GRADUATES CLASS OF 1904 19 

and the Crater National forests in Washington and Oregon, 
in turn. My work on the National forests was interrupted by 
special details in the Washington office and the district office 
at Portland, and as examiner of applications under the Act of 
June 11, 1906, in District 6. I have been for two seasons in 
charge of field parties engaged in making a map and a recon- 
naissance of the resources of the Crater National Forest in 
Oregon and much of my time has been spent as acting supervisor 
of the Crater Forest.” 
He is a member of the Congregational church and of the 
American Forestry Association and the Society of American 
Foresters. 
He has published: The distillation of oil of wintergreen from 
black birch, For. and Irr., reprinted in The Pharmaceutical Era; 
(With W. W. Ashe) Chestnut oak in the Southern Appalachians, 
Circ., U. S. Forest Service. 
William B. Greeley 
Business address, United States Forest Service, Washington, D. C. 
Residence, 625 Dahlia Street, Takoma Park, Washington, D. C. 
William Buckhout Greeley was born September 6, 1879, in Oswego, 
N. Y., the son of Frank Norton Greeley, a Congregational clergyman, 
and Anna Cheney (Buckhout) Greeley. He had one brother, Arthur 
White Greeley, B.S. Leland Stanford, Jr., University ’98, who died 
March 5, 1904. 
He was prepared at San Jose High School, San Jose, Calif., and 
received the degree of B.L. from the University of California in 1901, 
where he was a member of Phi Beta Kappa, Delta Upsilon and of the 
Order of the Golden Bear. Previous to this he was engaged in mountain 
ranching in California and after graduation from college he taught one 
year in the high school at Alameda, Calif. 
He was married December 30, 1907, in Berkeley, Calif., to Miss Ger- 
trude Maxwell Jewett of Berkeley, daughter of Rev. Henry E. Jewett 
and Alice (Dwinell) Jewett. They have one daughter, Mary Jewett 
Greeley, born April 25, 1909, in Missoula, Mont., and a son, Arthur White 
Greeley, born August 1, 1912, in Washington, D. C. 
Greeley has been assistant forester in charge of silviculture 
in the United States Forest Service since June 1,:1908. He 
writes: “From July 1, 1904, to July 1, 1905, I was engaged in 
