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Frederick Pursh plant list
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Title

Frederick Pursh plant list

Title Variants

Alternative: List of Plants observed at or in the vicinity of Permansion in the Island of Dominica

Related Titles

Series: Biodiversity Heritage Library Field Notes Project

External Resources

Collection guide: Frederick Pursh plant list, c.1811. Harvard University Botany Libraries

By

Pursh, Frederick, 1774-1820 , author

Type

Book

Material

Archival material

Publication info

Notes

This collection consists of a manuscript plant list entitled "A list of plants observed at or in the vicinity of Permansion in the Island of Dominica." The manuscript is 24 pages stitched in two separate signatures. Each page is divided into three columns: Botanical Names, English or Provincial Names, and Places of Growth. Plants are listed alphabetically by Latin binomial.

Frederick Traugott Pursh was born on February 4, 1774, in Grossenhain, Saxony. He studied horticulture under Johann Heinrich Seidel in Dresden and moved to the United States in 1799. He spent some time in Baltimore before being appointed gardener on the estate of William Hamilton in Philadelphia in September 1802 or 1803. Pursh developed friendships with a number of American botanists and gathered information about North American plants with the intention of publishing a North American flora. In Philadelphia he met Benjamin Smith Barton, who later became Pursh’s patron and financed two collecting expeditions, one to the Carolinas, Maryland, and Virginia in 1806 and another through Pennsylvania, New York, and the Green Mountains of Vermont in 1807. Following the second expedition Pursh accepted a position with nurseryman Bernard McMahon, describing and drawing plant specimens grown from seeds and roots collected on the Lewis and Clark expedition. In 1809 he moved to New York to work at the Elgin Botanic Garden but did not stay long. Poor health forced him to leave for the West Indies where he spent several months recuperating in 1810 and 1811. Returning from the West Indies Pursh found there was little likelihood of publishing his flora in the pre-war atmosphere of the United States. He departed for England in late 1811 or early 1812. With the support of British naturalists Joseph Banks and Aylmer Bourke Lambert, Pursh consulted private botanical libraries and collections and continued to work on his flora in England. After “Flora Americae Septentrionalis” was published in 1814 Pursh spent a few years working on catalogs of the gardens at Cambridge, England and in St. Petersburg, Russia. He returned to North America in 1816 and resumed his botanical explorations in Canada. Pursh died in poverty in Montreal on July 11, 1820. Portions of his herbarium were destroyed in a fire the previous winter.

However, much of the collection was purchased prior to this incident and survives in herbaria around the world. In 1857 Pursh’s remains were transferred from the Old Burying Ground to a new plot at Mount Royal Cemetery under the auspices of the Botanical Society of Montréal. A monument was erected soon after.

Subjects

1774-1820 , Botany , Dominica , Manuscripts (for publication) , Plants , Pursh, Frederick,

BHL Collections

BHL Field Notes Project

Identifiers

DOI: https://doi.org/10.5962/bhl.title.139638
OCLC: 177498952

 

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