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Page 18 text:
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NATHAN RANSOM MORSE was born in Stoddard, New Hampshire, February 20, 1831. He was grad- uated A.B. from Amherst College in 185 7. While in college, he was especially devoted to the study of geology. After graduation he became principal of the high school, serving from 1859-18605 leav- ing Holyoke he studied at Harvard Medical School and the University of Vermont where he was graduated M. D. in 1862. Dr. Morse iirst practiced at Reading, Massachu- setts, later moving to nearby Salem where he main- tained a practice for the rest of his life. He Was one of the founders of the Medical Department of Boston University and Was Professor of Diseases of Women and Children from 1874 to 1887. In 1878- 1879 he was secretary of the Massachusetts Homeo- pathic Medical Society and editor of volumes IV-V of its transactions 1879. At the time of his death in 1897, Dr. Morse was senior member of the American Institute of Homeopathy.
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Page 17 text:
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- V V - JOSEPH PAYSON BUCKLAND, son of George W. and Lydia CWoodj Buckland, was born in Chicopee Falls, October 6, 1836. He was educated in the Chicopee Falls public schools and in Williston Semi- nary. Mr. Buckland was graduated from Yale Col- lege in 1857 with degree, A.B. In October of that year he began duty as principal of the Holyoke High School, which position he filled until Decem- ber, 1858, when he resigned to study law. He was invited to return to the principalship in April, 1860, and continued until March, 1863. He was then elected superintendent of schools and served two years. He studied law with Judge W. B. C. Pearsons, with George M. Stearns of Chicopee, and with Judge Clark of New York. In October, 1865, he was admitted to the practice of law in the courts of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. He im- mediately entered a partnership with Edward W. Chapin, later Judge. After a year of practice he associated himself with T. A. Curtis of Springfield in the practice of patent law. In 1871-1872 he served one year on the Holyoke School Committee. In 1871 he was appointed judge of the police court in Holyoke. He served in this position until January, 1877, when he resigned to enter a partnership with A. L. Soule of Springfield. He died October 25, 1879, at the early age of 43.
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Page 19 text:
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THE HON. THOMAS BLANCHARD STOCKWELL, son of Amos W. and Susan Le Baron QMarchJ Stockwell, was born in Worcester, Massachusetts, July 6, 1839. The family removed to Chicopee when Thomas was two years old, and his early education was received in the public schools of that place. He fitted for college in the Chicopee High School, where George D. Robinson, after- wards governor of Massachusetts, was principal, che success of Mr. Stockwell,s career was, to a great extent, attributable to his early associations with Gov. Robinson. Mr. Stockwell entered Brown University in 1858, was graduated in 1862 and re- ceived the degree Master of Arts, three years later. After graduation, he served a short time as sub- master of the Eaton Grammar School in New Haven, Conn., and then was appointed principal of the Holyoke High School. In March, 1864, he became a teacher in the Boys' Department of the Providence High School, and continued to serve in that capacity for eleven years. From 1867 to 1875 he was also associate editor and manager of the Rhode Island Schoolmasterf' In 1875 the monthly teachers' publications of the New England states were merged in the weekly New England Journal of Education, published in Boston. Hon. Thomas W. Bicknell, then Commissioner of Public Schools for Rhode Island, resign- ed his position and became editor of the new periodical. Mr. Stockwell, already famil- iar with the duties of the commissioner's office, was appointed Commissioner of Pub- lic Schools for Rhode Island, and continued to fill that position till August, 1905, a period longer than that of any other official occupying a similar state position in this country. He was also secretary of the State Board of Education and Board of Trustees of the State Normal School. He was author of A History of Public Education in the State of Rhode Island from 1636 to 1876,,' a volume highly valued by educators. He was for many years an active member of the American Institute of Instruction, and from 1891, of the National Educational Association. Mr. Stockwell married Harriet E. Davis, daughter of Reverend Mr. Davis of West- field, an associate teacher with him in the Holyoke High School. They had three sons. After a long illness Mr. Stockwell died February 9, 1906.
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