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RBG Kew, Marianne North Papers, MN 1/4, box 2, f. 112. 80.10.26
Plant names
-
Eucalyptus amygdalina
Search for
Eucalyptus amygdalina
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Preferred Citation:
Ferdinand von Mueller to Joseph Hooker, 1880-10-26. 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/1880-9/1880/80-10-26-final.odt>, accessed June 4, 2026
26/10/80
Two days ago, dear Sir Joseph, the accomplished Miss North arrived, and I had the
pleasure of meeting her on the evening of her arrival here, when she showed me her
superb oil-paintings, made in India and East-Australia You may well congratulate yourself,
to have such an original and extensive contributor to the treasures of your Museum.
She will start in a day or two for the big Euc.
amygdalina trees at Fernshaw, where she will be able to paint also scenically some
of the loveliest of our "Ferntree-gullies".
1
Eucalyptus.
2
On 20 April 1880, in a letter to R. Meade, assistant under-secretary at the Colonial
Office, Hooker requested the assistance of the colonial authorities in supporting
Marianne North who was visiting a number of colonies 'for the purpose of making, at
her own cost, accurate paintings of the remarkable trees and plants of those countries
for presentation to the Royal Gardens of Kew … But there is one, and perhaps the most
important aid of all, that might not occur to the official mind, and that is instructing
the Government Botanist to accompany Miss North for the purpose of indicating the
best subjects for her brush, and, above all things, of giving her accurate information
in respect of their names, uses, &c.' On 24 April 1880, his letter was sent as a circular
despatch by the Colonial Office to
'Australian colonies
N. Zealand
Cape
Natal
Transvaal
Griqualand W [now part of the Northern Cape Province of South Africa, the capital
of which is Kimberley]
Mauritius',
(National Archives, London, CO 854/21 ff 171, 172).
Her images from Fernshaw are at
https://www.kew.org/mng/gallery/777.html
,
https://www.kew.org/mng/gallery/786.html
,
https://www.kew.org/mng/gallery/746.html
and
https://www.kew.org/mng/gallery/747.html
(all accessed 29 September 2017). See M. North (1892), vol. 2, pp. 144-6.
She also ought to go also to New Zealand and Tasmania, and to West Australia on her
way home.
3
Marianne North went to Western Australia after Victoria, and then saw M again when
she called in at Melbourne before going to Tasmania and New Zealand. In M. North (1892),
vol. 2, p. 168 she reports that M 'was excited over my paintings of the nuytsia and
the Eucalyptus macrocarpa, which he had named, but never seen in flower. When I showed him the bud with its
white extinguisher cap tied over it, which I was saving for Kew, he said "fair lady,
you permit I take that?" and calmly pocketed it!' The item is presumably the specimen
of E. macrocarpa
(MEL 1612933), which is recorded as having been collected by North in 1880 and consists
of a bud and cap only. E. macrocarpa was not described by M but had been named and illustrated in W. Hooker (1836-54),
vol. 5, tabs 405, 406 and 407. North described the circumstances of painting it in
M. North (1892), vol. 2, p. 156, and in more detail in a letter to Joseph Hooker,
29 December 1880 (RBG Kew, MN 1/4, box 2, f. 116). Her painting is illustrated at
https://www.kew.org/mng/gallery/751.html
(accessed 29 September 2017).
We are in turmoils for work of the Exhibition;
so excuse brevity.
4
International Exhibition, Melbourne, 1880-1.
Regardfully your
Ferd. von Mueller