. The New York genealogical and biographical record. atterlee, Francis Le Roy, Necrology, 187Seligman, Isaac Newton, Biographical Sketch, 321Seligman, Isaac Newton, Necrology, 185Sergeant John Griffin of Simsbury, Conn., 23Settlers of the Colony of Rensselaers- wyck, 1637, 365Sir William Johnson, 389Smith, Hon. Abel I., Biographical Sketch, 105Society Proceedings, 92, 200, 313Some Descendants of Stephen Calkins and Elder Brewster, 17Special Notice, 91, 192, 320, 393 Thacher-Thatcher Genealogy, 27, 124,229 Thacher-Thatcher Genealogy, Cor-rection, 393 The New York Genealogical and Bio-graphical


. The New York genealogical and biographical record. atterlee, Francis Le Roy, Necrology, 187Seligman, Isaac Newton, Biographical Sketch, 321Seligman, Isaac Newton, Necrology, 185Sergeant John Griffin of Simsbury, Conn., 23Settlers of the Colony of Rensselaers- wyck, 1637, 365Sir William Johnson, 389Smith, Hon. Abel I., Biographical Sketch, 105Society Proceedings, 92, 200, 313Some Descendants of Stephen Calkins and Elder Brewster, 17Special Notice, 91, 192, 320, 393 Thacher-Thatcher Genealogy, 27, 124,229 Thacher-Thatcher Genealogy, Cor-rection, 393 The New York Genealogical and Bio-graphical Societys Departmentof Registration of Pedigrees, 87, 194, 311The Salmon Records, 64, 154, 265Tilje- Gerritzen - Letelier, Correction, 192Tombstone Inscriptions, 377Tunis Deniseof Freehold, New Jersey, 1704-1797. 353 Utter Family, 379 Van Sickle Family, Additions, 84Vital Statistics, 345 Ward of Connecticut. I. Widow Joice Ward of Wethersfield, 262Wendell, Evert Jansen, Necrology, 184Whitaker, Epher, of Southold, LongIsland, Biographical Sketch, 117. uitRCARTIlE LIERAW. NEW YORK. THE NEW YORK (genealogical anb ^Biographical Retort. Vol. XLIX. NEW YORK, JANUARY, 1918. No. HON. JOSEPH HODGES CHOATE. An Appreciation by Charles E. Rushmore of theNew York Bar. It has been said of lawyers that their fame is local and tem-porary, and that only those whose names are attached to someenduring work as author or Judge are known to the generationsthat succeed them. Occasionally, however, there comes a manwho, by virtue of some special quality highly developed, attractsand holds a broader and more lasting grip on popular con-sideration. Such a man was Joseph Hodges Choate. He was pre-eminently an advocate, and his professionalcareer was a constant series of forensic triumphs that made himfor many years the most conspicuous figure in the legal professionin this country. He had the faculty of forcing and holding at-tention, and, in the discussion of complex questions of law, hismethods of reaso


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