Member Directory,
1847 - 1922
Augustus R. Macdonough
Lawyer/Railroad
Centurion, 1852–1907
Daniel S. Appleton
Middletown, Connecticut
New York (Manhattan), New York
Age thirty-one
Middletown, Connecticut
- L. Seymour Ashley
- Russell N. Bellows
- O. P. C. Billings
- S. S. Conant
- Samuel B. Dana
- Chauncey M. Depew
- Henry Dudley
- Jonathan Edwards
- Richard C. Fellows
- Charles King Gracie
- John Greenough
- John Hay
- Charles H. Hunt
- James Kent
- Edward King
- John King
- Manton Marble
- Cortlandt Parker
- Beverley Robinson
- John Rogers
- Eben Briggs Thomas
- William Tracy
- Aaron J. Van der Poel
- John Lester Wallack
- Samuel Wetmore
- Leroy M. Yale
- John E. Zimmerman
- Lawrence Barrett
- Karl W. Buchholz
- N. W. Stuyvesant Catlin
- Robert W. Chambers
- Walter De F. Day
- David Duncan
- James F. Dwight
- Charles Emott
- Charles F. Fearing
- George H. Forster
- Henry H. Gorringe
- Elial F. Hall
- Henry G. Harrison
- Woolsey Johnson
- Duncan McMartin
- Charles H. Ogden
- Duncan A. Pell
- Gifford Pinchot
- Frederick Sheldon
- Thomas D. Sherwood
- Alexander T. Stewart
- Charles Edward Tracy
- James M. Varnum
- Edward F. Winslow
Archivist’s Notes
Secretary of the Century Association, 1859–1885; designated an honorary member in 1886
Century Memorial
Augustus Rodney Macdonough, son of the famous commodore, was eighty-seven years old [sic: eighty-six] when he died and had been for fifty-five years a Centurion, always an honored member, and in token thereof for twenty-one years an honorary member likewise, of this Association. A graduate of Yale, a successful lawyer, and a trusted official of a great railway, his life was worthy of his ancestry. To the great reform of the Civil Service he gave time and energy, to the appreciation of what was best in letters and art he gave all his leisure. The very mention of his name recalls to many, who still rejoice in the sound of a voice that is still, the presence of the man. You felt the reason why for twenty-seven years he had graced the office of secretary to the Century Association. Standing in this station, his easy grace, his earnest manner, his weighty words, made him almost an incarnation of the Century spirit as he felt it: to wit, the repose, the self-restraint, and the cheerfulness of a generation and a society which took itself seriously, convinced that justice, truth, and honor, though absolute, were yet attainable in high degree by human effort, in chivalric contest, and through high-hearted confidence. If in this Association and its members the devoted spirit of service still survives in larger measure than elsewhere, we owe the meed of recognition to the faithfulness of Macdonough throughout his long term of office. When the fathers were setting the pace, fighting for high principle, taking both counsel and refreshment together in our rooms, and though ungirt were making ready for new campaigns of righteousness, he caught the subtle spirit of an inspired age and was trusted by that powerful company to mark its advances and its goals.
William Milligan Sloane
1908 Century Association Yearbook
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Aaron J. Van der PoelLawyerCenturion, 1861–1887
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John Lester WallackActorCenturion, 1864–1883
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Samuel WetmoreMerchant (Tea)Centurion, 1858–1885
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Leroy M. YalePhysician/ArtistCenturion, 1870–1906
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John E. ZimmermanDiplomatCenturion, 1865–1872