244 MARYLAND MANUAL.
County. He is a son of the late Lawrason Riggs, and a direct
descendant of Francis Riggs, who settled in Calvert County
in 1663, members of this family having afterwards spread
through Anne Arundel, Frederick and Montgomery Counties.
His maternal grandfather was the Hon. Jesse D. Bright, who
was for four terms United States Senator from Indiana.
At the age of eleven he entered St. Paul's School, Concord,
N. H. He graduated as a civil engineer from Princeton Uni-
versity in 1887, standing second in his class. After prac-
ticing this profession a short time in Iowa he returned to enter
the machine shop of Robert Poole & Son Company; went to
Detrick & Harvey Machine Company on February 9, 1891,
and retired from business as vice-president of that company on
January 15, 1903; entered the services of the Maryland Na-
tional Guard as Second Lieutenant of Company E, Fifth In-
fantry, on April 29, 1800; elected Captain of Company F,
same regiment, on February 23, 1891, and Major on Novem-
ber 12, 1805: was mustered into the service of the United
States on May 14, 1808, as Major, Fifth Maryland United
States Volunteers, and mustered out with his regiment at close
of Spanish-American War on October 22, 1898; resigned from
the Maryland National Guard on January 26, 1899: appointed
Adjutant-General of the State of Maryland January 29, 1904.
Clerk of the Court of Appeals: THOMAS PARRAN (Repub-
lican) .
Thomas Parran was born in Calvert County, February 12,
1860. He was educated at Charlotte Hall Academy. He
was elected to the House of Delegates in 1883 and re-elected in
1885. He was Chief Deputy in the Internal Revenue Ser-
vice at Baltimore from 1880 to 1893, which year he was elected
to the State Senate. He was appointed Assistant Enrolling
Clerk in 1805 and Index Clerk in 1897 in the House of Repre-
sentatives of the United States. The latter position he held
at the time of his election, November 5, 1901, as Clerk of the
Court of Appeals of Maryland.
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