. New York state's prominent and progressive men;. A. Lockwood, as Lockwood &Hill, which still exists. He has long been known as a success-ful lawyer. He was associated with some of the most eminentlawyers of the day as counsel for Henry Ward Beecher in thefamous Tilton-Beecher suit. He is a Democrat in politics, buthas held no political office but that aheady mentioned, to whichhe was elected as a Republican during the Civil War. Mr. Hill is a member of the Alpha Delta Phi Club, and wasone of the founders of the Union College chapter of that frater-nity. He belongs to the New York Union Alumn
. New York state's prominent and progressive men;. A. Lockwood, as Lockwood &Hill, which still exists. He has long been known as a success-ful lawyer. He was associated with some of the most eminentlawyers of the day as counsel for Henry Ward Beecher in thefamous Tilton-Beecher suit. He is a Democrat in politics, buthas held no political office but that aheady mentioned, to whichhe was elected as a Republican during the Civil War. Mr. Hill is a member of the Alpha Delta Phi Club, and wasone of the founders of the Union College chapter of that frater-nity. He belongs to the New York Union Alumni Association,the Phi Beta Kappa Association, the Medicolegal Society, theLaw Library Association, the Brooklyn Bar Association, theSons of the Revolution (of which he is perhaps the only mem-ber who is a son of a Revolutionary soldier), the Long IslandHistorical Society, the New England Society of Brooklyn, theState Bar Association, the Brookljm, Carleton, and Montaukclubs, the Wyandauch Club, of which he is president, and theMasonic WELCOME GEER HITCHCOCK THE Hitchcock family reckons its origin here from MatthiasHitchcock, who came from London to Boston in the springof 1635 on the hark Susan and Ellen. The next year his namefigm-es in the records of Watertown, Massachusetts, as a land-owner, and in June, 1639, we find him among the founders ofNew Haven, Connecticut. Thereafter his name is frequently tobe found, in one connection or another, in the records of thatcolony. He married EUzabeth Perry, and had fom* children, ofwhom the second was Nathaniel Hitchcock. The latter marriedElizabeth Moss, and had six children, the f om-th of whom was ason, John. John Hitchcock married, for his second wife, AbiahBassett, and had ten children. Of these the eldest, John, mar-ried Esther Ford, made his home at Cheshire, Connecticut, andhad ten children, of whom the fifth was named John. Thisthird John Hitchcock married Phoebe Tyler, daughter of ColonelBen Tyler of WaUingford, Connec
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