Officers and Members. 
1423 
By invitation of the chair Director Henry L. Ward of the Public Mu¬ 
seum, gave a talk on the improvements to be made in the Milwaukee 
Public Museum. 
EXTRACTS FROM THE CHARTER. 
Aw Act to incorporate the Wisconsin Academy of Sciences, Arts, and 
Letters. 
The people of the state of Wisconsin, represented in senate and assem¬ 
bly, do enact as follows: 
Section 1. Lucius Fairchild, Nelson Dewey, John W. Hoyt, Increase 
A. Lapham, * * * x at present being members and officers of an asso¬ 
ciation known as “The Wisconsin Academy of Sciences, Arts, and Let¬ 
ters,” located at the city of Madison, together with their future asso¬ 
ciates and successors forever, are hereby created a body corporate by 
the name and style of the “Wisconsin Academy of Sciences, Arts, and 
Letters,” and by that name shall have perpetual succession; shall be 
capable in law of contracting and being contracted with, of suing and 
being sued, of pleading and being impleaded in all courts of competent 
jurisdiction; and may do and perform such acts as are usually per¬ 
formed by like corporate bodies. 
Section 2. The general objects of the Academy shall be to encourage 
investigation and disseminate correct views in the various departments 
of science, literature, and the arts. Among the specific objects of the 
Academy shall be embraced the following: 
1. Researches and investigations in the various departments of the 
material, metaphysical, ethical, ethnological, and social sciences. 
2. A progressive and thorough scientific survey of the state with a 
view of determining its mineral, agricultural, and other resources. 
3. The advancement of the useful arts, through the applications of 
science, and by the encouragement of original invention. 
4. The encouragement of the fine arts, by means of honors and prizes 
awarded to artists for original works of superior merit. 
5. The formation of scientific, economic, and art museums. 
6. The encouragement of philogical and historical research, the col¬ 
lection and preservation of historic records, and the formation of a gen¬ 
eral library. 
7. The diffusion of knowledge by the publication of original contribu¬ 
tions to science, literature, and the arts. 
Section 3. Said Academy may have a common seal and alter the 
same at pleasure; may ordain and enforce such constitution, regula¬ 
tions, and by-laws as may be necessary, and alter the same at pleasure; 
may receive and hold real and personal property, and may use and dis- 
1 Here follow the names of forty others. Sections 5, 6, 8 and 9 are omitted 
here as of no present interest. For the charter in full see Transactions , vol. 
viii, p. xi, or earlier volumes. 
