The Worcester of eighteen hundred and ninety-eightFifty years a city . Ml IHLW J. WrilFTALLb bPIlN N ING-MILL. Mr. Whittall is a liberal-minded and public-spirited gentleman, and has«ntered into the active life and interests of his adopted city and is a director of the Board of Trade, the Associated Charities, the Peo-ples Savings Bank, and the Manufacturers Mutual Insurance Company;president of the Blackstone Valley Street Railway Company, and vice-president of the American Car Sprinkler Company; a member of the Grade-Crossing Commission, the Worcester Club, the Commonwealth Club,


The Worcester of eighteen hundred and ninety-eightFifty years a city . Ml IHLW J. WrilFTALLb bPIlN N ING-MILL. Mr. Whittall is a liberal-minded and public-spirited gentleman, and has«ntered into the active life and interests of his adopted city and is a director of the Board of Trade, the Associated Charities, the Peo-ples Savings Bank, and the Manufacturers Mutual Insurance Company;president of the Blackstone Valley Street Railway Company, and vice-president of the American Car Sprinkler Company; a member of the Grade-Crossing Commission, the Worcester Club, the Commonwealth Club, theTatassit Canoe Club, the Episcopal Clubs of Worcester and Boston, and aprominent Mason. In 1S95 Mr. and Mrs. Whittall gave to the Parish of St. Matthew, ofwhich he has been warden since 1874, the beautiful church building nowstanding on the corner of Cambridge and Southbridge streets. On theopposite corner is his house, which with its extensive grounds, laid out inexcellent taste, forms one of the pleasantest and most attractive residencesin the MATTHEW J. WHITTALL The Worcester of 1898. 495


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