XX11l Obituary Notices of Fellows deceased. 
and... . came to live in Sheffield.” Huis professorship he had held since 
1875. . He married in 1859 and had one son and three daughters, losing his 
wife ten years and his son one year before his own death. Two of his 
daughters are married to members of his own profession, one to Dr. Charles 
Atkin of Sheffield and another to Dr. R.S. Hubbersty of Sunderland, the third 
remaining with her father to the close of his days. He died on Christmas 
evening, 1921. Till the last year of what he himself described as his long 
and happy life, he had never realised that he was old. Apart from science, 
his amusements had all been of a tranquil kind—gardening, photography, and 
the game of bowls. A friend, who had been reading over many of his 
writings, tells his daughter that: “ Dominating all is the intense love he had 
for nature, religion, and poetry.” Another friend, who often walked with him, 
tells her of the enjoyment derived from the humour, instruction, and high 
tone of his conversation. A long correspondence is in harmony with these 
touches of character. 
A letter from Sheffield, dated June, 1915, shows him at eighty-three, away 
from necessary books, reluctant to undertake fresh work of importance, yet 
unable to be disobliging. He explains that he had declined an invitation to 
describe the Ostracoda and Copepoda collected by the Australasian Antarctic 
Expedition, 1911-1914, under Sir Douglas Mawson, but that the material had 
nevertheless been sent him, with further pressure. Now, the Scientific 
Records of that Expedition show that in Series C the fifth volume contains 
monographs on the Copepoda, the Cladocera, and Halocypride, by G.S. Brady. 
A fine finish! 
T. Tete ges 
a2et 
Hagrison 4npd Sons, Ltd., Printers in Ordinary to His Majesty, St. Martin’s Lane, 
