158 THE BOTANISTS OF PHILADELPHIA. 



His death occurred on September 10, 1859. In opening 

 a case of plants received shortly before from ^Ir. Booth he 

 overstramed himself, and from that time steadily declined 

 until his death on September 10, 1859. His love of nature 

 was great, and this, joined with untiring industry and great 

 firmness of purpose, had raised him from the position of an 

 unknown artisan to the foremost rank of American men of 

 science. Elias Durand said of him immediately after his 

 death : " No other explorer of the botany of North America 

 has personally made more discoveries; no writer on American 

 plants, except perhaps Prof. Asa Gray, has described more 

 new genera and species." His name is memorialized in a 

 genus of rosaceous plants, Nuttallia. 



Bibliography.* 



1. "Observations on the genus Eriogonum, and the natural order 

 Polygonete." — Journal Academy Natural Sciences, I : 24, 33. 



2. "An account of two new genera of Plants ; and of a species of 

 Tillsea, and Limosella, recently discovered on the hanks of the Delaware, in 

 the vicinity of Philadelphia." — Journal Academy Natural Sciences, I : 111. 



3. "Description of Collinsia, anew genus of plants." — Journal Aca- 

 demy Natural Sciences, I : 189. 



4. "Description of rare plants recently introduced in the gardens of 

 Philadelphia." — Journal Academy Natural Sciences, II : 179. 



5. ' ' Observations on the genus Oryzopsis. " — Journal Academy Natural 

 Sciences, III : 125. 



6. " Remarks on the species of Corallorhiza indigenous to the United 

 States." — Journal Academy Natural Sciences, III : 135. 



7. "Description of two genera of the natural order Crucifera?." — 

 Journal Academy Natural Sciences, V : 132. 



8. " Observations on a species of Anemone of the section Pulsatilla 

 indigenous to the United States." — Journal Academy Natural Sciences, 

 V : 158. 



* For complete bibliography see Popular Science Monthli/. 



