CASH ACCOUNT. JANUARY 



KENNEDY — At Milton, March J/th, Oeorgs */ f 



Gilding Kennedy, in his TT1K year. Servleea ^/ / 

 at his Into residence. Blue Hid avenue Mil- 

 ton. on Wednesday. April 3d, at 2.M P. M. 



Relatives and friends invlteitto attwUI. SB" 1 " fi~~i. 



car will leave Dudley .-treet I, -in-dual, lower ^l. 



level, at 1.30 P.-M. On account <>l war con- f~Je>. 

 dltions it is requested that no flowers be sent. 



STUDENT OF BOTANICAL RESEARCH 



Georae- Golding Kennedy Win Native of 

 lloxbury, Graduate ot Harvard, and 

 Last Tear Presented His College with 

 Herbarium of His Own Collection 



George Golding Kennedy, who of late 

 years had become widely known as a New 

 England botanist, died last night at his 

 home, Blue Hill avenue, Milton, in his sev- 

 enty-seventh year. Mr. Kennedy was born 

 In Roxbnry, and his father was Br. Daniel 

 Kennedy, who gained a wide reputation 

 through "Kennedy's Medical Discoveries." 

 His mother was Anne (Colgate) Kennedy. 

 Mr. Kennedy studied at Harvard and was 

 graduated in the class of '64, He then 

 studied at the Harvard Medical School and 

 KPt his degree from there In '67, and it 

 was then that the botanical and scientific 

 world opened to him a fertile field for re- 

 search. He identified himself with his 

 father's business until 1909, when he re- 

 tired and thereafter devoted his time to 

 botanical research, being one of the foun- 

 ders of the New England Botanical Club. 

 He was a member of the visiting com- 

 mittee of Gray's Herbarium at Harvard 

 and was a member of the Union, St. Bo- 

 tolph, Boston Art and Harvard clubs. Dast 

 year he presented to Harvard an her- 

 barium, to the collection of which he had 

 devoted a long time. 



Mr. Kennedy's wife was Harriet White 

 Harris. She died in 1910. The four sur- 

 viving children are Mrs. Edith Golding 

 iBrlggs of Brookline, Dr. Harris Kennedy, 

 Sinclair Kennedy and Mlas Mildred Ken- 

 nedy, all of Milton, 



