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RBG Kew, Kew correspondence, Australia, Mueller, 1882-90, ff. 256-7. 88.09.12Preferred Citation:
Ferdinand von Mueller to William Thiselton-Dyer, 1888-09-12. 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/1880-9/1888/88-09-12-final.odt>, accessed June 13, 2026
1
Date stamped: Royal Gardens Kew 22.Oct. 88.
Annotated in pencil by
[Thiselton-Dyer?]: Ackd 25.10.88 (letter not found),
and
Sir JDH
;
and by Hooker: JDH.
This time, dear Mr Dyer, I send the fruits if Livistona Mariae. I fear they got too
dry on the long way to me; but they may serve Herbarium-purposes, the species being
so rare and geographically so remarkable also
Congratulate Sir Joseph also on my behalf, to have entered on the 8th thousand of
the Bot. Mag.
Through half of the fifth thousand the whole of the sixth and seventh I had this gigantic
publication from month to month, as its numbers appeared. Let me hope, that Sir Joseph
will remain in strength and health, to see an other thousand through, when he will
have lived into the 20th century! Long before that I shall require only the 6 by 2,
which finally is enough for all of us!
2
Hooker (1865-1904), plate 7000 was published in June 1888; Joseph Hooker's first plate as editor, 5486, was published in January 1865.
It was very pleasing to me, to see my name once more identified with the bot Mag through
the Sarcochilus Hartmanni.
Poor Hartmann became also a Martyr to the N. Guin. clime; but he was, to the relieve
of my mind, not
my
emissary.
3
Hooker (1865-1904), vol. 114, plate 7010; the specimen figured did not come to Kew
via M, but from 'J. F. Roberts, nurseryman, of Kew near Melbourne', however, M did name the species. See
M's complaints to W. Thiselton-Dyer, 1 May 1888.
4
relief?
5
Carl Hartmann. Hartmann was sponsored by the British New Guinea administration. He contracted fever in New Guinea but thought he was cured; however, it flared up again on his homeward journey and he died in Brisbane (Toowoomba chronicle and Darling Downs general advertiser, 15 December 1887, p. 3).
Regardfully your
Ferd von Mueller.
I influenced neither by my presense in Sydney nor by
any
other means my election to the Presidency of the Australian Association for 1889.
Indeed I was not in Sydney through an accidental fall from a tram-cart which laid
me up nearly the whole of August, and which still prevents me walking about.
6
M fell from a Melbourne tram on 31 July 1888; see M to T. Wilson, 1 August 1888, and
Argus, 1 August 1888, p. 7. He was as a result unable to attend the first Congress of the
Australasian Association for the Advancement of Science,
held in Sydney, 28 August-3 September 1888. During the Congress M was elected President
of the Association and in this capacity presided over the second Congress, held in
Melbourne in January 1890.
Livistona Mariae
Sarcochilus Hartmanni