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Physical location:
61.12.21
Plant names
-
Willsia
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Preferred Citation:
Ferdinand von Mueller to William Wills, 1861-12-21. 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/61-12-21>, accessed September 11, 2025
1
Letter not found. For the text given here see Wills (1863), pp. 361-2 (B63.01.02).
My Very Dear Doctor,
I need not assure you that I shall be but too happy to render you any services within
my power, and especially such as are connected with doing justice to your poor and
great son.
Having been duly authorized by you to secure the pistol of your late son, I will take
an early opportunity to claim it for you and bring it to your son Thomas.
I will also very gladly do what I can in restoring to you any property I may hear
of as belonging to your lamented son William. As soon as Professor Neumayer returns,
we can learn with exactness what instruments were your son's. I will also inquire
about the telescope. I believe I forgot mentioning to you, that it would be a source
of the highest gratification to me to call some new plant by the name of the family,
who claim as their own, one of now imperishable fame. But I will not be unmindful
that, in offering an additional tribute, humble as it is, to your son's memory, it
will be necessary to select for the
, a plant as noble in the Australian flora as the young savant himself who sacrificed
his life in accomplishing a great national and never-to-be-forgotten enterprise.
2
Dr. William Wills subsequently sued John Macadam 'as secretary to the Exploration Committee, for the recovery of the pistol found in
the hand of the corpse of Burke, the ground for the claim being that the pistol belonged
to Dr Wills's son, who had lent it to Burke' (
Argus
, 25 January 1862, p. 4). It was later given to Dr Wills; see Macadam's explanation
in Parliament on 12 June 1862 in responding to a comment about 'some property that
had been legally recovered from him', that 'he considered that he would have forfeited
his trust if he had allowed that article to pass from the colony without there being
the most absolute proof that the pistol really was Mr Wills'' (
Age
(Melbourne), 13 June 1862, p. 6).
Willsia
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3
M did not erect a genus
, but named Eremophila willsii in B62.04.01, pp. 21-2 and plate XX. See M to W. Wills, 5 January 1862.
Willsia
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Trusting, my dear and highly valued friend, that the greatness of the deed will, to
a certain extent, alleviate your grief and sorrow for an irreparable loss, and that
Providence may spare you long in health and happiness, for your family.
I remain,
Your faithfully attached,
Ferd. Mueller.
W. Wills, Esq., M.D.