309 MARYLAND MANUAL.
U. S. Volunteer Infantry, May 13th, 1898, serving until this
regiment was mustered out, October 22nd, 1898.
General Warfield has always taken much interest in the
affairs of his native city, both business and social. He is the
Resident Manager of the Royal Insurance Company, Limited,
of Liverpool, with offices in the Chamber of Commerce Build-
ing, Baltimore. He is President of the Association of Fire
Underwriters, Vice-President of the Baltimore Board of
Trade, and a member of the Baltimore Chamber of Commerce
and Merchants and Manufacturers' Association. His mem-
bership in the Clubs of Baltimore includes the Maryland Club,
the Elkridge Kennels, Merchants' Club, L'Hirondelle Club of
Ruxton and the Bachelors' Cotillion.
General Warfield resides at Timonium, Baltimore County.
State Treasurer: WILLIAM P. JACKSON (Republican'. Salis-
bury, Maryland.
William P. Jackson, son of William H. and Arabella H.
Jackson, was born at Salisbury, Maryland, Jan. II, 1868. His
forefathers, who were Scotch-Irish, were among the early set-
tlers of the Maryland peninsula and have always been closely
identified with its government and development.
He was educated, at the Wilmington Conference Academy
at Dover, Delaware, and. after finishing hi education, entered
the lumber business as a partner in the firm of E. E. Jackson
& Co., Salisbury, Maryland, on the dissolution of this firm,
he and his father organized the present firm of Jackson
Brothers Co., of which he is now president and active mana-
ger; he is also president of the Salisbury National Bank,
Jackson & Gutman Co., Salisbury Ice Co., Citizens Gas
Co., and Peninsula General Hospital; owns and operates a
large dairy farm and is extensively engaged in. the breeding
of registered Holstein-Friesian cattle.
Mr. Jackson has been a member of the Republican National
Committee since 1908 and was a member of the United States
Senate from 1912 to 1914, having been appointed to fill the
vacancy caused by the death of Senator Isador Rayner; he
has been twice married, his first wife was Sallie McCoombs of
Havre de Grace, Md., whom he married in 1890, from this
union two children were born, Belle McCoombs Jackson and
William Newton Jackson, after the death of his first wife
he married Katherme Shelmerdine of Philadelphia and from
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