Document information
Physical location:
K73/1640, unit 750, VPRS 44/P inward registered and unregistered correspondence, VA 538 Department of Crown Lands and Survey, Public Record Office, Victoria. 73.01.25Preferred Citation:
Ferdinand von Mueller to James Casey, 1873-01-25. 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/73-01-25>, accessed September 11, 2025
Melbourne bot Garden
25/1/73
Sir
In reply to your communication of the 25th inst.
I have the honor to inform you, that the work at my office commences invariably at
eight o'clock in the morning, by which time whenever my strength admitted of it, I
had for many years already an early walk through such portion of the ground, as might
need inspection at the time At eight o'cl. the townwork is arranged with the Clerk
of the office and the messenger, who is more then a mere letter-carrier, but who attends
to the clearing of consignments of plants or seeds arriving from any part of the globe
at any time, and who in the same manner sees to the shipping by sea or dispatch by
land to any return sendings. The messenger posts early every day the letters and brings
the letters and parcels, which have by post or otherwise arrived at my townadress.
He furthermore looks after the timely arrival of stores, material for repairs, forage,
Museum or Laboratory material &c &c, and arranges for any other detail-matter of the
service, which the exigencies at any time may call forth. The offices of Governments
and of Merchants being scattered through various parts of the metropolis, so much
time is needed in the transaction of town or port bussiness, that he has often no
time for anything else; but if he has time left, it is devoted to Gardenwork or any
other departmental occupation most needful at the moment, and in which he is able
to render assistance.
1
Letter not found.
The Clerk keeps the books of the Department, aids in the correspondence and gives
any time left at his disposal to museum Work, he living in the museum building, being
also custodian of the large and unique collections of prepared plants, on which my
scientific and specially phytographic work mainly rests, and which I commenced thirty
three years (33 years) ago. I receive all the Gardeners the Carters Carpenter
and also the Laboratory operator and Museum Amanuensis every Monday morning early,
to lay down for them the work for the commencing week, and to receive their written
reports of the work performed in the week past.
I inspect personally any portion of the ground and buildings any day whenever and
wherever it is required; and moreover such portions of the ground particularly in
which progressive work is going on. This gives me the moderate physical exercise in
the open air, needful for the preservation of my health, my work hours for the Department
extending with rare exceptions til late in the night. My own daily engagements must
necessarily to a large extent depend on momentary circumstances. They include oral
and written answers to numerous enquiries after the uses, names, properties of multitudinous
plants either indigenous or foreign. Moreover these questions often involve the chemistry
of plants and multifarious industrial purposes, as well as medical geologic, palaeontologic
or microscopic explanations. Any new or rare plant, when here first coming into flower
and fruit receives the Directors attention, so far as Library and Museum Material
in our young Institution admit of study. Whatever time is left me after attending
to all my Directorial daily correspondence and routine work, which to enumerate in
every detail would be tedious, is devoted to the continuation of the elaboration of
the various scientific volumes, on which I am engaged; besides daily new or rare plants,
arriving frequently for our Museum, have to be sorted and to be arranged or to be
examined for permanent reference.
2
Marginal addition by M: 'The Carter has for instance to convey water often in the
hot season, and to bring heath soil and other soil or stones or manure in the cool
season, irrespective of other general or routine work'.
3
Reports not found.
It cannot be surprising, that I had years, in which the correspondence rose to about
3000 letters. Dr Woolls, F.L.S., of Paramatta stated recently in a public journal,
that he alone had received several hundred autographic letters from me within a few
years on native plants, he being one of the many amateur contributors to our collections.
Three thousand letters a year, including all strictly official correspondence, would
after all amount to only about eight letters a day. I am satisfied, that Dr Hooker,
C.B., Director of the botanic Garden of Kew, writes many more. Let it be remembered,
that the plants of Australia (minute fungi excepted) amount to about fifteen thousand
species alone, and that they can only be studied in connection with more than one
hundred thousand extra-australian plants, the numerous varieties uncounted. This involves
the necessity, while discovery is progressing, to maintain a close communication with
the great phytologic masters of the day, and this I have endeavoured to maintain for
the honor of the colony and for the benefit of my fellow-colonists and their descendents
as far as my humble understanding, my small departmental and private means and my
remaining strength allowed it. The results are extant for permanent good in numerous
volumes of original research. As an instance of collateral correspondence arising
in many ways, I would merely mention, that every geographic traveller for many years
past has gratuitously gathered plants gratuitously for our museum and as material
for my studies, and that on this account alone communication with explorers must be
maintained.
Should still on any special point this reply not afford sufficient information, then
I will gladly extend it, when I learn in what direction more explanations are needed,
no questions of this kind having ever been adressed to me since the last twenty years,
I being thus unable by any precedent to judge, what precise information might be desired
in this instance.
I have the honor to be,
Sir, your obedient servant
Ferd. von Mueller, C.M.G.,
Director, botanic Garden.
The honorable the Minister of the Lands Department.
4
M's letter was forwarded to the Secretary of Agriculture, A. Wallis (Agriculture being
at this time a sub-department within the Lands Department).