
GRADUATES CLASS OF 1905 95 

He was married January 19, 1908, in Kuttawa, Ky., to Miss Mabel 
Leech Glenn, daughter of Thomas Glenn, deceased, and Lillian (Huggans) 
Glenn. They have two sons: David Glenn Barton, born November 24, 
1908, in Princeton, Ky., and John Earle Barton, Jr., born October 109, 
1910, in Sandpoint, Idaho. 
Barton was with the Federal Government until September, 
1912, when he became state forester of Kentucky. Previous to 
that time, since 1908, he had been forest supervisor with head- 
quarters at Sandpoint, Idaho. 
Anton T. Boisen 
Business address, Department of Church and Country Life, Presbyterian 
Board of Home Missions, 156 Fifth Avenue, New York City 
Home address, 307 East Second Street, Bloomington, Ind. 
Ames, Iowa 
Anton Theophilus Boisen was born October 29, 1876, in Bloomington, 
Ind., the son of Hermann Balthazar Boisen and Louise (Wylie) Boisen, 
daughter of Theophilus Adam Wylie, professor of physics and vice 
president of Indiana University, 1836-1887. Hermann B. Boisen was a 
professor of modern languages at Indiana University from 1870 to 1880, 
and master of modern languages at Lawrenceville School from 1883 
until his death the following year. He was the son of Amtsrichter 
Johannes Boisen of Sonderberg, Alsace, Schleswig, Germany. A sister, 
Marie Louise (Boisen) Bradley, was graduated at Indiana University 
in 1900. 
He was prepared at the Bloomington High School, Bloomington, Ind., 
and received the degree of B.A. at Indiana University in 1897. He was 
an instructor in romance languages at that institution from 1898 to 1903. 
He was a member of Phi Gamma Delta. 
He is unmarried. 
Boisen served as a forest assistant in the United States Gov- 
ernment Service from 1905 to 1908, resigning to take up 
preparation for the ministry at the Union. Theological Seminary 
_in New York City. He remained there three years, receiving 
a diploma in 1911 and during the next year was engaged as a 
field investigator in the department of church and country life 
of the Presbyterian Board of Home Missions. In 1912 he was 
appointed Congregational University pastor at the State College, 
Ames, Iowa. 
