160 YALE FOREST SCHOOL 

brothers: Albert Francis Judd, Yale ’97 and ’ooL.; James Robert 
Judd, Yale ‘97 and M.D. College of Physicians and Surgeons ‘or; Allan 
W. Judd; Henry Pratt Judd, Yale ’o1; Gerrit P. Judd, D.V.S. University 
of Pennsylvania; and Lawrence M. Judd. A cousin, George R. Carter, 
graduated from the Sheffield Scientific School in 1888. 
He was prepared at the Punahou School, Hawaiian Islands, and gradu- 
ated from Yale College in 1905, where he was a member of the Sophomore 
Football Team and of the Cap and Gown Committee and received a 
second colloquy appointment in his Junior year. He was also a member 
of Alpha Delta Phi, Elihu Club and Sigma Xi. 
He was married June 11, 1910, in New Haven, Conn., to Miss Louise 
Luquiens of New Haven, daughter of Professor Jules Luquiens, Ph.D. 
Yale 1873, head of the French department at Yale (died August 23, 1899), 
and Emma (Clark) Luquiens. She has two brothers: Huc-Mazelet 
Luquiens, Yale ’o2, and Frederick Bliss Luquiens, Yale ’97. 
During the summer of 1906 Judd returned to Honolulu after — 
a five years’ absence. He worked for the Board of Commis- 
sioners of Agriculture and Forestry of the Territory of Hawaii 
for seven weeks in Honolulu and on the island of Kauai, taking 
measurements of growth and volume in six hundred acres of 
planted forest trees. He writes: “Immediately upon graduation 
from the School I entered the Forest Service as forest assistant 
in management and started west with my assistant chief, stop- 
ping off at the Medicine Bow Forest, Wyoming. In California 
we visited the Diamond Mountain and Plumas forests, attended 
the Irrigation Congress at Sacramento, and visited the Shasta 
Forest. I was then stationed on the Diamond Mountain from 
September, 1907, to April, 1908, where I was engaged in the 
administration of two large timber sales, marking western yellow 
pine for cutting, and scaling logs. I also surveyed ranger stations 
and claims and, after the snow came, drew maps in the super- 
visor’s office. In April, 1908, I was called into the Washington 
office, where during a long hot summer I became thoroughly 
imbued with the timber sale policy and procedure of the Forest 
Service. At the time of the redistricting in December, 1908, I 
was promoted and assigned to the district office at Portland, 
Ore., as assistant chief of silviculture. During the summer of 
1909 I inspected the Snoqualmie National Forest, Washington, 
covering a large area of forested mountains in the Cascades east 
of Seattle. In thirty days I traveled on foot 340 miles, visiting 
all of the operations on the forest and often alone, but more 
ee i et 
