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RBG Kew, Miscellaneous reports 7.7, Victoria, Miscellaneous 1861-1916 (MR/412), f. 345. 79.07.24Preferred Citation:
Ann Timbrell to Ferdinand von Mueller, 1879-07-24. 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/1870-9/1879/79-07-24-final.odt>, accessed June 13, 2026
1
M forwarded this letter, together with the samples associated with it, to J. Hooker;
see M to J. Hooker, 27 July 1879 (in this edition as 79-07-27a).
Plenty Road.
Collingwood.
2
Melbourne.
Thursday. July 24. 1879
My dear Baron:—
I am sincerely obliged to you for your kindness; and am delighted to hear of your
accession to the title of K.C.M.G. but I am afraid that you have over-estimated my
small silk samples from the Osage Orange.
3
In the second edition of Select extra-tropical plants (B81.13.10), p. 185, M noted under Maclura aurantiaca: 'Mrs Timbrell, at the surmise of the author, has shown that the foliage is as good
a food for silkworms as that of the white mulberry, and the silk produced is no way
inferior to ordinary silk.'
I now enclose another curiosity. Some months ago, I noticed a paragraph in one of
the newspapers, about a M. Brunet having succeeded in obtaining "
Silk from the bark of a mulberry tree
": so, last night, I tried an experiment, with what result, you can now judge from
the accompanying paper.
4
A small piece of paper (about 9 x 11 cm.) is glued to the front of the folio. Two
samples of fibre, one off-white, the other pinkish-purple, are attached by thread
on one side of the paper, and below them Timbrell has written: 'Respectfully presented
as a novelty in sericultural science to Baron Ferd. von Muëller. K.C.M.G. &c &c'
Below the off-white sample she has written: 'natural: as extracted from mulberry bark'
and below the purple one: 'dyed: with magenta'.
Opposite these she has written: 'Mrs Timbrell's
first
attempt at procuring a substitute for Silk, from
the fibre of mulberry bark
. The experiment was made on the night of Wednesday, July 23. 1879, at her Silk Farm,
Plenty Road, Collingwood near Melbourne. Probably, the next operation may be an improvement
on the above result.'
It is only interesting as a novelty in Sericultural Science; and, please to remember,
it is only my first effort.
I am going to try again: and, will send you some Silkworm eggs very soon.
Allowe me to remain
Yours sincerely
Ann Timbrell
5
The signature is in a much larger and freer hand than the text of the letter and the
notes, in which the writing is small and almost Copperplate and may be that of an
amanuensis.
[…]
6
illegible — Obscured by binding.