LONO, Pierse, legislator, b. in Portsmouth, N. H., in 1739; d. there, 3 April, 1789. He was the son of Pierse Long, who was born in Limerick, Ireland, but came to this country and engaged in the shipping business in Portsmouth. The son entered his father's counting-room and was taken into partnership. He was a member of the Provin- cial congress of his native state in 1775, and served in the Revolutionary army as colonel of the 1st New Hampshire regiment. In the retreat from Ticonderoga his command was overtaken by the 9th British foot, which he turned upon and de- feated. He was a volunteer at the battle of Sara- toga, a delegate to the Continental congress in 1784-'6, a state councillor in 1786-'9, a member of the Constitutional convention in 1788, and was ap- pointed by President Washington collector of cus- toms at Portsmouth in January, 1789. He dis- charged the duties of the office until the following April, when he died.
LONG, Robert Carey, architect, b. about
1819 ; d. in New York city in July, 1849. He
studied architecture, and practised his profession
for several years in Baltimore. While in that city
he was intrusted with designing and building the
Athenaeum, occupied by the Maryland historical
society and the Baltimore library company. He
removed to New York city in 1848, and was rapid-
ly acquiring a reputation when his career was cut
short by cholera. He contributed a series of arti-
cles entitled '" Architectonics " to the " New York
Literary World," and read a paper before the New
York historical society on " Aztec Architecture,"
which was printed in its " Transactions." He was
also the author of " Ancient Architecture of
America " (New York, 1849).
LONG, Stephen Harriman, engineer, b. in
Hopkinton. N. H., 30 Dec, 1784 ; d. in Alton, 111.,
4 Sept., 1864. He was graduated at Dartmouth in
1809, and after teaching for some time entered the
U. S. army in December, 1814, as a lieutenant in
the corps of engineers. After discharging the
duties of assistant professor of mathematics at the
U. S. military academy until April, 1816, he was
transferred to the topographical engineers, with the
brevet rank of major. From 1818 till 1823 he had
charge of explorations between Mississippi river
and the Rocky mountains, and of the sources of
the Mississippi in 1828-'4, receiving the brevet of
lieutenant-colonel. The highest summit of the
Rocky mountains was named Long's peak in his
honor. He was engaged in surveying the Balti-
more and Ohio railroad from 1827 till 1830, and
from 1837 till 1840 was engineer-in-chief of the
Western and Atlantic railroad in Georgia, in which
capacity he introduced a system of curves in the
location of the road and a new kind of truss bridge,
which was called by his name, and has been gener-
ally adopted in the United States. On the organi-
zation of the topographical engineers as a separate
corps in 1838, he became major in that body, and
in 1861 chief of topographical engineers, with the
rank of colonel. An account of his first expedition
to the Rocky mountains in 1819-'20 from the notes
of Maj. Long and others, by Edwin James, was
published in Philadelphia in 1823, and in 1824
appeared " Long's Expedition to the Source of St.
Peter's River, Lake of the Woods, etc.," by Will-
iam H. Keating (2 vols., Philadelphia). Col. Long
was retired from active service in June, 1863, but
continued, charged with important duties,, until
his death. He was a member of the American
philosophical society, and the author of a " Rail-
road Manual " (1829), which was the first original
treatise of the kind published in this country.
LONGACRE, James Barton, engraver, b. in
Delaware county. Pa., 11 Aug., 1794: d. in Phila-
delphia, 1 Jan., 1869. He was descended from an
early Swedish colonist on the Delaware, whose
name was originally Longker. He served his ap-
prenticeship as an engraver in Philadelphia, and
from 1819 till 1831 illustrated some of the best
works that were published in this country. With
James Herring, of New York, and afterward alone,
he issued the '• National Portrait Gallery of Dis-
tinguished Americans," in which many of the en-
gravings were from sketches by his own hand
(3 vols., New York, 1834-'9). From 1844 till his
death he was engraver to the U. S. mint, and de-
signed all the new coins that were struck during
this time, including the double-eagle, the three-
dollar piece, and the gold dollar. He was after-
ward employed by the Chilian government to re-
model the entire coinage of that country, and had
completed the work shortly before his death.
LONGFELLOW, Stephen, lawyer, b. in Gorham. Me., 23 June. 1775 ; d. in Portland, Me., 2 Aug., 1849. He was of the fourth generation in lineal descent from William Longfellow, who had emigrated from Yorkshire to Massachusetts and settled in Newbury about 1675, and in 1676 married a sister of Judge Samuel Sewall. Stephen
was graduated at Harvard in 1798, admitted to the bar in 1801. and practised successfully in Portland. He was a delegate to the Hartford convention in 1814, and was subsequently elected to the 18th congress as a Federalist, serving from 1 Dec, 1823, till 3 March, 1825. In 1834
he was president of the Maine historical society, having previously been its recording secretary. In 1828 he received the degree of LL. D. from Bowdoin. He compiled sixteen volumes of Massachusetts and twelve volumes of Maine " Reports." He married the daughter of Gen. Peleg Wadsworth, an officer in the Revolution. — Their son,
Henry Wadsivortli, poet. b. in Portland, Me.. 27 Feb., 1807; d. in Cambridge, Mass., 24 March, 1882, was the second son in a family that
included foursons and four daugh-
ters. His birthplace, on Fore
street, is shown in the engraving on
page 11. He was named fora broth-
er of his mother, who, a youth
of nineteen, lately commissioned
lieutenant in the U. S. navy, and
serving before
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Tripoli under Com. Preble, had perished in the fire-ship " Intrepid," which was blown up in the night of 4 Sept., 1804. The boyhood of the poet was happy. A sweeter, simpler, more essentially human society has seldom existed than that of New England in the first quarter of this century, and the conditions of life in Portland were in some respects especially pleasant and propitious. The beautiful and wholesome situation of the town on the sea-shore ; the fine and picturesque harbor that afforded shelter to the vessels by which a mod- erate commerce with remote regions was carried on, giving vivacity to the port and widening the scope of the interests of the inhabitants; the general