Document information
Physical location:
GRG 35/631/12, Department of Lands, State Records of South Australia, Adelaide. 63.06.07Preferred Citation:
Ferdinand von Mueller to John McKinlay, 1863-06-07. 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/63-06-07>, accessed September 11, 2025
Melbourne bot Garden
7. June 1863
Dear Mr M'Kinlay.
It was only within the last days (I confess it to my discredit) that I carefully examined
the map of the track, which you laid so gloriously across the Australian Continent.
It was thus for the first time that I perceived you had done me the honor of naming
a watercourse with my paternal name.
Accept for this token of friendship, which I prize as the highest gift you or any
one could bestow on me, the expression of my most grateful acknowledgment. I shall
esteem it as one of the greatest honors I ever had bestowed on me, that my name has
become thus connected with that enterprise of yours, for which you have earned the
whole worlds admiration. I cannot do much to reciprocate your generous act, but it
will be a source of gratification to me to attach to some noble new plant of the interior
your name,
and though this may be but a humble tribut of my gratitude and respect, it will nevertheless
as one as imperishable as nature herself be kindfully accepted by you.
1
McKinlay crossed Australia from south to north in 1861-2 while leading a relief expedition
in search of Burke and Wills.
2
In April 1862 McKinlay for a time followed a 'magnificent stream' in the vicinity
of 22° S, 142° E: 'it is at least 250 yards wide, and from forty to fifty feet down
the banks to the water, lined with noble gums, box, bean, and other trees …'. This
he named Mueller's Creek. (There had been good rains in the area, and much of the
country to the southward was flooded at the time.) To the east, he named a 'well-defined
range' Mount Mueller; see McKinlay (1862), pp. 72-3. 'Mueller's Range' is still shown
on modern maps, but the 'magnificent stream' proved to be a stretch of the same river
named Diamantina by William Landsborough in 1866 in honour of Lady Diamantina Bowen,
wife of Sir George Bowen. Governor of Queensland; and Landsborough's name prevailed
despite the priority of McKinlay's naming. See M to A. Petermann, 24 October 1876.
3
Mackinlaya macrosciadea (B64.06.01, p. 120).
Trusting that you are enjoying your well earned triumph in happiness and health and
that we shall again on some future occasion derive advantage from your talents and
experience for exploration, I remain, dear Mr M'Kinlay, your attached
Ferd. Mueller.
Many of the seeds, you so kindly presented, have germinated and promise to furnish
excellent plants.