IN MEMORY OF ROBERT HOLLAND. 241 
for the present to say that it had been found in five stations 
altogether—two on the Co. Antrim shores of the lake, one in 
Derry, and two in jllpatie, In three of these stations the plant 
p ‘ ; 
fr hree feet ma ; In. a spac few square yards 
I gathered two hundred stems; the greater aeleng of these speci- 
mens have since been distributed through the two Exchange Clubs 
Among the other more interesting addons to the flora of 
restricted range in the South of Bupland sea biennis, a colonist 
at Armagh, where it was first observed by Mr. A. G. More some 
years ago; Linaria repens, 2s y in §. Armagh, six miles N.W. 
of Killowen, in Co. Down, its only other station in Ulster; Statice 
bahusiensis, a ndant in estuary of Newry River; Potamogeton 
eee ae gs and P, filiformis, in Lough Neagh—the latter 
dies Savii, estuary of Newry River; Festuca sylvatica, woods at 
Tanderagee ; and Chara polyacantha, lake and pools at Lou ughgall, 
near Armagh, Other additions to the flora, which, though not 
uncommon plants in England, are very rare or local in Ireland, are 
* Ranunculus circinatus, Fumaria densiflora, Diplotaxis muralis, Silene 
best were Barbarea arcuata and B. iisoadaieca recorded from near 
Armagh by Mr. More nearly forty years ago, which still flourish in 
their old cared and Lathyrus palustris, found some years ago by 
Re on islets at the mouth of the Closet River, in 
Lough Ne gh, ake I saw it in abundance, as well as on the 
banks of the same ——— 
IN MEMORY OF ROBERT HOLLAND, 
Ir was in 1865 or eae that I made the acquaintance of Robert 
High 
olland. I was then studying medicine at Hig Wycombe, and 
devoting my leisure to Britis h botany. Being anxious to see ag 
any plan possible in a living state, I asked a 
correspondent, Mr. Le Grindon, if ae eg send me | Ge 
JOURNAL OF ares 31, [Ave. 18 
