land, in 1805, and died in 1820. The son succeeded to the management of the business, and in 1828 formed a partnership with his In-nthcr. Alexander. They began refining sugar by strum in 1832. and were the first to succeed in this process. They abandoned candy-making in 1856, devoting them- selves solely to sugar- refining, and in 18T2 they retired from ac- tive business. He was president of the American museum of natural history and of the Presbyte- rian hospital. New York, was connected with various chari- table, scientific, and social organizations, and was known also as the possessor of a
large and valuable library and gallery of paintings, and a raunifieent giver to educational and religious institutions. In
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he gave $55.000 to the Presbyterian hospital,
New York city, $100.000 to Princeton theological seminary, $100,000 to Princeton college, and $50,- 000 to the San Francisco theological seminary. Mr. Stuart's charities were continued by his widow, whose New York residence was among the finest in the country. His brother, Alexander, b. in New York city, 22 Dec., 1810; d. there. 23 Dec., 1879, was a generous donor to philanthropic objects. The brothers began in 1852 to devote each year a certain minimum sum to works of benevolence, chiefly connected with the Presbyterian church, and before the death of Alexander had given away $1,391,000, which was increased by the subsequent gifts of Robert L. to nearly $2,000,000.
STUART, William, journalist, b. in Galway,
Ireland, 7 July, 1821; d. in New York city. 27
Dec., 1886. His real name was Edmund O'Pla-
herty. He was educated at Eton college, and soon
after being graduated became interested in Irish
politics. He was elected to parliament, and iden-
tified himself with a group that opposed the ec-
clesiastical-titles bill, but made terms with Lord
Aberdeen's coalition ministry in 1852, Edmund
O'Flaherty receiving the appointment of commis-
sioner of the income tax. Two years later, becom-
ing pecuniarily embarrassed by election expenses
and losses on the turf, he attempted to raise money
by a fraud, and fled to Paris to avoid prosecution,
and thence to New York city. Taking the name
of his mother's family, he wrote newspaper articles
for a livelihood, and gained a reputation as a dra-
matic critic by caustic strictures in the New York
" Tribune " on Edwin Forrest's style of acting, en-
hancing the popular interest in his criticisms by
sarcastic replies that he wrote for the " Evening
Express." He became a theatrical manager in
Washington and Philadelphia, and then the lessee
of the Winter Garden theatre in New York city,
where Edwin Booth gained his first success as
Hamlet and Dion Boucicault and Agnes Robert-
son were introduced to the public in the " Octo-
roon," which had to be taken off the stage on
account of the political feeling that it excited.
After the burning of the Winter Garden in 1867,
he was associated with Lester Wallack, and in 1869
returned to the profession of journalism. Stuart
was a connoisseur in gastronomy, and in the clubs
of New York und elsewhere he entertained many
notable' | pic of both continents.
STUCKENBERG, John Henry William, clergyman, b. in Bramschc. Hanover. Germany, 6 Jan., 1835. lie emigrated in carlv life to the
United States, and was graduated at Wittenberg
college, Springfield, Ohio, in 1S.~>7. after which he
returned to Germany to study theology in the
universities of Gottingen, Berlin, and Tiibingen.
He was ordained us a Lutheran minister in 1860,
and held pastoral charges in Iowa and Pennsyl-
vania, besides officiating in 1862-'3 as chaplain of
the 45th Pennsylvania volunteers. He was profes-
sor of theology at Wittenberg college from 1873
till 1MSO, and since that time has been pastor of
the American chapel in Berlin, Germany. He is a
member of the Berlin philosophical society. In
addition to contributions to religious periodicals,
he has published " German Rationalism in its
Rise, Progress, and Decline," from the German
of Carl Rudolf Hagenbach, in conjunction with
William L. Gage (Edinburgh, 1865); "Ninety-five
Theses" (Baltimore, 1867); "History of the Augs-
burg Confession from its Origin till the Adoption
of the Formula of Concord " (Philadelphia. 1869);
"Christian Sociology" (New York, 1880; London,
1881); "Life of Enianuel Kant " (London, lss2r,
and " Introduction to the Study of Philosophy."
STUEBER, Henry, author, b. in Philadelphia,
Pa., about 1770; d. 'there in 1792. He was of
German extraction. After graduation at the Uni-
versity of Pennsylvania in 1784, and at the medi-
cal department in 1788, he obtained a clerkship in
a government office and began the study of law,
but soon died of pulmonary disease, after estab-
lishing a reputation as a versatile scholar and
original thinker. Besides contributions to peri-
odical literature, he wrote a sequel to Benjamin
Franklin's " Autobiography," containing an ac-
count of his discoveries in electrical science. A
memoir was published shortly after his death.
STUNG SERPENT (or LE SERPENT PICQCE),
chief of the Natchez Indians, d. in Louisiana, about
1725. The Natchez having killed some Frenchmen
in 1713, and Bienville having been sent to punish
them, a deputation, headed by Stung Serpent and
other chiefs, came to negotiate with him. After
Bienville's expedition had ended successfully, he
made peace with the Natchez, and released their
chiefs. In 1722 several Natchez villages rose against
the French, and a soldier was murdered. Troops
were sent to reduce them, but Stung Serpent, who
was then great chief, endeavored to make repara-
tion by fining the villages. He acted as interpreter
to the French, and is described as being their best
friend among the Natchez. Some authorities place
his death later than 1725.
STURGE, Joseph, English author, b. in Elver-
ton, Gloucestershire, England, in 1793; d. in Bir-
mingham, 1 May, 1859. He was a member of
the Society of Friends, established himself as a
corn-factor in Birmingham in 1820, acquired great
wealth, and devoted himself, among other philan-
thropic objects, to the abolition of slavery. To
familiarize himself with the subject of slavery, he
visited the West Indies in 1837, and four years
later the United States. He published " The West
Indies in 1837 " (London, 1838), and " Visit to the
United States in 1841 " (Boston, 1842). The " Me-
moirs of Joseph Sturge" were written by Henry
Richard (London, 1864).
STURGEON, Daniel, senator, b. in Adams county, Pa., 27 Oct., 1789 : d. in Uniontown. Fayette co., Pa.. 2 July. 1878. He was educated at Jefferson college, Pa., studied medicine in Fayette