174 YALE FOREST SCHOOL 

He is a member of the Dutch Reformed church. He is a 
member of the Society of American Foresters, the Eastern 
States Forestry Association, the National Geographic Society 
and the Concatenated Order of Hoo-Hoo. 
Hugo Winkenwerder 
Business address, University of Washington, Seattle, Wash. 
Residence, 6306 Seventeenth Street, N. E., Seattle, Wash. 
405 North Washington Street, Watertown, Wis. 
Hugo [August] Winkenwerder was born March 16, 1878, in Water- 
town, Wis. 
He prepared at Northwestern University, Watertown, Wis. and 
graduated from the University of Wisconsin in 1902 with the degree 
of B.S. and taught botany and physiography in the high school in 
Sheboygan, Wis. 
He was married to Miss Adelene Maddern Clark of Los Angeles, Calif. 
Winkenwerder is dean of the College of Forestry at the Uni- 
versity of Washington, which position he has held since August 
I, 1912. He was at one time forest assistant in the United 
States Forest Service and later became assistant professor of 
forestry at Colorado College. His first appointment at the. 
University of Washington was as associate professor of forestry. 
He is a member of Sigma Xi. 
He has published: The migration of birds—monographs, Wis. Nat. 
Hist. Soc., Milwaukee, 1902; Forestry in .the public schools, Circ. 130, 
U. S. Forest Service; Progress in conservation, Proc. N. E. A., Chicago, 
1908; Short keys to trees of Oregon and Washington, Forest Lab., 
Univ. of Wash., 1910; Outline for correlation of methods in forest men- 
suration, Forest Lab., Univ. of Wash., 1909; Forests and American 
history, Univ. of Calif. Chronicle, Berkeley, 1912. 
*Edward S. Woodruff 
Died 1909 
Edward Seymour Woodruff was born December 23, 1876, in New York 
City, the son of Charles Hornblower Woodruff, Yale ’58, and Catherine 
G. (Sanford) Woodruff. He was a grandson of Hon. Lewis Bartholomew 
Woodruff, LL.D., Yale ’30, judge of the United States Circuit Court, and 
a great grandson of Chief Justice Joseph C. Hornblower of New Jersey. 


