The Worcester of eighteen hundred and ninety-eightFifty years a city . 162 The Worcester of li. ^Ir. Knight married, in iSSi, Effie J.,daughter of Thomas B. and EmilyPhelps of Hopkinton, and later of WestBoylston. They have one son. Rock-wood, born in 1885. Fred Lincoln Hutchins, deputy collect-or, was born in Dedham, Massachusetts,vSeptember 10, 1851, and was educated inthe public schools of that town. He wastwenty-two years in railroad service, firstas telegraph operator, then rising throughseveral gradations to the general chargeof the Worcester freight business of theBoston & Maine Railroa


The Worcester of eighteen hundred and ninety-eightFifty years a city . 162 The Worcester of li. ^Ir. Knight married, in iSSi, Effie J.,daughter of Thomas B. and EmilyPhelps of Hopkinton, and later of WestBoylston. They have one son. Rock-wood, born in 1885. Fred Lincoln Hutchins, deputy collect-or, was born in Dedham, Massachusetts,vSeptember 10, 1851, and was educated inthe public schools of that town. He wastwenty-two years in railroad service, firstas telegraph operator, then rising throughseveral gradations to the general chargeof the Worcester freight business of theBoston & Maine Railroad, with charge HENRY A. KNIGHT. of freight-train men. In 1893 he was ap-pointed deputy collector of in theoffice of the city treasurer. Mr. Hutchinsis much interested in matters of currentthought, is prominent and active in theFirst Unitarian Church, and is generalsecretary of the North American Vola-plik Association. In 1896 he becamepresident of The Worcester Society ofAntiquity, and by his energetic methodshas effected a radical change in the char-acter of that institution. KA


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