Page:One of a thousand.djvu/395

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LODGE. LOM BARD. 33i this until he accepted the position of gen- eral agent for the Fitchburg Railroad in 1878, which he now holds. Mr. Locke was married in June, 1862, to Eliza C, daughter of Captain Allen and Lydia (Hates) Dawes, by whom he has one child : Charles A. Locke. Mr. Locke was a member of the state Senate from the 2d Norfolk district, 1882 and '83, serving on the committees of en- grossed bills, labor, and street railways (chairman) 1882, street railways (chair- man), federal relations (chairman), and rail- roads, 1883. He was elected to the governor's coun- cil, 1885, '86 and '87. He is a resident of Norwood, and has presided at all the annual town meetings, except two, since the town was incorporated, in 1872. He is a member of the Odd Fellows, A. O. U. W., Good Fellows, Masonic, and other organizations ; and a representative of the successful self-made men of the Commonwealth. LODGE, Henry Cabot, son of John Ellerton and Anna Cabot Lodge, was born in Boston, May 12, 1850. He availed himself of the educational advantages that surrounded him, and grad- uated at Harvard University in the class of 187 1, from the law school in 1874, and was admitted to the Suffolk county bar in 1875. In 1S75 Mr. Lodge was given the degree of Ph. D. for his thesis on the " Land Law of the Anglo-Saxons" (Boston, 1877). He was university lecturer on American History from 1876 to '79, edited the " North Ameri- can Review " in 1 S73— '76, and the " Inter- national Review " in 1879— '81. He was elected to the House of Repre- sentatives in 1SS0, and was re-elected in 1881. In 1S86 he was elected a member of Congress from his district, the 6th, a some- what famous one in the political history of the State. Mr. Lodge at once took a promi- nent part in the somewhat exciting scenes in the sessions of the last Congress, and by his familiarity with the subject, earnestness of purpose, and irrefutable logic, did much to dignify and worthily illustrate the title at first intended as a slur — "the scholar in politics." In one short session he be- came a power upon the floor of the House, and to-day he most honorably represents the Commonwealth, which takes great pride in his somewhat phenomenal suc- cess and manly record. He was vice-president of the commis- sion that superintended the centennial celebration of the forming of the United States Constitution, in 1S87. Among the better known productions of this author arc : "Public Life and Letters of George Cabot" (Boston, 1877); "Short History of the English Colonies in Amer- ica " (New York, 1S81); "Lives of Alex- . ander Hamilton and Daniel Webster" (Boston, 1883), in the American Statesmen Series; and "Studies in History" (Bos- ton, 1S84). His lighter works are two HENRY CABOT LODGE series of " Popular Tales " and one volume of selected "Ballads and Lyrics" (Boston, [881), He has also edited the works of Alexander Hamilton, including his private correspondence and some documents hith- erto unpublished, with introduction and notes (nine volumes, New York, 1885). Mr. Lodge is a nephew of Giles Henry Lodge, a well-known classical scholar. He married Anna Cabot Mills, daughter of Rear -Admiral Charles H. Davis. The children of this union are : Constance Davis, born April 6, 1872 ; George Cabot, born October 10, 1873, and John Ellerton Lodge, born August 1, 1S76. LOMBARD, NATHAN C, son of Joseph and Eliza Lombard, was born in Guilford, Piscataquis county, Me., October 29, 1827. The first eighteen years of his life were passed on a farm in his native town. His early education was obtained in the dis- trict school.