JOHN TORREY 137 



Mitchell 3 and David Hosack.* Being endowed 

 with unusual natural gifts, he quickly forged 

 ahead. He took his medical degree in 1818 with 

 a thesis on Dysentery, and by 1817 had already 

 presented to the Lyceum of Natural History 

 of which he was one of the founders his Cata- 

 logue of Plants growing within thirty miles of 

 New York (1819), and enjoyed as correspond- 

 ents such men as Sir James Edward Smith, 6 Nut- 

 tall, 6 and von Schweinitz. 7 



About the time Elliott's Sketch of the Botany 

 of South Carolina and Georgia was being pub- 

 lished, Torrey conceived a similar systematic 

 work on The Flora of the North and Middle 

 Sections of the United States, and got out Volume 

 I by the summer of 1824. It showed the rare 

 power of setting forth details in delicate sepa- 

 rateness, yet as a comprehensive entirety. 



In 1824 he was settled at the Military Acad- 

 emy at West Point with a bride, Elizabeth Rob- 

 inson Shaw, and as Professor of Chemistry, Min- 

 eralogy and Geology. The Flora did not extend 

 to a second volume, but ended in a pocket " Com- 

 pendium ' in 1826, for Torrey rightly foresaw 

 that " the natural system was not longer to remain 



3 Samuel Latham Mitchell, surgeon, 1764-1831. 



4 David Hosack, surgeon, 1769-1835. 



5 James Edward Smith, botanist, London, 1759-1828. 

 fi Thomas Nuttall, botanist-explorer, 1784-1859. 



7 Lewis David von Schweinitz, D. D., 1780-1834. 



