18 J. H. MAIDEN. 



Medical Men. — Surgeon-General White, Denis Considen, 

 D' Arcy Wentworth, and Outhill should be included. William 

 Bland, Hon. Dr. Douglass and Sir Alfred Roberts were all 

 active members of our Society, though, it will be observed, 

 I do not propose to restrict our portrait gallery to members. 



Surveyors and Explorers. — We can hardly separate one 

 designation from the other. The earliest surveyor-explorers 

 include our first Surveyor-General Alt, buried in St. John's 

 Cemetery, Parramatta; Surveyors Grimes and Meehan, G. 

 W. Evans, John Oxley, Sir Thomas Mitchell, and many 

 others. No doubt our Surveyor-General and our Institute 

 of Surveyors would willingly help us. 



Engineers. — When I come to Engineers, I find the title 

 was somewhat loosely used, but whether some might be 

 called surveyors or architects is a matter of detail. Let 

 me suggest the following, and I am sure our Works Depart- 

 ment and the Railway Department would help us. Major 

 Druitt, W. H. Alcock, Superintendent of Streets, Highways 

 and Bridges in 1810; John Busby, "Mineral Surveyor," of 

 Busby's Bore fame. Captain, afterwards Sir E. Ward, a most 

 attentive member. Col. Barney, R.E., G. K. Mann, r.e., 

 E. O. Moriarty, Whitton, W. C. Bennett, three distinguished 

 Engineers-in-Ohief of the Public Works Department. 



Architects. — Mortimer William Lewis of the Corps of 

 Royal Military Surveyors, and first Colonial Architect. He 

 was an early town-surveyor of Sydney, besides being in 

 charge of engineering works. Then we must not forget 

 such men as William Greenway, who dates from Governor 

 Macquarie's time, nor E. T. Blacket, architect of the 

 University, and of many fine churches. 



Botanists. — These are attended to at the Botanic Gar- 

 dens, so that attention can, in the meantime, be given to 

 other kinds of portraits. If at any time the Society should 



