135 HULL SCIENTIFIC AND FIELD NATURALISTS’ CLUB. 
distributed handbills, offering rewards, consisting of money 
and a free pass to the Leeds Exhibition in 1866, to those 
who would supply us with the greatest number of articles of 
various kinds. In 1873 Mr. Allerson had obtained a con- 
siderable number of pre-historic relics, which he then wished 
to sell, and he offered them to me. These I purchased 
from him, and they are now in the Museum at Driffield. 
(10.) My friend, Mr. Thomas Boynton, of Bridlington 
Quay, has a large and choice collection of stone, flint, and 
bronze weapons of local origin, as well as a few from the 
south of England and other districts. He also possesses 
many very beautiful flint and chert arrow-heads, and various 
instruments from America and other countries. He is 
frequently adding to his very fine collection, which should 
certainly be secured so as to remain in East Yorkshire. 
(11.) The late Rev. Thomas J. Monson, of Kirby Under- 
dale, was merely one of Canon Greenwell’s collecting friends 
in this neighbourhood, and after he had purchased a few 
specimens picked up by the farm servants, he forwarded 
them to the Canon, without having any further interest in 
the matter, or knowing more about them. The probability 
is that the district was not very much impoverished by 
his labours. 
(12.) Mr. Robert Gatenby, of Bridlington, has obtained 
several hundreds of flint, stone, and bronze specimens, a few 
of which are very fine ones. He is still adding to the 
number. 
(13.) Mr. Samuel Chadwick, late of Malton, who emi- 
grated to New Zealand in 1895, was a very energetic 
collector of both fossils and implements. His _ business 
occupation brought him frequently among the farm labourers” 
and quarrymen in the rural districts. This gave him excep- 
tional opportunities for obtaining a considerable quantity of 
specimens, and for a considerable time he was my most 
active rival. That Mr. Chadwick made good use of these 
facilities, the contents of the Malton Museum give ample 
proof. This fine and large collection, gathered almost 
entirely from the neighbourhood, is also sufficient evidence 
of his energy and knowledge as a diligent collector. 
Besides those placed in the Malton Museum, he supplied 
many specimens to the York Museum, and a few to 
other places. 
There were also a few minor collectors, whose united 
labours have assisted to impoverish this neighbourhood. 
