Vezin was born on April 9, 1858, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. He was the son of Charles Vezin and Caroline Vezin, née Kalisky. His younger brother was the painter Frederick Vezin.[1]
On 14 June 1883 he married Adah Delamater (1858–1930) in New York City.[2]
In 1914, he published an essay in the Brooklyn Eagle that was intended to convince the U.S. of the German viewpoint in World War I.[6]
Vezin had two sons and two daughters.[3] He died on March 13, 1942, in Coral Gables, Florida, at age 83.[3][5]
References
^ abCharles Joseph Cohen: Memoir of Rev. John Wiley Faires, A. M., D. D., Founder and Principal of the Classical Institute, Philadelphia. A Teacher from 1831 to 1888, with Photographs and Biographic Sketches of Upward of Five Hundred of His Former Pupils 1926, p. 781 ff.
^Phillip D. DeLamarter: Connecting with Our Past: A Genealogy of Descendants of Claude Le Maitre, Volume 1 Gateway Press, 2002, p. 543