5 • Tin-: \VI-:.s|" \1RGIXIA il.ORA 



Iccting unusual plants during bis many trips in various portion'^ 

 of the State, from 1892 to 1902, in pursuit of his entomological 

 studies. His plants are deposited in the herbarium of the West 

 Virginia Agricultural Experiment Station, with duplicates in the 

 Herbarium of the Field Museum of Natural History. 



(36) Prof. A(mo.s) A(rthur) Heller, of the University of Xevada, did 



considerable plant collection on Kates Mountain and the neigh- 

 borhood of \Vhite Sulphur Springs in Greenbrier County in 189!!. 

 x\ set of his plants is deposited in the herbarium of the Field 

 Museum of Natural History with the balance of his private her- 

 barium. 



(37) L(ee) C(leveland) Corbett, while engaged in forest held work 



for the West Virginia Agricultural Experiment Station, collected 

 a number of plants from 1894 lo 1896; these are in the herbarium 

 of the Station. 



(38) \V(illiam) Mc(C.\lly) Pollock, while a student at i!'o Univer- 



sity of West Virginia, collected largely, from 189;j to 1897, in 

 Lewis, Upshur, Preston, Pocahontas, Taylor and Wood c^'inties, 

 and from 1898 to 1899 in Monongalia County. The full num- 

 ber of plants he secured amounted to about 1700 specimens. His 

 prime series was accidentally destroyed. Sets of over a ■iuni- 

 dred duplicates are in the herl)aria of the Field Museum ol 

 Natural History, New York Botanical Garden, and 'J S. 

 National Museum. 



(39) W(illiam) E(arle) Rumsey, of the Department of Entomology. 



University of West Virginia, collected a considerable number 

 of plants in various parts of the State while engaged in ento- 

 mological field work, from 1894 to 1899. His plants are in the 

 herbarium of the West Virginia Agricultural Experiment Station 



(40) Allen & Britton. Drs. T. F. Allen and Nathaniel L. Britton 



collected for one full day in May, 1897, in the neighborhood 

 of White Sulphur Springs, Greenbrier Covmty. They secured 

 from 40 to 50 species of especial interest, which were deposited 

 in the herbarium of Columbia University, now a part of the 

 herbarium of the New York Botanical Garden. (See also 

 1872 T. F. Allen, and 1890 N. L. Britton). 



(41) Rev. a. Boutlou, of Fairmont, Marion County, spent consid- 



erable of his spare time, from 1897 to 1907, in botanizing in 

 his immediate neighborhood and in Taylor, Monongalia and 

 Preston Counties. His collections are in his private possession 

 though many of his interesting finds are represented in the 

 herbarium of the Field Museum of Natural History. 



(42) Prof. Edw(ard) L(ee) Greene, of the U. S. National Herbarium, 



has spent a day or so once or twice each year, from 1897 to 

 July, 1912, in Jefferson County, in the vicinity of Harpers 

 Ferry. His collecting in this region has been of a highly dis- 

 criminating character, confined to selecting only such plants as 

 appeared to differ from the usual form. His specimens are in 

 the U. S. National Herbarium, with a few particularly inter- 

 esting duplicates in the herbarium of the Field Museum of 

 Natural History. 



