Document information
Physical location:
A 271/3, John Brown papers (CY1190, frames 899-902), Mitchell Library, State Library of New South Wales, Sydney. 85.07.24Preferred Citation:
Ferdinand von Mueller to [Richard Rigaud], 1885-07-24. 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/1880-9/1885/85-07-24-final.odt>, accessed June 13, 2026
1
MS is bound into a volume, embossed ‘South Australian Papers’ on the spine, that was
part of D. S. Mitchell’s original bequest to the State Library of New South Wales
in 1907, but of which the earlier provenance is not known. The correspondent is conjectured
to be Rigaud on the basis of the inscriptions on the envelope accompanying the manuscript
in the archive: 'Letter from Baron Von Mueller re Leichardt &c' and, in a different
hand, 'from Mr Rigaud 3/12/86'. Richard J. Rigaud was a member of the commercial staff
of the South Australian register and a member of the Royal Society of SA.
Dear Sir,
Let me thank you for your kind letter and the friendly attention shown me by sending
me Mr Knuckey's letter as published in the S.A. Register,
which seems fully to explain, who the white aged member is noticed with native tribes
on the M'Arthur-River.
In reference to searches for traces and remnants of Leichhardt's Expedition I fully
concur in the opinion of those, who look for the death-places of Leichhardt and his
companions some where near Eyre's Creek;
and but little doubt exists, that the long pending mystery about this geographic
tragedy could be solved, if the country between the Hay and Finke-River became explored;
as this tract of unmapped country is within the boundaries of South Australia,
it is more particularly devolving on
your
colony, that this work of humanity and gratitude towards a great but unfortunate
Explorer should be carried out by South Australian means within the area indicated,
and I feel sure, that the newly formed branch of the geographic Society of Australia,
so well already founded in Adelaide,
will make the object of revealing Leichhardt's fate the very first question of its
consideration and active engagements, and therewith gain at once fame and gratitude
in the geographic world.
2
'White men among natives in the north', South Australian register, 10 July 1885, p. 7, in which serious doubts were cast upon the supposed identification
as Leichhardt of the white man reported to be living 'amongst the blacks on the Macarthur
River' in Qld.
3
NT.
4
Qld.
5
i.e. in the NT, then administered by SA.
6
The South Australian Branch of the Royal Geographical Society of Australasia had been
formed two weeks earlier, on 10 July 1885 (South Australian register, 11 July 1885, p. 6). Several of the founding members were correspondents of M.
Regardfully
your
Ferd. von Mueller