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R68/11717, unit 750, VPRS 44/P inward registered and unregistered correspondence, VA 538 Department of Crown Lands and Survey, Public Record Office, Victoria. 68.08.15Preferred Citation:
Ferdinand von Mueller to James McCulloch, 1868-08-15. 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/1860-9/1868/68-08-15-final.odt>, accessed June 13, 2026
1
This letter was first registered in the Chief Secretary's office as S68/8173 (No.
8173, vol. 1868 S, VPRS 1168, PROV),
15/8/68.
Honored and dear Sir.
Let me solicit, that you will take into kind consideration, whether the sum, which
I paid to redeem the debt for maintenance of the camels during this year should not
be refunded. In complying with the request to surrender these animals unconditionally
to the Queensland Government, it became necessary, that payment should be rendered
previously for their maintenance at Carpentaria beyond the stipulated time; — and
to remove all difficulties thus far I at once rendered the payment of £150.- .- from
my very slender private means, the Ladies Committee having no fund left. I may be
permitted to draw your kind attention also to the circumstance, that altho' the Leichhardt
Search Expedition enjoyed a subsidy of £500.- .- from your Government, that this sum
would have not even sufficed to keep the Camels during the last three years, had they
remained in Victoria. They would have been here a source of continuous expense, and
thus you may perhaps not be disinclined to see Parliament or rather Government refunding
this
final
outlay of £150.- .- Had the season not been such, when the Expedition went through
the interior, as even in Australian History was unparalleled as regards drought, then
in all wordly probability the whole party would have reached the west coast, and the
Camels with your permission could have remained there, an acceptable gift to the West
Australian Government.
It would fall rather heavy on me were I to loose the outlay, which I incurred for
these animals, the expedition having been besides a heavy tax on my private resources.
I am now spending my
twenty second
year in Australia and have
done no good
, altho' I even brought some capital to Australia many years before the gold-period.
A scientific course of life like mine in a new country involves very heavy expenses,
which to avoid it is impossible, unless the objects of such a life are abandoned.
In your own elevated public position you will have often found, how severe the monetary
sacrifices must be. Were my position so well endowed as that of many other heads of
establishments, I would gladly sacrifice the little sum now asked for along with what
has gone from my private properties in former years; but as it is I must ask you to
take this claim into your kind consideration.
Let me remain, dear Mr M'Culloch, your very regardful
Ferd. von Mueller.
2
McCulloch referred the file containing M's above letter to the President of the Board
of Land and Works, J. Grant, on 25 August 1868. On 4 September Grant asked the commissioner
of audit, A. J. Agg: ‘Mr Agg Are there any funds available'. Agg replied on the same
day: 'No indeed'.