treat of her lines of descent, as the former work did of the lines of his descent, and that of the Phillips familv, to which his first wife belonged.
SALISBURY, James Henry, physician, b. in
Scott, Cortland co., X. Y., 13 Oct., 1823. He was
educated at Homer academy, and in 1846-'S wa.-
a-i.-isiant, and in 1849-V52 principal, chemist of the
New York state geological survey. He received
the degree of M. D. from Albany medical college
in 1850. In 1851-'2 he lectured mi elementary
and applied chemistry in the New York state nor-
m:il >i liool at Albany. He conducted experiments
and microscopical examinations, the results of
which were published in the "Transactions" of
the American association for the advancement of
science, and devoted himself later to the study of
the causes and treatment of chronic diseases, pub-
lishing his therapeutical discoveries in the New
York Journal of Medicine." In 18fi4 he settled
in Cleveland. Ohio, where he assisted in establish-
ing the Charity hospital medical college, before
which he lectured till 1806 on physiology and his-
tology. He has been president of the Institute of
mierology since 1878. Among his publications
are a prize essay on the " Anatomy and History of
Plants" (Albany, 1848); one on "the "Chemical
and Physiological Examinations of the Maize Plant
during" the Various Stages of its Growth." which
was published in the New York agricultural re-
port for 1840, and reprinted in the Ohio state re-
ports: and "Microscopic Examinations of Blood
and Yegetations found in Variola, Yaccina, and
Typhoid Fever" (New York. IM;~H.
SALISBURY, Sylvester, British soldier, b. in
England; d. in Albany, N. Y., about 1680. He
was a captain in the force that captured New Am-
sterdam in 1664, and was placed in command of
Port Orange, the name of which he changed to
Fort Albany. He married a Dutch lady named
Marius, and" held the offices of high sheriff and
justice of the peace at Albany. When New Am-
sterdam was retaken by the Dutch in 1673, he was
carried as a prisoner of war to Spain, then an ally
of the Netherlands in the war against France and
England. On his release, he was restored to his
post at Albany. Sir Edmund Andros sent him to
Knirland in 1675 with a petition to King James
for the annexation of Connecticut to New York.
SALM SALM, Prince Felix, soldier, b. in An-
holt, Prussia, 25 Dec., 1828 ; d. near Metz, Alsace,
18 Aug., 1870. He was a younger son of the reign-
ing Prince zu Salm Salm, was educated .-it ilie
cadet-school in Berlin, became an officer in the
Prussian cavalry, and saw service in the Schleswig-
Holstein war, receiving a decoration for bravery at
Aarhuis. He then joined the Austrian army, but
was compelled to resign, extravagant habits having
brought him into pecuniary difficulties. In 1861
he came to the United States and offered his ser-
vices to the National government. He was given a
colonel's commission and attached to the staff of
Gen. Louis Blenker. In November, 1862, he took
command of the 8th New York regiment, which
was mustered out in the following spring. He was
appointed colonel of the 68th New ork volunteers
on 8 June, 1864, serving under Gen. James B. Steed-
man in Tennessee and Georgia, and toward the end
of the war was assigned to the command of the
post at Atlanta, receiving the brevet of briga.liei-
general on 15 April, 1865. He next, offered his
services to the Emperor Maximilian, embarked for
Mexico in February, 1866, and on 1 July wa> ap-
pointed colonel of the general Mail'. He I ami
the emperor's aide-de-camp and ehief of his house-
hold, and was captured at Queretaro. Soon after
Maximilian's execution he returned to Europe, reentered the Prussian army as major in the grenadier guards, and was kille'd at the battle of Gravelotte. He published " My Diary in Mexico in
18H7. including the Last Days of the Emperor Maximilian, with Leaves from the Diary of the Princess Salm Salm " (London, 1868). His wife, Agnes, b. in Baltimore, Md., in 1842 ; d. in
Coblentz. Germany, about 1881, is said to have been adopted when a child in Europe by the wife of a member of the cabinet at Washington, but, after receiving a good education in Philadelphia.
to have left her home and become a circus-rider and then a rope-dancer. Afterward she acquired a reputation as an actress under the name of Agnes Leclercq, and lived several years in Havana. Cuba.
She returned to the United States in 1861, and married Prince Salm Salm on 30 Aug.. 1862. She accompanied her husband throughout his military campaigns in the south, performing useful service
in connection with the field-hospitals, and was
with him also in Mexico. After the fall of Quere-
taro she rode"to San Luis Potosi and imploreil
President Juarez to procure the release of Maxi-
milian and of his aide, who underwent imprison-
ment with him. She also sought the intervention
of Porfirio Diaz and of Mariano Escobedo. and ar-
ranged a conference between the latter general and
the archduke. After the death of her husband she
rai-ed a hospital brigade, which accomplished much
good during the Franco - Prussian war. Subse-
quently she married Charles Heneage, an attache
of the British embassy at Berlin, but soon sepa-
rated from him. She published "Ten Year- of
My Life" (New York, 1875).
SALNAYE, Sylvain (sal-nahv), president of
Hayti, b. in Cape Haytien in 1832; d. in Port au
Prince, 15 Jan., 1870". He enlisted in 1850. and"
was captain of cavalry when Geffrard overthrew
Soulouque in January, 1859, being rewarded for
his aid with the rank of major. In 18(51 he was
bitter in his denunciation of Geffrard for what he
called the latter's subserviency in the matter of the
occupation of the Dominican territory by Spain,
and Geffrard, whose popularity began to decline,
was powerless to punish Salnave. The latter pro-
moted and encouraged frequent insurrections on
the borders, and in 1864 he abetted an insurrection
in the northern part of Hayti, but the movement
was put down with the aid of the Spanish. In
July, 1866, he led a new rising at Gonaives, and, al-
though he was again defeated, the revolt continued
to increase, and, aided by a pronunciamento in his
favor at Port au Prince, 22 Feb., 1867, he entered
the capital on 13 March. A triumvirate was now
appointed, composed of Nissage-Saget, Chevalier, and Salnave, and the last was elected president on 14 June. His first act was to promulgate the new constitution that had been voted by the senate, but his despotic rule soon occasioned sullen discontent. In 1869 a general insurrection, headed by Nissage-Saget and Dorningue, began in the count of the north and the south. Salnave collected his forces and fought desperately, even after his chief general, Chevalier, had gone over to the enemy, intrenching himself in Port au Prince, where he was soon besieged by the rebel army under Gen. I'.rice. The defence was obstinate, and Salnave refused to surrender even after his fleet had been capture. I. Port au Prince had been bombarded, and the grand palace had been completely destroyed by an explosion. At the instance of the British consul he endeavored on 19 I'ee. to escape to li.nninican territory, but was captured b (ien. Cabral on 1C Jan., INTO, and by him surrendered to Nissage Saget,