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1674-5 John Collins192 THE NATIONAL CYCLOPIEDIA mitten that Issued the song book used through- developed by the American bar." Alone, or la out the synod, editor of the religious calendar, collaboration with J1r. Snuthmayd, he drew maay "Cross Banner"' and the monthly magazine, hundreds of inatrunu•nts, many more than any "Friend of the Youth," and nasneinte editor of twn other men ever fr:uued, including 'wares of the weekly n.•wapajs•r, "Native bond." JIr. tills :111.1 .lee.k ..f trust in all branches of the Sw•ens■on was niternale•at•Itrge for the state legal praetiee. That no eoitest or question was of kaftans to the Republican national ennven- ever raised in regard to any n( these numerous tions in 1AA.A and 1892. and was n member of the instruments is a record virtually unrrputlled la Kunsan legislature during 1889-110. Ile wax the history. .Mr. Tracy was a ehnrler Member of author of "The Swedes in America" (\$All); the. New fork City liar Assoeintion, nn.l a mem- 'Address at the Dedication of the New College ber of the American liar Association, New Building at Augnatnna" (1889); "Vid Item- York State 13nr Association, New York Law mets Yard" (1a90): 41 Sverige" (1891); Institute, American Society of International "Forgat•mig•e•j" (1892); with Rev. Ahrnham• l.nty, the New England 'm•ir•Iy, Die Dialer nt Ann, ",Tube1•all•um" (149.1); "Ater 1 Sverige" F'onudere and Patriots of America, Sons of Ib. (1498); and "I notrgonstund" (19(13), 11e re. American Revolution and the t1ilitary Order of ceived the hnnorary degrees of M.A. from tho Loyal Legion. A resident of Plainfield, Augustana College in 1839, Ph.D. from the N. .T„ fur many years lie was active in the Royal T•niveraity nt Upanla, Sweden, in 1893, community life of that town, 'wing n alrntl•er nn.l >1,T). from August:urn College nn.l Seminary and president of a h.• lo.tn ....,,,cit n gnvcranr n( and Thiel College, 1;rrrnvillr, 1'44., in 1!'''. the \luhlrnherg hospital for twenlyonx years, Ifo belonged to the Kansas Historical Society, and n director of the Plainfield public library. A giant in hotly and mind, he pnsses)1r.I nn Ile was married Sept, :11, 1(111:1 to Martha Sher. extraordinary energy and enpnrity for tvork and ruin, d:u,ghter of Bev. David 1 r„ue, "( Wet. was n for..•ful and rlo. cent 14 or. Ire, hors,: \loss. Ile ons the rasher of five dnrtgh• sw,•n•sen was mnrrie.1 nt Moline, 111., Sept, I:,, ter., Emily Baldwin, Mary Fly:iris, Margaret to Alma Christina Lind, and had two chit- Louisa, wife of Dr. (.•hnrles \T. Mix, Edith ldaat• dren, Bertha and Annie Svensson, Ile died in rings and Martha Tracy, and of four aonz, How Los Angeles, Calif., Feb, ]4, 1904. and Crosby, Everts, Robert Storer and WilliamTRACY, Jeremiah Evart; Inwyer, wn■ born Et'rtrts Tracy. \I r. Tracy died nt Italltudc*le nt. \\'indoor, Vt., ,I:tn, 31, 14:I.1, son of Ebenezer \taus., I I., 11, 1!e2:I, tarter rind Ma rtbn Sherman (Everts) 'pricy. B-.ohnStiles, orultnri t and eity{is trtivate of Dartmouth College and of the Andover Theological `rudeveloper,nrh^ J., inary (1S=2), was editor and proprietor of the :9, Is:) , Ann of Is:,a. :1n. S; "Vermont ('hrnniele," p p I ,nth se's Collins,('0a n religious newspal.cr lies tool n .L•s�•.vi.lant of Praise's ollia whir) for more than thirty years w'aa n power. (jnaker, %v)o rause from Ita.l••Iif, \liddlcie , fill influence both in and beyond the state. Ilia F;ngl:uul, and settled at Itnrliagton, N..1., where earliest American ancestor was Stephen Tracy, he (wilt the lirst Quaker .,,.,tiug.house,in 11/7x. a native of England, who with his wife Try• Prone Francis and his wife \lar(• r:oslin, the line ;,Msa landed at Plymouth, Mass., in 111:1, Ti,.. motion., through their sou . fffii1T-!r,,l his wit', line of ,11,eent is trnrr.l from them, throng!, 1:Iiraheth Moore: their sou I•rau,•is and his wife John and Mary (Prim/.) Tracy, Stephen and Ann Haines; their son John and his wife Ruth 1)ehnrah (I'angbnrn) Tracy, Thomas and Eliz:\• Itnrrodale; :11„1 their sou Arthur and his wife beth (Warner) Tracy, and Joseph and Ruth NIarlha ltn!linger, the graudl.ar•nls of John (Carter) 'Pratt•, parents of 1•:b.11ezer 4'. %Tracy. Stiles Collins, Educated in pnl.Ii.• :11111 privet.• After rr,nIpleting hie prep:sr:dory 1rniuing in the schools in Monr..1own, ,\Ir, .'',Ilios entered the public art'•"els of his native state, .Jeremiah E. fmtit•growing and nursery business in Is.'s:, tad Tracy began the study of Ins- in the office of Inter t•otablished the Pleasant Valley nnracriea his uncle, Hon. William M. }worts, in New York which he roadncte.l for many years. Ib• nlso tits. Noma years Infer he rnterrd Die I,s uulin•aiied lo.ilder.' an•I f,unn•,,' supply pints school of Vide 1'i,terslly, n,, l 1114 duly gray!,, nl \to..n•slowi mid \I.•r. haotyille. N, J. l0 Iss9 ated LL.B. in 1 .1i. He wns n.Imitte.l to the \Ir. Collins wns one of a group of New Jersey ber of New York in the same year, beginning men who undertook to develop :11, inunenae praetice as an assistant in the office of Evnr,s, co118not grove on the Florida coast, They puny Snuthnlay,l & Choate, one of the trading firms chased disconnc,led strips of I:uul, with a tutor of the country, in which be became n parker In acreage of 41,.;nu ,•strn.lirtg for sisly•li,, 11111,44 .lune. ]A..9 Ile continued a member of this firm nlnng the Florida const north of Miami heart', throughout his professional career, covering but although the prnjeet was a failure Mr. Col• half a century, and ending with his retirement tins did not relinquish his interest in Florida in 1907. The style was changed to Eynrts, fruit growing, n 19(1'1 ne aired Iron acres Choate & Beaman in 1SS4, nn.l to Everts. Tracy of Innrl between the Atlantic• oeenn nn • 1 Sherman in 1901. It represented ninny inter• enyneT};-rtireef1- j'tst of Miami, and on thin est' of the lint importance, including the tract planted the •Inrgest ny",•rine grove in the Pennsylvania, New York t'entrnl nn.1 the world, devoting 1111101 r,ltention to finding differ• l':,ill.' railron.ds, several lending shipping coin• ent varieties of the fruit that would Irnr at ponies and nnirerous eorp•,rations, limns nnl different lint,44 in the year. later he derided to individuals engaged in financial, realty and gen. develop the trar•t into residential properties and er:tl business operations. Mr. Tracy enjoyed the for that purpose organize,! the \li:ani Reach Im• reputation of being the foremost renity Inwyer pros,nlent Co., of which Ire was president, and in New York city, nnd according to records,dia.. deeded to it the lnoo.:icre tract in 1912. Inter pinye.l similar skill in surrogate prnetiee rind lie constructed a /aunt between Itis,•aynr hey in suits for neootrnting. In the words of a pro• and Lake I'anroist and I•ridged Biscayne bny, fessienal associate. he was "unquestionably the between Miami heal, and \I ami, with n greatest conveyancer and draughtsman ever wooden structure two and a half utiles long, at Of AMERICAN 131OORAI'll Y. of $100,000. It was Inter replaced by •i and concrete causeway. After the los of the bridge the maugrovu swain') tendering the bay was cleared, the level land lifted and the hay deepened by 6 material from the lots nod building ilea was begun. curl (1. FIAlier, or polls, Ind., an,' New York, purchased a. section of the land from the Miami Reach anent Co. and on it carried out an enor• dredging and hnilding development in• the expenditure of millions of dollars. h u a result of Mr. Collins' vision, ruur• pa enterprise, the present city of Miami with a permanent population of over and one u( the .stmt popular tt•inter Oa the Florida .•.,nst, has g rnwn ❑I, nn which wits principally swam'', when he Its development." Mr. Collins wns a mem. ;af the United States Toror Iogirnl Society the New Jersey llnrtieultnral Noriety, and aleag member of the (neiely of Friends. twice married: (1t ,tan. 17, 1401, In 1 A, dnughter of Rrn•jnntin Rogers, of \It. 1, N. J., by whom he had five children: &, Katharine R., wife of Thomas .T. Pan• Arthur .1., Irving A. And Tester Collins; Collins died in I914 nn,l 1m, nutrrir.t un 16, 1910, Ida 1C., daughter of Buren T,nr• 'a( Stavanger, Nnrwny. Tie died at Miami Fla„ Felt. 11, 1929. SON, Charles Fletcher, U. C. senator 1-17), was horn at \\'inalnw, Moss., Feb. 1839, son of \Cillinm Fletcher and Ruth F. kr) Johnson. Ile was descended from Johnson, a native of l' nglnnd who enure ,Ameriea with the Winthrop group in 11130 nettled In Rntlnrv, \Ins'.. Jahn, W110 was n ly to the general court in Id31, ntnrried *retry, and from them the line of drsrent through Humphrey and Eleanor (Cheney) Hon; Ren,jautin and Rebecca (Hersey) John• I JOahmn and Lydia (Wird) T,inojn .Tnhn• ; Jaeoh, whose wife is unknown, awl ,Inco), Ahlgnil ( Ila telt t Johnson, the grnu.lparents Charles F. Johnson. Ile nttended the Water. Classical institute, Colby and Row'dnin col. and wns grndunfed .\.R at the last in 1079, spent a period teaehing st•hnol and rase to the tion of principal of the Machias (Me.) high I. He studied law simultaneously and nt being ndtteul to the bar in 1900'began prsetire as junior pnrtnor of the firm of wa k Johnsen of l\ateryitle, Me. In 1990, became n mem her of the firm of \\'el,b, Honk Weld, and after its dissolution four later he maintained an independent prive- t it Waterville. Ile entered politics AA a her of the ltrmneratie party and Anon rnsr prominence. Ile was n delegate to the nn• 1 conventions of the period from 1904 to 116` and nerved his city ns mayor in 1993 and her of the hoard nf aldermen In 1099. 1Ie led as a candidate far governor in 109'_' and is in 1994. :\(ter serving t wo terms in the alae house of representatives, from 19(' to 109, he was elected to the 1". S. senate for the 11-17 term, the tint Democratic senator from Ake since 1417, In the senate he Arr'ed no n her of the rnmmlttees on finance, nnt•nI •alfadrs, pensions and fisheries. (1n returning to rate life he wag appointed 1'. R. circuit edge In the first circuit and remained on the eh for twelve years, resigning in Mny, 1929. was a trt.tee of Itowtloin 1'oll•gr, which aeso0t8(7( Rd �� �F ties -1t7 Oa I D il Kwir (As 04 1 II:1 eonferred upon him the honorary degree of 1.1..1). in 1911, and a member of the Masonic fraternity (:\3rd degree). Ile was married, Pee. 91, 7xM1, to Abhie W., daughter of Isa:t.• \V Britton, of \Yinelnw•, Me., and they 111111 a laugh ter, Entnut I.., tei fu of Henry \\', Ablmt 1, of \\'ntt•r'illc. Ile died tet S1. I'etershmrg, Feb. LI, 1930, CALVERT, John Bette, clergyman and editor. was born at l'rehle. Cortland yo., N. 1'., Aug 29, 19.72, son of ,ironer Alexander and Clive :\,Inline ( Bet tit) ('elver,, grandson of John and Isabella 1slory) Calvert, ami gra•:It IV:unlson John Calvert of Armagh, lrel:uol, tthn settled in New York city in 1792, and later remove.) to a (arm in Saratoga county, N. Y. I)r. (':tl vert reeeive.t his early education at the ('ort• land Ac'rtdlentt•. Homer. N. Y. the "(111 .\ea.! emy" at Cortland, and at the Itnehest•r t'ollt•gi ate Institute, where lie was awnrdcd the gold medal for oratory. In IA71-72, he was grin• eil+:tl n( the high school rat tf l.'an, N. 1-.. and then ,entered the I'niyersity of Rochester, %len. he was graduated Alt. in I' 7'l and .\.\I. in 1879. In the latter 'ear also he rnutpletel the course in the Eldon Theologi'al `'en:in:tr". New York city. Ile had been licensed to preach in l97.i; was ordained in :ut.l front l l to l`tt 7. served as assistant pastor of the 1':tiv:iry Itnptist Church, New York city. Li 1979. l+.• was elet•trd secretary of the Baptist Mission• ar' Convention of the state of New York. au•l demonstrated suet grent executive nhility that in 1,Zsrd he was unanimously el,nsen president of the convention. Ile retire,) from this other in 191)7, after haying performed a lasting tier i.•1. in giving direction and permanency to the coo• ventint's work. As n freepient enntrilutor to the ,.Inmos of "The 1:enntiner," "Zion's .\•Ivo carr," :ea.l "Thr Standard," his tastes finally led hien into journalism. enol in Fehrutrv, 19,9. he purchased the "Baptist Weekly" changed the name to "The Christian Inquirer." and was its editor :in.' president of the publishing enutpaav for set ,•n years, Itt NI:tr•h, 1 "9'., chis 1 tInr was rnusoli.lnted with "The Examiner." Or Calvert bee:une a ntorkhotder of the F:Samtitut r Co. and w:14 one of the editorial staff until 1912. .\s an editor, Dr. Calvert was singularly well equipped, having nn unusual sense of news values and n wide knowledge of denominational movements and men. For many years• he was president of the Anterienu Seamen's Friend )oeiet', an institution to telieh Itis interest was I:argely devoted its his I:tlrr vr:ers. 110 also serve.) as president of the New York Evangelistic Committee, whose work he tont; sustained with personal services and financial eontrittutinns; was n member of the national hoard nf trusters of the Near F,:nt Relief; was :t trustee of the University of It,•hester, and during 1911.1-1U was president of the board of trustees of Cook Arn,lrmy. After 1910, alsn, he was president of the lnstittte of ,\ppli.•,I \Iasi••. In collabnr:ttinn with F:,Is in A. Bedell, he piled the "Church Ilymnary" for use in Baptist churches, and was the author of "Men \Cho Have Meant Much to Me" (1918), "The Impar tint Christ," and "Ministering in a Wide Field." 11t• wits a member of the I'hi Tlrta Kappa n( Rnrht•sler I'niytrsil' (prrsi.lenl, Iv!t!t 19nu1. New Ynrk :\lumni .\s:meiation of lh,• t'nty.•r sitz• of Rnehester (president, 1099-19u1 t. Itapli+t �nrial 1'oinu (president, 1!t04-t1.i), Cortland comity T:oeiets' (president, 191011, Autrriran