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N89/6771, unit 436, VPRS 3992/P inward registered correspondence, VA 475 Chief Secretary's Department, Public Record Office, Victoria. 89.05.23aPreferred Citation:
Ferdinand von Mueller to Thomas Wilson, 1889-05-23 [89.05.23a]. 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/1880-9/1889/89-05-23a-final.odt>, accessed June 13, 2026
Melbourne,
23/5/89.
T. R. Wilson Esqr,
Under-Secretary,
Melbourne.
Sir
I have the honor to inform you, that in the Argus of yesterday
an editorial article appeared, concerning the height of Eucalypts, and as in this
article is alluded to myself as having merely recorded the data given by others, I
have the honor to solicit that I may be allowed to reply in the interest of my Department
to the article.
1
On 22 May 1889, the Argus published a long article by 'Telemachus' headed 'Our tall trees shortened'. It began:
There is little doubt that among the readers of The Argus this morning many will be found with sad faces, for at length there has been accurate
scientific measurement made of the great trees of the Big Bush, and the result is
not as we had expected, or, perhaps, hoped.
The epoch of tall trees may be regarded as almost contemporary with the bush researches
of Baron von Müeller. The Baron, riding about upon a somewhat diminutive pony, was
wont to look aloft when riding through the arches of the great forest, and to imagine
that he gazed right up into heaven, even before he looked beyond the topmost foliage.
The Baron laboured hard, we know, and Australia now reaps a rich harvest by his labours.
He has taught the world more of Australian botany than all others who have studied
in that way in all our colonies. But he made a mistake about the big trees. They looked
enormous to him, and he accepted the gauging of amateurs who desired to make them
more enormous still. They grew in the Baron's vision in the first place, in his imagination
in the second, and at length they so grew in us all, that we, as a people, were prepared
to hold our own against the world, if not the universe. …'.
The article continued with reports of various people who had measured the trees of
Australia and California. Two letters on the subject, dated 22 May, were also published
in the Argus of 23 May, p. 6; one by W. C. Kernot, who was also mentioned in the article by 'Telemachus',
and the other by 'Californian' pointing out that the Californian big trees were remarkable
not for their height but for their girth. Other letters on the subject followed in
May and June, including one by the photographer N. J. Caire, Argus, 4 June 1889, p. 9, who supplied the photograph that accompanied M to the Gardeners' Chronicle, May 1889 (in this edition as 89-05-00c).
2
The Chief Secretary, A. Deakin, granted M's request on 23 May 1889, and on the same
day Wilson minuted: 'Messenger infd [informed] verbally'. See M to the Editor of the
Argus, 23 May 1889.
I have the honor to be,
Sir, your obedient servant
Ferd. von Mueller