240 
series of visits to the southern states. The elder, John Bartram, 
had established, at his home in Philadelphia, the first botanical 
he 
garden in America. Some of the plants from the South went 
In 1780 John Fraser* and his son Nae beau aera: ages 
for cultivation in En nglan In 1786 the Michaux,f fa 
son, went to Charleston, and later i Baldwint se 
After the American Revolution an additional continental Euro- 
“Travels.” He was a botanical artist of much enthusiasm and considerable 
abi a oh —J. H. B. 
n Fraser (1750-1811), one of the most famous European collectors of 
American seeds a living plants, i in ee oe the Revolution, and 
quest between 1780 and 1810. He made one aeqnaintance: of most if not all 
the few American botanists of that day, a the fe publcerion 
of Walter’s ‘Flora caroliniana.” ieved tt f tk 
in the flora were collected by Fraser in regions never visited by Walter. Fraser's 
son, of the @ name, accompanied him in his travels from 1799 to 1810, and 
continued a eer exploration of ie southeastern states after his father’s 
—]J. H. B. 
t ‘André inure (1746-1802), after i: ii ion as a botanical 
under the editorship of the Erench botanist Richard. Michaux's herbarium is 
Francois eanise Michaux (1770-1855) accompanied bis father to America in 
1785 
He was in America 
again. from October, 1801 
until enn 1803, traveling meanwhile from New York to South Carolina, and 
in Kentu and Tennessee. He traveled even more hao cae ans in the eastern 
United See from Maine to Georgia, and west to the Ohio, from 1806 1809. 
parti ly i in A i fi and is best known for his 
Jat d 
Albany to New York, I 
—J. H. B. 
tae a (779-— 1819), a medical graduate of ne University of poe 
to them. He was one of the two Larsen ae ig 
i ip of the first Ful in 1807. 
on the Sketch, was responsible for the most of that work in so far as it related 
ce eorgia. Baldwin was in Charleston in November and December, 1811, and 
Same at other times.—J. H. B. 
