416 
tion, 119; letters written on the 
expedition, — at sea, 119, 120, 
122, 123, 183 ff.; at St. Thomas, 
120 ff.; Barbadoes, 122; Rio de 
Janeiro, 123, 124 ff.; Sandy 
Point, 126, 127; Monte Video, 
127, 128; Bahia Blanca, 128 ff.;| 
Port San Antonio, 130 ff.; Tal- | 
cahuana, 145 ff.; Curicu, 152 ff.; | 
Panama, 163; San Francisco, | 
164; return to Cambridge, 165; | 
at Penikese Island, 166 ff.; be-| 
Teavement in the death of Agas- | 
siz, 171 ff.; care of the children of | 
Alexander Agassiz, 171, 172, 175, | 
182, 185; views on happiness, | 
173, 175, 176; membership on a | 
committee for collegiate instruc- | 
tion for women, 192, 194, 196, 
199, 201 ff., 403, 404; policy in 
regard to the aims of the com- 
mittee, 205; elected president of 
the Society for the Collegiate In- 
struction of Women, 207, 404; 
negotiations for the affiliation of 
the Society with Harvard Univer- 
sity, 231 ff., 243; consideration 
of the name “‘ Radcliffe College,” 
241, 242; satisfaction in the pro- 
posed incorporation of Radcliffe 
College, 244; replies to criticisms 
of the incorporation, 245; policy 
toward Harvard, 245 ff.; at the 
hearing for the charter of Rad- 
cliffe College, 165, 249, 256, 257, 
404, 405, 409 ff.; elected Presi- 
dent of Radcliffe, 258, 404; de- 
sire for a dean for Radcliffe, 258, 
259; ideals for Radcliffe, 261 ff., 
326 ff., 338 ff., 357, 358; services 
to the college, 263, 324, 325, 404; 
loyalty to Harvard, 263, 265; 
views on the education of women, 
264, 358 ff.; influenced by her 
life with Agassiz, 264, 265; 
Wednesday teas, Fay House, 
266, 342, 343, 353; dread of 
Commencement exercises, 267, 
318, 319, 343; family interests, 
275; ber mother’s death, 275; in- 
INDEX 
terest in the Kindergarten for 
the Blind, 275, 276; visit to the 
Pacific coast, 279; year in Eu- 
rope, 280 ff.; letters from Paris, 
282 ff., 287, 288, 308; memories 
of Agassiz abroad, 282, 283, 288, 
307; letters from Rome, 284 ff.; 
letter from Florence, 287; visit 
to Fontenay-aux-Roses, 287; let- 
ters from London, 288, 296; 
visit to Cambridge, 282, 289 ff.; 
at Girton College, 282, 290, 291, 
298; at Newnham College, 182, 
291 ff., 298 ff.; visit to Oxford, 
282, 294 ff.; letters from Venice, 
297 ff., 302 ff.; hears of first Rad- 
cliffe Commencement in Sanders 
Theatre, 302, 303; letter from 
Perarolo, 304, 305; letter from 
Cortina, 305 ff.; letter from Mu- 
nich, 307; second visit to Mon- 
tagny, 282, 307, 308; return to 
Cambridge, Massachusetts, 309; 
receives the Elizabeth Cary 
Agassiz scholarship as a gift, 309; 
correspondence in regard to the 
Radclifie Gymnasium, 311 ff.; 
at the opening of the Gymna- 
sium, 317; resignation as honor- 
ary president of Radcliffe, 341 ff., 
347; called ‘President Emerita,” 
348; gratitude to President Eliot, 
348; on Commencement Day, 
1903, 350 ff.; illness, 356, 386; 
visit to Agassiz House, 358; 
notes for the opening of Agassiz 
House, 357; as an ideal for Rad- 
cliffe students, 358, 366, 408; 
visit to Harvard Observatory, 
361, 382; occupations of later 
years, 367 ff.; at College (Brooks 
House) teas, 368, 882; sor- 
row on the death of her sister 
Sarah, 369, 371; views on old 
age, 371, 372; at the “Queens,” 
371, 374; ill health, 373; visit at 
Hamilton, 373, 377 ff.; reading 
of Carlyle, 373; views on Chris- 
tian Science, 375; seventy-ninth 
birthday, 375; visit to the mu- 
