Page:A Life of Matthew Fontaine Maury.pdf/334

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APPENDIX D.

time, and pluck the rhododendron and the laurel and shower them on my bier."

His body now lies in Holywood, between the last resting-places of Ex-Presidents Monroe and Tyler, on a lovely knoll overlooking the James River.


PROPOSED MEMORIAL TO COMMANDER MAURY.

The following is a copy of a communication transmitted to Governor Kemper:—

Sir, Richmond, Va., Jan. 23rd, 1874.

The Superintendent of the Virginia Military Institute has received a communication from Commodore Jansen, of the Royal Netherland's Navy, proposing the construction of a lighthouse on the Rocos Banks as a memorial to the distinguished services rendered to mankind by the late Commander M. F. Maury, LL.D.

This proposition has received the endorsement of the Royal Geographical Society of Great Britain. We are permitted to submit the following extracts from letters on this subject:—

London, 21, Eccleston Square, S.W.,
My dear Jansen, May 13th, 1873.

The President and Council of the Geographical Society have authorized me to tell you, that as soon as the proposal for the "Maury Memorial" takes regular shape, they will be glad to give the plan their cordial support. Sir Henry Rawlinson thinks that the plan should originate in America. Will you ask General Smith, as soon as the plan is well under way, to write officially to our Geographical Society and to the Societies on the Continent?

Yours sincerely,
Clements R. Markham.
My dear General, Delft, Holland, May 15th, 1873.

From Markham's letter you will see that the Royal Geographical Society will give the "Maury Memorial," in the