44 



APPENDIX TO THE REPORT OF THE SECRETARY. 



D. — Addressed packages received by the Smithsonian Institution, fyc. — Csntin'd. 





02 



o to 

 c" J2 





to 



o fcu 



. oS 



£•* 



53 % 



S. 



TAUNTON, MASSACHUSETTS. 



1 



11 



1 

 2 



1 



2 

 1 



2 

 3 

 3 

 3 

 32 



2 l 



Washington, D. C— Continued. 

 Ordnance Bureau 



2 





Secretary of the Interior 



1 



TORONTO, CANADA. 



Secretary of the Treasury 



1 





Secretary of War 



2 







1 





Treasury Department 



8 





United States Coast Survey 



United States Naval Observatory 



United States Patent Office 



16 



TUSCALOOSA, ALABAMA. 



72 

 136 





WATERVILLE, MAINE. 





UTICA, NEW YOUK. 



2 



American Journal of Insanity 



New York St§te Lunatic Asylum 



WILLIAMSBURG, VIRGINIA. 



5 



WASHINGTON, D. C. 



Bureau of Ordnance and Hydrography 



WINDSOR, NOVA SCOTIA. 



4 





AVORCESTER, MASSACHUSETTS. 



American Antiquarian Society 





Library of Congress .-. 





Medical Department 







6 







Total addresses of institutions . 

 Total addresses of individuals. 



109 

 160 



Total number of parcels to institutions 2, 205 



Total number of parcels to individuals 498 



329 



2,70^ 



ADDITIONS TO THE COLLECTIONS OF THE INSTITUTION IN 1S66. 



The total number of distinct donations in 1866 amounts to 220 : the number 

 of donors being 168. This exhibits a considerable increase over the tigures of 

 1865, which are 155 and 102, respectively. The number of different packages 

 received was 318, as compared with 257 of 1865. 



The precise character of the collections received will be best gathered from 

 the list of donations given further on. As will be seen they come from many 

 different localities throughout the continent of America ; the most important, 

 however, being those from the officers of the Hudson's Bay Company, in Arctic 

 America. 



WORK DONE IN MUSEUM AND COLLECTIONS IN 1866. 



Much labor has been expended during the year in cleaning the specimens on 

 exhibition, and otherwise repairing the damage of the fire of 1865. The diffi- 

 culty of preventing the rain and melted snow from coming through the tempo- 

 rary roof has caused great trouble from mould, requiring energetic measures of 

 relief. No mounted specimens have been added to the collection. 



^ As usual the collections received have been regularly entered and catalogued. 

 The following table shows what has been done in this respect : 



