Document information

Physical location:

MS 100, William Henry Brewer Papers, Manuscripts and Archives, Yale University Library, New Haven, Connecticut. 65.08.22

Plant names

Preferred Citation:

Ferdinand von Mueller to William Brewer, 1865-08-22. 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//letters/1860-9/1865/65-08-22-final.odt>, accessed June 4, 2026

1
Annotated: 'Rec. Nov 13./65'.
22/8/65
The most interesting letter, dear Prof. Brewer, written by you on the 17. Oct of last year
2
Letter not found.
remained so long unanswered, because I watched for a direct opportunity of sending something to your country. This has at last occurred, by the Patr. Henry, which will leave here about the middle of next month.
3
Patrick Henry cleared out of Port Phillip Bay, bound for New York, on 20 September 1865 ( Argus , 25 September 1865, p. 4).
I will send by her a box of specimens to the illustrious Asa Gray, and among these will be a sufficiency of duplicates to provide for your private collection. The most important notes of your letter I had published here,
4
'California. The Results of the State Geological Survey', Argus , 13 January 1865, p. 6? The article is introducd by 'The following extract from a Californian paper has been forwarded to us by Dr. Mueller:—'. A more botanically orientated possibility in which Brewer is mentioned is 'Vegetation of the Californian Alps', Age , 7 January 1865, p. 7, said to be reprinted from Daily alta California , 24 October 1864; there is, however, no indication in this case that the source item had been received from M.
since they are of high interest to the general reader who intellectually follows the march of great discoveries. Your labours under the aid of Prof Gray will most gloriously widen our knowledge of the vegetation & other physical features of the high mountain regions of the west of North America, and this will be a labour of which future ages will envy you.
5
Brewer had been appointed professor of agriculture at Yale University's Sheffield Scientific School in 1864 after several years in California where he traversed much of the State during field expeditions for the government's geological survey. He spent the early months of 1865 at Harvard University with Asa Gray, working up his Californian botanical collections for publication.
Your field exertions have also a most important bearing on geographical & geological enquiry & will thus be pregnant with manyfold [deep] interest We have nothing of so grand a feature in Australia, than that region explored by you. There are only 2 points in all Australia rising to 7000' feet, one of which (Mount Hotham) was first ascended, fixed & named by me.
6
M's name for the mountain he climbed was not adopted; it is now known as Mt Feathertop (see Home (2014)).
If you can spare a few of the duplicate plants of any of the Californian regions for my Museum, I should feel much indebted as I really have nothing from there. I have now about 350,000 plants in my herbarium, which I presented to the State, and which will be well preserved in all futurity, as it is unique in the S. hemisphere.
Allow me to mention, that I am eager to raise as many of the noble American pines as I can. We have absolutely no pines of importance in Australia, except within the eastern tropics e. So it becomes a great object to introduce the firs of America & India in masses into our vegetation & thus I endeavour raising them by the thousands for our public reserves.
I was delighted to insert your carte de visite into my gallery of celebrated friends & beg to offer you my humble effigies in return.
Ever regardfully
yr
Ferd. Mueller.
Certainly Bromus (Ceratochloa) unioloides ought to become the most important pasture grass of N. A.
7
North America.