491 



10th. At Needham Market is a small British Herbarium compiled 1 

 by Miss Jeffes of that town. A fair proportion of its plants have been 

 collected in Suffolk. Some of these are earliest records. 



llth. A number of original drawings of plants, chiefly from the 

 neighbourhood of Oulton, executed by Mrs. McAubrey, have been twice 

 examined and many records taken from them. 



12th. In the Norwich Museum, under the care of the Norfolk and 

 Norwich Naturalists' Society, is the Herbarium of Mr. J. D. Salmon, 

 formerly of Thetford. Its date is 1835 to 1848. It has been -kindly- 

 examined by the Rev. E. F. Linton. Nearly one-half of its Suffolk 

 localities are new, but it adds no plants to the list. 



13th. H. D. Geldart, Esq., of Norwich, has obligingly contributed 

 a list of the Suffolk plants in his Herbarium, and considerably added to 

 the localities for various species. 



14th. A small collection of plants, in the Ipswich Museum, by 

 Miss Manning, has been examined ; also an anonymous portfolio, the 

 best plants of which have been incorporated with Lady Blake's 

 Herbarium. 



15th. A small collection by Miss Turner, of Bradfield St. George 

 Rectory, including some specimens from Mrs. Suttaby, was examined 

 by the late Dr. Babington. 



16th. A collection of plants by N. F. Hele, Esq., of Aldeburgh, 

 contains several interesting species from his neighbourhood ; among 

 them a few, which were believed to be peculiar to the " Breck " district 

 in the North-western part of the County. 



Several small collections have helped to swell the Suffolk list 

 Among them, Euston plants by Lady Laura FitzRoy, kindly lent by the 

 Hon. Canon Phipps; Woolverstone plants by Miss H.M. Sheppard, also 

 Woodbridge and Felixstowe lists by Miss S. in Gardener's Chronicle : 

 Suffolk plants by Mr. C. W. Peck, of Brockford and Christ's Coll., 

 Cambridge. A valuable list of Felixstowe plants supplied to the late 

 H. C. Watson, for his Topographical Botany, has been furnished anew 

 by the Rev. W. H. Purchas, Vicar of Alstonfield, Staffordshire. 



Several names are here omitted of those who have done most to- 

 wards perfecting the Progress of Botanical Science in Suffolk. Their 

 names will be found in the preface to this work, where some slight 



