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RBG Kew, Letters to Joseph Hooker, vol. 16, ff. 14-16. 94.08.05Preferred Citation:
Ferdinand von Mueller to Joseph Hooker, 1894-08-05. 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/94-08-05>, accessed September 11, 2025
5/8/94.
The anxiety felt by you, dear Sir Joseph, concerning the well-being of your Son Brian
and his family, will have been relieved before this by a letter of his and also one
of mine,
apprizing you of his good fortune to get the Managership of a Gold Mine in Coolgardie,
W.A. Indeed, to use his own words, he expects to become a Millionaire, and that is
quite within the reach of possibility there, though such a happy luck falls to the
lot of but few mortals anywhere. Coolgardie is the southern terminatio[n]
of a vast tract of auriferous country, interrupted by wide spaces, under meridians
at which, when I was with the two Mess Gregory in 1876
we discovered the northern probabl[e] termination at Sturts and Hooker's Creeks.
But we had in a season of drought and travelling with horses only no time for methodic
experimental "digging". We were 2000 miles on the one side and 3000 miles on the other
side distant from the nearest settlements and the country either side unexplored.
Had we made too much of the Gold-Indications then, numbers of "Prospectors", enticed
by any uncautiousness of ours, would have fallen under the hands of the Cannibals!
—
1
Letter not found.
2
editorial addition — Obscured by binding. All square brackets in the following text have this meaning.
3
1856?
The generous offer of Lady Hooker to educate your eldest Australian grandson
with your youngest Son
should be eagerly seized under ordinary circumstances by Mrs Brian Hooker, but a
mothers feeling may be such, that she may not perhaps like to be separated from one
of her darlings, more particularly as all monetary distress seems warded off, though
she could not live at the Goldfields, but could live very comfortably a long way towards
Coolgardie, somewhere east of York, a region known to me by my travels in 1877. I
think I cannot do wrong in writing at once to Sir John Forrest or Lady Forrest, who
are personally known to me, informing them of Lady Hookers Offer. It would be better,
to do that than to write direct to your son or his wife, who would certainly not be
in Perth. The Premier or his Lady could communicate with them and would doubtless
see the little boy sent safely wth a family of passengers to your domicile, where
he should arrive in the northern spring; this as a medical man you will see to be
necessary.
4
Brian William Hooker, b. 1889, son of Joseph Hooker's son Brian; see Allan (1967).
5
Richard Symonds Hooker, b. 1885; see Allan (1967).
I would like to write to you on hundreds of things, but am so overwhelmed with work
at this
dire
period of financial distress, that I must reserve further writing to a later time.
Let me felicitate you on the rapid progress, you are making with the Index Kewensis.
You will be entitled to the gratitude of the whole bot. world for all times by this
work most particularly. Every one of us must find it of to be of advantage to our
working almost daily. No doubt a competing
edition will become due at the end of the century, when little of absolute novelty
will remain to be discovered.
6
Parts 1 and 2 of B. Jackson (1895). comprising vol. 1, were published in 1893 and
part 3, the first part of vol. 2, in October 1894 (TL2).
7
completing?
Always with friendship your
Ferd. von Mueller
Your resuscitation of the Banksian diaries is most remarkable and opportune.
8
Banks (1896). See also J. Hooker to M, September 1893 (in this edition as 93-09-00d).