Page:Encyclopædia Britannica, Ninth Edition, v. 11.djvu/175

Rh and 1835, when the villages of Navarino and Astor were founded. In 1839 these we re incorporated under the name of Green Bay, and in 1854 a city charter was granted. It was in 1868 created a bishop s see by Tins IX., and a handsome cathedral church in the Romanesque style has been erected since. The growth of the place has been rapid even for an American city. The population in I860 numbered 2275, and 46G6 in 1870, exclusive of Fort Howard across the river, with its population of 2462, which commercially may well be regarded as part of the city. In 1875 the State census gave 8037 to Green Bay and 3610 to Fort Howard.

 GREENE,, an English composer, was born in London towards the close of the 17th century (about 1696, it is generally stated). He was the son of a clergyman in the city of London, and soon became a chorister of St Paul s Cathedral, where lie studied under Charles King, and subsequently under Richard Brind, organist of the cathedral from 1707 to 1718, whom, on his death in the last-named year, he suceeded. Nine years later he became organist and composer to the chapel royal, on the death of Dr Croft. In 1730 he was elected to the chair of music in the uni versity of Cambridge, and had the degree of doctor of music conferred on him. Dr Greene was a voluminous composer of church music, and his collection of Forty Select Anthems is a stand ird work of its kind. He also wrote a Te Deum, several oratorios, a masque, The Judgment of Hercules, and a pastoral opera, Phoibn (1748). He is also among the writers of glees and catches, a form of music peculiar to English composers (see GLEE) ; and a collection of Catches and Canons for Three and Four Voices is amongst his com positions. In addition to this lie wrote many occasional pieces for the king s birthday, having been appointed master of the king s band in 1735. But it is as a composer of church music that Greene will be chiefly remembered. It is here that his contrapuntal skill and his sound musical scholarship are chiefly shown The influence of Handel is, however, discernible in his compositions. With that great master Greene was originally on intimate terms, but his equal friendship for Buononcini, Handel s rival, estranged the German master s feelings from him, and all personal intercourse between them ceased. Greene, in conjunction with Testing and others, originated that excellent institution, the Society of Musicians, for the support of poor artists and their families. He died September 1, 1755.

 GREENE, (1742-1786), an American general, son of a Quaker who followed the joint occupation of a farmer and smith, was born at Potowhommet, Warwick county, Rhode Island, May 27, 1742. From his early years he was employed in assisting his father, but be suc ceeded, notwithstanding this, in acquiring a large amount of general information, and made a special study of mathe matics, history, and lav/. At Coventry, where he removed to take charge of a forge of his own, he was the first to establish a public school; and in 1770 he was chosen a member of the legislature of Rhode Island. Sympathizing strongly with the revolutionists he in 1774 joined the &quot; Kentish Guards,&quot; and on this account was expelled from the Society of Friends. In 1775 he was appointed to the command of the contingent of 1000 men raised by Rhode Island, and after joining Washington before Boston he was named brigadier-general. In 1776 he obtained the rank of major-general and accompanied Washington to New Jersey, where he took part in the battles of Trenton and Princeton. At the urgent request of Washington he in 1778 accepted the office of quartermaster-general, on the understanding, however, that he should retain the right to command in the field, a right of which he took advantage at the battle of Monmouth, 24th June of the same year, and at the battle of Springfield, 23d June 1780. In August following he resigned bis office, and on the 2d of December he succeeded Gates in the command of the Southern army. In this position he was soon successful in restoring the demoralized and helpless troops to a con dition of thorough vigour and efficiency ; and though not always technically victorious in the combats in which he engaged, he conducted operations in such a masterly manner that ths enemy gained little advantage from any victories they obtained, and were never able to baffle him in what was essential in his plans. At the beginning of the cam paign he detached General Morgan to attack the enemy at Cowpens, with a result that was brilliantly successful. Then followed a series of clever retreats to avoid engaging superior forces, until he deemed himself strong enough to attack the enemy at Guilford Court House; and although he here suffered defeat, the British army a few days afterwards retreated towards Wilmington. After following a short distance in pursuit he changed his line of march, and advancing into South Carolina attacked Lord Rawdon at Camden, and again suffered a defeat. But this reverse also failed to impede his energy, and after capturing a number of forts he again engaged Lord Rawdon at the battle of Eutaw Springs, which, though a drawn combat, resulted in the British abandoning South Carolina. For his services in the campaign he was presented with two pieces of captured ordnance, a British standard, and a gold medal. Georgia and North and South Carolina a^o made him valuable grants of laud. He died from sunstroke at his estate of Mulberry Grove, Savannah, June 19, 1786. His Life and Letters, 3 vols., edited by G. W. Greene, w T ere published in 1867-71.

 GREENE, (1560-1592), dramatist and miscellaneous writer, was born at Norwich about the year 1560. As an eastern counties man (to one of whose plays, Friar Bacon, the Norfolk and Suffolk borderland owes a lasting poetic commemoration) he naturally received his education at Cambridge, where he took his B.A. from St John s College in 1578, proceeding M.A. in 1583 from Clare Hall, where it is possible that he had expectations of a fellow ship. In 1588 he was incorporated at Oxford, so that on some of his title-pages he styles himself &quot; utriusque Academioe in Artibus Magister,&quot; and Nash humorously refers to him as &quot; utriusque Academiie Robertus Greene.&quot; Between the years 1578 and 1583 he had travelled abroad, according to his own account very extensively, visiting France, Germany, Poland, and Denmark, and learning at first hand to &quot; hate the pride of Italie &quot; and to know the taste of that poet s fruit, &quot;Spanish mirabolanes.&quot; Whether on his return he took holy orders, the evidence on the sub ject is insufficient to determine ; according to the title-page of a pamphlet published by him in 1585 he was then a &quot; student in phisicke.&quot; Already, however, after taking his M.A. degree, he had according to his own account begun his London life, and engaged in pursuits more congenial to his tastes. He became &quot;an author of playes and apenner of love-pamphlets, so that I soone grew famous in that qualitie, that who for that trade grov/ne so ordinary about London as Robin Greene?&quot; He rapidly sank into the worst debaucheries of the town, though not without being inspired by a passing impulse towards a better life, and derided in consequence by his associates as a &quot; Puritane and Presizian.&quot; His marriage, which soon after this took place, failed to steady him ; if Francesco, in Greene s pamphlet Never too late, is intended for the author himself, it had been a runaway match ; but the fiction and the autobiographical sketch in the Repentance agree in their account of the unfaithfulness which followed on the part of the husband. He lived with his wife for a while; &quot;but for as much as she would perswade me from my wilfull 