166 .. Obituary. 
- of Religion and Science” are all logical sequences of his 
ew of human progress. He remarks, “ When I thus look back 
existence for which the phon is only a preparation 
For many years Dr. Draper has dwelt in a quiet retreat at 
Hastings on the Hudson, a few miles ohge New rk City, near 
the astronomical spearvatory of his son, Dr. Hen Draper, the 
his more elaborate works into a ¢ reat number of ee and 
Asiatic languages. His wife died sete years before him, leaving 
three sons and three daughters. All the sons have adopted pur- 
suits of science, sph to the father’s taste, and oe mee names 
for themselves now well known in the walks of se 
e funeral of ee Draper was attended, oy 10th, by a 
throng of mourners, including delegates of numerous scientific 
societies with which the deceased had been connected—the Fac- 
ulties of Medicine and Arts, Science and Law, of the University 
of a — and ee of the Faculties of the Universities of 
- Verm and Penn sylvania, The religious ceremonials were 
shaneed | in St. Mark’s Church, in New York, where the remains 
were brought from the village church at Hastings on the Hud- 
son, and finally found their resting-place in the Greenwood Cem- 
sland. 
Be 
ewis H. Morgan, eminent in American Ethnology, and 
Archeology, died on Saturday, the 14th of December last, at 
Rochester, New York. He early began his otitdy 3 in his favorite 
department among the Indians then remaining in Western New 
_ His published vos and memoirs are ab 1 the result of 
ety, or Researches in the line of human progress from 
pie through Barbarism, into Civilization ” (1877), “ Houses 
and House-lite of the American pL RD (1881); and in 
another line, the “American Beaver and his Works” (1867). Mr. 
Morgan was President of the ace Association at the meet- 
ing in 1880 at Boston. 
