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RBG Kew, Miscellaneous reports 1.52, Phylloxera, Bordeaux Congress 1881, ff. 56-7. 81.07.22Preferred Citation:
Ferdinand von Mueller to Joseph Hooker, 1881-07-22. 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/81-07-22>, accessed June 23, 2025
22/7/81.
You will have received a communication from the Agent General of Victoria, dear Sir
Joseph, after a telegram from here, soliciting you to become the representative of
Victoria and indeed also of N.S. Wales and South Australia at the Congress of Bordeaux
early in September, when the Phylloxera-questions are further to be discussed.
A telegram from the Right. Hon the Secretary of State for the Colonies, invited us
to send a delegate. New South Wales proposed, that you should name a Representative
at home; but I went a step farther and recommended that
yourself
should be asked to be the delegate of these Colonies. As the Congress takes place
at the period when usually you make a tour to the Continent, as moreover it takes
you so little time to go to Bordeaux from Kew, but above all as you as our "Premier"
in an Official position are interested in this Phylloxera-question for the sake of
all
the British Colonies, it was but fair to offer the mission to
you
in first instance, and in the event of your being pressingly prevented, to ask you
to nominate the Delegate perhaps Mr Dyer
if he can be spared for the purpose. Of course all expenses incurred by you, will
be paid by the three colonies jointly.
1
W. Thiselton-Dyer, whom Hooker did indeed nominate; see M to J. Hooker, 29 July 1881.
Some Reports & correspondence will be transmitted by the Cuzco-mail
to you through the Agent General, among these a letter of mine,
which explains, why — beyond a private visit to the Geelong district to see the ravages
of the Phylloxera vastatrix personally [—]
I became in no way identified with this, now to Australian Viticulture most serious
question. This exclusion of mine from all cultural-concerns is one of the many ill
consequences of my loosing the bot. Garden, and has made me powerless to do anything
in matters of this sort or in any other cultural pursuits.
2
Cuzco
was one of the mail steamers operated on the England-Australia run by the Orient Steam
Navigation Company.
3
M to T. Wilson, 16 July 1881; the letter is now at Kew.
4
Obscured by binding.
Your despatch of 1876
came too late to prevent the ingress of the Phylloxera, which found its way into Victoria
(Geelong) insiduously soon after I left the bot. Garden in 1873. On this occasion
I would now only add, that altho' it was taked
about by some, that I should go to the Congress and by others that the Secretary of
our Agricultural Department should go, I stated that after I had not even my own large collection of Vines seen for the last eight years, and had been excluded from
all
cultural operations, I had no courage now to share in a task, of this kind, unless
the Government here insisted on my going;
you
can also understand, that it would "break my heart" to meet the Directors of Kew,
of Montpellier and all the other Garden-Directors, a colleague of whom I was til 1873,
unless I was myself Director again at least of some one garden here; hence it is not
likely that my intention of 1869 when my Garden was first invaded, to visit Europe,
the homestead of my boyhood, my paternal house (and then also the great horticultural
institutions of Europe) once more, will ever be realized!, not to speak of destroyed
hopes of life and overthrow of my career in
most
respects from all of which I might have been saved by one single powerful appeal from
England!
5
J. Hooker to Under-Secretary of State, Foreign Office, 9 February 1876, published
in the Melbourne
Argus, 8 May 1876. See also M to T. Wilson, 16 June 1881.
6
talked?
Regardfully
your
Ferd von Mueller