. Report of proceedings incidental to the erection and dedication of the Confederate monument. education at the University of Missouri. He espoused the cause of the southat the beginning of the civil war, and served under Gen. Sterling Price, in the Missouristate guards. Having lost his interest in much property through the emancipation of hisfathers slaves by the government, he at the close of the war went to Chicago andengaged in the banking business, which he has continuously and successfully conductedever since. He is a cultivated, enterprising and whole-souled citizen, alive to the intere
. Report of proceedings incidental to the erection and dedication of the Confederate monument. education at the University of Missouri. He espoused the cause of the southat the beginning of the civil war, and served under Gen. Sterling Price, in the Missouristate guards. Having lost his interest in much property through the emancipation of hisfathers slaves by the government, he at the close of the war went to Chicago andengaged in the banking business, which he has continuously and successfully conductedever since. He is a cultivated, enterprising and whole-souled citizen, alive to the interestsof the great city, his adopted home, and ever recollecting and cherishing the land andpeople of his youth. PHILIP D. ARMOUR. Of Chicago. Is another, among the most prominent, who gave early and liberally tothe erection of a shaft over the Confederate dead in Chicago,having contributed t(.) that tjranite testimonial in Oakwoods in the unos-tentatious direct manner, that characteristically stamps all of hisphilanthropies. To him, as to the others, the sincerest thanks arehereb\ May. 1S95. See Following Page.
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, bookidreportofproc, bookyear1896