until the close of the civil war. In 1872 he declined the nomination for governor and was a presidential elector, and in 1876 he was vice-president of the National convention that nominated Samuel J. Tilden. In January, 1877, he was appointed chief justice of the supreme court, serving until 1880, when the adoption of a new constitution displaced the whole state government. While chief justice he was elected one of the trustees of the Peabody educational fund. In 1880 he was again presiden- tial elector, and in the autumn of that year was appointed U. S. senator, but was not admitted. In 1882 he was placed for the third time on the su- preme bench, and served until the expiration of his term in 1886. He was then appointed by President Cleveland U. S. minister to Mexico, which office he filled until his death.
MANNING, William, colonist, b. in England
about 1616; d. in Cambridge, Mass., 14 March,
1692. He was descended from an ancient family
who had their early origin in Germany and went
over, in the 4th century, from Saxony to England.
His father, of the same name, came to Massachu-
setts with his family and settled at Cambridge,
where, in 1638, he purchased an estate, and became
the founder of a large American posterity. He
was one of the chief men of Cambridge, a mer-
chant, largely engaged in navigation, and a mem-
ber of the first church, as messenger of which he
was sent to England in 1669 to invite the Rev.
Urian Oai<es to become its pastor. Mr. Manning
was one of the select-men of Ca?nbridge. and with
Deacon John Cooper, by appointment of the Co-
lonial government, directed the erection of Harvard
hall, and collected and disbursed the moneys that
were raised for its construction.
MANOGUE, Patrick, R. C. bishop, b. in Desert,
County Kildare, Ireland, in 1881 ; d. in Sacramento,
27 Feb., 1895. He studied in a college in Callan,
County Kilkenny, emigrated to the United States
in 1856, and entered the University of St. Mary of
the Lake, Chicago, where he followed a course of
theology and philosophy. After graduation he
went to California, and was for some time super-
intendent and part owner of a mine in Moore's
Flat, Nevada county, but he afterward disposed of
his interests and sailed for Europe, where he pre-
pared for the priesthood in the Sulpitian seminary,
Paris, and was ordained in 1861. He was appoint-
ed pastor of Virginia City in 1862, with jurisdic-
tion over almost the entire country which now
forms the state of Nevada, and where he continued
during his missionary life. He acquired great in-
fluence among the miners of this region, and also
won the affection of the Piute Indians, large num-
bers of whom became converts. He was for sev-
eral years vicar-general of the diocese of Grass Val-
ley, and was its administrator during the bishop's
absence. He built one of the finest churches on
the Pacific coast in Virginia City. In 1880 he was
appointed coadjutor bishop of the diocese, and was
consecrated bishop of Ceramos in partibus infide-
lium on 16 Jan., 1881. In 1884 he succeeded Bishop
O'Connell. There were in 1888 twelve religious
institutions in his diocese, with three asylums, a
hospital, 37 churches, 75 stations, and a Roman
Catholic population of about 10,000.
MANOSALVAS. Hernan Venegas Carillo,
South American soldier, b. in Cordova. Spain : d.
in Venezuela in 1583. He followed Gonzalo Jime-
nez de Quesada to South America as a private
soldier, served in New Grenada, and rose rapidly
in rank. When the governor of that province re-
solved to send an expedition, in 1544, to conquer
the Panches and Pantagoros Indians, whose lands
were said to contain gold-mines, Manosalvas was-
offered the command. He accepted it on condi-
tion that he should select his soldiers, and set out
from Santa Fe early in the year. He defeated the-
natives in several engagements, and. reaching the
country of the Panches, passed Magdalena river
and discovered the sites of Ibague. Santa Agueda,
Ambalema, and Mariquita. and the mines of Sa-
bandijas and Venadillo. He then explored the
banks of Pati (now Bogota) river, and founded, on
6 April, 1544, the city of Tocaima. which soon be-
came one of the most prosperous in the colony,
but was afterward ruined by an inundation. He
founded it anew on a higher level, but it did not
achieve its old prosperity. In 1547 he was sent to
Spain by the council of New Grenada to ask for
the revocation of certain laws that had been en-
acted by the governor. Armendariz, and he returned
in 1548 after accomplishing the object of his mis-
sion. He was afterward sent at the head of troops
to aid Gasca {q. v.) in putting down the rebellion of
Gonzalo Pizarro in Peru ; but learning on the way
that the rebel leader had been defeated, he returned
to Santa Fe. He was afterward sent on several
missions to Spain in the interest of the colony.
MANRIQUE, José Angel (man-re'-keh), Co-
lombian poet, b. in Bogota in 1777; d. in Cacota
in 1822. He studied at the College of Nuestra
Seriora del Rosario in Bogota. He took part in
revolutionary movements in 1794. and his youth
alone saved him from being sent to Spain. He
afterward entered the church, and was ordained
in 1798. He was a zealous partisan of the revolu-
tion of 20 July, 1810. and contributed greatly to
rouse the enthusiasm of the people. The influence
that he obtained on that day he used on a subse-
quent occasion in favor of the wife of the viceroy,
when she was taken from the convent of the En-
senanza to prison. He retired afterward to his
curacy at Manta, and was raken prisoner by Morillo
in 1816. The service that he had rendered the wife
of the viceroy saved his life. In 1818, while cu-
rate of Manta. he was brought to trial for having-
preached in Tibirita in favor of the insurgents, and
for having had unlawful dealings with them in the
town of Macheta, procuring them horses, arms,
and other implements of war. In the same year
he took paxt in the guerilla war of the Almeidas,
and was again taken prisoner and sentenced to be
banished to Spain. When he was about to embark
at Santa Marta, the news of the victorious battle
of Boyaca, 17 Aug.. 1819, reached the city. He
escaped, and, destitute of means and nearly blind,
made his way to Bogota. Bolivar offered him a-
place in the choir of the cathedral of that city, but
he refused it, and would only accept the curacy of
Cacota. Manrique was the author of the burlesque-
poems "Tocaimada" and " Tunjunada'" (Bogota,.
1802), and of several notable epigrams.
MANROSS, Newton Spaulding, mining engineer, b. in Bristol, Conn., 20 June. 1825; d. near-Sharpsburg, Md., 17 Sept., 1862. He was graduated at Yale in 1850, then studied at the University of Gottingen, where in 1852 he received
the degree of Ph. D. Subsequently he visited mines and metallurgical establishments in Europe, but returned to the United States in 1852. In the autumn of 1853 he was sent with an exploring expedition to South America, and spent several months in examining the gold region of the Yuruari between Orinoco and Amazon rivers. On his way home, in 1854, he examined the Pitch lake of Trinidad, and in 1856 he was sent to the Isthmus of Panama to explore for coal, iron-ore. and other minerals. During the same year he visited Mexi-