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Henry Constantine Richter

Henry Constantine Richter (7 June 1821 – 16 March 1902) was an English zoological illustrator who produced a very large number of skillful coloured lithographs of birds and mammals, mainly for the scientific books of the renowned English 19th century ornithologist John Gould.

Large Niltava Niltava grandis, date between 1850 and 1883, The Birds of Asia, Volume 2, J. Gould and H. C. Richter

Many of the original drawings used by Richter as the basis for his coloured lithographs were by Gould's wife, Elizabeth Coxen, produced before her death in 1841.[1][2]

Richter's reputation was overshadowed by that of his much-celebrated employer. Since it was not customary to acknowledge illustrators alongside authors in the titles of publications, his name was forgotten. But in 1978, his great ability and the extent of his contribution to Gould's work came to light, in the work of the researcher Christine E. Jackson.[3]

Early years edit

Note:

(1) Henry Constantine Richter will be referred to as 'Richter' throughout this article, whereas full-length names will be used for each of his relatives, to reduce confusion.
(2) Where no citation is given in this section for the dates of birth, death, marriage and residence of the Richter family, the information can be accessed online from indexes of English registers in the Ancestry.com databases at https://www.ancestry.com
 
St. Marylebone Parish Church, London, England, completed 1817. Architect, Thomas Hardwick

Richter was born in Brompton, London in England on 7 Jun 1821, into an artistic family. His father, Henry James Richter (1772-1857), was a philosopher, painter and engraver who was born in Soho, Middlesex, England to Mary Haigh, the wife of John Augustus Richter, an immigrant from Dresden, Germany - himself an artist and engraver.[4]

Richter's mother, Charlotte Sophia Edson (1793-1862), had married his father on 2 May 1818 in Marylebone, Middlesex, England. He was their first child. His birth was followed by that of his sister Antonia Charlotte (1823-1896) and his brother Charles (b.1827). A half-sister - Henrietta Sophia (1814-1896) had already been born to Henry James Richter's first wife, Elizabeth Smith (1787-1816), whom he had married on 9 July 1808, and lost after eight years' marriage.[4]

Henry James Richter became a well-respected and popular artist - he was a member, and president (1811-1812), of the Associated Artists in Water Colours, exhibiting frequently. He was also elected to membership of the Society of Painters in Oil and Water Colours. Several of his works are owned by the British Museum.[4]

Artistic talent also flourished elsewhere in Richter's family: his half-sister, Henrietta Sophia, became a successful miniature portrait artist, and exhibited at the prestigious Royal Academy of Arts in London, 1842–1849.[5][6]

The English census returns [7] indicate that the Richters were a close-knit family. For example, in 1851, the 30 year-old Richter was still living with his parents. Henry James Richter did not own a house, but always lived in rented accommodation. In that year, when he was aged 79, his household consisted of: his wife, Charlotte Sophia, his adult son, both of his adult daughters and one servant. This arrangement may have been out of financial necessity as much as family affection - artist and lithographers were paid very little. As related by Jackson (p. 48),[3] one practitioner, GJ Keulmans, wrote of his remuneration: "it has just saved me from starvation and nothing else".

The technique of lithography edit

Richter's work with his coloured lithographs was breaking new ground at the time. The technique was labour-intensive and demanded great skill and attention to minute detail.

The University of Tasmanian explains the process that artists use to produce a lithograph from an image, such as a sketch, a drawing or a painting:

 
Lithographic stones, Museum of the Printing Arts, Leipzig, Germany

Lithography is essentially a chemical process. A drawing is made with a greasy crayon on limestone, then gum arabic and nitrate acid is rubbed into the material, changing its molecular structure so that when ink is applied it adheres to the crayon marks, but not the stone. Fine details are more difficult to achieve, but tonal qualities are easily suggested and it is possible for a drawing to be made directly onto the stone. The result is a more spontaneous impression, with the broad, fluid lines of a crayon and tonal planes producing a much softer or subtler result than that produced by the black and white linear imprint of engravings. - University of Tasmania.[8]

John Gould was an experienced taxidermist, using his skill to preserve the skins of birds from his various worldwide expeditions. These skins were used by his artists to guide their illustrations, together with initial sketches made by Gould to indicate his requirements for the exact appearance of the finished images. The London Zoo was opened to the public in 1847 and was a further source of models of birds and animals for Richter's drawings.[6]

Career edit

Richter's earliest published bird illustrations were three plates in the book Genera of birds (1844–1849) by George Robert Gray. The plates depicted the Indian Barn Owl Strix javanica, the head and claws of two other owls, and a member of the pheasant and partridge family, Clapperton's spurfowl Pternistis clappertoni.[9] His illustrations attracted the favourable attention of ornithologists.

 
Tasmanian tiger Thylacinus cynocephalus, 1841, Plate 54 of Mammals of Australia, vol.I, J.Gould & H.C. Richter. The thylacine became extinct in 1936

In 1841 Richter was contacted by the zoologist John Gould, who urgently needed an illustrator, after the death of his wife Elizabeth Coxen (1804-1841), because he had committed to producing various parts of his lavish books on certain dates. The Gould-Richter working relationship lasted for forty years, until Gould died in 1881. Richter created about 3,000 lithographic plates and watercolours for Gould.[6] Other illustrators employed by Gould included Edward Lear, William Matthew Hart and Joseph Wolf, although it was Richter who produced the vast majority of the works during Gould's lifetime.[10]

 
Yellow-bellied Tit Parus venustulus, between 1850 and 1883, The Birds of Asia. Volume 2, J. Gould & H.C. Richter

Amongst his best known illustrations are those of the male and female thylacine, from Gould's Mammals of Australia (1845–63) - frequently copied since publication.[8] For example, an Australian company Cascade Brewery used the image on the label for one of their brands of beer, in 1987.[11] Previously, the Tasmanian Government had published a monochromatic reproduction of the same image, in 1934 [12] and, earlier still, the author Louisa Anne Meredith also copied it for Tasmanian Friends and Foes (1881).[8]

In his will, John Gould wrote "I bequeath to my Artist H C Richter a legacy of £100 as a kind remembrance for the purchase of a [mourning] ring or any other article that he may prefer".[2] He seems to have been unconcerned about the impecunious state of his 60-year-old artist, although Richter had contributed so materially to his own prosperity for over four decades.

After Gould's death Richter gained a small amount of work for Gray's Birds of Asia, and he prepared a plate for Sir Richard Owen's Memoirs on the extinct wingless birds of New Zealand (1878—1879 ).[6] Work already completed by him was used in Gould's books that were published posthumously, such as Birds of Asia, but new plates for the books were commissioned from William Hart.

Final years edit

Lacking a regular income after the death of Gould, Richter became dependent upon his sister, Antonia Charlotte, who had married a wealthy Nottinghamshire farmer with property in Ranby, Henry Francis Noble Champion. Antonia Champion had become a widow in 1854, one year after her marriage, and she inherited her husband's London residence in the Lisson Grove area of London. She continued to live there alone with a servant, and did not marry again.

After John Gould's death Antonia Champion took in her brother and their half-sister Henrietta Sophia Richter. Since Henry James Richter's death in 1857 they had been living in pauper's lodgings in the Lisson Grove area, with their mother whilst she was alive.[2]

When Antonia Champion died in 1896, the house passed to Richter, and he stayed there until his death. The probate administration record states that he died 16 March 1902, and that administration occurred 17 April 1902. His estate was valued at just under 840 pounds.

Nothing is known of the life of Richter's younger brother, Charles Richter, beyond a mention in the English Census of 1841, when he was 14 years of age and living with his parents. In 1896, Richter had lost not only his sister, Antonia Charlotte Champion (in January), but also his half-sister, Henrietta Sophia Richter (in October), and since none of them had children, the Richter family line appears to have ended with the passing of Henry Constantine Richter.

Works illustrated edit

Jackson (pp. 13–14) [6] lists the 1,600+ hand-coloured plates drawn by Richter as follows:

  • Gray, George Robert, Genera of bird', 1844-1849, 3 vols.
In Vol I plate XV, Strix javanica HCR del.
In Vol I plate 15, Head and claws of Phodius badicus & Strix flammea HCR del.
In Vol III Francolinus clappertoni HCR del.
  • Gould, John, Birds of Australia, 1840-1848, 600 plates, & Supplement, 1851-1869, 81 plates, HCR after 1841 (when Mrs Gould died) del. & lith.
  • Gould, Joh, Monograph of the Odontophorinae or partridges of America, 1844-50, 32 plates JG & HCR del. & lith.
  • Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London, plates drawn and lith. by HCR.
1848 Aves Pl.I Trochilus (Helianthea) eos Gould
Pl.II Trochilus (Heliangelus) mavors Gould
Pl.IV Cinclosoma castaneothorax Gould
1849 Pl. XII Ptiloris Victoriae Gould
1850 (opp. P. 212) Notornis Mantelli Owen
  • Transactions of the Zoological Society of London Plate drawn by HCR.
1849, iii: 379-380 Gould J. On a new species of Genus Apteryx. Plate accompanying text Apterux owenii
  • Gould, John, Monograph of the Trochilidae, or family of humming-birds, 1849-1861.
5 vols, 360 plates, JG & HCR del. et lith.
  • Gould, John, A monograph of the Ramphastidae or family of toucans: Supplement, 1855.
21 plates, JG & HCR, 2nd ed, 1852-1854, 52 plates JG & HCR del. & lith.
  • Gould, John, A monograph of the Trogonidae or family of trogons 2nd ed., 1858-1875.
47 plates, JG & W. Hart & HCR del. & lith.
  • Gould, John, Birds of Asia, 1850-1883, 7 vols. Approx. 500 plates JG & HCR and J. Wolf & HCR.
  • Gould, John, The birds of Great Britain, 1862-1873, 5 vols, 367 plates. Artists JG, HCR & J. Wolf.
  • Owen, Richard, Memoirs on the extinct wingless birds of New Zealand, 1878-1879.
1 large folded plate depicting Notornis mantelli, JG & HCR del & lith.
  • Gould, John, A monograph of the Pittidae, edited by R. B. Sharpe, 1880.
10 plates from other Gould titles, including 3 plates JG & HCR del. * lith.

Note: Jackson's list omits Mammals of Australia, 1845–1863, though it is not clear whether this was intentional or not. Certainly his contribution of illustrations for the book was significant.

A selection of illustrations by Richter edit

Unlike paintings, lithographs in Richter's time tended not to be dated by the artist, so it is normal to use the publication date of the book in which the lithograph was printed.


External links edit

  • Birds of Australia, 1848, J Gould, with illustrations by Richter and others
  • Birds of Great Britain, Vol. 1, 1873, J Gould, with illustrations by Richter, Hart & Wolf
  • The Mammals of Australia, Vol. 1, 1863, J Gould (with illustrations by Richter and others)
  • Richter family tree in Ancestry.com (membership required)

References edit

  1. ^ Stephens, M 2009, Henry Constantine Richter (about 1821-1902), Australian Museum, Sydney NSW, accessed 02 Dec 2017, https://australianmuseum.net.au/henry-constantine-richter-about-1821-1902.
  2. ^ a b c Cook, KS 2013, 'Gould collections at KU: the story of the Gould Collection', John Gould: Bird Illustration in the Age of Darwin, University of Kansas, accessed 3 Dec 2017, https://exhibits.lib.ku.edu/exhibits/show/gould/about/kucollections.
  3. ^ a b Jackson, CE 2011, 'The painting of hand-coloured zoological illustrations', Archives of Natural History, 38, 1, pp. 36-52.
  4. ^ a b c Cust, LH 2012,'Richter, Henry James', Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, accessed 3 Dec 2017, https://doi.org/10.1093/ref:odnb/23599.
  5. ^ Kansas Library n.d., Henry Constantine Richter, University of Kansas Library, Lawrence, Kansas, accessed 5 Dec 2017, https://exhibits.lib.ku.edu/exhibits/show/gould/art/henry_constantine_richter.
  6. ^ a b c d e Jackson, C 1978, 'H. C. Richter–John Gould's unknown bird artist', Journal of the Society for the Bibliography of Natural History, Volume 9, Issue 1, 11 1978, pages 10-14.
  7. ^ Census Returns of England and Wales, 1851. Kew, Surrey, England: The National Archives of the UK (TNA): Public Record Office (PRO), 1851.
  8. ^ a b c University of Tasmania, 2007, 'Imaging the thylacine: the exotic thylacine', Exhibitions, Hobart, Tasmania, accessed 3 Dec 2017, http://www.utas.edu.au/library/exhibitions/thylacine/exotic.html.
  9. ^ Gray, GR 1848, The genera of birds : comprising their generic characters, a notice of the habits of each genus, and an extensive list of species referred to their several genera, Longman, London.
  10. ^ Sauer, GC 1982, John Gould the bird man: a chronology and bibliography, Landsdowne, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
  11. ^ Stephens, Matthew; Robyn Williams (13 June 2004). "John Gould's place in Australian culture". Ockham's Razor. Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved 28 April 2009.
  12. ^ Government Tourist Bureau, Tasmania, Tasmania: The Wonderland, Hobart, Government Printer, Tasmania, 1934

henry, constantine, richter, june, 1821, march, 1902, english, zoological, illustrator, produced, very, large, number, skillful, coloured, lithographs, birds, mammals, mainly, scientific, books, renowned, english, 19th, century, ornithologist, john, gould, lar. Henry Constantine Richter 7 June 1821 16 March 1902 was an English zoological illustrator who produced a very large number of skillful coloured lithographs of birds and mammals mainly for the scientific books of the renowned English 19th century ornithologist John Gould Large Niltava Niltava grandis date between 1850 and 1883 The Birds of Asia Volume 2 J Gould and H C RichterMany of the original drawings used by Richter as the basis for his coloured lithographs were by Gould s wife Elizabeth Coxen produced before her death in 1841 1 2 Richter s reputation was overshadowed by that of his much celebrated employer Since it was not customary to acknowledge illustrators alongside authors in the titles of publications his name was forgotten But in 1978 his great ability and the extent of his contribution to Gould s work came to light in the work of the researcher Christine E Jackson 3 Contents 1 Early years 2 The technique of lithography 3 Career 4 Final years 5 Works illustrated 6 A selection of illustrations by Richter 7 External links 8 ReferencesEarly years editNote 1 Henry Constantine Richter will be referred to as Richter throughout this article whereas full length names will be used for each of his relatives to reduce confusion 2 Where no citation is given in this section for the dates of birth death marriage and residence of the Richter family the information can be accessed online from indexes of English registers in the Ancestry com databases at https www ancestry com nbsp St Marylebone Parish Church London England completed 1817 Architect Thomas HardwickRichter was born in Brompton London in England on 7 Jun 1821 into an artistic family His father Henry James Richter 1772 1857 was a philosopher painter and engraver who was born in Soho Middlesex England to Mary Haigh the wife of John Augustus Richter an immigrant from Dresden Germany himself an artist and engraver 4 Richter s mother Charlotte Sophia Edson 1793 1862 had married his father on 2 May 1818 in Marylebone Middlesex England He was their first child His birth was followed by that of his sister Antonia Charlotte 1823 1896 and his brother Charles b 1827 A half sister Henrietta Sophia 1814 1896 had already been born to Henry James Richter s first wife Elizabeth Smith 1787 1816 whom he had married on 9 July 1808 and lost after eight years marriage 4 Henry James Richter became a well respected and popular artist he was a member and president 1811 1812 of the Associated Artists in Water Colours exhibiting frequently He was also elected to membership of the Society of Painters in Oil and Water Colours Several of his works are owned by the British Museum 4 Artistic talent also flourished elsewhere in Richter s family his half sister Henrietta Sophia became a successful miniature portrait artist and exhibited at the prestigious Royal Academy of Arts in London 1842 1849 5 6 The English census returns 7 indicate that the Richters were a close knit family For example in 1851 the 30 year old Richter was still living with his parents Henry James Richter did not own a house but always lived in rented accommodation In that year when he was aged 79 his household consisted of his wife Charlotte Sophia his adult son both of his adult daughters and one servant This arrangement may have been out of financial necessity as much as family affection artist and lithographers were paid very little As related by Jackson p 48 3 one practitioner GJ Keulmans wrote of his remuneration it has just saved me from starvation and nothing else The technique of lithography editRichter s work with his coloured lithographs was breaking new ground at the time The technique was labour intensive and demanded great skill and attention to minute detail The University of Tasmanian explains the process that artists use to produce a lithograph from an image such as a sketch a drawing or a painting nbsp Lithographic stones Museum of the Printing Arts Leipzig GermanyLithography is essentially a chemical process A drawing is made with a greasy crayon on limestone then gum arabic and nitrate acid is rubbed into the material changing its molecular structure so that when ink is applied it adheres to the crayon marks but not the stone Fine details are more difficult to achieve but tonal qualities are easily suggested and it is possible for a drawing to be made directly onto the stone The result is a more spontaneous impression with the broad fluid lines of a crayon and tonal planes producing a much softer or subtler result than that produced by the black and white linear imprint of engravings University of Tasmania 8 John Gould was an experienced taxidermist using his skill to preserve the skins of birds from his various worldwide expeditions These skins were used by his artists to guide their illustrations together with initial sketches made by Gould to indicate his requirements for the exact appearance of the finished images The London Zoo was opened to the public in 1847 and was a further source of models of birds and animals for Richter s drawings 6 Career editRichter s earliest published bird illustrations were three plates in the book Genera of birds 1844 1849 by George Robert Gray The plates depicted the Indian Barn Owl Strix javanica the head and claws of two other owls and a member of the pheasant and partridge family Clapperton s spurfowl Pternistis clappertoni 9 His illustrations attracted the favourable attention of ornithologists nbsp Tasmanian tiger Thylacinus cynocephalus 1841 Plate 54 of Mammals of Australia vol I J Gould amp H C Richter The thylacine became extinct in 1936In 1841 Richter was contacted by the zoologist John Gould who urgently needed an illustrator after the death of his wife Elizabeth Coxen 1804 1841 because he had committed to producing various parts of his lavish books on certain dates The Gould Richter working relationship lasted for forty years until Gould died in 1881 Richter created about 3 000 lithographic plates and watercolours for Gould 6 Other illustrators employed by Gould included Edward Lear William Matthew Hart and Joseph Wolf although it was Richter who produced the vast majority of the works during Gould s lifetime 10 nbsp Yellow bellied Tit Parus venustulus between 1850 and 1883 The Birds of Asia Volume 2 J Gould amp H C RichterAmongst his best known illustrations are those of the male and female thylacine from Gould s Mammals of Australia 1845 63 frequently copied since publication 8 For example an Australian company Cascade Brewery used the image on the label for one of their brands of beer in 1987 11 Previously the Tasmanian Government had published a monochromatic reproduction of the same image in 1934 12 and earlier still the author Louisa Anne Meredith also copied it for Tasmanian Friends and Foes 1881 8 In his will John Gould wrote I bequeath to my Artist H C Richter a legacy of 100 as a kind remembrance for the purchase of a mourning ring or any other article that he may prefer 2 He seems to have been unconcerned about the impecunious state of his 60 year old artist although Richter had contributed so materially to his own prosperity for over four decades After Gould s death Richter gained a small amount of work for Gray s Birds of Asia and he prepared a plate for Sir Richard Owen s Memoirs on the extinct wingless birds of New Zealand 1878 1879 6 Work already completed by him was used in Gould s books that were published posthumously such as Birds of Asia but new plates for the books were commissioned from William Hart Final years editLacking a regular income after the death of Gould Richter became dependent upon his sister Antonia Charlotte who had married a wealthy Nottinghamshire farmer with property in Ranby Henry Francis Noble Champion Antonia Champion had become a widow in 1854 one year after her marriage and she inherited her husband s London residence in the Lisson Grove area of London She continued to live there alone with a servant and did not marry again After John Gould s death Antonia Champion took in her brother and their half sister Henrietta Sophia Richter Since Henry James Richter s death in 1857 they had been living in pauper s lodgings in the Lisson Grove area with their mother whilst she was alive 2 When Antonia Champion died in 1896 the house passed to Richter and he stayed there until his death The probate administration record states that he died 16 March 1902 and that administration occurred 17 April 1902 His estate was valued at just under 840 pounds Nothing is known of the life of Richter s younger brother Charles Richter beyond a mention in the English Census of 1841 when he was 14 years of age and living with his parents In 1896 Richter had lost not only his sister Antonia Charlotte Champion in January but also his half sister Henrietta Sophia Richter in October and since none of them had children the Richter family line appears to have ended with the passing of Henry Constantine Richter Works illustrated editJackson pp 13 14 6 lists the 1 600 hand coloured plates drawn by Richter as follows Gray George Robert Genera of bird 1844 1849 3 vols In Vol I plate XV Strix javanica HCR del In Vol I plate 15 Head and claws of Phodius badicus amp Strix flammea HCR del In Vol III Francolinus clappertoni HCR del dd Gould John Birds of Australia 1840 1848 600 plates amp Supplement 1851 1869 81 plates HCR after 1841 when Mrs Gould died del amp lith Gould Joh Monograph of the Odontophorinae or partridges of America 1844 50 32 plates JG amp HCR del amp lith Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London plates drawn and lith by HCR 1848 Aves Pl I Trochilus Helianthea eos GouldPl II Trochilus Heliangelus mavors Gould Pl IV Cinclosoma castaneothorax Gould dd dd dd dd 1849 Pl XII Ptiloris Victoriae Gould dd 1850 opp P 212 Notornis Mantelli Owen dd Transactions of the Zoological Society of London Plate drawn by HCR 1849 iii 379 380 Gould J On a new species of Genus Apteryx Plate accompanying text Apterux owenii dd Gould John Monograph of the Trochilidae or family of humming birds 1849 1861 5 vols 360 plates JG amp HCR del et lith dd Gould John A monograph of the Ramphastidae or family of toucans Supplement 1855 21 plates JG amp HCR 2nd ed 1852 1854 52 plates JG amp HCR del amp lith dd Gould John A monograph of the Trogonidae or family of trogons 2nd ed 1858 1875 47 plates JG amp W Hart amp HCR del amp lith dd Gould John Birds of Asia 1850 1883 7 vols Approx 500 plates JG amp HCR and J Wolf amp HCR Gould John The birds of Great Britain 1862 1873 5 vols 367 plates Artists JG HCR amp J Wolf Owen Richard Memoirs on the extinct wingless birds of New Zealand 1878 1879 1 large folded plate depicting Notornis mantelli JG amp HCR del amp lith dd Gould John A monograph of the Pittidae edited by R B Sharpe 1880 10 plates from other Gould titles including 3 plates JG amp HCR del lith dd Note Jackson s list omits Mammals of Australia 1845 1863 though it is not clear whether this was intentional or not Certainly his contribution of illustrations for the book was significant A selection of illustrations by Richter editUnlike paintings lithographs in Richter s time tended not to be dated by the artist so it is normal to use the publication date of the book in which the lithograph was printed nbsp Giant Hummingbird Patagona gigas 1887 A Monograph of the Trochilidae or Family of Hummingbirds J Gould amp H C Richter nbsp Lord Derby s Parakeet Psittacula derbiana J Gould amp H C Richter nbsp Cinereous Tit Parus cinereus between 1850 and 1883 Birds of Asia Volume 2 J Gould amp H C Richter nbsp Mrs Gould s Sunbird Aethopyga gouldiae J Gould amp H C Richter nbsp Saxual Sparrow Passer ammodendri Birds of Asia Volume V J Gould and H C Richter nbsp Himalayan Shrike babbler Pteruthius ripleyi J Gould amp H C Richter nbsp Squirrel Glider Petaurus norfolcensis 1845 1863 Mammals of Australia J Gould amp H C Richter nbsp Gould s Mouse Pseudomys gouldii 1863 Mammals of Australia J Gould amp H C Richter nbsp Duckbilled Platypus Ornithorhynchus anatinus 1845 1863 Mammals of Australia Gould amp H C Richter nbsp Koala Phascolarctus cinereus 1845 1863 Mammals of Australia J Gould amp H C Richter nbsp Common Wombat Vombatus ursinus 1845 1863 Mammals of Australia J Gould amp H C Richter nbsp Northern Quoll Dasyurus hallucatus 1845 1863 Mammals of Australia J Gould amp H C RichterExternal links editBirds of Australia 1848 J Gould with illustrations by Richter and others Birds of Great Britain Vol 1 1873 J Gould with illustrations by Richter Hart amp Wolf The Mammals of Australia Vol 1 1863 J Gould with illustrations by Richter and others Richter family tree in Ancestry com membership required References edit Stephens M 2009 Henry Constantine Richter about 1821 1902 Australian Museum Sydney NSW accessed 02 Dec 2017 https australianmuseum net au henry constantine richter about 1821 1902 a b c Cook KS 2013 Gould collections at KU the story of the Gould Collection John Gould Bird Illustration in the Age of Darwin University of Kansas accessed 3 Dec 2017 https exhibits lib ku edu exhibits show gould about kucollections a b Jackson CE 2011 The painting of hand coloured zoological illustrations Archives of Natural History 38 1 pp 36 52 a b c Cust LH 2012 Richter Henry James Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press accessed 3 Dec 2017 https doi org 10 1093 ref odnb 23599 Kansas Library n d Henry Constantine Richter University of Kansas Library Lawrence Kansas accessed 5 Dec 2017 https exhibits lib ku edu exhibits show gould art henry constantine richter a b c d e Jackson C 1978 H C Richter John Gould s unknown bird artist Journal of the Society for the Bibliography of Natural History Volume 9 Issue 1 11 1978 pages 10 14 Census Returns of England and Wales 1851 Kew Surrey England The National Archives of the UK TNA Public Record Office PRO 1851 a b c University of Tasmania 2007 Imaging the thylacine the exotic thylacine Exhibitions Hobart Tasmania accessed 3 Dec 2017 http www utas edu au library exhibitions thylacine exotic html Gray GR 1848 The genera of birds comprising their generic characters a notice of the habits of each genus and an extensive list of species referred to their several genera Longman London Sauer GC 1982 John Gould the bird man a chronology and bibliography Landsdowne Melbourne Victoria Australia Stephens Matthew Robyn Williams 13 June 2004 John Gould s place in Australian culture Ockham s Razor Australian Broadcasting Corporation Retrieved 28 April 2009 Government Tourist Bureau Tasmania Tasmania The Wonderland Hobart Government Printer Tasmania 1934 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Henry Constantine Richter amp oldid 1213819995, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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