American jttuseum of Natural history OPEN FREE TO THE PUBLIC EVERY DAY IN THE YEAR KEY TO BUILDING AND COLLECTIONS 1 91 3 (Third Edition) American Museum of Natural History Seventy-seventh Street and Central Park West, New York City First Vice-President Cleveland H. Dodge Treasurer Charles Lanier Albert S. Bickmore George S. Bowdoin Frederick F. Brewster Joseph H. Choate Director Frederic A. Lucas Board of Trustees, 191 3 President Henry Fairfield Osborn The Mayor of the City of New York The Comptroller of the City of New York The President of the Department of Parks Thomas DeWitt Cuyler James Douglas Madison Grant Anson W. Hard Arthur Curtiss James Walter B. James A. D. Juilliard Seth Low Ogden Mills Percy R. Pyne Second Vice-President J. P. Morgan Secretary pro tern. Adrian Iselin, Jr. William Rockefeller John B. Trevor Felix M. Warburg George W. Wickersham Executive Officers Assistant Treasurer The United States Trust Company of New York Assistant Secretary George H. Sherwood AVCRY DURST The Museum from the Southwest Plan of Building Tf CENTRAL i (East Corridor). Elevators The halls are named according; to the position they will have in the completed Museum building, which will consist of four long facades facing east, west, north and south respectively, each connected with the center of the quadrangle thus formed by a wing extending between open courts. [ 2 J CLASSICS no t/S2 NMH24, Cross Sections of Building LABORATORIES LIBRARY AND OTHER STORE ROOMS STORE ROOMS STORE ROOMS A LA80RATOR ES LABORATORIES OFFICES , SCIENTIFIC DEPTS OFFICES AND LABORATORIES SCIENTIFIC DEPTS FOSSIL MAMMALS FOSSIL MAMMALS FOSSIL REPTILES * FISHES NORTH AMERICA, AfiCHAEOlOCvn MEXICO AND CENTRAL AMERICA AMERICA, ARCHAEOLOGY .NO CENTRAL ARCHAEOLOGY MONKEYS . APES s, BIRDS MMALS ASTROHOMICALCLOCK 4MALS AND CETACEANS LOCAL AND GENERAL MAMMALS MAMMALS I REPTILES m RESTAURANT I WORK SHOPS AND IBTORE ROOMS From Southwest Pavilion to Southeast Pavilion / STORE ROOMS / STORE ROOMS LABORATORIES OFFICES AND LABORATORIES , S IENTIFIC DEPTS PHILIPPINE ISLANDS ETHNOLOGY SOUTH SEA ISLANDS ETHNOLOGY RECENT SHELLS CHINA AND SIBERIA ETHNOLOGY AFRICA , ETHNOLOGY NORTH AMERICA ARCHAEOLOGY INDIANS OF THE SOUTH WEST ETHNOLOGY PLAINS INDIANS ETHNOLOGY WORK SHOPS AND STORE ROOMS West Wing and Southwest Pavilion From Central Pavilion to South Pavilion Index Location in Museum Administrative Offices Fifth Floor, South Pavilion Africa, Collections from Second Floor, West Wing American Science, Pioneers of First Floor, South Pavilion Amphibians Second Floor, South Pavilion Amphibians and Reptiles of the Coal Era Fourth Floor, Southeast Pavilion Ancient Monuments, Mexico and Central America Second Floor, Southwest Wing Antiquity of Man in Trenton Valley Second Floor. Southwest Pavilion Antiquity of Man in Europe Second Floor, Southwest Pavilion Arizona Petrified Wood First Floor, Central Pavilion Asia, Collections from Third Floor, Southwest Pavilion Auditorium First Floor, Central Pavilion Basketry First Floor, West Wing Birds, Local Second Floor, West Corridor Birds of North America (Habitat Groups) Third Floor, South Central Wing Birds of the World Second Floor, South Central Wing Brontosaurus Second Floor, Southeast Pavilion Building Stones First Floor, Central Pavilion Bullfrog Group Second Floor, South Pavilion Catlin Indian Paintings First Floor, Southwest Pavilion Cave Dwellers of Europe Second Floor, Southwest Pavilion Children's Room Second Floor, South Pavilion Chinese Collection Third Floor, Southwest Pavilion Cliff-dwellers of Utah, etc First Floor, West Wing Copper-Queen Azurites and Malachites Fourth Floor, West Corridor Darwin Hall First Floor, Southeast Pavilion Demuth Collection of Pipes First Floor, West Corridor Dinosaurs ... .Fourth Floor, Southeast Pavilion [4] Index — Continued . . . Location in Museum Elevators All Floors, East Corridor Engine Room First Floor, West Central Wing Eskimo Collections First Floor, South Central Wing European Archaeology Second Floor, Southwest Pavilion Evolution of Fishes, Amphibians, Reptiles First Floor, Southeast Pavilion Evolution of Invertebrates First Floor, Southeast Pavilion Evolution of Mammals Fourth Floor, South Central Wing Evolution of the Morse Fourth Floor, Southeast Wing Finback Whale Skeleton Second Floor, South Central Wing Fishes, Recent Second Floor, Central Corridor Fly, Enlarged Model Third Floor, West Corridor Forestry, North American First Floor, Southeast Wing Fort Lee Fossil Phytosaur Fourth Floor, Southeast Pavilion Fossil Birds with Teeth Fourth Floor, Southeast Pavilion Fossil Fishlike Lizards Fourth Floor, East Corridor Fossil Invertebrates Fourth Floor, South Central Wing Fossil Mammals (Horses, Camels, etc.) Fourth Floor, Southeast Wing Fossil Mammals (Mastodons, etc.) Fourth Floor, South Pavilion Fossil Marine Reptiles Fourth Floor, East Corridor Fossil Reptiles and Fishes Fourth Floor, Southeast Pavilion Gems and Precious Stones Fourth Floor, West Corridor Geology, Historical and General Fourth Floor, South Central Wing Giant Salamander Group Second Floor, South Pavilion Ground Sloth Group Fourth Floor, South Pavilion Habitat Bird Groups Third Floor, South Central Wing Horse Skeletons (Modern) Fourth Floor, South Pavilion Indians of California , First Floor, West Wing [5] Index — Continued Location in Museum Indians of New York First Floor, Indians of South America Third Floor, Indians of the Mackenzie Area First Floor, Indians of the North Pacific Coast First Floor, Indians of the Plains First Floor, Indians of the Plateau Area First Floor, Indians of the Southwest First Floor, Indians of the Woodlands First Floor, Information Bureau First Floor, Insects Third Floor, Invertebrates First Floor, Invertebrate Palaeontology Fourth Floor, Jesup Collection of North American Woods First Floor, Jesup Statue First Floor, Jumbo's Skeleton Fourth Floor, Library Fifth Floor, Local I>irds Second Floor, Local Mammals Second Floor, Mammals of North America Second Floor, Mammals of the North Polar Region Second Floor, Mammoths and Mastodons Fourth Floor, Man, Prehistoric, from Europe Second Floor, Man, Prehistoric, from North America Second Floor, Maori Heads, Tattooed Fourth Floor, Members' Room Third Floor, Memorial Hall First Floor, Meteorites First Floor, [6J Southwest Wing Southwest Wing Southwest Wing South Central Wing Southwest Pavilion Southwest Wing West Wing Southwest Wing South Pavilion Southeast Pavilion Southeast Pavilion South Central Wing Southeast Wing South Pavilion South Pavilion West Corridor West Corridor Southeast Wing Southeast Wing Southeast Wing South Pavilion Southwest Pavilion Southwest Pavilion Southwest Pavilion East Corridor South Pavilion South Pavilion Index — Continued r . . nM Location in Museum Meteorites Fourth Floor, South Central Wing Minerals Fourth Floor, Southwest Wing Monkeys and Apes Third Floor, South Pavilion Natural History Reading Room Second Floor, South Pavilion Navaio Blankets First Floor, West Wing Parcel Checking Room First Floor, South Pavilion Peruvian Collections Third Floor, Southwest Wing Philippine Collections Fourth Floor, West Wing Polar Fxpeditions First Floor, East Corridor Prehistoric Man of Europe Second Floor, Southwest Pavilion Prehistoric Man of North America Second Floor, Southwest Pavilion Public Health Exhibits Third Floor, West Corridor Reptiles Second Floor, South Pavilion Right-Whale Skeleton Third Floor, South Pavilion Rodents Third Floor, South Pavilion Seasonal Birds Second Floor, West Corridor Seismograph First Floor, South Central Wing Shells Third Floor, West Wing Siberian Collection Third Floor, Southwest Pavilion South American Anthropology Third Floor, Southwest Wing South American Fossil Mammals P'ourth Floor, South Pavilion South Sea Island Collections Fourth Floor, Southwest Pavilion Toilet Rooms (entrances to) First Floor, South Central Wing Totem Poles First Floor, South Central Wing Visitors' Room First Floor, Right of Entrance Whales Third Floor, Southeast Wing Woods, North American First Floor, Southeast Wing [7] NO R I M Elevators 3. Visitors' Room 5. West Assembly Room Information Bureau 4. East Assembly Room 6. Corals First Floor [3] Some of the Chief Features, First Floor SOUTH PAVILION-MEMORIAL HALL Marble statue of Morris K. Jesup, a founder, trustee and benefactor of the Museum, and for twenty-seven years (1SS1-190S) its President Marble busts of noteworthy pioneers of American Science '* Ahnighito" (Peary) meteorite, 36% tons ; Willamette meteorite, 15.6 tons Sections showing meteoritic structure EAST CORRIDOR Maps of Polar Regions Sledges that reached the North and South Poles Seismograph (Passage to South Central Wing) SOUTHEAST WING— FORESTRY Jesup Wood Collection Sargent watercolors Reproductions in wax of foliage, flowers and fruits Section of Big Tree Section of Coast Redwood Section of Douglas Spruce SOUTHEAST PAVILION— DARWIN HALL Bust of Darwin Synoptic series of specimens and models illustrating the Classes of Animals Models of Malaria Mosquito Groups illustrating marine life Tidal Marsh group Marine Worm group Record lobsters Models in glass and in wax of Rhizopods, Sponges, Polyps and Bryozoans Struggle for Existence group Large Staghorn Coral SOUTH CENTRAL WING— NORTHERN TRIBES Haida canoe Kwakiutl village Totem poles Chilkat blankets Carvings in wood and ivory Mural decorations by Frank Wilbert Stokes and Will S. Ta) [9] Some of the Chief Features, First Floor — Continued CORRIDOR, SOUTH CENTRAL WING Bust of Professor Bickmore Models, catching of salmon Arizona petrified wood Totem poles American building stones WEST CORRIDOR Temporary Exhibits Demuth collection of pipes SOUTHWEST WING— INDIANS OF THE WOODLANDS Iroquois group Pottery from Manhattan Wampum Quilled medicine bags Birch bark records Woven bags Objects showing use of corn Bark Canoes SOUTHWEST PAVILION— INDIANS OF THE PLAINS Tipi group Art in quills and beads Sun Dance model Painted skins Catlin paintings Ceremonial bundles and charms Models of Pueblo villages Apache house Navajo blankets Hopi ceremonial objects [10] Some of the Chief Features, Second Floor EAST CORRIDOR Caribou skulls and antlers SOUTHEAST WING— NORTH AMERICAN MAMMALS Elk, or Wapiti Musk-ox Mountain Sheep group Local-mammal groups Peccary group Walrus group Moose group Virginia Deer Polar Bear Bison group Fur Seal group Alaskan Brown Bear Pronghorn Antelope group Grant's Caribou group Roosevelt Elk group Peary Musk-ox group Wild Boar group SOUTHEAST PAVILION Occupied as a workroom for the preparation of a group of African elephants SOUTH PAVILION— MAMMALS AND REPTILES Water Monitor group Bullfrog group Elephant " Tip " Florida Rattlesnake group Salamander group Right Whale skeleton SOUTH CENTRAL WING-GENERAL BIRDS Ptarmigan group (seasonal) Labrador Duck Birds of Paradise Great Auk Passenger Pigeon Crested Cassique Finback Whale Skeleton [II] LABORATORIES or- PREPARATION GAL LI ANCIENT MONUMENTS OF MEXICO (f CENTRAL AMERICA i—| AUDI TO H I U M MAMMALS O F NO B T H AMERICA Elevators 2. Children's Room 4. Natural History Reading Room Second Floor [12 Some of the Chief Features, Second Floor — Continued CORRIDOR OF CENTRAL PAVILION— RECENT FISHES Polvodon group Evolution of Fishes Deep-sea Fishes WEST CORRIDOR Local birds Seasonal birds Auduboniana SOUTHWEST WING— ARCHEOLOGY OF MEXICO AND CENTRAL AMERICA Loubat COLLECTION : Gold, copper and jade articles Stelre and Ceremonial Stones Terra cotta Warrior Funeral urns Codices SOUTHWEST PAVILION— ARCHEOLOGY OF NORTH AMERICA Antiquity of Man in New Jersey Cairns of British Columbia and Washington Model of Serpent Mound in Ohio Flint implements Cache of flint discs Copper implements from Lake Superior region Tower: European archaeology WEST WING— ETHNOLOGY AND MAMMALS OF AFRICA Iron implements; basketry, carvings, bead and shell work Grant's Zebra group Waterbuck Hippo " Caliph" Antelopes Thomas' Gazelle African Lion " Hannibal" Transparencies and mural paintings Co] [14] Some of the Chief Features, Third Floor EAST CORRIDOR Members' Room Caribou skulls and antlers SOUTHEAST WING— MAMMALS Phytogeny of chief divisions of Mammals Models of Sulphurbottom Whale and other Cetaceans SOUTHEAST PAVILION— INSECTS Local Insects Economic series Observation Hive of Seventeen-year Cicada group Evolution series Migratory Butterflies the Honey Bee Termite nests SOUTH PAVILION— PRIMATES AND BIRDS Orang-utan group Chimpanzees Gorilla Small bird groups Right Whale skeleton SOUTH CENTRAL WING— HABITAT GROUPS OF BIRDS Groups are geographically as well as ornithologically accurate WEST CORRIDOR Public Health : Water supply and sewage disposal exhibits Models of bacteria Model of Fly Insects and disease [15] Some of the Chief Features, Third Floor — Continued SOUTHWEST WING— ANTHROPOLOGY OF SOUTH AMERICA Peruvian gold and silver articles Quipus Trephined skulls Musical instruments Textiles Pottery Mummy bundles Chilean " Mummy " SOUTHWEST PAVILION— ASIATIC PEOPLES Modern Chinese culture Ancient Chinese bronzes Ancient Chinese pottery (Han Dynasty) Lamaistic masks Culture of the Siberian tribes Villages of Koryak and Gold tribes WEST WING— CONCHOLOGY Recent shells (150,000 specimens of 15,000 species) [16] Some of the Chief Features, Fourth Floor EAST CORRIDOR Ichthyosaurs Mosasaur Newly discovered fossils Pele photographs and paintings SOUTHEAST WING— FOSSIL MAMMALS Irish Elk Evolution of the Titanotheres Pigmy Hippopotamus Evolution of the Horse (in nature) Evolution of the Uintatheres Rhinoceroses Evolution of the Camel Giant Pigs Plesiosaurus (reptile) SOUTHEAST PAVILION— FOSSIL REPTILES AND FISHES Prontosaurus Diplodocus Eryops (Tower) Allosaurus Naosaurus Port Lee, N. J., Phytosaur Dinichthys Tyrannosaurus Triceratops Crocodiles and Turtles Jaws of fossil Shark Trachodon and " mummy " Diadectes Hesperornis (toothed bird) Devonian "Aquarium " SOUTH PAVILION— QUATERNARY MAMMALS Domesticated Horse Saber-tooth Tiger Skeleton of Jumbo Giant Ground Sloth group Warren Mastodon New Zealand Moa (bird) Glyptodonts Columbian Mammoth SOUTH CENTRAL WING— GEOLOGY AND INVERTEBRATE PALEONTOLOGY James Hall Collection of Volcanic bombs from Mt. Pele Copper Queen Cave Fossil Invertebrates Fossilized tree stump from coal mine Local rocks and minerals Cave material (Calcite, Aragonite, Selenite) from near Chihuahua, Mex. Model of Copper Queen Mine — in course of construction NORTH Fourth Floor [18] Some of the Chief Features, Fourth Floor — Continued WEST CORRIDOR-MORGAN HALL OF GEMS New accessions (southeast quarter of hall) American (United States) Diamonds Tourmalines Copper Queen Azurites and Malachites Beryls (Emeralds, Aquamarines and Topazes Brazilian Amethysts Morganite) Garnets Crystal Balls Sapphires (Corundums) Kunzite SOUTHWEST WING— MORGAN HALL OF MINERALS New accessions (entrance) Graphites Golds Quartzes Micas Pyrites Fluorites Coppers Stibnites Calcites Feldspars 'Wall painting of Ely, Nev. , copper mine SOUTHWEST PAVILION-TRIBES OF THE PACIFIC ISLANDS Tahitian Fire-walker Maori warrior on jade bowlder (Tower) I Iawaiian Feather Capes Melanesian masks Tattooed Maori heads WEST WING-ETHNOLOGY OF PHILIPPINE ISLANDS Belt-weaving group Model of tree-house Iron weapons Filters Model of house Woods, baskets and textiles Moro outrigger Leg-stocks [19] NORTH F I C E sjfc L A BOR A TO R I ES OF THE SCIENTIFIC DEPARTMENTS — a «r E A 5T r. Elevators < ADMINISTRATIVE LAB ojoA TOR OFFICES & LAB 0|R A T O R OF THE SCIENTIFIC DEPAIRTMEN EPA o 2. Office of the Director Fifth Floor [20] Fifth Floor Administrative offices, Library and the offices and laboratories of the scientific departments. The Library contains more than 60,000 volumes devoted to the natural sciences. The reading room is located in the west corridor, and is open free daily from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., except Sundays and legal holidays. A rack there contains current issues of many scientific periodicals. The Study Collections of specimens are even more extensive and varied than the exhibition series and are more important to the scientific world. They are accessible to students and other interested persons on application to the head of the department concerned. Some of their more salient features are as follows : Anthropology. — Ethnology. — On the attic floor of the west wing and the northwest pavilion there are thirty-three fire-proof store rooms containing the ethnological study collections of more than 100,000 catalogue numbers comprising extensive series for the Philippine Islands, Siberia, China, South Sea Islands, Africa, South Africa and the various culture areas in North America. Archeology. — In archceology there is a large type series of stone objects from the various States of the Union. Full collections from excavated sites in British Columbia, Washington State New York State, Kentucky, Arizona and New Mexico are here, together with a special series from the Trenton Valley. There is much material from Mexico, Peru and Bolivia. The human skeleton material is chiefly from western States and South America. About two thousand crania have been classified and made available for study. [21] Geology and Invertebrate Palaeontology. — Geology. — The study collections comprise, among other things, the Hitchcock series of rocks illustrating thirteen geological sections across the States of Vermont and New Hampshire ; a complete set of duplicate specimens from the United States geological survey of the Fortieth Parallel ; a series illustrating the early geological survey of Pennsylvania ; a complete typical series of rocks and microscopic thin sections illustrating Rosen- busch's manual of petrography ; large series of American rocks ; a complete series typifying the rocks encountered in driving the Simplon tunnel, Switzerland ; many ores and economic specimens. Invertebrate Paleontology. — Great numbers of fossil invertebrates, too numerous and varied to particularize, but representing many of the important groups. Ichthyology and Herpetology. — Ichthyology. — The collection of fishes comprises about 7,000 catalogued specimens, preserved in alcohol and kept in tanks and jars. The fossil fish collection is one of the largest, if not the largest, in America, comprising about 10,000 catalogued specimens ; it includes the Newberry, the Cope and several smaller collections. Herpetology. — The collection of frogs, salamanders and reptiles numbers 9,000 specimens. Invertebrate Zoology. — General Invertebrates. — About 60,000 specimens of protozoans, sponges, polyps, starfishes, sea-urchins, worms, crustaceans, spiders, myriapods and chordates. Insects. — (a) Local collection comprising insects known within fifty miles of New York City. (b) General collection including more than 500,000 specimens, among them the types of many species. Shells. — The chief Molluscan collections of the Museum, exclusive of fossils. About 15,000 species are represented, comprised for the most part of the Jay and Haines collections. Mammalogy and Ornithology. — MAMMALOGY. — The study collection of mammals contains about 25,000 skins, skulls and skeletons. It is especially rich in South American forms. Mexico and the Arctic ate well represented ; from the latter region there is a large and unique series of the beautiful white Peary's caribou and of the Greenland musk-ox, comprising about 150 specimens. The collection of whales is likewise noteworthy. Ornithology. — The study collection of birds consists of approximately 90,000 unmounted skins, about nine-tenths of which are from the Western Hemisphere, and several thousand nests and eggs. South America is chiefly represented by a large collection from Matto Grosso, Brazil, and extensive collections from Colombia ; also smaller series from Ecuador, Peru, Venezuela and Trinidad. From North America, there are important collections from Mexico, Nicaragua, California, Texas, Arizona and the Middle Atlantic States. — the Rocky Mountain region being most poorly represented. Of special collections, the George N. Lawrence and Maximilian collections are of special importance from the hundreds of type specimens which they contain. Mineralogy. — Most of the mineral specimens are on exhibition, but the overflow from the public cases forms a study series of no mean proportions. Public Health. — Living bacteria are maintained and distributed free to recognized laboratories. Vertebrate Palaeontology. — The study collections comprise about 15,000 catalogued specimens of fossil mammals, 6,000 fossil reptiles and amphibians and a few hundred fossil birds. Most of these are from the western United States. The collections of fossil horses, Eocene mammals and Cretaceous dinosaurs are unrivaled. The fossil rhinoceroses, camels, oreodonts, carnivora, Fayum, Pampean and Patagonian mammals, Jurassic dinosaurs, Permian reptiles, turtles, etc., are likewise of the first rank. They include more than nine hundred type specimens of fossil mammals and several hundred type specimens of fossil reptiles and amphibians. [23] The American Museum of Natural History was established in 1S69 to promote the Natural Sciences and to diffuse a general knowledge of them among the people, and it is in cordial cooperation with all similar institutions throughout the world. The Museum authorities are dependent upon private subscriptions and the dues from members for procuring needed additions to the collections and for carrying on explorations in America and other parts of the world. The membership fees are : Annual Members $ 10 Patrons $ 1,000 Sustaining Members (Annual) 25 Associate Benefactors 10,000 Life Members 100 Benefactors (Gift or bequest) 50,000 Fellows 500 The Museum Library is open to the public for reference daily — Sundays and holidays excepted — from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. The Museum Publications are issued in seven series : The American Museum Journal, Annual Report, Anthropological Papers, Bulletins, Guide Leaflets, Handbooks and Memoirs. Information concerning their sale may be obtained at the Museum Library. Guides in the Study of Exhibits are provided on request by the Department of Public Education. Teachers wishing to bring classes should write or telephone the Department for an appointment, specifying the collection to be studied. Lectures to classes may also be arranged for. In all cases the best results are obtained with small groups of children. Study Collections are open to all persons desiring to examine specimens for special research. Applications should be made at the information desk. The Mitla Restaurant in the east basement is reached by the elevator and is open from 12 to 5 on all days except Sundays. Afternoon Tea is served from 2 to 5. The Mitla Room is of unusual interest as an exhibition hall, being an exact reproduction of temple ruins at Mitla, Mexico. The Museum Building and Manhattan Square on which it is located are the property of the City of New York. The city, furthermore, makes an annual appropriation toward the maintenance of the institution. That for the year 1913 is $200,000, which is about 40^' of the whole expenditure. [24] Scientific Departments Director Frederic A. Lucas, Sc.D. Geology and Invertebrate Palaeontology Mineralogy Edmund Otis Hovey, A. B. , Ph. D. , Curator L. P. Gratacap, Ph. B. , A. B. , A. M. , Curator Invertebrate Zoology Henry E. Crampton, A.B., Ph.D., Curator Ichthyology and Herpetology Bashford Dean, A.B., A.M., Ph.D., Curator of Fishes and Reptiles Mammalogy and Ornithology J. A. Allen, Ph.D., Curator Frank M. Chapman, Curator of Ornithology Vertebtate Palaeontology Henry Fairfield Osborn, A.B., Sc.D., LL.D., D.Sc, Curator Emeritus W. D. Matthew, A.B., Ph.B., A.M., Ph.D., Curator Anthropology Clark Wissler, A.B., A.M., Ph.D,, Curator Anatomy and Physiology Ralph W. Tower, A.B., A.M., Ph.D., Curator Public Health Charles-Edward Amory Winslow, S.B., M.S., Curator Woods and Forestry Mary Cynthia Dickerson, B.S., Curator Books and Publications Ralph W. Tower, A.B., A.M., Ph.D., Curator Public Education Albert S. Bickmore, B.S., Ph.D., LL.D., Curator Emeritus George H. Sherwood, A.B., A.M., Curator FOR THE PEOPLE TOR EDVCATION FOR^SCIENCE