ical association to the European medical associations. He was one of the founders of the Medical society of West Virginia, and in addition to contributions to medical journals and other periodicals has published a " Biographical Sketch of Joseph Thoburn, M. D." (1865) ; a memorial to the legislature of West Virginia on the appointment of a state geologist (1870) ; and a memorial to the same body to establish a state board of health (1877). Some of his sketches descriptive of the early history of his native county appeared in Creigh's "History of Washington County."
HURD, Frank Hunt, lawyer, b. in Mount
Vernon, Ohio, 25 Dec., 1841. He was graduated at
Kenyon college in 1858, studied law, became county
prosecuting attorney in 1863, and a state senator
in 1866. In 1874 he was elected a representative
in congress from Ohio as a Democrat, and served
one term, being defeated in 1876. He was again
elected in 1878 and 1882, but was defeated in 1880
and 1886. Mr. Hurd has been conspicuous as an
active advocate of free trade doctrines. He codified
the criminal laws of Ohio in 1868.
HURD, Nathaniel, engraver, b. 13 Feb., 1730 ;
d. 17 Dec, 1777. His grandfather came from
England, and settled in Charlestown, Mass. Na-
thaniel engaged in the business of seal-cutting and
die-engraving in Boston, and was considered su-
Ferior to any one in the colonies in his occupation,
ndependently of his superior execution, his works
often displayed character and humor. Among his
engravings is a descriptive representation of Hud-
son, a swindler and forger, standing in the pillory,
the likenesses of well-known characters being intro-
duced among the spectators. Hurd was probably
the first in this country to engrave on copper. He
also engraved the seal of Harvard university.
HURLBUT, Stephen Augustus, soldier, b. in
Charleston, S. C, 29 Nov., 1815 ; d. in Lima, Peru,
27 March, 1882. He studied law, was admitted to
the bar in 1837, and practised in Charleston until
the Florida war, in which he served as adjutant in
a South Carolina regiment. In 1845 he went to
Illinois and practised his profession in Belvidere.
He was a presidential elector on the Whig ticket
in 1848, was a member of the legislature in 1859,
1861, and 1867, and presidential elector at large on
the Republican ticket in 1868. At the beginning
of the civil war he was appointed a brigadier-
general of volunteers, and commanded at Fort
Donelson after its capture in February, 1862.
When Gen. Grant's army moved up Tennessee
river, Hurlbut commanded the 4th division, and
was the first to reach Pittsburg Landing, which
he held for a week alone. He was promoted major-
general for meritorious conduct at the battle of
Shiloh, was then stationed at Memphis, and after
the battle of Corinth, in October, 1862, pursued
and engaged the defeated Confederates. He com-
manded at Memphis in September, 1863, led a corps
under Sherman in the expedition to Meridian in
February, 1864, and succeeded Gen. Nathaniel P.
Banks in command of the Department of the Gulf,
serving there from 1864 till 1865, when he was
honorably mustered out. He was minister resi-
dent to the United States of Colombia from 1869
till 1872, and then elected a representative to con-
gress from Illinois as a Republican for two con-
secutive terms, serving from 1873 till 1877. In
1881 he was appointed minister to Peru, which
office he retained till his death. — His brother,
William Henry, journalist, b. in Charleston, S. C.,
3 July, 1827, was graduated at Harvard in 1847, at
the divinity-school there in 1849, and then studied
in Berlin, Rome, and Paris. After a few years in
the Unitarian ministry, he entered Harvard law-
school in 1852, in 1855 was a writer on " Putnam's
Magazine " and the " Albion," and joined the staff
of the New York " Times " in 1857. While visit-
ing the south in 1861, he was arrested by a vigilance
committee in Atlanta, Ga., imprisoned for a time,
and then released, but he was refused a passport
unless upon conditions with which he would not
comply, and finally in August, 1862, made his
escape through the Confederate lines, and reached
Washington. He became connected with the New
York " World " in 1862, and in 1864 purchased the
•' Commercial Advertiser," intending to publish it
as a free-trade paper, but, he and his associates
in the enterprise failing to agree, the paper was
sold in 1867 to Thurlow Weed. He went to Mex-
ico in 1866, and was invited to the capital by Max-
imilian, represented the New York "World" at
the World's fair at Paris in 1867, and the Centenary
festival of St. Peter at Rome, and in 1871 accom-
panied the U. S. expedition to Santo Domingo, dur-
ing which time he wrote and published the most
complete account in any language of the modern
history of that island. In 1876-'83 he was editor-
in-chief of the " World," and in the latter year
went to Europe, where he has since chiefly resided.
He has contributed largely to American periodicals
and to the " Edinburgh " and other British maga-
zines, and has published " Gan-Eden " (Boston,
1854) : " General McClellan and the Conduct of the
War " (New York, 1864), and other works, besides
several hymns and poems.
HURST, John Fletcher, M. E. bishop, b. in
Dorchester county, Md., 17 Aug., 1834. He was
graduated at Dickinson college in 1854. and after
teaching for two years pursued theological studies
at the universities of
Halle and Heidel-
berg, Germany. He
returned home in
1858 and entered on
the work of the min-
istry in the Newark
conference of the
Methodist Episcopal
church. In 1866 he
again went to Ger-
many, to become the-
ological instructor in
the Methodist mis-
sion institute at Bre-
men. Here he re-
mained for three
years, serving both as
teacher and director
of the institution.
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He also travelled extensively in Europe. Syria, and Egypt. In 1871 he returned to the United States, having been elected professor of historical theology in Drew theological seminary, Madison, N. Y., and in 1873 he was chosen president of that institution. Here he continued till 1880, when at the general conference in Cincinnati he was elected and ordained bishop. In the performance of his episcopal duties he has not only visited every part of the United