and Samuel Colman, subsequently under Leon Bailly in Paris, and during five years travelled and sketched in Europe and Africa. In 1870 he be- came a member of the Water-color society ; the following year he was elected an associate of the National academy, and he became an academician in 1880. He is also a member of the Society of American artists. Among his works in oil are " Fruit- Vender, under the Sea- Wall at Nassau" (1870); "Market -Day, Morlaix," and " Duane Street, New York" (1878); and "Bow-Zarea, Al- giers." His water - colors include " Meditation " (1872): "Shop in Switzerland," "Old and New Mosques at Cairo," and " Lazy Life in the East " (1876); " Algiers " (1877) ; and "Cobblers at Bori- farik " (1878). He devotes much time to decora- tive work, and has furnished many cartoons and designs for windows for the Tiffany glass company, of which he is the founder. The interior work of his father's house in New York was executed under his supervision.
TIFFANY, Osmond, author, b. in Baltimore,
Md., 16 July, 1823. He was educated at Baltimore
and studied at Harvard in 1840-'2, but was not
graduated. He afterward engaged in mercantile
and literary work, was ordnance clerk at the U. S.
armory in Springfield, Mass., in 1862-'3, and pay-
master's clerk in the U. S. army in 1863-'4, and
has been custom-house liquidating clerk at Balti-
more since 1869. He has contributed to periodi-
cals and published "The Canton Chinese, or the
Americans' Sojourn in the Celestial Empire " (Bos-
ton, 1849) ; " Brandon, a Tale of the American
Colonies " (New York, 1851) ; and " Sketch of the
Life of Gen. Otho H. Williams " (Baltimore, 1851).
He has edited " Patriarchs and Prophets of Bibli-
cal Story " (Springfield, Mass., I860).
TIFFIN, Edward, statesman, b. in Carlisle,
England, 19 June, 1766; d. in Chillicothe, Ohio,
9 Aug., 1829. After receiving an ordinary English
education, he began the study of medicine,
and continued it after his removal to Charlestown,
Va., in 1784, receiving his degree at the University
of Pennsylvania in 1789. In the same year he
married Mary, sister of Gov.
Thomas Worthington.
In 1790, he united with the Methodist church, and
soon afterward he became a local preacher, being
ordained deacon by Bishop
Asbury, on 19
Nov., 1792. In 1796 he removed to Chillicothe, Ohio, where he
continued both to preach and to practise medicine.
At Deer Creek, twelve miles distant, he organized
a flourishing congregation, long before that part
of the country was visited by travelling preachers.
In 1799 he was chosen to the legislature of the
Northwest territory, of which he was elected
speaker, and in 1802 he was president of the
convention that formed the constitution of the state
of Ohio. He was elected first governor of the
state in 1803, and re-elected two years later. During
his second term he arrested the expedition of
Aaron Burr,
near Marietta, Ohio. After the expiration
of his service he was chosen U.S. senator,
to succeed his brother-in-law, Thomas Worthington,
and took his seat in December, 1807, but early
in the following year his wife died, and on 3 March,
1809, he resigned from the senate and retired to
private life. Shortly afterward he married again,
and was elected to the legislature, serving two
terms as speaker. In the autumn of 1810 he
resumed the practice of medicine at Chillicothe, and
in 1812, on the creation by act of congress of a
commissionership of the general land-office, he was
appointed by president Madison as its first incumbent.
He removed to Washington, organized the
system that has continued in the land-office till the
present time, and in 1814 was active in the removal
of his papers to Virginia, whereby the entire contents
of his office were saved from destruction by
the British. Wishing to return to the west, he
proposed to Josiah Meigs, surveyor-general of public
lands northwest of Ohio river, that they should
exchange offices, which was done, after the consent
of the president and senate had been obtained.
This post he held till 1 July, 1829, when he received,
on his death-bed, an order from President
Jackson to deliver the office to a successor. Dr.
Tiffin continued to preach occasionally in his later
years. Three of his sermons were published in the
“Ohio Conference Offering” in 1851. In a letter
of introduction to Gen. Arthur St. Clair, Gen.
Washington speaks of Dr. Tiffin as being “very familiar
with the law.”
TILDEN, ———, poet, b. in 1686 ; d. about
. He was the author of " Tilden's Miscellane-
ous Poems on Divers Occasions, chiefly to animate
and rouse the Soldiers" (1756). This little volume
of thirty pages was one of the first of the produc-
tions that were written with a view to stimulate
the soldiers in the French war. A copy of this
rare book was in the library of George Ticknor, of
Boston, and the whole of it appeared in the New
York "Historical Magazine" for November and
December, 1859, and January, 1860.
TILDEN, Samuel Jones, statesman, b. in New
Lebanon, N. Y., 9 Feb., 1814; d. at his country-
house, Graystone, Westchester co., N. Y., 4 Aug.,
1886. The name of an ancestor, Nathaniel Tilden
of Tenterden, yeoman, and that of Lydia, his wife,
with seven chil-
dren and seven
servants, head the
list of " such per-
sons as embarked
themselves in the
good ship called
the ' Hercules,'
... to be therein
transported to the
plantation called
New England in
America," from
the port of Sand-
wich, England, in
March, 1634. This
Nathaniel Tilden
had been mayor
of Tenterden, as
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had been his uncle John before him. and as was his cousin John after him. He settled with his family at Scituate, whence the second generation of Tildens migrated to Lebanon, Conn. To Isaac Tilden, the great-grandfather of Samuel J., was born at this place, in 1729, a son named John, who settled in what was afterward called New Lebanon, Columbia co., N. Y. Samuel J.'s father, Elam, the youngest of John Tilden's seven children, was born in 1781, and in 1802 married Polly Y. Jones, a descendant of William Jones, lieutenant-governor of the colony of New Haven. Eight children were born of this union, of whom Samuel J. was the fifth. The boy early developed great activity of mind and a remarkable command of language. His father, a farmer, who also carried on a mercantile business, was an intimate friend of Martin Van Buren, and the political controversy of the time was part of the very atmosphere of the Tilden household. In his eighteenth year Samuel prepared an address, which was adopted as a party manifesto by the Democrats, in regard to the issues of the pending state election. In the same year he entered Yale col-