27 



months amon^ the Mormons, and then continued his travels into 

 Mexico, and South America. There he visited the Peruvian An- 

 des, BoHvia, and Chile, and returned to the United States from 

 Panama. He returned to France, and prepared his observations 

 and records for publication. 



He later made a second tour, visiting India, Thibet, China and 

 Japan, terminating with a second visit to the Hawaiian Islands. 

 His publications relating to Hawaii are : 



Ka Moolelo Hawaii. Histoire de TArchipel havaiien (iles 

 Sandwich), texte et traduction, precedee d'une introduction sur 

 I'etat physique, moral et politique du pays. Paris, 1862. 



Recits d'un vieux sauvage pour servir a I'histoire ancienne de 

 Hawaii. Chalons-sur-Marne, 1859. 



Remy's Hawaiian collections and botanical labors are com- 

 memorated in the names of many indigenous plants: Coreopsis 

 ' Remyu Car ex Remyi, Lipochaeta Remyi, Lys'miachia Remyi, the 

 genus Remya, Schiedea Remyi, Sicyos Remyanus, Tetramolo- 

 pium Remyi. Remy's collections (1851-55) are in the Paris 

 Museum; a portion of his herbarium is now in the Gray Herb- 

 arium at Harvard University. 



25. The Botanical Explorations of Mann and Brigham. 



In 1864-65 Horace Mann, the son of the renowned Horace 

 Mann, and William T. Brigham, another botanical student in 

 Harvard University, visited the islands and made extensive 

 botanical explorations. Dr. Brigham states, "When Dr. Asa 

 Gray was told that I was soon to visit the Hawaiian Islands, he 

 asked me to collect the very peculiar flora of that group, and sug- 

 gested the propriety of asking Horace Mann to accompany me. 

 It was a short notice, but his friends advised him to go, and he 

 joined me in California. . . . With his rich collections he return- 

 ed to Cambridge, and was soon appointed Dr. Gray's assistant, 

 and afterward instructor in botany in Harvard College." His 

 enthusiasm for his science led to overwork, and not long after 

 his return he died of hasty consumption, 



Mann's botanical publications were as follows : 



1. Revision of the genus Schiedea and some of the Rutaceae, 

 Proc. Boston Society Nat. Hist., Vol. 10, 1866, p. 309. 



2. Enumeration of Hawaiian Plants, Proc. Amer. Acad. Arts 

 & Sci., Vol. 7, 1867, p. 143. 



3. Flora of the Hawaiian Islands, Proc. Essex Institute, Vol. 

 5, 1867. 



William Tufts Brigham was born in Boston, 1841 ; received 

 the A. B. degree at Harvard, 1862, and the A. M. in 1865 ; ex- 

 plored the Hawaiian flora, 1864-65 ; was admitted to the Massa- 

 chusetts bar in 1867 ; was instructor in botany at Harvard, 1868- 

 69; and since 1888 has been director of the Bernice Pauahi Bish- 

 op Museum in Honolulu. 



The botanical work of Mann and Brigham is commemorated 



