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The following is reprinted from the Obituary Record of the Society
of Alumni, Williams College, October 1937:
Alfred Clark Chapin,
the last surviving member of the class of 1869 at Williams College, until
his resignation in 1935 a member of the Board of Trustees of the College,
to which he gave his virtually priceless collection of rare books and
Chapin Hall, died on October 2, 1936, in the Ritz-Carlton Hotel, Montreal,
Canada. In recent years his home had been at the Hotel Drake in New York
City.
xxxA
distinguished lawyer, in retirement since the end of the last century,
Mr. Chapin played a prominent part in college affairs for more than a
generation and had served on the board since 1917. He was made an honorary
Doctor of Laws by his Alma Mater in 1909.
xxxMr.
Chapin had spent the summer at his summer home in Murray Bay, Quebec.
He was in good health until September 10, when he suffered a heart attack,
from which he rallied sufficiently, however, to make the journey to Montreal.
His wife, the former Charlotte (Storrs) Montant, was with him when he
died. A daughter likewise survives, Mrs. Hamilton Fish, Jr., of Garrison,
N.Y., and Washington, D.C., wife of the representative in Congress from
the 26th New York District. Mrs. Fish is the daughter of Mr. Chapin and
his first wife, who was Grace Stebbins prior to her marriage on February
20, 1884. She died in 1908. A grandson is Alfred Chapin Rogers, ’31. Mr.
Chapin married Mrs. Montant on January 6, 1913.
xxxOne
of the College’s most loyal graduates, Mr. Chapin with Mrs. Chapin had
been a frequent visitor in Williamstown. For years it was his custom to
stay at the Williams Inn [now Dodd House] for two or three weeks in the
spring and fall while en route from New York to Quebec. On these occasions
he invariably visited the library of rare books which bears his name and
of which Miss Lucy Eugenia Osborne is the custodian. The fascinating story
of the origin of this collection has been graphically told by Miss Osborne
in her little volume entitled Alfred Clark Chapin, published in
April 1937.
xxxChapin
Hall and the Chapin Collection in no wise represent all of Mr. Chapin’s
benefactions to Williams, although they are two of the College’s most
valuable and most valued physical assets. He has contributed generously
to many a Williams cause, and the total of his gifts to the College is
reported to be in the neighborhood of $1,250,000.
xxxMr.
Chapin, the son of Ephraim A. and Josephine Clark Chapin, was born in
South Hadley, Mass., March 8, 1848, a descendant on both sides of New
England families prominent in the settlement of Massachusetts. One of
his ancestors was Deacon Samuel Chapin, a founder of Springfield in the
17th century.
xxxHe
came to college from Rutland, Vt., having prepared there and at Mills
School, South Williamstown, and graduated from Williams when the institution
was experiencing the reconstruction period of the post-Civil War era.
After studying law for one year in Keene, N.H., he entered Harvard Law
School, graduating in 1871. He was admitted to the New Hampshire bar in
the same year and to the New York bar in 1872, when he began his law practice
in New York City. He became attorney for the Long Island Railroad and
for the banking and railroad interests of Austin Corbin. Some ten years
later he branched out into politics, when he was chosen president of the
Young Men’s Democratic Club of Brooklyn. He entered the New York State
Assembly in 1882, and in 1883 was Speaker. Following the two-year term
at Albany he was appointed Comptroller, serving from 1884 to 1887, and
in this office insisted on applying the Civil Service Reform Law to every
department under him.
xxxBacked
by reform elements in the Brooklyn democracy, Mr. Chapin was elected mayor
of Brooklyn in 1887, serving for two terms. He attacked in his first message
the management of the Brooklyn Bridge, opposing its separate treasury.
It was through his efforts that the legislature passed a bill compelling
the trustees of the bridge to hand over certain amounts at stated intervals
to the New York and Brooklyn comptrollers.
xxxHe
also brought about the laying out of new streets in Brooklyn and the erection
of new schoolhouses. He was re-elected in 1889. In his second term he
prepared a bill, known as the Sinking Fund Law, which when adopted enabled
him to reduce the bonded indebtedness of Brooklyn by $10,000,000.
xxxMr.
Chapin was a member of Congress, representing the 2nd New York District,
in 1891-92, and resigned from Congress in 1892 because he opposed free
silver. He served as New York State Railroad Commissioner, 1892-97. In
1891 he had been unsuccessfully boomed for the Democratic gubernatorial
nomination.
xxxAs
an undergraduate, Mr. Chapin was elected to the Phi Beta Kappa society
and was affiliated with the Alpha Delta Phi fraternity. He belonged to
the Union and Williams Clubs in New York and formerly was a member of
the Brooklyn, Montauk, Lincoln, and Carlton clubs.
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by the President and Trustees of Williams College
This page was last updated on 20 September 2001
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