The Worcester of eighteen hundred and ninety-eightFifty years a city . The Worcester of iJ i6i. JAMES M. ORENNAN. five sergeants, two inspectors, one secre-tary, two drivers, one matron, one jani-tor and 117 patrnlmen, which representsthe department as it is now change in substance was recom-mended by Colonel Drennan during hisformer term of office in 1882, and underthe new form the work of the depart-ment and the improved discipline giveincreased satisfaction. Worcester to-dayis as )rderly a city as anyone of its sizein the world. Charles H. Benchley, mayors clerk, isthe s(jn
The Worcester of eighteen hundred and ninety-eightFifty years a city . The Worcester of iJ i6i. JAMES M. ORENNAN. five sergeants, two inspectors, one secre-tary, two drivers, one matron, one jani-tor and 117 patrnlmen, which representsthe department as it is now change in substance was recom-mended by Colonel Drennan during hisformer term of office in 1882, and underthe new form the work of the depart-ment and the improved discipline giveincreased satisfaction. Worcester to-dayis as )rderly a city as anyone of its sizein the world. Charles H. Benchley, mayors clerk, isthe s(jn of the late Henry W. Benchle),president of the Massachusetts Senate in1S55, and lieutenant-governor in 1S56and 1857. He was born in Worcester August 6, 1848, and received his education in the public schools of this city and Millbury, and at the Maine Wesleyan Seminary, Kents Hill, Maine. He served in the War of the Rebellion as corporal of Company F, ist Battalion Heavy Artillery, Massachusetts Volunteers, and was in the United States Navy from 1869 to 1873. He was a member of the Worceste
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, bookidworcesterofeight00ricefra