176 Rhodora ' I July 



on it that, except for its phrasing and its faults, he is as much its 

 author as I. 



The following lists may perhaps be of service. 



Species and varieties published by Han at t, or by others from his 

 notes and over his name, of which there is original material in his 

 herbarium. 



Carex vulpinoidea, var. ambigua, Suppl. N. Am. Carices, no. 02 

 (1841). _ 



Carcx vulpinoidea, var. glomerata, 1. c. no. 01 (1841). 



Eupatorium fistulosum, Eupatoria Verticillata no. 1 (1841). 



Salix balsamifera in Anderss. Oefvers. Vet. Akad. Foerhandl. xv. 

 125 (1858) (a single leaf only). 



Salix crassa, Sal. Am. no. 7 (1840). 



Salix Drummondiana in Hook. Fl. Bor. Am. ii. 144 (1840). 



Salix pameachiana, Sal. Am. no. 10 (1840). 



Salix Scouleriana in Hook. Fl. Bor. Am. ii. 144 (1840) (probably 

 this species, though labelled by mistake S. Hookeriana). 



Salix Torreyana, Sal. Am. no. 29 (1840). 



Salix tristis, var. monadelphia, 1. c. no. 2. 



Other material of Barratt's willows may be found in the Torrey 

 Herbarium at the New York Botanical Garden, and the Gray Her- 

 barium and, no doubt, at Kew. The identity of most of his species 

 not already well understood has been worked out by Mr. Camillo 

 Schneider in his recent series of notes on North American Willows 

 in the Botanical Gazette and the Journal of the Arnold Arboretum. 



II 



Barratt's publications, so far as known to me, exclusive of letters 

 and other articles in newspapers, of which there arc a considerable 

 number in the one complete file extant of the Middletown Sentinel 

 and Witness. All items here listed, except as otherwise noted, were 

 published at Middletown and bear the imprint of C. H. Pelton. Nos. 

 2, 3, 4, and 5 are label-sheets, printed on one side of the paper only. 

 An official acknowledgment from the Linnaean Society of London of 

 a gift of pamphlets, etc., from Barratt, dated March 5, 1842, mentions 

 another publication which I have not seen — "Remarks on the Canker 

 Worm Moth." 



1. Plan of Main St., Middletown, showing the buildings and occu- 

 pants, from about 1770 to 1775. In J. W. Barber, Connecti- 



