of the Brooklyn art association, and has travelled and studied extensively in France and England. Among his earlier works are "Mansfield Mountain at Sunset," "Showery Day at Lake George," " Meadows near Utica," "Twilight," " High Peak, North Conway," and "Vermont Hills." He ex- hibited at the Centennial of 1876 " The Coming Storm," " Early Autumn," and " Glimpse of the Adirondacks " ; and at the National academy " Hartford, Conn." (1882) ; " Afternoon in Summer (1884) ; " Down on the Meadows " and " The Wa- tering-Place"' (1885); "Lake Cazenovia," "The Old Mill at Coxsackie," and "The Head of the Dam, Mount Moore, N. Y." (1886).
HUBBARD, Samuel, jurist, b. in Boston,
Mass., 2 June, 1785 ; d. there, 24 Dec, 1847. He
was graduated at Yale in 1802, studied law, and
settled in Biddeford, Me. In 1810 he returned to
Boston, and became a partner of his former law
tutor, Judge Charles Jackson. His ability and
character won him the foremost place at the bar.
From 1842 until his death he was a judge of the
supreme court of Massachusetts. Harvard con-
ferred on him the degree of LL. D. in 1842.
HUBBARD, Samuel Dickinson, congressman,
b. in Middletown, Conn., 10 Aug., 1799 ; d. there,
8 Oct., 1855. He was graduated at Yale in 1819,
and studied law, but, on inheriting a large property,
engaged in manufacturing. In 1845-'9 he served
in congress as a Whig, and in 1852-'3 was post-
master-general. For many years he was president
of the Middletown Bible society, and was a gener-
ous contributor to benevolent and educational en-
terprises. Wesleyan university conferred upon him
the degree of LL. D. in 1854.
HUBBARD, Thomas, physician, b. in Smith-
field, R. I., in 1776; d. in New Haven, Conn., 16
June, 1838. He received his medical instruction
from Dr. Albigense Waldo, a surgeon in the IT. S.
army, and was for thirty-four years a physician in
Pomfret, Conn., his practice extending into the
bordering towns of Rhode Island and Massachu-
setts. He was several times in the legislature, and
once in the state senate, was president of the Con-
necticut medical society, active in the establish-
ment of deaf, dumb, blind, and insane asylums,
and, during the last year of his life, was engaged,
by authority of the legislature, in establishing a
hospital for the insane poor. In 1829 he removed
to New Haven, and occupied the chair of surgery
at Yale until his death.
HUBBARD, William, clergyman, b. in Eng-
land in 1621 ; d. in Ipswich, Mass., 14 Sept., 1704.
He emigrated with his parents to this country in
1630, and was graduated at Harvard in 1642. In
1665 he was ordained, and became first assistant
and then pastor of the Congregational church in
Ipswich, Mass., continuing in this charge till 1703,
when age compelled his resignation. He is repre-
sented to have been " hospitable, amiable, equal to
any of his contemporaries in learning and candor,
and superior to all as a writer." His " History of
New England," for which the state of Massachu-
setts paid him £50, was saved from the flames by
Dr. Andrew Eliot, in the attack on Gov. Thomas
Hutchinson's house by the mob in August, 1765,
and presented by Dr. Eliot's son to the Massa-
chusetts historical society, by whom it was printed
in 1815. Mr. Hubbard's other works are " A Narra-
tive of Troubles with the Indians " (Boston, 1677) ;
" Sermons " (1684) ; and " Testimony of the Order
of the Gospel in Churches " (1701).
HUBBELL, Jay Abel, lawyer, b. in Avon,
Mich., 15 Sept., 1820. He was graduated at the
University of Michigan in 1853, studied law, and
was admitted to the bar in 1855, when he re-
moved to Ontonagon, Mich. He was elected dis-
trict attorney of the upper peninsular in 1857, and
again in 1859. He removed to Houghton, Mich.,
in 1860, and was elected prosecuting attorney of
Houghton county in 1861, 1863, and 1865. He
practised law till 1870. He was elected to congress
as a Republican, and re-elected four times, serving
from 1873 till 1883, and being a member of the
committees on banking and currency, and on com-
merce, appropriations, and ways and means, lie
declined a renomination, but served in the Michi-
gan senate in 1885 and 1887. He has been largely
identified with mineral interests in northern Michi-
gan, and was active in establishing the Michigan
mining-school, a state institution, in Houghton.
HUBBELL, Levi, jurist, b. in Ballston, N. Y.,
15 April, 1808 ; d. in Milwaukee, Wis., 8 Dec, 1876.
He was graduated at Union in 1827, after which
he studied law. He was adjutant-general of the
state from 1833 till 1836, and in 1841 was a mem-
ber of the assembly. In 1844 he removed to Wis-
consin, and became a Democratic politician. He
was elected judge of the 2d judicial circuit, and
served as chief justice of the supreme court for one
year. Impeachment proceedings were instituted
against him in 1853, but the trial resulted in his
acquittal. In 1856 he resigned his judgeship. He
was elected to the assembly in 1864 as a war Demo-
crat, and held the office of U. S. district attorney
from 1871 till 1875.
HUBBELL, Martha Stone, author, b. in Ox-
ford, Conn., in 1814 ; d. in North Stonington, Conn.,
in 1856. She was the daughter of Dr. Noah Stone,
and married Rev. Stephen Hubbell in 1832. She
wrote children's stories for the American and
Massachusetts Sunday-school Union, and " The
Shady Side, or Life in a Country Parsonage, by a
Pastor's Wife " (Boston, 1853). This was intended
as a counterpart to Mrs. Phelps's " Sunny Side,"
and 40,000 copies were sold in a year.
HUBBELL, William, pioneer, b. in Vermont
about 1750 ; d. in Scott county,' Ky., about 1835.
He served five years and a half in the Revolution-
ary army as private, sergeant, and lieutenant, -taking
part in the capture of St. John and Montreal and
in several skirmishes. After the close of the war
he removed to Kentucky and settled in Scott
county, where he resided until his death at an un-
usually advanced age. He is chiefly noted for his
contest with a band of Indians as he was returning
to Kentucky from the east. His party numbered
twenty. After passing Pittsburg he thought he
saw traces of Indians along the banks of the Ohio,
which suspicion was confirmed by information at
Gallipolis. Having been appointed regular com-
mander of the flat-bottomed boat in which they
voyaged, Capt. Hubbell divided the nine men into
three night-watches. Early in the night an Indian
canoe was seen, and more evidence of the approach
of hostile savages. On the following morning, 24
March, 1791, they were attacked by Indians in
large canoes. Each man took his position, having
been ordered not to fire till the savages were so
near that " the flash from the guns might singe
their eyebrows." After a bloody conflict, only two
of the nine men .escaping unhurt, they reached
Limestone. The fleet, which they had passed the
night before the battle, arrived the next day, the
Indians having suffered it to sail unmolested. It
is believed that after Hubbell's encounter no boat
on the Ohio was ever attacked by Indians.
HUBLEY, Adam, soldier, b. in Lancaster county, Pa., 9 Jan., 1740 ; d. in Philadelphia in May, 1798. He was commissioned as major of the