. Bench and bar of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. nd there made a beginning of the study oflaw. He afterwards continued his study in Boston with Baxter E. Perry and SamuelW. Creech, jr., and was admitted to the Suffolk bar in October, 1873. He has beenengaged in mining operations in Colorado, and while attending to a general practicehe has been largely connected with railroad litigation, chiefly in the South. He isdescended from Phillip Towle, who came early to New England and settled in Hamp-ton in 1640, where he married, November 19, 1657, Isabella Astyn, daughter of Fran-cis Aysten and


. Bench and bar of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. nd there made a beginning of the study oflaw. He afterwards continued his study in Boston with Baxter E. Perry and SamuelW. Creech, jr., and was admitted to the Suffolk bar in October, 1873. He has beenengaged in mining operations in Colorado, and while attending to a general practicehe has been largely connected with railroad litigation, chiefly in the South. He isdescended from Phillip Towle, who came early to New England and settled in Hamp-ton in 1640, where he married, November 19, 1657, Isabella Astyn, daughter of Fran-cis Aysten and his wife Isabella (Bland) Astyn, who came to Hampton from Col-chester, England. The ancestor, Phillip, born about 1616, died in Hampton, Decem-ber 19, 1696. His descendants are numerous and include among their number Hamil-ton Ela Towle, the distinguished civil engineer who graduated at the LawrenceScientific School in 1855, and died in London, England, September 2, 1881. married, October 25, 1875, Sarah Dorset, daughter of William and Mary.


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, booksubjectmassach, bookyear1895