Address on the Life and Character of William Smyth, D.D: Late Professor of Mathematics and Natural Philosophy in Bowdoin College; Delivered Before the ... the College, July 7, 1868
Excerpt from Address on the Life and Character of William Smyth, D.D: Late Professor of Mathematics and Natural Philosophy in Bowdoin College; Delivered Before the Alumni of the College, July 7, 1868
I may, in behalf of the college and the community, to the eminent claims of that steadfast friend, the faith ful officer of government and instruction, the citizen of the highest tone of public spirit, and the true man, to the affectionate respect of us all.
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Alpheus Spring Packard Jr., LL.D. (February 19, 1839 – February 14, 1905) was an American entomologist and palaeontologist. He was the son of Alpheus Spring Packard, Sr. (1798–1884) and the brother of William Alfred Packard. He was born in Brunswick, Maine and was Professor of Zoology and Geology at Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island from 1878 until his death. He was a vocal proponent of the Neo-Lamarckian theory of evolution.
His chief work was the classification and anatomy of arthropods, and contributions to economic entomology, zoogeography, and the phylogeny and metamorphoses of insects. Packard was appointed to the United States Entomological Commission in 1877 where he served with Charles Valentine Riley and Cyrus Thomas. He wrote school textbooks, such as Zoölogy for High Schools and Colleges (eleventh edition, 1904). His Monograph of the Bombycine Moths of North America was published in three parts (1895, 1905, 1915, edited by T. D. A. Cockerell).