JOURNAL AND PROCEEDINGS. T1g 
DR. REYNOLDS. 
Dr. Reynolds was born at Brockville, Ontario, June 6th, 1858, 
and died at Baltimore, Maryland, June oth, 1902. He was the son 
of the late Thomas Reynolds, M. D., one of the old practitioners at 
Brockville, He was educated at the Public Schools of Brockville, 
and McGill University, Montreal, where he took his medical degree 
in 1881. Fora time he practised his profession in Hamilton, and 
in 1885 was appointed to the Medical Staff of the Hamilton Asylum 
as Junior Physician. With the exception of a short interval of a few 
months at the Mimico Asylum, his whole official career was spent at 
the Hamilton Asylum, where he had risen by promotion to the posi- 
tion of Assistant Medical Superintendent. 
In 1890 he married Miss Mary L. Logie, daughter of the late 
Judge Logie, of Hamilton, whe with one daughter survives him. A 
sister, now deceased, was the wife of Dr. Malloch, of Hamilton, and 
a brother, E. J. Reynolds, K. C., was recently appointed a deputy 
Judge at Brockville. 
About the beginning of the present year his health began to fail 
and he went to Southern Pines, North Carolina, to recuperate, ac- 
companied by his wife and daughter. They were on their way home 
and had stopped off at Baltimore to consult Dr. Osler, when he sud- 
denly became worse and was taken to Johns Hopkins Hospital, 
where he received every attention which medical skill could suggest, 
but he gradually sank and died the following day from lung disease. 
From 1881 to the time of his death, Dr. Reynolds was an active 
member of this Association. His services in connection with the 
Biological Section, in which he was for a number of years a faithful 
office-bearer, were especially valuable. In 1893 he became a Vice- 
President of the Association, succeeding in 1898 to the Presidential 
chair. The two years of Dr. Reynolds’ occupancy of that office will 
rank among the most successful in the history of the Association. 
Dr. Reynolds belonged to the Anglican Church, being a very 
active member of St. Thomas’ Church, Hamilton. He was a 
prominent Mason and a Past Master of Barton Lodge. He was also 
a member of the Independent Order of Oddfellows, of which Order 
his father was the first Grand Master in Ontario. He was a member 
