especially his eulogy on Alexander Hamilton in 1804, and his argument in the U. S. senate on the question of the admission of Missouri to the Union in 1820. See James S. Loring's " The Hundred Boston Orators " (Boston, 1852). — His son, George, educator, b. in 1797; d. in Cambridge, Mass., in 1828, was graduated at Harvard in 1815, studied for the ministry, and became a clergyman of the Protestant Episcopal church. From" 1820 till 1826 he was tutor at Harvard and in 1826-'7 he was professor of Latin. On leaving the college he be- came rector of Christ church, Cambridge, Mass., where he remained until his death. He published "Perfectibility," '* An Address to the Humane Society at Newburyport in 1818," and a " Ser- mon," delivered at Cambridge in 1826. — The second Harrison Grav's wife, EHza Henderson, b. in Boston, Mass.", 27 July, 1796; d. there, 21 Jan., 1873, was the daughter of William Bordman, a Boston merchant, and on 6 May, 1817, married Mr. Otis, after whose deffth she went to Europe, residing there for several years to educate her children. Up- on her retui-n to Boston she be- came a leader in social circles, and was active in works of char- ity. She was the first to celebrate George Washing- ton's birthday reg-
ularly, and finally
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induced the legislature to make the 22d of February a legal holi- day. During the civil war she was interested in the relief of soldiers and was a leader in the Evans house aid committee, receiving a vote of thanks from the mayor and council. Her portrait, by George P. A. Healy, is possessed by the Bostonian society, in the old South church. She was the au- thor of " The Barclays of Boston," a novel (Boston, 1854) ; and contributed to the Boston " Transcript " under the signature of " One of the Barclays."
OTT, Isaac, physician, b. in Northampton
county. Pa., 30 Nov.. 1847. He studied in Lafay-
ette college, was graduated at the medical depart-
ment of the University of Pennsylvania in 1869,
and studied medicine in Germany and London.
In 1878 he organized a physiological laboratory in
the University of Pennsylvania, and lectured for
a year on experimental physiology. He was made
a fellow in biology at Johns Hopkins in 1878. Dr.
Ott has devoted considerable study to the physio-
logical action of drugs, and discovered the path
and decussation of the sudorific, sphincter-inhibi-
tory, and thermo-inhibitory fibres in the spinal
cord, the innervation of sphincters, and the loca-
tion of the fever-centres in the brain. He has
published " Cocaine, Veratria, and Gelseminum "
(Philadelphia, 1874); "Action of Medicines "(1878);
and " Contributions to Phvsiology and Pathology of
the Nervous Svstem " (Easton, 1879-87).
OTTENDORFER, Oswald, journalist, b. in
Zwittau, Moravia, 26 Feb., 1826. He was the son
of a manufacturer, went through the course of
classical studies, and devoted himself to jurisprudence
at the University of Vienna. He was active
in the movement to overthrow the Metternich
government in 1848, and joined the Von der Tann
volunteer corps, which, in the first Schleswig-Holstein
war, participated in several engagements
with the Danish forces. During the uprising in
Vienna he was 1st lieutenant in the battalion
that was commanded by Robert Blum. He
subsequently joined in the popular revolution in
Saxony and Baden, after the failure of which, to
escape capital punishment, he fled to Switzerland,
and from there came to the United States. In
New York he found employment in the counting-room
of the “Staats-Zeitung.” When, after the
death of Jacob Uhl, its proprietor, the management
of the paper devolved upon his widow, the services
of Mr. Ottendorfer became gradually more
important, and the acquaintance thus formed led to
his marriage with Mrs. Uhl in 1859. As the
German-born population of New York city increased,
his journal, in which he endeavored to reflect the
sentiments of the German-Americans, became one
of the most widely circulated and influential in
New York. He adhered to the principles of the
Democratic party, but joined no political organization,
and maintained an independent position. He
has been an advocate of reform in the civil service
and active in promoting improvements in the
public-school system. In 1872-’4 he was an alderman,
and in 1874 a candidate for mayor of New
York city. Besides other charitable gifts, Mr.
Ottendorfer gave $300,000 to build and endow an
educational institution in his native town in
Austria, founded on Long Island a home for aged and
indigent men, and established the Ottendorfer free
library in Second avenue. New York city, at an
original cost of $50,000, which has been augmented
by annual gifts. He has retired, on account of
failing health, from active journalism, and spends
most of his time in Europe. — His wife, Anna,
philanthropist, b. in Würzburg, Bavaria, 13 Feb.,
1815; d. in New York city, 1 April, 1884, was the
daughter of a poor man named Behr. She came
to the United States in 1837, and in the following
year married Jacob Uhl, a printer. In 1845 her
husband purchased the “New Yorker Staats-Zeitung,”
then a small weekly paper, which, after
a brief period, he changed to a daily. When, in
1852, Mr. Uhl died, his widow assumed the
management of the paper. Yet she declined several
offers for the “Staats-Zeitung,” and, by her own
energy and sagacity and the co-operation of Mr.
Ottendorfer, made it one of the chief journals in
the United States. She took an active part in the
management of the paper until almost the time of
her death. She also devoted much attention to
charitable enterprises. In 1875 she established in
Astoria, L. I., the Isabella home for aged women,
named in memory of a deceased daughter, expending
$150,000 on the building and endowment. She
contributed $40,000 to an educational fund, built
the women's pavilion of the German hospital, New
York city, at a cost of $75,000, and gave $100,000
for a German dispensary. Mrs. Ottendorfer
received in 1883 a gold medal from the empress of
Germany, in recognition of her many acts of charity.
In her will she left additional sums for her
charitable foundations, and bequeathed $25,000 to
the employés of the “Staats-Zeitung.”
OTTER, William Dillon, Canadian officer, b. in Clinton, Out.. 3 Dec, 1843. He joined the Canadian volunteer militia force in 1861, was appointed lieutenant - colonel of the Queen's Own regiment in 1875, and commanded the Wimbledon Canadian team in 1883. He had charge of the school of infantry at Toronto in 1883, led a brigade during the northwest campaign in 1885, and was