GRADUATES CLASS OF Ig10_ 253 

old Massachusetts settlers, and was the head of James Marsh & Company, 
pail manufactuers of Swanzey, N. H., for fifty years. His wife was 
Candace Aldrich. His maternal ancestors were C. N. Tottingham, a 
carriage maker, descended from early settlers at Plymouth, Mass., and 
Rahie (Titus) Tottingham. He has two sisters, Alice Doris Marsh and 
Marion Elizabeth Marsh. 
He was prepared at the Keene (N. H.) High School and received the 
degree of B.S. at Dartmouth in 1908. 
He is unmarried. 
Marsh entered the United States Forest Service in July, 1910, 
and was first assigned to the Apache National Forest, Springer- 
ville, Ariz. He has since had charge of reconnaissance on the 
Carson Forest in New Mexico and in the fall of 1912 was 
appointed deputy forest supervisor of this forest, with head- 
quarters at Tres Piedras. 
He is a Republican. He is a member of the Methodist church. 
Frank B. Notestein 
Business address, Manitou, Colo. 
United States Forest Service, Denver, Colo. 
Frank Browning Notestein was born June 26, 1885, in Wooster, Ohio, 
the son of J. O. Notestein, head of the department of Latin, University 
‘ of Wooster, Wooster, Ohio, and Margaret Bruce (Wallace) Notestein. 
His father’s father was of German descent, the family having come to 
America in 1766, and his mother of English ancestry. His mother is 
the daughter of Benjamin Wallace and Margaret Bruce Wallace, who 
came from Scotland in the thirties. He has three sisters and a brother: 
Mary B., Lucy L., Margaret W., and Wallace Notestein, B.A. University 
of Wooster ’oo, M.A. Yale ’03, Ph.D. ’08. 
Before entering the Forest School he camped for seven summers in 
the northern part of Michigan. He spent two summers as a forest 
guard on San Juan National Forest. He had made quite an extensive 
wood collection of the species of Ohio and Michigan. He received the 
degree of Ph.B. at the University of Wooster in 1908. 
He is unmarried. 
Notestein was appointed an assistant in the United States For- 
est Service in July, 1910. He was in charge of the Fremont 
Experiment Station at Manitou in connection with the Pike 
National Forest, but is now forest examiner at the Wagon 
