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William Henry Harvey

William Henry Harvey, FRS FLS (5 February 1811 – 15 May 1866) was an Irish botanist and phycologist who specialised in algae.

William Henry Harvey

FRS
Born5 February 1811
Died15 May 1866 (1866-05-16) (aged 55)
Torquay, Devon, England
NationalityIrish
Other namesW.H Harvey
Known forA Manual of the British Algae
SpouseMiss Phelps (m 1861)
Scientific career
FieldsBotanist
Author abbrev. (botany)Harv.

Biography edit

Harvey was born at Summerville near Limerick, Ireland, in 1811, the youngest of 11 children. His father Joseph Massey Harvey, was a Quaker and prominent merchant.[1] William started his education at Ballitore School in County Kildare and by the age of 15 had already established algae as his over-riding interest.[2] After leaving school he joined the family business.

Harvey was an authority on algae and bryophytes (mosses), and author of A Manual of the British Algae (1841), Phycologia Britannica (4 vols., 1846–51), Nereis Boreali-Americana. (3 parts 1852–85) and Phycologia Australica (5 vol., 1858–63).[3] He spent several years in South Africa, and was the author, with German botanist Otto Wilhelm Sonder, of the Flora Capensis (7 vol. in 11, 1859 – 1933). Harvey's main algal herbarium is located at Trinity College Dublin.

Harvey's discovery in 1831 of the moss Hookeria laetevirens at Killarney, new to Ireland, led to a lifelong friendship with Sir William Jackson Hooker, who was then Regius Professor of Botany at Glasgow University. Hooker recognised the talent of the young man and lent him books and specimens. Soon afterwards Hooker invited him to contribute the section on algae to his British Flora (1833) as well as the section on algae for The Botany of Captain Beechy's Voyage.

In 1835 Harvey went to South Africa aboard the vessel "Carnatic", with his brother Joseph, who had been mistakenly nominated as colonial treasurer by Thomas Spring Rice instead of William. When Joseph's health failed in the following year, William took over his duties. They left for Britain together on 14 April 1836 and Joseph died on the voyage.

 

Back in Cape Town, and now officially treasurer-general, William took up residence at Bishop's Court, rising before dawn every day, collecting in the mountains or sea-shore, and working on the plants at night. In March 1837 he wrote: 'I have taken so many excursions lately that I almost fear I shall earn the sobriquet of Her Majesty's pleasurer general'. In the same year he enlisted the services of botanical collector Karl Zeyher, who was in Uitenhage, to collect specimens. He developed a close friendship with Baron von Ludwig who had started his famous gardens in Cape Town, and dedicated his Genera of South African Plants to him. Under the patronage of Sir George Grey and with the assistance of a team of collectors and of Otto Wilhelm Sonder, he set about writing a Flora Capensis in English – he lived long enough to see the first three volumes completed and published in Dublin, the third in 1865. He came home in 1842, having resigned his position due to illness.

In 1844 Harvey became curator of the Trinity College Herbarium (TCD)[4] and in 1848 Professor of Botany of the Royal Dublin Society.

In 1853 he made a three-year voyage, visiting South Africa, Ceylon, Australia, New Zealand, Tonga, Fiji, and Chile. On his return he published further important books dealing with the botany of North America and South Africa and in 1858 was appointed Professor of Botany at Trinity College Dublin.

He died from tuberculosis on 15 May 1866 at Torquay and was buried there.[5]

Botanic works edit

 
Illustrations made by William Henry Harvey in 1855, including Notheia anomala (top left)

As a result of the publication of his 1858 book, The genera of South African plants, in which he asked South African readers to send him specimens so that he could begin documenting the flora of the Cape, he began a correspondence with Mary Elizabeth Barber, an amateur naturalist who lived in Cape Colony.[6] Their ongoing correspondence took place during a time when it was not generally accepted for women to engage in scientific discussion;[7] indeed, in the beginning Barber did not disclose the fact that she was a woman.[6] Barber became one of Harvey's main suppliers of plants from South Africa and also assisted him in the naming and classification of numerous species.[8] Over a nearly 30-year correspondence, she sent Harvey approximately 1,000 species with notes on each one.[6]

Harvey described over 750 species and in excess of 75 genera of algae.[5]

His Phycologia Britannica was published in 1846–1851 and his publication of Nereis Australis Or Algae of the Southern Ocean (1847–49) along with other publications established his reputation. His Phycologia Australica represents one of the most important books on phycology in the 19th century. Published in five volumes between 1858 and 1863 it is the result of his extensive collecting on the Australian shores.

By the time Harvey set foot in Western Australia he had already established himself as a leading phycologist having published several large works. He earned the title: "father of Australian Phycology". He was elected as a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1858.[9]

Legacy edit

About 600 specimens from Ireland, Ceylon, Friendly Islands, Australia and Tasmania collected by Harvey are in store in the Ulster Museum Herbarium (BEL), almost 90 of which are in the 5th volume of the William Thompson collection in the Ulster Museum, catalogue numbers: F8848–F8937. However his primary collection is still in the TCD Herbarium attached to Botany School building of Trinity College. There are also collections of Harvey's specimens in: The former botany department of University College, Cork, Ireland; West Chester, Pennsylvania, US; National Herbarium of Victoria (MEL), Melbourne, Australia; National Herbarium of New South Wales (NSW), Sydney, Australia and the Herbarium of St. Andrews University (STA). He edited three exsiccata series: Australian Algae, Ceylon Algae and Friendly Island Algae. The exsiccata specimens are deposited in several herbaria.[10]

In Harvey's era naturalists often relied upon the exchanging of specimens with other scientists and contributions by amateur collectors. His 1841 Manual of the British Algae was dedicated to British beachcomber, Amelia Griffiths. In his Phycologia Britannica Harvey often notes the "distribution" of each species giving the name of the collector who reported the record. In the Preface of Vol. 1 he lists 19 people to whom he is indebted. These include: Rev Pollexfen and Dr McBain for Orkney algae. The others are: Rev Hore, Dr Cocks, Mr Rohloff, Mr Boswarva, Miss White, Miss Magdalene Turner, Miss Warren, Miss (Anne) Ball, Miss (Isabella) Gifford(4), Miss Cutler (1), Mrs Gatty, Mrs Gulson (?–1871)(5), Mrs Hayden, Rev Dr Landsborough, Dr Dickie (2), Mr Ralfs and Mr Cresswell. Others noted in volume 1 include: Mr Winch, Mr McCalla (c.1814–1849)(3), Mr Wigg, Mr Borrer, Miss Hutchins, Mr John Templeton, Mr T.N.Cole, Rev Clouston, Rev H. Davies, Mr Stackhouse, Mrs Ovens, Mr W. Backhouse, Dr James, Dr. P. Neill and others. Harvey recognised Turner's help and named Cladophora magdalenae Harv. in her honour. Harvey also honoured Susan Fereday's contribution to his work by naming the species Dasya feredayae and Nemastoma feredayae after her.[11]

This botanist is denoted by the author abbreviation Harv. when citing a botanical name.[12]

Specimens in Ulster Museum Herbarium (BEL) edit

Specimens of some of these collectors are to be found in the Ulster Museum Herbarium (BEL):

  1. Miss Cutler: BEL catalogue numbers:— F5646; F5400; F5399; F5358; F5336; F5335 and F5511.
  2. Professor George Dickie (1812–1882): BEL catalogue numbers:— F2651; F2462 and F2696.
  3. William McCalla many specimens in Ulster Museum.
  4. Miss Isabella Gifford (1823?–1891): BEL catalogue numbers:— Ulster Museum Collection No. 15.
  5. Mrs Gulson (?–1871): BEL catalogue numbers:— F5369; F5419; F5410; F5370; F5737; F5522; F5810; F5810; F5737; F5713; F5523; F5522; F5506; F5720; F5719; F5410; F5401 and F5369.

Other collectors edit

George Clifton (1823–1913) Mr G. Clifton is mentioned in Harvey's Memoirs, as the superintendent of the Water Police in Perth, West Australia whose boat Harvey used when collecting in Fremantle (Blackler, 1977).[13] Some of his specimens are in the Ulster Museum Herbarium: BEL: F2195; F2196 from "W.Australia."

Ronald Campbell Gunn (1808–1881) Harvey's specimens in the Ulster Museum are from George Town. The handwriting has been determined by Dr H. B. S. Womersley (1980): F2256; F2242; F2083; F2081 and others.

Harvey was an honorary M.D. of Dublin University (1844) and F.R.S. (1858). His portrait is in the National Gallery of Ireland, Dublin.

Harvey's publications edit

  • Harvey, William Henry. 1833. Div.II. Confervoideae. Div.III. Gloiocladeae. In, Hooker, W.J. (Ed.) The English flora of Sir James Edward Smith 5. London.
  • Harvey, William Henry. 1834. Algologhical illustrations. No. 1 Remarks on some British algae and descriptions of a new species recently added to our flora. J. Bot., Hooker 1: 296 – 305.
  • Harvey, William Henry. 1838. The Genera of South African Plants. Cape Town, 429 pp.
  • Harvey, William Henry. 1841. A Manual of the British Algae
  • Harvey, William Henry. Description of Ballia, a new genus of Algae. – Hooker's Journ. Bot.' Bd 2
  • Harvey, William Henry. 1844. Description of a minute alga from the coast of Ireland. Annals and Magazine of Natural History. 14: 27–28.
  • Harvey, William Henry. 1844. Description of a new British species of Callithamnion (C. pollexfenii) Annals and Magagazine of Natural History. 14: 109 – 131.
  • Harvey, William Henry. 1844. Algae of Tasmania, J. of Bot., London, 3:428–454.
  • Harvey, William Henry. 1847. Phycologia Britannica. Plates 73–78). Reeve & Banham, London.
  • Harvey, William Henry. 1848. Phycologia Britannica. Plates 147–216). Reeve & Banham, London.
  • Harvey, William Henry. 1847. Nereis Australis or Algae of the Southern Ocean:... Transactions of the Royal Irish Academy. 22(Science):525–566. London.
  • Harvey, William Henry. 1848. Directions for Collecting and Preserving Algae. Am. Journ., Sci. and Arts, II,6: 42–45.
  • Harvey, William Henry. 1849. A Manual of the British Marine Algae... John van Voorst, London
  • Harvey, William Henry. 1849. The sea-side book : being an introduction to the natural history of the British coasts John Van Voorst, London. Online here
  • Harvey, William Henry. 1849. Phycologia Britannica. Plates 217–294). Reeve & Banham, London.
  • Harvey, William Henry. 1850. Phycologia Britannica. Plates 295–354). Reeve & Banham, London.
  • Harvey, William Henry. 1850. Observations on the Marine Flora of the Atlantic States. Proc. Am. Assn. Adv. Sci., pp. 79–80.
  • Harvey, William Henry. 1851. Nereis Boreali-Americana:... Part I.— Melanospermaea. Smithsonian Institution.
  • Harvey, William Henry. 1853. Nereis Boreali-Americana:... Part II.— Rhodospermeae.
  • Harvey, William Henry. 1855. Some account of the marine botany of the colony of Western Australia. Transactions of the Royal Irish Academy, 22: 525–566.
  • Harvey, William Henry. 1855. Algae. In J.D.Hooker, The Botany of the Antarctic Voyage 2: Flora Nova-Zelandiae II. London, 211–266, pl. 107–121.
  • Harvey, William Henry. 1857. Nereis Boreali-Americana:... Part III.— Chlorospermeae.
  • Harvey, William Henry. 1857. Short description of some new British algae, with two plates. Nat. Hist. Rev. 4: 201–204.
  • Harvey, William Henry. 1858. List of Arctic Algae, Chiefly Compiled from Collections Brought Home by Officers of the Recent Searching Expeditions. Smithsonian Contrib. to Knowledge. Part III, Supl. 2: 132–134.
  • Harvey, William Henry. 1859–1863. Thesaurus Capensis. Figures and brief descriptions of South African plants, selected from the Dublin University Herbarium.
  • Harvey, William Henry & Otto Wilhelm Sonder. 1859–1933 Flora Capensis (7 vol. in 11)
  • Harvey, William Henry. 1860. Algae. Pages 242–383, pl.185–196 in: The Botany of the Antarctic Voyage, Part III. Flora Tasmaniae. Vol. 2 (Ed. by J.D. Hooker) L.Reeve, London.
  • Harvey, William Henry. 1862. Phycologia Australica. Vol 4, Pl. 181–240. London.
  • Harvey, William Henry. 1862. Notice of a collection of algae made on the northwest coast of North America, chiefly at Vancouver's Island, by David Lyall, Esq., M.D., R.N., in the years 1859–1861. J. Linn. Soc. Bot. 6: 157–177.
  • Harvey, William Henry. 1868. The Genera of South African Plants. (enlarged 2nd edition, edited by Sir J.D. Hooker). London.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Jun 27, Sharon Slater |; Places, 2013 | Limerick; People; Genealogy. "Harveys Quay through the years". Limerick's Life. Retrieved 30 January 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  2. ^ Papenfuss, G.F. 1976. pp.21–46. Landmarks in Pacific North American Marine Phycology. in Abbott, I.A. and Hollenberg, G.J. 1976. Marine Algae of California. Stanford University Press, California. ISBN 0-8047-0867-3
  3. ^ Gunn, Mary; Codd, L. E. W. (1 June 1981). Botanical Exploration Southern Africa. CRC Press. pp. 179–181. ISBN 978-0-86961-129-6.
  4. ^ "Trinity College, Herbarium History". Trinity College Dublin. Retrieved 30 January 2021.
  5. ^ a b Guiry, M.D., Boalch, G.T. and Peters, A.F. 2010. William Henry Harvey's Grave Rediscovered. The Phycologist. Number 79: 14–15
  6. ^ a b c Creese, Mary R. S.; Creese, Thomas M. (2010). Ladies in the Laboratory III: South African, Australian, New Zealand, and Canadian Women in Science – Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries. Scarecrow Press. pp. 9–12. ISBN 978-0810872882.
  7. ^ Cohen, Alan (2000). "Mary Elizabeth Barber: South Africa's first lady natural historian". Archives of Natural History. 27 (2): 187–208. doi:10.3366/anh.2000.27.2.187. ISSN 0260-9541.
  8. ^ Beinart, William (2008). The Rise of Conservation in South Africa: Settlers, Livestock, and the Environment 1770–1950. Oxford University Press. p. 117. ISBN 978-0199541225.
  9. ^ . Royal Society. Archived from the original on 29 March 2022. Retrieved 23 January 2017.
  10. ^ Triebel, D. & Scholz, P. 2001–2024 IndExs – Index of Exsiccatae. – Botanische Staatssammlung München: http://indexs.botanischestaatssammlung.de. – München, Germany. Retrieved: 2024-04-07
  11. ^ Norton, Leonie (2009). Women of Flowers: Botanical Art in Australia from the 1830s to the 1960s. Canberra: National Library of Australia. pp. 48–57. ISBN 9780642276834.
  12. ^ Brummitt, R. K.; C. E. Powell (1992). Authors of Plant Names. Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. ISBN 1-84246-085-4.
  13. ^ Blackler, H. 1977. Harvey's Australian Algae in the Herbarium of Mrs, Margaret Gatty in the Department of Botany of the University of St Andrew's (STA), Scotland. Taxon 26: 495–496

Further edit

  • Blackler, H. 1977. Harvey's Australian Algae in the Herbarium of Mrs Margaret Gatty in the department of botany of the University of St Andrew's (STA), Scotland. Taxon 26: 495 – 496.
  • Evans, F. 2003. Mrs Alfred Gatty (1809–1873), author of "British Seaweeds". Phycologist. 65:14–17.
  • Gordon, R.B. 1975. A collection of Wm. H. Harvey's Australian algae at West Chester, Pennsylvania, USA Taxon 24: 628.
  • Ducker, S.C. 1977. W.H.Harvey's Australian Algae. Taxon 26 166–168.
  • Guiry, M.D., Boalch, G.T. and Peters, A.F. 2010. William Henry Harvey's Grave Rediscovered. The Phycologist. Number 79: 14–15.
  • Harvey, W.H. 1834. Algolical illustrations. No. 1.— Remarks on some British algae, and descriptions of new species recently added to our flora. J. Bot., Hooker, 1:296–305.
  • Harvey, W.H. 1841. A Manual of the British Algae. Van Voorst, London.
  • Harvey, W.H. 1844. Description of a minute alga from the coast of Ireland. Ann. & Mag. of Nat. Hist. 14:27–28.
  • Harvey, W.H. 1848. Phycologia Britanica, plates 145–216. London.
  • Harvey, W.H. 1852–58a. Nereis Boreali-Americana. Part I, Melanospermae. Smithsonian Contrib. to Knowledge, 3: 1–150, Pl, 1–12. 1852; Part II, Rhodospermae. Ibid., 5: 1–258, Pl. 13–36. 1853. Part III, Chlorospermae. Ibid., 10: 1–140. Pl. 37–50. 1858.
  • Harvey, W.H. 1855. Some account of the marine botany of the colony of Western Australia. Trans. R. Ir. Acad. 22: 525–566.
  • Harvey, W.H. 1862. Notice of a collection of algae made on the northwest coast of North America, chiefly at Vancouver's Island, by David Lyall. Esq., M.D., R.N., in the years 1859–61. J. Linn. Soc., Bot., 6:157–177.
  • Harvey, W.H. and Hooker, J.D. 1845. Botany of the Antarctic voyage of H.M.discovery ships Erebus and Terror in the years 1839–1843... 1. Flora Antarctica. Part 1. Algae, pp. 175–193.
  • May, V. 1977. Harvey's Australian Algae at the National Herbarium of New South Wales (NSW), Sydney, Australia. Taxon 26: 496.
  • Morton, O. 1977. A note on W.H.Harvey's algae in the Ulster Museum. Ir. Nat. J. 19: 26.
  • Morton, O. 1980. Three algal collections in the Ulster Museum Herbarium. Ir. Nat. J. 20: 33–37.
  • Morton, O. 1981. American Algae Collected by W.H.Harvey and others, in the Ulster Museum Herbarium. Taxon 30: 867–868.
  • Parkes, H. Introductory notes to the catalogue of marine algae housed in the herbarium of the Department of University College, Cork, Ireland. pp. 16–22. In Cullinane, J.P. 1973. Phycology of the South Coast of Ireland. The Cork University Press, University College Cork.
  • Ross, J.H. 1976 The collection of W.H.Harvey's Australian algae at the National Herbarium of Victoria (MEL), Melbourne, Australia. Taxon 25: 525–526.

External links edit

  • Digitized works by William Henry Harvey at Biodiversity Heritage Library
  • Memoir of W. H. Harvey: M.D., F.R.S., etc., etc., late professor of botany, Trinity College, Dublin, with selections from his journal and correspondence (1869) (archive.org)
  • Harvey, William Henry (1811–1866) by Sophie C. Ducker, Australian Dictionary of Biography (1972)
  • W.H. Harvey’s Australian Travelling Sets of Algae in the Herbarium of Trinity College Dublin and the National Herbarium of Victoria, Australia 15 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine by John A.N. Parnell, H. Bryan S. Womersley, Doris Sinkora, Alison Vaughan and John M. Huisman; Biology and Environment: Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy 110B, 119–161.
  • Visitor Centre Portraits, National Botanic Gardens, Glasnevin (includes portrait of Harvey)

william, henry, harvey, harv, redirects, here, other, uses, harv, disambiguation, february, 1811, 1866, irish, botanist, phycologist, specialised, algae, frsborn5, february, 1811limerick, county, limerick, irelanddied15, 1866, 1866, aged, torquay, devon, engla. Harv redirects here For other uses see Harv disambiguation William Henry Harvey FRS FLS 5 February 1811 15 May 1866 was an Irish botanist and phycologist who specialised in algae William Henry HarveyFRSBorn5 February 1811Limerick County Limerick IrelandDied15 May 1866 1866 05 16 aged 55 Torquay Devon EnglandNationalityIrishOther namesW H HarveyKnown forA Manual of the British AlgaeSpouseMiss Phelps m 1861 Scientific careerFieldsBotanistAuthor abbrev botany Harv Contents 1 Biography 2 Botanic works 3 Legacy 4 Specimens in Ulster Museum Herbarium BEL 5 Other collectors 6 Harvey s publications 7 See also 8 References 9 Further 10 External linksBiography editHarvey was born at Summerville near Limerick Ireland in 1811 the youngest of 11 children His father Joseph Massey Harvey was a Quaker and prominent merchant 1 William started his education at Ballitore School in County Kildare and by the age of 15 had already established algae as his over riding interest 2 After leaving school he joined the family business Harvey was an authority on algae and bryophytes mosses and author of A Manual of the British Algae 1841 Phycologia Britannica 4 vols 1846 51 Nereis Boreali Americana 3 parts 1852 85 and Phycologia Australica 5 vol 1858 63 3 He spent several years in South Africa and was the author with German botanist Otto Wilhelm Sonder of the Flora Capensis 7 vol in 11 1859 1933 Harvey s main algal herbarium is located at Trinity College Dublin Harvey s discovery in 1831 of the moss Hookeria laetevirens at Killarney new to Ireland led to a lifelong friendship with Sir William Jackson Hooker who was then Regius Professor of Botany at Glasgow University Hooker recognised the talent of the young man and lent him books and specimens Soon afterwards Hooker invited him to contribute the section on algae to his British Flora 1833 as well as the section on algae for The Botany of Captain Beechy s Voyage In 1835 Harvey went to South Africa aboard the vessel Carnatic with his brother Joseph who had been mistakenly nominated as colonial treasurer by Thomas Spring Rice instead of William When Joseph s health failed in the following year William took over his duties They left for Britain together on 14 April 1836 and Joseph died on the voyage nbsp Back in Cape Town and now officially treasurer general William took up residence at Bishop s Court rising before dawn every day collecting in the mountains or sea shore and working on the plants at night In March 1837 he wrote I have taken so many excursions lately that I almost fear I shall earn the sobriquet of Her Majesty s pleasurer general In the same year he enlisted the services of botanical collector Karl Zeyher who was in Uitenhage to collect specimens He developed a close friendship with Baron von Ludwig who had started his famous gardens in Cape Town and dedicated his Genera of South African Plants to him Under the patronage of Sir George Grey and with the assistance of a team of collectors and of Otto Wilhelm Sonder he set about writing a Flora Capensis in English he lived long enough to see the first three volumes completed and published in Dublin the third in 1865 He came home in 1842 having resigned his position due to illness In 1844 Harvey became curator of the Trinity College Herbarium TCD 4 and in 1848 Professor of Botany of the Royal Dublin Society In 1853 he made a three year voyage visiting South Africa Ceylon Australia New Zealand Tonga Fiji and Chile On his return he published further important books dealing with the botany of North America and South Africa and in 1858 was appointed Professor of Botany at Trinity College Dublin He died from tuberculosis on 15 May 1866 at Torquay and was buried there 5 Botanic works edit nbsp Illustrations made by William Henry Harvey in 1855 including Notheia anomala top left As a result of the publication of his 1858 book The genera of South African plants in which he asked South African readers to send him specimens so that he could begin documenting the flora of the Cape he began a correspondence with Mary Elizabeth Barber an amateur naturalist who lived in Cape Colony 6 Their ongoing correspondence took place during a time when it was not generally accepted for women to engage in scientific discussion 7 indeed in the beginning Barber did not disclose the fact that she was a woman 6 Barber became one of Harvey s main suppliers of plants from South Africa and also assisted him in the naming and classification of numerous species 8 Over a nearly 30 year correspondence she sent Harvey approximately 1 000 species with notes on each one 6 Harvey described over 750 species and in excess of 75 genera of algae 5 His Phycologia Britannica was published in 1846 1851 and his publication of Nereis Australis Or Algae of the Southern Ocean 1847 49 along with other publications established his reputation His Phycologia Australica represents one of the most important books on phycology in the 19th century Published in five volumes between 1858 and 1863 it is the result of his extensive collecting on the Australian shores By the time Harvey set foot in Western Australia he had already established himself as a leading phycologist having published several large works He earned the title father of Australian Phycology He was elected as a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1858 9 Legacy editAbout 600 specimens from Ireland Ceylon Friendly Islands Australia and Tasmania collected by Harvey are in store in the Ulster Museum Herbarium BEL almost 90 of which are in the 5th volume of the William Thompson collection in the Ulster Museum catalogue numbers F8848 F8937 However his primary collection is still in the TCD Herbarium attached to Botany School building of Trinity College There are also collections of Harvey s specimens in The former botany department of University College Cork Ireland West Chester Pennsylvania US National Herbarium of Victoria MEL Melbourne Australia National Herbarium of New South Wales NSW Sydney Australia and the Herbarium of St Andrews University STA He edited three exsiccata series Australian Algae Ceylon Algae and Friendly Island Algae The exsiccata specimens are deposited in several herbaria 10 In Harvey s era naturalists often relied upon the exchanging of specimens with other scientists and contributions by amateur collectors His 1841 Manual of the British Algae was dedicated to British beachcomber Amelia Griffiths In his Phycologia Britannica Harvey often notes the distribution of each species giving the name of the collector who reported the record In the Preface of Vol 1 he lists 19 people to whom he is indebted These include Rev Pollexfen and Dr McBain for Orkney algae The others are Rev Hore Dr Cocks Mr Rohloff Mr Boswarva Miss White Miss Magdalene Turner Miss Warren Miss Anne Ball Miss Isabella Gifford 4 Miss Cutler 1 Mrs Gatty Mrs Gulson 1871 5 Mrs Hayden Rev Dr Landsborough Dr Dickie 2 Mr Ralfs and Mr Cresswell Others noted in volume 1 include Mr Winch Mr McCalla c 1814 1849 3 Mr Wigg Mr Borrer Miss Hutchins Mr John Templeton Mr T N Cole Rev Clouston Rev H Davies Mr Stackhouse Mrs Ovens Mr W Backhouse Dr James Dr P Neill and others Harvey recognised Turner s help and named Cladophora magdalenae Harv in her honour Harvey also honoured Susan Fereday s contribution to his work by naming the species Dasya feredayae and Nemastoma feredayae after her 11 This botanist is denoted by the author abbreviation Harv when citing a botanical name 12 Specimens in Ulster Museum Herbarium BEL editSpecimens of some of these collectors are to be found in the Ulster Museum Herbarium BEL Miss Cutler BEL catalogue numbers F5646 F5400 F5399 F5358 F5336 F5335 and F5511 Professor George Dickie 1812 1882 BEL catalogue numbers F2651 F2462 and F2696 William McCalla many specimens in Ulster Museum Miss Isabella Gifford 1823 1891 BEL catalogue numbers Ulster Museum Collection No 15 Mrs Gulson 1871 BEL catalogue numbers F5369 F5419 F5410 F5370 F5737 F5522 F5810 F5810 F5737 F5713 F5523 F5522 F5506 F5720 F5719 F5410 F5401 and F5369 Other collectors editGeorge Clifton 1823 1913 Mr G Clifton is mentioned in Harvey s Memoirs as the superintendent of the Water Police in Perth West Australia whose boat Harvey used when collecting in Fremantle Blackler 1977 13 Some of his specimens are in the Ulster Museum Herbarium BEL F2195 F2196 from W Australia Ronald Campbell Gunn 1808 1881 Harvey s specimens in the Ulster Museum are from George Town The handwriting has been determined by Dr H B S Womersley 1980 F2256 F2242 F2083 F2081 and others Harvey was an honorary M D of Dublin University 1844 and F R S 1858 His portrait is in the National Gallery of Ireland Dublin Harvey s publications editHarvey William Henry 1833 Div II Confervoideae Div III Gloiocladeae In Hooker W J Ed The English flora of Sir James Edward Smith 5 London Harvey William Henry 1834 Algologhical illustrations No 1 Remarks on some British algae and descriptions of a new species recently added to our flora J Bot Hooker 1 296 305 Harvey William Henry 1838 The Genera of South African Plants Cape Town 429 pp Harvey William Henry 1841 A Manual of the British Algae Harvey William Henry Description of Ballia a new genus of Algae Hooker s Journ Bot Bd 2 Harvey William Henry 1844 Description of a minute alga from the coast of Ireland Annals and Magazine of Natural History 14 27 28 Harvey William Henry 1844 Description of a new British species of Callithamnion C pollexfenii Annals and Magagazine of Natural History 14 109 131 Harvey William Henry 1844 Algae of Tasmania J of Bot London 3 428 454 Harvey William Henry 1847 Phycologia Britannica Plates 73 78 Reeve amp Banham London Harvey William Henry 1848 Phycologia Britannica Plates 147 216 Reeve amp Banham London Harvey William Henry 1847 Nereis Australis or Algae of the Southern Ocean Transactions of the Royal Irish Academy 22 Science 525 566 London Harvey William Henry 1848 Directions for Collecting and Preserving Algae Am Journ Sci and Arts II 6 42 45 Harvey William Henry 1849 A Manual of the British Marine Algae John van Voorst London Harvey William Henry 1849 The sea side book being an introduction to the natural history of the British coasts John Van Voorst London Online here Harvey William Henry 1849 Phycologia Britannica Plates 217 294 Reeve amp Banham London Harvey William Henry 1850 Phycologia Britannica Plates 295 354 Reeve amp Banham London Harvey William Henry 1850 Observations on the Marine Flora of the Atlantic States Proc Am Assn Adv Sci pp 79 80 Harvey William Henry 1851 Nereis Boreali Americana Part I Melanospermaea Smithsonian Institution Harvey William Henry 1853 Nereis Boreali Americana Part II Rhodospermeae Harvey William Henry 1855 Some account of the marine botany of the colony of Western Australia Transactions of the Royal Irish Academy 22 525 566 Harvey William Henry 1855 Algae In J D Hooker The Botany of the Antarctic Voyage 2 Flora Nova Zelandiae II London 211 266 pl 107 121 Harvey William Henry 1857 Nereis Boreali Americana Part III Chlorospermeae Harvey William Henry 1857 Short description of some new British algae with two plates Nat Hist Rev 4 201 204 Harvey William Henry 1858 List of Arctic Algae Chiefly Compiled from Collections Brought Home by Officers of the Recent Searching Expeditions Smithsonian Contrib to Knowledge Part III Supl 2 132 134 Harvey William Henry 1859 1863 Thesaurus Capensis Figures and brief descriptions of South African plants selected from the Dublin University Herbarium Harvey William Henry amp Otto Wilhelm Sonder 1859 1933 Flora Capensis 7 vol in 11 Harvey William Henry 1860 Algae Pages 242 383 pl 185 196 in The Botany of the Antarctic Voyage Part III Flora Tasmaniae Vol 2 Ed by J D Hooker L Reeve London Harvey William Henry 1862 Phycologia Australica Vol 4 Pl 181 240 London Harvey William Henry 1862 Notice of a collection of algae made on the northwest coast of North America chiefly at Vancouver s Island by David Lyall Esq M D R N in the years 1859 1861 J Linn Soc Bot 6 157 177 Harvey William Henry 1868 The Genera of South African Plants enlarged 2nd edition edited by Sir J D Hooker London See also editHistory of phycologyReferences edit Jun 27 Sharon Slater Places 2013 Limerick People Genealogy Harveys Quay through the years Limerick s Life Retrieved 30 January 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Papenfuss G F 1976 pp 21 46 Landmarks in Pacific North American Marine Phycology in Abbott I A and Hollenberg G J 1976 Marine Algae of California Stanford University Press California ISBN 0 8047 0867 3 Gunn Mary Codd L E W 1 June 1981 Botanical Exploration Southern Africa CRC Press pp 179 181 ISBN 978 0 86961 129 6 Trinity College Herbarium History Trinity College Dublin Retrieved 30 January 2021 a b Guiry M D Boalch G T and Peters A F 2010 William Henry Harvey s Grave Rediscovered The Phycologist Number 79 14 15 a b c Creese Mary R S Creese Thomas M 2010 Ladies in the Laboratory III South African Australian New Zealand and Canadian Women in Science Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries Scarecrow Press pp 9 12 ISBN 978 0810872882 Cohen Alan 2000 Mary Elizabeth Barber South Africa s first lady natural historian Archives of Natural History 27 2 187 208 doi 10 3366 anh 2000 27 2 187 ISSN 0260 9541 Beinart William 2008 The Rise of Conservation in South Africa Settlers Livestock and the Environment 1770 1950 Oxford University Press p 117 ISBN 978 0199541225 Fellows details Royal Society Archived from the original on 29 March 2022 Retrieved 23 January 2017 Triebel D amp Scholz P 2001 2024 IndExs Index of Exsiccatae Botanische Staatssammlung Munchen http indexs botanischestaatssammlung de Munchen Germany Retrieved 2024 04 07 Norton Leonie 2009 Women of Flowers Botanical Art in Australia from the 1830s to the 1960s Canberra National Library of Australia pp 48 57 ISBN 9780642276834 Brummitt R K C E Powell 1992 Authors of Plant Names Royal Botanic Gardens Kew ISBN 1 84246 085 4 Blackler H 1977 Harvey s Australian Algae in the Herbarium of Mrs Margaret Gatty in the Department of Botany of the University of St Andrew s STA Scotland Taxon 26 495 496Further editBlackler H 1977 Harvey s Australian Algae in the Herbarium of Mrs Margaret Gatty in the department of botany of the University of St Andrew s STA Scotland Taxon 26 495 496 Evans F 2003 Mrs Alfred Gatty 1809 1873 author of British Seaweeds Phycologist 65 14 17 Gordon R B 1975 A collection of Wm H Harvey s Australian algae at West Chester Pennsylvania USA Taxon 24 628 Ducker S C 1977 W H Harvey s Australian Algae Taxon 26 166 168 Guiry M D Boalch G T and Peters A F 2010 William Henry Harvey s Grave Rediscovered The Phycologist Number 79 14 15 Harvey W H 1834 Algolical illustrations No 1 Remarks on some British algae and descriptions of new species recently added to our flora J Bot Hooker 1 296 305 Harvey W H 1841 A Manual of the British Algae Van Voorst London Harvey W H 1844 Description of a minute alga from the coast of Ireland Ann amp Mag of Nat Hist 14 27 28 Harvey W H 1848 Phycologia Britanica plates 145 216 London Harvey W H 1852 58a Nereis Boreali Americana Part I Melanospermae Smithsonian Contrib to Knowledge 3 1 150 Pl 1 12 1852 Part II Rhodospermae Ibid 5 1 258 Pl 13 36 1853 Part III Chlorospermae Ibid 10 1 140 Pl 37 50 1858 Harvey W H 1855 Some account of the marine botany of the colony of Western Australia Trans R Ir Acad 22 525 566 Harvey W H 1862 Notice of a collection of algae made on the northwest coast of North America chiefly at Vancouver s Island by David Lyall Esq M D R N in the years 1859 61 J Linn Soc Bot 6 157 177 Harvey W H and Hooker J D 1845 Botany of the Antarctic voyage of H M discovery ships Erebus and Terror in the years 1839 1843 1 Flora Antarctica Part 1 Algae pp 175 193 May V 1977 Harvey s Australian Algae at the National Herbarium of New South Wales NSW Sydney Australia Taxon 26 496 Morton O 1977 A note on W H Harvey s algae in the Ulster Museum Ir Nat J 19 26 Morton O 1980 Three algal collections in the Ulster Museum Herbarium Ir Nat J 20 33 37 Morton O 1981 American Algae Collected by W H Harvey and others in the Ulster Museum Herbarium Taxon 30 867 868 Parkes H Introductory notes to the catalogue of marine algae housed in the herbarium of the Department of University College Cork Ireland pp 16 22 In Cullinane J P 1973 Phycology of the South Coast of Ireland The Cork University Press University College Cork Ross J H 1976 The collection of W H Harvey s Australian algae at the National Herbarium of Victoria MEL Melbourne Australia Taxon 25 525 526 External links edit nbsp Wikisource has original works by or about William Henry Harvey nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to William Henry Harvey nbsp Wikispecies has information related to William Henry Harvey Digitized works by William Henry Harvey at Biodiversity Heritage Library Memoir of W H Harvey M D F R S etc etc late professor of botany Trinity College Dublin with selections from his journal and correspondence 1869 archive org Harvey William Henry 1811 1866 by Sophie C Ducker Australian Dictionary of Biography 1972 W H Harvey s Australian Travelling Sets of Algae in the Herbarium of Trinity College Dublin and the National Herbarium of Victoria Australia Archived 15 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine by John A N Parnell H Bryan S Womersley Doris Sinkora Alison Vaughan and John M Huisman Biology and Environment Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy 110B 119 161 Visitor Centre Portraits National Botanic Gardens Glasnevin includes portrait of Harvey Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title William Henry Harvey amp oldid 1217756426, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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