oni shOrniCAk Stele OF THE DEVELOPMENT Oe BOW AN 4 UN INE W.-Y ORK -CIT Y.* By HEnry H. Ruspy: It is my purpose this afternoon to direct your attention to the influences whose workings have brought into existence the pres- ent highly satisfactory organization of botanical work in this city. Among many minor elements, three stand out prominently, and call for our special attention. They are: (1) local botanical gardens, including the present one, and the persons who have been associated in their management; (2) the botanical depart- ment of Columbia College ; (3) the Torrey Botanical Club. Were we to commence citi the very earliest botanical history of our city, we should be carried back to a time when, as an im- portant seaport in a new world, it was made the temporary head- quarters of visiting botanists, who accumulated here their collec- tions, maintaining some of them in a living condition, until the arrival of a convenient opportunity for dispatching them to the mother countries. Such occurrences as these, exerting little in- fluence in the permanent development of a botanical center here, occupy no place in to-day’s consideration. Developmental work of the kind that concerns us was active, previous to the close of the 18th century, at some points farther south, especially at Phila- delphia, and in New England, but not at New York. The first important event here was the work of Doctor, after- ward Governor, Cadwallader Colden and his daughter Jane, who, near the middle of the 18th century, conducted their studies with the aid of a small botanical garden at their home, near Newburgh. * An address delivered before the Torrey Botanical Club at a special meeting held on May 23, 1906, in commemoration of the tenth anniversary of the commencement of work in the development of the New York Botanical Garden. 1 NEW YOR BOTANIC GARDEN 9 Perhaps the most important part of this work consisted of the correspondence carried on with native and foreign botanists re- garding their local flora, and the transmission of specimens. Miss Colden first made known our pretty little Copts, or gold-thread. A much more important event was the arrival here, in 1785, of the elder Michaux, who established a celebrated botanical gar- den at New Durham, N. J., the site of which is now occupied by the Hoboken cemetery. O49 41 TAL c + iy it, i] DIES rarely 7 ‘iM hae