a formal wedding. He died in 1857 at Havana.
Rochester is an attractive city, with a park system comprising 1,649
acres. The largest parks are the Durand-Eastman, the Genesee Valley,
Seneca, Maplewood and Highland. The Durand-Eastman Park occupies a
beautiful tract of wooded ground on Lake Ontario.
The University of Rochester, founded 1851 as a Baptist institution, but
now non-sectarian, occupies a tract of 24 acres on University Ave. in
the eastern part of the city. Notable men who have been connected with
the university include Henry Augustus Ward, professor of natural history
from 1860 to 1875; Martin Brewer Anderson, president from 1854 to 1888,
and David Jayne Hill, president from 1888 to 1896.
David Jayne Hill was born at Plainfield, N.J., June 16, 1850.
After obtaining his first degree at the University of Bucknell,
Pa., he studied for his A.M. in Berlin and Paris. He was
president of the University of Rochester from 1888 to 1896, then
spent 3 years in the study of the public law of Europe. As one
peculiarly fitted by education and training for a diplomatic
career, he was minister first to Switzerland (1903-1905), then to
the Netherlands (1905) and from 1908 to 1911 ambassador to
Germany. His numerous writings cover a wide field in biography,
rhetoric, diplomacy, history and philosophy.
[Illustration: Falls of the Genesee River at Rochester About 1850
(_From a print in the N.Y. Public Library_)
For many years Rochester was the most important flour milling
centre in the country, owing to the valuable water power furnished
by the falls and the fertility of the wheat fields of the Genesee
Valley.]
Rochester Theological Seminary prepares students for the ministry of
the Baptist Church, and has no organic connection with the university.
The Mechanics' Institute, founded in 1885 by Henry Lomb of the
Bausch-Lomb Optical Co., is an unusually successful school of trades and
handicrafts. It occupies a large building, the gift of George Eastman of
the Eastman Kodak Co.
For many years Rochester was the most important flour milling centre in
the country, owing to the valuable water furnished by the falls and the
fertility of the wheat fields of the Genesee Valley. Flour milling is no
longer so important an industry here--Minneapolis having taken first
rank in this respect--but Rochester ranks high among the great
manufacturing cities of the count
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