AGASSIZ AT PENIKESE. “IAI 
His tall, robust figure, his broad shoulders bend- 
ing a little under the weight of years, his large round 
face lit up by kindly dark-brown eyes, his cheery 
smile, the enthusiastic tones of his voice, his ‘roll- 
ing gait, like that of ““a man who had walked 
much over ploughed ground,” — all these entered 
into our first as well as our last impressions of 
Agassiz. He greeted us with great warmth as we 
landed. He looked into our faces to justify him- 
self in making choice of us among the many whom 
he might have chosen. 
/The roll of the Anderson School has never been 
published, and I can only restore a part of it from 
memory. Among those whose names come to my 
mind as I write are Dr. Charles O. Whitman, of 
the University of Chicago; Dr. William K. Brooks, 
of Johns Hopkins; Dr. Frank H. Snow, now Chan- 
cellor of the University of Kansas; Dr. W. O. 
Crosby, of the Boston Society of Natural History; 
Charles Sedgwick Minot, Samuel Garman, Walter 
Faxon, J. Walter Fewkes, —all of these still con- 
nected with the work at Cambridge; Ernest 
Ingersoll, then just beginning his literary work; 
Professor J. G. Scott, of the Normal School at 
Westfield; Professor Stowell, of the school at 
Cortland; Professor Austin C. Apgar, of Trenton, 
N. J.; Professor Fernald, of Maine; Miss Susan 
Hallowell, of Wellesley College; Miss Mary A. 
Beaman (now Mrs. Joralemon, of the Belmont 
School, California); Mr. E. A. Gastman, of Illi- 
nois, and other well-known instructors. With 
these was the veteran teacher of botany at Mount 
Holyoke Seminary, Lydia W. Shattuck, with her 
