Minutes of Proceedings. 131 



8. J. J. Kelso, M.D., elected November 8, 1869. 



9. Sir T. A. Larcom, K.C.B., elected ISTovember 30, 1833, 



10. C. Lloyd, M.D., elected May 14, 1877. 



11. Sir John Macls^eill, P.E.S., elected February 21, 1831. 



12. David Moore, Ph.D., elected June 23, 1845. 



13. Rev. T. H. Porter, D.D., elected April 25, 1836. 



14. YeryEev. C. "W. Russell, D.D., elected February 10, 1868. 



15. H. H. Stewart, M.D., elected April 11, 1853. 



16. A. Thorn, elected June 11, 1866. 



In addition to the distinguished name of Corrigan, whose labours 

 have been more appropriately commemorated in the memoirs of other 

 Societies devoted to the studies of his profession, there appear in the 

 above list the following names, which call for some special mention in 

 the present Report : — 



William Andrews, from his youth, and during his long life, was 

 an ardent field naturalist. He made many valuable additions to the 

 flora and fauna, especially the marine ichthyology, of the South West 

 of Ireland : among his discoveries should bo particularized Geomalacus 

 maculosus (Allman), a beautiful gasteropod, occurring in Co. Kerry. His 

 memory will be deservedly perpetuated in the name given by Edward 

 Newman to another of his discoveries, Trichomanes Andretvsii (a 

 remarkable variety of T. radicans), and in that of Galathea Andrewsii 

 given to a crustacean by Dr. John Kinahan. Mr. Andrews was one 

 of the chief founders and promoters of the Natural History Society of 

 Dublin, of which he was at one time President, and for a considerable 

 period Secretary. He was also for many years Chairman of the 

 Natural History Committee of the Royal Dublin Society. He 

 contributed to the Proceedings of the Academy, in 1844, a Paper on 

 Trichomanes and Hymenophyllum ; and in 1867 and 1870, two com- 

 munications recording the finding in those years of the rare cetacean, 

 Ziphius Sowerhii, in Dingle Bay, Co. Kerry. 



David Moore, Ph. D., has left a memory not less enduring in the 

 records of the Academy's publications than in the hearts of all who 

 knew him. His able management of the Botanical Gardens at Glas- 

 nevin for the last forty years as Director, has shown the possibility 

 of uniting the keenest spirit of scientific investigation with a practical 

 skill as invaluable as it is rare. In the early portion of his career, 

 attached as Naturalist to the Ordnance Survey, his first important 



