Document information

Physical location:

RBG Kew, Kew correspondence, Australia, Mueller, 1858-70, ff. 207-8. 66.04.23

Plant names

Preferred Citation:

Ferdinand von Mueller to Joseph Hooker, 1866-04-23. 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/1860-9/1866/66-04-23-final.odt>, accessed May 15, 2026

St Georges Day 1866
I send off, dear Dr Hooker, by this mail 140 sp. Australian seeds just lying bye. As I am in ignorance of what Kew already possesses of Austr. plant[s], it is of course entirely guess work to select. Still I think some of the seeds will prove acceptable & the rest may be useful to some other garden. A more extensive consignment of seeds will be put for you in readiness when the harvest is quite completed. As yet singularly few of the Australian plants of this garden, though the seeds have been sent so often, have found a place in the botan. Magazine.
I have been excessively busy in garden work of late. For the first time the lake dried out & hence I turned to to get islands raised, dams thrown up &c &c. In my report of 1866 which I presented to Parliament & which I trust will be printed in time for the next mail I have given a full record of all recent improvements.
1
M's report was never published and has not been found. See also M to J. Hooker, 24 May 1866 (in this edition as 66-05-24b).
I was under the impression, that a lot of Algae had been sent in one of my boxes to Kew for the Rev A. Leighton.
2
See M to W. Hooker, 24 June 1865, and M to W. Leighton, 26 July 1865 (in this edition as 65-07-26c).
However the parcel must have erroneously gone elsewhere. I will now send at an early opportunity a lot lying in readiness for being sent away.
I wished you could see the graceful festoons of which cover my iron-bowers. What a glorious plant it will prove for the Mediterranean. The or rather should form one of the principle plants for edgings almost anywhere. It has splendidly stood through the summer, when all failed. It might be grown in Lapponia.
3
i.e. Lapland.
I have sent to Dul[au] for the first fascicle of your lamented fathers synopsis filicum,
4
Hooker & Baker (1868).
but it did not arrive yet. Is it not actually within purchase?
I am carrying on a series of distillations of timber. The produce of Tar, [Acids], naphtha &c seems very gratifying. So we can give a number of poor people work in our stringybark-ranges. Many samples from my laboratory will go in sufficient quantity to Paris,
5
Exposition Universelle, Paris, 1867. See Royal Commissioners for Victoria (1867), Catalogue of articles exhibited, pp. 17-18, for a list of such products displayed by M in Paris and afterwards presented to France's Minister for Public Instruction.
as to allow Kew also to be supplied. Some of the
6
MS annotation: '(Caladia)'.
received from you have turned out magnificent; so also some Cacti.
Ever your
Ferd. Mueller