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Natural HistoryMuseum,London,Keeper's Archives(Zoological Department),Letters 1878, vol. 14, f. 379b. 78.10.28Preferred Citation:
Charles French to Ferdinand von Mueller, 1878-10-28. 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/78-10-28>, accessed September 11, 2025
Botanic Garden
28/10/78
My Dear Baron.
I beg to enclose a few particulars connected with my collection of Longicorns and
other families, in the hope that you may be able to assist me in disposing of them
to the British Museum authorities.
The collection has been formed with the greatest care, and has cost me far more than
ever I could ask for it. Of course you are aware of the heavy loss which I sustained
some time since in my Queensland Nat History undertaking, a loss which I have not
yet recovered,
[so] that I am desirous of disposing of all, or part of my Australian collection,
to the best advantage. (I intend to keep my Foreign collection if possible.) I have it on the authority of
several well known Scientific Gentlemen both in England, France, and here, that my
collection of Australian Longicorns is in point of rarity of sp. and also in numbers,
the finest in the whole world.
1
f. 379c in the letter book is in the hand of Charles French Snr. and is titled 'Particulars of Australian Longicorns'. There are 700 species, 890 specimens, many named, arranged in ten drawers of a cabinet.
Many un-named probably new, especially those collected in Northern Territory, Port
Essington and on Overland Telegraph lines, N.W Australia &c. The genera, with numbers
of different species, are listed.
French reports that Mr Macleay of Sydney has praised the collection. French would
prefer the collection, with which circumstances force him to part, to go to the British
Museum and offers his collection of Longicorn beetles, in which he had specialized,
buying in specimens for as much as £1.5.0, for £150. The remainder of the Australian
collection (listed) was offered for £200 without cabinet.
2
French and Wiliam Petterd had undertaken a collec
ting trip to Queensland in 1875
but 'were unfortunate enough to lose nearly the whole of their splendid collection of birds, insects, &c., through the vessel in which the cases were shipped being wrecked on the passage to Melbourne '(Argus, 11 March 1876, p, 4).
Trusting that your health is improving
I remain
Yours sincerely
Chas French
Baron F. von Mueller C.M.G FRS &c &c
3
See also M to R. Owen, 30 October 1878.