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A36 Royal Geographical Society of Australasia (Vic. Branch) papers, letter press copy book, pp. 9-12, Mitchell Library, State Library of New South Wales, Sydney. 89.04.12bPreferred Citation:
Ferdinand von Mueller to William MacGregor, 1889-04-12 [89.04.12b]. 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/89-04-12b>, accessed September 11, 2025
1
MS is a letterpress copy.
Accompanying my official letter
by a private one now, dear Dr McGregor, you will kindly allow me to point out, that
(as stated telegraphically in reply to your telegram
) the geographic branch here cannot spend any thing out of its fund outside of its
special science, and that my Department is too slenderly endowed, as to admit of spending
any large sum on a collector.
Moreover I never paid for travelling botanic collectors more than £150 a year, out
of which they would have to pay even their travelling expenses, altho collecting material
was found them and paper for their collections was paid extra. Even at this moderate
rate, none of my former botanic Collectors did furnish even approximately a value
for the expenditure incurred; indeed Sir Will. Hooker came to the same result with
most of his Kew Emissaries, as he wrote me in 1854, and abolished them and never reestablished
collectorship for the Kew-Gardens. It is different with zoologic Collectors, who can
realize for their gains always much larger returns than botanic Collectors.
2
M to W. MacGregor, 12 April 1889 (in this edition as 89-04-12a).
3
W. MacGregor to M, 29 March 1889 (in this edition as 89-03-29b), to which no telegraphic reply has been found.
4
MacGregor had suggested that the £500 granted by the Victorian Government to the Victorian
Branch of the Royal Geographical Society of Australasia to support exploration in
New Guinea should be spent on a full-time botanical collector attached to his office.
What a pity that we have not yet
telegraphic
communication with Port Moresby. Could that not be accomplished by a subsidy to the
Cable-Company, which has its line to Thursday Island? Such a measure would give more
impulse to N.G. trade and settlement than any other effort. Could a Gardener be appointed
out of your means at £150 a year and £50 extra for tools &c to introduce and test
culture plants
I could send a first [rate] Gardener on those terms from here. He might perhaps accompany
the party up to the Owen Stanley's Range and afterwards stay there, sowing seeds of
useful plants on the way up for naturalising valuable plants. All that I could spend
in my Department to subsidise a Collector or Gardener, if he also collected, would
be £50 for the trip.
I am afraid, that as a Sexagenarian I shall have
passed away
, or be forestalled, before the
last
great wish of my professional life is realized.
Regardfully your
Ferd. von Mueller
As the Colony Victoria pays already £5000 to the N.G. fund I could not ask the Vict
Government to spend extra
I would help a Gardener there grandly with sendings from here