Gc 974.401 Es7es V, 29-30 1425143 GENEALOGY COLLECTION r ALLEN COUNTY PUBLIC LIBRARY 3 1833 01101 1274 BULLETIN OF THE ESSEX INSTITUTE. VOLUME XXIX. 1897. SALEM, MASS: PRINTED BY THE ESSEX INSTITUTE. 1898. Salem tPress: The Salem Press Co., Salem, Mass. 1899. 1425148 CONTENTS. PAGE The Retrospect of the Year 1 Japanese Collembola. By Justus Watson Folsom. Illustration. 51 BiotiteTinguaite Dyke Rock. By John H. Sears. Illustration. 58 Battles of the Black Ants. By Rev. W. P. Alcott ... 64 Some Glacial Wash-Plains of Southern New England. By J. B. WooDWORTH. Maps 71 Selections from a Note Book of Manasseh Cutler, Entitled "A Description of the Animals in North America Taken from Actual Observation." 120 (ill) BULLETIN OF THE ESSEX IltTSTITTJTE. Vol. 29. Salem: January, — June, 1897. Nos. 1-6. ANNUAL MEETING, MAY 17, 1897. The annual meeting was held in Plummer Hall, this evening, at 8 o'clock, the President in the chair. The reports of the Executive Committee, Treasurer, Auditor and Librarian, were read, accepted, and ordered to be placed on file. The report of the Committee on Nominations was pre- sented, and the following persons were nominated and unanimously elected ; PRESIDENT . ROBERT S. RANTOUL. VICE PRESIDENTS: Francis H. Appleton, Ed-\vard S. Morse, Abner C. Goodell, Jr., Alden P. White. SECRETARY : TREASURER : Henry M. Brooks. William O. Chapman. (1) BULLETIN OF THE ESSEX INSTITUTE. AUDITOR: LIBRARIAN". Henry M. Batchelder. Charles S. Osgood. COUNCIL . George H. Allen, Richard C. Manning, William H. Gove, S. Endicott Peabody, Ezra D. Hines, David Pingree, Thomas F. Hunt, Charles S. Kea, Francis H. Lee, George M. Whipple. Keport of THE Executive Committee, May 17, 1897. Owing to the illness and absence of the Secretary, Henry M. Brooks, the Executive Committee prepared a full report of the work of the Institute during the past year. This report was read by President Rantoul. It showed that the year just closed had been a prosperous one for the Institute, and while the work of the Societ}^ had been hampered by the continued illness of the Secre- tary, the Assistant Librarian and the 2d Assistant Libra- rian, yet the routine work had been carried on and the Institute was in good condition, — its publications had con- tained articles of great merit which must prove of value to the historical and scientific student. The regular lec- tures and the less formal meetings, where papers weie read by members of the Institute, were noted and highly commended. The matter of field meetings was considered and a continuance advised. The pressing need of more room for the many hundreds of volumes received by do- nation during the past year was referred to and a strong appeal for the necessary funds to bring about this much desired result was made. Reference was made to the death of Mr. William J. Foster, who had of late been of great assistance at the rooms during the illness of the Sec- retary. The loss the Institute had sustained in the death THE RETROSPECT OF THE YEAR. 3 of Vice-President Hagiir was noted, and the valuable and long-continued service of the deceased wa^ referred to. Vice-President White ottered the following resolution which was unanimously adopted : Resolved: That in the judgment of this meeting, the tiltieth anniversary of the founding of the Essex Institute ought not to pass without a distinct and emphatic recog- nition, and that the Council lake steps to carry this vote into effect. George M. Whipple, Secretary , ^ro tern. The Executive Committee's Report was as follows : The Essex Institute has been from the beginning de- pendent to a very large extent upon the spontaneous help of volunteers, and the class of persons to which such an institution can appeal being a busy and preoccupied class, it is impossible to depend upon the attendance of most of the committees except on special occasions. The institu- tion is too large to be conducted longer by one man, even if that man were its founder. Accordingly, resort has been had, of late years, to an executive committee, which is now practically charged with administering the Society's affairs, and it seems tit that some report should be heard from it, in the enforced omission of the usual report from the Secretary. To a very exceptional extent the Institute has been hampered this year by the absence, through sickness and other causes, of its w^orking oflScers and members. New comers, be they ever so well disposed, cannot till the places of experienced workers. But it has not been the practice of the Institute in the past to magnify its difficul- ties, and fortunately there is enough of encouragement in 4 BULLETIN OF THE ESSEX INSTITUTE. the record of the year just closed^ to make repining need- less. The loss by death of two presidents in quick suc- cession had disordered to some extent, before this year, the normal state of our affairs, and it has been the cher- ished purpose of the Executive Committee for this year to restore to a regular system as speedily and as fully as might be, the running machinery of the Society. -The recent death of William J. Foster removed one of the most esteemed and valued of our volunteer assistants. The Historical Collections are now printed and distrib- uted for the year 189(3. The Bulletin is also complete for the year 1895. Both of these volumes lie before you on the table, and will be found to be made up of matter of a quality as valuable as and possibly more readable than those of some preceding years. Large use has been made in both volumes of illustrations, which modern electrical methods produce at a cost within our reach. Our pages have been opened freely to the papers offered by the Local History Class. The Lecture courses have been well sustained and well attended. Nine free lectures have been furnished, of a quality which, it will appear on a recital of the list, it would be difficult to better. Professor Goodale of Har- vard opened the course with an illustrated lecture on the Botany of New Zealand. Subway-Commissioner Gargan followed with an illustrated account of the great Boston enterprise. Next came Prof. Arlo Bates of the Institute of Technology on " The Language of Literature," followed by Professor Minot of the Harvard Medical School on the great Russian Naturalist, von Baer. The fifth lecture was from General Curtis Guild, Jr., on the "Sword in Warfare." The sixth was by Rev. E. D. Towle on the Poet Holmes, and the next by Professor Ripley of the Technological School on "Some Peculiar People of South- THE RETROSPECT OF THE YEAR. 5 eiii France." Louis Prang followed him, on "Chronio- Lithographic Art," and Dr. Hasket Derby, describing "Wisbuy, a Dead City of the Baltic," completed the series. The last three lectures were copiously illustrated. The promise of another lecture on the "Old Time Clergymen of Salem," by Rev. J. W. Buckham, was defeated by the illness of the speaker. The nature of these addresses is at once a tribute to the character of the audiences which our courses command and an evidence that the work of the Institute is held in high esteem amongst the class of lecturers who are able and willing to make gratuitous contributions to popular cul- ture. Our own home course of evenings in the Institute Building has been also well sustained and furnished sev- eral papers which have been accepted for the Historical Collections. Wm. L. Welch, Gilbert L. Streeter, John Robinson, Arthur H. Chase, Edward A. Silsbee, Ezra D. Hines, Mrs. Henry Wardwell, Mrs. W. S. Nevins and Miss A. L. Warner have each, in turn, occupied evenings, — Mr. Streeter two, — in an acceptable manner, and a con- sideiable number of local topics have been illustrated and discussed. The Institute has commemorated the seventy-fifth anni- versary of the founding of the Essex Historical Society, which was practically its own birthday , for the mantle of the Historical Society has fallen, for better or for worse, upon the shoulders of the Essex Institute. Before the next en- suing annual meeting, the Institute will be called on, in March, 1898, to give an account of its stewardship for the first half-century of its corporate life. It would be well if this present annual meeting should indicate, in some way, what notice it would wish the Society to take of this event. Prof. Daniel B. Hagar, a vice-president of the Institute for many years, has since the last yearly meeting removed 6 BULLETIN OF THE ESSEX INSTITUTE. from the county and soon after died. His many services, fitly commemorated in our records, at tiie time, have not been forgotten. The Institute has felt called on, during the year, in common with other like bodies, to declare its views on several public questions closely allied with its work. In these cases, your Executive Committee has ventured to submit resolves at regular meetings of the Institute, and these have, without exception, met the approval of the members present. In this way the voice of the Society has been raised against the destruction of the Frigate Constitution; in favor of acquiring for a State Park the Stage Fort property on Gloucester Harbor ; and in favor of a proposal, submitted by the Swiss Government to the Universal Postal Congress just holden at Washington, fo)' admitting to the mails of the world scientific speci- mens at the same postal rates as samples of merchandise. The Institute in the early period of its career derived great advantage from a system of field-meetings ado[)ted, as Dr. Wheatland said at a field-meeting at Manchester, July 18, 1856, from the practice of the Berwickshire Naturalists' Club in Scotland. Shall they be revived? It is not unlikely that a practical test will be api)lied this summer, in the form of invitations to visit two or three attractive localities. In that case it will devolve upon the field-meeting committee, which has been a sinecure for several years past, to determine how far under the greatly changed conditions now existing — when so mimy towns, twelve at least, have local societies of their own, and when facilities for travel are vastly increased and extended, — the attempt to revive field-meetings is expe- dient and practicable. Donations have poured in upon us in such vol nine as to tax the utmost capacity of our available space ; and a generous rear-extension of our building has become as THE RETROSPECT OF THE YEAR. 7 necessary for the accommodation of the normal, daily growth of the collections as it is indispensable, if we would provide for large donations already promised and secure such as our lack of space may, it is feared, be diverting to some other destination. Our lack of funds is actual and not prospective and no donor, who has money to devote to the interests of general culture, could do better than by endowing us with a por- tion of his bounty. Among the gifts received this year, are six volumes of elegant engravings of the details of East Indian archi- tecture, presented by the Maharaja of Jeypore, with splen- did illustrations of American architecture from another source ; a donation of rare value and interest from Henry Fitz Gilbert Waters, including a copy of Robinson Cru- soe's will ; a Hebrew Bible enclosed in a case measuring lxl|^ inches and worn in Russia as a watch-charm; a complete Parsee presentation costume ; a photograph of an ancient knife handle richly embossed, once the proper- ty of William Burnet Browne of Salem and Virginia, and now in posse.> 67.28 % feldspar. 3.44 CaAl, Si, Os ) 9.61 NaeK2Al«SiA4 8.09 H, AL Si2 O,, 2.62 SiO, 6.00 Na^ Fe, Si, Oi, = G.OO % a?girine. 2.90 Biotite. 3.50 Fe, O3 (Fe Mn) O I ^'^^ % . ^'""^^^ ^"^ ^^-- > netite. 20.32 % nepheline, kaolin and quartz. 100.00 100.00 PLATE. Biotite tinguaite dyke cutting augite syenite. The dyke may be detected near the bottom of the ledge by my note book at near one end and on the other by a Boston and Maine railroad time table placed in the contact walls where the dyke has been eroded out. Salem, Aug. 21, 1898. BATTLES OF THE BLACK ANTS. BY REV. W. P. ALCOTT. The wood borings of Formica JPennsylvanica L. are often wonderfuL Sometimes these insects will form, in a soft pine log, a maze of halls, chambers, corridors, and spiral passages, separated by walls little thicker than paper, and altogether of great architectural beauty and finish. But attention is now to be called to another line of activity conspicuous in these insects. If investigation of their singular conflicts has been made, it has not happened to attract my notice. The following observations are re- corded that they may incite some young Lubbock or Mc- Cook to find the cause and purpose of these wars. On the morning of June 26, 1883, I observed numbers of large black ants wandering excitedly over a back piazza of my house in Boxford, Mass. More careful observation showed a dozen of their dead bodies scattered around, while two living insects were struggling in a desperate conflict. In some places dissevered legs and antennae were thickly strewn, while in retired nooks living ants were resting, either exhausted, w^ounded or skulking. I gathered over twenty corpses from the piazza and the ground. Some of these warriors, having mutuall}^ in- (64) BATTLKS OF THE BLACK ANTS. 65 dieted mortal wounds, had never relaxed their iron em- brace but lay dead in pairs. The conflict was not yet ended and I watched one of these Homeric encounters. An ant had his antagonist's feeler in his jaws. The combatant, thus held, twisted and turned to get his own mandibles upon feeler, leg, neck or waist of his antagonist. He was, evidently, much un- nerved by the other's hold, for these antennae seem as sen- sitive as the eyeball, and he was dragged about, resisting and struggling in every way, but all in vain. Finally, the antenna came off near the base and the two warriors parted. Single combats like this probably went on through the day and a few occurred the following night, for in the morniny; I found more dead bodies. One wounded soldier died in my custody and many doubtless in cracks and nooks, but the level tioor seemed to be the main battle- field. Altogether I collected from the fight about seventy complete bodies or dissevered heads which I preserved in a red pill box — the rather gaudy tumulus of this Waterloo ! In the same place on the morning of July 7, following, 1 found traces of another l)attle which was not yet finished. Again, July 19, there had been a battle during the night on the bare floor of a chamber at the opposite end of the house and upstairs. One morning in August, of the same year, I found traces of a similar battle in the cel- lar way of a neighboring house. Recurring to the conflict of July 7, I may give from notes made at the time, a more particular description. The ants engaged were evidently workers of the two kinds, havino; either laro-e heads or small ones — megace- phalic or microcephalic. I observed especially a struggle l)etvveeii one of each kind whom I may call for l)revity, Meg and Mic, or Mike, abbreviations of the above tech- 66 BULLETIN OF THE ES8EX INSTITUTE. nical words. The latter was then alone, all the others being large-headed and seemingly bent on his destruction. But Mike was undaunted and full of tight in spite of being alone among numerous big-headed foes. Indeed, the latter seemed generally afraid to get too near him. At length one of them ventured to clasp jaws, which seems to be the "first hold •' Then the two began to bend their tails as if to sting or to inject poison into one another's mouth, an issue which each endeavored to prevent. Other ants attacked Mike, pulling upon his legs and attempting to fasten upon the connection of his abdomen. Meg dragged Mike about, both at times apparently attempting to sting. Mike was dying in half an hour, probably from exhaus- tion or poison. Later two dropped from overhead in energetic and deadly conflict — not ceasing under my capture and ob- servation of them. These also were a Meg and a Mike. The former, as before, was stronger, the latter more active and ferocious. He had Meg by an antenna, but Meg pulled him around, Mike keeping his abdomen so curled as to prevent his antagonist's jaws from a fatal grip on his slender waist. Mike had already lost half of one fore- leo; and all of a middle one. Meor was minus one entire front leg and was lame in a leg of the next pair, but ho was biting vigorously, though in vain, at Mike's hard and polished abdomen. At last Meg's feeler parts where the other has hold and Mike clutches the tip of the remaining feeler. This quickly gives wa}^ and he seizes the base, while a small colorless drop exudes from the broken end. Now this antenna parts at the base and, after having fought twenty minutes under my eye and perhaps previously much longer, they separate, the advantage being with Mike. Though confined together, they did not care to fight ao-ain. One died during the following night and the other BATTLES OF THE BLACK ANTS. 67 several days later, perhaps from some abnormal condition of his contiuemeiit. Unfortunately, I did not note which died the sooner, but probably it was Meg, who was more injured. Often since the above observations, I have noticed, about another residence, the corpses left by similar encounters of these ants but I have discovered no additional facts. No similar battles of our other Massachusetts species have ever come under my observation. Some twelve or tifteen years ago an anonymous corre- spondent of the St. Louis liepul)lican described a battle of ants in southwestern Missouri. Evidently these were our " black ants." The account tallies so exactly with what I have seen in our own county, that I quote it entire, as follows : " I am a pedagogue in the rural districts of Newton County, Missouri, and my schoolhouse had been infested for several months by a species of a large black ant, much to the annoyance of the little barefooted scholars, and there seemed to be no way of getting rid of the pest. But what was my astonishment a few mornings since on coming into my school-house, to tind the floor literally strewn with dead and dying ants, and upon a closer ex- amination to tind that a desperate battle was then raging among them more sanguinary and fatal than any I ever witnessed (and I saw many a hard-fought battle during the late unpleasantness) or read of [in the annals of history] . A much larger number were lying dead than were left en- gaged, and I therefore concluded the battle had raged all night. Most of the combatants engaged were grappled in a deadly embrace, while others but recently commenced were standing erect on their hind legs, and soaring for the advantage with all the science of the most experienced swordsmen or pugilists. The most fatal point of attack, ESSEX INST. BULLETIN, VOL. XXIX 5* 68 BULLETIN OF THE ESSEX INSTITUTE. and the one for which it seemed all contended, was the ligament which joined the main body with the head. This vital member once seized by the powerful nippers, death succeeded without a struggle, and the victor was ready and eager for another engagement. No undue advantage was taken by either party ; and no two would endeavor to overpower a single one ; nor was there any flinching or wavering in a single instance, for whenever two belligerents met it was certain death to one or both parties. Never, perhaps, were two armies more equally matched in numbers, strength and valor ; and consequently at the close of the battle, which lasted two nights and a day, as new recruits continued to arrive at every moment, there were but few left, and probably none of the vanquished army, thus rivalling the valor of the heroes of the Alamo and the Spartan band of Leonidas. Observing closely, I could see a slight difference in the appearance of the contestants, one set being perfectly black, with a large head, while the other was nearer brown, with a smaller head, though both about equally matched in size and strength. Dismembered legs were numerous, and many an unfortunate though valiant hero, being en- tirely deprived of his supporters, was thus left, hors de combat, to die on the held. The next morning I swept up the dead and dying of both armies (for I would not disturb them while engaged), amounting to thousands." In view of the facts given, my own suggestions are now added. That the maiming alone does not always cause the death of those ants is evident. Unless I am greatly in error, experimenters have proved this by clipping off an- tennse or legs. Death does not follow for several days at least, and then perhaps from inability to obtain food or drink. Indeed, I observed an ant running about for a long time with his abdomen bitten off or hanging only by BATTLES OF THE BLACK ANTS. 69 H filament drawn out so that his stomach was upon his shoulders — where perhaps some of us ought to have it ! For all this, the ant was very lively and did not appear to suffer. Again combatants will sometimes die in a few minutes with no wound that a microscope can discover. It is possible that death is caused by the injection of formic acid, saliva or some other natural secretion into the wounds or mouth. It is admitted, I believe, that animal products take on specially poisonous properties under the influence of rage. It was astonishing to note the desperation of the en- counters. Sometimes others interfere in these dual con- flicts as in one case cited above, though this appears ex- ceptional. When two ants grapple it means the death of one or both. Many pairs were found locked in an em- brace mutually fatal. Others are seen running around with the dissevered head of an antagonist locked in its final grip upon an antenna or leg. Such a warrior would not loosen his hold though his enemy or some comrade should succeed in his decapitation. The trophy may be " glo- rious," but it is quite an incumbrance and the bearer tries in vain to secure relief from his ornament. As to the cause of these battles, I can make no conclusive suggestion. It is, of course, not to be supposed that the insects of the formicary have discovered, as man has, that by such sanguinary conflicts, great questions of ethics and property rights may be settled with infallible exactness ! There is said to be great diversity in the social economy of difierent species of Formica. With some kinds there are battles between rival nests, but I could discover no evidence of this in the cases mentioned. From the im- possibility of finding the houses of these wood-borers, my opinion may not be correct. But the slow accumulation of the slain and the insignificance of the numbers at any 70 BULLETIN OF THE ESSEX INSTITUTE. one time seen in conflict suorofested some other cause than hostile colonies, or a struggle for booty. Contrary to the Missouri testimony, my pill-box mau- soleum shows that the struggles were not uniformly be- tween the large-headed and the small-headed ants. Often two of the former or two of the latter are locked in the final clasp. I could discover no rule of difference in size or color. All these conflicts, I believe, began in the night — usually, if not always, on sultry nights. There may be a kind of craziness, a propensity to " run amuck," which at times seizes a part or all of the workers of a formicary. Some ants were generally recognized as friends, some as enemies. Is it a witchcraft delusion ? My present residence was built in 1770 and early in summer is seriously infested with these insects. Later they are rarely seen in the house. Is it possible that these battles are due to some Malthusian instinct by which, when their services are no longer needed, the great mass of the soldier and worker class slay one another and thus empty the formicary that there may be room and welcome for another generation ? Oris there a survival, in this way, of the young and vigorous? Some of the questions suggested can be finally answered only by the carefully recorded observations of many independent and skilful students of nature. SOIME GLACIAL WASH-PLAINS OF SOUTHERN NEW ENGLAND.' BY J. B. WOODWORTH. CONTENTS. Introduction ..... Bibliography The wash-plains of existing glaciers Heard Island wash-plain Alaskan wash-plains General characters of extraglacial wash Drainage creases ..... Boulder-paved creases Kettle-holes, ice-block holes Inliers of older drift .... Loess-like cover Sandblasting and glj^ptoliths Superposition of plains by raised water Boulders and wash-plains leeward margin of wash-plains . Geographical distribution of wash-plains in this Plains of the terminal moraine . Nantucket plain .... Martha's Vineyard plain . Plains of the Cape Cod moraine . Plains of Narragansett Bay region The Middleboro morainal line Providence-Bridgewater line Wrentham-Weymouth line of lakes . Woonsocket-Sharon line of plains Newtonville- Woodland wash-plains The Cambridge moraine and plain Sporadic plains level field PAGB 72 73 76 76 78 78 80 81 81 83 84 85 85 85 86 87 89 89 91 92 95 95 96 98 98 100 100 103 > rublished by permission of the Director of the U. S. Geological Survey. (71) 72 BULLETIN or THE ESSEX INSTITUTE. PAGE Water-level of wash-plains 105 Stagnation of ice-sheet 109 Decomposition in wash-plains Ill Economics of wash-plains 116 Conclusions 117 Explanation of map, Fig. 7 119 INTRODUCTION. The glacial wash-plains or streaQi deltas and fans of southern New England constitute by far the most impor- tant feature in the pleistocene deposits of the area, for the reason that they cover the larger part of the lowlands ; on these flat spaces the greater number of towns and vil- lages are built ; the sands and gravels determine the nature of most of the problems of local water-supply and drainage ; and because of their scientific bearings in de- termining the history of the glacial retreat across this portion of our country, as well as in the evidence they are thought to afford concerning the attitude of the land and sea at the close of the Glacial Period. The notes which are here brought together present but a crude outline of the results which may yet be gained in this field by a careful mapping and investigation of these old glacial stream deltas. These glacial deposits remain almost as sharply defined as when abandoned by the ice. The growth of forests and the development of sw^amps in the low wet grounds alone offer difficulties to the rapid and satisfactory interpretation of the glacial history of the district. The writer has had the opportunity of examining those portions of this area which lie within the geologic field known as the Narragansett Basin of Carboniferous rocks and the islands off the south coast. Some of the leading facts concerning wash-plains occurring about Nan-agansett Bay have already been published as noted in the annexed references to the literature. SOME GLACIAL WASH-PLAINS. 73 BIBLIOGRAPHY. The following references include those papers which relate to the country lying south of a line drawn from Boston to Worcester and east of Connecticut. A few papers relating to the New Haven region are added. 1856. Prof. Edward Hitchcock, • in descrihinir the sur- face geology of New England, refers to gravelly and sandy plains of the lowlands as " sea-bottoms." 187l>. Mr. Warren Upham,^ in a paper on " The for- mation of Cape Cod," discusses the leading facts in the moraine of that stage. 1880. The same author^ later discusses " The succession of glacial deposits in New England." 1881. Mr. CJpham^ describes " The Glacial Drift in Boston and Vicinity." 1883-84. The late Professor J. D. Dana, in a paper under the title of " Phenomena of the glacial and Cham- plain Periods about the mouth of the Connecticut Valley, in the New Haven region,"^ gives a detailed map of the glacial sand-plain about New Haven with elevation'^ and discusses the origin of the plain and its features. He re- fers the deposit to coalescing sand-bars formed by flooded waters in the valley during the retreat of the ice-sheet. Deep depressions in the plain are ascribed to lack of dep- osition. It was held that the ice had vanished from the district when the plain was deposited. 1888. Professor Shaler*' made a report on the Geology of the Island of Martha's Vineyard, in which he describes the large outwash plain or frontal apron, ascribing it to ' Illustrations of Surface Geology, 1856, p. 44. » Am. Nat. vol. XIII, 1879, pp. 489-502; 562-565. 3 Am. AsBor. Adv. Sci. Proc. vol. XXVIII, pp. 299-310. ♦Proc. Boston Soc. Nat. met. vol. XX, pp. 220-334 •Am. Journ. of Science, vol. XXVI, 1888, pp. 3U-361; and vol. xxvii, pp. 113-130. •7th Annual Report, U. S. Geol. Survey, pp. 314-320. 74 BULLETIN OF THE ESSEX INSTITUTE. deposition from subglacial streams discharging their load of sand and gravel below sea-level. The creases are ex- plained as due to initial shaping by the outrunning streams and to subsequent modification by the to-and-fro move- ment of tides. The depth of water, not definitely de- termined, is thought to have been as great as 300 feet. 1889. Professor Shaler,i in this year, published a report on the Geology of Nantucket, in which he describes the outwash plain of that island, notes its surface features, including the creases, and discusses the relations of the head of the plain or terrace to the currents which deposited the detritus in the plain. 1890. Professor Davis, ^ in a paper " On the Struct- ure and Origin of Glacial Sand-plains," gives a critical study of an esker-fan near Newtonville, Mass. 1891. Mr. Upham,=^ in a paper entitled " Walden, Co- chituate and other lakes, enclosed by modified drift, "de- scribes certain ice-block holes in this area. 1892. Professor Davis,'* in a paper " On the Subglacial Origin of certain Eskers," considers sand-plateaus as del- tas marginal to the ice-sheet. 1893. Professor Davis, ^ in a publication entitled "Geo- graphical Illustrations," notes the occurrence and influence of numerous sand-plains on settlement in this district. 1893. Dr. F. P. Gullivers describes a model based upon the esker-fan at Newtonville previously described by Professor Davis. A second model is introduced to show supposed relations of the ice-front to the delta. 1 Bulletin 53, U. S. Geol. Survey. = Bull. Geol. Soc. Amer., vol. 1, pp. 195-202, pi. 3. 3 Froc. Boston Soc. Nat. Hiet. vol. xxv, pp. 228-242. *Proc. Boston Soc. Nat. Hist. vol. xxv, 1892, pp. 477-499. ' Geographical Publications. Pul>li8hed by Harvard University, Cambridge, Mass., 1893, pp. 46. Reprinted from the Proceedings of the Am. Institute of In- struction, 1892. 6 The [Chicago] Journal of Geology, vol. 1, 1893, pp. 80.3-812. SOME GLACIAL WASH-PLAINS. 75 1893. J. B. Woodworth,' in a paper entitled "An attempt to estimate the thickness of the ice-blocks which gave rise to lakelets and kettle-holes, " mentions several glacial lakelets in the sand-plains of this district, and discusses the bearing of otitlet creases to marine submer- gence. 1896. J. B. Woodworth-^ describes "The Retreat of the Ice-sheet in the Narragansett Bay region," enumerat- ing several successive lines of sand-plains in southeastern Massachusetts and Rhode Island. 1896. In a later note^ the last author gives reasons for thinking that certain sand-plains in the Narragansett Bay region were deposited above sea-level. 1896. Prof. W. O. Crosby and Mr. A. W. Giabau^ refer certain wash-plains in Hingham and Weymouth to deposition in a lake held up by the retreating ice front. 1896. Messrs. Shaler, Woodworth and Marbut, in a paper on " The Glacial Brick-clays of Rhode Island and southeastern Massachusetts," describe some of the wash- plains and attendant clay deposits of this area.^ 1898. Mr. M. L. FuUers writes on " The Champlain Submergence in the Narragansett Bay Region," and at- tempts to show that wash-plains in that area were depos- ited at sea-level. 1898. Professor Shaler,^ in a paper on the "Geology of the Cape Cod District," describes the moraines and underlying deposits. 1899. J. B. Woodworth** publishes "The ice-contact 1 Am. Geol. vol. XII, 1393, pp. 270-284. ' Am. Geol. vol. XVin, 1896, pp. 150-168. » Am. Geol. vol. xvni, 1896, pp. 391-392. * Abstract in Science in, 1896, pp. 212-213. » 17th Annual Report, U. S. Geol. Survey, pt. 1, 1896, pp. 9.51-1004. • Am. Geol. vol. XXII, 1898, pp. 310-321. ' 18th Annual Report, U. S. Geol. Survey, 189S, pt. li, pp. 497-.'i93. •Am. Geol. vol. XXII, 1899, pp. 80-86. ESSEX INST. BULLKTIN, VOL. XXIX 6 76 BULLETIN OF THE ESSEX INSTITUTE. in the classification of glacial deposits," based upon a study of the glacial deposits in this field. THE WASH-PLAINS OF EXISTING GLACIERS. Existing glaciers present two general types of wash plains which may be briefly described as follows. First, in the case of valley glaciers, where the ice front com- monly rests upon a slope high above base-level, the gravel and sand washed out from the ice accumulate in a sheet or fan below the base of the ice. Such is the case with the debris washed out from the glaciers of Chamonix in France. It is a characteristic of glaciation in a mountain- ous or upland region. Where the ice spreads out on the lowland, we have the second case, in which, owiug to delta building in lakes or the sea or upon a plain, the wash accumulates in front of the ice as a fan of gentle slope banking up against the ice margin. Probably in all cases where the term plain is used, the form is that of a fan or a group of fans ; and from these almost level-topped deltas to steeper sloping deposits and to cones there is a gradual passage. The term plains is thus only roughly correct when applied to the group of deltas which have accumulated at the ice-front. This second group of deposits is found to-day in pro- cess of formation only in high latitudes. Examples are here cited for comparison with New England cases. The Heard Island wash-plain. — A graphic account of an outwash plain now in process of formation is given by the late Canon Moseley in his description of Heard Island at the time of the visit by the Challenger. Heard Island lies in about lat. 53° 10' S., and long. 73° 31' E. The following is abstracted from Moseley's account :i 1 Notes by a Naturalist, made during the Voyage of the Challenger. Revised cd., New York and London,1892, pp. 191-192. SOME GLACIAL WASH-PLAINS. 77 " The view along the shore of the successive termina- tions of the glacier was very fine. I had never before seen a coast-liiie composed of cliffs and headlands of ice. The bases of their cliffs rested on the sandy beach and were only just washed by the waves at high water or dur- ing gales of wind. The lateral moraines were of the usual form, with sharp ridged crests and natural slopes on either side. They formed lines of separation between the contiguous glaciers. They were somewhat serpentine in course, and two of them were seen to occur imme- diately above points where the glaciers were separated by masses of rock in situ, which masses showed out between the ice cliffs on the shore and had the end of the moraines resting on them. " A stretch of perfectly level black sand about half a mile in width forms the head of the bay and intervenes between the glaciers and a promontory of rocky rising land stretching out northwards and westwards, and form- ing the other side of the bay. It was on the smooth sandy beach bounding this plain that we landed. The surf was not heavy, but we had to drag the Ijoat up at once . . . The sandy plain stretches back from the bay as a dreary waste to another curved beach at the head of another inlet of the sea. Behind this inlet is an irres:- ular rocky mountain mass forming the end of the island, on which are two large glaciers ver^'^ steeply inclined, and one of them terminating in a sheer ice-fall . . . The plain is traversed by several streams of glacier water coming from the southern glaciers. These streams are constantly changing their course as the beach and plain are washed about by the surf in heavy weather. At the time of our visit, the main stream stretched across the entire width of the plain and entered the sea at the extreme western verge of the beach. We therefore had to ford it. 78 BULLETIN OF THE ESSEX INSTITUTE. " The stream was about twenty yards across and knee deep. It was intensely cold, and pained my legs worse than any glacier water I have ever waded in. The water of the stream was brown, opaque and muddy, charged with the grindings of the glaciers. Running into the sea it formed a conspicuous brown tract, sharply defined from the blue-green water of the sea, and extending almost to the mouth of the bay. The sandy plain seemed entirely of glacial origin ; it was in places covered with glacial mud, and was yielding and heavy to walk upon, " Mr. Buchanan observed that the isolated rocks which had been rolled down upon the plain from the heights above were cut by the natural sandblast into forms resem- bling trees on a coast exposed to trade winds. The effect of every prevalent wind was shown by the facets cut by the blown sand upon the surfaces of the rocks, the largest facet in each case being that turned towards the west." Alaskan ivash-plains. — Professor RusselU has described several examples in the glacial region of Mt. St. Ellas, Alaska, analogous to that of the Heard Island plain. True alluvial cones also form in this region along the steep ice margin where the drainage escapes from tunnels in the ice. GENERAL CHARACTERS OF EXTRAGLACIAL WASH. From the foregoing bibliographic references it will be seen that several writers have described forms composed of ulacial sand and gravel accumulated at the front of the ice-sheet in the manner of deltas and alluvial fans. These deposits have a definite, recognizable form and structure, and have for some time taken rank with moraines, drum- 1 I.e. Russell. The Glaciers of North America, Boston, 1897. See also papers by same author in National Geographic Magazine, iii, 1890, pp. 54-203, and 13th Annual Kept. U. S. Geol. Survey, pt. ii, 1891, pp. 1-91. SOME GLACIAL WASH-PLAINS. 79 lins, eskers, kames and terraces, in the classification of glacial deposits. So far as glacial drainage repeats the conditions exist- ing in ordinary streams and rivers, we shonld expect to find, at the months of rivers and streams dischaiging from the ice, alluvial deposits corresponding in all essential re- spects to deltas with lobate and multilobate mai-gins, to alluvial cones and fans, and to confluent cones and fans. The examination of the region here described has revealed examples analogous to most of these types, difiering only in the respect that the deposits were built against or in the presence of an ice formation instead of a rock formation and that, by the melt- ing of the ice, anomalies in the to- pography have been introduced which separate the group, often widely, from those deposits of non-glacial origin. The following classes of glacial stream deposits are here recognized under the head of extraglacial wash : Wash-plains, comprising gently slop- ing areas of gravel and sand deposited along the ice front. They are divisible into kinds dependent on their relations to frontal moraines, the ice-margin, and to the ice-margin and eskers. From their relations to frontal moraines there arise over- wash-plains banked up against the outer edge of the frontal moraine. From their relation to the ice-margin alone there arise : a. Frontal moraine terraces, with an ice-contact slope, charged with till and boulders, a true morainal deposit. b. Frontal terraces, like the preceding but lacking the till-coating along the ice contact. 'fMlie . Fig. 1. Contour map of the Say les vil le esker-fan (area left white) in Rhode Isl- and. Horizontally ruled areas, swamps; black areari, ponds ; dotted areas marginal terraces of sand and gravel. (Topography from Providence atlas sheet, U. S. Geological Survey.) 80 BULLETIN OF THE ESSEX INSTITUTE. c. Esker-fans, small plains of gravel and sand built at the mouth of subglacial tunnels and channels in the ice ; associated with an eskei* or esker-like chain of de- posits made in the ice-sheet at the same time — e. g.^ Newtonville, Mass. ; Saylesville, R. I. d. Wash-cones, steeply sloping deposits, with ice- contact slope on the iceward side culminating in a high point, with gentler slope outward, in the manner of allu- vial cones — e. g., Sprague Hill, Bridgewater ; the de- posit south of Waban Station, Mass. ; deposits near Davis- ville, R. I. With these general types are associated minor topo- graphic features due to the mode of origin of the deposits or inherent in their relations to preexisting formations. Some of these features are here described ; Drainage creases. — The largest plains of the outermost moraine in this area bear strongly defined drainage fur- rows, thought by all to mark the paths of streams flowing out from the ice-front at the time it lay along the head of the plains. By analogy with the channels on existing plains of like origin we should infer that these streams flowed in the open air. These creases may traverse the entire breadth of the plain from the ice-contact to the distal margin. Many furrows are traceable only on the lower, outer margin of the plain for the reason that the later deposition of gravel in the form of fans along the ice-front clogged up and eflTaced the upper portions of such furrows. Durincf the construction of a delta in a water basin with constant level, the delta margin grows forward with the discharging streams running on the lobate axis. If the water level suddenly fall ofl*, we should expect a stream to become diverted to the furrow between two lobes. To what extent the lobate aspect of some of the large creased SOME GLACIAL WASH-PLAINS. 81 plains is really of constructive origin and to what extent purely erosional has not been definitely determined. The study of creased plains becomes important in de- termining change of water level during the duration of the ice mass at the head of the plain, as in the case of the Harrington esUer-fan in Rhode Island, where the writer has attempted to demonstrate that the water-level fell off from forty to fifty feet after the construction of the delta and before the disappearance of the ice at its northern margin. Boulder-paved creases. — In those areas in which the outwash of gravels took place on lower ground than that on which the ice front rested, a case which occius in the Mansfield region and eastward towards Brockton, there are occasionally exhibited north and south troughs, on till areas, marking the outfiow of water from the ice. Such creases are usually paved with boulders and so resemble torrent beds although the inclination of the crease may be gentle. Such boulder-lines, although the material is iden- tical with that of the boulder belts, should be classed with the water-laid drift deposits. One or two lines of these stream beds occur near North Easton on the northern bor- der of the Narragansett Carboniferous area. Kettle-holes, ice-block holes. — Many wash-plains are in- terrupted by depressions. Crateriform hollows prob- ably indicate the site of buried masses of ice which on melting out allowed the gravel cover to settle. A cross- section of the wash-plain should here exhibit a quaquaver- sal synclinal. Crosby has observed sections of this chai-- acter near Boston. It would be an advantage to restrict the term kettle-hole to depressions of this class. Many depressions have steep sides, with coarse detri- tus, like the ice-contact phase of wash-plains in which they lie. These depressions are usually much larger than 82 BULLETIN OF THE ESSEX INSTITUTE. kettle-holes and frequently are the sites of large glacial lakes. Depressions of this class are typical ice-block holes. A drainage crease sometimes starts from the ice-block hole and traverses the plain ; such furrows do not origi- nate in kettle-holes as defined in this paper. In the kettle-hole the ice did not rise above plain level ; in the ice-block hole, the ice once rose above plain level and the drainage ran across the plain. Imperfect ice-block holes sometimes occur in the margin of wash-plains as between the lobes of the Drownville delta in Rhode Island. A similar phenomenon has been reported by Fairchild in western New York. Large ice-block holes surrounded by the ice-contact are to be distinguished from "unfilled areas" between suc- cessive retreatal plains. Such unfilled areas will exhibit the ice-contact about their southern margins and lobate delta fronts about their northern border where later plain building has carried sands into the de})ression. From the point of view of glacial geology, the occur- rence of lakes in ice-block holes is an accident dependent on the height of the water-plane in the surrounding gravels. There are many ice-block holes of large size without lakes. Such depressions exist in the Plymouth area. Ice-block holes are sometimes grouped, as where in the bottom of a large depression there are two or three isolated deep holes. The accompanying map (fig. 2) of the Aga- wam river area in Plymouth County, Mass., shows an example of this mode of occurrence. In this case the holes are occupied by water. Typical ice-block holes in this region seldom, if ever, show ravines caused by streams eating back into the sur- rounding terrace. Kettle-holes, on the contrary, as in SOME GLACIAL WASH-PLAINS. 83 the Robin Hill district, near Providence, R. I., not infre- quently show wet weather gullies on the convex brow of the slopes, with alluvial fans converging in the bottom of the pit. These gullies have the appearance of recent origin. I owe the suggestion to Prof. George F. Wright that a very recent melting out of buried ice might give rise to changes now going on in the drainage of areas oc- cupied by kame kettles. A kame-kettle recently formed would for some time be subject to marginal gullying. The observed results meet the ex- pectations from theory ; but the duration of the postgla- cial epoch has been so long that one's judgment, perhaps wrongly, rejects the conclu- sion that buried glacial ice still lingers in this field. i Inliei's of older drift. — The contour of the wash-plains is frequently broken by knobs of coarse gravels or by till knolls and small drumlins. Both kames and eskers may be part- ly buried under the growing edge and rising level of the wash-plain. These features of deposition are illustrated in the area on the west of the Boston & Albany Circuit Railroad between Woodland and Waban stations. The Newtonville esker-fan encloses older knobs of drift. Irregularities in texture and structure of plains may be largely explained as the result of the burial of drift de- posits previously laid down. These abnormal textures are invariably coarser than the detritus in the body of the plain. Fig. 2. Ice-block holes near Aga- waiii River, giviug rise to three lake- lets in a larger depression. (From Plymouth atlas sheet, U. S. Geologi- cal Survey, topography by Grambs, Smyth and Thompson.) iSee the literature concerning the ice wells in Vermont. Report of the com- mittee appointed to examine the frozen well at Brandon, Vt. Proc. Boston Soc. Nat. Hist, viil, 186-i, pp.7'2-88. ESSEX IMST. BULLETIN, VOL. XXIX 6* 84 BULLETIN OF THE ESSEX INSTITUTE. Loess-like cover. — The sand-plains as well as the till of New England frequently bear a capping of fine loamy sand of loess-like consistency and further resembling loess in that the material is devoid of stratification ; it stands up a longtime in steep cuts, and appears to owe its origin to the blowing of dust in the post-glacial epoch. In places, the material appears to be in process of accumula- tion by depositing between the grasses so that the sod grows upward according to the rate of accumulation of dust. The underlying subsoil exhibits traces of decayed plants in roots and occasional branches which have been buried in the development of the deposit. This loess-like cover is conspicuous in low places in the sand-plains where it constitutes a sheet from a few inches to two or three feet in thickness. It may frequently bo found at the foot of hills on terraces or plains. Deposits of this loess, on the southern part of Prudence Island, are from three to four feet thick where not recently removed by the winds. This loess-like cover has much to do with producing the level of some of the wash-plains as it has also with the smooth flowing contours of the knob and basin type of drift deposits. It is largely, I believe, the product of post-glacial eolian action and this view finds support in the common occurrence of sand-blasted pebbles on the sur- face of wash-plains in close connection with the loess-like cover. The deflation of the wash-plains does not usually result in the formation of dunes. The sands which are coarse shift somewhat to and fro with the stronger winds, but the prevailing direction of transportation is eastward, at least near Boston, for the reason that the easterly winds strong enough to move the finer sands are usually so damp as to cause the sands to cohere by reason of the films of water which coat the grains. The dr}^ westerly winds alone eflect the removal of dust. SOME GLACIAL WASH-PLAINS. 85 Sandblasting and c/li/ptoliths.^ — The pebhles on the sur- face of the wash-plains frequently exhibit the touch of the natural sandblast. Sharply carved glyptoliths have been noted in many localities. The widespread occurrence of these pebl)les beneath the soil in New England, in areas where the wind is not now blowing sand, makes it highly probable that immediately after the ice retreated and be- fore vegetation came in, the barren sandy stretches were for a time in a desert condition. Superposition of plains by raised water level. — Plains may exhibit the phenomenon of superposition in which the outward margin in the case of partial overlap assumes the form of grouped terraces, the lobate margin of the first formed plain extending beyond the lobate margin of the overplaced plain. This phenomenon is due to a rise of the water level above the surface of the first plain so that construction begins anew at the ice contact. It is shown in the superposition of a small plain on those which encir- cle Greenwich Cove in Rhode Island. It is obvious that the overplacement of plains may con- ceal the initial deposit and result in the formation of a broader plain enveloping a smaller one. The existence of such a buried plain could only be determined on seeing the cross-section wherein the top-set beds of the older would underlie the fore-set beds of the newer plain. Boulders generally absent from ivash-plains. — In the town of Rehoboth, Mass., is a broad morainal tract with knob and basin topography, thickly strewn with large boul- ders of the Carboniferous conglomerates. Nearly in the middle of this tract is a small wash-plain with a typical ice-contact on its northern margin. The plain is free from boulders. The ice-contact at the head of the plain shows » See Facetted pebbles on Cape Cod, by Prof. W. M. Davis, In Proc. Boston Soc. Nat. Hist, xxvi, 1893, pp. 16t>-175; also Post-glacial eolian action in southern New England, by J. B. Woodworth, Am. Journal Sci. for January, 1894. 86 BULLETIN OF THE ESSEX INSTITUTE. that it was built against the edge of melting ice ; the ab- sence of boulders from the plain shows that the boulders on the surrounding mounds did not come to their positions from floating ice, else some erratics must have dropped on the plain. While boulders are rarely found on the actual surface of sand-plains, they are frequently found at the same level on the surface of till continuous with the sand- plain topography, and boulders have been seen sparingly in the sand-plain itself, particularly near the head, as at Woodland, Mass., where a boulder probably floated out on ice in the early stages of deposition. One of the plains in the Narragansett Bay region is coated with angular blocks and some till indicating clearly an advance of the ice-sheet over the field. Even on the hypothesis that plain level was marginally at water level, it is rather sur- prising to note the absence of boulders from characteristic wash-plains. The iceivard margm of wafih-plains . — The head or highest part of wash-plains is towards the ice or the source of the detritus. There are two classes of plains as re- gards the topographic features of their iceward margin, viz. : (a) plains with a terrace confronting low interglacial ground north of them ; (/>) plains, without terraces, con- fronting till-covered areas usually rising above plain level. These types are illustrated by the Nantucket plain on the one hand, and that of Martha's Vineyard on the other. We sometimes find kames and eskers associated with plains having an iceward terrace ; but kames and eskers are quite as frequently absent as present. We must, therefore, conclude that there is no necessary lelation between the formation of kames and eskers and the pouring out of gravels and sands from the ice to make plains. It is im- portant to perceive this want of dependence between intra- glacial and extraglacial deposits in formulating an hypoth- esis for the stream action which produces the wash-plain. SOME GLACIAL WASH-PLAINS. .S7 As yet the manner of flow, in the ice-sheet, of the streams which produced the greater sand-plains, has re- ceived little light from studies on the ground. This is partly because the structure of our sand-plains is rarely exposed at the head or terrace in a manner to show the method of building. From studies conducted on the Woodland plain it appears that building went on along the entire front, (piite regardless of the esker which joins the plain on Beacon street. There is a very rapid passage outward in the plain at the mouth of the eskcr channel from coarse gravels to tine sands. The appearance of the contact zone where seen in the plain is such as to show that the esker built up^;an^as.sw with the plain, and that there Avere streams flowing in or on the ice of which no record now remains in the intraglacial field. From anal- ogy with the conditions of discharge in Alaskan glaciers, made known by Russell's studies, we might expect waters under hydrostatic pressure bursting out as " s})rings '' along the marginal portion of the ice-sheet, thus breaking out on the surface of the ice where it would be easier to main tain an open passage than through the clogging sand in the contact zone of the plain. An abandoned channel of this sort, almost connecting with the plain but filling up with gravel and sand, would present the " notch " which separates some eskers from their wash-plains, a feature which forms at present the chief stumbling-block in ex- plaining the relations of esker-channels to their fans. GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION OF THE WASH-PLAINS OF SOUTHERN NEW ENGLAND. (The numbers in parentheses refer to townships on the map, Fig. 7.) In the uplands of this region, sand-plains are practi- cally wanting. If these deposits occur there at all it is in narrow north and south valleys in association with rem- »0 BULLETIN OF THE ESSEX INSTITUTE. nant tongues of the ice-sheet rather than along its main front. In the broad lowlands of eastern Rhode Island and the southeastern part of Massachusetts, embracing all of " The Old Colony," wash-plains abound. The age of the plains in this field is, in general terms, successively newer from south to north. The outermost plains fronting the terminal moraine pertain to the height of the last or third glacial epoch. The more northern plains belong to the letreat of the ice-sheet and fall with- in the time commonly known as Champlain. But there is reason for believing that till- and drumlin-making may have been going on, about Boston, while the plains in the latitude of Providence were being deposited, so shadowy is the demarcation between the Glacial Period so-called and the Champlain Period as originally defined. It would be more consistent to speak of the superficial glacial drift of this field as pertaining to the last or third glacial epoch, allowing the term Champlain, as seems to be the tendency, to become obsolete. The distribution of plains in this lowland district of New England is at first sight without order ; but amid the laby- rinth of passages in the decaying ice, channels which are now marked by accumulations of gravel and sand, there are certain well marked and massive accumulations which upon examination on the ground arrange themselves in lines comparable to moraines. To a certain extent, mo- rainal accumulations attend the wash-plains which are thus distinguished from the irregular accumulations of this nature. In the following pages, the most prominent of these retreatal lines will be indicated, and under the head of sporadic plains, are placed a few notes concerning deposits which may yet be arranged in a coherent system, but which are not at present distinguishable from the irregular disposition of gravels and sands about chance blocks of ice left in the general retreat of the glacier. SOME GLACIAL WASH-PLAINS. 89 Plains of the terminal moraine. — The largest and best defined outwash plains in this region are those lying in front of the outermost or terniinal moraine Ikying upon the New England Islands. The i)laiii on Long Island has not yet been mapped. If a plain ever existed in front of the morainal accumulations on Block Island, it has long since been washed away by the sea. The plains of Mar- tha's Vineyard and Nantucket' are well illustrated by the contour maps of the U. S. Geological Survey. These two plains are apparently contemporaneous, having been formed well within a reentrant angle of the ice-front lying between lobes, for convenience designated as the Cape Cod and Narragansett Bay lobes, which were more sharply de- fined when the ice front lay north of the New England Sounds on the "back bone" of the Cape. Nantucket plain. — The Nantucket plain (13) is an essentially eskerless, kameless, well-defined outwash delta or series of fan cones fed by streams coming from the glacier, the position of whose front is very clearly marked by the terrace at the northern margin of the plain. Near its head, the plain attains elevations of sixty feet above the present sea-level, these points, apparently marking the last layers of outwashed gravel and sand, being separated by furrows due either to the failure of adjacent fans to coalesce marginally, or, as can be proved in some cases, to creases marking the discharge of subglacial streams. The former contact of this plain with the ice-front can be traced by alignment to Tuckernuck Island on the west, and so onward by the wave-washed isle of Muskeget, to Chappaquiddick island where small fans extend in a north- west line towards the larger island of Martha's Vineyard. Nantucket presents us with perhaps the best and clear- • Consult the Nantucket, Muskeget, Martha's Vineyard and Gay Head atlas sheets (in Massachusetts). A colored model of Nantucket on the scale of one mile to the inch has been prepared by Mr, G. C. Curtis of Brookline, Mass. 90 BULLETIN or THE ESSEX INSTITUTE. est example of terminal moraine topography in the east- ern United States, for the reason that the underlying pre- glacial deposits have very little expression in the relief of the area. On Martha's Vineyard and in the westward ex- tension of the terminal moraine, an older topography at almost every step accentuates the height and grandeur of the morainal accumulations ; whereas, on Nantucket, the approximate extent and bulk of the moraine and its posi- FiG. 3. A portion of the island of Nantucket, stiowing tiie frontal outwash plain with Ice-contact slope (dotted belt between twenty and sixty feet contour- lines), the fosse or depression at the head of the plain, and the kame moraine or belt of mounds and kettles of submarginal drift. The contours represent some of the larger creases on the plain. Contour interval, twenty feet. (From U. S. Geological Survey, topography by E. B. Clark.) tion with reference to the ice may be clearly discerned. (See Fig. 3.) From the existence of a terrace at the head of the sand- plain which rises from forty to fifty feet above the depres- sion or fosse on the north, it seems demonstrable that the ice-front lay along the head of the plain while deposition was taking place in the morainal tract proper. The knobs and basins moulded in the unstratified drift, then, are submarginal rather than precisely frontal in origin. In SOME GLACIAL WASH-PLAINS. 91 restoring the glacial conditions, we should imagine the ice-front in contact with the head of the sand-plain, and the northern part of the island covered with ice rising as a gently slo})ing plain to the northward. From the front of the ice, rivers emerge laden with gravel, sand, and mud, as is the case with the plains confronting the Mala- spina glacier to-day. From the form of the plain on the east, it is thought that the ice-front turned southeastward and ran out over the Nantucket shoals. This interpretation is expressed in the accompan^^ing map (Fig. 3), and on the general map of southeastern Massachusetts. (See 13, Fig. 7.) Marthci's Vineyard plain. — The Martha'sVineyard plain a[)pears to have arisen in the angular space between the two lobes of the ice-front previously named. From Vine- yard Haven harbor, the ice edge extended southea^-tward across Chappaquiddick Island in the direction of Nantucket as shown by the ice-contact delineated on the general map (Fig. 7 ) . Topographic signs of this ice contact exist on either side of Edgartown harbor. From Vineyard Haven, the ice front also extended southwestward lying for the greater part of its extent on the highlands of the island. At an earlier period than the time of sand-plain building, it is probable that the ice extended southward of the island ; at least, as Professor Shaler has pointed out,' the southernmost part of this island and the neighboring island of No Man's Land are till covered. The position of the ice-front in the highlands of Martha's Vineyard is clearly indicated by houlder-belts (16), a type of frontal moraine accumulated on southward slopes where the fine materials were readily Avashed to the lower grounds. The position of the principal belt is shown on the accompany- ing map (16, Fig. 7). 1 See his report on Geology of Martha's Viueyard, 188S. ESSEX INST. BULLETIN, VOL. XXIX 7 92 BULLETIN OF THE ESSEX INSTITUTE. Only in deep passes through the highlands, where the ice-base was low, did the construction of the sand-plain reach up to and above the base of the ice-sheet, hence the plain usually comes up against the rising slopes of the moraine without a definite terrace such as characterizes the Nantucket plain. Evidences of ice-contact are shown in the head of the James Pond depression (16) and again in a high terrace south of the state road at Sachem Spring in the region of Chappaquonsett Pond. There are fan-like forms, between the state road and the eastern side of Lagoon Pond and at an averape radial distance of two and a half miles south of Vineyard Haven, which indicate the extension of the ice-sheet up to the arc, thus described, at a time just before the deposition of the Sachem Spring terrace. The outer portion of this great plain is grooved by sharply defined drainage creases, some of which are trace- able up to the line of the moraine. Other creases appear to have been originally thus extended but to have been later choked up by the outpouring of gravels and sands along the ice front. This plain, like that of Nantucket, has, at the present time, an average slope of about twenty feet to the mile. Its inner margin attains an elevation of one hundred feet above the sea. It is relatively free from ice-block holes, one such depression existing one and a half miles south of the southern end of Lngoon Pond (15). Kettles are, however, not wanting in the morainal or intraglacial field of the time of deposition. Plains of the Cape Cod 7norame. — A well recognized line of moraine begins on Cape Cod, in Orleans (4), and extends west- by-south next the shore of Cape Cod Bay, curving northward to unite with the interlobate line of moraine skirting the eastern shore (12) of Buzzard's Bay. At the point of union (10) , thick morainal deposits extend SOME GLACIAL WASH-PLAINS. 93 northwards in the form of an interlobate moraine to and beyond Plymouth (17, 53). The Buzzard's Bay moraine caps the Elizabeth Islands and is then lost at sea, but probably appears westward in the C'harlestown moraine skirting the southern coast of Rhode Island. A broad plain (6-12) skirts the southern side of the moraine on Cape Cod, combining features which have been described on Martha's Vineyard and Nantucket, with the addition of numerous lakelets and kettle-holes which here take the place of the fosse on Nantucket. Traces of what appears to be an earlier, temporary halt of the ice-sheet with deposition of small plains are shown along the southern coast of Barnstable (9) in situations which have not been suffused by the outwash of sands and gravels from the principal moraine. Two such deposits are shown on the annexed map of the Great Pond area in Barnstable (fig. 4). A diagnosis of this plain in comparison with those of Nantucket and Martha's Vineyard is interesting in show- ing the irregularit}^ of the melting of ice along the front and in the determination of the place in which the mo- rainal wall proper was built. The annexed map of the Great Pond region in Barn- stable shows by the contours of the plain, as the author has been able to ascertain on the ground, that the ice-sheet probably overlay the morainal wall and lay in the lake area as late as the closing stage of sand-plain construc- tion. The high terrace skirting the eastern border of the pond shows a marked slope away from the pit with a maximum point, the apex of the alluvial cone, designated by the eighty feet contour at the northeast corner of the pond. An examination of the map will show the reader that the plain slopes away southeastward, south- ward and southwestward from the respective sides of the ice-block hole. The association of the later local fans, 94 BULLETIN OF THE ESSEX INSTITUTE. with what appear to have been blocks of ice or protru- sions from the main mass, suggests that there was much detritus in the ice or on its surface, or that these special areas were the outlets of the drainage from above the base of the ice sheet. The occurrence of an esker-like ridge \0n'9 Mile-i Fin. 4. A portion of tlie Barnstable atlas sheet, showing the mor.'iinal wall on the north and the wash-plain on the south enclosing (Jreat Pond. Deposits of earlier drift form knolls and hummocks along the south shore. Contour inter- val, 20 feet (from U. S. Geol. Survey). in Great Pond recalls the features of the Saylesville esker (87) and lateral terraces in Rhode Island (Fig. 1), as well as the like features of Cunliffe Pond near Providence. SOME GLACIAL WASH-PLAINS. 95 The Elizabeth Island moraine presents no outwash phiins above the sea-level. The moraine itself, according to investigations carried on by C. W. Coman under Professor Shaler, overlies stratified drift, which appears to be of an earlier date than the halt of the ice-sheet at this line. Neither is a sand-plain developed above sea-level in front of the Charlestown moraine. From analogy of this line of moraine with the similar deposits on Nantucket, we should expect to tind the sand-plains of that stage from half a mile to a mile south of the moraine and ])eneath the present sea-level in these areas, the moraine itself being a submarginal deposit. Plains of the Narragansett Bay region. — The principal features of the numerous plains in the Narragansett Bay area have been described in my paper of 1896. They need be referred to here only in connection with the lines of retreat which they mark. The Middleboro moraine. — The southeastern border of the Carboniferous area from Fall River eastward is more or less topographically shown by a low elevation of gra- nitic hills. Closely following this line and in the sedi- mentary, lower area is a recognizable line of glacial, frontal accumulations, perhaps best shown at Middleboro (30), where, east of the town, morainal hills, with crum- pled gravels, lie on the northwest border of stretches of sand-plain extending southeastward. This type of topog- raphy extends northeastward to Kingston, beyond which it merges into the complex morainal and fan- cone topog- raphy of the Plymouth interlobate moraine (32). Nu merous streams head in the belt, flowing to the southeast or northwest, and showing manifest derangement by the distribution of the deposits. The Lakeville lakes (28) lie on the outer margin partly enclosed by earlier drift. Great Cedar Swamp lies in the unfilled area back of the morainal line. 96 BULLETIN OF THE ESSEX INSTITUTE. Southwestward (27) towards Fall River (24), frontal deposits are traceable in the terrace from that city to Tiverton, and again in the partly submerged sand-plain at Tiverton Bridge (91) on the island of Rhode Island. The deposits along this line are notably stronger and show more signs of ice action as we approach the region of the interlobate moraine on the west shore of Cape Cod Bay. The Pr'ovidence-Bridgewater line. — A fairly distinct line of morainal accumulations with outwash plains ex- tends from the narrows, at Providence (42), northeast- ward, throngh Rehoboth (40), Taunton (37), Raynham (36), Bridge water (35), and so to Pembroke (51), in the North River region, joining the Cape Cod Bay lobe near the Coleman's Heights (57) sand-plain which was built at the margin of that lobe. The Bridgewater locality exhibits perhaps the most unique of these deposits near Boston. Sprague Hill (50) the site of a water-tower, is the culminating point of this morainal line. The highest point of the mass appears to be the apex of a large cone built at the ice-front. The northern slope of this hill has all the features of the ice- contact, in its steep slope, in the coarseness of the de- tritus, even boulders being occasionally present as in the morainal terrace of Gilbert. From the ice-contact the deposits fall off rapidly southward in long finger-like lobes, ending on a terrace, which appears to mark a water level in the region. The cone above described ap- pears to have been built above water level. Westwards, near the railroad, sand plains occur, with the ice-contact well develo{)ed. About one- quarter of a mile north of this ice-contact line there appears, east of the railway track, an area of typical morainal topography and deposits. A few cut- tings show that the till is locally not more than three to four feet thick and that it overlies water-worn drift of SOME GLACIAL WASH-PLAINS. 97 n rather coarse type. We have here repeated the cross- section of frontal or submarginal deposits which appears so distinctly on Nantncket, viz. : going from south to north, (1) an outwash plain; (2) the ice-contact, a ter- race overlooking low ground which may be designated as (3) the fosse, occnpied by undifferentiated drift, fre- quently bouldery ; and followed by (4) morainal mounds, with till and underlying wash, to which succeeds on the north the ordinary ground moraine. If we suppose that the morainal mounds were built at the front of the ice when its edge lay on their northern side, then we have no contemporaneous wash deposits attributable to the discharging streams. It is more rational to suppose that the morainal mounds accumulated under the ice when its front lay along the wash-plain heads, thus correlating extraglacial plain-building by drainage with intraglacial mounding of till by forward ice movement. The superposition of till on stratified drift in these morainal mounds in the intraglacial field has elicited two alternate hypotheses, viz. : 1. The deposit is due to the overriding of a small gravel outwash fan built on the site of the mounds in a stage of the ice retreat immediately preceding the Bridgewater stage, when the ice front w^as along the northern edge of the present morainal area. Outwash fans tend to occur in isolated forms. The over- riding action of the ice would mantle them over with till and destroy the form of the original deposit. 2. After a wash-plain has grown up at the ice margin, it forms a mass resisting the forward motion of the bottom ice. The upper ice would tend to shear oti" from the stagnant prism lying behind the sand-plain head. At the point where the bottom of the lire ice began to move up over the inclined plane thus formed, the sul)glacial till would 98 BULLETIN OF THE ESSEX INSTITUTE. tend to clog ill the plane between the live and dead ice. There might thus be established one of those masses of till involved in the ice which Chumbeilin has described in Greenland. On the subsequent melting out of the ice, the unequal thickness and rate of lowering of this till to the ground would result in mounds. This hypothesis accounts for the till in the submarginal moraine but does not account for the underlying watervvorn gravels. On this account, the first hypothesis is preferred. Mr. H. T. Burr, a student in Harvard University, has traced this line of ice-front several miles to the northeast. The Wrentham- Weymoutli line of lakes, — There is a prominent line of glacial lakes extending in a north- east aud southwest direction from near the northeast corner of Rhode Island to Weymouth, Mass. These lakes are as follows, begiiming on the southwest : Shep- ardville Reservoir, Shepard's Pond, Cocasset Pond, Ne- ponset Reservoir, Billings Pond, Massapoag Pond, ponds and reservoirs at Canton, Ponkapoag Pond, Great Pond, Little Pond. These lakelets are simply the water occu- pied portions of low areas partly surrounded by plains of sand and gravel. No attempt has been made to map this line of apparent ice-front and further study is necessary to show that the plains are not merely fans fringing ice- blocks. The enclosing plains form a line of deposition not readily separated from the wash-plains referred to in this paper as the Woonsocket-Sharon line described below. By the frequency of the three-hundred feet level on some of these deposits from East Foxboro northward towards Sharon, it seems probable that further study will show a connection between the plains de[)endont on water-level in this field. The Woonsocket-Sharon line of dejjosits. — A fairly SOME GLACIAL WASH-PLAINS. 99 well defined line of wash-plains can l)e traced fVoni the south side of the Blackstone River at Woonsocket north- eastward to the southwest corner of the Blue Hills, The Woonsocket (70) outwash plain stands at an elevation of al)ont three hundred feet above the sea. At Sharon (64) there is an extensively developed plain also at an elevation of three hundred feet. A few miles northeast (82) of this plain begins the deposit built along the edge of the ice wheii the Neponset valley was occupied by the retreating front. This deposit has an elevation varying from 140 to 150 feet above sea-level. At the base of Little Blue Hill, the plains of this stage have been suffused by a fan supplied by the drainage coming through the pass between Little and Great Blue Hill, evidently after the retreat of the ice from the Canton stage, but while the sheet still clung about the northern base of the Blue Hill range. Immediately north of Canton Junction station, the head of the plain of this stage shows grouped terraces and the intraglacial ground is heavily strewn with boulders dropped from the melting ice. The Neponset valley Avith its marshes thus represents an unfilled area whose existence as such depends upon the position of the ice front. About Islington (81) on the west side of this depression, there are local plains and eskers, but the development of plains along this western line was so feeble that the Ne- ponset valley was scarcely invaded by them. North of the Woonsocket-Sharon line of plains lies the Mechanicsville esker-fan in the town of Belli ngham. As shown in the accompanying figure, the esker and the notch in this deposit are abnormal, the esker in its breadth and the notch in its depth. The notch gives passage to a stream and a pond lies in the axis of the esker at the head of the plain, showing that the ice- wall was intact the en- tire length of the plain. It seems likely as noted on p. 87 ESSEX IN8T. BULLETIN, VOL. XXIX 7* 100 BULLETIN OF THE ESSEX INSTITUTE. that the observations of Russell on the Malaspina glacier fountains may afford an explanation of this case, for if the subglacial drainage found its way to the surface of the margin of the ice through a crevasse or hole when the lower end of the subglacial streamway became clogged, a break in the continuity of the esker-fan and the esker would be expected. The NewtonviUe- Woodland ivcii^h-jjlains . — The Newton- ville esker-fan described b\'^ Professor Davis and modelled by Dr. Gulliver lies south of the Charles River apparently in line with larger wash-plains lying between Woodland and Waban stations on the west. The Woodland plains are com- plex in structure, showing the phe- nomena of ice-retreat and the over- lapping of newer plains on those previously laid down. Southeast of Waban station stands a ridge of gravel and sand with an ice-contact slope on its northwestern face with typical coarse detritus in the contact zone. The opposite side of the ridge is lower, slightly lobate, and the detritus finer. The inclined snrface of the deposit suggests that we have in this case an alluvial cone built at the ice edge. The deposit is lengthened parallel with the ice contact. The Cambridge moraine and jj/ain. — Old Cambridge lies upon a plain of sand whose northern limit is a well defined ridge extending from Porter's Station southwest- wards by the Harvard Observatory and thence westwards along the southern border of Fresh Pond to the Water- town line. This ridge rises at three points to the uniform height Fig. 5. The Mechanics- vllle wash-plain with the eeker-llke deposit north of It. The " notch " between the esker and the plain is followed by a stream and is occupied by a pond. (Topography fi-om Frank- lin atlas sheet, U. S. Geol. Survey.) SOME GLACIAL WASH-PLAINS. 101 of eighty feet above the sea and has an average elevation of forty-five feet above the plain on the soutii. It is a complex structnre of glacial materials. The core of the ridge is clay apparently pushed up from the area on the north. On the south side of the ridge, as in the vicinity of French Pond Lane, a sheet of washed gravels declines southward from near the top of the ridge. Locally, along this crest, the southern slope of the ridge is rudely strat- ified as if by the overvvash of waters from ice lying on the north. Just west of the Watertown branch of the Fitchburg R. R., at the point where it i)asses through this morainal ridge, the bulging front of the ridge is strongly morainal in form. On top of the clays, throughout the extent of the ridge, is a thin deposit of glacial drift composed of boulders and small fragments derived from the slates and igneous rocks in the Boston area and on the north of it. These materi- als are frequently ice-scratched. This ridge is at the southern end of the line of ice-block holes with attendant wash-plains which begins in Fresh Pond and extends northwards through Spy Pond in Arl- ington to the Mystic Lakes, the Winchester Ponds and Horn Pond in Woburn. The moraine bordering Fresh Pond indicates that there was a slight forward movement of the ice on the line of the \Vol)urn-Arlington depression, causing the ice to excavate the underlying clays in Belmont and Cambridge. This movement lasted perhaps somewhat later here than the disappearance of the ice in the drumlin area to the eastward in Somerville. Kames on the west side of Fresh Pond, as pointed out by Professor Crosby in 1889, show marked signs of overriding by the ice. The annexed figure represents a sketch of folds in the gravels observed by the writer on June 7, 1891. Further evidence of ice movement in this 102 BULLETIN OF THE ESSEX INSTITUTE. same side of the pond has been freqnently observed in the heads of clay which protrnde into the overlying grav- els. These masses sometimes rise up as much as ten feet above the level of the pond. In one part of the section a bed of clay was forced up with the gravels into a broad arch as shown in a recent report on the Cambridge clays. 1 The frontal wash-plain has an average elevation of about thirty feet above sea-level. It is pitted by broad shallow depressions most of which have disappeared under the extension of streets and buildinsfs and through the action FiG.fi. Sectiou (now destroyed) on west .side of Kre.sh Pond, as seen June 7, 1S91, allowing folded and eroded gravels. The arrow indicates direction of ice motion. Elevation in feet. of peat-making plants. One such peat-bed was encoun- tered in laying the foundation of the botanical section of the University Museum on Oxford street. Several glacial deposits of an earlier date than the plain interrupt its extent. The knoll of till in Harvard College yard, extending to Dana Hill, is such a mass, as are also the partially graded kames in Mt. Auburn ceme- tery. There are no contemporaneous kames or eskers associated with the plain. It appears to have developed largely as overwash and outwash from the moraine before mentioned. The cuts in the plain formerly exposed in > See Shaler, Woodworth and Marbut; 17th Annual Report, U. S. Geol. Survey, pt. i, p. 990, fla-. 37. SOME GLACIAL WASH-PLAINS. 103 the pits on North avenue (now so-called Massachusetts avenue), near the car stables, revealed frequent reversals of cross-bedding of the tidal sort, giving the improssion that the plain was formed bcnenth sea-level. The exten- sion of the j)lain eastward into Cambridgeport favors the same view, but no decisive facts have been gathered to exclude the hypothesis of a glacial lake at the level of about thirty feet above the present sea-level. In connec- tion with this higher water level, it should be mentioned that there is, in the outer margin of this plain, a distinct furrow or crease, occupied by Willis Court, which joins the Charles River at Gerry's Landing. This old drainage furrow is now partly submerged by the Charles and occu- pied by marsh deposits. Sporadic ^ilains. — Between the lines of dominant sand- plaius and moraines outlined in this paper there occur sporadic plains built without definite arrangement between and around masses of melting ice. Until the actual ice- contacts in this area are carefully plotted and the super- position of wash deposits has been made out, further mention of these deposits can be of little more value than to guide students to them. The following notes are re- corded for the sake of those who desire to undertake the study of promising localities. On the Taunton sheet the mass of gravels on the southern border of Cedar Swamp should be examined. The course of the Three Mile River from Norton reservoir southeast- ward to Taunton appears to be determined by constructive depressions between snnd-plains. On the Abington sheet, the shores of the numerous lakes and so-called ponds are invariably formed l)v wash- plains. The course of the North River is through a re- gion of plains and morainal mounds. Monponset Pond, on the south, is one of the saddle-bag type, like Cunliffe 104 BULLETIN OF THE ESSEX INSTITUTE. Pond- A well-defined esker divides the lake into two lobes. On the eastern and western sides of the pond are wash-plains. At North Pembroke, plains are developed in succession on the south side of the North River. Long Hill, on the east of the town, is a high plateau apparently of wash ori- gin. A well-formed wash-plain rises above the village immediately east of the principal street. It should be noted that a well-defined esker comes down the hill on the north of the river and passes beneath the swampy stream at a point opposite the mouth of Robinson's Creek. The plains in the northern part of this atlas sheet have been described by Crosby and Grabau in connection with Lake Bouve. Numerous deposits on the Duxbury atlas sheet are resolvable into high plains and cones of washed gravels. Everywhere steep slopes marking ice-contacts appear. On the Plymouth sheet, there is a double alignment of ice-block holes and lakelets. One line runs northwest at a distance of two or three miles from the shore of the Bay and includes the following ponds, beginning on the north : Smelt, Triangle, Billington Sea, Cook, Great South, Boot, Gunner's Exchange, Crooked, Long, Half- way, Bloody, Little and Great Herring. Springing out from this line and extending southwestward are at least six marked lines of ponds beginning with Buttermilk Bay on the south. Next come White Island, Glen and Spec- tacle ponds ; farther northwest is a line of lakelets run- ning southwest from Crooked Pond of the main line series ; another set intersects the main line in Great South Pond. Billington sea has a spur in West Pond ; Triangle Pond in the main trend is in line with Round Hole, Clear and Darby ponds. The ponds in the main line have their axes northwest and southeast ; those in the spurs are SOME GLACIAL WASH-PLAINS. 105 elongated in the direction of the cross-lines, northeast and southwest. Between the lines of ponds are broad, high plains, mainly sloping south westw^ard. The deposit be- tween the Great South chain of ponds and the Crooked Pond series is the most pronounced. The ponds mark ice blocks. The plains mark valleys in the ice filled with detritus. The JNIonument River depression partakes of the character of the northeast and southwest lines of ponds, but has been scoured out by running water. The full interpretation of this interlobate mc^rainal area promises tc throw much light on the toiniation of plains about ponds. The Middlebo rough sheet presents many sporadic plains with lakes and swamps. THE WATER-LEVEL OF WASH-PLAINS. A stream of water flowing in a trench and scouring its bottom will begin to deposit its load on encountering a deep hole. A sub-aqueous delta with a lobate front and flat top will form in such a place. This deposit will build up to a level at which the velocity of the current for the depth of water is at bottom sufficient to drag to the lobate margin the particles which the stream brings to the place. These particles are hurried along and dropped in the talus at the end. With constant velocity and load, the delta builds uniformly forward. The height of the plain in this case is not directly determined by water-level, but it is indirectly related to it in so far as water-level depends upon the cross-section of the stream, depth of water, velocity, and width of channel. It has not been shown as yet that any wash-plains in this region have developed under conditions similar to those above indicated. Streams heavily laden with detritus and pouring out from declivities on to low grounds above baselevel build cones with slopes at angles dependent on relation of load 106 BULLETIN OF THE ESSEX INSTITUTE. to stream volume, with a tendency to approach the dry talus at one end of the series and the alluvial fan at the other end of the series. In this field there exist several peculiar deposits, usually ridge-like in halnt, but diflering from eskers in that they extend east- west, or north-east and south-west while neio-hboring eskers extend north- south ; and in that they have a typical ice-contact on their northern or icevvard sides, and a deltate or lobate topog- raphy on the opposite southern side. There is usually a steep slope from the summit line of the ice-contact slope to the outer margin. The deposits not infrequently have one high apical point along the ice-contact. They are deposits of the subaerial type in most cases, although marginal delta lobes would in other cases point to stand- ins water about their bases. Both the Brido;ewater cone, known as Sprague Hill, the deposit at Walpole Junction and that southeast of Waban station point clearly, it seems to the writer, to the subaerial construction of the upper prism of these deposits. If the topography of an existing alluvial plain deposited in a water-body may be taken as affording evidence of water-level, the summit line or brow of the lobate margin is at water-level. On the margin of such a deposit, lobes are built by different streams at the same time or by the same stream at different times since a stream may wander from side to side of the fan ; hence, since the water-level may vary, the lobes of such a plain may occur at slightly difterent levels. The instances pointed out by Salisbury in Lake Passaic, New Jersey, probably fall Avithin this class of eflFects. The elevation of the summit line of multilobate plains thus becomes of importance in deter- mining water-levels. It is the southern and outer rather than the northern and iceward margin of the plain which is taken into account. In most plains the level of the SOME GLACIAL WASH-PLAINS. 107 middle of the plain as given on maps is probably a fair elevation to assume for water-level. Taking this level for data, we obtain the following re- sults on two lines of wash plains going north, one in the Connecticut Valley area, the other in the Narragansett Bay region. The elevations arc taken from the U. S. Geological Survey atlas sheets. A. In the Connecticut Valley rer/ion. PLACE OF DELTA OR WASH-PLAIN. LATITUDK. DISTANCE FROM COAST AT SAVIN ROCK. ELEVATION ABOVE SEA. 1, New Haven. 2. Bristol, Conn. 41° 18' 41^41' 3 miles. 29 " 15 feet. (]50-670 feet. B. In Nanrtgansett Bay region. PLACE OK DELTA OK WASH-PLAIN. LATITUDE. DISl'ANCE FROM COAST AT POINT JUDITH. ELEVATION ABOVE SEA. 1. Slocumville, R. I. 41° 32' 11 miles. 160 feet. 2. E. Greenwich. 41° 38' 20 " 50 " 3. Barrington. 41^'' 44' 27 " 50 " 4. Saylesville. 41° 53' 37 " 107 " 5. Attleboro, Mass. 41° 56' 40 " 140 " 6. Woonsocket, R. I. 41^ 59' 45 " 300 " If we suppose the two deposits cited from the Connec- ticut valley area to have been formed at sea-level, we must assume a postglacial tilting to the northward of 25 feet to the mile, a result so far abnormal as to exclude the supposition. Moreover, this view forces us to hold to a ESSBX INST. BULLETIN, VOL. XXIX 8 108 BULLETIN OF THE ESSEX INSTITUTE. submergence of over 650 feet at Bristol, Conn., while at Bristol, R. I., in the same latitude, the nearest wash- plains would indicate a submergence to a depth of about 50 feet. Other anomalies, if we hold sea-level to lie rigidly at delta plain level, appear in the Narragansett Bay region as I have pointed out in another paper. There we have the Slocumville plain at 160 feet in the hills, fol- lowed by plains at 50 feet in the low now open grounds ; and the Attleboro deposit at 140 feet in the low grounds with the Woonsocket deposit at 300 feet in the hills and only five miles farther north. In this latter case, we should have a tilt rate of 32 feet to the mile ! It may be objected to the above statement of the marine limit hypothesis that the high plain at Woonsocket for instance was built during the deeper submergence which attended the going off of the ice, while the low level plain at Attleboro was deposited later when the land, unladen of much ice, had risen higher. But this argument is met by the rather decisive facts in the glacial history, showing that the Woonsocket deposit belongs to a line of retreatal moraine formed later than the Attleboro accumulation. The attempt, therefore, to interpret sea-level by a rigid application of the criterion of wash-plain level involves us in hopeless inconsistency, sudden changes of level, and the need of having the sea at different levels at the same time in the same region. If the water-level index afforded by delta fronts means anything at all, it seems to point to local bodies of water standing at levels dependent on local topographic condi- tions as in temporary glacial lakes or flooded areas by which I mean bodies of water formed in basins where the rise of the water is due to the excess of inflow over out- flow, however brought about. The occurrence of plains in high grounds along the south coast as well as on the SOME GLACIAL WASH-PLAINS. 109 low grounds alon*^ essentiall}'^ contemporaneous ice-fronts shows that sea-level could not have afforded the control which has limited the upward growth of wash-plains. This view of course docs not exclude the possibility' of certain low-lying plains near the coast being deposited under the marine limit ; but the wash-plains themselves have not as yet, it seems to the writer, been made to fur- nish the criteria of marine deposition. Beaches, fossils, and wave modified glacial deposits are much better indi- cations of submergence than deltas which are in this region identical in form and surroundings with similar glacial accumulations found under circumstances where no submergence is supposed to have taken place. STAGNATION OF ICE-SHEET. The mode of deposition of the wnsh-plains and accom- panying morainal deposits above outlined in this paper affords a clew to the relative areas of stagnant and live ice during the retreat of the glacier across this field. The facts demanding stagnation are found in the numer- ous ice-block depressions and in wash-plains with heads which show no forward movement of the ice-sheet, either by the failure of shoving in the gravels or by the lack of morainal deposits in the terrace at the wash-plain head. The facts demanding live ice at intervals during the retreat are the lines of boulder-belts, positions marking halts of the ice-front during which backward melting equalled for- ward movement. A similar demand is made to explain displaced and overridden glacial deposits, as in the case of the Fresh Pond area in Cambridge. It will also be shown that the distribution of prominent belts of wash- plains can only be explained on the supposition of a forward movement of the ice. 110 BULLETIN OF THE ESSEX INSTITUTE. The picture presented by Professor Davis of the mar- ginal portion of the ice broken up into isolated blocks around and between which streams deposited gravels and sands is again and again forced upon the mind in the low^- land of the state and in the valleys in the uplands. These ice-block holes as the bergs now present themselves to us, like the sands which surround them, do not mark a single phase of the retreat. As in the Narragansett Bay region, the drift phenomena are increasingly newer as we go northward. The repeated overlap of the lobate front of one wash-plain upon the esker and kame deposits of an earlier stage to the southward is sufficient evidence of the general truth of this statement. This mode of retrogres- sion of the front is what we should expect in the case of an ice-sheet thinner on its margin than in its central part. The existence of recessional wash deposits does not there- fore of itself disprove the idea of a period of general and complete stagnation of the ice over this area. But when we consider the evidence of forward movement of the ice at several successive lines across the eastern part of the state as in the Middleboro, Providence-Bridge water, and Cambridge moraines, it becomes evident that the ice-sheet as a whole did not lie stagnant on the area. There were periods of marginal inactivity, accompanied by the tunnel- ing of running water, esker- building, terrace and plain construction, with a general retreat of the main front, followed by seasons of advance, with the shoving of drift deposits, the spreading of till and boulders over wash- plains. The occurrence of the several morainal patches with wash-plains in lines which traverse the area between the head of Narragansett Bay and the south side of Boston Bay is further evidence of forward movement in the ice sheet. These lines of frontage obey the law of marginal SOME GLACIAL WASH-PLAINS. Ill lobation, l>y which the equalizatiou of pressures in the ice uloiiu: the front miiintains a convex outward curve. From all these considerations it seems to me possible to conclude that the ice-sheet retired from southern New England at least as far north as the Cape Ann boulder moraine while the main mass was still live ice. DECOMPOSITION IN WASH-PLAINS. The retreat of the ice from this field was so recent that the general form of the deposits and most of their details remain unaltered. Owing to the openwork structure of the wash-plains, and to the fact that the clays made at the same time were carried ofl' into deeper water, the sands allow the rain water which falls upon the plains to sink through instead of running over the surface and cutting trenches. While the deposits are thus by their structure protected from erosion, they are subjected to chemical alterations b}' the action of the water which passes down- ward through the soil. In this region, where the plains are largely built of particles of feldspathic rocks, most pebbles contain solvable nunerals which sooner or later go to pieces. Croll' has pointed out the fate of glacial deposits strewn over the land surface and so left for an indefinitely long period without preservation by burial beneath overlying strata. Glacial drift so left must gradually waste away, going to the sea mainly in solution, while quartz vein pebbles and the quartz of the granitic rocks alone will remain to make pebbly beds, in which there may remain no distinguishable feature of glacial origin. The begin- i\ing of this change is already far advanced in the glacial deposits even in the latest in the latitude of Boston. ' Climate and Time, chap. xvii. 112 BULLETIN OF THE ESSEX INSTITUTE. Professor Shaler, in his report on tlie Geology of Nan- tucket, has presented a study of decay in the glacial de- posits of that island the leading features of which changes I cite in his own words :^ " Perhaps the most noteworthy feature in these deposits of drift is the very extensive decay to which the pebbles and sand have been subjected. Some of the consequences of this decay will be noted below. In their form and structure, the drift deposits in no distinct way differ from the similar accumulations found in the region a hundred miles farther north, but in their state of preservation they present important differences. The decay which has at- tacked the pebbles is exhibited in the following ways, viz. : (1) By the interstitial decay of the stone, which mani- fests itself in the crumbling of many of the varieties of crystalline and fragmental rocks; (2) by the dissolved look of the surface of the rocks which resist the intersti- tial decay; and (3) by the development of the incipient joint planes in the pebbles, so that, though they may be but little decayed, they often split into fragments on be- ing removed from their bed." An examination of the pel)bles in some of the wash- plains near Boston shows the presence of similar effects due to chemical action. The most conspicuous example which has fallen under my notice is the case of the overridden deposit or"karae"on the west side oi Fresh Pond, in which thousands of pebbles break down into angular pieces or have been so far leached out as to crumble into a rusty red powder when released from the bank. In the Woodland wash-plain, the following changes in the section lying above the water-plane in the gravels have been observed. In the first place, pebbles lying near the surface of the deposit in the top-set beds and having 1 Bull. 53, U. S. Geol. Survey, pp. 21-22. SOME GLACIAL AV ASH-PLAINS. 113 veins of carbonate oi limo have invariably been robbed of these veins by the downward percolation of rain-water charged with acids from the soil and the air. Now and then, the interior of a pebble exhibits a remnant of one of these veins as a deliquescent lump of calcite marked by spoon-shaped inosculating depressions, the character- istic mark of solution. Deep clefts are freipiently opened up along the cleavage planes of the calcite. The cavities in many pebbles, thus formed by the removal of calcite, constitute from a tenth to a dfth by volume of the rock. Thousands of pebbles exhibit the same abstraction of car- bonate of lime. Associated with but underlying this pebbly zone of solution is oie in which the pei)bles exhiijit the redeposi- tion of the carbonate of lime. This deposition of the lime carbonate takes i)lace as in the case of stalactites in caves, on the under side of the roof-like surface of the larger pebbles which rest upon coarse sands below. A crust of lime carbonate thus forms cementing the under- lying sands to the overlying pebbles. On top of the peb- bles which carry this lime crust is usually to be found a film of dust, the mechanical load of the percolating water. A few pebbles become encrusted over their entire surface with carbonate of lime. This action is most noticeable in tlie northern or head portion of the wash-plain, where the gravels are relatively coarse. The lime carbonate layer is not more than tive or six feet below the surface in some instances. It suggests itself that the agricultural value of wash-plains might be enhanced by penetrating to this lime-bearing zone and returning the carbonate of lime to the soil by accumu- lating heaps of the gravels from which the lime would slowly, by the action of the rains, work its way into the surrounding top soil. After such gravels have been 114 BULLETIN OF THE ESSEX INSTITUTE. leached, they may be returned to the pits whence they were taken. By carefully working over the field so as not to have more than a few pits open at one time, the whole area might in the course of a few years be replen- ished with lime carbonate at a small loss of acreage ex- empted from cultivation by the pits and gravel heaps. A rare occurrence of an analogous series of changes is the deposition of green carbonate of copper on pebbles, the copper having come from the breaking up of sulphides of that mineral in the overlying pebble layer. The iron-bearing rocks and particularly those which carry both iron and lime, as in the case of the basaltic rocks and the diabases of the region, have frequently un- dergone decomposition to the point of losing their identity. The rusty pebbles feel light or have partly fallen to pieces regardless of their joint planes. In extreme cases, noth- ing is left of the contour of one of these pebbles but the network of quartz veins which it contained. The segreo^ation of oxides of iron in the outer crust of diabase pebbles sometimes takes place. This crust be- comes heavy and limonitic, with a bluish black tarnish. A further stage in this line of alteration shows a yellowish powdery center surrounded by a dark l)rown crust, trav- ersed in ever}' direction by irregular wandering cracks gaping at the surface and dying out inwardly, the greater fractures only intersecting the nucleal portion of the peb- ble. These cracks are undoubtedly due to expansion con- sequent upon the oxidation and hydration of the iron in the interior of the pebble. Such pebbles exposed to the air and frost speedily crumble into dust. Owing to the low stand of the sand-plains, their bot- toms generally lying at or below base-level, the streams have not cut down near them so as to expose their floor, and so only here and there do we see signs of accumula- SOME GLACIAL WASH-PLAINS. 115 lions of chemical waste such as give rise to sands and gravels cemented by iron oxides in other fields. In fact, there are few or no instances in which the consolidation of considerable masses of the glacial trravels have Ijeen observed in this area. Such consolidation as I have ol)- served has most cons[)icuously taken place in a series of gravels and sands antedating the last glacial advance as on Martha's Vineyard and Block Island. The result of the loss of materials in the upper parts of our glacial sand-plains by chemical solution must in the end become apparent in the lowering of their mass. If the action is uniform, the skeleton pebbles will crush and settle down into the open spaces below. Owing to the openwork structure of the gravels, the falling of the decayed pebble matter into the spaces remaininvas studded with green incandescents. The seal is the work of the late Dr. George A. Perkins, who designed it and carved it in wood. This unique and novel representation of it was produced by Mr. Ross Turner, with the ready and enthusiastic cooperation of the Salem Electric Lighting Company, who also traced out the lines and ano^les of the buildino- with incandescents in the nat^ ional colors, and placed, between the windows on each side the entrance, large stars of white light which were very effective. For the rest, the mural decorations in- cluded the national flag, draped about the porch and main entrance, which was ablaze with light, and three pairs of well grown trunks of the native cedar of our hill-sides stood upright, one pair in the corners of the iron fence at the street entrance, one pair before the fine Corinthian columns of the portico, and one pair in the corners of the balustrade above. Fresh laurel in festoons was used with freedom. The two dates, 1848-1898, were displayed on appropriate escutcheons decorated with wreaths of actual laurel, the first a vernal green, the latter golden-bronze, each leaf of laurel in the wreath having been hand painted. 4 BULLETIN OF THE ESSEX INSTITUTE. Upon testing the completeness of the work, it was found that the green incandescents in the laurel wreath encir- cling the seal, while producing a beautiful effect, did not properly light up the elaborate art-work of Mr. Turner, but were unable to cope with the power of the white flame issuing from the Roman lamp, before which they so far paled their uneifectual fires, that it was thought best to replace them with white, and this was successfully done. The seal, as shown, was a very beautiful object, and a very original design. Could we have thrown a strong light from some outside source upon it, as it was at first arranged, the efliect would have been even finer. Our neighbors caught the contagion of the moment, and not only were the residence of David Pingree on the east with Plummer Hall and the Cadet Armory on the west generously lighted up with electricity and gas, and decorated with bunting, but the quarters of the Father Mathew Temperance Society, and the dwellings of Dr. Morse and of Major Peck on the other side of Essex street were equally so, and the whole block wore the gala air of a night in Venice . The Cadet Headquarters displayed , in front, a fine picture in colors of the original seal of the ancient corps, dating back to the Revolution. The weather throughout was perfect. Between 7.30 and 10 o'clock, it appeared that 1734 persons passed through the rooms, in the first and second stories of the body of Daland house. The fire-proofs and all the third floor rooms were closed, though lighted. A large committee of reception, numbering twenty-five or thirty gentlemen, acted as guides and dispensed informa- tion to the visitors, most of whom had never before entered the building, and it is worthy of record that a careful examination, the next day, failed to show a relic broken, a glass cracked, a curiosity missing, a picture THE FIRST HALF CENTURY OF THE INSTITUTE. 5 defaced or any of the little injuries done, which might, in such a dense and pushing mass, have easily been excused. Five pieces of music from Jean Missud's Cadet Band con- tributed their cheerful strains : and pot-plants, flowers and other tasteful decorations made the scene a rare one. On Wednesday, Cadet Armory began to till soon after two o'clock and, at the opening of the exercises, contained between twelve and thirteen hundred persons. Several of the speakers and special guests from out of town had lunched with President Rantoul, at the Salem Club, and they reached the Armory at half-past two o'clock. A larger number of invited guests had met in the reception room of the Armory, — all the accommodations of the elegant quarters having been courteously placed at the service of the Institute, — and here strangers were made acquainted with each other by members of the reception committee who were in attendance. The stage was occu- pied at half-past two, and the stated exercises of the day began with the reading, by President Rantoul, of the half-century address which was as follows : THE COMMEMOKATION ADDRESS. Friends of the Essex Institute : We are met to celebrate the golden wedding of the Historical Society of Essex County, formed in 1821, with the Natural History Society of Essex County, formed in 1833. These two kindred bodies came together on the first Wednesday of March, 1848, and, for half a century, have worked together harmoniously and well under the joint title of the Essex Institute. The story of the Institute is unique. Starting without funds ; relying always on the zeal and enthusiasm of those b BULLETIN OF THE ESSEX INSTITUTE. who value culture for itself; growing up, with a sponta- neous life, out of what seemed to be a recognized popular demand ; the Institute has waxed sturdy and strong, and now would seem to have reached a crisis in its career. The people of Essex County — the people interested in Essex County, living here or elsewhere — have come to regard the Institute as a place of deposit where every- thing typical of our heroic past, everything that can em- balm the personality and keep alive the memory of actors in the scenes of long ago, may well repose in consecrated security forever. Not only valuable books and rare his- torical papers — the natural accretions of a great library — have been gathered here, but relics and manuscripts and pictures and ancient records — a priceless legacy to the antiquary and the student of local annals, rich material ready to the hand of the historian — have poured in upon us until our receptivity is overtaxed. Buried under the indifference or lost sight of in the greed of the modern Philistine, these relics spared by the tooth of time would have no ministering value to the public ; but when res- cued for the cabinets and archives of a well arranged col- lection, they become parts and most important parts of a great representative exhibit, picturing as nothing else can do — neither word nor pen nor brush — the actual domestic life of the New England that is gone. To rear and worthily to care for such a mausoleum to the past requires labor and thought and funds. Especially does it require ever-growing space. Thus far our collections have increased unchecked. Still the monumental pile mounts higher. Would we have it less ? Does the pride of an- cestry in Essex County — does the love of the heroic in Essex County crave nothing further? Have we a surfeit of hereditary honors ? Shall we cry, hold 1 enough! Only ten years ago, the munificence of the late William Burley THE FIRST HALF CENTURY OF THE INSTITUTE. 7 Howes made it possible, for tlie first time, to gather the riches of the Institute under a roof-tree of its own. At that time, we had increased the splendid accumula- tions of the Historical and Natural History Societies by large donations from the private libraries of our first President Judge AVhite, of Colonel Francis Peabody our third President, and of our townsman Augustus Story, as well as by an incomparable store of historic paintings, ancient manuscripts, sea-journals and log-books, and of specimens illustrating the Natural History of Essex County, — curious reminders of the life and manners, the traditions and scientific knowledge of our colonial and commercial eras. For the first time in our history the Institute was able, ten years ago, to display its wealth ; and such was the stimulus imparted to public interest in our pursuits, that our lectures and social evenings became popular, our donations multiplied, and our rate of growth became so great that, as a result, our wall-space and floor- space and shelf-room are exhausted. What to do next is the problem of the hour. Literally we know not whither we should turn. We must have money, — money and a good deal of it. The need is a present one and not a pro- spective one. The practical question is this : Will the friends of the Institute, who have means to spare for ob- jects such as ours, give us a portion of it, or will they see us succumb to plethora and congestion and so die? No room to grow ! What will become then of the zeal and enthusiasm of those friends of a lifetime who take a daily pride in our success? No room to grow ! We have in hand maijnificent offers. One of them I am about to read. It is one of four or five of scarcely less interest and importance. It is one of the most splendid offers a museum of history and art could wish to have, — a gift 8 BULLETIN OF THE ESSEX INSTITUTE. which naturally belongs to Essex County. There is no gallery in the world but would be eager to secure it. Shall we allow it to pass into alien hands because we have no room to grow? To say that such an enterprise as ours must grow or die is something more than rhetoric. Either we must provide ourselves at once with largely increased facilities and means, or the character and general scope of the Essex Institute must suffer a sea change. The Institute has passed successfully its formative stage, — its period of mere accretion. What it now craves is the opportunity to unfold its treasures, to utilize its wealth, to make available its vast assets. I cannot bring myself to believe that, at this stage of its development, the Essex Institute is to experience a check. I cannot suppose that here in this birthplace of Massachusetts the people of this ancient county — one of three Counties first set apart in 1643, — a people strong, numerous, wealthy and progres- sive, have carried forward such an enterprise as this to its present advancement, only to let it fail, — that we are ripening only to decay. The devotion and self-sacrifice of which it is the fruitage forbid the thought. The prayers and blessings of those who have pushed on this under- taking until it stands looking wistfully over the threshold of the coming century, have consecrated us to their work and we must not turn back. The past at least is secure. The record of our achievement best vindicates our right to be. It is not enough that we have striven to give form and body to the aspirations of the times. Other activities might claim as much. Not what we have essayed, but what we have achieved ! Could some other agency do it better? In the educational enginery of Massachusetts is there no room for us? Are we not effecting something worth effecting, which, if we forego our efforts, will not THE FIRST HALF CENTURY OF THE INSTITUTE. 9 be done ? The eminent men who founded our school system never meant it for a finality. They made it as far reach- ing, as ehistic and as comprehensive as they might, but they meant to leave broad vistas open towards something beyond. A voluntary association like this which trusts so largely to personal initiative and leans so little upon mechanical aids, — which avoids so well the Scylla of sciolism whilst yet escaping the Charybdis of conventional mannerisms and methods, — must be of all others the accepted means to hold in check the school machinery of the State, should it ever turn its energies to stamping the dead-level impress of the numerical majority upon all alike. What we have accomplished may be briefly told. Our published Historical Collections have reached their thirty- fourth volume. Since 1859 we have published yearly, besides occasional monographs, about three hundred pages. These contain material of a character common to such issues, except for this, that it is strictly local to Essex County. These volumes are cited with respect, and their high authority will be recognized when I say that they are the work of such contributors, of more than local fame, as Professors Herbert B. Adams of Johns Hopkins and Emerton and Wendell of Harvard, of the Reverends Jones Very and Charles T. Brooks, of the two Uphams, father and son, of the Honorables Leverett Saltonstall and Eben F. Stone, of Captain George H. Preble, of the United States Navy, of Dr. Joseph B. Felt, of Henry Wheatland, of Henry F. Waters, of Abner C. Goodell, of Matthew A. Stickney, and of William G. Barton. The temptation to recite the list of local authorities to whom we owe so much of our success, is well-nigh overmaster- ing, but I must refrain. A score or two of the most approved writers this neighborhood has produced in our ESSEX INST. BULLETIN, VOL. XXX 1* 10 BULLETIN OF THE ESSEX INSTITUTE. picl^rpar) place century, would be found to have furnished us with the mass of our material and with much of our prestige. i Since its establishment in 1848 the Institute has issued six volumes of its Proceedings and twenty-eight volumes of its Bulletin, and these contain, together with its current transactions, scientific papers of high authority and value num- bering two hundred and ninety-six articles, besides minor contributions, covering an infinite variety of topics of greater or less importance, for the most part related to the Natural History of Essex County ; and the work of one hundred and lorty-nme writers, >Tom Btov^os runs^ amongst whom I find such names as Agassiz, Fitch Poole, the Uphams, Alex- ander Bell, Jones Very, Russell, Silsbee, Wheatland, John Robinson, Professors Wright, Dorsey, Emerton, Fewkes, Garman, Crosby, Putnam, Hyatt, Morse. The "American Naturalist," a scientific magazine in good standing, was established by the Essex Institute in 1867. 1 To a little venture called the " Weal Reaf " printed in ISGO at a fair for the benefit of the Essex Institute, Nathaniel Hawthorne contributed a delightful reminiscence of Browne's Polly. During the period when his genius was ma- turing,— say from 1825 to 1845, — be spent much time in the Historical Society's Rooms in Pickman Place, and filled his note-books with what he saw there. Many of our treasures will be found described in the " American Note Books." Espe. cially has he used a bit of rough-cast from the old Browne Mansion, built in 16!)8, which he found preserved there, for a mural decoration of the " House of Seven Gables," where it will be recognized, twice described to the letter, iu Chap- ters One and Thirteen. We have it still. THE FIRST HALF CENTURY OF THE INSTITUTE. 11 The Institute has for twenty-five years, succeeding the Lyceum in the field of oral popular instruction, conducted annual courses of free public lectures. It has always held frequent evening meetings, and of late fortnightly meet- ings throughout the winter, at which members and their households have met to consider and discuss papers on local to})ics of history and science. These papers have furnished a large part of the material printed in our two serial issues. At its lectures the Institute has enjoyed the honorable distinction to introduce Professor Bell and the Bell Tele- phone to the notice of this utilitarian age,- — and to pre- sent to its members at different times such eminent strangers as Dean Stanley, Dr. William B. Carpenter, Canon Kingsley, Wilkie Collins, and Matthew Arnold, together with such local celebrities as Chief Justice Chase, Professors Rogers and Gray, Agassiz and Dr. Holmes. It has celebrated most impressively the 250th Anniver- sary of the landing of Endecott, as the Historical Society, its predecessor, had celebrated the 200th Anniversary ot that event ; it has commemorated the 250th Anniversary of the landing of AVinthrop, and the 200th Anniversary of the witchcraft frenzy, and the 50th Anniversary of the founding, at Topsfield, of the Natural History Society, and the 75th Anniversary of the Historical Society's beginning, and the 100th Anniversary of the vote of Massachusetts, passed by the Assembly at Salem, a year before Bunker Hill, which Mr. Webster said made this colony independent of Great Britain. Through its pic- ture and flower and microscope shows, and concerts, and entertainments, it has done its share towards brinoin^ hisfh culture and sound learnino^ and useful knowledge within the reach of everybody. 2 See Bulletin, Vol. ix, pp. 21-8. 12 BULLETIN OF THE ESSEX INSTITUTE. The ladies have formed, and have sustained with spirit for several years, a Local History Class of from fifty to sixty members, meeting every week, and investigating topics of interest through special committees, whose re- ports are read and placed on file and form a valuable record. For forty odd years the Institute has sustained a series of field-meetings, modelled in some sort on those of the Scottish Naturalists' Club of Berwick-upon-Tweed. At these, we have held gatherings ranging in attendance from one to four hundred persons, visiting seventy-three localities in every one of the thirty-five towns and cities, and in almost every parish, in the county, besides a dozen spots beyond the county lines. The mass of material piled up in Daland House and Plummer Hall must speak for itself. Neither as to quality nor as to quantity is it possible, in the moments allotted me, to do it justice. I shall not attempt it. If our friends will pay us the honor of a visit they will discover not indeed all our wealth, because we have been obliged to resort largely to warehousing, by the outside storage of choice volumes not in constant use ; but they will find Daland House packed from attic to basement, and Plum- mer Hall, of which we occupy the basement, the first floor and the attic, equally overfull. We suppose our- selves to be in possession of between seventy-three and seventy-four thousand bound volumes of books — our collection of pamphlets and unbound volumes has reached the very extraordinary figure of two hundred and sixty-one thousand. The list of libraries in the country having such a catalogue of books is not a long one. In the forty- five States of the Union there may be thirty-eight libraries containing upwards of seventy thousand bound volumes, and there are but very few indeed containing one-half our THE FIRST HALF CENTURY OP THE INSTITUTE. 13 quantity of unbound volumes. Of libraries in the United States containing twice our number of bound volumes there are but twelve. Aside from the great aggregations of Harvard Univer- sity, and of the Boston Public Library, Massachusetts has but four collections of bound volumes larger than ours, and all New England has but six. Scarcely wall space remains to hang the valuable pictures constantly committed to our care, and shelf room for new accessions of books is only made by boxing and storing those which fill our alcoves now. These accumulations have been piling up since 1820, but mostly within the later years. Many of these deposits are of a value not to be described. If we got rid of all our duplicates by exchange or sale, and gave to the flames such elements of the great mass as might fairly be thought to be of doubtful worth, there would then remain to us a collection quite beyond our present means to utilize or display, and which, if classified and catalogued and arranged, w^ould prove to be, in its special features, without a peer. No county in New England, — no equal tract of densely peopled territory in America, outside of the great cities, can make such an exhibit of its historic past as this. Should we eliminate relentlessly from our treasure-house all the costly and inestimable art-works, and books of whatever value, helpful to gen-^ eral culture, but not bearing exclusively upon Essex County, we should then retain an exhibit of the local history and tradition, the biography and natural history, the genealogy and ancestral records, the literary, scien- tific and artistic eminence of this county of ours which would make it — I speak with a pretty thorough knowl- edge of the subject, and a careful estimate of the value of the words employed — which would make it the envy of any equal population in the land. 14 BULLETIN OF THE ESSEX INSTITUTE. The Institute counts five presidents amongst its honored dead. They are men whose names are in themselves a legacy, — Daniel Appleton Wliite, Asahel Huntington, Francis Peabody, Henry Wheatland, Edmund B. Will- son. Undoubtedly the Institute owes its origin to Henry Wheatland, who was its organizer and its secretary for twenty years, before his presidency of twenty-five years began. He had been an honored member of the old Historical Society, and was the creator of the Natural History Society. He brought about the union of the two, and, with untiring labor and unremitting thought, welded their elements into the substantial structure which he left, forty-five years later, ready to our hands. The list of our contributors — the list of topics treated in these seventy odd volumes of ours — is quite too long for introduction here. Figures tell little except to those who know their secrets. The best names in Essex County will be found to grace our pages. Besides memoirs of our leading men, prepared by Judge Lord, Dr. Briggs, Charles W. Upham, the Rev. Mr. Willson ; besides com- memorative addressei delivered by Judge Story on the two himdredth, and by Judge Endicott on the two hun- dred and fiftieth, anniversaries of the landing of Ende- cott ; by Abner C. Goodell, jr., on the Historical Society's half-century anniversary and on the centennial of the meeting; in Salem of the First Provincial Congress of Massachusetts Bay ; by James Kimball, whose grand- father was an actor in the scene, on the centennial of the destruction of the tea in Boston Harbor ; besides com- memorations of the fiftieth anniversary of the Natural History Society, with a review by Professor Morse of the progress of natural science during the last half-century ; of the two hundred and fiftieth anniversary of the land- ing of Winthrop ; of the twenty-fifth anniversary of the THE FIRST HALF CENTURY OF THE INSTITUTE. 15 Institute's founding and of the seventy-Hfth anniversary of the founding of the Essex Historical Society, — besides all the contributions to local science already enumerated, the Institute has received and printed contributions to its Historical Collections from one hundred and seventeen writers, on three hundred and eighty-two topics of local history, biography and genealogy ; has contributed con- spicuous features to both the World's Fairs at Philadelphia and at Chicago ; has for thirty years past had on deposit with the Peabody Academy of Science a collection of specimens in natural history, covering every group of the mineral, vegetable and animal kingdoms — in several important features possessing exceptional value — and too;ether forming the basis of an exhibit of the natural history of Essex County probably unequalled by any col- lection drawing on so limited a population anywhere ; has established, through its publications, an exchange list with kindred bodies all over the world, numbering between two hundred and sixty and two hundred and eighty ; has accumulated on its shelves a library of the works of Essex County authors now counting nearly seven hundred vol- umes, an art library equal in numbers, a China library nearly as large, the gift of Mr. Hunt, perhaps without a rival in size and quality in the country, a rare collection of log-books and sea-letters and ship's journals and owner's instructions of privateersmen and merchantmen, detailing the thrilling story of more than four hundred voyages, during our romantic commercial era. It has set up and preserved for all time what we believe to be the skeleton of the earliest meeting-house, erected on this continent for congregational worship, by an independent society gathered on the spot. For several seasons, gatherings were arranged which brought together scores of microscopes, and led to a dis- 16 BULLETIN OF THE ESSEX INSTITUTE. cussion of their relative merits and characteristics, and to an examination of the home-products of land and sea, by such specialists as Dr. Holmes, Prof. Jeffries Wyman, Dr. B. A. Gould, Rev. E. C. Bolles, Caleb Cooke, the Messrs, Scudder, Morse, Hyatt, Tracy, Phippen and Bicknell. Frequent exhibitions of art work have been afforded the public under our auspices, but perhaps the salient feature in the career of the Institute, after the field- meetings, has been the series of famous fruit and flower shows, sometimes held weekly, which for many years it was enabled to sustain. No neighborhood had more reason than this to boast of the affluence of its private gardens. Native and exotic fruits and flowers loaded the Society's tables in exquisite profusion, when our departments of horticulture and of botany were under the patronage of Francis Putnam, John C. Lee, Joseph S. Cabot, Stephen C. Phillips, John Bertram, Charles Hoftman, Ezekiel H. Derby, Thomas Spencer, Robert Manning, John Fiske Allen, George D. Phippen, and Ives and Ropes and Oliver and Emerton and Rogers and Russell and Upton of Salem, and Oakes of Ipswich, and Perry of Bradford and Nichols and Fowler of Dan vers, and Prescott of Lynn, and Appleton of Gloucester. Just as the scientist ceases, after a while, to be content with broad generalizations which embrace a continent, and gives himself over to pursue with microscopic scrutiny the problems of some section nearer home, whose secrets are within his reach, — just as the specialist, in despair of mastering the whole field of human knowledge, applies himself with unimpaired activity to some tempting nook which he can make his own, — just so the Institute has striven to stimulate in Essex County a healthy appetite for local things, — to create a literature having a strong local flavor, not without its interest to the outside world — for the county is a rare THE FIRST HALF CKNTURY OF THE INSTITUTE. 17 one — hnt possessed of an absorbing and abiding chann for eveiy child of Essex County. Tliat we have not wholly succeeded is to say that we are human. That we have not wholly failed is witnessed by no less than thirteen historical and scientific societies of a local character, self- sustained to-day in the various municipalities of the county, working on our lines, and almost all of them looking to the Institute as their fountain head. This is the goal for which the founders strove. It is the science of e very-day life ; it is the tradition gathering about these moss-grown roofs, these ancestral acres, these familiar streets ; it is the home-bred heroisms, for which they crave a thought. To the slight extent to which our history and science impinge upon the history and science of the world at large, they will be garnered for us out of hand. But to the much greater extent to which our daily lives are quickened by a knowledge of what is special to our surroundings and common to no one else, — if we would reap this harvest we must till it for ourselves. Conscious that no history was more inspiring to them, no experience more edifying, than such as their ancestors had here wrought out ; feeling that the heroisms of the past should be kept in perpetual remembrance by the creation of bodies like this, which should cherish the gath- ered relics and reminders, should accumulate books and autographs and pictures, and should publish records, and observe anniversaries, all to the end that the children may remember what the fathers did ; persuaded that in the study of nature, whether animate or inanimate, the mind rises to one of its grandest functions, — they decreed that, so far as in them lay, no child of Essex County, prompted by a longing to come in closer touch with the wonders and the beauties flung broadcast al)out us, — with the scenes enacted on our soil, — should fail of its desire. Aware ESSEX INST. BULLETIN, VOL. XXX 2 18 BULLETIN OF THE ESSEX INSTITUTE. that local topics like our own history and traditions, like our own botany and geology and mineralogy and ento- mology, must be taught and mastered by ourselves, or else lost sight of in the absorbing interests of the greater world at large, they decreed that, so far as in them lay, no young enthusiast should be without a Mentor if he had time and thought and energy to devote to these pursuits in Essex County. The numbers of scholars holding conspicuous rank in natural science to-day, who gladly own a debt of gratitude to the Essex Institute for their first glimpses into the glories and the mysteries, — into the grand arcana of this Universe of ours, furnish an ample vindication of our right to be. No friendly soul who has taken any share in the formative labors of our past, — no observer who has a just perception of what we are d(jing to-da}^ is able to think of this organization but as a vitalizing, an advancing, an enduring: force. It cannot be that all this enthusiasm and devotion is to come to naught. It cannot be that the people of this county, trained for two generations to look to us as the custodians of their ancestral fame, are to be bidden to seek out some other depository for their his- toric wealth, — must find some other shrine whereon to lay their offerings to the manes of their dead. Would that there were time to recall the honored names that grace our records, beginning with Holyoke and Bow- ditch and Story and Pickering and Cutler and Dane and White and Silsbee and Saltonstall andPenbody and Ward and Pickman and King and Merrill, who created the His- torical Society, down through the younger generation of scientists who sustained the Natural History Society and the Institute, until we reach the workers of to-day. The catalogue would be luminous with the brightest names. I suppose those familiar with the inner workings of the Institute in our generation will mostly agiee that, next THE f:hst half century of the institute. 19 <5 jSie^i£*z^£2tiA^ t^/i.^^ .^eu^^^£<^!cc^^..^*t^c^:,^^iix^C£,^,,^tfy^tx^t-^ ux^^t^ . ?/2^^ *-^Sl^2^j3iC'- ..a/i^oc^^^ • v^-y^-^v- ^a2i£> -jk^Se^ 7^t*'-e/2t'^^ y^x^jt^e ,y««^^«t-«'^»«w 20 BULLETIN OF THE ESSEX INSTITUTE. to Dr. Wheatknd, the most valued patron we have had in the years just closed, was Mr. Hunt. His devotion to our interests, in season and out of season, his promptness to respond to every call, his judgment, his good taste, his interest in art, his enjoyment of the beautiful and his yearning that all should share that pleasure with him, have taken form in a stream of costly and laborious ben- efactions only checked by death. But the hour is too short. I detain you no longer from the pleasure which is in store for us, except to read the letter I have prom- ised. It will be perceived by every well-wisher of the Institute to be a communication of capital importance ; others, only less significant of what our future may bo- come, might be presented if the delicacy of our intended benefactors would permit. I cannot suppose that the people of the county will prove indifferent to such a trust. I dare not but suppose that they will rise to an appreciation of the forces that have sustained the Insti- tute for fifty years, — that they will rise to the opportu- nity which opens before them to put upon a stable footing an enterprise so unique, so hopeful, and so competent to correct the tendency towards machine methods which threatens the educational systems of to-day. Whatever the coming years may have in store for the Essex Institute, it is certain that devotion and enthusiasm such as have crowned the now-accomplished lustrum will not be wanting, amongst our actual working force, to achieve the next. Whether we shall be enabled, through the generosity and high spirit of this ancient county, to press on to higher aims, or whether we must be content with what we have, and indulge no further outlook save to hold our own, I can speak for those who have borne the heat and burthen of the day for at least a generation, — for at least that period I have known the Institute as a THE FIRST HALF CENTURY OF THE INSTITUTE. 21 daily burthen and a daily incentive, — I speak for them and all of them when I say that no eflbrt of theirs will l)e lackin«r to make the future worthy of the past. The President then n*ad two letters dated at Kome, the first, as he said, to show the feeling entertained for us by the Sculptor Story just before his death, as evinced by the deposit, for perpetual preservation in the Institute, of a cradle in which he and his distinguished father, Judge Story, were rocked in infancy. This was as follows : The Palazzo Barberini. Mv dear Mr. Kantoul and Gentlemen of the Essex Institute: I have jnst received your most kind and flattering letter of Nov. 19, and I be.? to express my Avarm thanks for the cordial terms with which you accept ray little gift of the old cradle. It comforts my heart to hear that my Father's memory is so Avarmly cherished in Salem. He always had a deep feeling for the town and, as I well remember, quitted it with great regret and only be- cause he deemed it his duty to do so in order to secure for Harvard University the Donation of Mr. Dane — as Mr. Dane had made it a condition of his gift that my Father should accept the Professor- ship of Law and go to Cambridge to reside. For myself, Dear old Salem has my stronsi affections. It was my birthplace — the days of my boyhood were spent there — and I retain for it only the most affectionate associations and memories. Often in my dreaming and musing hours I go back to it, and long again to see the streets and to renew the old and vivid recollections which still are fresh and living in my mind The boyish memories last forever, and have a charm unsurpassed by those of a later age. I wish my little gift were more worthy of your acceptance, and small as it is, I am, I confess, deeply pleased that you have so kindly 22 BULLETIN OF THE ESSEX INSTITUTE. given it a place in tlie Institute, and that you liave also given my name a place among the many far more distinguished ones of the dear old City of Peace. With best wishes I am, Yours most faithfully, W. W. Story. Dec. 26, 1894. The second letter read was this : — Palazzo Barbeiuni, Rome. August 27, 1897. To THE Hon. President : Robert S. Rantoul, Essex Institute, Salem, Mass., My dear Mr. Rantoul : — My father left to me all the original plaster casts of his statues in his studio in Rome. It is my desire to present these works to the Essex Institute at Salem, and I have much pleasure in offering, through you, as a gift to the Institute, the only collection of original plaster casts of Statues and Busts executed by my father, W. W. Story. My father was born in Salem, and he always had the greatest affec- tion and regard for the old Town. I therefore feel sure that in mak- ing this offer I shall be carrying out his wishes, and I also feel certain he would have been most gratified to know that these statues — his life's work — had found a permanent and suitable resting-place in his old home. My desire is to present all his best works — there are some twelve to fifteen or even more statues — some life-size — some even larger, besides other small statuettes, — also many busts of distinguished men and women. All these I would give, provided the space allotted were sufliciently large properly to accommodate them. When I know what room the Institute can dispose of, I shall be better able to judge what number of casts could be becomingly exhibited. The only stipulation I would ask to be allowed to make is, that this collection should be properly and becomingly exhibited together in some permanent and befitting building : and that no copies or reproductions of whatso- ever size or description should be made of these works. If the space were sufficient I should have much pleasure in presenting the entire collection. THE FIRST HALF CENTURY OF TIIK INSTITUTE. 23 Permit rae, in conclusion, Mr. Tresident, to liave tlie pleasure of formally making this oiler, through yon, to the Essex Institute. Hoping to liear from you at your convenience, I have the honor to sign myself, most cordially and respectfully yours, Waldo Stoky. What shall we say to that? asked the President. We have no room ! The President then said : I promised to read you a letter. I have done better. I have read you two. I will do better still. I will read you two more. I will read them in the order of their dates and you shall judge for 3^ourselves of their relative impor- tance. The first calls upon us to give free lectures — just what we are doing. The second calls for more room. Here are the letters : Salem, Feb. 26th, 1898. Hon. Robert S. Rantoul, Prksident of the Essex Institute, Salem, Mass. Dear Sir : — At a meeting of the Salem Lyceum held January 24, 1898, the com- mittee appointed at a previous meeting to consider the matter of presenting to the Essex Institute the funds of the Salem Lyceum, re- ported in favor of so transferring the funds, and, as part of their report, submitted a petition and bill to be presented to the Legislature of this Commonwealth, asking for a dissolution of the Salem Lyceum corporation and authority to trausfer its funds to the Essex Institute, to be safely invested by said Institute, and the income thereof to be expended each year in maintaining a course of lectures to be announced by said Institute as being maintained by the " Salem Lyceum Fund." On motion it was voted that the report of the committee be accepted and adopted. The petition and bill above referred to were presented to the Leg- islature, and I am happy to inform you that the bill has been duly enacted, and that under the authority thereof the funds of the Salem Lyceum amounting to three thousand dollars ($3,000.00) will be paid over to the Essex Institute, subject to the conditions of said act. Very truly yours, Edw'd C. Battis, Secretary. 24 bull?:tin of the esskx instituti March 1st, 1898. To THK Hon. Robert S. Rantoul, Prksident of the Essex Institute, Salem, Mass. My dear Sir : — I avail myself of this half-century anniversary to say publicly to the Institute w^hat my friends have linown before, that all the antique furniture, portraits, old china and glass now in my house in Lynde street will be ultimately deposited with the Essex Institute for per- petual preservation. The portraits which form a part of the gift are mostly in oils, and these may perhaps derive an additional interest from the fact that they include the likenesses of ten generations of my family, all Salem people. Trusting that the celebration will be all that the friends of the In- stitute have hoped, and that my intentions may be consistent with the purposes of your Board of Government, I am very respect, yours, Geo. R. Curwen. This offer, like the others, was loudly applauded. Mr. Curwen sat upon the stage with two others of the charter members of the Institute, Messrs. Willard Peele Phillips and Robert Manning.^ The President then said : There are some friends of the Institute so conspicuous that their absence needs to be accounted for. When we celebrated the two hundredth anniversary of Endecott's landing, Governor Lincoln was present, and when we cele- brated the two hundred and liftieth anniversary of that event, Governor Rice was present, and when we observed the twenty-tifth anniversary of the founding of the Insti- tute, Governor Washburn was present. We had hoped 3 Six others of the original members are known to be living, and letters were received from live of tliem.viz: Charles W. Palfray, J. Hardy Phippen, Henry M. Brooks, Isaiah Nichols, E. S. L. Richardson. THE FIRST HALF CENTURY OF THE INSTITUTE. 25 that His Excellency Governor Wolcotf* would be with us to-day, but I have here a letter in which, after a most cordial acknowledg- ment, His Excellency says : The occasion, I am sure, will be an interestinij; one and it ■would give me much pleasure to be present, but the date falls upon the reg- ular da}- of meeting of the Council and I have never permitted any other engage- ment to interfere with my presence at these Council meetings. Therefore you will please accept my regrets, und believe me Very truly yours, KoGKR WOLCOTT. President Ean- toul here presented General Appleton of the Governor's staff, — a Vice President of the Institute, — who was in uniform, l)einir detailed by His Excellency to respond for the Commonwealth. General Francis H. Appleton, of Governor Wolcott's staff, being introduced, said that as His Excellency was unable on account of important business at the State EndecoU *Only two Governors of Massachusetts have ever lived in Salem. They were Endecott and Bradstreet, and they happen to be the first and the last in the line of colonial governors. The Cadet Armory and Pluniraer Hall stand on an estat« more or less identified with both of tlieni. There is reason to think that it may ESSKX INST. BUIXKTIX. VOI, XXX. 2* 26 BULLiaiN OF THE ESSEX INSTITUTE. House, before the Council, to be present, the Governor had delegated him to represent the Commonwealth, and to convey his regrets that he could not attend so notable an occasion. General Appleton expressed his own gratification at being permitted to come back to his former home, Salem, in this capacity, which he esteemed a high honor. He regretted that he must pre- sent himself in a somewhat an- tiquated, l)ut so historic, form of uniform, which he hoped he might soon have an opportunity to pre- sent to the Institute, not as a relic of himself but as a reminder of nrodstreet ^^^ many brave officers wdio have fought for the Nation's unity in this dress ; but General Miles has just proposed a dress of new design far better adapted to the needs of the service. General Appleton then said : — The value of institu- tions, like this Institute, to a State and Nation cannot be too highly spoken of; it advances the idea of value of history and art, as a power in promoting cultivation in man, and a more cultivated taste among people generally. have been assigned in tlie first instance to Governor Endecott. (Bulletin, Vol. I, p. 79; Historical Collections, Vol. xxiv, p. 24t.) It certainly was the domicile of Governor Bradstreet, for in 1676 he married the widow of Captain Joseph Gard- ner, a niece of Governor Winthrop, who had it for a marriage portion, and here, Bradstreet, who had landed in Salem with Winthrop in 1630, came back to pass the closing twenty years of his life, and to die and be entombed in 1697. On this estate, from 1836 until 1867, lived Colonel Francis Peabody with his wife Martha, and she was an Endicott descended, in the eighth generation, from the Governor. Governor Wolcott married a granddaughter of William Hickling Prescott. Prescott was born on this estate. She was also a granddaughter of Joseph Augustus Peabody, and for him the Peabody mansion, now the Cadet Armory, was built in 1819, and he lived in it until his death, when his brother Francis took it. The Governor, had he been present, would have found Mmself on friendly soil. THE FIRST HALF CENTURY OF THK INSTITUTE. 27 Such influence as emanates from an institution of the character of yours promotes an instinctive desire for, and a respect towards, law and order in any community. The history and heredity ot our people must be made the most of; such characteristics as are found in the history and historic things of Essex County, are truly capital to any locality ; and are as essential to the best results, as is a sound and golden rule of value. The influence of such collections and library as you have, and seek to accumulate, here in Salem, is by no means confined to Essex County, nor to this historic State of Massachusetts ; you have been leaders, in your line, at the largest exhibition of this country at Chicago, in the interest of both State and Nation, and there))y set a standard before the public that carried your name and fame beyond the bounds of this Nation. Our eastern coast boasts of more accumulated history than elsewhere in our Nation ; and the children, who have gone from us, west and south, are proud of that history because it is theirs also. Besides collecting our relics in-doors, let us be the medium of preserving relics out-of-doors. So far as is possible, and besides some interesting houses in old Salem Village, let spots in nature's landscape, that mark the life of men and women who have lived to help us by their wisdom and example, be preserved to continue to help us by a bright remembrance of the lives there lived ; as, Mr. Eliot, you have done in Cambridge at the Long- fellow home, and are trying to do at the James Russell Lowell estate. A like work has been accomplished at the early home of Whittier, and in some other Essex County spots . May you also promote the preservation of spots now beautiful from what nature has made of them ; and may 28 BULLETIN OF THE ESSEX INSTITUTE. your speakers uiul writers encourage richness in the ap- pearances of onr farms, so far as our rugged soil will allow, in the hope that the dress of Mother Earth may be of the best and what she well deserves. President Rantoul, with the best wishes of the Com- monwealth, may the Essex Institute, after this its fiftieth birthday, continue, as now, always to deserve the confi- dence of the people who have ties to Essex County, and of all others ; may the help that comes to you from a large membership with modest annual dues forever continue and increase ; and may those who can give more largely during life of money, relics, etc., or after death by will, believe, as I do, that this Essex Institute, founded by men to whose memory we c:ui all bow in reverence, is always to continue sound, as to its historical, and in its financial, management, to the honor of Country, State and Nation. The President then said : It may not be generally known that we came very near having the Massachusetts Bay College established in our neighborhood. We came just as near havins^ it named Scruofo^s College instead of Har- vard College, and so we should all have been looking forward to the degree of LL.D. of Scruggs, and not to the degree of LL.D. of Harvard. The facts are these. One Thomas Scruggs, as early as January, 1(335-6, got possession of a part of that beautiful meadow lying be- tween S\vam[)scott and Marblehead, and looking out on the Bay, and now dotted over with summer villas. It was a favorite resort with Hawthorne, and is often referred to in the "American Note Books." Having got the delightful tract into his hands, Scruggs negotiated in April with Captain Trask, our Massachusetts Bay Miles Standish, and received in its stead a farm at Bass liiver near Wenhara Pond. His object in the transaction was to secure THE FIRST HALF CENTURY OF THE INSTITUTE. 29 a site which was satisfactory to Rev. Hugh Peters of the First Church, and to the other members of the tirst Board of Education, who were "to take order for a colledore." A long negotiation ensued, which resulted in the establish- ment of the College at Newetowne, now Cambridge, in November, 1637. Mr. Scruggs was a man of substance, of influence, and of public spirit. He was a man of independent judg- ment also, for he was later disarmed for an o[)inionist. And a good deal more might be said for Mr. Scruggs.^ I have the honor to present my schoolmate, my class- mate, and, 1 think I may add, my life-long friend, the head Note 5. ii of the lltli nioiieth 1635 This is void by the Granted by the flfreemen of Salem [*vnto*] the day and yeare grant of an »l>ove ^mtten vnto ni'' Thomas Scrugs of the same hia heires and other farnie assignees for ever a farme conteyning three hundreth acres of in Leiwe land whereof thirty acres are fitt to be mowed scitnate lying and of this to being in the outmost bounds of Salem towards nv' Humphries and m Scrugs. jg from the Sea where the frcslie water runs out, West and by North is the fearme next to m"^ Humphryes bounded by the Coraon by the North west end & East end provided alwayes A in Case of Sale, the towne of Salem haue the first prefer before any other. John Endecott Roger Connunght John Holgeave Thomas Gardner Edm. Batter At a gen'rall Court or towne meeting of Salem held the second of the third moneth called May A° 1636. Imprimis after the reading of former orders; In the reading of an order for the division of Marble Head Neck; A motion was brought in by Op. Endicot in behalf e of m"^ John Humphries for some Land beyond Iforest River, moved by spetiall argumen [ts] one whereof was, Least yt should hinder the building of a Colledge, w'^' would be manie [mens] losse, It was agreed vpon this motion that six men should be nominated by the towne to view these Lands and to consider of the premisses, and for that end was named m'' Thomas Scrugs Cp. Traske m' Roger Conant m'' Townsen Bishop John Woodbery Peter Palfrey That these six or any fours of them are deputed for this business to spcake or Item yt was ordered that whereas m'' Scrugs had a farme of three hun- dred acres beyond forest River, And that Cp. Traske had one of tooe hundr 30 BULLETIN OF THE ESSEX INSTITUTE. of the leading institution of learning in the land, President Eliot of Harvard. President Eliot, after a few complimentary phrases and a word of pleasantry about the choice of names and of locations as between Scruggs and Harvard, spoke substan- tially as follows : It is fitting that a represen- tative of Harvard University should take part in this celebra- tion. As I listened to the com- memorative address of the President of the Institute I thought of the many Salem families to which Harvard Uni- versity and the Essex Institute had been alike indebted. I recalled the names of Holyoke, Bowditch, Story, Wheatland, Saltonstall, Pickering, Endicott and White, all of which are great Harvard names as well as great Essex names. In succes- sive generations Harvard and Salem have both incurred a great debt to these eminent and TfiTKcK^^ ° Fi'TTbtl durable families. The working of the Essex Institute is extraordinarily varied. By its collections it illustrates many widely "7^"' ditch nesii ana Quadrant. [ed] acres beyond Basse River, The — Cp. Traske frely relinquishing his farme of tooe hundred acres, It was granted vnto m'' Thomas Scrugs, and he there vpon frely relinquished his farme of three hundred acres that soe m"" Humphryes might the better be accomodated. See Records of Massachusetts, Vol. I, passim. Felt's Annals of Salem, Vol. I, pp. 172, 427; Vol. II, pp. 564, 575; Ist edition, pp. 98, 527. Savage's New England Genealogical Dictionary, Vol. IV, p. 42. Uphnm's Witchcraft, Vol. I, pp. 64-6, 130. Salem Town Records; see Historical Collections, Vol. IX, passim. THE FIRST HALF CENTURY OF THE INSTITUTE. 31 difl'erent fields of knowledge. Thus its collections in natural history, already interesting and important, are likely to be of more and more service as time goes on. Our fathers did not expect botany, zoology and geology to be cultivated in the elementary schools; but we have come to believe that these subjects should be diligently taught in all schools, and that local collections should be generously provided to illustrate these sciences. "We believe that every primary school teacher and grammar school teacher in Salem should have a good knowledge of the natural history of the place, and should cultivate in her pupils a taste for exploring the flora and fauna of the county. Every year will increase the importance of the natural history collections of the Institute. The Essex Institute has also a unique collection to illustrate the adventurous life of Salem men when com- merce with the far East was a large element in Salem life. Here is a unique collection of records of voyages, ship's logs, and ship-letters covering one of the most interest- ing and important periods in the commercial history of our country. These are records of enterprise, adventure and daring exploration ; they are records of the struggles of Salem men with the dangers of unknown seas and coasts, struggles which furnished to thousands of Essex sailors an heroic discipline. It is in such struggles that those constructive moral and physical qualities are de- veloped which occasionally get opportunity of destructive expression in war. The qualities of endurance, alertness, and boldness which give victory during the destructions of war have been developed in the struggle with adverse nature during long periods of peace. You citizens of Salem have the privilege of living in one of the most historic towns of America. Ten years ago I had the privilege of visiting, early in the delightful month of May, the city of Athens. I soon came to the 32 BULLETIN OF THE ESSEX INSTITUTE. conclusion thiit, apart from the Acropolis and its imme- diate surroundings, the actual city of Athens was decid- edly a less interesting place than this city of Salem. It is also a much less comfortable and enjoyable place than Salem. But, good as the work of the Essex Institute has been, you all long to make it better ; and I, therefore, venture to describe briefly the best means of enlarojing the scope and influence of the Institute, and of making valuable to other parts of the country its precious collections. To give the highest value to such collections as the Institute maintains, it is necessary to have learned and skilful men constantly engaged in re-arranging and enlarging the col- lections, and making known their contents by descriptive labels and published memoirs. The most instructive arrangement and the most scientific development can be secured only by the continuous service of experts ; and the Essex Institute needs two such expert curators whose whole time can be devoted to its service. To support them an endowment of $200,000 would be needed. There should also be a fund of at least $50,000 for publi- cation purposes in order that the collections might be made useful, not only to Salem and Essex County, but to the whole country. Such publications would carry the name of the Essex Institute far and wide. I sincerely hope that the suggestion of these endowments on this occasion may bear fruit. Such an Institute as this helps to create and foster love of home, of city, and of country. Out of a local afiec- tion grows the wider love of country, and out of the early interest in such subjects as those to which the Essex Institute is devoted, habitually fostered in the children of a city like Salem, grows in after life a broad and fruitful interest in intellectual pursuits. These loves and interests are what make life worth livinof. [ THE FIRST HALF CENTURY OF THE INSTITUTE. 33 President Rantoul then said : Our senior Senator writes as follows : — My dear Sik : — I am sorry that my public engagements here will deprive me of the pleasure of accepting your invitation to attend the fiftieth anniversary of the Essex Institute. I should like to see the members of that famous society and to hear what they will tell of its founders and the learned men who have given it such great distinc- tion, of Dr. Wheatland, and of Mr. Hunt, the modest and faithful officer you have so lately lost. But I suppose it will be impossible. I am, with high regard, faithfully yours, Geo. F. HoAit. And our junior Senator, an Essex County man, sends his regrets in these words : U. S. Skkate, Feb. 11, 1898. My DEAR Sir : — I am much obliged by your kind invitation to be present at the fiftieth anniversary of the founding of the Essex In- stitute, and regret that it will not be possible for me to be present. Very truly yours, H. C. Lodge. Henry M. Brooks, Esq., Secretary. The President remarked that it was not every day that we had a son of Salem at the head of one of the three great professions of the country, but it was so to-day, and he shared their resret in heing obliojed to read a letter from Mr. Choate, when they had hoped to hear from him. Mr. Choate writes : 50 West Forty-seventh Street, Feb. 28, 1898. My dear Eantoul : — I regret very much that I cannot avail myself of your kind invitation to be present and take part in the celebration of the jubilee of the Essex Institute on the 2nd of March. It turns ESSEX IKST. BULLKTIX, VOL. XXX 3 34 BULLETIN OF THE ESSEX INSTITUTE. out just as I expected that an inevitable engagement in the Supreme Court at Washington on that day -will keep me away. I well remember the foundation of the Essex Institute and its fee- ble beginnings, and have watched with great pride and interest its sure and steady progress to its present high position of influence for good. It is not only the pride of Salem and of Esses County, but is hon- ored wherever its work is known. Its publications have been of very great value, and I have particularly enjoyed its historical re- searches which I hope may be continued with renewed vigor, for I am satisfied that much remains yet unpublished of local history which Avould be of great general interest. Wishing you a most successful celebration, and prophesying a great future for the Institute, I am Most truly yours, Joseph H. Choate. President Rantoul alluded to the Peabody Academy of Science as "our neighbor across the way," and said that the two societies lived on such terms of unbroken amity, of undisturbed harmony and mutual helpfulness, as almost to presage the millennial era. He asked Acting Presi- dent S. Endicott Peabody, who sat behind him, to respond for the Academy, but that gentleman excused himself, and Professor Edward S. Morse, the Curator of the Museum, was presented. Professor Morse said : The Peabody Academy of Science, as custodian of the natural history collections of the Essex Institute, has en- deavored to present to the public a well-arranged, well- labelled and well-lighted museum. The Institution founded by George Peabody of London was specially organized to diffuse knowledge not only in Essex County but, as Mr. Peabody expressed it in his letter of trust, " our common country as well." It is believed that a public museum, open every day in the week and free to TIIK FIRST HALF CENTURY OF THE INSTITUTE. 35 all, furnishes intellectual pleasure and nitional jimusement in a most graphic way. Our museum is unique in that it combines not only a collection of the animals and plants, rocks and minerals and prehistoric relics of Essex County, hut an epitome- collection of the animals of the world. These are exhib- ited in one great liall. In another hall are displayed the weapons, utensils and handiwork of the nations of the world. Among these are many objects of great rarity. Since the opening of the museum in 1868 over one mill- ion two hundred and fifty thousand visitors have passed through its halls. Salem does not realize the importance of its ethnological collections, which stand third in rank in the United States at the present time. The President then said : Thirteen towns and cities of the County, — a round dozen, — are now supporting local historical and scientific societies of their own, and almost all of them recognize their obligations to the Essex Institute as the parent soi'iety of them all. It is fitting that these kindred bodies should be heard from here, and I call upon the President of the Danvers Historical Society, one of the most vigorous of the brood, to speak for the affiliated bodies of the County. Dr. Putnam said : Mr. President, Ladies and Gentlemen : Surely no one can catch sight of the stately and spa- cious buildings of the Essex Institute so close at hand and thiidi of the vast and priceless collections which they hold without a fresh feelinor of jjratitude and honor to the ilhis- trious Dr. Wheatland for what he did to make the whole the one crowning glory of the Salem of to-day ; nor, let me add, without rejoicing that, under the direction of 36 BULLETIN OF THE ESSEX INSTITUTE. his present very able, earnest and accomplished successor, Mr. Rantoul, the work still goes on with unabated vigor, and can hardly fail ot the largest and most beneficent results, I have been asked to say a word for the numerous other historical societies, which have been established from time to time in as many of the towns of Essex Count3^ Could I be permitted to speak in their behalf, it were but just to say how much they feel indebted to the Institute and its honored presidents for the service which they have also rendered in this more extended scene by awakening or intensifying in us all a love and zeal for such pursuits as have engaged you here for these fifty years. Stimu- lated by 3'our noble example and realizing that they had, immediately around them, promising fields which they might glean for their own special advantage and for the public good, your neighbors have organized these local societies here and there and are glad to believe that they are thus enlarging the work and widening the influence of the mother of them all. These organizations, generally, have each their own rooms or head-quarters, and have courses of interesting and instructive lectures. They celebrate historic events. They erect monuments in honor of departed heroes and benefactors. They seek and collect, from far and near, for safe keeping and profitable use, such memorials of the past or objects of nature, as shall be suitable for such institutions and shall best illustrate the manners and cus- toms, the arts and industries, the thought and life, of generations gone, and the facts and lessons of science and of the world around us in our own time ; books and pamphlets, diaries and journals, maps and charts, manu- scripts and documents, autographs and letters ; coins, scrip, seals, medals, badges and banners ; military weapons and insignia; paintings, engravings, etchings. THE FIRST HALF CENTURY OF THE INSTITUTE. 37 silhouettes and photographs ; old-time articles of wear and furniture ; relics and curios of great variety ; geolog- ical, inineralogical, botanical and natural history speci- mens, and whatever else may properly serve the end in view. And it were strange if some of these humbler local societies were not able to gather, from the widely scattered sons and daughters of their respective towns, many a memento or prize of particular value to themselves, such as the larger, central institution, in its vaster work, might possibly miss. Treasures come back to us that might else be lost. But whether they come from near or from afar, all do good by kindling a new interest in the higher things ; and it is especially gratifying and significant that even the school children of the vicinity often come to see and inquire, so that what they have learned in their regu- lar daily studies may be made more vivid to their minds by the object lessons they find. In numberless ways the study of history is quickened and fostered, tastes are ele- vated and ennobled, character is developed, and all are somehow made to feel that man does not live by bread alone, and that he does not bear the root, but the root him. We congratulate the Essex Institute on the splendid work it has done. There is no end to the good it may yet do, — and with it, I would fain hope, the sister societies of which I have spoken, — in restoring, as far as may be, the picture of the New England of our fathers, and, in adding, still, to the great sum of human knowledge. They are all ornaments and blessings to the towns or cities where they exist, promoting their intellectual, moral, social and even business prosperity, by their presence, activities and influence. You have heard of the excellent and venerable Presbyterian clergyman, who, after a very long pastorate, still held on to his thinning and wasting congregation, until the price of real estate itself around 38 BULLETIN OF THE ESSEX INSTITUTE. him began perceptibly to decline. The good deucons and elders were at last prompted to action, explained to their beloved minister the gloomy sitnation and could but sug- gest to him the inevitable remedy. Said the dear old man, with becoming gravity and evident sincerity, "I came to you in the days of your prosperity, and I haven't it in my heart to leave you in the time of your adversity." Mr, Rantoul is not likely to be surprised with a visitation like that, but will see to it well that the Institute shall in more ways than one minister to the w^eal of the " City of Peace " and the towns about it, and that the half-century to come shall be still more glorious than that which we commemorate to-day. The President, in presenting the British Consul Gen- eral, Sir Dominic E. Colnaghi, said : Whatever differences of opinion or of feeling may spring up, from time to time, between us and any given administration of the British Government, and they are wide and frequent, the ties that bind the British and American peoples can never be broken. We are honored to-day with the presence of Her Britannic Majesty's repre- sentative at Boston and I take great pleasure in present- ing to you the British Consul General, Sir Dominic Col- naghi. The British Consul said : Mr. President, Ladies and Gentlemen : — It has been a great pleasure to me to come here to-day, and I would take this opportunity of thanking the Presi- dent and members of the Essex Institute for their cour- teous invitation and for the hospitality so kindly extended to me. I will not deny that I feel somewhat abashed in address- ing, even with a few words, so large and distinguished an THE FIRST HALF CENTURY OF THE INSTITUTE. 39 audience. Still, though I am personally unknown to nearly all ot" yon, and to most, indeed, the mere shadow of a name, I cannot, as an Englishman, feel that I am a stranger in New England. With some new traits, brought ahont hy change of cli- mate, of association and of political conditions, I tind here that steady energy of character and devotion to duty, — that love for home, for country and for freedom, — that dignified calm in moments of acute political crisis, — qualities which, 1 flatter myself, your ancestors brought as their heritage from the old country, and which, I trust, still flourish in their original home. We are met together to celebrate the tiftieth anniver- sary of the foundation of the Essex Institute, of whose good work Salem is justly proud, but with regard to which I can add nothing to what has been so eloquently said by previous speakers ; I would only remark that here again I tind America vying with Great Britain in all that relates to the advancement of science, of education, of literature tmd art — of all, in short, that tends to promote civilization in general and the welfare of our people in particular. And, it is gratifying that this movement is so strong in Salem, which not only claims the interest of Englishmen as the birthplace of Hawthorne, of Prescott and of other distinguished men and women, but as the mother city of Massachusetts with all her historic associations. In England we have a County, not the only one, in which the lasses are noted for their beauty and are called the Lancashire witches. I had read, indeed, of Salem witchcraft, but never came under its influence till to-day, when the presence of her fair citizens, while enhancing greatly the charm of the celebration, has contributed to increase the confusion which a slow-tongued Englishman has felt in venturing to address you. 40 BULLETIN OF THE ESSEX INSTITUTE. The Rev. William Orne White of Brookline was next introduced as one who was here with a triple claim to be heard, for he was not only the son of Judsje Daniel Appleton White, who was long the first President of the Essex Institute and its greatest early promoter, but also the son of that Judge Daniel Appleton White who was, for as many years, the last President of the Essex His- torical Society whose successor we are, and the first Pres- ident of the Salem Lyceum, whose successor we are to be. Mr. White replied : Mr. President, Ladies and Gentlemen : The mention of that name compels me, first, to say that for me to lose such a friend and inspirer has been impossi- ble. Not even death can rob us of those that every pass- ing year does but bury deeper and deeper in the heart. When I recur to my earliest recollections of my father, I see bookshelves to left of him, bookshelves to right of him, and bookshelves above him, and yet at evening I find him down in the parlor eagerly cutting the leaves of some new volume belonging to the Athengeum. Well misfht such a man love the Essex Institute, as he did, indeed, the whole county of Essex. Before the rail- road days, it was a joy of my childhood to sit by him in the chaise which took him to Lynn or Andover or Haver- bill or Newbury port or Gloucester or Ipswich, in his cai)acity of Judge of Probate. Mr. President : it is always a pleasure to read the story of your delightful field meetings. One such occasion I recall thirty-two years ago next summer, when, in the old church at Manchester, Congressman Butler and Chief Justice Chase enchained the attention of their listeners, — the one speaking on aerial navigation and a projected phonograph with forty strings ; the other discoursing THE FIRST HALF CENTURY OF THE INSTITUTE. 41 al)Out the then recent successful laying of tiie Atlantic telegraph ; and it was interesting to find that both of them, from research and professional experience, were able to add much to the zest of the occasion.^ As you may all readily imagine, countless faces of the venerable and the beloved are flitting across my mind to-day. There is one scene that so persistently repeats itself, that I must try to make you stand by the side of the boy of seven, as it rivets itself upon his mind. It is the procession of friends, who, two by two, are following seventy j^ears ago next August, the honored centenarian Dr. Edward Augustus Holyoke, from his home, about midway between the Market and Central street to the hotel on the opposite side of Essex street, where those professional companions and others, from Boston and elsewhere, will sit down with their revered guest at a banquet in honor of his one hundredth birth- day. It is over a gulf of one hundred and seventy years that we now glance backward to Dr. Holyoke's birth, a date preceding by more than three years the birth of Washington.'' My friends : as I listened to your President to-day, I thought, "how interesting it is to note, as they move for- ward, and all keep in line, the onward march of succes- sive generations." The grandfather of your President, Robert by name, I vividly recall ; a man of impressive presence and of marked influence. Then came the son, that second Robert, who counted not the cost, but threw himself boldly, as a statesman, into the intellectual con- flict which preceded, by long years, that national triumph which he was not spared to see. And now, here is the grandson keeping step in his turn, as he gives his mind to •See Proceedings, Vol. v, pp. 60-61. 'See Historical Collections, Vol. xxxii, pp. 117-122. KSSEX INST. BULLETIN, VOL. XXX 3* 42 BULLETIN OF THE ESSEX INSTITUTE. the public welfare ; and there are others of the race, ready, we doubt not, to take up the line of march in a kindred spirit. Among the figures of the past that continue to rise before me, I discern Jones Very, the modest, retiring poet, who, as Greek tutor at Cambridge, in his walks with one and another of us Freshmen, strengthened our best aspirations, and drew, in later life, from such a man as the late William Goodwin Russell, the leading advocate in Boston, a heartfelt tribute to the value of a close personal intercourse with such a man as Jones Very at the forming period of one's life. Time and again have I heard my father express, in glowing terms, his sense of the inestimable value to the Institute of the ser- vices of the late Dr. Henry Wheat- land. And now let us hear Eeverend Charles T. Brooks (whose schol- arly face always retained the sweet ingenuousness of childhood). I speak for himself in the closing lines of the Ode for the Dedication of Plummer Hall, which (after alluding to Salem as the " City of Peace ") continues : " God of Peace, the city keep ! Guarded well by -watchmen three ! Sentinels that never sleep, Learning, Faith, and Liberty. HoTyot^e ChaiT The President here alluded to the ancient chair that he was using, as associated with Dr. Holyoke. It was an Elizabethan arm chair presented to the Historical Society at its initial meeting in 1821, and then two centuries old,^ THE FIRST HALF CENTUUY OF THE INSTITUTE. 43 tiad ii!?ed l)y Dr. Holyoke in presiding. It was lu'oiiglit to Ipswich in 1634. There was also on the stage a finely inlaid tahle bronght from Japan in 1799, in the ship "Franklin," by Captain Deverenx of Salem, who com- manded her, — the first American vessel tliat traded with Jai)an.^ Tlie President then presented the Hon. Stephen Salis- bury of Worcester as the President of a greater society than onrs, pursuing kindred aims, l)ut which had a con- tinent for its field instead of a county. President Salisbury of the American Antiquarian Soci- ety spolie as follows : — Mr. President : I bring cordial greetings and felicitaticms from the American Antiquarian Society to its younger sister. The Society that I represent has its library of 100,000 volumes, its collections of paintings, statuary, manuscripts, coins, relics and In- dian implements, in its Halls at Worcester, and was founded liy Isaiah Thomas in 1812, thirty-six years before your Society, and yet we have every reason to be grateful to Salem, for we possess the mi'.jor part of the Dr. William Bentlcy Library.^ For this we are indebted to his friendship for Dr. Thomas, and by his bequest we have become possessed of Di-. Bentley's Ger- man library, pictures, manuscripts and books relating to • For au account of the Holyoke Chair see Bulletin, Vol. iv, pp. 25-6 and 133-4. Also Historical Collections, Vol. xxxii, p. 120, and Essex Register for Sept. 22, 1828, 1st page, 2nd column. 9 See Historical Collections, Vol. xxxii, pp. 101-2. Bentley: 44 BULLETIN OF THE ESSEX INSTITUTE. America. The hooks are now collected in an alcove, which bears Dr. Bentley's name. We have the publica- tions of the Essex Institute upon our shelves, another cause of gratitude to Salem. Our objects are in many respects similar to yours in the collection and preservation of early Americana, of which we have a large store, and in the promotion of historical and literary enquiry, and in the investigation of archaeo- logical questions relating especially to this Continent. Our publications consist of the proceedings of stated meetings and the editing of manuscripts of which we are the custodians. Among our local societies in Worcester we have two to which I belong and both of them have received much benefit from studying the system you have pursued and I believe have copied some of your methods. The Wor- cester Society of Antiquity has a building erected for its purposes, containing a hall for its meetings seating three hundred persons, a library of ten thousand volumes, and a museum of local historical curiosities and paintings. The building is open to the public every week day after- noon, and stated meetings are held every month at which essays are read and courses of lectures are given each winter by eminent men. Once or twice each 3'ear the Society visits localities of historic interest. The pro- ceedings of the Society are issued in print and have now reached their fourteenth volume. The Worcester Natural History Society is another organization which owns the building that it occupies and has classes in the different departments of Natural Science. In former years it has held field-meetings following largely the plan you have so successfully inaug- urated. Not alone are societies benefited by the habit of inves- THE FIRST HALF CENTURY OF THE INSTITUTE. 45 tigation, which they encourage by bringing students in contact with objects to be studied, tlius creating the object-lesson system, but our higher institutions of learn- ing are now adopting that method in teaching how to pursue special investigations, which perhaps were first suo;gested by ]al)()ratory work in Institutes like 3'ours. After seeing the great value of the library and collec- tions you possess, which show the richness of the field from which it has been drawn, that in early colonial times was hardly second to any part of the seaboard of Massa- chusetts and left the interior of the state entirely behind, it cannot be doubted that the same protecting care of interested co-laborers that has provided these collections will secure ample quarters for future development. The President then presented Rev. George Batchelor of the Christian Register, as once of Salem, and the writer of one of the best chapters of condensed Salem history that has ever been printed. Response of Rev. George Batchelor. Mr. President, Ladies and Gentlemen : I recognize the fact that not one-half of the gentlemen upon this platform have yet spoken, and I know they are all prepared to say something in honor of the Essex Institute. There is only time, therefore, for me to bring you my greeting and congratulation. In regard to that historical sketch to which you have so kindly referred, I said to a friend this morning that I considered it my foremost literary achievement. It gave me great pleasure to be asked by the sons of Salem to contribute such an important chapter to the history of this ancient town. I reijarded it as an act giviiio^ me the freedom of the city and making me an adopted son of Salem. You do not allow strangers to deal with your 46 BULLETIN OF THE ESSEX INSTITUTE. antiquities and handle your precious heirlooms. When my sketch was completed I sent it to the antiquarians of Salem for criticism, to Dr. Wheatland, Messrs. Waters, Rantoul and Upham. I expected to have it returned to me in tatters. 1 was delighted to find it in such condition that it could still be printed. Mr. Upham expressed his surprise that 1 had i)een able to get so thoroughly into the atmosphere of Salem. My reply was, that one who had lived sixteen years in Sclera, and loved it as I did, must carry with him something of the atmosphere of the place. As a reward of merit Mr. Upham presented to me for my sketch one of his discoveries concerning the contro- versy between the cottagers and commoners of Old Salem. Probably he and I were the only two persons in the United States who understood that question. I most heartily second the appeal of your President and the President of the University for a larger endowment and a full display of the historical and literary treasures in the Essex Institute. I do this partly for a personal reason, namely, to vindicate my reputation as a truth teller. I have travelled in all parts of the union ; I have visited state universities, laboratories and museums, and whenever, in answer to the boasting of some institution which had nothing to show in comparison with your treasures, I have begun to speak of these things in Salem, a look of incredulity has stolen over the faces of my hearers, and a polite but increasing reserve indicated the belief that I was exaggerating. The presence of our English friend, Sir Dominic Conaghi, suggests a similar experience by way of illustration. I was travel liuij in Switzerland with an Englishman who dilated upon the habit of exaffo-eration common to Americans. I asked for a sample. " Oh !" he said, " they tell big stories about everything; the size of their farms, for instance." "Well," THE FIKST HALF CENTURY OF THE INSTITUTE. 47 I replied, "there are some big farms in the United States. For instance, on the Pacific coast there are wheat farms that it would take a span of horses a week to draw a furrow around." That is a simple fact, but the English- man, greatl}^ amused, threw himself back, saying "That is the biggest lie yet." There is another reason. With- in ten years half a million visitors have registered at the Peabody Academy of Science. In the century to come that number will be greatly increased. All over the country new attention is being paid to the antiquities, to the old families, the old names, the old relics, the old historic spots, and whatever the newspapers may say to the contrary, it is true that there are in all parts of the country Americans wdio look with love and reverence towards the homes of their ancestors, and what they con- sider the shrines of the national life. This celebration is unique. In no other city of this size in the countiy could such an assemblage be gathered with such a purpose, with such substantial reasons for congratulation. But, Mr. President, you see I am tempted to trespass beyond my limit. Were I to make an oration instead of a speech, I should say that, in the forty years before the building of our railroads, Salem was foremost among the towns and cities of America in four different ways (not to claim too much). She led in war, as the records of her naval experience attest. She led in com- merce, as all the world knows. She led also in literature and in religion. Just one sample fact of the scores which might be cited. Salem represented the two great divis- ions of Congregationalism to such an extent that she may fairly be credited with leadership. The Theological School at Andover came out of Salem, as did also the Plummer professorship of morals in Harvard University. I have long wished that 1 might devote myself to the 48 BULLETIN OF THE ESSEX INSTITUTE. history of Salem, but I have been a busy man and many other things have claimed my attention and made impos- sible what would be for me a task of the most a2:reeable description. The President said : You will all agree with me that this commemoration would be incomplete without a word of respectful tribute to the memory of Henry Wheatland, and I know of no one better fitted, in his training and career, to pronounce that word, than the President of the American Associa- tion for the Advancement of Science, a Salem boy, an early associate of the Institute, grown up under the tute- lage of Doctor Wheatland himself. May I ask Professor Putnam to say a word in memory of Doctor Wheatland? Professor Frederick Ward Putnam spoke in substance as follows : He said he had attended the twenty-fifth anniversary of the Essex Institute and had then promised himself that, if he lived, he would attend the fiftieth. He had been early on intimate terms with Doctor Wheatland, who had for some reason taken a ver}'' special and active interest in his development. He became when a mere boy a member of the Institute. It was then but seven or eight years old. Under its influence and guid- ance he developed those tastes for natural science and for critical observation which had shaped his life. He could not fail to pay his tribute, humble though it be, to Doctor Wheatland. The dear old Doctor, ever busy for the good of others, had befriended and encour- aged him in his special pursuit — the study of the bird, fish and reptile life of Essex County — and it should be especially known and remembered that Doctor Wheatland THE FIKST HALF CENTURY OF THE INSTITUTE. 49 was the first person in America to dredge the sea and study the sea-fauna of this region. Professor Putnam described tlie rude appliances with which this result was accomplished. He said that the importance of such an institution as Doctor Wheatland had created, to the country at large, and especially to young naturalists, could not be over- stated. Its plans and methods were widely copied, and he watched the development of Doctor Wheatland's schemes with as great enthusiasm, now that he was no longer actively engaged in them, as he did in earlier years when his oAvn success in life almost depended upon them. He gave several instances of the singular and character- istic methods adopted by Doctor Wheatland, to procure the funds required. Once the speaker was publishing a work describing every species of bird in Essex County. When the last bird was ready to be mounted for descrip- tion, the money was lackiug, and Professor Putnam com- plained to the Doctor that the specimen would perish. Ten dollars was the sum required at that crisis, and there was no money for that or any other purpose. Doctor Wheatland, after a moment's thought, said, "Fred, we must secure more members, and stuff the specimen out of their admittance fees." And out into the street he went and secured enough members to meet the deficit. It seems impossible, said the speaker, to be present at a meetino^ of the Institute and not to believe that Doctor Wheatland is with us still. And Mr. Hunt also, who had in so great a measure taken up the self-imposed task of the Doctor and carried it on until he too has left to others the contiiuiation of the work. I should indeed be recreant, said Professor Putnam, if I were present at the fiftieth anniversary of the Institute and failed to re- spond to the call for a word of tribute to its noble dead. ESSEX INST. BULLETIN, VOL. XXX 4 50 BULLETIN OF THE ESSEX INSTITUTE. Three other gentlemen were present who had accepted invitations to "contribute a few words to the speaking of the afternoon," and it was an unpleasant necessity that deprived the audience of an opportunity to hear them. But the ladies had spread tables on each floor of Plum- mer Hall and were awaiting their guests since half-past four, and as it was considerably beyond that hour, the large assembly adjourned to the next building, where a social cup of tea was shared by the friends of the Institute, amidst general congratulations upon the hopeful outlook with which the Society enters upon its second fifty years. The two floors of Plummer Hall were brilliantly illumi- nated, for the first time, with powerful arc lights, and the noble upper hall w^as festooned with greenery also. These rooms, when filled with guests and set off with the ele- gantly appointed tables and tastefully varied costumes of the ladies, made a charming picture. SOME LETTERS RECEIVED. Mr. Robert D. Andrews begs to thank the Secretary of the Essex Institute for the courtesy of his invitation to be present at its celebra- tion on March 2d, and sincerely regrets his inability to be present at that time. Boston, Feb. 9, 1898. 16 Fairfield Street. Boston. Mr. John T. Morse, Jr., accepts with pleasure the polite invitation to be present at the celebration of the Essex Institute on March 2, 1898. Feb. 9, 1898. THE FIRST HALF CENTURY OF THE INSTITUTE. 51 Dkau Siu : — It Avas ver}' kind of the Essex Institute to invite me to their celebration on March 2d. I regret that I am quite unable to avail of the courtesy. Yours truly, Henry Lee. Bkookline, Feb. 9, 1898. . Massachuse 1 TS Historical SociErv, Feb. 10, 1898. Dear Sir : — I "wish to acknowledge the receipt of your kind invi- tation to attend the celebration of the Essex Institute at Salem, on March 2, but other engagements will prevent my acceptance. Thank- ing you for your courtesy in the matter, I am Very truly yours, Samuel A. Green. The Librarian of the Boston Athenaeum thanks the Essex Institute for its invitation and hopes to be present at the celebration of the fiftieth anniversary of its founding. Boston Athen.eum. Feb. 10, 1898. Phillips Academy, Andover, Mass., Feb. 10, 1898. Henry M. Brooks, Secretary, Essex Institute, Salem, Mass. Dear Sir : — I have the polite invitation for your celebration, 2d March, and shall hope to be present, with Prof. Wm. B. Graves, representing the Phillips Academy at Andover, and its library. Very respectfully, Cecil F. P. Bancroft, Principal 52 BULLETIN OF THE ESSEX INSTITUTE. Benj. C. Clark, 55 Kilby Street, F. O. Box 2,682. Boston, Fkb. 10, 1898. Mr. Henuy M. Brooks, Secretary of the Essex Institute, Salem. My dear Sir : — It gives me great pleasure to accept the courteous invitation of tlie Essex Institute for Marcli 2cl, personally, as also that addressed to the President of the Bostonian Society for the same occasion. Mr. Curtis Guild, the President of the Bostonian Society is, I regret to say, confined at home by an illness which gives no hope that he will be able to attend your meeting, and I am endeavoring to perform his duties by the partiality of the Board of Directors. Sincerely yours, Benjamin C. Clark. 247 Commonwealth Avenue. Mr. Uriel H. Crocker thanks the Essex Institute for its invitation to be present at the celebration of its fiftieth anniversary but regrets exceedingly that he shall be unable to attend on that occasion. Feb. 10, 1898. Charles Frederick Smith's thanks to the Essex Institute for its invitation to the celebration of the fiftieth anniversary of its founding. On account of illness, he will be compelled reluctantly to decline the invitation. Boston, Feb. 10, 1898. Newbury, Feb. 10, 1898. Henry M. Brooks, Secretary, Essex Institute. Dear Sir: — Very sincere thanks for your kind invitation for March 2d. We, Mrs. L. and myself (presuming she is included), accept THE FIRST HALF CENTURY OF THE INSTITUTE. 53 with pleasure, and doubt not that the occasion will be to us both a pleasure and a profit. Very respectfull}', William Little, President of the^Old Newbur}' Historical Society. 28 East 36th Street. New York. Fkb'y 10, 1898. Mr. D. F. Appi.kton begs to acknowledge the honor of an invitation to join in the celebration of the fiftieth anniversary of the founding of the Essex Institute, which he very much regrets that he is unable to accept. To Hknuy M. Brooks, Esq., Secretary. Union Club. Boston. Feb'y 10, 1898. De.\r Sir : — I regret that my immediate departure for Europe will prevent my acceptance of the kind invitation to attend the fiftieth anniversary of the founding of the Essex Institute on March 2d. I am very truly yours, Henry K. Oliver, M.D. Florence, Feb. 10, 1898. Hon. Robert S. Rantoul, President of the Essex Institute. Dear Sir : — I am very glad to hear that the Essex Institute is to celebrate the fiftieth anniversary of its organization. We natives of Salem of course are deeply interested in the history of the old town and its sons and daughters should help to make its coming celebration an occasion of the greatest success. I am in the habit of speaking of our County to strangers as the Mother of Counties. We would not, in the least, detract from the high regard in which Suflblk, Plymouth and Middlesex Counties are 54 BULLETIN OF THE ESSEX INSTITUTE. looked upon, but it seems to me that old Essex, when we consider its early religious, commercial, manufacturing, agricultural and social development, and also bear in mind that it was the birthplace of Rufus Putnam, Nathan Dane and Manasseh Cutler, the pioneers in the settlement of the great West, is well deserving of the title of the Mother of Counties. All the towns of the County should help each other in treasuring, most carefully, everything related to their rich history of two cen- turies and a half. I was greatly grieved to hear of the sudden death of my friend Mr. Hunt, who, next to Doctor Wheatland, it seems to me has done for the Essex Institute more, in a disinterested way, than any other per- son. Let us tr_v to carry out some of the plans which we know he had formulated for enlarging and extending its usefulness. Many of the members of the Institute know that we are greatly in need of more room to display our valuable collections, and it is to be hoped we may be able to raise a sufficient fund to enable us to begin soon to extend the building in the rear by erecting fireproof annexes. I feel quite sure that many valuable treasures would be given to the Institute, — valuable and of great interest not only to our own people but to the many strangers constantly flocking to the rooms to acquaint themselves with the many objects of unique historic interest, — if the donors could feel sure that these things would be constantly on exhi- bition and be entirely safe from loss by Are. Sooner or later I expect to give my valuable collection of coins to the society and these, Aviih the considerable addition of our own accumulations, would make, at the start, quite a respectable display in what might be called the coin room. Then we need a room devoted entirely to old family portraits, and Salem is very rich in this direction. Another room might be set apart to the exhibit of rare historical documents and autographs. Another to old silver, jewelry, miniatures, seals, rings, etc. Still another to old glass and china which has graced, in the olden time, many of the houses of the colonial and commercial periods. I think we should soon fill our newly built fire-proof extension with the con- siderable collections which we have already, stored away and out of sight for want of room, increased by the treasures which are sure to come from many people, as soon as the beneficiaries can be shown that they shall have a safe and fitting habitation. Let a committee be appointed to prepare a circular, to be sent out not only to all of the members but to many others, including natives of the town scattered all over the country, who are rich In this world's goods and would, I feel sure, in many cases contribute generously to a fund to be devoted to enlarging our society's building. Sincerely yours, Francis H. Lee. THE FIRST HALF CENTURY OF THE INSTITUTE. 55 Boston, Mass., Feb. 10, 1898. Dkau Sir : — I thank yoii for the compliment — but it will.be impos- sil)le for me to attend at the Essex Institute Anniversary. Resp. yrs., Wm. I. BOWDITCH. Gloucester, Mass., Feb. 10, 1898. To THE Sec'uy Essex Inst. Sir :— Your kind invitation to attend the fiftieth anniversary rec'd. I shall try to do myself the honor of being present on that occasion, although there is a possibility of my professional duties preventing the fulfilment of my desires. Yours very respt'y, T. CONANT, Pres. Cape Ann Sci. & Lit. Ass'n. Henry M. Brooks, Esq., Sec'y Essex Inst. Dr. W. Z. RiPLKY regrets very much his inability to attend the fiftieth anniversary of the Essex Institute. An engagement in New York will preclude his acceptance of the kind hospitality extended. Boston, Feb. 11, 1898. House of Representativks, U. S. Washington, D. C, Feb. 11, 1898. My dear Sir : — May I be permitted informally to reply to your formal invitation to attend the fiftieth anniversary of the founding of the Essex Institute? I wish very much that I could be present, but my duties here will prevent it. Yours very truly, W. H. Moody. 56 BULLETIN OF THE ESSEX INSTITUTE. Cambridge, Fkb. 11, 1898. My DEAR Sir : — I accept the very kind invitation of the Essex In- stitute to be present at their fiftieth anniversary with great pleasure. Very truly, John Trowbridge. Henry M. Brooks, Esq., Secretary. Ames Building. Boston, Mass., Feb. 11, 1898. Hknry M. Brooks, Esq., Secretary, Salem, Mass. Dear Sir : — I thank you for your kind invitation to attend the fiftieth anniversary of the Essex Institute, but I am afraid that it will be impossible for me to be present. I am Very truly yours, T. Jefferson Coolidge. Brookline, Mass., Feb. 11, 1898. My dear Mr. Brooks : — A septuagenarian cannot count very long ahead upon health and strength for any hoped-for pleasure at a fixed date. But as you have arranged for the afternoon of March 2d rather than the eveninii, I can only hope that nothing unforeseen may deprive me of the pleasure, upon the fiftieth anniversary of the Essex Institute, of being present. Most truly yours, William Orne White. 299 Berkeley Street. Mrs. John C. Phillips regrets extremely that she is unable to accept the kind invitation of the Essex Institute for March second. February eleventh. THE FIRST HALF CENTURY OF THE INSTITUTE. ')7 Washington, D. C, Fkb. 11, 1898. Mr. Justice Gu.vy regrets that official engagements put it out of his power to accept tlie courteous invitation of tlie Essex Institute to attend tlie fiftietli anniversary of its founding on the second of March next. Dear Sir : — I am obliged for the very kind invitation to tlieflftietli anniversary of the Essex Institute March 2d, but I have an engage- ment for that day that will prevent my acceptance. Yours truly. Arthur T. Lyman. Fku'y 11, 1808. Tufts Coli,p:ge, Mass., Feby. 11. Dear Mh. Brooks : — I now expect to attend the exercises in cele- bration of the semi-centennial of the Essex Institute on March 2, Thanking you for the courtesy of the invitation I am Yours truly J. S. KiNGSLEY. Dear Sir: — I am in receipt of your kind invitation to be present at the fiftieth anniversarj' of the founding of the Essex Institute. It would give me great pleasure to attend but the increasing infirm- ities of age compel me to decline. With my best wishes that the second half-century of your society may be as prosperous as the last, I remain, Yours sincerely, William Endicott. Beverly, Feb'y 11, 1898. Tufts College, February' 11, 1898. An engagement to be at Cornell University on the 1st of March will prevent me, very much to my regret, from joining you in the celebra- ESSEX INST, bulletin, VOL. XXX 4* 58 BULLETIN OF THE ESSEX INSTITUTE. tion of the fiftieth anniversary of the Essex Institute. The high character of the work it has done deserves commendation. Very truly yours, E. H. Capen. Dr. Richard H. Dkrby has the honor of accepting the polite invi- tation of the Essex Institute for March 2d, 1898. New York, 9 West 35th St., Feb. 12, 1898. Amos P. Tapley & Co. Boston, Feb. 12, 1898. Henry M. Brooks, Esq., Secretary. Dear Sir : — Your favor regarding the celebration of the fiftieth anniversary is at hand; will you kindly favor me with everything in the way of tickets or documents to which I am entitled, as I certainly expect to use the same. Yours truly, Henry F. Tapley. Feb. 12, '98. 13 Appian Way Cambuidgk, Mass. I should be glad to be present on March 2d, at the celebration of the fiftieth anniversary of the Essex Institute which society has done so much for the increase of knowledge and interest in Natural History in this state and done that so well too, but my regular school duties will not allow it. With many thanks for your polite invitation. Truly yours, Joshua Kendall. To Henry M. Brooks, Sec'v. THE FIRST HALF CENTURY OF THE INSTITUTE. 59 Melrosk, Mass., FicB. 13, 1898. Dkak Henuy : — Many thanks for the card of invitation to the Hftieth anniversary of the good old Institute. Be assured that, unless prevented by some imperative professional duty, I shall attend. Sincerely yours, Edwin C. Bolles. 9 Massachusetts Avenue. Mrs. Clement Waters accepts her invitation to attend the anni- versary of the founding of the Essex Institute, on March second, with pleasure, and appreciates the courtesy thus shown her, and is much interested in the occasion. February 13, 1898. Columbia University In the City of Nkw York. Presidknt's Room, Feb. 14, 1898. My dear Mr. Rantoul : — I wish it were possible for me to attend the semi-centennial of the Essex Institute on the 2nd of next mouth. Unfortunately, my duties are such as to make it seem improbable that I shall be able to be aAvay from New York at that time. Thanking you for your cordial tender of hospitality, I am, with kind regards. Yours sincerely, Skth Low. Hon. Robert S. Rantoul, Essex Instituie, Salem, Mass. The Presidknt and Librarian of Bradford Academy accept with pleasure the kind invitation of the Essex Institute for March second. With sincerest congratulations to the Institute upon its approach- ing anniversary. Very cordially, Helen L. Cram. Bradford Academy (Librarian). February fifteenth. 60 BULLETIN OF THE ESSEX INSTITUTE. Boston, Tremont Building. Feb. 15, 1898. Henry M. Brooks, Esq. Secretary, Essex Institute. My dear Sir : — It gives to Mr. Bingham, the librarian of the Man- chester Library, and myself much pleasure to accept the kind invita- tion of the Essex Institute to be present at its fiftieth anniversary exercises on March second. With thanks from us both for the courtesy, Very truly yours, Roland C. Lincoln, Chairman of Trustees of Manchester, Mass., Public Library. Florence, Feb. 15th, 1898. Honorable R. S. Rantoul, President of the Essex Institute, Salem, Dear Sir, I am glad to know that the Essex Institute is to have a celebration of its 50th year. Salem is the Mecca of the West. No town has such a varied interest. No county has produced such men. The Past is as needful to man as the Future. The Past refines. We go to Europe to see it. The West comes here. Lying back on its fortunes & its history it reproduces Europe in America. Its repose, out of the vortex of materialism & recency which devours & sterilizes the country, gives it Avhat Emerson called security of maimers & tastes invaluable to a new land. Where all Is money let us hnve some mind & memory & associations. Violently new as is the interior let us show on the seacoast what we do, what Ave have done with our opportunities. The Avorld comes here, & will for endless time where Hawthorne & the men who made Essex County lived. It is a fortune to the town. It is an education to America. I am with great respect, your friend, Edward A. Silsbee. Boston Public Library, Librarian's Office, Feb'y 15, 1898. Mr. Herbert Putnam, Librarian of the Boston Public Library, begs to congratulate the Essex Institute on the achievement of its fiftieth THE FIRST HALF CENTURY OF THE INSTITUTE, Gl anniversary, and reting commemoration on the 2d of March. The Essex Institute has had a successful half century of work and service, and I wish it prosper- ity for the time to come. Truly yours, Samuel Hart. Cambhidgk. Feb. 26, 1898. President of the Essex Institute : Dear Sir : — Your personal invitation to be present at the celebra- tion of the fiftieth anniversary of the founding of the Essex Insti- tute and to take part in the speaking has just reached me. I had previously received a general invitation from the Secretary, but had not replied, in the hope that I might be able to arrange my engage- ments so that I could accept. I regret exceedingly that urgent business matters will not allow nie to be absent from Boston on the second of March. Although it is now over twenty years since I moved away from Salem, I have not forgotten the seven years that I lived in that city. 72 BULLETIN OF THE ESSEX INSTITUTE. partly under the hospitable shelter of the Essex Institute and partly under that of its sister institution, the Peabody Academy. It would have been a real pleasure to me to take part in a celebra- tion in honor of an institution to which I have been so deeply in- debted for sympathy and encouragement at a time in my life when these were most needed. Your institution and personal association with Dr. Wheatland helped me and others to encounter the difficulties that beset the teaching and investigation of science. You have set before us as well as the community at large brilliant examples of unselfish devotion to the highest purposes, that have had predominant influence for good, not only upon the institutions with which we have been connected, but upon all similar undertakings throughout this country. The Essex Institute can consequently not only congratulate its members upon the record of the past fifty years, but most confidently look forward to the future in the hope that, with larger means and greater opportunity, it may make the history of the next fifty years even fuller and richer than that of the last half-century of its existence. Thanking you for the honor conferred by your invitation and again expressing my sincere regret that I shall not be able to give personal and fuller evidence of my obligations and interest in the work of the Institute, I remain Very respectfully yours, Alpheus Hyatt. Massachusetts Senate, President's Room, State House, Boston, Feb. 26, 1898. Mk. Henry M. Brooks, Secretary Essex Institute, Salem, Mass. Dear Sir : — I thank you for the ticket of admission to your exer- cises in commemoration of the founding of the Essex Institute at Salem on March 2, 1898. I should be very nmch pleased to attend, but the Senate will be in Session at that time and there is consider- able business in prospect for next week and, therefore, I think I shall have to decline your kind invitation. Yours truly, George E. Smith, THK FIRST HALF CENTUKV OF THE INSTITUTE. 73 SwAMi'SCOTT, Mass. Feu. 27, 1898. Henky M. Brooks, Sec'y. Dear Sik : — I regret that other imporiaut engagements will pre- vent uiy being present at the fiftieth anniversary exercises of the Essex Institute. Trusting the occasion will be a memorable one, I am very truly yours, Elihu Thomson. Worcester Polytechnic Instituie, Office of the President, Worcester, Mass., Feb. 27, 1898. Mr. Henry M. Brooks, Secretary Essex Institute, Salem, Mass. Dear Mr. Brooks : — I regret very much that another engagement will prevent my accepting your kind invitation to join in celebrating the fiftieth anniversary of the founding of the Essex Institute, on Wednesday next. Thanking you very much for your courtesy in sending it, I am Yours faithfully, T. C. Mendenhall. Lynn, Feb. 28, 1898. Henry M. Brooks, Esq., Secretary, The Essex Institute, Salem, Mass. Dear Sir : — In reply to your kind invitation to be present at the fiftieth anniversary celebration of the Essex Institute, permit me to say that it would have aftbrded me great pleasure to be present, but I regret exceedingly that unavoidable circumstances have arisen which will prevent my attendance. With sincere thanks, I remain Respectfully yours, C. A. Ahearne, M.D., President Essex South District Medical Society. ESSEX INST, bulletin, VOL. XXX 5* 74 BULLETIN OF TIIK ESSEX INSTITUTE:. Public Library, RocKPORT, Mass., Fkb'y 28, 1898. Hknuy M. Brooks, Esq., Skcretary. My dear Sir : — I beg to acknowledge, with thanks, your polite in- vitation for the librarian and myself to be present at the celebration of your fiftieth anniversary on March 2cl, and regret to say that neither of us will be able to be present. Trusting you may have the abundant success that your Institute so much deserves, I am Very truly youi's, J. LoRiNG WooDFALL, Pres't Trustees. Boston and Maine Railroad, President's Office, Boston, February 28, 1898. Mr. Henry M. Brooks, Essex Institute, Salem, Mass. Dear Sir : — I thank you for your invitation to be present at the fiftieth anniversary of the founding of the Essex Institute, on the 2d prox., but regret that an important engagement will keep me in Boston that day and will prevent me from being present. Yours truly, Lucius Tuttle, President. New England Magazine. Boston, Mass , Hon. Robert S. Rantoul, Pkes't. &c. Feb. 28, 1898. Dear Sir : — I am sincerely sorry that the pressure of many duties will prevent my being present at your interesting meeting on Wednes- day. It would give me great pleasure to be present at your celebra- tion. The Essex Institute has done a unique and splendid service in historical scholarship and study in Massachusetts, and we are all your debtors. Yours truly, Edwin D. Mead. THE FIUST HALF CENTUUV Ol" THK INSTITUTE. 75 TopsFiKt.D Historical Socikty, TOPSFIELD, Mass., Fkb. 28th, 1898. Hknry M. Brooks, Ksq., Sec'y. Di:ak Sir : — Thanks for your kind invitation to attend the semi- centennial of the foundinnr of tlie Essex Institute. I ver}' niucli regret my inability to be present on the interesting occasion. Wishing every success to tlie meeting, I am Yours, very truly, Justin Allkn, Pres't Topsfield Hist. Soc'y. Feb. 28, '98. Am very sorry that I cannot be present. Augustus Hemenway. City of Newbury'pokt, Office of City Clerk. March 1st, 1898. Mr. Henry M. Brooks, Secy. Salem, Mass. Dear Sir : — It is -with regret that I am obliged to return the en- closed ticket, but at this time my official duties are such that I am obliged to take this course. Thanking you for the courtesy extended I am, Very rsp'y yours, Geokgk H. Plumer, Mayor. No. Andover, March 1, 1898. Mr. Moses T. Stevens accepts with pleasure the invitation of the Essex Institute to attend the celebration of their fiftieth anniversary on March 2, 1898. 76 BULLETIN OF THE ESSEX INSTITUTE. Amhkrs r College Library, W. I. Fletciiek, Librarian. Amherst, Mass., Mar. 1, 1898. H. M. Brooks, Esq., Secretary Essex Institute. Dear Sir : — According to your request I return the enclosed card. Up to to-day I liave hoped to use it myself, but am now obliged to give up the pleasure of being with you to-morrow. Very truly yours, W. I. Fletcher. Cambridge, March 1, 1898. Dear Mr. Rantoul, It is a source of regret to me that I am prevented by other engagements from being present at to-morrow's celebration in Salem. I always feel a real aflection for the home of my ancestors and for the institution which has so well preserved the history of past centuries. Cordially youi-s, Thomas Wentworth Higgisson. 63 Mt. Vernon Street, Boston. March 1, 1898. The President of the Historic-Genealogical Society is unable, owing to illness, to visit the Essex Institute on the celebration of its fiftieth anniversary, much to his regret. Representatives of the Society will be present. The President congratulates the Society upon its success and use- fulness to the community. Salem, March 2, 1898. Dear Mr. Rantoul : — I had hoped until a few days that I should be able to attend the exercises of the'fiftieth anniversary of the found- THE FIRST HALF CENTURY OF THE INSTITUTE. 77 ing of the Essex Institute, but I find the state of my health will not permit me to be present, which I deeply regret. Hoping that the occasion will be enjoyed by all who take part, I am Sincerely yours, Henry M. Brooks, Secretary Essex Institute. To Hon. Robert S. Rantoul. Providence, R. I. IM.\rch 3, '98. My hear Mr. Brooks : I am very much mortified to find that the 2d of March has passed, and your kind invitation to attend the celebra- tion of the fiftieth anniA'ersary of the Essex Institute not answered. I hoped to be able to attend, and meant to write yon to that effect, but your invitation came while I was unwell, and finally got overlooked. I have the warmest attachment to the Institute, and remember with gratitude all it has done for me, and wish it every prosperity and success. Yours sincerely, A. S. Packard. Henry M. Brooks, Sec'y. Williams College, WiLLIAMSTOWN, Mass., March 14, 1898. My dear Sir : — Only yesterday I noticed on the ticket which you so kindly sent me for your commemoration the request to return the ticket if I could not use it. I regarded it as a great compliment that you sent me such a ticket but found it impossible to attend your exer- cises. Will you please accept my most humble apology for having failed to acknowledge so marked a courtesy, and especially for neglecting to return the ticket. Very respectfully yours, Franklin Carter. To H. M. Brooks, Sec'y, &c. LIST OF THE PRESENT MEMBERS OF THE ESSEX INSTITUTE. Tlie ntimee of life members are marked thus ' NAME. Abbot, Edwin H., Abbot, Dr. Francis E., Abbot, Walter L., Abbott, Joseph C, Abbott, Nathaniel, Adam, William L., Albree, Edward C, Albree, John, jr., Allen, Charles F., Allen, Miss Elizabeth C, Allen, George H., Allen, George L., Almy, James F., Almy, Mrs. James F., Anderson, John M., Andrews, Clement W., Andrews, William P., Annable, E. Augustus, Appleton, Daniel, Appleton, Francis H., Appleton, William S., jr.. Archer, Miss Rebecca, Arey, Reuben, Arey, William R., (78) RESIDENCE. Cambridge, Mass. Salem, Mass. Pittsfield, Mass. Swampscott, Mass. Salem, Mass. Boston, Mass. Salem, Mass. it it Marbleliead, Mass. Boston, Mass. Salem, Mass. DATE OF ELECTION. Aug. 17, 1896. Dec. 2, 1894. May 7, 1894. June 4, 1894. Jan. 16, 1888. Aug. 3, 1896. March 21, 1898. Feb. 21, 1898. June 18, 1894. July 2, 1894. Jan. 16, 1888. July 2, 1894. July 6, 1864. March 19, 1894. May 6, 1895. June 3, 1895. July 22, 1870. Aug. 6, 1894. May 6, 1895. Aug. 10, 1870. Aug. 17, 1896. July 7, 1879. Dec. 16, 1867. March 21, 1898. LIST OF PRESENT MEMIJER8, 79 NAME. Arrington, Philip P. P., Arvedson, George, Ashton, Joseph N., Austin, Arthur S., Averill, Arthur L., Averill, James W., Averille, Arthur A., Aylward, George A., Bachelder, Nathan A., Baker, Henry A., Balcorab, James W., Bancroft, Kobert H., Barker, Benjamin, Barker, William G., Barnes, Mrs. Carrie E., Barnes, Mrs. Clara L., Barrett, Henry H., Bartlett, Albert L., Bartol, Miss Elizabeth H. Batchelder, Miss Alice S., Batchelder, George E., Batchelder, Henry M., Battis, Edward C, Battis, Mrs. Marie A., Beanian, Cliarles C. Beckwith, Walter P., Bell, John H., BeU, Rev. S. Linton, Bennett, Josiah C, Benson, Arthur F., Benson, Frank W., Berry, Francis T., Bigelow, AValter K., Billings, Robert C, Bixby, Henry 'SI., Bixby, S. Arthur, Blaisdell, Dr. George W., Blake, ]\Irs. S. Parkman, Blake, Mrs. Sarah P. L., Blaney, Dwight, Blaney, Mrs. Edith H., Blodgette, George B., Boardman, T. Dennie, RESIDENCE. Salem, Mass. Boston, Mass. Salem, Mass. Salem, Mass. Montville, Ct. Salem, Mass. Boston, Mass. Salem, Mass. Methuen, Mass. Brookline, Mass. Maiden, Mass. Haverhill, Mass. Manchester, Mass. Salem, Mass. Amesbury, Mass. Salem, Mass. New York City. Salem, Mass. Marblehead, Mass. Lynn, Mass. Salem, Mass. Jamaica Plain, Mass. Salem, Mass. Manchester, Mass. Boston, Mass. Rowley, Mass. Boston, Mass. DATE OK El.KCTlON. Feb. 21, 1898. Feb. 21, 1898. Aug. 17, 189t). Sept. 17, 1894. June 1, 1896. Dec. 23, 1807. Aug, C, 1894. Feb. 18, 1895. April 16, 1894. May 6, 1895. Sept. 18, 1893. Sept. 4, 1894. June 18, 1895. April 30, 1894. Feb. 21, 1898. Sept. 17, 1894. Nov. 2, 1896. July 20, 1896. Aug. 5, 1895. May 20, 1895. Aug. 10, 1894. April 7, 1879. Nov. 2, 1885. Feb. 21, 1898. Feb. 18, 1895. Oct. 19, 1896. July 2, 1894. Aug. 6, 1894. June 4, 1894. Dec. 21, 1891. May 7, 1894. July 1(), 1894. April 5, 1869. July 15, 1895. May 7, 1894. June 18, 1894. Feb. 17, 1896. Aug. 5, 1895. Feb. 18, 1895. June 4, 1890. Oct. 1, 1894. July 2, 1894. Aug. 5, 181)5. so BULLETIN OF THE ESSEX INSTITUTE. NAME. Bond, Henry R., Bosson, Mrs. Jennie H., Bowditch, Miss Charlotte, Bowditch, Charles P., Bowditch, Dr. Henry P., Bowditch, William I., Bowditch, Dr. Vincent Y., Bowdoin, Mrs. Lncy H., Bowker, Charles, Bowker, George, Boyd, Ernest, Braden, Mrs. James, Bradlee, Mrs. Josiali, Breed, Amos F., Bridgman, Lewis J., Briggs, Miss Mary E., Brigham, Clifford, Brodie, Rev. James F., BroolATE OF ELECTION. Salem, Mass. Sept. 16, 1857. June 4, 1894. Lynnfield Center, Mass. Feb. 4, 1895. Cambridge, Mass. Salem, Mass. Lynn, Mass. Salem, Mass. Boston, Mass. New York City. Salem, Mass. Boston, Mass. Salem, Mass. Newburyport, Mass. Salem, Mass. Newburyport, Mass. Wenham, Mass. Boston, Mass. Topsfleld, Mass. Salem, Mass. Chicago, 111. Cambridge, Mass. Boston, Mass. Dauvers. Mass. Salem, Mass. Boston, Mass. Salem, Mass. Aug. 20, 1894. June 18, 1895. Oct. 19, 1896. Sept. 4, 1894. Feb. 1, 1897. May 3, 1880. Aug. 20, 1894. Jan. 7, 1895. June 4, 1894. May 7, 1894. July 2, 1894. Feb. 15, 1897. Sept. 16. 1895. Sept. 17, 1894. March 20, 1893. Sept. 16, 1895. Feb. 21, 1898. July 2, 1894. Nov. 14, 1866. March 16, 1896. Aug. 20, 1894. April 1, 1895. Aug. 15, 1892. Nov. 5, 1894. Aug. 20, 1894. May 6, 1895. July 1, 1895. Sept. 16, 1895. March 5, 1888. Oct. 19, 1896. Jan. 13, 1868. Nov. 19, 1894. Aug. 19, 1895. *Eaton, John D., *Edes, Henry H., Edwards, Henry W., Emerton, Prof. Ephraim, Emilio, Luis F., Salem, Mass. Cambridge, Mass. Salem, Mass. Cambridge, Mass. New York City. Emmerton, Miss Caroline O., Salem, Mass. July 22, 1876. March 17, 1886. Aug. 26, 1885. Nov. 5, 1894. Oct. 15, 1894. March 19, 1894. 84 BULLETIN OF THE ESSEX INSTITUTE. NAME. Emmerton, Charles S., Emmerton, E. Augustus, Emmerton, Frederick A., Emmerton, Mrs. Jennie M., Endicott, Henry, Endicott, Mrs. Louise, Endicott, William, jr., Endicott, William C, Endicott, William C, jr., Endicott, William, 3d, Entwisle, J. Clifford, Evans, Forrest L., Everett, Mrs. Katherine, RESIDENCE. West Peabody, Mass. Salem, Mass. Cleveland, O. Salem, Mass. Boston, Mass. Danvers, Mass. Boston, Mass. Danvers, Mass. Danvers, Mass. Boston, Mass. Salem, Mass. Washington, D. C. DATE OF ELECTION. Feb. 7, 1898. Jan. 16, 1888. June 1, 1896. March 19, 1894. Sept. 16, 1895. Oct. 1, 1894. Sept. 4, 1894. May 31, 1854. Oct. 1, 1894. April 1, 1895. March 6, 1893. Aug. 6, 1894. Feb. 4, 1895. Fabens, B. Louis, Fabens, Frank P. , Fabens, Mrs. William C, Fanning, James, Farley, Charles B., Farnhani, Rev. Edwin P., Farnham, Frank E., Farnham, Mrs. Stephen H., Farrell, Hugh F. E., Farrington, Mrs. Susan B., Felt, John P., Fettyplace, Miss Sarah B., Fifleld, Charles H., Files, Miss Lucy W., Fiske, John, Fitz, Andrew, Flagg, Augustus, Fleming, Charles H., ♦Fletcher, Horace, Fogg, Francis A., Foote, Arthur, Forness, Arthur A., Foster, Charles H. W., Foster, James M., Foster, John M., Fowler, Harriet P., Fox, Charles W., Frankle, Jones, Franks, Rev. James P., Salem, Mass. Marblehead, Mass. Salem, Mass. Peabody, Mass. Salem, Mass. Peabody, Mass. Brooklyn, N. Y. Salem, Mass. Cambridge, Mass. Salem, Mass. Boston, Mass. Manchester, Mass. New Orleans, La. New York City. Boston, Mass. Beverly, Mass. Brookline, Mass. Salem, Mass. Danvers, Mass. Philadelphia, Pa. Haverhill, Mass. Salem, Mass. Oct. 15, 1894. June 4, 1894. Sept. 17, 1894. Feb. 1, 1897. Sept. 4, 1894. July 3, 1893. Feb. 4, 1895. March 4, 1895. Oct. 18, 1897. March 21, 1892. July 16, 1894. June 18, 1894. June 18, 1894. May 15, 1893. Aug. 20, 1894. March 19, 1894. Aug. 5, 1895. Oct. 19, 1896. Oct. 16, 1894. Aug. 20, 1894. Aug. 20, 1894. April 30, 1894. April 6, 1896. April 1, 1895. April 1, 1895. Feb. 18, 1889. April 1, 1895. May 6, 1895. Nov. 17, 1873. LIST OF PRESENT MEMBERS. 85 NAMK. Frost, Miss Mary F., Fuller, George W., Fuller, Henry O., Fuller, Mrs. Lucy I)., Funiess, George A., *Galloupe, Charles W., Gallup, Z. Augustus, Giirdner, Mrs. Daniel B., Gardner, Dr. Frank A., ♦Gardner, Mrs. Isabellas., Gardner, John L., Gaston, Mrs. Louisa B., Gauss, John D. H., Gavet, Louis F., Geary, John E., George, Edward B., Gifford, Josiah H., Giftbrd, Nathan P., Gilbert, Mrs. Clara L., Gilbert, Shepard D., Gillis, James A., Glover, Miss Grace A., Godden, Miss Mary E., GoldthAvaite, Mrs. Eliza H., Gooch, Frank A., *Goodell, Abuer C. Goodell, Zina, Goodhue, Mrs. Albert P., Goodhue, George C, Goodhue, Mrs. George C, Goodhue, Miss Margaret, Goodhue, Samuel V., Gove, William H., Grant, Miss Beatrice, Grant, George W. , Gray, John C, Gray, Reginald. Greenlaw, Mrs. Lucy H., Greenlaw, William P., Greenough, Mrs. Charles E. * Gregory, James J. H., Groves, Mrs. Henry B., RESIDENCE. Salem, Mass. Boston, Mass. Salem, Mass. Swampscott, Mass. Salem, Mass. Boston, Mass. Salem, Mass. Haverhill, Mass. Salem, Mass. Winchendon, Mass. Salem, Mass. Peabody, Mass. Salem, Mass. New Haven, Ct. Salem, Mass. Salem, Mass. Boston, Mass. Cambridgeport, Mass, Beverly, Mass. Marblehead, Mass. Salem, Mass. I>ATK OF ELE( TION. June 4, 1894. July ir,, 1894. July 16, 1894. Jan. 7, 1895. June 18, 1894. Dec. 2, 1894. Sept. 18, 1893. March 21, 1808. Feb. 18, 1898. Aug. 22, 1895. Sept. 4, 1894. Oct. 18, 1897. Aug. 6, 1889. May 7, 1894. July 5, 1887. Jan. 17, 1898. Feb. 21, 1898. Feb. 7, 1898. Feb. 21, 1898. April 30, 1894. Jan. 4, 1854. Feb. 6, 1888. Feb. Ifi, 1891. Feb. 21, 1898. March 18, 1895. Nov. 18, 1857. April 30, 1894. March 21, 1898. July 16, 1894. March 21, 1S98. July 2, 1894. April 16, 1894. Sept. 5, 1882. Aug. 20, 1894. April 80, 1894. Jan. 21, 1895. Feb. 18, 1895. Dec. 16, 1895. May 4, 1896. Feb. 18, 1895. Sept. 4, 1868. July 18, 1887. 86 BULLETIN OF THE ESSEX INSTITUTE. NAME. Haddock, Dr. Charles W., Hale, Henry A., Hale, Mrs. Henry A., Hale, Miss Mary S., Hale, Willard J., Harlow, Arthur F., Harrington, Francis, Harrington, Henry, Hari-ington, Mrs. Henry, Harrington, Richard, Harris, George M., Harris, George R., Harris, Howard P., Hart, John W. , Harwood, Herbert J., Haskell, Mark H., Haskins, Leander M., Havemeyer, William F., Hawkes, Nathan M., Hayden, Mrs. Harriet P., Hayden, Dr. William R., Hay ward, William P., ♦Hemenway, Augustus, Henderson, Daniel, Henderson, Joseph, Higginson, Miss Annie S., Higginson, Francis L., ♦Higginson, James J., Hill, B. Frank, Hill, Rev. James L. , Hill, WilUam M., Hines, Ezra D., Hitchiugs, A. Frank, Hodgdon, Samuel. Hodges, Miss Mary O., Hoffman, Mrs. Eliza A., Holmes, Oliver W., Hood, Martin H., Horner, Mrs. Charlotte N. S. Horton, William A., How, George C, Howe, Joseph S., Hubon, William P., RESIDENCE. DATE OK ELECTION. Beverly, Mass. March 5, 1883. Salem, Mass. Feb. 2, 1891. " Feb. 21, 1898. June 18. 1894. Newburyport, Mass. Feb. 7, 1898. Salem, Mass. Oct. 5, 1896. Boston, Mass. Nov. 18, 1857. Salem, Mass. Jan. 16, 1888. Jan. 16, 1888. July 16, 1894. Aug. 4, 1879. Brookline, Mass. Nov. 9, 1870. Salem, Mass. July 2, 1894. April 30, 1894. Littleton, Mass. March 4, 1895. Salem, Mass. March 4, 1895. Boston, Mass. Dec. 16, 1895. New York City. Sept. 16, 1895. Lynn, Mass. April 30, 1894. New York City. April 15, 1895. Bedford Springs, Mass. Sept. 3, 1895. Salem, Mass. Sept. 6, 1854. Boston, Mass. Aug. 6, 1894. Salem, Mass. May 8, 1867. July 15, 1895. Magnolia, Mass. Feb. 3, 1896. Boston, Mass. Aug. 20. 1894. New York City. Sept. 17, 1894. Salem, Mass. Feb. 4, 1895. July 2, 1894. Aug. 20, 1894. Danvers, Mass. June 4, 1874. Salem, Mass. April 2, 1894. Everett, Mass. April 6, 1896. Topsfield. Mass. Dec. 19, 1870. Salem, Mass. Jan. 21, 1889. Boston, Mass. Oct. 1, 1894. Lynn, Mass. Sept. 3, 1895. Georgetown, Mass. March 18, 1895. Salem, Mass. Oct. 27, 1893. Haverhill, Mass. May 6, 1895. Methuen, Mass. Aug. 20, 1894. Salem, Mass. March 15, 1897. LIST OF PRESENT MEMBERS. 87 NAMK. Huiinewdl, James F., Hunt, Miss Sarah E., Huntington, ArtliurL., Huntington, Miss S. Louisa, Hussey, William G., Hutchinson, John I., Hyde, William L., Jelly, Dr. George F., Jelly, William H., Jelly, William M., Jenks, Kev. Henry F., Jenkins, Lawrence W., Jewett, Daniel L., Jewett, George R., Johnson, E. Walter, Johnson, Enoch S., Johnson, Henry D., Johnson, Mrs. Mary C, Johnson, Samuel, Johnson, Thomas H., Jones, Gardner M., Jones, Mrs. Gardner M., Jordan, Cyrus A., KKSIDENCE. Charlestown, Mass. Salem, Mass. Boston, Mass. Salem, Mass. Canton, Mass. Boston, Mass. Salem, Mass. Boston, Mass. Lynn, Mass. Salem, Mass. Boston, Mass. Salem, Mass. DATE OF ELKCTION. Aug. 1!), 1895. May 1, 1865. April 19, 1875. Dec. 19, 1881. Aug. 20, 1894. Feb. 1, 1897. March 19, 1891 Jan. 6, 1890. July 6, 1864. July 16, 1894, Nov. 16,1891. Dec. 2, 1895. Sept. 17, 1894. June 4, 1874. March 4, 1895. Feb. 18, 1895. May 21, 1894. Feb. 21, 1898. Dec. 2, 1894. Jan. 3, 1876. April 8, 1889. Feb. 21, 1898. Apr. 16, 1894. Kemble, Dr. Arthur, Kemble, Laurence G., Kemble, H. Parker, Kimball, David P., Kimball, Miss Elizabeth C, Kimball, Frank R., Kimball, Mrs. Harriet K., Kimball, Miss Hattie L., Kimball, Mrs. Sarah A., Kimball, Miss Sarah S., King, Miss Annie F., King, Miss Caroline H., King, D. Webster, King, Miss Harriet M., King, Mrs. Sarah G., King, Miss Susan G., King, Warren D., Kinsman, Mrs. S. Augusta, Salem, Mass. Boston, Mass. Boston, Mass. Peabody, Mass. Salem, Mass. Methuen, Mass. Salem, Mass. Boston, Mass. Salem, Mass. New York City. Salem, Mass. Peabody, Mass. Salem, Mass. Jan. 13. 1864. Sept. 17. 1894. April 21, 1896. Oct. 1, 1894. May 6, 1895. April 16, 1894. June 20, 1882. June 20, 1882. July 16, 1889. Nov. 16, 189U June 21, 1897. May 4, 1896. April 15, 1895.. July 27, 1898. April 1, 1895. May 4, 1896. Feb. 21, 1898. April 30, 18d4. BULLETIN OF THE ESSEX INSTITUTE. NAME. Kittredge, Dr. Thomas, Knight, Edward H., *Lamson, Frederick, Lander, Miss Helen D., Lane, Edward, Lane, George W., Lang, Benjamin J., Langmaid, John H., Latimer, Rev. George D., *Lawrence, AmoryA., Lawrence, Samuel C, Leach, Henry C, Leach, J. Granville, Leavitt, James A., Lee, Francis H., Lee, Mrs. Francis H., Lee, George C, Lee, Miss Harriet R., Lemon, William H., Leonard, William, Liebert, Miss Katherine S. Lincoln, Solomon, Little, Arthur, Little, Mrs. Clara B., Little, David M., Little, James L., Little, John M., Locke, Frank E., Lord, Miss Mary II., Lord, George E., Lord, George R., Loring, Augustus P., Loud, George B., Low, David W., Low, Dr. Harry C, Low, Seth, Low, S. Fred, Lowell, Francis C, Lowell, Miss Georgina, Lyman, Miss Florence, McCusker, Patrick J., Machado, Ernest M. A., RESIDENCE. Salem, Mass. Salem, Mass. Boston, Mass. Salem, Mass. Boston, Mass. Medford, Mass. Salem, Mass. Philadelphia, Pa. Salem, Mass. Boston, Mass. Salem, Mass. Washington, D. C. Salem, Mass. Boston, Mass. Salem, Mass. Brookline, Mass. Boston, Mass. Salem, Mass. Boston, Mass. New York City. Gloucester, Mass. Salem, Mass. New York City. Salem, Mass. Boston, Mass. Salem, Mass. DATE OF ELECTION. April 16, 1894. March 6, 1865. Feb. 8, 1865. April 30, 1894. Jan. 6, 1896. March 19, 1894. Aug. 6, 1894. April 1, 1878. July 3, 1893. Sept, 16, 1895. April 1, 1895. April 16, 1894. Sept. 16, 1895. Jan. 15, 1894. Nov. 8, 1855. Jan. 17, 1876. Aug. 20, 1894. Nov. 19, 1894. April 15, 1895. Oct. 1, 1894. Feb. 4, 1895. Nov. 9, 1864. Nov. 5, 1894. June 8, 1886. June 8, 1886. Jan. 16, 1888. Dec. 21, 1891. Aug. 6, 1894. April 30, 1894. July 16, 1894. April 16, 1894. Sept. 4, 1894. Nov. 18, 1895. April 2, 1894. Feb. 2, 1891. June 4, 1894. June 4, 1894. Dec. 2, 1894. March 4, 1895. Feb. 4, 1895. Sept. 5, 1882. Feb. 15, 1892. . LIST OF PRESENT MEMBERS. 89 NAME. Mclntire, William S., Mack, Thomas F., Mackintire, E. Augustus, Mackintosh, Richards B., McMuUau, William P.. Macnair. John, Mahoney, Jeremiah T., Maloon, Kchvard A., Manchester, llev. Alfred, Mann, George S., Manning, Mrs. Louisa, Manning, Richard C, Manning, Robert, Manning, Richard H., Mansfield, Miss Harriet E., Mansfield, Miss Helen, Mansfield, Henry K., Matsuki, Bnnkio, Meek, Henry M.. Meriam, Dr. Horatio C, Merrill, Eugene H., Merrill, Henry W., Merrill, Samuel S., Merrill, W. Harvey, Merrill, William, Messervy, Mrs. Lucy J. , Meyer, George von L., Millea, Lawrence E., Miller, Henry F., Miller, Lewis F., AUllet, Edward L., Millett, Nathan H. , Millett, Mrs. Needham C, Mills, Mrs. Ellen L., Missud, Jean M., Monroe, Alexander, Moody, William H., Moore, David, Morse, Edward S., Morse, Henry W., Morse, John G., Morse, John T., jr., Morse, Mrs. Leopold, ESSEX INST. BULLETIN, KE.SIUENCE. Salem, Mass. Peabody, Mass. Salem, Mass. Lynn, Mass. Salem, Mass. Beverly, Mass. Salem, Mass. Brookline, Mass. Salem, Mass. Kansas City, Mo. Salem, Mass. Gloucester, Mass. Salem, Mass. West Newbury, Mass Salem, Mass. Boston, Mass. Salem, Mass. Boston, Mass. Salem, Mass. Beverly, Mass. Salem, Mass. Brooklyn, N. Y. Salem, Mass. Lawrence, Kan. Haverhill, Mass. Salem, Mass. Boston, Mass. VOL. XXX DATK OK ELECTION. Oct. 1, 1894. Aug. 6, 1889. April 3, 1882. Feb. 21, 1898. April 16, 1894. Feb. 4, 1895. June 4, 1874. J>b. 21, 1898. July 8, 1893. Jan. 7, 1895. May 5, 1879. March 2G, IS.'il. Feb. 21, 1898. Jan. 4, 1897. June 18, 1895. Feb. 18, 1895. June 4, 1894. July 2, 1894. April 16, 1883. Feb. 5, 1872. June 18, 1894. Jan. 4, 1892. April 30, 1894. Aug. 20, 1894. , July 16, 1894. Sept. 20, 1887. Dec. 3, 1894. Feb. 6, 1882. May 4, 1896. Dec. 20, 1875. June 4, 1894. Feb. 21, 1898. Feb. 4, 1895. March 4, 1895. June 20, 1882. Sept. 16, 1895. March 4, 1895. Feb. 22, 1854. Nov. 9, 1864. March 21, 1898. Feb. 2, 1891. March 18, 1895. Sept. 4, 1894. 90 BULLETIN or THE ESSEX INSTITUTE. NAME. Morse, Robert M., Moseley, Charles W., Moultou, John S., Moultoii, Henry P., Mudge, J)r. Kate G., Mullen, Thomas A., Mulligan, Bernard J., Munroe, AVillard E., Munroe, William F., RESIDENCE. DATE OF ELECTION^ Jamaica Plain, Mass. May 6, 1895. Newburyport, Mass. Aug. 19. 1895. Salem, Mass. / Boston, Mass. Salem, Mass. Peabody, Mass. Nov. 16, 1891. April 16, 1894. July 16. 1894. Dec. 7, 1896. June 4, 1894. March 21, 1898. Feb. 18, 1895. Neal, Peter M., Neal, William S., Nevius, Mrs. Mary E., Nevins, Winfield S., Newcomb, George, Newell, Francis A., Newell, Frank F., Newhall, Charles H., Newhall, Howard M., Nichols, Miss Abby F., Nichols, Mrs. James B. Nichols, William S., Niles, William H , Noble, Edward H., Norcross, Orlando W., Norris, Charles H., Northey, William, Nourse, John W., Lynn, Mass. Salem, Mass. Lynn, Mass. Salem, Mass. Lynn, Mass. Beverly, Mass. Worcester, Mass. Salem, Mass. (( (( Ipswich, Mass. May 6, 1895. April 30, 1894. Feb. 7, 1898. Oct. 5, 1877. Dec. 11, 1875. March 19, 1894. Feb. 21, 1898. Feb. 4, 1895. July 2, 1894. Feb. 21. 1898. July 2, 1894. May 7, 1894. Feb. 4, 1895. Feb. 21, 1898. Feb. 17, 1896. May 17, 1897. Nov. 5, 1866. May 21, 1894. O'Keefe, John A., Oliver, Mrs. Grace A., Oliver, Miss Grace L., Oliver, Miss Sarah E. C, Oliver, Mrs. Susan L., Orne, Joel S., Osborn, Franklin, Osborn, Lyman P., Osborne, Aaron, Osborne, Miss Elizabeth B., Osborne, Dr. George S., Osborne, Rev. Louis S., Osborne, Theodore M., Osgood, Alfred, Lynn, Mass. Salem, Mass. Boston, Mass. Cambridge, Mass. Peabody, Mass. Salem, Mass. Newark, N. J. Salem, Mass. Newburyport, Mass. July 5, 1887. Nov. 20, 1876. Jan. 7, 1895. Nov. 21, 1887. March 18, 1895. Nov. 18, 1895. Sept. 4, 1894. Feb. 17, 1896. Feb. 4, 1895. July 2. 1894. Sept. 4, 1894. Jan. 6, 1896. Oct. 21, 1879. Mays, 1869. LIST OF PRESENT MEMBERS. 91^ NAMK. Osgood, Joseph B. F., Osgood, Nathan C, Osgood, Robert, RESIDENCE. Salem, Mass. DATK OF ELECTION. March 6, 18ATK OK ELECTION. March 21, 1898. March 19, 1894. March 18, 1895. Feb. 18, 1895. Feb. 18, 1895. June 9, 1887. July 2, 1894. Nov. 5, 1894. May 7, 1894. Aug. Ifi, 1881. Sept. 17, 1894. April ;'.0, 1894. Dec. 3, 1894. Feb. 21, 1898. April 16, 1866. June 3, 1895. March 4, 1895. May 6, 1895. Aug. 20, 1894. Sept. 4, 1894. Jan. 31, 1855. May 4, 1896. June 19, 1893. Feb. 21, 1898. July 18, 1887. Nov. 16, 1891. July 2, 1894. Jan. 7, 1895. April 16, 1894. April 21, 1896. Jan. 6, 1896. July 16, 1894. April 15, 1895. July 16, 1894. Aug. 20, 1894. March 4, 1895. Jan. 9, 1857. Sept. 16, 1895. Aug. 20, 1894. March 18, 1895. Jan. 7, 1895. July 15, 1895. Jan. 16, 1888. 96 BULLETIN OF THE ESSEX INSTITUTE. NAME. Stickney, Miss Cornelia A. Stickney, George A. D., Stimpson, Thomas M., Stone, Arthur R., Stone, Owen B., Stone, Mrs. Richard, Storey, Moorfleld, Streeter, Gilbert L., Sutton, William, Swan, Dr. William D., Swasey, William H., Symonds, Ernest F., Symonds, Stillman G., Symonds, Walter E., RESIDENCE. Salem, Mass. Peabody, Mass. Salem, Mass. Boston, Mass. Brookline, Mass. Salem, Mass. Cambridge, Mass. Newburyport, Mass. Salem, Mass. Lynn, Mass. DATE OF ELECTION. July 1, 1895. July 16, 1894. Feb. 1, 1854. June 8, 1885. Jan. 16, 1888. March 17, 1896. May 6, 1895. July 18. 1849. March 21, 1898. Jan. 4, 1897. July 16, 1894. June 18, 1894. March 19, 1894. Feb. 18, 1895. Tapley, Henry F., Temple, Arthur S., Tenney, Miss Martha J., Thayer, Edward S., Thayer, J. Henry, Thayer, Oliver, Thompson, Elihu, Thorndike, John L., Thorndike, S. Lothrop, Tibbetts, Miss Emma A., Tierney. Patrick F., Tileston, Mrs. Mary W., Titus, Alonzo F., Todd, William C, Touret, Benjamin A., Towle, Rev. Edward D., Tracy, Miss Louise, Treat, John H., Trefry, William D. T., Trumbull, Edward B., Trumbull, Walter H., Tuck, Joseph D., Tucker, Richard D., Tuckerman, Charles S., Turner, James H., Turner, Ross, Tuttle, Charles H., Tyler, Loren S. , Lynn, Mass. Salem, Mass. Haverhill, Mass. Salem, Mass. Cambridge, Mass. Salem, Mass. Swampscott, Mass. Boston, Mass. Cambridge, Mass. Salem, Mass. Mattapan, Mass. Salem, Mass. Atkinson, N. H. Salem, Mass. Brookline, Mass. New Haven, Ct. Lawrence, Mass. Marblehead, Mass. Salem, Mass. Beverly, Mass. Salem, Mass. Feb. 4, 1895. May 7, 1894. July 16, 1894. April 3, 1865. June 18, 1895. Oct. 1, 1894. April 30, 1894. Feb. 17, 1896. Sept. 14, 1894. April 1, 1895. May 7, 1894. Dec. 17, 1894. Feb. 21, 1898. Dec. 17, 1894. April 30, 1894. Sept. 18. 1893. Oct. 18, 1897. Dec. 21, 1891. May 21, 1894. July 16, 1894. May 7, 1894. Dec. 18, 1861. July 2, 1894. April 30, 1894. May 7, 1894. Oct. 18, 1886. May 6, 1895. Oct. 5, 1896. LIST OF PRESENT MEMBERS. 97 NAME. Upham, William P., Upton, Mrs. Annie M. Upton, King, Vaughn, George C, Vaugiin, Ira, Very, George F., Very, Nathaniel A., Very, Nathaniel T., Vifkery, George A., RESIDENCE. Newtonville, Mass. Salem, Mass. Salem, Mass. DATE OF ELECTION. Jan. 22, 1863. May 20, 1895. May 7, 1894. Oct. 1, 1894. Dec. 16, 1895. Ang. 6, 1894. June 12, 1867. July 16, 1894. June 18, 1894. Waldo, Miss Phebe M., Walton, Eben N., Ward, Miss Elizabeth C, Ward, Frederick A., Ward, J. Langdon, Ward, Samuel G., Wardwell, Henry, Ward well, Linville H., Warner, Miss Annie L., Warner, Caleb H., Washburn, Calvin R., Washburn, Dr. George H. , Waters, David P., Waters, Edward S., Waters, Henry F. , Waters, Rev. T Frank, Waters, William C, jr., Webb, Arthur N., Webb, Dr. Benjaraiu, Wi'bb, Mrs. William G., "Webber, William G., Welch, Charles 0., Welch, William L., West, Arthur W., West, Miss Emma C, West, Miss Mary E., West, Mrs. William C, Westcott, Mrs. Stephen E., Weston, Mrs. Charles H., * Wet more, George P., Wheatland, Mrs. Ann Maria, Wheatland, Miss Elizabeth, Salem, Mass. Boston, Mass. Salem, Mass. New York City. Washington, D. C Salem, Mass. Beverly, Mass. Salem, Mass. Cambridge, Mass. Salem. Mass. Boston, Mass. Salem, Mass. Holyoke, Mass. London, Eng. Ipswich, Mas8. Salem, Mass. Boston, Mass. Salem, Mass. Newport. K. I. Salem, Mass. Jan. 15, 1893. Feb. 28, 1898. Nov. 8, 1897. April 30, 1894. April 30, 1894. March 4, 1895. April 30, 1894. April 30, 1894. March 21, 1898. Sept. 17, 1894. May 7, 1894. Feb. 17. 1896. May 23, 1868. Feb. 3, 1896 May 4, 1870. April 16, 1891. Jan. 16, 1893. .April 30, 1894. April 21, 1852. March 19, 1894. Oct. 18, 1886. July 3, 1893. July 5, 1887. Jan. 19, 1880. Jan 17, 1898. IMarch 2, 1874. July 16, 18^4. Nov. 18, 1K95. June 4. 1894. Oct. 15, 1894. Oct 4, 1886. March 15, 1869. ESSEX INST. BULLETIN, VOL. XXX 98 BULLETIN OF THE ESSEX INSTITUTE. NAME. Wheatland, George, jr., Wheatland, Richard, Whipple, Albert I., Whipple, Everett, * Whipple, George M., Whipple, Mrs. George M., Whipple, George N., Whipple, William H., White, Aldeu P., White, George M., White, McDonald E., Whitehead, Harry A., Whitehonse, Francis M., Whitney, Mrs. Mary W., Whitwell, Mrs. Mary C, Wilkins, S. Herbert, Williams, George W., Williams, John S., Williams, Tucker D., Willson, Miss Alice B., Willson, Miss Lucy B., Willson, Robert W., Wilson, Andrew J., Winchester, Frank, Wingate, Joseph C. A., Winn, John K., *Wiuthrop, Robert C, jr., Witliington, Lothrop, Wolcott, Roger, Woodbury, Charles J. H., Wooilbury, Chas. Levi, Woodbury, Mrs. David E., Woodbury, Dr. George E-, Woodbury, Mrs. Harriette E. Woodbury, James A., Woodbury, Johu, Woodbury, John P., Woodbury, Dr. Louis A., Wright, Carroll D., BESIDENCE. Salem, Mass. Boston, Mass. Salem, Mass. Chicago, 111., Lawrence, Mass. Boston, Mass. Salem, Mass. Cambridge, Mass. Salem, Mass. Peabody, Mass. Strathiim, N. H. Key West, Fla. Boston, Mass. Newburyport, Mass. Boston, Mass. Lynn, Mass. Boston, Mass. Gloucester, Mass. Methuen, Mass. Winchester, Mass. Lynn, Mass. Boston, Mass. Groveland, Mass. Washington, D. C. DATE OF ELECTION. Feb. 7, 1898. July 3, 1893. April 30, 1894. May 6, 1895. June 7, 1854. July 15, 1878. July 6, 1896. Nov. 14, 1856. March 17, 1884. Dec. 15, 1873. June 18, 1895. July 16, 1894. Jan. 6, 1896. Dec. 19, 1870. Nov. 19, 1894. Feb. 21, 1898. April 30. 1894. July 2, 1894. Nov. 19, 1894. April 6, 1896. Jan. 21, 1895. Aug. 20, 1894. July 16, 1894. April 15, 1895. Feb. 18, 1895. Jan. 6, 1896. Sept. 15, 1894. Nov. 18, 1895. Dec. 3, 1894. April 15, 1895. April 15, 1895. July 2, 1894. Aug. 6, 1894. March 21, 1898. Dec. 2, 1895. April 15, 1895. Dec. 1, 1890. Aug. 19, 1895. Jan. 21, 1895. Toung, Charles L., Boston, Mass. July 15, 1895. CORRESPONDING MEMBERS. Abbott, Henry Larcom, New York. AdaniH.IIerb't Baxter, Haiti more, Md. Agassiz, Alexander, Cauibiidge. Appletjn, William Sumuer, Boston. Babbidge, Charles, Pepperell. Battle, Rev. Kemp P.,Cliapel Hill,N.C. Bean, Tarletou H., Washington, D.C. Bell, Alexander Graham, Washington, D. C. Bourse, Peter. Geneva, N. Y. Brackett, C. F., Princeton, N. J. Brewer, W. H., New Haven, Conn. Brush, George J., New Haven, Conn. Caldwell, Samuel L., Prr.vidence,R.I. Cembrano, F. M., Manilla. Chever, Sarah Ann, Melrose. Chew, Samuel, Germantown, Pa. Clark, Thomas M., Providence, R. I. Collett, .John, Indianapolis, Ind. Coues, Elliott, Washington, D. C. Cox, E. T., New Harmony, Ind. Cresson, Ezra T., Philadelphia, Pa. Crowell, E. Payson, Amherst. Cummings, Jolin, jr., Woburn. Cutting, Hiram A., Lunenburg, Vt. Dall, Wni. H., Washington, D. C. Damon, Robert, Weymouth, Eng. Davis, Henry, IMcGregor, la. De Roax, William, Panama. Downs, Andrew, Dutch Village. Diaper, Lyman C, Ma.lison, Wis. Edwards, Arthur M., New York. Edwards, Richard. Fewkes, J. Walter, Boston. Gill, Theodore, Washington, D. C. Goodale, George L., Cambridge. Green, Samuel A., Boston. Griscom, John, New York. Guild, Reuben A., Providence, R. I. Hall, Elihu, Athens, 111. Hanaford, Jeremiah L., Watertown, Hart, Charles H., Philadelphia, Pa. Hickox, John H., Washington, D. C. Iligginson, Thomas Wentworth, Cambridge. Hoffman, W. J., Washington, D. C. Hollenbush, H. W., Reading, Pa. Holmes, Francis S., Charleston, S. C. Huntington, Geo. C, Kelley's Id., O. Hyatt, Alpheus, Cambridge. John8tone,Chrlstoph., Baltimore,MJ. Kellogg, A., San Francisco, Cal. KiDiy, Wm. H., Boston. Kilham, Rodney A., Temple, N. H. Kimball, James P., Washington, D. C. Kingman, Bradford, Bridgewater. Latour, L. A. H., Montreal, Can. Lea, Thomas G., Cincinnati, O. Levette, George M., Indianapolis, Ind. Lodge, Henry Cabot, Boston. Lovett, Thomas D., Maiden. Marsh, O. C, Now Haven, Conn. Marshall, George W., London, Kng. Minot, Charles Sedgwick, Boston. Newberry, J. S., New York. Niles, W. H., Cambridge. Norwood, J. G., Columbia, Mo. Oliver, .James Edward, Ithaca, N. Y. Ordway, Albert, Washington, D. C. Osten-Sacken, R., St. Petersburg, R. Packard, A. S., Providence, R. I. Perkins, Augustine T., Boston. Perkins, Charles P., Annapolis, Md. Pickering, Edward Charles, Cambridge. Playfair, Lyon, London, Eng. Poey, F., Havana, Cuba. (99) 100 CORRESPONDING MEMBERS. Porter, Edward Griffin, Lexington. Pumpelly, Raphael, Newport, R. I. Richardson, E. S.L., Chicago, 111. Rockwood, Otis, Lynn. Samuelson, James, Liverpool, Eng. Shaler, Natli'l S., Cambridge. Sloan, John, New Albany, lud. Smith, J. Challenor, London, Eng. Smith, S. I., New Haven, Conn. Soares, Jolm Da Costa, Mozanibi\ A commodore's salute was fired from the miniatnre ship which was borrowed for the occasion from the East India Marine Society. Mr. John Robinson then said that it was presented by Commodore Hull and that there was among the old bills of the Academy one for twelve dollars for repairs on the model of the Constitution about that date. It is presumed the model was injured by the salute. The bill read : East India Marine Society ) o i -m -r^ , -^ 1- 1 T3 . f Air C Salem, May Dr., to English Prisoners ot War ) 1814 To repairing &c &c the Constitution $12.00. Received payment for the above Prisoners. June. Thomas Webb. The Prison Ship then lay in the North river, off where the Universalist church now stands, then the site of the THE RETROSPECT OF THE YEAR. 123 sugar refinery of Mr. Brackley Rose. So the British prisoners of war repaired the damage and the model is still preserved at the Museum. The following letter is from the Museum files : Portsmouth 5th. August 1813 Sir. I have the honour to receive your letter of the 3cl instant, covering a vote of thanks passed by the Salem East India Marine Society at a meeting held by them on the 7th July last, for a. model of the Frigate Constitution which I had the pleasure of presenting them. I beg leave, Sir, through you to return my thanks to the Society for this mark of their attention and for their polite invitation to visit the museum, which I shall with pleasure do when a convenient oppor- tunity ofl'ers. I am With very great respect Sir, Your Obt. Servant, Isaac Hull William Lander Esqr. Secretary of the Salkm East India Marine Society. Monday Evening, Jan. 24, 1898.— Prof. T. C. Men- denhall of Worcester, a member of the Highway Com- mission, lectured in PlummerHallon the work being done by the Massachusetts Highway Commission. The Presi- dent called the meeting to order and spoke feelingly of the great loss the Institute had sustained in the recent death of Mr. Thomas F. Hunt, one of its most valued and active members. Mr. Rantoul presented the following resolutions, prefaced with these remarks : It is impossible to so on with the work of the Institute to-niijht without a thouo;ht of Mr. Hunt. This is the first meeting since his death. No one, not cognizant of the inner workings of this organization, has an idea of the extent to which his spirit permeated everything. Early and late, the In- stitute was close to his irreat heart. In his death we have 124 BULLETIN OF THE ESSEX INSTITUTE. suffered the most serious bereavement it was possible to sustain. Dr. Wheatlund's withdrawal is the only occur- rence in the past with v/hich this disastrous event can be compared. It seems fit that some expression should be made, however inadequate, of our share in a grief that is spontaneous, profound and universal. The light and life that have gone out of this community leave an especial shadow on the Essex Institute. I ask ^^ou to consider this resolve. Resolved: That the Essex Institute has no brighter page in her history than that just closed by the distress- ing loss of Thomas F. Hunt, and that the Board of Directors be and they are hereby requested to prepare for our records and to offer to the public, at a future day, some due memorial of a career so high, so honorable, and so distinguished. The President then asked those present if they would indicate their approval of the resolution by a rising vote. Every person in the large audience arose. Mr. Rantoul then introduced the speaker of the even- ing, Prof. T. C. Mendenhall, a member of the Massachu- setts Highway Commission, who told of the work being done in Massachusetts and showed the various stages of road building with lantern views. He traced the develop- ment of roads from the narrow foot path when pack ani- mals were used, and the wider path and rude bridges when the two- wheeled cart was invented, to the better roads required by the four-wheeled wagon carrying heavy freight. He spoke of the turnpikes owned by corpora- tions, when a fixed rate was charged for a given number of miles. It is only a few years since the toll gate about a mile from this city was abolished. With the introduc- tion of railroads, turnpikes fell into disuse and until a comparatively few years no effort was made to promote THE RETROSPECT OF THE YEAR. 125 good roads. The roads l)uilt hy the Uouiaiis about 2000 years ago, some of which are in good condition yet, were built with a rock bed many feet deep, the surface perfectly flat, with no idea of draiiiaijfc. Road niakei-s of our day build high in the center, sloping both ways to cany oft' the water. The speaker said the best roads of modern times ai-e those of France. They are well taken care of, the law requiring heavy wagons to have a six-inch tire and the hinder wheels running outside the track made by the forward wheels, so that a two foot strip of the road is rolled every time the wagon passes over it instead of being cut up by the narrow^ tires as is the case in our neighbor- hood. The Massachusetts highways are being constructed after the methods of Telford, an Englishman, and Mac- adam, a Scotchman, the former but little known, while macadamized roads are known everywhere. Telford used a substratum of broken stones of about four inches in di- ameter, while Macadam used only a two and a half inch diameter. A bed of six or eight inches of rock was laid after the ground had been prepared, then smaller stone with a layer almost like dust on top, which, when wet, cemented the whole into a compact body, l)eing rolled by a steam roller weighing some ten or twelve tons. $500,000 are being expended by the State each year and bonds issued in payment. The speaker said issuing bonds has been stigmatized as feloniously putting the hand into the pocket of posterit}"", but that the State is building these roads to last fifty years or more so that posterity will have something for its money. Monday Evening, Jan. 31, 1898. — The third lecture in the course was given this evening in Academy Hall by Miss Helen A. Brooks, a native of Salem, assisted by Miss Edith E. Torrey of the King's Chapel Choir, Boston. ESSEX INST. BULLETIN, VOL. XXX 9 126 BULLETIN OF THE ESSEX INSTITUTE. Her subject was English and French Dance Music. She regretted that there was no means by^ which she could give us a sample of the music played by Orpheus, Apollo and others that we read of in mythology. It was at a considerably later date that the art of printing music upon paper and parchment was invented. She said that there had been found in London upon the cover of an old law book, printed at a time when paper and parchment were scarce and costly, and they had evidently destroyed one book in making another, the music of some dance then in fashion, and this she played showing the difference be- tween the slow music of those days and the lively airs of the present time. About the year 1640 the minuet was introduced in France, and kings and queens, the courts and nobility of Europe were all obliged to study it. It was a very complicated measure involving some two hun- dred and twenty steps and every dancer must be perfect. In a dance called the Cushion Dance, the following dia- logue was sun Of : — The leader of the dance addressing the band master : " This dance it can uo farther go." Whereupon the band master replied also in tune : "I pray you, good sir, why say you so?" " Because Joan Sanderson will not come too." "She must come too and she shall come too." " And she miist come whether she will or no." " Prinkum-Prankum is a fine dance," " And shall we go dance it once again," " And once again, and once again," " And shall we go dance it once again?" and then the gallant knelt upon his cushion and the obdurate beauty was fain to yield. The minuet was so fashionable, she said, that once the great Cardinal Richelieu, then the master intellect of THE RETROSPECT OF THE YEAR. 127 Europe, wishing to gain the favor of the young Empress Ann of Austria, was induced to don green doublet and crimson sash, decked out with bows and bells, and dance the minuet. When he discovered that the young Queen was making game of him, he was greatly enraged and never forgave the insult to his dignity. And many years later, when the Queen was no longer young, she felt his power when he laid a heavy hand upon her, thus avenging himself for the indignity of earlier years. Saturday, Feb. 5, 1898. — A special meeting of the Directors and other members of the Institute was called this day to discuss plans for the coming fiftieth anniver- sary. Monday Evening, Feb. 7, 1898. — Regular meeting in the Lil)rary room. Mi-. Ross Turner spoke at length on "Mural Decoration." He had made a study of such work in most of the large cities of Europe and the result of his observations was clearly stated wath blackboard illustra- tions. He said he hoped and believed that in the next htdf centur}'^ America would witness the l)uilding of bet- ter public and private istructures and a great development of art. At the conclusion Professor Morse spoke upon tile decorations and, with interesting drawings on the blackboard, described the art as known to the Moors and Italians. Monday Evening, Feb. 14, 1898. — Rev. John "W. Buckham of the Crombie Street Church, read a discrimi- nating paper entitled " Some Famous Clergymen of old Salem." His list was quite a long one including some who were familiar figures on our streets within the recollection of many of his hearers. Among those mentioned were Brown Emerson, whose long pastorate of sixty-seven years 128 BULLETIN OF THE ESSEX INSTITUTE. at the South Congvegationiil Church, stands almost with- out parallel in parochial history ; Dr. Samuel Worcester of the Tabernacle ; Lucius BoUes of the First Baptist ; Hosea Ballou of the Universalist Church, one of the fore- most pulpit orators of the time ; Dr. George B. Cheever of the Howard Street, or Branch Church, and Joseph Ban- vard of the Second Baptist, now called the Central Bap- tist. John Hio'oinson, Huirh Peters, Nathaniel Fisher and William Bentley, were the four selected fur special mention by Mr. Buckham. All of these men were dis- tinguished, each in his own way; Dr. Bentley, perhaps, being the most unique figure of the four. Master of twenty languages, he was often called upon by the Government as an interpreter. He loved the sea and his favorite walk was down the Neck to Juniper Point and the Willows. Saturday, Feb. 19, 1898. — An adjourned meeting of the Jubilee Committee was held this afternoon to make further arrangements for the celebration of the fiftieth anniversary. Monday Evening, Feb. 21, 1898. — Regular meeting in the Library room. Edward C. Battis, Esq., read a care- fully prepared and exhaustive record of the " Piracy of the Brig Mexican," of Salem, Captain Butman, owned by Mr. Joseph Peabody. This paper is in print in the Historical Collections, Vol. xxxiv, page 41. The father of the lecturer, our venerable and respected townsman, Mr. John Battis, now eighty-four years of age, was an able seaman on board the Mexican and, after the lecture, gave a few personal reminiscences. Besides Mr, Battis, there are three other members of the crew still living. They are Capt. John R. Nichols of Salem, born Feb. 19, 1809 ; Capt. Thomas Fuller of Salem, born March 25, 1813, and John Larcom of Beverly, born Jan. THE RETROSPECT OF THE YEAR. 129 30, 1814. Mr. Battis completed his sc;i lite upon the ar- rival of the Mexican home in 1832. A very severe rain prevented the attendance of Captain Fnller, Captain Nich- ols and Mr. Larcom, who were expected. Momlcuj Evening, Feb. 28, 1898.— Ray. George D. Latimer, of the North Unitarian Chnrch, delivered an illus- trated lecture on " Salem and the Salem Witchcraft." He gave an account of the settling of the town of Salem and traced the story of its growth to the time of the witchcraft delusion in 1692, in which the people of Boston and other places in the vicinity were involved. This ended with the execution in Salem of tsventy victims. Mr. Latimer said that belief in witchcraft still exists in some parts of the world, mentioning the voodoo doctors among the negroes of the South, and the superstitions among the Bushmen, Zulus and Kaffirs. Tuesday, March 1, 1898. — The Jubilee Celebration of the Essex Institute commenced this evening. A full account of it is printed in this volume of the Bulletin. Wednesday, March 2, 1898. — The Jubilee Celebration was continued to-day with exercises in Cadet Armory which are fully reported in this volume. Monday Evening, March 7, 1898. — Regular meeting in the Lil)rary room. Rev. Alfred P. Putnam of Salem spoke on the life and characteristics of Abiel Abbot Low. Monday Evening, March 14, 1898. — Prof. C. How- ard Walker of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology lectured on the "Evolution of the House," He spoke of the hut made of branches or built up of clay by primitive man and described the gradual change from the house built for defence to the beautiful residences of the present 130 BULLETIN OF THE ESSEX INSTITUTE. time. He said that the round towers and conical roofs and the Boston bay windows seen to-day are patterned after the ancient Roman house. The round towers were so built as a means of better resisting the battering rams, and the projecting windows for hurling missiles at the besiegers. Monday Evening, March 21, 1898. — Regular meeting in the Library room. Mr. C. J. H. Woodbury of Lynn spoke on the " Floating Bridge on Salem Turnpike." This paper is printed, with illustrations, in the Historical Col- lections, Vol. XXXIV, page 67. Monday Evening, March 28, 1898. — Professor Edward S. Morse, Director of the Peabcdy Academy of Science, lectured this evening in Plummer Hall, on the question " Are there evidences of Asiatic contact with Central America ? " The speaker has examined the mounds and shell-heaps both in ,lapan and in this country, and he has occasionally found in these remote regions two pieces of pottery resembling each other in perhaps one very slight particular, but entirely different in every other way. It is claimed that a small colony of Buddhist monks came from China to Central America, but none of the implements used by the Mongolians, such as chop sticks, thumb rings, roofing tiles, wheeled vehicles, ploughs, potter's wheels or stringed instruments of music were found : no graves bearing any characteristic evi- dence that any such emigration had ever taken place. He said that the strong ocean currents running from the coast of Japan to the coast of North America had brought Japanese junks to these shores (but no Chinese) as traces of the wrecks had been found in ancient and modern times. He also said that there were traces of resemblance between the Japanese and the North American Indian THE RETROSPECT OF THE YEAR. 131 and lie thought that, if we went far enough back, we should find that the Indian was, as the high cheek bone and other characteristics seemed to indicate, of tlie Mongolian race, as it is certain he bek)n