Document information
Physical location:
76.07.16Preferred Citation:
Joseph Hooker to Ferdinand von Mueller, 1876-07-16. 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/76-07-16>, accessed September 11, 2025
1
Letter not found. For the text given here, see Argus, 21 September 1876, p. 5. col. c. The text is introduced by ‘The Government botanist,
in a letter dated 16th July, received from Dr. Hooker, C.B., president of the Royal
Society, England, and director of the Botanical-garden, Kew, finds himself a distinguished
participator in a bequest made by the late John Stuart Mill to his niece. In his letter
to the Baron von Mueller Dr. Hooker says:’.
2
Stepdaughter.
3
A slip by Hooker in duplicating the letter?
4
While living in France in his youth, John Stuart Mill, under the influence of George
Bentham, ‘discovered the pleasures … of collecting botanical specimens [which became
one of his] leisure pursuits of a lifetime' (ODNB). Bentham (1997) has scattered references
to collecting with Mill. For details of the bequest, see notes to M to H. Taylor,
23 September 1876 (in this edition as 76-09-23d); see also M to J. Hooker, 23 September 1876; J. Hooker to M, 13 December 1876; and Pearce (2006).
M did not take up Hooker's suggestion as to the labelling of the sheets and the specimens
at MEL can only be identified from labels in Mill's hand. This means that specimens
acquired by Mill but not annotated by him cannot be positively identified as part
of the donation by Helen Taylor.