Minn. Having many Indians within his jurisdic- tion and in the neighboring territories, he has de- voted his energies largely to their improvement, education, and evangelization. He is known among the tribes as " Straight Tongue." He is one of the origi- nal members of the Pea- body educa- tion fund. For many years he has been a recog- nized authori- ty on all ques- tions relating to the vexed Indian prob- lem, and he is often consult- ed by the U. S. govern- ment in such matters. He
is a member
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of the government commission for the consolidation of Indian tribes that are capable of civilization, and has been able to do much in this direction. In northern Minnesota 1,500 Christian Chippewa Indians are gathered on White Earth reservation engaged in agriculture and cattle-raising. He attended the third Pan- Anglican council at Lambeth palace in 1888, and took part in the funeral services of Bishop Harris, of Michigan, in Westminster abbey. One of the principal buildings in Faribault college is called Whipple Hall in his honor. Racine gave him the degree of D. D. in 1859. He has written much for the press and periodicals on the Indian question, and has also published sermons, addresses, and charges.
WHIPPLE, John Adams, inventor, b. in
Grafton, Mass., 10 Sept., 1822. While a boy he was
an ardent student of chemistry, and on the intro-
duction of the daguerreotype process into this coun-
try he was the first to manufacture the chemicals
that were used in it. His health having become
impaired through this work, he devoted his atten-
tion exclusively to photography, in connection with
which he made many useful inventions and im-
provements. He prepared his plates and brought
out his pictures by steam, invented crayon daguer-
reotypes, and crystalotypes, or daguerreotypes on
glass, and, with the aid of the fifteen-inch equa-
torial telescope of the Harvard college observatory,
under the direction of Prof. William C. Bond,
took a daguerreotype of the moon's surface, for
which he was complimented by the Royal academy
of arts and sciences of London, and on 17 July,
1850, photographed Alpha Lyra, which is said to
have been the first successful experiment in stellar
photography. He received the prize medal at the
World's fair, London, and a silver medal at the
Crystal palace, New York.
WHIPPLE, Squire, civil engineer, b. in Wor-
cester county, Mass., 16 Sept., 1804 ; d. in Albany,
N. Y., 15 March, 1888. He earned sufficient money
by teaching to educate himself at Hartwick semi-
nary and Fairfield academy, and was graduated at
Union college in 1830. Having acquired a fond-
ness for mechanical pursuits as a boy in his father's I
cotton-factory, he now turned his attention to civil
engineering, and was successively a rod-man and
leveller on the Baltimore and Ohio railroad. In
1840 he designed and built the first model of a I
scale for weighing canal-boats, and subsequently
he built the first weigh-lock scale on the Erie canal.
He began his career as a bridge-builder in 1840 by
designing and patenting an iron-bridge truss.
During the next ten years he built several bridges
on the Erie .canal and the New York and Erie
railroad. In 1852-'3 he built a wrought- and cast-
iron bridge over the Albany and Northern railroad,
and by his work acquired the title of the " father
of iron bridges." He obtained a patent for his
lift draw-bridge in 1872, and in 1873-'4 built the
first one over the Erie canal at Utica. Since that
time the Whipple iron bridges have stood in the
foremost rank. He possessed a fine cabinet of
models, instruments, and apparatus, mostly made
by himself, illustrating the different branches of
physical and mechanical science. Mr. Whipple
was elected an honorary member of the American
society of civil engineers in 1868. He was the
author of "The Way to Happiness" (Utica, 1847),
and a "Treatise on Bridge-Building" (1847; en-
larged ed., New York, 1873).
WHIPPLE, William, signer of the Declara-
tion of Independence, b. in Kittery, Me., 14 Jan.,
1730; d. in Portsmouth, N, H., 28 Nov., 1785.
His father, William, a native of Ipswich, Mass.,
was bred as a maltster, but, removing to Kittery,
engaged in a seafaring life for several years. The
son was educated at a public school in his native
town, and afterward became a sailor, having com-
mand of a vessel before he was twenty-one years of
age. He engaged in the European, West India,
and African trade, and
brought large numbers
of negro slaves to this
country, but afterward, during the Revolution,
liberated those that belonged to him. In 1759 he
abandoned the sea entirely and entered into busi-
ness in Portsmouth with his brother Joseph, which
connection lasted till about two years previous to
the Revolution. At an early period of the contest
between the colonies and Great Britain he took a
decided part in favor of the former. He was
elected a delegate from New Hampshire to the
Continental congress in 1775, taking his seat in
May. was re-elected, 23 Jan., 1776, took his seat on
29 Feb. following, and signed the Declaration of
Independence in July. He was re-elected to con-
gress in 1778, and declined to be chosen ;i irtiin.
but was a member of the state assembly in 1780-'4.
He was commissioned a brigadier - general in
1777, commanded
a brigade of New
Hampshire troops
at the battles of
Saratoga and Still-
water, and. after
the surrender of
Burgoyne, signed
the articles of ca-
pitulation with
Col. James Wil-
kinson ' on behalf
of Gen. Horatio
Gates. Gen. Whip-
ple was afterward
selected as one of
the officers under
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whose charge the British troops were conducted to their place of encampment on Winter hill, near Boston. In 1778 he participated in Gen. Sullivan's expedition to Rhode Island, having command of the detachment of militia from New Hampshire, but the expedition failed of success, and he resigned his military appointment, 20 June, 1782. In 1780 he