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RBG Kew, Archives, Letters from Joseph Hooker vol., Ada-Bar, ff. 158-9. M66.07.27Preferred Citation:
Joseph Hooker to Henry Barkly, 1866-07-27 [M66.07.27]. 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/mentions/selected/M66-07-27-final.odt>, accessed June 13, 2026
1
This volume consists mainly of transcriptions, most in the form of typescript carbon
copies, of Joseph Hooker's letters. There is no indication in the volume as to the
date or author of the transcriptions, or the location of the originals, and the Archivist
at Kew in June 2000 had no knowledge of the provenance of the volume. Folios 152-260
are to Sir Henry Barkly, October 1865 to November 1876, with one of 18 August 1866
(possibly an enclosure) to Charles Meller (see below) and 261-263 to Lady Annie M.
Barkly, July-August 1867. There are some gaps in the text and a few possible misreadings.
Many letters have been annotated or asterisked in red ink and in pencil. Each letter
in the Barkly series has been numbered. The subjects of the early letters are Hooker's
various difficulties with the Board of Works 'under a department of Govt. already
tired of scientific expenditure on Kew' (19 January 1866, f. 154), and Meller's journey
to, and health, conduct, and position at Mauritius, which apparently gave cause for
concern.
Kew, July 27/66
My dear Sir Henry
I have taken time by the forelock in answering yours of the 18th June […] Sir W. Denison
is home at last, and has spent two mornings with me. I have asked him if Mueller cannot
get knighted, and I find him well disposed to make the attempt: he (Mueller) has now
run crazy after chemistry
[…]
2
The paragraph dealing with M is at f. 159.