
GRADUATES CLASS OF 1908 191 

McLean is deputy supervisor in the United States Forest Ser- 
vice with headquarters at Ephraim, Utah. He has held this 
appointment since December 1, 1911. He entered the Service 
on July 1, 1908, as forest assistant, which position he held until 
he received his present appointment. 
He is a member of the Society of American Foresters. 
Harvey R. MacMillan 
Business address, Forest Branch, Victoria, B. C., Canada 
Harvey Reginald MacMillan was born September 9, 1885, in New- 
market, Ontario, the son of John Alfred MacMillan, holder of local 
municipal offices, and Joanne Caroline (Willson) MacMillan. His grand- 
father came from Scotland and his grandmother was a United Empire 
Loyalist. His mother’s family was loyal to the United Empire. They 
settled in the United States about 1690 and went to Canada in 1760° 

and 1780. jee 
He was prepared at the (Adelphi Academy and Worcester/ High School) 
and in 1906 graduated from the Ontario Agricultural College, Toronto 
University, with the degree of B.S.A. Since 1903 he has spent his 
summers with the Dominion Forestry Branch. He had charge of the 
first forest survey in Canada. 
He was married August 2, 1911, in Aurora, Ontario, to Miss Edna 
Mulloy of Aurora, daughter of Charles Wesley Mulloy and Gertrude 
(Claflin) Mulloy. They have a daughter, Edna Marion MacMillan, born 
June 16, 1912. 
MacMillan is chief of the Forest Branch of British Columbia, 
Canada. From 1908 to 1911 he was assistant inspector of forest 
reserves and assistant director of forestry from Ig11 to July 
15, 1912, when he received his present appointment. 
He writes: “I have recently left the service of the Dominion 
Forestry Branch, and am at present chief forester of the Pro- 
vincial Forest Branch, recently established to administer the 
public forest lands of the province of British Columbia. 
“British Columbia covers about 350,000 square miles, and is 
very similar in character to Washington, Oregon and Idaho. 
The timber in the southern portion of the Province is similar 
to that north of the 45th parallel of latitude, and west of the 
115th parallel of longitude in the United States, with the dif- 
ference that the valleys in British Columbia are narrower, and 
QDUATIA, 
“ ra 
