iterate and emphasize the recommendations o f the o f 1 88 Art Committee 5, that an annual appropria tion should be made to be invested in paintings or o f b the other works art y American artists , which in course o f a few years would enable the Club to b e the owners and not the borrowers of the adorn ments of at least a portion o f its art gallery . D uring the past year the portraits in the reading room and a number of the paintings and crayons have been cleaned and repaired and some o f them f re ramed . The expenditures of the Committee have been of which was for bills left over 1 from the Art Committee of 88 5. In conclusion your Committee begs to quote from r b ne JV. i u to a recent article in the Y. T in relation American art exhibitions which says It is q uality rather than q uantity that tells in the long run and the o e o f tures w c h c an bear o m ar s n , ch ic pic hi c p i o with fo reign wo rks is a val uable serv ice do ne to American art sts The Un on Lea ue C ub has one x e ent w rk i . i g l d e c ll o in t s d e t on and it is to be o ed that in the uture its hi ir c i , h p f influenc e will be strongly exerted in behalf of good Ameri $ c an art.

o f All which is respectfully submitted .

WM . H . PAYNE, ecretar S y . T COMMIT EE ON POLITICAL REFORM .

O G 1 1 8 8 . UNI N LEA UE CLUB , January 3, 7 The Committee on Political Reform respectfully submits the following report In considering the various subjects bro ught before it during the past year your Committee has been mindful o f the By-law committing to its general charge matters coming under the Fourth Article of “ the Association , which declares that it Shall be the duty o f the C lub to resist and expose corruption f and and promote re orm in our National , State, Municipal affairs ; and to elevate the idea of $ American Citizenship . It has also been kept in mind that the policy o f the Club has been to reserve for Occasions of spe cial importance the exercise of its political force , and to avoid , save when required by grave reasons , such controversies as might disturb the social har mony so happily prevailing among its members . This policy has been indicated on many occa n on 1 8 sions , and co spicuously by the adopti in 77 63 T e e e b 64 h Union L agu Clu . o f a report by this Committee to the effect that it “ will be more in harmony with the conditions ( 11 which a club like this can prosper, to adhere to the advocacy of sound principles and not take part in conducting the canvass , however unsatisfactory, be for the moment , that policy may to the spirit of $ partisanship .

Acting within the limits thus indicated , your Committee has refrained from b ringing before the Club v arious questions that have occupied its own

s attention and engaged its discus ion . In respect to the measures which it has reported its purpose has b v een conser ative . Early in the year a proposed Act to reorganize the Board of Estimate and Apportionment of the $ New City of York , was referred by resolution of the Club to the Committee fo r consideration and report . f After care ul consideration , and con ference with a committee representing the originators of the f bill , your Committee reported that , though ully recognizing the many and serious defects of the present organization of the Board o f Estimate and

Apportionment and the resulting evils , they were not prepared to recommend the proposed bill to r the Club fo its support . A proposed amendment of the Federal Co nstitu is f tion , which has passed the Senate and now be ore the House , establishing as the time for inaugurating the President the anni v ersary o f the first inaugura t n 6 Report of Commi tee o Political Reform. 5

n tio of President Washington , and thereby at once n perpetuating an event of great ational importance , and giving a much- needed extension to the short o f o f session Congress, has been the subject a care f o f ully considered report from this Committee , and favorable resolutions adopted by the Club . The Committee considered the pro priety o f recommending special action in the recent State and Municipal elections, but decided to limit its report to the earnest endorsement o f o ne candidate f o r high judicial position . The subject o f uniform laws regulating marriage has c on and divorce , which by many been long sidered o most urgent , has also occupied the attenti n of the Committee , and has been the occasion of an able and interesting report from one o f its Sub committees . The earnest and successful labor o f the municipal ‘ o flicers r in punishing, by aid of the proper cou ts , the corruption in municipal affairs long since ex fo r ffo r posed , has superseded the time any special e t in that direction on the part of your Committee . o flic ial In reviewing the events of its year, the Committee pauses to express its sincere sorrow fo r the death of two of its most prominent and re

s ec ted r . p members , Mr . Henry J . Scudde and Mr

Dexter A . Hawkins . A fitting tribute to the services o f and worth Mr . Scudder has been given in the minutes submitted to the Club and approved by its resolutions . 66 The Union Lea e Cl b gu u .

The death of Mr. Hawkins, which occurred later o o f in the year, has been the occasi n a memorial en r o te ed up n the records of the Committee, ex pressing the high appreciation in which he was the held by his associates . His valuable services to ff cause of education , his unselfish e orts for the right decision of questions affecting the public welfare , deserve a more extended notice than the o limits f this report admit . The concluding words o f the memorial do not exaggerate his worth f f f He was a courteous and aith ul riend , an o acc mplished lawyer, a patriotic citizen , who neither ‘ o flic e f held nor desired ; a ond father and husband , $ and a Christian man . The foregoing summary of the action of you r i d Committee s not esigned to itemize its work, but to indicate to the Club that it has been alive to its duties and thoughtful in their discharge . While it may not be the province of the Com mi tee f t to forecast the uture, an expression will not be thought untimely that points to a direction in Which the Committee and the Club may use thei r “ influence with effect . To elevate the idea of American citizenship is announced in the Articles o f Association as a duty of the Club . The idea of American citizenship which the Club

Should maintain and elevate , was well framed , by f one of its conspicuous ounders, in language de scribing the kind o f American Citizens who should compose it , and the loyalty they should avow . Re rt C mmittee on Political Re orm 6 po of o f . 7

“ is I feel , he wrote , that liberty and union not all . Neither A . nor B . could with sincerity say, I believe , that they would not , if they could , have a

— a privileged class in our society legal aristocracy .

Both , I believe , hold , in their own hearts , European views on this subject . Both regard our society as a failure because of the want of a legally privileged class . Both feel something of contempt for a man — at least they feel themselves the natural superiors o f a man— who does not feel himself to belong to a class which he thinks ought to be privileged . I , on the other hand , feel a certain contem pt for, or a sense of superiority to , a man who wants any such legal setting up . They sympathize with what has always been the prevailing sentiment of the aristo cratic and cultivated class abroad , and avowedly of only a very vulgar, presuming, and peculiarly snob i bish Class here . We sympath ze with what has been a prevailing sentiment with the highest quality

— of men , peculiarly in our own country the men , too , f who ormed our country and gave it to our keeping .

To their sentiment in this respect , and to this quality given by them to our nationality , we are loyalists , they are renegades . We are the hereditary and natural aristocracy, they are parvenus ; we are $ rich , they are vulgar . By embracing the idea that this Club is a rep re sentativ e body of American citizens who believe in no legal privilege or preference for any class, and that all efforts to create such privilege or preference 6 The U i a e l 8 n on Le gu C ub.

s hould be steadfastly opposed , the Club will retain the distinctive excellence which has belonged to it fo r from its foundation , and will find ample field useful action by itself and its committees .

Respectfully submitted ,

O . TH MAS H HUBBARD ,

Cha irman.

S econd inau gural

CHAUNCEY M . DEPEW , PRESIDENT .

GENTLEMEN OF THE CLUB I return you my thanks fo r the confidence ex hibited by this second election to the Presidency . It is an honor the more highly appreciated as one the knows better history and character of the Club . I know of no position outside of official life so T grateful to a citizen of New York . his organiza tion differs widely from the other clubs which form So f o f large a part of the social li e our city , in sup plementing conditions for enjoyment equal to any of them , with an origin identified with an heroic period and an active and aggressive public spirit . I am happy to report that the onerous and exacting duties of the past year have left your presiding o flicer in excellent health and with u n am impaired powers . I led from my experience with the administration and cares of this exalted position to doubt the reports so common in the daily press , that the labors and duties of gov ernment are undermining the constitutions and

7 1 T Union Lea e Cl b 72 he gu u . shortening the lives of those who have in charge I e i e i the destinies of the Republic . b l ev their m paired health and failing vitality are due to other u causes than the performance of official d ty . It is true that the President o f the Union League is freed from those dissensions within and assaults from without which harass the Chief Magistrate o f The the Nation . President of the United States canvasses the o pinions o f his party and discovers that so far as they are voiced by its leading repre sentativ es and newspaper organs there is a startling unanimity in disapproval o f his cou rse and anxiety for that he may not be renominated . He looks f com ort to the partisans who voted against him , and finds them serenely contemplating a new campaign , under their own banner and for one

' of their own faith . But within these walls no T strifes exist . here is always substantial una nimi ty. It is not because there is a dead level o f O r co mmon sentiment and pinion . It is not fo the reason that we are deficient in opinionated , bumptious , and egotistical members, or men of r marked , aggressive, and original ideas . Eve y r i element of dive se and warring conditions s here , and we are within ourselves a Miniature Republic . The reason these antagonisms do not break out in revolt , in revolution , and divide us into hostile o f camps, is because the government the Club is a faithful reproduction o f the ancient Athenian

Democracy . Sixteen hundred members agreeing l es Inaugura Addr s. 73 in the main upon the great questions which divide r the count y , and yet retaining the healthy friction o f ff individual di erences , render a loyal support to the management , because in our Democracy each so frequently has the opportunity to participate .

The committees formulate our policy and opinions, and once a month the whole Club criticises , amends,

ffi . disapproves, or a rms We admit that sixty mil lions o f people could not govern themselves in that way but the Athenian Democracy, which produced the greatest poets , orators , philosophers , and states men o f antiquity ; which treated every citizen who believed the State could not exist without him , to banishment or the hemlock ; which fostered and encouraged genius in every department of human

— intelligence , adopted as the model for government

— by the Union League Club, has given it perma nence and power, and made it an im portant and ever- present factor in the public affairs of the

Republic .

O F THE PATRI TIC O RIGIN O CLUB .

It would not be possible for any man to speak , in acknowledgment of his elevation to the presidency

of this organization ; without saying something of the spirit which underlies it and in which it was

born . This Club lives not in the past ; but it is proud of the past . It is not dependent upon what

has gone before , but it has the inspiration of all the glorious things which placed it in being and have e 74 Th Union League Club.

been the impetus of its life . It was created , not u o f as cl bs usually are , where men similar pur d s suits , thoughts, inclinations, and social ten encie nd gather for mutual amusement , recreation , a the passing o f idle hours ; but at a time such as never before existed and we trust never will agai n at a tim e when the country was in the throes o f n a revolution which threatened the ational life , which threatened to engulf every interest and even

— liberty itself in a common ruin , this Club sprang i no nto existence . For the past thirty years , matter what may have been said in derogation of this city, New York has been the metropolis of the nation . No matter what her government , or the criticisms upon it , the opinion of New York was vital in the affairs of the nation and to its civiliza tion and progress . New York occupied much the s - ame relation to the country, and does to day, as f so Paris ormerly did to France , though not quite was f potential . It an anomaly, it was insu ferable, when the Republic was in the very agony of disso lu tio n s m , that the city of New York should be in y who pathy with those favored its overthrow, and that its moral force should be on the side of the de struction of our institutions . It was to place New

York where the city Should be , to cultivate and con centrate and give Cxpression to the loyal and patri otic sentiment of the metropolis, it was to infuse into our Citizens a love of count ry which would be f elt from one end of the land to the other, it was Ina ral A ress ugu dd . 7 5

' to p ut down disloyalty here and rebellion else

was where , that the Union League Club organized . It accomplished that mission , and in the most sig But a nal way . the Union Le gue Club is abreast u estio us W of the times and the q of the hour . hen the issues of a purely patriotic character were settled , it lived on to take the phase of a social n w club , retaini g al ays its natal spirit of interest in the public affairs of the day and the expression o f its views u pon them . To the Union League Club was largely due the impelling force which carried

u thro gh the , and put into the Constitution of the United States in permanent and end u rIng form the results won u pon our battle

u fields ; which fo ght out in the press, in public o f prints, and upon the platform the principles

s u sound finance and hone t c rrency, and maintained the national honor and credit .

A PRESENT FO RCE .

n The Club bears o animosities . It recognizes o the conditions as they exist t day, and will meet those which arise to-morrow without regard to the past . When it was developed that the war was in actually over ; that the great surg g, resurrecting infl uences of universal liberty and un ific ation were felt in the development of industries in all parts of the land ; when the South , disenthralled and regen c rated , found in its new life marvellous wealth and prosperity ; when it sent here on the l t day o f e u 76 The Union L ague Cl b.

December last an eloquent representative o f its

people , who , in a speech of twenty minutes , won a

re- s national fame , because he recognized a establi hed brotherhood and oneness of national spirit in every part of our land — the first to welcome and to cheer

was the Union League Club .

R FO FREE LABO R .

o f o n We are in the midst events which , the sur f ace , appear to threaten revolution , the overturning o f our social relations, a permanent disturbance of r d o f the indust ial con itions of the country , the loss

credit , and the paralysis of employment for labor

— and capital , but they are not . There is a seething and bubbling of the elements which always precede and accompany great industrial and national pros erit p y . There never was a time when the signs were brighter fo r the healthful investment of capital and the remunerative employment of labor ; for the v o o rtu de elopment of the vast , the incalculable pp

nitie — - s for national wealth and growth than to day . The anarchist sees that if there is to be universal prosperity nobody will join in the disru ption o f the i State and society. The socialist knows that f there is to be a well - paid and permanent employment fo r

labor, with its savings going into banks and home fo r steads, he will have no following a general dis

tio n trib u of property , and the levelling of all to the

standard of the least competent , industrious , and f The e skil ul . labor agitator, who has no oth r voca

The Union Lea e Cl 78 gu ub.

importance , and it seems to belong to ancient his r to y, but it is within most of our recollections . It was the significant recognition by the Union League

Club of the lines upon which victory must be won , o f the broad , deep , and enduring foundations which u m st be laid under the reconstructed Republic . It meant the citizenship of all men upon like condi

tions and their equality before the law . When to emphasize their work this Club marched down

Broadway with that regiment , braving a hostile mob , and their wives, who had presented its flag,

rode along defying the social ostracism of the hour, the news flashing over the count ry and penetrating the rebel line , inspired hope in the breast of every

negro and poor white , and was a revelation to the world of the possibility and necessity of union with

r out slave y, and with full citizenship and the broad m ll est liberty as the com on right of a . It meant the peace and perpetuity of the nation .

I O O F O A D TH TS WELC ME BARTH LDI N E FRENCH .

We kept still abreast of the times when we recog niz ed the full significance and spirit of that magnifi cent gift which the French people made to America . s In our busy life , in the whirl and rush of our indu a trial and materi l pursuits, the people of this coun try did not for a while feel the generous spirit of this tribute . It was first recognized in this Club , and a Committee raised to prosecute the enterprise until its completion . It was by the exertion of that Ina ra A ress ugu l dd . 79

Committee and the triumphant efforts of the World newspaper that the pedestal was built and America put in a position to honorably receive the Statue of

Liberty . When Bartholdi arrived , accompanied by the representatives of the French Republic , they were received within these walls, not only as guests ,

r not only with ordina y hospitality, but with all the re re honors the Club could bestow , and with the p sentativ es of every department of the Government to join in the salutation and welcome . It was tele en graphed through the country , and aroused the thusiasmof the olden time ; flashed by the cable

under the ocean , renewing the memories of a hun dred years ago and the world saw that the friend

ship of nations , surviving the centuries and keeping

pace with the years , could grow brighter as the gen era n tio s descend .

RT AMERICAN A . I desire to call your attention to a subject in which I think the Club can take a peculiarly appropriate T and imp ortant interest . here are at present no

great questions occupying our minds or time . But there are matters outside o f political issues and in the field o f general discussio n and controversy which are important constituents of the forces of

education and culture , or rather the germs of na n im t io al character . Among them none are more portant than the enco u ragement and development

of art . Our Club has in its Gallery, at each n 80 The Unio League Club.

ff monthly meeting, the best pictures of the di er

ent foreign schools , and on one memorable night during the year we were gratified and surprised by the success of the Committee in collecting a re markable exhibition of the works o f American artists . It was here that the idea of the Metro politan M u seum of Art originated and took prae tical and enduring form . Its projectors found that C New York , alone among the great ities of the world , had no public gallery or collection where the people could enjoy the pleasure of seeing and studying the best results of the genius of all ages on canvas and in the metals and stone . The

Metropolitan Museum , in its present and its prom ise , redeems our city from the charge of utter in and beastly sordidness , and with municipal and dividu al benefaction it will become a grand treasury of the past and the popular college for the future . But its best features m u st necessarily belong to other civilizations than our own . We have money and mines , factories and farms , mills and telegraphs and railroads enough to give a distinctively Ameri can Character to our industrial life we have at last a recognized national literature ; and we want and must have an equally original and universally rec o ni e The idio s n g z d School of American Art . y crasies produced by the commingling o f all na tio nalities o u r in our cities , the wild life of plains , the picturesque conditions of our frontiers and a pl ins and mining and hunting camps, and our Inaugural Address. 8 1

u u unrivalled scenery, present nequalled opport ni

- ties . Now every palace and picture gallery from Maine to the golden coast is filled with representa ’ tions of court and castle scenes , of queens draw

- ing rooms, imperial reviews , German and French soldiers , or cottage and tavern interiors of a peasant life foreign to us . Neither historical characters and events , or popular incidents or characteristics or

r scene y , recall or suggest any thing except to trav ellers , and to them only the memories of an idle day . We pay fabulous sums for these canvases , and in many cases the buyer purchases names , not works of art . He fears the sneer of the critic and ’ Americo-phobiac ; he would fight for his country s en liberty or honor, but would die sooner than counter the suspicion that he was ignorant of art , because his walls were hung with American pict u The n l res . America artist whose paintings sel for two hundred dollars at home goes abroad s for a few years, has his picture in the Salon , p ut ffi a foreign prefix or a x to his name , and gets fo r two thousand dollars , in addition to the duty, any thing he does . It would promote p atriotism and immeasurably increase refinement and culture in its best sense , if under proper encouragement American genius was framing on undying canvases r the glories of our histo y and heroes , and the beau ’ o f s ties nature s noble gifts , and the novel situation presented by the original conditions of our complex national life . 8 2 The Union League Club.

TARIFF TINKERS . I firmly believe in the p olicy and beneficial results ff of a wise protective tari , in encouraging and fos tering our industries and products ; but under the pretext of revenue , when the surplus is so great that it already threatens the peace and virtue of the

country, interest or ignorance puts provisions into the statutes which threaten to bring the whole sys l tem into contempt . An alien dealer, a sharp awyer, and a careless committee formed the combination m which ade possible a duty of thirty per cent . on works of art . Genius knows no limitations , neither f The o . race, of territorial boundaries , nor of time p roductions of the modern Continental and English

schools are among the noblest works of any age . e For our enjoym nt and education , until we have

- defined a well school of art , and always thereafter,

- a as parts of every well selected g llery, we should

freely welcome these splendid creations . American artists did not ask for this protectio n ; they have The petitioned for its repeal . Art Committee of u re this Club sent out a circ lar to American artists, o u ff questing their views the art tari . Eleven hun

- dred and ninety seven answers were for free art , and f only seven for the tari f . When in Europe recently, I found that young American artists were given the same advantage in the great studios and galleries as ff the citizens of the various cities . No d i erences were kno wn and no distinctions m ade on account of a n tionality . But their position was annoying and Inaugural Address. 83

- m . ortifying Their fellow students, the English ,

French , German , Spanish , and Italians , could sneer “ fugly say : We give you freely every opportunity w C hich our older ivilizations possess and we enj oy, and you return the courtesy by putting a tariff of s thirty per cent . on our picture . It marks your o judgment f the value of our works as against yours,

with the same training and masters . There is a heredity in art , and we h ve behind us Raphael ,

Titian , Murillo , Rubens, Reynolds , and a host of $ others ; you have nobody . The influence of the Union League Club should be vigorously exercised for the recognition and development of American

art . While pictures are the most durable and h satisfactory of the investment of luxury, t eir

value often fluctuates by the caprices of fashion , but the judicious discretion of our Art Committee could make native works of merit standards of taste r in eve y collection .

TO O A ENC URAGE MERICAN ARTISTS .

The Club should be represented at each annual h ex ibition , and under the advice of its most compe

tent members select and purchase a few of the best . This would come in time to be a decoration and ff emu medal , inspiring the most brilliant e orts and

lous rivalry . Our rooms , as the years advance , would mark the progress and growth of American art and its steadily increasing power fo r larger con c e tio ns p and nobler work , and many a genius who n l 84 The Unio League C ub. might otherwise die unknown would reach fame and fort une by having merited the favoring verdict of this Club .

ITS FUTURE .

I have heard the fear expressed , and several times it has come near breaking out into a tem porary revolution , that the insuperable antagonism between the political and social elements of the Club must lead in time to the suppression of the one or the other . I d o not believe it . The political exigency arises infrequently . The social conditions are here all m h the ti e . W ile once in twelve months, per haps , this Club may be called upon to express itself with no uncertain voice upon public questions , dur ing the rest of the year it should be , and is , the very best of Clubs in every sense that constitutes a per The e . U fe t one nion League , it should be under in stood , while working parallel lines with one party, will never become its slave or unquestioning fol lower. Its best influence is negative as well as o r o nv en positive . There is no State National C tion of the Republican Party which dares put before the country nominees who would receive the its disapprobation , because that would be dam l . , al nation of the ticket , But gentlemen , after , we have here a home which has no equal o f its kind

— a in this country or any other, home which is full o f of rest , of recreation , of sentiment , reminiscence , and of good times . It is a most peaceful , comfort fo r able, companionable , and restful refuge the tired

2 11 wzmurtanr

O n ABRAHAM LINC LN , late Preside t of the United

1 1 86 . States . Died , April 5, 5 o f ULYSSES S . GRANT, late President the United

. 2 1 88 . States Died , July 3, 5

- O O Major General R BERT ANDERS N . Died , October

2 1 88 1 . 7 ,

- Major General A . E . BURNSIDE . Died , September

- O F eb Major General WINFIELD S . HANC CK . Died , ruar 1 886 y 9 , .

- O K . . Major General G UVERNEUR WARREN Died ,

u 8 1 882 . Aug st ,

- T O G . O Major General GE R E H H MAS . Died , March

1 Admiral DAVID G . FARRAGUT. Died , August 4 , 1 8 70.

- T O O R Rear Admiral HE D US BAILEY . Died , Feb

ruar 1 0 1 8 . y , 77

2 1 1 8 . O . O . GE RGE T STR NG Died , July , 75

. R O . r 0 Rev H EN Y W . BELL WS Died , Janua y 3 ,

1 882 .

OO 1 88 . PETER C PER. Died , April 4 , 3

CHESTER A . ARTHUR, late President of the United 6 1 8 1 88 . States . Died , November , 6 1 1 88 . O . . GE RGE B BUTLER Died , April 3 , 90

n a e l 94 The Unio Le gu C ub. M K A C . BA ER, FR NCIS BEA AN , CHARLES K GE F BEDLo w BA ER, ORGE , HENRY C E E BAKER , PETER . BEEBE, CHARL S .

P B. BALDWIN , AUSTIN . BEECHER , HENRY

N F H . BALDWI , HENRY DE . BEERS , WILLIAM

N L E E . BALDWI . SIMEON BE CHER, G ORGE

G L E H . BALLOU , EORGE WI LIAM BELCHER , G ORGE BANGs E , FRANCIS S . B LDEN , WILLIAM D L BARBOUR , WILLIAM . BELKNAP , ROBERT ENOX E E A K BARNARD , FR D RICK . BELL, CLAR P B . BELL, LAWSON . R E H BARNA D , HORACE BEND , G ORGE . S L W C T BARNE , CHAR ES . BENEDI , JAMES N L BAR ES , DAVIS BENEDICT, JAMES . W YLLYS BARNES , EDWARD BENEDICT ,

. P. BARNES , JOHN S BENJAMIN , GEORGE O W . BARNES , LIVER BERGH , HENRY

BARNES , THEODORE M . BIERSTADT, ALBERT

BIGEI .0W C C . BARNEY , NEWCOMB . , SAMUEL L E BARRETT, WILLIAM S BI LINGS , CH STER

C . E BARRON , JOHN BILLINGS , FR DERICK BAR STow R . , AND EW BILLINGS , J ARCHER T L T O P. C . BARTLE , DAVID . BILLINGS , LIVER L TT P B. R . BART E , EDWARD BISHO , HEBER BIxBY E F R . . BARTLETT , JOHN , ROB RT B F ARTON , GEORGE DE . BLAGDEN , GEORGE

O E G . BARTON, LIV R BLAGUE, GILES H W . . BARTRAM , THOMAS BLAIR , CHARLES W BASS, EDGAR BLAKE , HENRY E B BATES , ALFRED . BLAKE , MARSHALL .

C . I BATES , JOHN BLAKEMAN , B RDSEYE Lou1 s H BATES , LEVI M . BLAKEMAN , .

G . G R . BATES , WILLIAM BLANCHARD , EORGE BAxTE H R . , HUGH BLATCHFORD , SAMUEL M . E S E N BEACH , ALFRED . BLIS , CORN LIUS . BEADLESTON N , ALFRED . BLISS , GEORGE BEADLESTON H , WILLIAM . BLISS , GEORGE Resi ent IlTe ers d mb .

B A G . BLISS , JUSTIN . ROWN , FRANK B A BLODGETT, TILDEN ROWN , FREDERICK .

BLoss O . . , JAMES BROWN . FREDERICK T B B . G . BOARDMAN , AL ERT BROWN , BRUCE

L . W BOLLES , ELIAKIM BRO N , HAROLD

N . P BOLLES , THOMAS BROWN , HERBERT .

BOND , FRANK S . BROWN , JOHN NICHOLAS

G . H BOND , HIRAM BROWN , JOSEPH E B BONNER , FRED RICK BROWN , THOMAS . W E . H BONYNG , CHARLES BROWN , WALSTON .

R ev . BOOTH , ROBERT RUS BROWN , WILLIAM S .

W C . SELL BRO NING , WILLIAM C D . . P. BORDEN , MATTHEW BUCHANAN, CHARLES BO Rs , CHRISTIAN BUCHANAN , WILLIAM W E A . O W BOST ICK , JAB Z BUCKINGHAM , LIVER .

VINCENzo N G . BOTTA, BUCKLEY , MORGA

U NE G E . E F BO R , EORG T BUCKL Y , WILLIAM .

G . . BOWDOIN , EORGE S BUCKLEY , WILLIAM T

BOYD , JOHN SCOTT BUDLONG , MORRIS M . C BRACE, HENRY BUEL, CLARENCE .

BRAEM E E C . , HENRY M . BU LL , G ORGE L BRAINERD , CEPHAS BULKLEY , . DUNCAN C BREWSTER, BENJAMIN BULLARD , HAROLD E H BREWST R , HENRY BURCHARD , THOMAS . A R EV . BRIDGMAN , . CHARLES BURDEN , JAMES D W . . BURDETT , HENRY M . E H C BRIDGMAN , H NRY BURKE , CHARLES . R ws E H BUR o O . BRIGHTMAN , HORACE , GD N BRISTow IN H V , BENJAM . BURTON , FRANK L BRITTON , JOHN BURTON , ROBERT . BRO Aw V R K . , ISAAC . BUSH , EDWARD E A BROOKFI LD , WILLI M BUSH , J . ADRIANCE

BROOKS , WALTER BUTLER , CHARLES B L E ROWER , JOHN . BUTLER , CHARLES . H BROWN, ALBERT . BUTLER , CYRUS F R D BROWN , EDWARD . BUTLE , RICHAR N BYERs BROW , EDWARD M . , JOHN 6 ni e 9 The U on Leagu Club.

P L L PP . N . B CADWALADER , JOH C A , RO ERT

N LA S. CAMP , HUGH . C RK , BERNARD L A K CAMP, WI LIAM . CLAR , CYRUS

EL L K G . CAMPB L , DOUG AS CLAR E , BENJAMIN

G N K . r G . CANNON , HENRY LE . CLARKE, ARD ER , J

B E W . CANNON , LE GRAND . CL MENT, PERCIVAL E R WALDo P. CAR Y , HEN Y T . CLEMENT , W CLEws CARNEGIE, ANDRE , HENRY CARPENDER M , WILLIAM CLOSSON , JA ES T . TE H W . CARPEN R, FRANK COCHRANE, JOHN

C . F CARTER , JAMES COCHRANE , WILLIAM .

O . C . CARTER, LIVER S COCKEY , JOSEPH E P CAS , HENRY . CODDINGTON , CLIFFORD W W E P . CASE , HO ARD . COE , S ENCER E F H CASE, WATSON . COF IN , CHARLES . ASSI Y P W C LL . . . CHARLES COGGESHALL, EDWIN

I I r G E R . CATL N , JUL US , J . COLBY , ARDN R B CAULDWELL, JOHN . COLLINS , BENJAMIN L CECIL, GEORGE COLLINS , CHAR ES E W CHALM RS , MATTHE COLLINS , FRANK S . P I CHAMPION , CHARLES . COLL NS , JOHN T .

E F N K . CHANDL R , CHARLES . COLLI S , WALTER

LL N L . CHAPIN , EDWIN S . CO I S , WI LIAM M I L O B CHAP N , JOSIAH . C NE, JAMES .

HI E . CHARLIER, ELIE CONNOR , WAS NGTON H CHASE, GEORGE . COOK , CHARLES T . H D N . CHASE, HERBERT . COOK , HE RY W E . EL . CH ESMAN , TIMOTHY M COOPER , MARV LE B E H H LL ALONzo . CHEEV R , JO N . CORNE , B C HESEBROUGH B A . . , RO ERT CORNELL, JOHN

H CO SSITT H . CHOATE , JOSEPH . , FREDERICK W H . CHRISTMAS , CHARLES . COTTERELL, GEORGE

CHUBB , PERCY COTTING, AMOS B CHURCH , BENJAMIN S . COWING, RUFUS . w E B o L s W . Y K . C CILLE , JOHN , ED ARD

Co x A E F . CLAPP , EVERETT , CH RL S

G F . A L . CL PP , HENRY CRANE, EORGE

Tlze Uni n e e 98 o L agu Club.

F . B DOMINICK , GEORGE ELLIOTT , FREDERIC . W W DOMINICK, . GAYER ELLIS, JOHN . E R O D DOR MUS , . GDEN ELLIS , WILLIAM B A ORLER , EMILE ELMER , RICHARD . B E E R . DORS Y , EDWARD . ELY, JAM S

H N L W . DOUGLAS , JOHN . EMERSON NATHA IE

P. DOWD , WILLIAM EMMET, JOHN

B. F DOWD , WILLIAM ENO , AMOS . W B . D L . DOWLING, JOHN ERHAR T, JOE

C . DOWNING, AUGUSTUS ERVING , JOHN

EUEN S . DOWS , DAVID , MATTHIAS r DOWS, DAVID , J . EVARTS , WILLIAM M . E E E DRAPER , FRANK EV RSON , DUAN S . H DRAPER . WILLIAM . W F DREXEL, JOSEPH . FABYAN , GEORGE . L E C . DUDL Y , JOHN . FAHNESTOCK , HARRIS E DUGGIN , CHARLES FAHN STOCK , WILLIAM B V DUMONT, JOHN . FAILE , CHARLES .

E H . G . DUN , ROB RT FALCONER , WILLIAM E H L . DURHAM , G ORGE . FANCHER , ENOCH ME A H . . DURHAM , JA S FARRINGTON , EDWARD P DURAND , JOHN M . FARRINGTON , HENRY . W E DURANT, CHARLES . FAY , JOHN . C W DURANT , FREDERICK . FAY , SIGOURNEY . E DURANT , HOWARD M . FAYE , JAM S J . E B B DUTCH R, JOHN . FENNER , ARNOLD . E DWIGHT, TIMOTHY T FESSEND N , FRANCIS M DWINELLE r. H . , WILLIAM FISH , HA ILTON , J B L . DYER, HENRY . FISK , CLINTON D FISKE , ARTHUR .

EAMES , CHARLES J . FISKE , JOSIAH M . E P E P EARL , JOSEPH FITCH , G ORGE . R v B B. e . . EATON , DORMAN FLAGG , JARED H A . EDWARDS , WILLI M J . FLAGG , JOHN E EINSTEIN , EDWIN FLAGL R, HENRY M . E ELDERKIN , JOHN FL ISS, WILLIAM M .

E B E . ELKINS , ST PHEN . FLINT , EDWARD R s e Ale ers e id nt mb . 99

I S8O A FOOS , LAMAR GARLAND , JAMES . B H E R . 1 882 FOOT , CHA LES GARNER , WILLIAM

1 86 GAW TRY E . FOOTE , EMERSON 3 , HARRISON

O N 1 8 E . F RBES , FRA CIS 73 GAY , JOSEPH r 1 8 E M FORBES , JOHN M J . 79 G ST, ERAS US 8 H 1 86 . FORD , J . HOWARD GIBBENS , FREDERICK 8 G R R 1 6 . H . FORD, JO N 9 GIBSON , EORGE D N 1 8 S V . FORNEY, MATTHIAS . 79 GIB ON , HAR EY W 1 8 E E FORSYTH, GEORGE 79 GILB RT , FR DERICK B C . 1 8 . FOSDICK , BALDWIN 79 GILBERT, JAMES W P 1 8 8 B . FOSTER , JAMES . 7 GILBERT, RO ERT

W E A 1 88 E A . FO LER, CHARL S . 7 GILDERSLEEVE , H NRY

B 1 8 8 S G L . FOWLER , GEORGE . 7 GILLE PIE, EORGE 1 8 E FRALEY, JOHN U . 79 GILL T, SULLY

E P 1 8 E L R . FRAM , CHARLES . 77 GILL TTE, WA TER

G . 1 868 L C . FRANCIS, DAVID GILSON , WA TER H C . 1 886 . FREEBORN , GEORGE GOADBY , JAMES

1 8 8 H . FREEMAN , SAMUEL 7 GOADBY , WILLIAM F O . 1 8 1 . FRENCH , FRANCIS 7 GODDARD , NORTON N B 1 8 . FRENCH , STEPHEN . 74 GODDARD , FREDERICK

F 1 880 . FROTHINGHAM , CHARLES . , GODDARD , J WARREN N B 1 86 R R . FRY , HORACE . 7 GODDA D , WAR EN

1 88 B. FRY , REGINALD 5 GOLD , CORNELIUS W 868 G B 1 . FULLER , GEORGE . GOLDSCHMIDT, EORGE F W A r 1 88 . ULLER, GEORGE . , J . 4 GOLDSCHMIDT , SAMUEL W 1 880 O . FULLER, HORACE . G ODWIN , HENRY J L H 1 8 . FU LER , WILLIAM . 75 GORHAM , AUGUSTUS S

E A 1 8 G . FULL R , WILLIAM J . . 77 GORHAM , FRANCIS

FURNALD A P 1 868 H . , FR NCIS . GOULD , GEORGE H H K GRA AM , C ARLES E D G N A . ADSD , HENRY . GRANT, FRED

G R R . A NEY, MICHAEL GRANT , JESSE

G LL S. r. A AWAY , ROBERT M . GRANT, ULYSSES , J

G D A B. ANS, FRE ERICK . GRAVES, ARTHUR

G N C G . N ARDE , . HENRY RAY , J CLINTO

G R M A. C . A DINER , JAMES . GRAY , JOHN G RD H N N A NER, JOHN . GRAYDO , CLENDE IN e I O O 7 7u Union Leagu Clab.

K . L E GREEN , SPENCER HARRA , G ORGE O E O GREG RY , CHARLES . HARRIMAN , LIVER

N A . GRISWOLD , JOHN . HARRIS , ROBERT E L U GROESBECK, ERN ST HART EY, MARCELL S S B N GROSVENOR , JAME . M . HARTSHOR E , BENJAMIN M P N E G ROVESTEEN . . , WILLIAM HARTSHOR E, JAM S M B GUERNSEY , EGBERT HARTSHORNE, RICHARD . G N B UERNSEY , WILLIAM . HATCH , DANIEL . P N . GUITEAU , JOHN M HATCH , HE RY H W N . H . GU THER , WILLIAM HATCH , NAT ANIEL T .

GU N E HAVEMEYE R E C . R EE, WALT R S , H CTOR HAVEMEYER E , JAM S HABIRSHAW M H AVE MEY ER A , WILLIA M . , THEODORE E L E B E G HACKL Y, CA B . HAVEN , G ORGE A LI E E D. HAGGIN , BEN HAV N , H NRY D P HAGUE , JAMES . HAWES, GRANVILLE .

HAIGHT , LOUIS HAWK , WILLIAM S . B E E D HAIGHT, WILLIAM . HAWKINS, EUG N .

R C . HAINES , RICHARD . HAWKINS, RUSH C D HALL , DEWITT . HAWLEY , . EDWIN H E HALL JOHN . HAWLEY , HENRY . A E W HALL , LEWIS HAYDEN , H NRY .

L . E A HALL , ROBERT S . HAYDEN , JAM S . E . D N . HAMILTON , LUTHER HAZAR , ROWLAND H HAMILTON , EDMUND . HAZELTINE, JOSEPH M . E HAMILTON , ROBERT RAY HAZELTINE , L ONARD B W HAMMOND , HENRY . HEATON , WILLIAM E E HARB CK , CHARLES T . HELL N , JOSEPH F I M HARDY , CHARLES . HELMUTH , WILL A T . D H HARMON , FRANK . HENSCHEN , JOHN . E HARPER, FLETCH R HERRICK , EVERETT

E . E HARP R , J ABNER H RRICK , J . HOBART P P HAR ER , JOHN HERRICK , RICHARD . W HARPER, JOHN . HERRIMAN , JOHN

E E . HARPER , JOS PH HENRY H RRON , FRANCIS J W r R HARPER , JOSEPH J . HICKOX , CHARLES . E D HARP R , WILLIAM . HICKS , THOMAS

1 02 Tbe Union League Club.

L L JAMES , THOMAS . KEYSER , SAMUE L E JARDINE , JOHN KING, C AR NCE AY C J , JOHN KING , . VOLNEY W C N . L . . JEN KS, FRA CIS M KITCHEN , MARCUS

L r. L K M . . JENKINS, WILLIA , J KITCHEN , WI LIAM R B W O . . JENNINGS , LIVE KITCHING, FRANK W N E KNEVALS . JE NINGS , WALT R , SHERMAN

H . L JEWETT , CHARLES KNIGHT, AZARIAH .

H E A . K R JO N S, CHARLES NOEDLE , JOHN N D JOHNSON , EASTMA KNOWLTON , . HENRY H Ez RON A JOHNSON , . KNOX , JOHN JAY W H . . JO NSON , J AUGUSTUS KNOX , THOMAS

N F . KouNTzE JO ES , BENJAMIN , AUGUSTUS R JONES , EUGENE KUHNE , F EDERICK

JONES, GEORGE E 1 88 F . JONES , GILBERT . LADD , WILLIAM 3 R E H 1 886 JONES , WALTER . T . LADEW , JOS PH W 1 86 . G . JUDD , DAVID LANDON , CHARLES 3 A D H 1 86 JUILLIARD , . . LANE , JOHN . 5

C . 1 88 LANE . WILLIAM 3 1 882 KANE , S . NICHOLSON LANGDON , CHARLES J D 1 882 KEITH , E SON LANGDON , WOODBURY S E 1 86 KELLOGG , CHARLE LANIER , CHARL S 3 W 1 8 KELLY , RICHARD LANSING, HENRY . 75 W 1 88 KEMP, GEORGE LARNED , CHARLES . 5 L P 1 88 KENDRICK, HENRY . LATTING, CHARLES . 3 1 8 KENNEDY , HARVEY LAWRENCE, CYRUS J . 79 E C 1 88 KENN DY , JOHN S . LAWRENCE , DEWITT . 5 6 E E E N . 1 8 KENN DY , ROBERT L NOX , LAWRENCE, EML N 9 N N 1 86 D. KE T , CHARLES . LAWSON , JOHN 3 A 1 880 KENT , ELMORE . LAWSON , LEONIDAS M . P L 1 88 KENYON , GERSHOM . LAWSON , WILLIAM SHE DON, 5

E . 1 8 6 KEPPLER , RUDOLPH LAWTON , WALTER 7 F A 1 8 KERR, CHAUNCEY . LE SK , GEORGE 74 E D 1 882 K RR , HARRISON . LEAVITT, JAMES T H BOUTILLIER 1 886 KERS NER , EDWARD LE , CHARLES

E E . BO UTILLIER G . 1 886 KEY S , WILLIAM LE , WILLIAM d M e O Resi ent emb rs. I 3

D W 1 886 LECOMPTE, FRANCIS . LOCKWOOD , FREDERICK LEE L B 1 882 , ALBERT . LOCKWOOD , HENRY W 1 88 LEE, DANIEL . LOCKWOOD , HOWARD 4

. B. 1 882 LEE, J BOWERS LOCKWOOD , WILLISTON H . r 1 8 LEE , WILLIAM LORD , DANIEL, J . 74

E EO E . F 1 8 2 LEFF RTS, G RG M LOUBAT , JOSEPH 7

E E . U P 1 880 L FF RTS , M CLIFFORD LO NSBERY , RICHARD . H . 1 88 C . LEFFERTS , WILLIAM LOW , ADOLPHE 5

R . 1 880 LEGGAT , WALTER LOW , JAMES

A H . L ow 1 880 LEGGETT, FR NCIS , JOSEPH T E E . 1 880 L IGHTON , GEORGE LOWREY , CHARLES J . O R C W 1 86 LELAND , AMORY L WREY , GIRA D , . . 9

L H . P 1 866 LELAND , CHAR ES LOWREY , GROSVENOR .

L A L . L 1 8 LE AND , FR NCIS LUDINGTON , BENJAMIN 75

. H 1 86 LENT, WILLIAM M LUDINGTON , CHARLES . 3

E R . 1 8 0 L ROY , HERMAN LUSK , WILLIAM T . 7

L ER . . MA E H 1 8 ESHER , S MORTIM LY N , SAMU L . 79

E R . E W 1 8 LESHER , ST PHEN LYON , G ORGE . 73

C . D 1 8 2 LEWIS , LOUIS LYON , JOHN . 7 H LEWIS , WALTER . 8 8 . E S. 1 LIBBEY , JONAS M MACFARLAN , WILLIAM 7

L . A 1 88 1 LIBBY , JAMES MACK Y , DONALD

H - E 1 88 Rev . . LIBBY , WILLIAM . MACKAY SMITH , AL X , 3 1 88 1 LIDGERWOOD , WILLIAM MACMARTIN . MALCOLM V H 1 880 VAN . MACY , FRANCIS . H E 1 868 L C . INCOLN , GEORGE . MAGOUN , GEORG L L W 1 8 LINCO N , OWELL MALI , HENRY . T . 79 A E B 1 882 LINDLEY , DANIEL . MALLORY , GEORG . LINSLY H P 1 86 , JOHN . MAN , ALBON . 3 H 1 868 E . LITTLE , JOHN ALBRO MAN , FR DERICK 1 886 N H . LITTLE , ROBBINS MAN , HE RY 1 88 F . 2 LIVERMORE , CHARLES MAN , WILLIAM 1 86 M A D F . E F MNICE . LIV R ORE , WILLIAM . , WILLIAM 5 E 1 88 LIVINGSTON , JOHNSTON MANNING, ALFR D J . 5 D A 1 86 LLOYD , DAVID . MANNING, JOHN 4 L r 1 8 G . . LLOYD , FRANCIS MANSON , THOMAS J 77 P 1 88 H H . L . OCKE, JOSEPH MAR$UAND , JO N 5 be ea e l b 1 04 T Union L gu C u .

E C E E E MARSH , CHARL S . M G ATH , G ORGE A E . MARSH , JOHN . MERRIAM , HENRY R E E E MARSH , LUTHER . M RRILL, CHARL S . E W MARSHALL , CHARL S . MERRILL, PAYSON N R MARSLA D , GEORGE MESEROLE, AB AHAM O E W MARTIN , SWALD J . M YER , FREDERICK .

E C . A MARTIN , ROB RT MEYER , GEORGE C MARVIN, JOHN J . MEYER, HENRY . W E MASON , JOEL . MILBANK , JOS PH A MASON , T . HENRY MILBANK , LUTHER . A F . MASON , THOMAS . MILLER , CHARLES H L MAXWELL , WILLIAM . MIL ER, HENRY A MCALPIN, EDWIN . MILLER , HOFFMAN E R MCALPIN , JOS PH . MILLER, WILLIAM S . E MCBURNEY , CHARL S MILLIKEN , CHARLES S . W MCCLAVE, EDMUND . MILLIKEN , DAVID E E F r MCCONN LL, WALT R . MILLIKEN , DAVID , J .

O G L E F . MCCOOK , ANS N MI LIKEN , G ORGE R MCCOOK , JOHN J . MILLIKEN , LOUIS . H KE E MCCOON , JOHN . MILLI N , S TH M .

C . R MCCORMICK , RICHARD MILLS , AB AM A . O . MCCURDY , RICHARD MILLS , DARIUS H MCCURDY , ROBERT . MINFORD , THOMAS L E B MCDONA D , ALEXANDER MITCH LL , CORNELIUS . M O R CELLIG TT , HENRY . MITCHELL , EDWARD

MC O URK Y . r G E . , GEORGE J MITCHELL , WILLIAM , J MOERAN H G . . MCGUCKIN , WILLIAM , EDWARD K E E r MCHARG , HENRY MOLL R , PET R , J . E C MCKESSON , G ORGE . MONTAGUE , GEORGE W L MCKESSON , JOHN . MONTGOMERY , GEORGE .

Mc LANE W . , JAMES . MONTGOMERY , JAMES M

C . MCMILLAN , CHARLES MOORE , EDWARD

A F R . ME D , ERASTUS . MOORE, HOMER

E B G . M EKER, ARTHUR . MOORE , JOHN

B V. MEEKER , THOMAS . MOORE, MUMFORD H B H . MEEKER , WILLIAM . MOORE, WILLIAM . E M EKS, JOHN MOORE, WILLIAM T .

ea e 1 06 Tbe Union L gu Club.

K R G . E PEC , MY ON PORTER, HORAC

P F L . EET, CHARLES . PORTER , WILLIAM A V P R . . EET, GEO GE J . POST, HENRY

PE C . ET, WILLIAM POST, WILLIAM

R . A . PELTON , GUY POTTS , FREDERICK A r FO . PEN LD , EDMUND POTTS , FREDERICK J H H N . PE FOLD , WILLIAM . POTTS , GEORGE H PERCIVAL, JAMES . PRENTICE, FREDERIC

R I H . r E A . PE K NS, EDWARD , J . PR NTISS , NATHANIEL P E N E . . PERKI S , FRANK . PURDY , ALFR D M R F PE KINS, GEORGE . PURDY, J . HARSEN W E E F . P RKINS , H NRY . PURDY , RANDOLPH A E PETERS , GEORGE . PUTNAM , ALBERT

PETERS , SAMUEL T . PUTNAM , J . BISHOP R D N A PETE SON , RICHAR . PUTNAM , WILLIAM . E PHELPS , CHARL S . E PHELPS, DUDLEY $UACKENBUSH , SCHUYL R N E PHELPS , ISAAC . $UINCEY , CHARLES . A PHELPS , WM . WALTER $UINTARD , EDWARD . MO RITz B PHILIPP, . H . P PHILLIPS , WILLIAM RAMSDELL, HENRY . L E PHOENIX , PHI LIPS RANDALL, FRANK . W PINCHOT , JAMES . RANDAL, HENRY L PIPER, ALEXANDER RANDLE, JOHN . R L PIPPEY . R ATHBO NE . , BENJAMIN Y , CHARLES L P ACE , GEORGE RAYMOND , AUGUSTUS B H L . . P ANT , HENRY RAYMOND , CHARLES N A E . O . PL TT, JAM S READ , EDWIN F A E PLUMMER , JOHN . RE D , JOHN MER DITH H r M I . G . . PO EROY , WILL AM READ , WILLIAM J L M C . POMEROY , WILLIAM . REED , JA ES

G . E C . POND , SAMUEL R ED , SAMUEL

S A . POOL , CHARLE REID , WHITELAW

E . POOL , JOS PH REMER , FREDERICK J

R E . POOR , EDWA D RE$UA , HENRY M

W . POOR , HENRY . RE$UA, JAMES M E POORE, CHARLES T . RHOADES , J . HARS N d e Resi ent [Vernb rs. 1 07

E E T R RIC , CL AVES J . RU TER , JOHN

A D C . RICH R S , FRED RUTTER, THOMAS

H C . RIC ARDSON , EDWARD D RICHARDSON , T . CHESLEY SABIN , CHARLES . P AB E RICKETTS , PIERRE DE . S IN , THOMAS T . P RIDDLE, WILLIAM $ . SALTER, THOMAS .

G . A G . RIECK , JAMES S LTONSTALL, FRANCIS

L . C . RIKER , JOHN SAMPSON , EDWARD A P RIPLEY, DAVID M . S MPSON , ELIJAH E RIPLEY , J . DWIGHT SAMPSON, H NRY G A A MB ROBBINS , EORGE . S NCTON , WILLIA .

E A E . ROBBINS , H NRY . SANFORD , HARRISON

F N F . ROBERTS , ADDISON . SA XAY , THEODORE A EN H N N H . ROBI SO , GEORGE . S RG T, GEORGE E E P A ROBINSON , J R MIAH . S RTAIN , WILLIAM E G B ROBINSON , N LSON SCHLEY , RANT . L ROBINSON, WILLIAM M . SCH EY , WILLIAM T . I E ROB SON , WILLIAM SCHULTZ , FRED RICK

D . ROCKEFELLER , JOHN . SCHULTZ , JACKSON S

E E E . ROCK F LLER , WILLIAM SCHULTZ , JOHN S W H RODMAN , ROBERT . SCOTT, CHARLES F ROE , ALFRED SCOTT, JOHN . L R E . O F . , ISAAC SCOVILLE, THOMAS

E B B. ROG RS, COLUMBUS . SCRANTON, GERARD E H R ROG RS , HENRY . SC IBNER CHARLES CRYMSER A E S . ROG RS , JOHN S . , JAMES

E G E . ROLLINS , DANI L . S ARS , J MONTGOMERY D D B . ROOSA , . . ST. JOHN SEDGWICK, HENRY E H ROOS VELT , THEODORE SEELEY , GEORGE . E ROOT, ELIHU SE LEY , NATHAN

H G . ROSS, WILLIAM . SEELEY, WILLIAM GE P I ROWELL , ORGE . SEL GMAN , JESSE W A E RO LAND , THOS . FITCH SELOVER, J M S M . E EN RUGGL S, HORACE M . S EY, ROBERT

RUMRILL, ALEXANDER SEWELL, ROBERT A E F RUSSELL, HOR C SHAFFER, WILLIAM . B RUSSELL, SALEM T . SHATTUCK , WILLIAM . e 1 08 Tbe Union L ague Club.

W SHAW , JOHN . SMITH , ROSWELL B A SHAW , SHELDON . SMITH , SIDNEY .

E . N H SH FFIELD , GEO . ST JOHN SMITH , SPE CER . W E E R E . SH LDON , G ORGE . SMITH , ST WART

E O . R E . SHELDON , JAM S SMITH , THEODO E E MC SH LDON , WILLIA . SMITH , WILLIAM HART W E R F . . SH PA D , ELLIOTT SMITH , WHEELER E N A SNECKNER H SH RMA , CHARLES . , WILLIAM . W H R E . SHETHAR , EDWARD . SO EN , GEORG E SHETHAR , SAMUEL SOUTHER , CHARLES E E F D E SHOEMAK R, H NRY . SPADONE , AMA E

E H. SHOTWELL , THEODORE SPANG , CHARL S W MW E E . SIBLEY, HIRA . SP NC R , BIRD N SIMPKINS, JOHN SPOFFORD , PAUL . ’ ’ FRED K SIMPKINS, NAT L STONE STAFFORD , WM . A E E P E SL D , G ORGE . STANFORD , L LAND

E F . E SLAD , JAMES STANTON , H NRY

E . SLOANE, H NRY T . STANTON , S FRANKLIN

E P. SLOAN , JOHN STARBUCK , HENRY NE D E SLOA , WILLIAM . STARR, EGB RT E B E R . SLOCUM , JOS PH J . STARR, TH ODO E H SMALL, CHARLES . STEAD, CHARLES M

F E N . SMILLIE , CHARLES . ST ARNS, JOHN

H H . SMITH , ALFRED . STEBBINS, JAMES

E E G . SMITH , AUGUSTINE ST DMAN , ERN ST E H SMITH , CHARL S S . STERETT , SAMUEL . E W SMITH , EDGAR M . ST RLING , JOHN . E A B . SMITH , EDWIN . ST WART, JOHN

S W A r. MITH, FITCH . STEWART, JOHN J S E W MITH , G ORGE . STICKNEY , JOSEPH

B F . SMITH , HARRISON . STILLMAN , CHARLES S H ME MITH , . ERSKINE STILLMAN , JA S

A U . SMITH , ISAAC . STIVERS , R FUS M A SMITH , IS AC T . ST . JOHN , WILLIAM M . L c I P u Us H . SMITH , . ST JOHN , WILLIAM . L B SMITH , REV . J . TUTTLE STOCKWEL , CHARLES . S N P MITH , . DENTON STOKES , ANSON .

I 1 0 Tbe Un n Lea e Cl b io gu u .

B I D 886 W . 1 RH TROW R DGE, EDWIN VAN VOO IS , ELIAS B E 1 8 2 WAGENEN RNE TROW RIDGE, FRANCIS . 7 VAN , CO LIUS B A 1 882 D TROW RIDGE, JAMES . . 1 8 TUCK , EDWARD 79 VAN WART , AMES E V P . 1 8 AN A TUCK , SOM RVILLE 73 W RT, IRVING R 1 86 R TUCKERMAN , E NEST 3 VAN WORMER , JOHN . E 1 86 TUCK RMAN , LUCIUS 3 VARNUM , JAMES M

E B 1 8 VENNARD L . TURN R, ARCHI OLD 79 , WILLIAM R VERMILYE D 1 88 . TU NER , THOMAS M . 5 , JACOB 1 8 8 VIGELIUS TUTTLE , FREDERICK 7 , WILLIAM B 1 882 TWOMBLY , ARTHUR . VILAS , JOSEPH Mc K 1 88 TWOMBLY, HAMILTON . 5 VILLARD , HENRY N 1 86 TWOMBLY , HORATIO . 9 VON STADE, FREDERICK E 1 86 TYL R , CHRISTOPHER 3 TYNG Rev H 1 8 1 , . STEPHEN . 7 WADSWORTH , JULIUS

WAGNER , CLINTON

R C . UNDE HILL, EUGENE WAGNER, FREDERICK

WAGSTAFF, ALFRED

C 1 8 8 E . VALENTINE, HENRY . 7 WAIT , FRED RICK S

1 86 . VALENTINE, LAWSON 9 WALCOTT, BENJAMIN S

L 1 8 2 E C . VALLOTTON , JAMES . 7 WALCOTT , JOS PH

BO SKERCK W 1 88 H . VAN , ROBERT 4 WALES , EDWARD H R N L 1 88 E . VAN B U T , CORNE IUS 3 WAL S , SALEM B 1 86 E G VAN BUREN , THOMAS . 4 WALK R, EORGE W B H 1 86 . VANCE, SAMUEL . 7 WALL, MICHAEL E I 1 88 L VAND RBILT, CORNEL US 5 WAL ACE, JOHN VANDERVENTER H S L , C ARLE WAL ACE, WILLIAM S H K WALLER , FRAN A VANDERVOORT, WILLIAM WALSH , CHARLES

L 1 8 F . . 79 WARBURTON , ADOLPHUS 886 R H . 1 VAN INGEN , EDWARD WA D , AARON H 1 86 L . VAN NORT, GEORGE M . 5 WARD , CHAR ES

SANTVOO RD L 1 8 . VAN , A FRED 75 WARD , CHARLES S VOLKENBURGH ED C VAN , WARD , HENRY N WARD WARD , J . LA GDON VO LKENBURGH VAN , THOS . WARD , JOHN , A S. . A . W RD , JOHN $ de e s 1 1 1 Resi nt Alemb r .

S r. E O C . WARD , JOHN J WH ELER, SCAR L WARD , RAYMOND . WHEELER , THOMAS M . B M A . E WARNER, SA UEL WHEEL R , WILLIAM . E LI A WARREN , FAIRMAN WH ELOCK , WIL AM . R E WA REN , JAMES S . WH ELWRIGHT, WILLIAM D WARREN, JOHN HOBART . E WATERS, EDWARD . WHITE, HORACE .

Rev B F . L WATKINS , . WIL UR WHITE, LOOMIS

G . WATROUS, CHARLES WHITE , WILLIAM W H WATROUS , HARRY . WHITE, WILLIAM . W I E E WATROUS , WALTER . WH TEH AD, CHARLES . E W WATSON , CHARL S . WHITEWRIGHT, WILLIAM ,

A. r WATSON , FRANCIS J .

R C . B WATSON , HENRY . WHITFIELD , FRANK . H H . N WATSON , JOHN . WHITING, FRANCIS .

L . A S. WATSON , THOMAS WHITING, HOLL ND E EL WATSON , WILLIAM ARGYL WHITMAN, NATHANI LE H R WEBB, CHAR S . WHITNEY , ALFRED H L WEBB , WILLIAM . WHITTEMORE , WILLIAM .

A A . WEEKES , JOHN . WICKES , EDWARD

ES . . WELL , CHARLES S WICKHAM , WM HULL W H WELLS, NATHAN . WIGGIN , FREDERICK . W O WELLS , JOHN . WILC X , ALBERT D WELLS , . HENDERSON WILCOX , DAVID L P WELLS , WI LIAM S . WILLIAMS , CHARLES . G P WENDELL , ORDON WILLIAMS , PERRY . N MP WE DELL , JACOB WILLIS , WILLIA .

E . F WEST , JAMES WILLMARTH , ARTHUR .

C . WESTERVELT , JOHN WILSON, HENRY S . B r WESTINGHOUSE , GEORGE, WILSON , JAMES . J .

r. O J WILS N , JOHN M .

WETHERBEE, GARDNER WILSON, JOSEPH THORN

E G C . WETMOR , EORGE TON

WEYMAN , CHARLES S . WILSON , WASHINGTON

E E C . G LB C . WH EL R, DEWITT WILTSE , I ERT D S W WHEELER , ELIJAH . WINCHE TER , LOCKE . O WHEELER, BED WING, CHARLES T e l 1 1 2 7 h Union L ague C ub.

C . WINSLOW , EDWARD WORK , JOHN F WINSLOW , EDWARD . WORTHINGTON, CHARLES

C . WINSTON , GUSTAVUS S .

E AS H . H B. WITHERB E, SIL WRIG T , LOUIS

C . M WITTER , WILLIAM WYCKOFF, WILLIA S .

O . L S WOLCOTT , EDWARD WY IE, GEORGE . O WO D , EDWARD

H . C WOOD , THOMAS YALE , HENRY .

O R . B. WO D , WALTER YALE , JOHN B A . LI M WOOD , WILLI M YALE, WIL A HENRY

N G . WOODHOUSE , LORE ZO Z WOODRUFF , DICKINSON ABRISKIE , LANSING

1 1 4 me Union League Club.

LA E C RKE , ALEXAND R S . FELT , EDWIN M .

LI P. CLYDE , WIL AM FERGUSON , WALTON W . COE, LYMAN FESSENDEN , SAMUEL

G . H COIT, EORGE M FIELD , MARS ALL E COLY R, VINCENT FISHER , CLARK

G . F RANK C COOK, ALBERT FISKE, O COOK, SETH FISKE, LIVER

COPCUTT H . B , WILLIAM FRIEZE, LYMAN . N L COR EL , THOMAS

S C . G F W CORNELL , THOMA ARDNER , AL RED . ' ALEX R B . G H . r CRANE , ARDNER , JOHN , J .

r. G CRAWFORD , JOHN, J ILBERT , FITCH

G A A . CRERAR, JOHN ILLIS , CH RLES

. R . G CROES , J JAMES ILMAN , THEODORE G H CROWLEY, RICHARD OODMAN , RIC ARD

CULYER . N S . , JOHN Y GRANT , THOMPSO

R . G Rev B Z CUMMINGS , COLUMBUS RAY, . AL ERT G RL P REGORY , CHA ES DAVEN ORT , IRA G C REGORY , EDWARD L DAVIS , J . A BA A GRIGGS , DAVID . D Y , E A DMUND G NN U , ALEXANDER DENNIE, EDWARD M . E DE WITT, JOHN HALL, EDWARD S . N B DICKERMA , WATSON . L HAM , SAMUEL . Y A P DILLAWA , CH RLES . A W W HARL ND , ED ARD DIX , GEORGE . W A HARRIOTT , ED ARD . DOUBLEDAY , ABNER W HASSLER, CHARLES . R E P H W , C . ATHA AY F AN IS EARL , WILLIAM D H , R C S . EASTON , HENRY AVENS I HAR B A H Y , A ELLIS , J MES M . A DEN L ERT K . . H YW , ELLIS , JOHN S A ARD JEDEDIAH

W , A . H ELWOOD , FR NK EAD CHARLES E H , I C . END RSON SAA EMMET, RICHARD S HEUBERER E , C L . HARLES EMMET, WIL IAM J W H C X , . EMMONS, J . FRANK I KO RALPH

HITCHCOCK, HENRY N S S FANTON , HULL HOLLI SHEAD , JAME . - Non Resident Alembers. I 1 5

E E N L . HOMANS , SH PPARD M RRIAM , CLI TON

O . HOYT , LIVER MERRITT , M FRANKLIN E E HUBBARD , WALT R M TCALF, JESSE

A . L HUMPHREYS , WIL ARD MIDDLETON , JOHN E W A C HUMPHR YS, EDWARD . MILLER , NICHOL S . W HUNT, HIRAM . MILLER, ROSWELL L MIL ER, WARNER

B I . IRWIN , JAMES . MINOR , WILL AM T

H . MOFFAT, DAVID F JACKSON , . WOLCOTT MOORE, JOHN

C . O r. JAY, JOHN MORRIS , G UVERNEUR , J

B . M . JEWELL , LY AN MORRISON , DAVID M

0 r. N P. JO ES , JOHN MORSE , JAMES J

W S B D KELLOGG, STEPHEN . NA ON , AL ERT

KENNEY , ALBERT S . NAST , THOMAS

E . KETT LL , HERBERT NICHOLS , WILLIAM S B H KIP, WILLIAM . NIEMEYER , JOHN

A L C . KIRKH M , AUGUSTUS NORVEL , CALEB

N A r. KNAPP, JOHN . NORWOOD , C RLISLE , J

L W O O R . ADE , EDWARD LC TT, DUDLEY O L E R H . ARN D, DAVID . SGOOD , CHARLES L E O E D A . WSON , JAM S W N , CHARLES L E E E CH , WILLIAM

L A . L E . EWIS , EDWIN PARKER , CHAR ES

L WI G A . E S, EORGE PARRISH , CHARLES L ORD , JOHN T . PAXSON , WILLIAM O W W G . LO , EDWARD PEABODY, LIVER . W R LO , HENRY . PEABODY , ROBERT S . E B P DDIE , THOMAS . M F L W A AC AR ANE, VICTOR . PERKINS , . ERICKSON M GE B P D ATHEWS , ORGE . PHEL S , HENRY . M RD E ASA P AYNA , GEORGE POTT R , . M E K . . CCLEES , WILLIAM POTT R , J SANFORD M O T B CCORMICK , ELI PROAL , ARTHUR . Mc c REA E N , JAM S PULLMA , GEORGE M 1 1 6 Tbe n Le e C Unio agu lub.

PUMPELLY . N F , J COLLI S STONE, GEORGE . P STONE, MARSHALL .

L A . P . H r. RAMSDE L , JAMES STOTT , CHARLES J

A C . H RHOADES , ARCHIB LD STOTT, FRANK .

H RD C . I H RIC ARDS , EDWA STOTT , WILL AM . MAS O R W . RICHARDSON , THO . ST ONG , THOMAS H RIPLEY , EDWARD . STURGIS , THOMAS E L D ROBY, . WILLARD SUL IVAN , HENRY . H N ROCKWELL , CHARLES . SWAI , PAUL M . R ROGERS , SHE MAN S . F ROGERS , URIAH . THOMAS , SETH

O I E . G . R GERS, WILL AM THOMPSON , HENRY

TOMKINS , JOSEPH T . B . H SAFFORD , DANIEL TOWAR , THOMAS . R L SANFORD , ROBERT T AIN , ABNER .

SANFORD , SAMUEL S . TRASK , SPENCER

G . N E . SCRIBNER, HILTO TROWBRIDGE, HAYES, r SEDLEY, HENRY J H H SHARPE, GEORGE . TURNER, ELIS A

N C . SHARPE, LUCIA TYLER , AUGUSTUS L SHAW , SAMUEL TYLER, EDMUND .

FF AR S . F SHE IELD , CH LE J TYLER , MORRIS CIIARLES A B TYNG R SHEPARD , . . , CHARLES O E H SHEPARD , LIV R . E E R VAN R SHERMAN , G ORG . VLIET, FREDE ICK r B R . E SHERRA D , ROBERT , J VAND NBURGH , JAMES .

SHIPHERD . , JOHN J B SLOAN , GEORGE . WAGNER, SAMUEL H L SMITH , BRYAN . WALLACE , WI LIAM J .

F R A . SMITH , CHARLES . WALTON , EDWA D L SMITH , FRANCIS WARD , WI LIAM S

W V E r. SMITH , GEORGE . . WARING, GEORGE J W D MI H E D S . . S T , JAM S . WA HBURN , D B F SMITH , RICHAR . WATERS , EDWIN N G EL STEAR S , JOHN . W D , DANIEL

O . STEERE , HENRY J . WELLS, LIVER J

H OD RE W E VER H . STERLING, T E O . W NDO , STEPHEN

Tbe 1 2 2 Union League Club.

ADMITTBD NAME DI ED ‘ 1 868 IBuKHvN l LTl mL l 0 1 8 L Apri 3 , 79 .

1 868 SH SEPH B. 2 1 86 BRU , JO July 3 , 9 . 1 86 N L n 1 2 1 8 8 3 BRYA T, WM . CUL EN Ju e , 7 . W 1 86 n.L1 AMA . a 2 1 8 1 3 BUDD , Febru ry 7 , 7 .

1 86 LE . E o 1 8 3 BULK Y, J . N vember 3 , 79.

1 86 INNER 1L. LI . a 2 0 1 86 3 , Febru ry , 7 . 1 86 RR N Mar 1 1 866 3 BU , EDWI ch 3 , . V 1 86 . s 6 1 8 2 5 BUTLER, HENRY Augu t , 7 . 8 W F a 1 1 8 1 6 . . 3 BUTTER ORTH , JOHN M rch , 73

8 G E A . r l 2 1 880 1 86 . BAKER , EORG Ap i , I N e a 1 1 8 1 A H 1 88 . 7 BE C , WILL AM . F bru ry 3 , 3 1 86 lBELL (hmORGB: 1 881 5 , December 9 , .

1 86 C T C . O c o e 2 2 1 880. 3 BENEDI , ERASTUS t b r , 1 86 IHNUKE \N1 LLDUM o e 1 2 1 88 4 , N v mber , 3 . 1 86 mbe 2 1 1 882 3 BORDEN, WILLIAM Septe r , . 6 W H Ma 1 1 88 1 1 8 . . 3 BO NE, RICHARD y , A e a 1 82 1 86 E . 2 8 . 3 BUNC , SEYMOUR F bru ry , W u 2 6 1 86 L . st 1 88 . 5 BIGE OW , JOHN A gu , 3

1 882 li NTE DI ARJ TN a a 1 1 88 . S, J nu ry , 3

1 8 1 L N P H . e 1 6 1 882 7 BAL A TINE, PHILI Septemb r , .

1 868 lBENETHCT (hHARI ES O o 0 1 881 . , ct ber 3 ,

1 868 B B. a a 1 0 1 88 1 . ROWN , JOHN J nu ry , M Ma 1 8 1 86 8 . 3 BAILEY, LATI ER y 4 , 5 H o m 2 6 1 886 1 8 1 A . . . 7 BALDWIN , N ve ber , \N 1 MI o e 6 1 8 1 86 ILMNER HLL A . 8 . 5 , J N vemb r , 5

1 86 N . o e 0 1 88 . 7 BANGS , FRANCIS N vemb r 3 , 5

' 1 868 IhuUNETT li I RAJ I (L o 0 1 88 . , N vember 3 , 4

1 86 LO 1 1 88 . 4 B OD , HENRY June 4 , 5 F a 8 W ND . 1 1 88 1 8 B . 3 RO N , ALEXA ER M rch 5, 4

1 868 T L . a a 2 8 1 88 . BROWN , AUGUS US J nu ry , 5

1 86 Y A. e 2 1 88 4 BURR, HENR Decemb r 5, 4 .

1 86 MUTLER frBuuunv ll . an a 1 1 88 l . 3 , J u ry 9, 4 1 86 e 1 88 3 BULL, ISAAC M . Septemb r 9 , 4 .

1 868 H Ma 1 1 8 CARLE , EDWARD . rch 5, 77 . 1 86 T 1 1 8 3 CHRIS Y , THOMAS April 5, 74 . 1 r u I S 92 zliéanun iovz. L3

ADMITTED NAME DIED B 2 1 86 2 1 8 . 5 CHURCH , JOHN July , 75 m 1 86 L H G . 1 1 8 . 3 CHURCHIL , TIMOT Y Septe ber 5, 73

1 86 L G . 2 6 1 8 1 9 C ARK , PARIS June , 7 . 1 86 R E W a a 1 8 5 CLA K , WED . J nu ry 9, 79.

1 868 . s 1 8 0 COBB , GEORGE T Augu t 7 , 7 . 1 868 EFF ON l 1 1 8 6 CODDINGTON , J ERS Ju y 7 , 7 . 1 868 A an a 1 8 0 COE, FREDERICK . J u ry 9 , 7 . 1 86 E o b 1 8 2 9 COFFING, G ORGE N vem er 4 , 7 . W m 8 1 868 CO GGILL F . . 1 0. , Dece ber 3 , 7 1 868 COGGILL em 1 1 866 , HENRY Sept ber 5 , . 1 868 ML o 1 8 COGSWELL, WILLIA N vember 5, 79 . 6 H A o 1 1 868 1 8 . 3 COIT, . N vember , .

1 86 R E 1 1 868 . 5 COLGATE, CHA L S April 5,

1 86 G C a 1 0 1 8 . 3 COLLINS, EORGE . Febru ry , 75 1 86 V A a a 1 1 86 3 CONO ER, GUSTAVUS . J nu ry 5, 7 .

1 868 O c to 2 1 8 . CONOVER, JOHN T . ber 4 , 79 em 1 1 86 CO PCUTT I c 8 . 7 , FRANC S De ber 5 , 77 1 IA W a 1 1 8 0 86 . 7 CORNELL, WILL M . M rch 7 , 7 1 86 P e m 2 1 8 3 COWLES , EDWARD . D ce ber , 74 . 1 86 AMN s 0 1 866 3 COZZENS , BENJ I Augu t 3 , . 1 8 H 1 8 6 6 s . 5 CUSHMAN, GEORGE . Augu t 3 , 7

1 86 L C . a 1 1 882 5 CALHOUN , PHI O M rch 4 , . 1 8 6 B 1 8 1 88 7 CLERKE, WILLIAM . July , 3 . A a 1 8 1 86 . 1 8 4 COFFIN , M . Febru ry 5, 3 . 1 86 B 2 1 1 s 88 . 3 COLLINS, CHARLES . Augu t 3 , 1 868 R 2 2 1 882 COMSTOCK , SAMUEL . September , . 1 86 C 1 2 1 880 3 COWDIN , ELLIOT . April , . 1 880 H LLI L s 2 1 1 880 C AMBERLAIN , WI AM . Augu t , . 1 8 O E O o 6 1 88 2 79 CO K , DANI L ct ber , . 1 86 A F Ma 2 1 88 1 3 CARY , WILLI M . y 7 , .

1 86 G . 2 1 880. 9 CHILD , CALVIN September 7 , 1 8 2 F 2 8 1 882 7 CLAPP , JOHN . July , . 1 8 1 L G 2 2 1 8 S. 7 CO LINS , EORGE December , 79. 1 8 6 ar 1 88 7 CAMPBELL, RICHARD Febru y 3 , 4 . 1 8 FF M B a 1 886 79 CHA EE, JERO E . M rch 9, . 1 86 A E HAN s 1 1 88 3 CH NDL R , NAT Augu t 3, 4 . I ih e 4 T$ze Union L ag ue a n .

ADMITTED NAME DIED

1 86 S MUEL a a 1 1 1 88 . S. 4 CON TANT, SA J nu ry , 5

1 8 R CK IAMB a a 1 886. 73 C O ER , WILL . J nu ry 3,

1 8 PB L RENCE 8 1 88 . 73 CAM ELL , C A December , 3

1 868 O B R O . 1 1 88 . C LT, RO E T December 5, 5

V HA E F us 1 2 1 8 8 . DA EY, C RL S . Aug t , 7

DE R S GE B a a 1 1 86 . FO E T , ORGE . J nu ry 5, 5

M E l 1 1 8 0. DELANO , OR AU Ju y 5, 7

S F . 1 2 1 8 . DE PEY TER , JAMES June , 74

W W 2 0 1 86 . DE FOREST , . . April , 5

K S OH B Mar 1 6 1 8 . DIC IN ON , J N . ch , 75 O WM A D a c 1 1 8 6 D RR, . W R M r h 5, 7 .

S. Ma 1 1 866. DRAPER, y 3 ,

U O R S 1 1 8 . D M NT, OBERT . July 7 , 73

1 1 8 2 . F B. C . . DUR EE . M September 3, 7

W D us 2 8 1 881 . DELANO, ED AR Aug t ,

E E O ob 2 0 1 882 . DRAP R , H NRY ct er ,

T L C Ma 1 1 88 . DUN ON , WIL IAM . y , 4

R A L S W 1 88 . DU ANT, CH R E . April 5, 5

R N s 1 886. DU KEE, HARRISO Augu t 4 ,

C N M 1 1 88 . DI KSO , THO AS July 3 , 4

1 86 TT H H O o 2 0 1 868 . 4 ELLIO , . . ct ber ,

1 8 V ua 2 1 8 . 73 ELY , DA ID J . Febr ry 3 , 77

1 8 0 S. a ar 1 1 880. 7 EAKIN , WILLIAM J nu y 3 ,

1 8 C il 1 88 . 75 EMBURY, . U . Apr , 7 , 5

1 8 LLI C 1 1 886. 74 E S , HENRY . June 9 ,

G N I Ma 2 2 1 8 . FAGNANI , IOVA N y , 73

A L H H l 2 1 8 2 . F I E. T OMAS . Apri , 7

L A O o 2 1 8 . FITZHUGH , WI LIAM . ct ber 4 , 74

LO D VAN RN O o 2 0 1 8 8 . F YD , . HO ct ber , 7

O 1 0 1 8 2 . F RBES, ALPHEUS June , 7

S M E Ma 1 1 8 0. FOL O , GEORG y 5, 7

B A No 1 0 1 8 . FORSYTH , RO ERT . vember , 74

R S W 1 1 866. FOSTER, CHA LE . July 5,

1 2 6 Tbe Un n Lea e Cl io gu ub.

ADMITTED NAME DIED 1 86 L 2 6 1 88 3 GRISWO D , GEORGE April , 4 . 1 8 0 GREACEN r . a ar 2 1 1 886. 7 , JOHN , J J nu y ,

O s 0 1 8 HAGGERTY , GDEN Augu t 3 , 75.

H . ua 1 8 8 HARBECK , JOHN Febr ry 3 , 7 . I L a ar 2 1 8 HARDON , BENJAM N . J nu y , 75 .

H ARTSUFF GE E L . Ma 1 1 8 , ORG y 7 , 74 .

L . S. Ma 1 1 8 2 HASKELL , y 3 , 7 .

E G . O o 2 0 1 8 HASTINGS , G ORGE ct ber , 73 . W s 1 1 866 HATCH , GEORGE Augu t 3 , .

. O W i 6 1 8 2 HAVEN , J WO D ARD Apr l , 7 . P 0 1 8 6 HAVENS , HENRY . April 3 , 7 .

HECKSCHER H A . o 1 866 , C ARLES N vember 5 , . L M O o 1 8 HEGEMAN , WI LIA ct ber 3 , 75 . F P R 8 1 8 HOF MAN , . . September , 73 . HO ANE H LD s 2 1 1 8 . , JOHN . Augu t , 74 o e 1 8 HOWE , JONAH N vemb r 4 , 73 . T H Ma 1 1 86 HU CHINSON , . y 3 , 9. B 1 2 8 882 . HERRICK , ALBERT . December , R RI A o 2 1 88 HERTE , CH STI N N vember , 3. F M V O c o 6 1 880 HOF MAN , SA UEL . t ber , .

O o 1 88 1 . HARPER , FLETCHER U . ct ber 4 ,

L G . O c o 1 2 1 88 1 HOL AND , JOSIAH t ber , .

s 1 1 882 . HOYT , JESSE Augu t 4 , s 1 0 1 882 HAWK , SAMUEL Augu t , .

C . 1 1 1 88 . HASTINGS , CHARLES September , 4 N D 1 1 88 HATCH , WAR ER . July 5, 4 . R A l 2 1 886 HAWKINS , DEXTE . Ju y 4 , . ar 1 1 886 HEATH , WILLIAM M ch , . B 0 1 88 HAMILTON , AL ERT T . April 3 , 4 . P O o 1 0 1 88 HOWARD , JOHN ct ber , 5.

1 86 A L . 1 8 1 . 3 ING L S , HENRY T July 3 , 7

1 86 o 2 1 86 . 4 ISHAM , SAMUEL N vember 9, 5

1 86 P. o 1 1 86 . 4 JONES , WILLIAM N vember 5, 9 In file r mo iam. 1 2 7

ADMITTED NAME DIED 1 86 K P c m 1 1 880 7 JAC SON , JOHN . De e ber 7 , . 1 86 L a 1 0 1 88 4 JEWELL , MARSHAL Febru ry , 3 . 1 868 N m 2 6 1 886 JOHNSON , ROWLA D Septe ber , .

1 8 L S a a 1 1 8 75 KEENE , SAMUE . J nu ry 3 , 75. 1 8 6 o m 1 1 8 1 . 3 KELLY , JAMES N ve ber , 7 1 86 8 B s 6 1 8 6. KENDALL, CHARLES . Augu t , 7

1 86 C s 1 8 1 8 8 . 5 KENDALL, ISAAC . Augu t , 7

1 86 N L a a 1 86 . 3 KE NEDY , JAMES . J nu ry 3 , 4

1 86 E A 2 0 1 8 . 4 K NNEDY , JOHN . June , 73

1 86 F m 1 1 8 2 . 3 KENSETT, JOHN . Dece ber 4 , 7

1 86 m 1 1 86 . 3 KING , CHARLES Septe ber 5, 7

1 8 m 1 0 1 8 . 74 KING, EDWARD Septe ber , 75

1 8 A l 1 1 8 8 . 74 KING , EDWARD . Apri 3 , 7 1 86 A 1 86 3 KING, JOHN . July 7, 7 .

1 868 L m 1 8 2 . KING , JOHN . Septe ber 5 , 7

1 8 2 LI K m 2 1 1 8 6. 7 KITCHEN , WIL AM . Septe ber , 7 1 86 A r 1 1 8 8 9 KNOEDLER , MICH EL Ap il 3 , 7 .

1 86 G . 1 1 88 . 9 KELLOGG , GEORGE April 9, 3

1 86 K IDDOO B s 1 1 880. 9 , JOSEPH . Augu t 9 ,

1 8 F O o e 1 0 1 88 1 . 74 KIRBY , WILBUR . ct b r ,

1 868 N 1 1 88 1 . KNEELA D , CHARLES December 9,

1 8 O G . 1 1 880. 74 KIMBALL , LIVER December 4 ,

1 8 P a a 2 8 1 886. 79 KIDDER , HENRY . J nu ry ,

O c o 1 1 86 . LAKE , JOSEPH S . t ber 5, 7 E 1 8 2 LAN , JOSIAH April 3 , 7 .

F E 1 1 8 6. LATHROP , . . July 5, 7

F O c o 2 6 1 8 0. LEE, BENJAMIN . t ber , 7

F a 1 0 1 8 . LEE , GEORGE . Febru ry , 74 L l 1 8 6 LEFFERTS , MARSHAL Ju y 3 , 7 . m 1 1 868 R C . H . e . LEONA D , Dec ber 5 ,

O o 2 1 8 2 . LIEBER , FRANCIS ct ber , 7 I ua 2 6 1 8 6 LOCKE , S . MORR S Febr ry , 7 . 1 0 1 8 LOCKWOOD , ALFRED June , 74 . 1 868 LORD , J . COUPER September 9, . IN ie 7 i o Ee e' I S Ell ( 92 oz [ wggnz tflhab.

ADMITTED NAME DIED 1 86 E m 2 1 8 3 LOTHROP, JER MIAH Septe ber 5, 74 . 1 880 L EE N a 2 6 1 88 , WASHINGTO M rch , 3 . 1 88 E E 2 1 88 3 LEGGETT , TH ODOR . July 9, 3 . M 1 1 880 1 8 8 O . . 7 LOUNSBERY , NOR AN July 3 , 1 86 IMBEER I M o m 8 1 886 LA 2 . 3 , W LLIA N ve ber ,

1 880 TT L 1 88 . LI LE , JOHN . April 4 , 5 1 8 B 1 886 79 LIVERMORE , RICHARD . December 9 , . 1 868 2 1 88 LOWREY , JOSEPH S . July 7 , 5 .

1 86 R O o 1 8 3 MCMARTIN, PETE ct ber 9 , 73 . 1 86 O 1 8 1 868 5 MAC MBER , EDWARD July , .

1 86 H 1 1 8 0. 3 MACY , JOHN . June , 5, 7

1 868 DI AL VV \NZ a a 1 0 1 8 8 . L, . J nu ry , 7

1 86 E H s 1 1 86 . 3 MARSHALL , CHARL S . Augu t 5, 5 1 868 MA VIN b 1 1 8 R E MH . , WILLIA . Decem er 5 , 77

1 868 M G 1 86 . ASON , DANIEL . September 3 , 9

1 6 E D a ua I 1 8 1 . 8 8 F C . . M HA FY , J n ry , 7

1 8 2 I B a 2 1 8 . 7 MELL SH, DAVID . M rch 3 , 74 86 1 8 1 L . A . 1 0 . 9 MI LS , S June , 75 86 1 B B. a a 1 866. 3 MINTURN , RO ERT J nu ry 9,

1 868 LE H a 1 1 8 . MITCHELL , CHAR S . Febru ry , 73 1 868 W 1 8 MOORE , JOHN . December 5, 74 . 1 868 M S C a 0 1 8 . MOORE , LAN ING . y 3 , 73 1 8 2 I M ua 1 1 8 E . 7 MORR S , WILLIA . Febr ry 3 , 75 1 8 1 H 2 6 1 8 7 MUMFORD , GEORGE . July , 75. 1 868 D o 1 . O 881 . MAIRS, JOHN ct ber 3 ,

1 8 8 A G . O o 0 1 88 1 7 MCCOSH , ALEX NDER ct ber 3 , . 1 86 M H 1 880 3 CCURDY , ROBERT . April 5, . 1 8 6 H O o 1 880 7 MEEKER , WILLIAM . ct ber 5, . 1 8 O o 2 1 882 73 MCLAREN , JOHN J . ct ber , . 1 868 a a 2 1 88 MORGAN , HENRY T . J nu ry 7 , 3 . 1 3 I B o 2 1 882 79 MEEKER , WILL AM . N vember 3 , .

1 86 . D e 0 1 881 . 9 MCCOMB, HENRY S ecemb r 3 ,

1 8 0 Ma 2 0 1 880. 7 MOODY, HORACE J . y , 868 E R o 1 1 88 1 1 . O . MUDGE , . ct ber , 1 868 Mcc LURE G O c o 1 1 88 , EORGE t ber 3 , 5.

1 ' bz rz n 1 ze l d 30 I77be lD io .lk gg (f ui

ADMITTED NAME DIED m 1 8 1 86 6 6 . 3 REYNOLDS, J . S . Septe ber , 4

1 86 Y LD I P 2 1 86 . 3 RE NO S , PH LI April , 7

1 86 W a 1 0 1 86 . S. . 3 REYNOLDS, Febru ry , 7

1 8 I H L . O o 0 1 8 . 74 R C ARDS , AUGUSTUS ct ber 3 , 77 m 8 1 8 0 1 86 A D o . 9 RICHMOND , EDW R N ve ber , 7

1 8 2 E W A Ma 1 1 8 6. 7 RIPL Y , D IGHT . y 9, 7 1 86 Ma 2 1 1 8 P O PH . 5 RI LEY , J SE rch , 79

1 86 BB G S. a ar 1 1 866. 3 RO INS , EORGE J nu y 5, 1 86 B 1 8 2 9 RO INSON , COLEMAN T . December 3 , 7 . 1 86 E a 1 8 8 3 ROOSEVELT, THEODOR Febru ry 9, 7 .

1 86 L 1 86 . 4 ROSS, DANIEL . April 4 , 7

1 868 L B 1 8 0. RUSSEL , FRANK . July 4 , 7 m 1 1 1 1 86 A 0. 880. 7 ROBERTS , MARSH LL Septe ber ,

1 868 H . s 1 1 880. ROGERS, CHARLES Augu t 5,

1 868 W F s 1 88 . RO LAND , WM . Augu t 3 , 3

1 86 L B s 2 8 1 88 1 . 4 RUGGLES , SAMUE . Augu t , 1 88 1 Ma 2 1 882 F . ROOK , EDWARD . rch , 1 1 8 1 ICEA1 MRLES IA r 1 1 880. CEL . 7 L Ap il 7,

1 8 2 A a a 2 1 1 88 . 7 RAYNOR , JAMES . J nu ry , 5

1 8 2 a 1 88 . 7 REED , THOMAS Febru ry 3 , 5

1 86 E C. a ar 1 1 88 . 9 RICHARDSON, FR DERICK J nu y 4 , 4

86 H a a 2 1 1 88 . 1 8 S L S . RU SELL , CHAR E J nu ry , 4

K H Ma 1 8 8 . SAC ETT, JAMES . y 5, 7

N C 1 1 8 . SA FORD , JOHN . June 3 , 73

E r Ma 1 8 6. MS D. . SARG NT, THO A J rch 5, 7

G . C . s 1 1 8 2 . SATTERLEE, Augu t 4 , 7

H 1 8 . F . SCHENCK, . June 9, 73 8 R . LA a a 2 0 1 . SC IBNER, J B IR J nu ry , 79

s 1 1 866. SHELDON, HENRY Augu t 3,

N C E K O o 1 1 8 . SHERMA , . . . ct ber 4 , 73

W 0 1 8 . F . SIDELL, . June 3 , 73

o m 1 6 1 8 0. SIMPKINS , JOHN N ve ber , 7

E L S r. O o 1 8 1 88 . SIMPKINS , NAT . . J ct ber , 3

H 2 2 1 8 8 . SKEEL , T ERON April , 7

N A a 2 1 8 6 . SMITH , EDMU D Febru ry 4 , 7 I r 1 n Alemo iam. 3 1

ADMITTED NAME DIED

1 8 0 1 0 1 8 2 . 7 SMITH , WILLIAM S . April , 7 1 868 B m 1 1 8 0 STEIN ERGER , JUSTUS Septe ber 5, 7 . 8 F m 1 6 C . o 1 866 4 STEPHENSON , . N ve ber 5, . 1 86 L 1 0 1 8 6 3 STEWART , A EXANDER T . April , 7 . 6 m 1 8 8 B. o e 1 0 1 8 1 STONE, LEWIS N v ber , 7 . 1 86 IL MK a c 1 1 86 3 STRONG , W LIA . M r h 7 , 7 . 1 86 o em 2 1 8 3 STURGES , JONATHAN N v ber 9 , 74 . 1 86 1 0 1 8 0 3 STURGES , THOMAS T . June , 7 . 1 86 A u s 8 1 86 3 SUYDAM , JAMES . Aug t , 5 . 1 8 0 I E W a a 1 1 8 8 7 SWA N , G ORGE . J nu ry 5, 7 .

1 868 SW EETZER C . l 2 1 1 8 1 . , FREDERICK Ju y , 7 1 8 0 FT O o 1 0 1 8 7 SWI , FOSTER ct ber , 7 5.

1 868 r 2 6 1 880. SELIGMAN , JOSEPH Ap il ,

1 8 1 G . 1 88 1 7 STEBBINS, HENRY December 9, . 1 8 V 1 88 79 STOUT, ANDREW . September 5, 3 . 8 a ar 1 0 8 1 6 1 82 . 4 SILSBY , JOHN J nu y , 1 86 F A D m e 1 882 4 SAN ORD , EDW R S . Septe b r 9 , . E H a a 8 1 8 6 . 1 8 . 7 SAWY R, EDMUND J nu ry 7 , 3

1 86 N G . o e 1 882 3 SHAW , FRA CIS N vemb r 7 , . 1 TIA TNY Ma 0 1 8 1 8 0 S S . 8 . 7 , LEONARD J y 3 ,

1 8 . a a 1 1 1 88 1 79 SAVILLE , HENRY M J nu ry , .

1 8 a 6 1 88 . 79 SCOTT , JAMES M rch , 5 1 8 a 1 0 1 886 73 SCUDDER , HENRY J . Febru ry , . N 1 1 1 88 1 86 . . . 5 SEWALL , J April , 4 o e 8 1 8 1 868 . O 86. SHERMAN , ELIJAH T ct b r ,

1 8 6 E R a 1 1 886. 7 SP AR , CHA LES M rch 3 , 1 H o e 1 1 8 8 2 . O 8 7 STRAHAN , ROBERT ct b r , 4 . T L O o 1 6 1 886 1 8 . 73 SLATER, WIN HROP ct ber , . 1 8 E s 2 1 88 75 STANFORD , CHARL S Augu t 4 , 5. 1 8 1 a 2 8 1 886 7 STEVENS, HENRY Febru ry , .

1 86 2 6 1 88 . 3 SULLIVAN , NAHUM September , 4

1 8 2 a a 1 1 1 8 . 7 THOMAS GRIFFITH J nu ry , 79

1 86 Rev . P. 2 0 1 8 . 4 THOMPSON , JOSEPH September , 79 m 86 1 86 TILESTO N 1 . 3 , THOMAS Dece ber 5, 3

1 868 A F a 1 1 8 8 . TR CY , JOHN . Febru ry 3 , 7 1 2 Tbe L a u C 3 Union e g e lub.

ADMITTED NAME DIED

1 868 A a c 1 0 1 8 0. TROWBRIDGE , JOSEPH . M r h , 7

1 86 c 1 1 8 1 . 3 TUCKERMAN , HENRY T . De ember 7 , 7 1 m 1 1 8 8 O . . 73 TYLER , ROBERT Dece ber , 74 8 1 86 L a 2 1 1 880. THORNELL , THOMAS . M rch , 1 8 B W o m 2 0 1 88 2 77 THROCKMORTON , . . N ve ber , .

A A 2 1 880. 1 8 1 . . . us 7 TORBERT, T Aug t 9,

1 868 m 1 882 . THOMPSON , ALBERT Septe ber 9 ,

1 8 2 1 880. 79 TRUMBULL, JOSEPH July 5, 1 882 GE H c 2 1 886 TALMAN , ORGE . De ember 9 , . 8 M 2 1 1 88 1 6 RA S a . 9 TAYLOR , HO CE . y , 4 0 8 1 86 C . 1 1 8 9 THOMPSON , SAMUEL April , 4 .

1 880 O c o 1 88 . THORNE , JONATHAN t ber 9, 4 1 868 2 6 1 88 TOWNSEND , PETER September , 5.

1 882 U C a 1 1 1 88 . TAYLOR , AUGUST S . Febru ry , 7

1 86 E us 2 6 1 88 3 UNDERHILL, GEORGE . Aug t , 4 .

N B r 1 1 8 . VAR UM , JOSEPH . , J . December 3 , 74 VERMILY E R m 1 1 8 6 , WASHINGTON . Dece ber 5, 7 .

VERMILYE 1 8 1 8 8 . , WILLIAM M . June , 7

G a 1 1 8 . VOSE, JOHN . M rch 7 , 74

C . 2 1 88 . VAN WYCK , PIERRE April 3 , 3 H 2 2 1 886 VAN ALEN , JAMES . July , .

R S a 1 1 1 886. O . VANDE POEL, . M rch , 1 1 886 VAN NOSTRAND , DAVID June 4 , .

a a 1 0 1 8 1 WALBRIDGE , HIRAM J nu ry , 7 .

H S e a 1 1 86 . WALBRIDGE, . . F bru ry 5 , 9

a a 2 6 1 8 . WALL, CHARLES J nu ry , 79

G 2 0 1 86 . WARD , HENRY . April , 7 W i 2 8 1 8 H . WARNER , . . Apr l , 74 Ma 1 8 R W . WESTON , . . y 7 , 73

E B F O c o 1 8 . WHE LWRIGHT , . . t ber 7 , 75

H ar 2 1 8 . WHITE, JOHN Febru y 5, 77

M 1 1 86 . N . WHITNEY , ELVI S June 5, 4 8 1 G . ar 1 . WILKINS , . M Febru y 7 , 7

8 T e U i 1 3 b n on League Club.

E XE CUT VE CO ITTEE all Con rol Cl I MM . Sh t ub M em e s Of to Hold Ofice b r , May F ill Vacanc ies M embers not Eligible for M eetings Of May M ake Contrac ts Shall Mak e Regulations May Su spend Members May Req uest Resignations May Reinstate Annual R eport F EE AD SS O , MI I N F NCE O ITT E E es of INA C MM , Duti F ORMATION O F THE C LUB G AME S GRATUITIES HOUSE CO M TTE E how A oin ed MI , pp t Duties Of HOUSE RULES I CO RPO RATIO ACT OF N N , IND EBTE DNESS O F M E MBE RS K TCHE w en Closed I N , h L AD ES w en Adm ed I , h itt LIBRARY LO DGING- R OO MS ME ET GS A U IN , NN AL Spec ial Order of Business

ME BE RS E EC T O O F . M , L I N

A m and Na L a l es Of . r y vy, i bi iti Becoming Resident Members Ho nora how E ected ry , l Non- Resident no t to Vote Indebtedness O f Res nin Lia le for ues ig g, b D Gra es no t A o wed tuiti , ll May be Expelled Exempt fromDues Admission F ee and Dues May b e Suspended Clergymen List o f M E BE RSH P O ND T O S O F M I , C I I N Candidates who F all to be E lec ted F orfeited Not to Exceed e Ind x. I 39

NEWSP PE RS R E MOV OF A , AL O MIN G O ITTE E es o f N ATIN C MM , Duti O FFI ERS w en and ho w Elec ted C , h Duties o f May he Removed Vacanc ies may be F illed L s Of for 1 86 i t , 3 L s Of fo r 1 88 i t , 7 PRESID E T es Of N , Duti Add ess Of 1 88 r , 7 PRESIDENTS L ST OF 1 86 - 1 88 , I , 3 1 PRESIDING OFFICE R W en C osen , h h PROXIES

NOT CES 2 I 9»35s $UORUM O F EXE CUTIVE COMMITTE E Of Clu b Members R EADING-RO OM R E CEPTI ON- ROO M RE FRESHME NTS R E GISTE R C UB , L R E PO RTS ANNU , AL R ESIGNATIONS R ESTAURANT RESTRICTIONS RU ES HO USE L , E C UB S AL, L E CRET RY es of S A , Duti ERVANTS RESTR C TI O S OF S , I N SMOKING SPE CIAL COMMITT EES T R C S ANDA D, LUB STRANGERS TRE SURE R es of A , Duti Annual Report VICE- PRES DE TS es Of I N , Duti May Call Spec ial Meeting VISITORS WINES W NE- ROO w en Closed I M, h