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Archive box 00325, Melbourne Museum, Melbourne. 63.02.18Preferred Citation:
Ferdinand von Mueller to Frederick McCoy, 1863-02-18. R.W. Home, Thomas A. Darragh, A.M. Lucas, Sara Maroske, D.M. Sinkora, J.H. Voigt and Monika Wells (eds), Correspondence of Ferdinand von Mueller, <https://vmcp.rbg.vic.gov.au/id/63-02-18>, accessed April 20, 2025
1
See also F. McCoy to M, 20 February 1863 (in this edition as 63-02-20a).
18/2/63
My dear Professor
By the mail I received on Monday Mr Maxwells plants, collected about the W. extremity
of the Great Bight. He sent 3 specimens of each species & I requested Mr Heyne to
put one of each apart for you & label them. This collection after about 2 days work
has been put up for you now, & I have the pleasure of forwarding it, regretting only,
that in the turmoils of accumulated work I had no time to put the specific names instantly
to each plant, but I have given the generic names. I have under all circumstances
some day to revise & enlarge the University herbarium & can then simultaneously attend
to the proper naming of each species.
I trust you will find the collection worth £10, especially when considering that Maxwell
had to travel with a small party for 5 months, to purchase several horses & to live
upon what he is able to raise from the value of his collections. I have to remit to
him by the outgoing mail (end of this week) & you would much oblige me, if you could
add kindly your contribution to mine. I had a good deal of private expenses of late
& would find some difficulty to make the outlay. — I trust you received the large
fish all right. I had half a days heavy work to prepare it. Pray give me kindly your
opinion on it, as Mr M'Haffie is desirous to learn what it is.
I am writing to that Gentleman within the next days.
2
See M to F. McCoy, 28 January 1863; F. McCoy to M, 20 February 1863 (in this edition as 63-02-20c); and M to E. Henderson, 1 March 1863 (in this edition as 63-03-01a).
Pray let me know, whether you ever received my few rock-specimens from the Barkly
Ranges? Dr Sturms
large private museum of zoological objects, on which von Sieboldt
so favorably reported, is to be sold. The whole is valued at £3000. I suppose there
is no likelyhood of your securing
any
portion of it for your institution.
3
The natural history collection assembled by Jacob Sturm (1771-1848) and his sons was advertised for sale by the surviving son in September 1862 (Bonplandia
,
vol. 10, pp. 319-20. The collection had been described in 1860 (Bonplandia
,
vol. 8, p. 317) and, in addition to the zoological specimens advertised in 1862, mentioned a substantial herbarium including Sieber's collections from New Holland and elsewhere.
4
Carl Theodore von Siebold? The advertisement includes reference to the collection being judged 'ersten Ranges in seiner Art' [first class of its kind] by several scholars, including 'Dr. v. Sielbold in München'.
Pray favor me with an answer & believe me to be, your attached
Ferd Mueller
In Maxwells account only 400 specimens are charged. In the parcel transmitted are
448. I have some seeds, for which I have specially to pay, from Maxwell and will be happy to present of those of which the quantity can
be diverted some to the University Gardens
5
See also F. McCoy to M, 20 February 1863 (in this edition as 63-02-20a).