Page:Appletons' Cyclopædia of American Biography (1889, volume 6).djvu/189

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.
TROWBRIDGE
TRUE

man, and has laid them both open in his books. His ' Neighbor Jackwood ' is the pioneer of novels of real life in New England, and the ' Vagabonds ' is the first specimen, and one of the best, of what has come to be known as the Bret Harte school of poetry." Mr. Trowbridge has published numerous books of adventure, travel, and fiction, and his writings include " Father Brighthopes, or an Old Clergyman's Vacation " (Boston, 1853) ; " Burrcliff " (1853) ; " Hearts and Faces " (1853) ; " Home Life Unveiled " (1853) ; " Martin Merrivale, his X-Mark " (1854) ; " Ironthorpe " (1855) ; "Neighbor Jackwood, a Novel of New England Life " (1857) ; " The Old Battle-Oround " (1859) ; " The Vagabonds, and other Poems " (1869) ; " The Drummer-Bov " (1863) ; " Cudjo's Cave " (1864) ; " The Three Scouts " (1865) ; "Lucy Arlyn" (1866); "The South, a Tour of its Battle-Fieldsand Ruined Cities" (Hartford, 1866); "Neighbors' Wives" (Boston, 1867); "The Story of Columbus " (1867) ; " Coupon Bonds, and other Stories" (1871); "The Jack Hazard Series" (5 vols., 1871-5) ; " The Emigrant's Story, and other Poems" (1875); "The Silver Medal Series" (6 vols., 1877-'82) ; " The Book of Gold, and other Poems" (New York, 1878); "A Home Idyl, and other Poems " (1881) ; and " The Tide-Mill Series " (6 vols., Boston, 1882-'7).


TROWBRIDGE, William Petit, engineer, b. in Oakland county, Mich., 25 May, 1828. He was graduated at the U. S. military academy in 1848 at the head of his class, and promoted 2d lieu- tenant in the corps of engineers. During the last year of his course he acted as assistant pro- fessor of chemistry, and after graduation he spent two years in the astronomical observatory at West Point, preparing himself for duty in the U. S. coast survey, to which he was ordered at his own request. In 1852 he was assigned to duty under Alexander D. Bache in the primary triangulation of the coast of Maine, which in 1852 was placed under his immediate charge. Later he executed surveys of Appomattox river, in Vir- ginia, with a view to the improvement of its navi- gation, and also similar surveys of James river near Richmond. He also surveyed the Dutch gap, and recommended the "cut-off, ' or canal, that was subsequently constructed. In 1853 he was sent to the Pacific coast, where he conducted a series of tidal and magnetic observations extending through a period of three years along the coast from San Diego to Puget sound. He became 1st lieutenant, 18 Dec, 1854, returned from the west in 1856, and resigned from the corps of engineers on 1 Dec. to accept the professorship of mathematics in the University of Michigan, which chair he held for a year. At the solicitation of Supt. Alexander D. Bache he accepted the permanent appointment of assistant on the coast survey, and was engaged in preparing for publication the results of the Gulf stream exploration. In 1860 he was sent to Key West to superintend the erection of a permanent self-registering magnetic observatory, and in 1861 he prepared minute descriptions of the harbors, inlets, and rivers of the southern coast, for the use of the navy. Later he was ordered to execute a hydrographic survey of Narragansett bay, where there was a design to erect a navy-yard, but the results of the survey were not favorable to the Eroject. Soon after the beginning of the civil war e was placed in charge of the engineer office in New York city, where his duties included the supply of materials for fortifications and other defences, and the construction and shipping of engineer equipage for armies in the field. He also was superintending engineer of the constructing of the fort at Willett's point, N. Y., of repairs of Fort Schuyler, N. Y„ and in charge of works on Governor's island in New York harbor. In 1865 he became vice-president of the Novelty iron-works in New York city, with direction of their shops, where he remained for four years. He was then elected professor of dynamical engineering in the Sheffield scientific school of Yale until 1876, when he was called to take charge of the engineering department of the School of mines of Columbia, which place he now holds. Prof. Trowbridge held various state offices while he was in New Haven, notably that of adjutant-general with the rank of brigadier-general on the governor's staff in 1872-'6. The degree of A. M. was conferred on him by Rochester in 1856 and by Yale in 1870, that of Ph. D. by Princeton in 1879, and that of LL. D. by Trinity in 1880, and the University of Michi- gan in 1887. He is a member of scientific socie- ties, and vice-president of the New York academy of sciences, was vice-president of the American association for the advancement of science, presid- ing over the section of mechanical science in 1882, and in 1878 was elected to the National academy of sciences. In addition to many papers in scientific journals and the transactions of societies of which he is a member, he has published " Proposed Plan for building a Bridge across the East River at Black- well's Island " (New York. 1869) ; " Heat as a Source of Power" (1874); and "Turbine Wheels" (1879).


TROYES, Pierre de, French soldier, b. in France ; d. at Niagara in 1687. He had seen much service both in France and Canada, and commanded a troop of eighty men in the Hudson bay expedi- tion of 1686. He arrived at the head of Hudson bay on 20 June, and at once laid siege to Monsipi fort, on the Monsoni river, which he finally carried by assault. He held a command of regulars in Denonville's campaign of 1687. He was sent the same year to take charge, with 100 men, of a fort which had been erected at Niagara. But sickness attacked the garrison, which, with its commander, perished in a short time, according to Charlevoix in his " Histoire de la Nouvelle France." La Hon- tan in his " Nouveaux voyages " (The Hague, 1703) says that some escaped. See also "Histoire de l'Amerique Septentrionale," by De la Potherie.


TRUDEL, Francois-Xavier Anselme, Canadian journalist, b. in Sainte Anne de la Parade, Quebec, 29 April, 1838. He was educated at Nico- let college, studied law, was admitted to the bar in 1861, and appointed queen's counsel in 1880. He was editor of " La Minerve " in Montreal in 1860, founded " L'Etendard," a French daily, of which he is part-proprietor and editor, and is also editor of " La Revue Canadienne " and " L'Ouvrier." He represented Champlain in the Quebec assembly in 1871-3, and became a member of the Dominion parliament, 31 Oct., 1873. He was one of the au- thors of the " Programme Catholique " (1871), and wrote several political pamphlets. He has been for several vears president of the " Cercle literaire " and the " Union Catholique " of Montreal.


TRUE, Charles Kittridge, educator, b. in Portland, Me., 14 Aug., 1809; d. in Brooklyn, N. Y., 20 June, 1878. He was graduated at Harvard in 1832, and was subsequently pastor of various Methodist churches, and principal of the Amenia seminary, N. Y. He was professor of moral and intellectual philosophy at Wesleyan in 1849-'60. Harvard gave him the degree of D. D. in 1849. He edited the “Oregonian and Indian Advocate” in 1839, in Boston, Mass., and was the author of “Elements of Logic” (Boston, 1840); “Shawmut, or the Settlement of Boston” (1845); “John Winthrop