22 MARYLAND MANUAL.
of the Baltimore Mutual Aid Society, and was at once
elected to fill the position of president. This position he
has held until the present time. In 1883, he was married
in Baltimore to Miss Alice Barnes, of Sykesville. He is
president of the Twentieth Ward Republican Club and
one of the governors of the Young Men's Republican
Club. He was also a member of the Republican State
Central Committee, and was the executive of the third
legislative district. He was on the committee on elec-
tions, on sanitary condition of State, on committee on
Article 3, section 24, of the Constitution, on committee
on temperance, on committee on insurance, fidelity,
security and loan companies, on committee on re-valua-
tion and assessment of the last Senate.
Baltimore County— D. HOPPER EMORY.
D. Hopper Emory was born in Centreville, Queen
Anne's county, in 1841. He is a son of the late Judge D.
C. H. Emory. Shortly after his birth the family removed
to Baltimore, and Mr. Emory has lived in the city and
hi the county ever since. He was educated in the public
schools, at Newton Academy and at the Rugby Institute
at Mount Washington, and was also a private pupil of
Dr. Edwin Arnold. He studied law with his father,
Judge Emory, and was admitted to practice about twenty-
five years ago in the Superior Court. He was for about
fifteen years commissioner of chancery in the Baltimore
County Court. He has been frequently upon the Repub-
lican ticket in the county, however, for judge, for State's
attorney and other offices—his misfortune being that
Baltimore county was a democratic stronghold. He was
on committee on education, on committee on engrossed
bills, on committee on library, on committee on public
buildings in Annapolis, on committee on Article 3, section
24, of the Constitution, on committee on re-valuation and
assessment of the last Senate.
Calvert County—CHARLES L. MARSH..
Charles L. Marsh is 45 years of age. He is a native of
New York, but has spent the greater part of his life in
Calvert, and is thoroughly identified with its people. Mr.
Marsh is a mechanic and the inventor and manufacturer
of the deep-water oyster tongs that are now in general
use in the waters of Maryland and Virginia. He has
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