Document information

Physical location:

RBG Kew, Kew correspondence, Australia, Mueller, 1871-81. f. 19. 71.08.29b

Plant names

Preferred Citation:

Ferdinand von Mueller to Joseph Hooker, 1871-08-29 [71.08.29b]. 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/71-08-29b>, accessed September 11, 2025

Melbourne bot Garden,
29/8/71
The "Great Britain" dear Dr Hooker, proceeds to day and may arrive before the next English Mail. Yesterday I got your letter concerning the huge ;
1
Letter not found, but see M to J. Hooker, 9 February 1871(in this edition as 71-02-09b) and M to J. Hooker, 6 September 1871.
the plant was entirely at your discretionary disposal , more particularly as you defrayed all expenses for it.
In what better hands could the plant come than in those of the generous Mr Booth,
2
John Booth, Flottbeck Nurseries, Hamburg.
whose noble establishment I visited in 1838 as a boy and 1847 before I left Europe. No better place can be found for it, than the one at Berlin, allotted to the plant by Mr Booth; but he alone can be the donor!
Will have a hunt after an other , for which I will pay the £15 - : you kindly sent to Black[i]th and Co.
3
See also M to J. Hooker, 6 September 1871; the letter from Hooker reporting the payment has not been found. Booth also reimbursed Hooker the £15! (See J. Booth to J. Hooker, 26 June 1871, in this edition as M71-06-26.)
Will try my best.
After being for 10 years passively and for 2 years actively persecuted by half a dozen individuals in a manner possible only in a young colony with universal suffrage, at last truth reason and fairness has prevailed and I have vanquished the lot. Parliament has just behaved nobly to me and restored me to my unimpaired power of administration and I feel as if I was born anew!
4
During the parliamentary debate on 23 August 1871 on the budget vote for the Botanic Gardens, the Treasurer, Graham Berry, was reported as saying with reference to the position of William Ferguson in the Gardens that he was 'fully aware of the anomaly referred to, and arrangements should be made to retransfer Mr Ferguson to the Lands department as promptly as possible' (Argus, 24 August 1871, p. 6) The apparent verbatim passage is shorter than that in the official record, Victoria, Parliamentary Debates, vol 13, pp 980-983. Ferguson was not, however, finally moved from the Gardens until December 1872 (Fox (2004), p. 205. See also Cohn and Maroske (1996).
Thanking you for your generous sympathy and powerful support & for your friendly help,
I remain your attached friend
Baron Ferd von Mueller
I will write by th[is] mail to the good Mr Edw Wilson.
5
Letter not found.
Kind regards to Mr Bentham
The plate of the
6
Oliver (1871), drawn from a plant grown 'from seeds transmitted by our highly valued correspondent, Dr. Ferdinand von Mueller, from the rich Botanical Gardens of Melbourne'.
came just most opportune! Every plant here is lost , by the intrusion on my position, and no end of other valuable shrubs, trees &c