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Page 31 text:
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BIOGRAPHICAL. 25 Vol. IV, 1882; “ Mineralogy and Lithology of Wisconsin ’ in Geology of Wisconsin, Vol. I, 1883; “The Copper Bearing Rocks of Lake Superior ’ containing 475 pages, XXIX plates, in U. S. Geological Survey, Vol. V, 1883; “The Copper Bearing Rocks of Lake Superior,” third Annual Report U. S. Geological Survey, 1883. FLETCHER A. PARKER was born in Ashland County, Ohio, Dec. 26, 1842. He fitted for college in Ashland, being for a time under the instruction of Lorin Andrews, who was afterwards President of Kenyon College. He attended the Northwestern University, and Western Union College, but at the close of his Junior year in 1862, enlisted as a private in the Chicago Mercantile Battery. In 1864 he was promoted to the position of First Lieutenant in the First Louisiana Heavy Artillery, a regiment organized in New Orleans to man the defenses of the city. In 1864 he resigned and, on returning to civil life, resolved to devote himself to the study of music, for which he had shown a predilection from childhood. Having received some instruction in this art in his native town and the neighboring city, Cleveland, he enrolled as a student in the Boston School of Music, and graduated in 1868, completing the course in vocal and instrumental music, and theory. After teaching a short time in Boston and Brooklyn, he returned to the West, and located at Bloomington, 111., where he remained until 1878. During his residence in Bloomington, he was absent nearly two years in Europe. Here he studied music under the celebrated teachers of Stuttgart, Germany, and for a short time filled the position of Professor of Piano in the Royal Normal Academy of Music, London, which position was offered him permanently, but declined. He was also offered a like position in his musical Alma Mater, but the position was not accepted. On returning to Bloomington, in 1875, he was appointed Dean of the College of Music, Illinois Wesleyan University. In 1878 he accepted the position of instructor in music in the University of Wisconsin, and was made Professor in 1880. Prof. Parker has been connected with others in the preparation for publication of several music books for use in Church and Sunday-school, and some years ago published several miscellaneous compositions.
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Page 30 text:
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24 THE TROCIIOS. was in charge of the government expeditions to observe the total solar eclipse of 1878 in Colorado, and that of 1883 in the South Pacific Ocean. He is the author of various astronomical memoirs, published in the scientific journals, annals of the naval observatory, etc., and is a member of various scientific societies. The degree of 13. S. was conferred on him in 1866, and that of M. A. in 1879. ROLAND I). IRVING, Ph. D., was born April 27, 1847, at New York City. Having received his early education at home, he entered a private school at New Brighton, Staten Island, N. Y., where he remained until entering Columbia College, in 1863. He entered the school of Mines in the same college in 1866, graduating with the degree of M. E. in 1869, and with the degree of M. A. in 1870. During the summer of 1867 he was Assistant Engineer in the Lykens Valley Colliery, Pa., and the following year was Assistant Geologist in the Ohio survey. He accepted a position as Metallurgist in the Gold Smelting Works of Greenville, N. J., in 1870, and in the same year was elected to the chair of Geology, Mining and Metallurgy in the University of Wisconsin, which was changed in 1880 to that of Geology and Mineralogy. He was Assistant State Geologist of Wisconsin between 1873 and 1879, and Expert Special Agent 10th Census, in charge of explorations on Lake Superior, during the two years following. Columbia College bestowed the degree of Doctor of Philosophy upon him in 1880. He has been United States Geologist, in charge of Division U. S. Geological Survey in North-Western States, since 1882. For four years he has been President of the Wisconsin Academy of Sciences. Besides short articles on Geological subjects in the American Journal of Science, Transactions of Wisconsin Academy, and School of Mines Quarterly, he has published “ Geology of Central Wisconsin,” containing 233 pp., XIII plates, 3 atlas plates, in Geology of Wisconsin, Vol. II, in 1877; “The Mineral Resources of Wisconsin,” with map, in Trans. Am. Institute of Mining Engineers, Vol.VIII, 1880; “ Geological Structure of Northern Wisconsin,” in Geology of Wisconsin, Vol. Ill, 1880; “ Geology of the Eastern Lake Superior District,” containing 187 pp., XXII plates, VI atlas plates, in Geology of Wisconsin, Vol. Ill, 1880; “ Crystalline Rocks of the Wisconsin Valley” (in conjunction with C. R. Vanhise), containing 89 pp., IX plates, in Geology of Wisconsin,
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Page 32 text:
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26 THE TROCIIOS. DAVID B. FRANKENBURGER, Ph. B., was born October 13, 1845, at St. Lawrence, Penn. His early education was received in his native place. In 1855 he came to Wisconsin, and settled in Green County. For several years he worked upon the farm, attending school during the winter months of the year. In 1864 he entered Milton Academy, and two years later entered the University of Wisconsin. After graduating in 1869, with the degree of Ph. D., he was instructor in the University for two years. In 1871 he graduated in the Law Department, and entered the practice of law in Milwaukee. He is now Professor of Rhetoric and Oratory in the University of Wisconsin. His poems, entitled “ Old Home on a Rainy Day” (1878), “ The Bells that Hung at Bethlehem ” (1871), “ Our Welcome Home,” were read before the Alumni. Besides other poems, he has published “ Like Vapor it Passeth Away.” HENRY P. ARMSBY, Ph. D., was born in Northbridge, Mass., 1853. He entered the Worcester Free Institute in 1868, and graduated in 1871, receiving the degree of B. S. For one year after graduation he was assistant in Chemistry. The next two years he took a postgraduate course in Agricultural Chemistry, at the Sheffield Scientific School of Yale College. After acting as instructor in Natural Sciences in the Pittsburg, Mass., High School, in 1875, studied Agricultural Chemistry in the University of Leipzig, Germany. Returning thence in 1876, he was for one year assistant in Chemistry at Rutger College, N. J. In 1877-81 he was the chemist of the Connecticut Agricultural Experimental Station. In 1881-3 he was employed as acting Principal of the Storrs Agricultural School, at Mansfield, Conn. In the summer of 1883 he received the Professorship of Agricultural Chemistry in the State University of Wisconsin.. While at the Connecticut Experimental Station, the degree of Ph. D. was conferred on him by Yale College. Professor Armsby is a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, and a member of both the Connecticut and Wisconsin Academies of Sciences. EDWARD T. OWEN, A. B., was born at Hartford, Conn., March 4, 1850. He prepared for college at the Hartford High School, and graduated at Yale College in 1872. After graduating he remained in
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