. Bench and bar of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. 91. In theWar of the Rebellion he was commissioned captain in the Twenty-fourth Massachu-setts Regiment September 2, 1861, captain and C. S. of United States VolunteersAugust 30, 1862, major and judge advocate July 10, 1863, brevet lieutenant-colonelMarch 13, 1865, and resigned April 20, 1865. He has appeared in the North Ameri-can Review for November, 1865, as the author of Military Law, and in theAtnerican Law Review as the author of Rogers vs. Attorney-General, October,1866; Law and Romance, April, 1867; Book about Lawyers, October, 1867
. Bench and bar of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. 91. In theWar of the Rebellion he was commissioned captain in the Twenty-fourth Massachu-setts Regiment September 2, 1861, captain and C. S. of United States VolunteersAugust 30, 1862, major and judge advocate July 10, 1863, brevet lieutenant-colonelMarch 13, 1865, and resigned April 20, 1865. He has appeared in the North Ameri-can Review for November, 1865, as the author of Military Law, and in theAtnerican Law Review as the author of Rogers vs. Attorney-General, October,1866; Law and Romance, April, 1867; Book about Lawyers, October, 1867:Lord Plunket, April, 1868; Campbells Lives of Lyndhurst and Brougham,1January, 1870; Howland Will Case, July, 1870, and Early Days of Charles Sum-ner, April, 1879. He married, March 3, 1863, at Cambridge, Martha Watson Par-sons, and has his domicile at Mattapoisett, with his office in Boston. Arthur Langdon Spring, son of John Langdon and Ellen M. Spring, was born inSalmon Falls, N, H,, February 25, 1857, and was • educated at Kimball Union Acad-.
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, booksubjectmassach, bookyear1895