— EE oe 


GRADUATES CLASS OF 1907 159 

He writes: “My collections were chiefly of fungi, mosses, 
dragon flies and spring tails. The ranges of certain species 
were extended and new species in fungi and spring tails were 
discovered. Made four expeditions on marine biological collect- 
ing trips along the coast of Maine for the state.” He has 
contributed a collection of the woods of Maine, also minerals, 
animals, birds, insects, tree diseases, etc., to the museum of the 
University of Maine. 
He is a member of the Congregational church. In politics 
he has no party choice, but believes in the right man for the 
right place. He also believes in equal suffrage. He is a repre- 
sentative of the United Press Syndicate and a member of the 
Maine Forestry Association, the American Forestry Association, 
the National League for Medical Freedom and the Maine State 
Hunters Association. 
He has written articles on forestry for the Bangor (Maine) 
Daily Commercial and Morning Oregonian, Portland, Ore. In 
1912 he made contributions to the list of dialect expressions in 
the annual publication of the American Dialect Society. 
Charles S. Judd 
Business address, 409 Beck Building, Portland, Ore. 
Residence, 734 East Main Street, Portland, Ore. 
Forest Service, Portland, Ore. 
Charles Sheldon Judd was born July 11, 1881, in Honolulu, Hawaii, 
the son of Albert Francis Judd, LL.D., Yale 62, and Agnes Hall (Boyd) 
Judd. His father graduated from Harvard Law School in 1864, and 
was given the degree of LL.D. by Yale in 1894. He also was secretary 
of the Constitutional Convention of the Hawaiian Kingdom in 1864, 
attorney general in 1873, associate justice of the supreme court of Hawaii 
in 1874, chief justice from 1881 until his death in 1900 and chancellor of 
the Hawaiian Kingdom until it ceased to exist. He is the grandson 
of Dr. G. P. Judd, who. went to Hawaii as a medical missionary in 
1827 and afterwards was adviser to Hawaiian kings, and a descendant 
of Thomas Judd, who emigrated from Kent, England, to Cambridge, 
Mass., in 1634. His mother was the daughter of James R. Boyd, a Con- 
gregational minister in Geneva, N. Y., and also chaplain and professor 
at Hamilton College, principal of Maplewood Institute at Pittsfield, 
Mass., and head teacher at Abbott Collegiate Institute, New York City. 
He has two sisters, Agnes E. Judd and Sophie B. Judd, and seven 
