English:
Identifier: reportofmeetings19061907cham (find matches)
Title: Report of the meetings for organization and of the ... general meeting, together with the president's address, and a list of members
Year: 1898 (1890s)
Authors: Chamberlain Association of America
Subjects:
Publisher: (S.l. : s.n.
Contributing Library: Boston Public Library
Digitizing Sponsor: Boston Public Library
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ntle counsel that he always extended to me. His loss is indeed a personal one for me as well as for the company. A man who makes such a record as John Frederick Chamberlin for character and ability, leaves a reputation worthy of the ancestors from whom he descended, and of this Association to which he considered it an honor to belong. While recognizing the full value of the brilliant qualities which guaranteed him success in business and civic life, it is pleasant to remember that in his character they were always mingled with the lovable attributes of kindness, courtesy, and care for others. These, when much of life's work is forgotten, will ever rise in fragrant memory, and like a wreath never fading may fitly crown his epitaph. Mr. Chamberlin is survived by a widow and three daughters, Mrs. May Chamberlin Berry, Mrs. Jessie Chamberlin Moore, and Miss Edna Winslow Chamberlin; also by two brothers, Emerson and George W. Chamberlin, all members of this Association. Summit, N. J., August, 1906.
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llo.v. Daniel Henry Chamberlain Governor of South Carolina. 18T4-18T7 NECROLOGY 21 HON. DANIEL H. CHAMBERLAIN Daniel Henry Chamberlain was born on a farm in West Brookfield, Worcester County, Mass., June 25, 1835, the ninth of ten children, and shared the home life which his brother, Rev. Leander Trowbridge Chamberlain, D. D., describes so pleasingly in the Annual Report of this Association for 1904-5 (p. 36). He studied for a few months at the Academy in Amherst, Mass., beginning the study of Latin and Greek in 1849 and 1850; and part of a year at Phillips Academy, Andover, in 1854; and completed his preparation for college at the High School in Worcester under Homer B. Sprague and Wolcott Calkins in 1856 and 1857. With his friend Walter Allen, later of the Boston Daily Advertiser and of the Boston Herald, and the historian of Governor Chamberlain's administration in South Carolina, he founded at the High School a literary society, The Eucleia, which still remains. He taught school each win
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