. History of the University of Michigan . career asteacher, and later as physician, till his death at Evans-ton, Illinois, in 1888. The eldest daughter, AlidaElecta, is also deceased. Still living are : FrancesElizabeth (Mrs. Moss), Urbana, Illinois; AlfredColes, a physician at I,ake Forest, Illinois; MiraElecta (Mrs. Draper), Yokohama, Japan ; and theReverend Theodore Woodruff Haven, New youngest son, Theodore, was with his father atSalem during the last hours. (See pages 51-58.) Roger Williams on his expulsion from the Massachu-setts Colony in 1636. He was prepared for collegeat the


. History of the University of Michigan . career asteacher, and later as physician, till his death at Evans-ton, Illinois, in 1888. The eldest daughter, AlidaElecta, is also deceased. Still living are : FrancesElizabeth (Mrs. Moss), Urbana, Illinois; AlfredColes, a physician at I,ake Forest, Illinois; MiraElecta (Mrs. Draper), Yokohama, Japan ; and theReverend Theodore Woodruff Haven, New youngest son, Theodore, was with his father atSalem during the last hours. (See pages 51-58.) Roger Williams on his expulsion from the Massachu-setts Colony in 1636. He was prepared for collegeat the University Grammar School, Providence, en-tered Brown University in 1S45, and was graduatedwith the highest honors in 1S49. The first yearafter graduation he was engaged as assistant libra-rian in the college library and as a private tutor;and then, for the sake of his health, which showedsigns of impairment, he travelled extensively onhorseback through the South. Still looking for out-door occupation, he took up civil engineering for a. JAMES BURRILL ANGELL was born atScituate, Rhode Island, January 7, 1829, in directdescent from Thomas Angell, who accompanied JAMES BURRILL ANGELL time, and then went to Europe for travel and abroad he was appointed professor of theModern Languages and Literatures at Brown Univer-sity, a position which he did not return to fill until1853. In addition to the duties of his professorship,he contributed leading articles to The ProvidenceJournal from time to time; and when Henry was elected United States Senator in i860,Professor Angell succeeded him as editor of thatpaper and resigned his chair at Brown. After sixyears of arduous editorial work covering the wholeperiod of the Civil War, he accepted the presidencyof the Lhiiversity of Vermont. In 1871 he resignedthat position to become President of the Universityof Michigan. For a detailed account of his servicesin this position, the reader is referred to the chapter 220 UNIFE


Size: 1353px × 1847px
Photo credit: © Reading Room 2020 / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, bookidcu3192403062, bookyear1906