MILESTONES 18JO-IO3O THE BOSTON SOCIETY OF NATURAL HISTORY 4H- / THE BOSTON SOCIETY OF NATURAL HISTORY i8jo-i^jo The course of nature is the art of God. EDWARD YOUNG BOSTON 'Printed for the Society 1930 The Seal of the Society From the minutes of the meeting of the Boston So- ciety of Natural History, held on November 3, 1841: VOTED, that the Society adopt as their corporate seal the one now presented, consisting of the profile of the head of Cuvier with the name of Cuvier beneath, surrounded by a belt containing the inscription of "Boston Society of Natural History," and that the custody thereof be committed to the Corresponding Secretary. TO THE READER We trust that this simple story of a typical New England in- stitution may cause you to share our pride in its past and our enthusiasm for its future. The cost of this edition is borne by a few members of our Society. CHARLES H. TAYLOR President February 9, 1930 TABLE OF CONTENTS I. Milestones 3 II. The Museum as it stands To-day 6y III. Plans for the Future 113 This book is edited by Captain Percy R. Creed LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS Thomas NuttaJl 2 Charter 5 Benjamin D. Greene 9 Georae B. Emerson 12 Amos Binney l5 Augustus A. Gould 16 John Collins Warren !9 Alexander von Humboldt 20 D. Humphreys Storer 23 Jeffries Wyman 27 Louis Agassiz 28 Frederick W. Putnam 31 Thomas T. Bouve 32 Samuel H. Scudder 37 Alexander Agassiz 39 Nathaniel E. Atwood 40 Thomas M. Brewer 43 Alpheus Hyatt 44 Charles T. Jackson 47 George Lincoln Goodale 48 William Harmon Niles 51 Charles Sedgwick Minot V- xii Illustrations Edward S. Morse 59 John James Audubon 63 Plan showing Location of Museum 66 A Corner of the Museum Library 71 The Front Hall & Main Staircase of Museum 72 Glover M. Allen 75 W. Cameron Forbes 79 Edward Wiwlesworth 85 View of the Main Gallery of Museum 86 Charles W. Johnson 91 Thomas Barbour 95 "Bald Eagle," selected as model by Audubon 101 "American Oyster Catcher," presented by Daniel Webster 102 Eggs, found and given by H. D. Thoreau 107 Charles H. Taylor 108 The New Budding 112 William]. Walker 116 I MILESTONES THOMAS NUTTALL 1 786- 1 8 59. Original Member. Elected first president, May 13, 1830. Declined office because he re- garded himself as only a transient resident (home was in England). o THE BOSTON SOCIETY OF NATURAL HISTORY 1830-1930 MILESTONES N February 9, 1930, the Boston Society of Natural History passes its hundredth milestone along the road of years. iSjo THE first meeting of the Society was held at the house of Dr. Walter Channing on February 9, 1830, and a committee was appointed. The members of the first committee are entitled to honorable mention and to our gratitude. Dr. Channing was made chairman and Mr. Simon E. Greene, secretary. They had for their colleagues Dr. George Hayward, Dr. John Ware, Mr. Edward Brooks, Dr. Amos Binney, and Mr. George B. Emerson. Here is the personnel of the first office-bearers of the Society : Thomas Nuttall, President George Hayward, First Vice-President John Ware, Second Vice-President Gamaliel Bradford, Corresponding Secretary Theophilus Parsons, Recording Secretary Simon E. Greene, Treasurer Seth Bass, Librarian Curators Francis Alger George B. Emerson Amos Binney, Jr. Francis C. Gray Edward Brooks Benjamin D. Greene Walter Channing Joseph W. McKean 4 Boston Society of Natural History It would seem as though it were ordained that an ideal may be brought to realization only through the agony and self-sacrifice of its pioneers. To this rule the story of the Boston Society of Natural History forms no exception. Here is an account by one of its original mem- bers of the atmosphere and circumstances through which the So- ciety had to fight its way. "At the time of the establishment of the Society, there was not, I believe, in New England, an institution devoted to the study of Natural History. There was not a college in New England, except- ing Yale, where philosophical geology of the modern school was taught. There was not a work extant by a New England author which presumed to group the geological structure of any portion of our territory of greater extent than a county. There was not in existence a bare catalogue, to say nothing of a general history, of the animals of Massachusetts, of any class. There was not within our borders a single museum of Natural History founded accord- ing to the requirements and based upon the system of modern sci- ence, nor a single journal advocating exclusively its interests. "We were dependent chiefly upon books and authors foreign to New England for our knowledge of our own Zoology. There was no one among us who had anything like a general knowledge of the birds which fly about us, of the fishes which fill our waters, or of the lower tribes of animals that swarm botli in air and in sea. " Some few individuals there were, distinguished by high attain- ments in particular branches and who formed honorable exceptions to the indifference which prevailed, but there was no concentration of opinion or of knowledge, and no means of knowing how much or how little was known. The Laborers in Natural History worked alone without aid or encouragement from others engaged in the same - c/Mae///^f ti i / / 7 rJ* / QPhtA c ' V a//a&^az>. y ■ - U ^7iM.i/Le.ia.& ■' lit /J/\f/t7L\' •' uiA i££#r-Wt-*-\s1&-nu . g'oa.7', .it-it-* better U .'i'.x.XtJ- I ■ ■ ' - ■ _/i-NJ ■ „ ' * , V . , .iJ-Aa,7 . /vu7 'ikwcO i^CtTca/cij /heroic a-jUU^^L' tt, ifnu 0'Uie.ry'uiyi,if-sti.r£n\j^. ' '-{o.rxDvc-i'anJ ~ /i)o 77 -Jui7fifrt:.a.c{'7i7s' \ * '1 «j V^i-g/ Jg^n-'ds £ZrzL&7v ^/la-W/furtrt/ 7>(U<-crs(r~EC&c7 a, a^-CJtX^Tz a>i.7s \~7o Ji/^c uj-iiecfi/,' Li 'mSBls :*:; - '' • ''- - , " -> ,' ,' / ^/ / it L . . * EL jdliVM^.t/et Mttj ^2e^-tJ^asUt&e^z::>z J* / CHARTER OF THE BOSTON SOCIETY OF NATURAL HISTORY Incorporated on the 25th of February, 183 1. ^ * •^ ' 5 4 2 2 ^ i§ "> S ^ * v ?s -j \ 4 ^ Vf-y/. / /* /&-£ /^»va^2s ■ * : : : Milestones y pursuits, and without the approbation of the public mind, which re- garded them as busy trijlers." The revolution in the public attitude and the absorbing interest of the present generation in "the course of Nature" are there for all to see. It is difficult for us to conceive the dispiriting conditions, so vividly described by our original member, the indifference and contempt which our naturalists had to face 100 years ago. Such, however, was the atmosphere in which the Boston Society of Nat- ural History was born. The Third Milestone THE problem of finance made an early demand on the attention of the pioneers. In March, 1833, the Society rented what is de- scribed as "the hall over the Savings Bank in Tremont Street." A course of lectures for the winter 1833-34 was arranged and we are told that "the Committee considered it expedient to pay $15 for each lecture." How far removed are we in these days from that scale of remuneration ! At one of the meetings of the Council of the Society in this year, the President, Mr. B. D. Greene, expressed a strong desire that a fund of $5,000 might be raised, the interest of which should be devoted to paying the rent bills incurred by the Society. He wished that we might feel independent and thought with such provision against indebtedness there would be no doubt of success. He then pledged himself ready to furnish s500 for this object. Mr. Charles Amory likewise pledged himself to raise $400. "Nothing further," says the chronicler, "seems to have been done towards the creation of such a fund." However, in spite of this lapse from generous grace, the faith and enthusiasm of its members kept the Society alive until 8 Boston Society of Natural History an "angel" appeared on the scene. On a tablet in the vestibule of our Museum may be found the following inscription: TO AMBROSE S. COURTIS MERCHANT OF BOSTON WHOSE GENEROUS BEQUEST IN 1838 WAS FOR TWENTY-FIVE YEARS ITS CHIEF SUPPORT THE BOSTON SOCIETY OF NATURAE HISTORY ON THE FIFTIETH ANNIVERSARY OF ITS FOUNDATION GRATEFULLY INSCRIBES THIS TABLET In his will he commended his bequest in the following terms: "Finally, I request the recipients of the above bequeathed prop- erty to realize that no inconsiderable portion thereof has been gathered as the fruits of a laborious vocation, exercised through anxious days and sleepless nights; that it is given to them, in trust, nevertheless, to be expended so as to inure to the greatest advance- ment of sound education in the departments as above specified, and the public good. I request that its investment may be safely guarded; that its expenditure may be subject to the strictest economy; yet that it may be appropriated liberally where the ob- jects aimed at justify an open hand, and cannot be afforded the cause of education and the public good at less expense." Those who are familiar with the history of the Society will agree that the spirit of the touching request of its first great benefactor has governed the financial policy of the succeeding Trustees of the Societv's funds. BENJAMIN D. GREENE 1 79 3- 1 86 2. Original Member. President, August 9, 1 830, to May 3, 1 837. Curator, May 13, 1830, to September 2, 1830. His very complete herbarium and library were transferred to the Museum at his death. io Boston Society of Natural History The Seventh Milestone iS}7 IN this year our members came to the conclusion that a scientific survey of the State of Massachusetts was "of the utmost desira- bility" and the President, Mr. George B. Emerson, was deputed to memorialize the State Government on the subject. This he did, laying his memorial before Governor Everett "by whom it was most cordially and graciously received." In due time the Governor informed Mr. Emerson that the Legislature, both houses of which justly appreciated his memorial, had authorized the Executive to appoint six proper persons to conduct the survey of the State and had passed an appropriation to cover the expenses thereof; and he requested that Mr. Emerson should suggest the names of such men as he thought competent for the work. The result was that the gen- tlemen appointed were almost entirely named byhim.TheGovernor desired that he should hold himself responsible for all the reports presented ; but his friends in the Society, knowing his ability, were not satisfied except by his taking a more active part in the survey; and he eventually divided the botany with Dr. Dewey, the doctor taking all other plants and Mr. Emerson the trees and shrubs. The report which he subsequently made to the Legislature was not only admirable in its scientific features but was most charming from a literary point of view. It takes one out with the writer into the fields and woods and makes the reader at once the interested stu- dent and the personal friend, so to' speak, of the tree or shrub which the writer may be describing at the time. This report was made up from the observations and study of nine successive years, nearly three months of each of which he gave to the work, visiting all parts of the State in its prosecution. Milestones n Apart from these valuable services, Mr. Emerson who was, like Louis Agassiz, a noted Educator as well as Naturalist, prepared the well-known "Memorial of the American Institute of Instruction to the Massachusetts Legislature" and himself placed it in the hands of the Governor. The result of this course was the formation in April, 1837, of the Board of Education with Horace Mann, then President of the Senate, and a member of our Society, as its Secre- tary. The cause of Education took a new departure from this time forth, and the good effect of this action in which Mr. Emerson was prominent was inestimable. Thus, early in the history of the Society were the causes of Science and Education intimately associated in the persons and policies of its members. As evidence of the position which the Society had won for itself fifty years ago stands the fact that instruction was given to a class of students from Boston University in Biology and Zoology: to a class of students from the Institute of Technology in Zoology and Paleontology : and to a special class of the teachers of the Public Schools in Zoology. Apart from these formal classes the laboratory room and its working collections were used by persons engaged in teaching or studying. The Eighteenth Milestone i