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Physical location:
Unit 7278, Samuel Mills Tracy papers 1895-1914, Smithsonian Institution Archives, Washington. 95.03.15a
Plant names
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Panicum proliferum
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Panicum proliferum
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Preferred Citation:
Ferdinand von Mueller to Samuel Tracy, 1895-03-15 [95.03.15a]. 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/1890-6/1895/95-03-15a-final.odt>, accessed June 13, 2026
15/3/95
Let me thank you, dear Prof Tracy, to send me your excellent essay on culture plants,
introduced for forage into your states.
I hope soon to send you the augmented 9th Edition of the "Select plants"
which is now to pass through the press.
1
There is a copy of Tracy (1894) in the Library at MEL.
2
B95.04.08.
You can render me a special service, if you will be so good to inform me whether any
of the Panicums, indigenous to the Eastern states of North-America have any
prominent
pasture-value.
I have already admitted into former editions of the Select plants; but the genus
is represented by other seemingly valuable rural species in your regions, and it is
remarkable that this mainly tropic genus penetrates so much farther north in the western
hemisphere than in the eastern.
Such hardy Panicums would therefore be particularly valuable for naturalisation in
other countries of the temperate zone.
Panicum proliferum
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3
M did not include any information from Tracy about Panicum species in the new edition.
With regardful
remembrance your
Ferd von Mueller
A late medical Colleague of mine took a high position here, Dr Tracy, perhaps he belongs
to your relations.
4
ie: Richard Thomas Tracy, co-founder of the Women's Hospital, Melbourne, and pioneer
abdominal surgeon. He emigrated from Ireland via London and died in 1874.