418 
16; Mr. Christinat, 36; F. J. 
Child, 209; her colleagues at the 
Annex and Radcliffe College, 
208 ff., 322, 323, 3438, 346; Mr. 
and Mrs. Otto Dresel, 52; C. C. 
Felton, 17, 66; her grandchildren 
and great-grandchildren, 65, 81, 
88, 105, 106, 172, 173, 175, 182, 
372, 378 ff., 384, 386 ff. (see also 
Shaw, Louis A.); Agnes Irwin, 
259 ff., 303, 317 ff.; Elizabeth 
Cabot Lee, 18, 108, 374; C. E. 
Norton, 209; the students of 
Radcliffe College, 254, 265 ff.; 
Sarah W. Whitman, 355, 356. 
Writings of : — Manuscript 
Memoir of Thomas G. Cary, 3, 5, 
63; Actaea, a First Lesson in Nat- 
ural History, 64, 204; Methods of 
Study in Natural History, 66; A 
Journey in Brazil, 69 ff., 103, 104, 
106 ff., 110, 112; Seaside Studies 
in Natural History, 93, 95; An 
Amazonian Picnic, 102; A Dredg- 
ing Excursion in the Gulf Stream, 
103; The Hassler Glacier, 119; In 
the Straits of Magellan, 119; A 
Cruise through the Galapagos, 119; 
Louis Agassiz: His Life and Cor- 
respondence, 181 ff. 
Agassiz, George, 172, 182. 
Agassiz, Ida. See Higginson, Ida 
Agassiz. 
Agassiz (Jean) Louis (Rodolphe), 
early life, 35; in Munich, 307; in 
Paris, 283; arrival in Boston, 
30 ff.; Lowell Lectures, 30, 31; at 
East Boston, 32; appointment to 
professorship at Harvard Uni- 
versity, 32; life in Oxford Street, 
82 ff.; Cambridge friends, 32; 
friendship with Longfellow, 32, 
52, 180, 186; his wife’s death, 32, 
37; his children, 32, 37; meeting 
with Elizabeth Cabot Cary, 34; 
marriage with Elizabeth Cabot 
Cary, 35; zodlogical specimens in 
Oxford Street, 34, 38, 39; labora- 
tory at Nahant, 39; professor- 
ship at Charleston, 40 ff.; lec- 
INDEX 
tures in Washington, 41; labora- 
tory on Sullivan's Island, 40 ff., 
392; library in Quincy Street, 45; 
part in the Agassiz School, 47 ff., 
397 ff.; fiftieth birthday, 52; is 
offered a professorship in Paris, 
55 ff.; summer in Europe, 58 ff.; 
friendship with Alexander Braun, 
58, 187, 188; visit to Montagny, 
59, 60, 62; Methods of Study 
in Natural History, 66; on the 
Thayer expedition to Brazil, 
68 ff., 70, 71, 75, 81, $5 ff., 91, 93, 
94, 96, 97, 99 ff.; lectures on the 
Colorado, 71; friendship with the 
Emperor of Brazil, 68, 72 ff., 
78 ff., 102, 179, 180; lectures in 
Rio de Janeiro, 82 ff., 102; return 
to Cambridge, 103; failing 
health, 103; journey in the West, 
103, 112, 113; expedition in the 
Gulf Stream, 103; his mother’s 
illness and death, 104, 105; at 
the Humboldt Celebration, 114, 
115; illness, 115; at Deerfield, 
115 ff.; recovery, 118; on the 
Hassler expedition, 118 ff., 127, 
128 ff., 137, 143 ff., 147, 151 ff., 
160, 161; return to Cambridge, 
165; school on Penikese Island, 
165 ff.; failing health, 170; death, 
170; biography of, 181 ff.; mem- 
ory of, in Switzerland, 190, 191; 
memoir of, by Ernest Favre, 185; 
as a teacher, 264, 288, 351. 
Agassiz, Maximilian, 172, 182. 
Agassiz, Pauline. See Shaw, Paul- 
ine Agassiz. 
Agassiz, Rodolphe, 172, 182, 378; 
daughters of, 378 ff., 384, 386. 
Agassiz Museum, 56 ff., 92 ff., 372, 
380, 381. 
Agassiz School, 46 ff., 204, 264, 351, 
394 ff. 
Albatross, 130. 
Alexander, Francesca, 282. 
Alexander, Lucia S., 282, 287. 
Amazon, the, 68, 59, 91, 95, 102. 
Andes Mountains, 146, 156, 159, 
162. 
