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Joseph Banks

Sir Joseph Banks, 1st Baronet, GCB, FRS (24 February [O.S. 13 February] 1743 – 19 June 1820[1]) was an English naturalist, botanist, and patron of the natural sciences.[2]


Joseph Banks

Sir Joseph Banks, as painted by Sir Joshua Reynolds in 1773
Born(1743-02-24)24 February 1743 (13 February O.S.)
30 Argyll Street, London, England
Died19 June 1820(1820-06-19) (aged 77)
Spring Grove House, Isleworth, London, England
Alma materChrist Church, Oxford
Known forVoyage of HMS Endeavour, exploration of Botany Bay
SpouseDorothea Banks
Scientific career
FieldsBotany
InstitutionsRoyal Botanic Gardens, Kew
Author abbrev. (botany)Banks
21st President of the Royal Society
In office
1778–1820
Preceded bySir John Pringle
Succeeded byWilliam Hyde Wollaston
Signature

Banks made his name on the 1766 natural-history expedition to Newfoundland and Labrador. He took part in Captain James Cook's first great voyage (1768–1771), visiting Brazil, Tahiti, and after 6 months in New Zealand, Australia, returning to immediate fame. He held the position of president of the Royal Society for over 41 years. He advised King George III on the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, and by sending botanists around the world to collect plants, he made Kew the world's leading botanical garden. He is credited for bringing 30,000 plant specimens home with him; amongst them, he was the first European to document 1,400.[3]

Banks advocated British settlement in New South Wales and the colonisation of Australia, as well as the establishment of Botany Bay as a place for the reception of convicts, and advised the British government on all Australian matters. He is credited with introducing the eucalyptus, acacia, and the genus named after him, Banksia, to the Western world. Around 80 species of plants bear his name. He was the leading founder of the African Association and a member of the Society of Dilettanti, which helped to establish the Royal Academy.

Early life edit

 
A 1757 portrait of Banks with a botanical illustration, unknown artist, but attributed to Lemuel Francis Abbott or Johann Zoffany[4]

Banks was born in Argyll Street, Soho, London, the son of William Banks, a wealthy Lincolnshire country squire and member of the House of Commons, and his wife Sarah, daughter of William Bate.[2] He was baptised at St James's Church, Piccadilly, on 20 February 1743, Old Style.[5] He had a younger sister, Sarah Sophia Banks, born in 1744.[6]

Education edit

Banks was educated at Harrow School from the age of nine and then at Eton College from 1756; the boys with whom he attended the school included his future shipmate Constantine Phipps.[4]

As a boy, Banks enjoyed exploring the Lincolnshire countryside and developed a keen interest in nature, history, and botany. When he was 17, he was inoculated with smallpox, but he became ill and did not return to school. In late 1760, he was enrolled as a gentleman-commoner at the University of Oxford. At Oxford, he matriculated at Christ Church, where his studies were largely focussed on natural history rather than the classical curriculum. Determined to receive botanical instruction, he paid the Cambridge botanist Israel Lyons to deliver a series of lectures at Oxford in 1764.[7]

Banks left Oxford for Chelsea in December 1763. He continued to attend the university until 1764, but left that year without taking a degree.[8] His father had died in 1761, so when Banks reached the age of 21, he inherited the large estate of Revesby Abbey, in Lincolnshire, becoming the local squire and magistrate, and dividing his time between Lincolnshire and London. From his mother's house in Chelsea, he kept up his interest in science by attending the Chelsea Physic Garden of the Worshipful Society of Apothecaries and the British Museum, where he met the Swedish naturalist Daniel Solander. He began to make friends among the scientific men of his day and to correspond with Carl Linnaeus, whom he came to know through Solander. As Banks's influence increased, he became an adviser to King George III and urged the monarch to support voyages of discovery to new lands, hoping to indulge his own interest in botany. He became a Freemason sometime before 1769.[9]

Newfoundland and Labrador edit

In 1766, Banks was elected to the Royal Society, and in the same year, at 23, he went with Phipps aboard the frigate HMS Niger to Newfoundland and Labrador with a view to studying their natural history. He made his name by publishing the first Linnean descriptions of the plants and animals of Newfoundland and Labrador.[10][11] Banks also documented 34 species of birds, including the great auk, which became extinct in 1844. On 7 May, he noted a large number of "penguins" swimming around the ship on the Grand Banks, and a specimen he collected in Chateau Bay, Labrador, was later identified as the great auk.[12]

Endeavour voyage edit

 Dr Daniel SolanderSir Joseph BanksCaptain James CookDr John HawkesworthEarl of Sandwichuse button to expand image
Dr Daniel Solander, Sir Joseph Banks, Captain James Cook, Dr John Hawkesworth and Lord Sandwich by John Hamilton Mortimer, 1771.[13] Use a cursor to see who is who.[14]

Banks was appointed to a joint Royal Navy/Royal Society scientific expedition to the South Pacific Ocean on HMS Endeavour, 1768–1771. This was the first of James Cook's voyages of discovery in that region. Banks funded eight others to join him: the Swedish naturalist Daniel Solander, the Finnish naturalist Herman Spöring (who also served as Banks' personal secretary and as a draughtsman), artists Sydney Parkinson and Alexander Buchan, and four servants from his estate: James Roberts, Peter Briscoe, Thomas Richmond, and George Dorlton.[15][16] In 1771, he was travelling with James Cook and docked in Simon's Town in what is now South Africa. There, he met the trader Christoffel Brand and a friendship started. He was the godfather of Brand's grandson Christoffel Brand.[citation needed]

The voyage went to Brazil, where Banks made the first scientific description of a now common garden plant, Bougainvillea (named after Cook's French counterpart, Louis Antoine de Bougainville), and to other parts of South America. The voyage then progressed to Tahiti (where the transit of Venus was observed,[17] the overt purpose of the mission), then to New Zealand.

From there, it proceeded to the east coast of Australia, where Cook mapped the coastline and made landfall at Botany Bay. The ship then landed at Round Hill (23-25 May 1770), which is now known as Seventeen Seventy and at Endeavour River (near modern Cooktown) in Queensland, where they spent almost seven weeks ashore while the ship was repaired after becoming holed on the Great Barrier Reef.[11] While they were in Australia, Banks, Daniel Solander, and Finnish botanist Dr Herman Spöring Jr. made the first major collection of Australian flora, describing many species new to science. Almost 800 specimens were illustrated by the artist Sydney Parkinson and appear in Banks' Florilegium, finally published in 35 volumes between 1980 and 1990. Notable also was that during the period when the Endeavour was being repaired, Banks observed a kangaroo, first recorded as "kanguru" on 12 July 1770 in an entry in his diary.[citation needed]

 
Satire on Banks titled "The Botanic Macaroni", by Matthew Darly, 1772: A macaroni was a pejorative term used for a follower of exaggerated continental fashion in the 18th century.

Return home edit

Banks arrived back in England on 12 July 1771 and immediately became famous. He intended to go with Cook on his second voyage, which began on 13 May 1772, but difficulties arose about Banks' scientific requirements on board Cook's new ship, HMS Resolution. The Admiralty regarded Banks' demands as unacceptable and without prior warning, withdrew his permission to sail. Banks immediately arranged an alternative expedition, and in July 1772, Daniel Solander and he visited the Isle of Wight, the Hebrides, Iceland, and the Orkney Islands,[11] aboard Sir Lawrence. In Iceland, they ascended Mt. Hekla and visited the Great Geyser, and were the first scientific visitors to Staffa in the Inner Hebrides.[18] They returned to London in November, with many botanical specimens, via Edinburgh, where Banks and Solander were interviewed by James Boswell.[19] In 1773, he toured south Wales in the company of artist Paul Sandby.[20] When he settled in London, he began work on his Florilegium. He kept in touch with most of the scientists of his time, was elected a foreign member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences in 1773, and added a fresh interest when he was elected to the Dilettante Society in 1774. He was afterwards secretary of this society from 1778 to 1797. On 30 November 1778, he was elected president of the Royal Society,[11] a position he was to hold with great distinction for over 41 years.

 
Banks as painted by Benjamin West in 1773

In March 1779, Banks married Dorothea Hugessen, daughter of W. W. Hugessen, and settled in a large house at 32 Soho Square.[17] It continued to be his London residence for the remainder of his life. There, he welcomed the scientists, students, and authors of his period, and many distinguished foreign visitors. His sister Sarah Sophia Banks lived in the house with Banks and his wife. He had as librarian and curator of his collections Solander, Jonas Carlsson Dryander, and Robert Brown in succession.[citation needed]

Also in 1779, Banks took a lease on an estate called Spring Grove, the former residence of Elisha Biscoe (1705–1776),[21] which he eventually bought outright from Biscoe's son, also Elisha, in 1808. The picture shows the house in 1815. Its 34 acres ran along the northern side of the London Road, Isleworth, and contained a natural spring, which was an important attraction to him. Banks spent much time and effort on this secondary home. He steadily created a renowned botanical masterpiece on the estate, achieved primarily with many of the great variety of foreign plants he had collected on his extensive travels around the world, particularly to Australia and the South Seas. The surrounding district became known as Spring Grove.[22]

The house was substantially extended and rebuilt by later owners and is now part of West Thames College.[23]

Banks was made a baronet in 1781,[11][24] three years after being elected president of the Royal Society. During much of this time, he was an informal adviser to King George III on the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, a position that was formalised in 1797. Banks dispatched explorers and botanists to many parts of the world, and through these efforts, Kew Gardens became arguably the pre-eminent botanical gardens in the world, with many species being introduced to Europe through them and through Chelsea Physic Garden and their head gardener John Fairbairn. He directly fostered several famous voyages, including that of George Vancouver to the northeastern Pacific (Pacific Northwest), and William Bligh's voyages (one entailing the infamous mutiny on the Bounty) to transplant breadfruit from the South Pacific to the Caribbean islands. Banks was also a major financial supporter of William Smith in his decade-long efforts to create a geological map of England, the first geological map of an entire country. He also chose Allan Cunningham for voyages to Brazil and the north and northwest coasts of Australia to collect specimens.[citation needed]

 
Sir Joseph Banks (center), together with Omai (left) and Daniel Solander, painted by William Parry, circa 1775–76

Colonisation of New South Wales edit

Banks's own time in Australia, however, led to his interest in the British colonisation of that continent. He was to be the greatest proponent of settlement in New South Wales. A genus of the Proteaceae was named in his honour as Banksia.[11] In 1779, Banks, giving evidence before a committee of the House of Commons, had stated that in his opinion the place most eligible for the reception of convicts "was Botany Bay, on the coast of New Holland", on the general grounds that, "it was not to be doubted that a Tract of Land such as New Holland, which was larger than the whole of Europe, would furnish Matter of advantageous Return".[25]

Although Banks remained uninvolved in these colonies in a hands on manner, he was, nonetheless, the general adviser to the government on all Australian matters for twenty years. He arranged that a large number of useful trees and plants should be sent out in the supply ship HMS Guardian, which was unfortunately wrecked, as well as other ships; many of these were supplied by Hugh Ronalds from his nursery in Brentford.[26] Every vessel that came from New South Wales brought plants or animals or geological and other specimens to Banks. He was continually called on for help in developing the agriculture and trade of the colony, and his influence was used in connection with the sending out of early free settlers, one of whom, a young gardener George Suttor, later wrote a memoir of Banks. The three earliest governors of the colony, Arthur Phillip, John Hunter, and Philip Gidley King, were in continual correspondence with him. Banks produced a significant body of papers, including one of the earliest Aboriginal Australian words lists compiled by a European.[27] Bligh was also appointed governor of New South Wales on Banks's recommendation. Banks followed the explorations of Matthew Flinders, George Bass, and Lieutenant James Grant, and among his paid helpers were George Caley, Robert Brown, and Allan Cunningham.[citation needed]

However, Banks backed William Bligh to be installed as the new governor of New South Wales and to crack down on the New South Wales Corps (or Rum Corps), which made a fortune on the trading of rum. This brought him in direct confrontation with post-Rum Rebellion de facto leaders such as John Macarthur and George Johnston. This backing led to the Rum Rebellion in Sydney, whereby the governor was overthrown by the two men. This became an embarrassment for Sir Joseph Banks, also, because years earlier, he campaigned that John Macarthur not be granted 4,000 hectares (10,000 acres) of land near Sydney in the cow pastures, which was later granted by Lord Camden. The next governor, Lachlan Macquarie, was asked to arrest Macarthur and Johnston, only to realise that they had left Sydney for London to defend themselves. He was humiliated that Macarthur and Johnston were acquitted from all charges in London and both later returned to Sydney.[citation needed]

Later life edit

 
In The great South Sea Caterpillar, transform'd into a Bath Butterfly (1795), James Gillray caricatured Banks's investiture with the Order of the Bath as a result of his expedition.
 
This 1812 print depicts Banks as president of the Royal Society, wearing the insignia of the Order of the Bath.

Banks met the young Alexander von Humboldt in 1790, when Banks was already the president of the Royal Society.[28] Before Humboldt and his scientific travel companion and collaborator Aimé Bonpland left for what became a five-year journal of exploration and discovery, Humboldt requested a British passport for Bonpland, should the two encounter British warships.[29] On their travels, Humboldt arranged for specimens be sent to Banks, should they be seized by the British.[30] Banks and Humboldt remained in touch until Banks's death, aiding Humboldt by mobilising his wide network of scientific contacts to forward information to the great German scientist.[31] Both men believed in the internationalism of science.

Banks was elected a member of the American Philosophical Society in 1787[32] and a foreign honorary member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1788.[33] Among other activities, Banks found time to serve as a trustee of the British Museum for 42 years.[34] He was high sheriff of Lincolnshire in 1794.

He worked with Sir George Staunton in producing the official account of the British mission to the Chinese Imperial court. This diplomatic and trade mission was headed by George, Earl Macartney. Although the Macartney Embassy returned to London without obtaining any concession from China, the mission could have been termed a success because it brought back detailed observations. This multivolume work was taken chiefly from the papers of Lord Macartney and from the papers of Sir Erasmus Gower, who was commander of the expedition. Banks was responsible for selecting and arranging engraving of the illustrations in this official record.[35]

Banks was invested as a Knight of the Order of the Bath (KB) on 1 July 1795,[36] which became Knight Grand Cross (GCB) when the order was restructured in 1815.[37]

Banks was a large landowner and activist encloser, drainer and ‘improver’ in Fens at Revesby.[38]

Banks's health began to fail early in the 19th century and he suffered from gout[11] every winter. After 1805, he practically lost the use of his legs and had to be wheeled to his meetings in a chair, but his mind remained as vigorous as ever. He had been a member of the Society of Antiquaries nearly all his life, and he developed an interest in archaeology in his later years. In 1807, William Kerr named the Lady Banks climbing rose after Banks's wife.[39] Banks was made an honorary founding member of the Wernerian Natural History Society of Edinburgh in 1808. In 1809, he became associated member of the Royal Institute of the Netherlands.[40] In 1809, his friend Alexander Henry dedicated his travel book to him. In May 1820, he forwarded his resignation as president of the Royal Society, but withdrew it at the request of the council. In 1819, Fabian Gottlieb von Bellingshausen on his First Russian Antarctic Expedition, briefly stopped in England and met Joseph Banks. Banks had sailed with James Cook 50 years earlier and supplied the Russians with books and charts for their expedition.[41] He died on 19 June 1820 in Spring Grove House, Isleworth, London, and was buried at St Leonard's Church, Heston. Lady Banks survived him, but they had no children.[11]

Legacy edit

 
Banks' house was used for the offices of the Zoological Society of London.

Banks was a major supporter of the internationalist nature of science, being actively involved both in keeping open the lines of communication with continental scientists during the Napoleonic Wars, and in introducing the British people to the wonders of the wider world. He was honoured with many place names in the South Pacific: Banks Peninsula on the South Island, New Zealand; the Banks Islands in modern-day Vanuatu; the Banks Strait between Tasmania and the Furneaux Islands; Banks Island in the Northwest Territories, Canada; and the Sir Joseph Banks Group in South Australia.[42]

The Canberra suburb of Banks, the electoral Division of Banks, and the Sydney suburbs of Bankstown, Banksia, and Banksmeadow are all named after him, as is the northern headland of Botany Bay, Cape Banks.[citation needed] A number of schools and colleges are also named after him, including the Sir Joseph Banks High School in the Sydney suburb of Revesby,[43] and the Joseph Banks Secondary College opened in Perth, Western Australia in 2015.[44]

An image of Banks was featured on the paper $5 Australian banknote from its introduction in 1967 before it was replaced by the later polymer currency.[45]

In 1986, Banks was honoured by his portrait being depicted on a postage stamp issued by Australia Post.[46]

In Lincoln, England, the Sir Joseph Banks Conservatory was constructed in 1989 at The Lawn, Lincoln; its tropical hot house had numerous plants related to Banks's voyages, with samples from across the world, including Australia. The conservatory was moved to Woodside Wildlife Park in 2016 and has been named 'Endeavour'. A plaque was installed in Lincoln Cathedral in his honour. In Boston, Lincolnshire, Banks was recorder for the town. His portrait, painted in 1814 by Thomas Phillips, was commissioned by the Corporation of Boston, as a tribute to one whose 'judicious and active exertions improved and enriched this borough and neighbourhood'. It cost them 100 guineas. The portrait is now hanging in the Council Chamber of the Guildhall Museum.[47]

The Sir Joseph Banks Centre is located in Horncastle, Lincolnshire, housed in a Grade II listed building, which was recently restored by the Heritage Trust of Lincolnshire to celebrate Banks' life. Horncastle is located a few miles from Banks' Revesby estate and the naturalist was the town's lord of the manor. The centre is located on Bridge Street. It boasts research facilities, historic links to Australia, and a garden in which rare plants can be viewed and purchased.[citation needed]

At the 2011 Chelsea Flower Show, an exhibition garden celebrated the historic link between Banks and the botanical discoveries of flora and fauna on his journey through South America, Tahiti, New Zealand, and eventually Australia on Captain Cook's ship Endeavour. The competition garden was the entry of Melbourne's Royal Botanic Gardens with an Australian theme. It was based on the metaphorical journey of water through the continent, related to the award-winning Australian Garden at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Cranbourne. The design won a gold medal.[48]

In 1911, London County Council marked Banks' house at 32 Soho Square with a blue plaque. This was replaced in 1938 with a rectangular stone plaque commemorating Banks and botanists David Don and Robert Brown and meetings of the Linnean Society.[49]

Banks appears in the historical novel Mutiny on the Bounty, by Charles Nordhoff and James Norman Hall. He appears briefly as a contact with British naval intelligence in the historical novel Post Captain, from the Aubrey–Maturin series by Patrick O'Brian. He is also featured in Elizabeth Gilbert's 2013 best-selling novel, The Signature of All Things, and is a major character in Martin Davies' 2005 novel The Conjuror's Bird.

Banks's life and influence were explored in a documentary five-part television series The Lost World of Joseph Banks in 2016.[50]

Banks' account of the Endeavour's approach to Botany Bay might have been the basis for the invisible ships myth.[51][52]

Dispersal of Banks papers edit

Following Banks's death in 1820 a "treasure-trove of letters and papers"[54] was passed to Sir Edward Knatchbull, his wife's nephew. In 1828 the latter passed bound volumes of foreign correspondence to the British Library but retained the rest of the papers in the expectation that an official biography would be written.[55] After the death of Knatchbull and his wife, the letters and papers were passed on to their son Edward Knatchbull Hugesson, 1st Baron Brabourne, who offered to sell them to the British Museum.[55] However, in 1884 it declined to purchase them.[54] Following that "notorious"[54] decision the Agent General of New South Wales, Sir Saul Samuel, issued instructions for the purchase of a large portion of the papers, which now form part of the State Library of New South Wales's Brabourne Collection.[56] The "large quantities of papers" which remained were then auctioned off at Sotheby's in London in March and April 1886.[54] One of the successful bidders was E. A. Petherick. Many of those are now in the Petherick Collection at the National Library of Australia.[57] During the twentieth century the National Library continued to purchase Banks's letters and papers when they came on the market.

Online archive edit

In his Endeavour journal, Banks recorded 30 years of his life. Letters, invoices, maps, regalia, and watercolour drawings have now been digitised on the State Library of NSW website. This rich research and educational tool provides access to 8800 high-quality digital images.[58]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Sir Joseph Banks, Baronet. Britannica.com. Retrieved on 22 June 2015.
  2. ^ a b Gascoigne, John (2004). "Banks, Sir Joseph, baronet (1743–1820), naturalist and patron of science". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/1300. ISBN 978-0-19-861412-8. Retrieved 8 February 2021. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  3. ^ Gooley, Tristan (2012). The Natural Explorer. London: Sceptre. p. 2. ISBN 978-1-444-72031-0.
  4. ^ a b O'Brian, Patrick (1993) Joseph Banks: A Life. London: David R. Godine, pp. 23–24, ISBN 0-87923-930-1.
  5. ^ George Suttor, ed., Joseph Banks, Memoirs Historical and Scientific of the Right Hon. Sir Joseph Banks (Parramatta: E. Mason, 1855), p. 19
  6. ^ Hill, J.W.F. (1952) The Letters and Papers of the Banks Family of Revesby Abbey, Lincoln Record Society, vol. 45, noted in Patrick O'Brian, Joseph Banks, A Life, 1987 p. 16
  7. ^ Gascoigne, John (2004) "Banks, Sir Joseph, baronet (1743–1820)", in Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/1300.
  8. ^ He was, however, awarded an honorary degree by Oxford on his return from his voyage to the South Seas, see "Banks, Sir Joseph", in Dictionary of Scientific Biography, Scribner, 1970.
  9. ^ Jackson, John (October 2007). "Specialist Lodges". MQ Magazine (27): ns.
  10. ^ Tuck, Leslie. Montevecchi, William. Nuttall Ornithological Club (1987). Newfoundland Birds, Exploitation, Study, Conservation, Harvard University.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h Gilbert, L. A. (1966). "Banks, Sir Joseph (1743–1820)". Australian Dictionary of Biography. Vol. 1. National Centre of Biography, Australian National University. pp. 52–55. ISSN 1833-7538. Retrieved 6 November 2007.
  12. ^ Lysaght, Averil M. (1971) Joseph Banks in Newfoundland and Labrador, 1766 Berkeley: University of California Press, p. 168, ISBN 0-520-01780-3.
  13. ^ Digital Collection, National Library of Australia
  14. ^ Catalogue, National Library of Australia, accessed February 2010
  15. ^ "Muster for HMB Endeavour during the first Pacific Voyage, 1768-1771" (PDF). Captain Cook Society. Archived (PDF) from the original on 9 October 2022. Retrieved 6 May 2019.
  16. ^ Holmes, Richard (2009). The Age of Wonder. HarperPress. p. 10. ISBN 978-1400031870.. Holmes incorrectly states that Green's first name was William, not Charles.
  17. ^ a b Holmes, Richard (2008). "Joseph Banks in Paradise". The age of wonder : how the romantic generation discovered the beauty and terror of science. New York: Pantheon Books. pp. 1–54. ISBN 978-1-4000-3187-0. OCLC 264044731.
  18. ^ Agnarsdóttir, Anna (2020). "The young Joseph Banks: naturalist explorer and scientist, 1766–1772". Journal for Maritime Research. 21 (1–2): 23–44. doi:10.1080/21533369.2020.1746090. ISSN 2153-3369. S2CID 219033761.
  19. ^ Boswell, James; Tankard, Paul (10 June 2014). Facts and inventions : selections from the journalism of James Boswell. New Haven. ISBN 9780300141269. OCLC 861676836.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  20. ^ Colley, Linda (2009), "Men at arms", The Guardian, 7 November 2009.
  21. ^ Susan Reynolds (editor) Heston and Isleworth, A History of the County of Middlesex: Volume 3: Victoria County History, 1962
  22. ^ Thorne, James (1876). Lambourne-Yiewsley. John Murray.
  23. ^ "West Thames College PART TIME, FULL TIME AND EVENING COURSES FOR ADULTS" (PDF). West Thames College. p. 4. (PDF) from the original on 22 October 2021. Retrieved 23 October 2021.
  24. ^ "No. 12172". The London Gazette. 20 March 1781. p. 5.
  25. ^ Journals of the House of Commons, 19 Geo. III, 1779, Vol. 37, p. 311. [1]
  26. ^ Ronalds, B.F. (2017). "Ronalds Nurserymen in Brentford and Beyond". Garden History. 45 (1): 82–100. JSTOR 44987945.
  27. ^ "Sir Joseph Banks Collection". www.sl.nsw.gov.au. 29 June 2016. Retrieved 18 January 2017.
  28. ^ Wulf, p. 19.
  29. ^ Wulf, p. 44.
  30. ^ Wulf, p. 76.
  31. ^ Wulf, p. 136.
  32. ^ "Joseph Banks". American Philosophical Society Member History. American Philosophical Society. Retrieved 14 December 2020.
  33. ^ "Book of Members, 1780–2010: Chapter B" (PDF). American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Archived (PDF) from the original on 9 October 2022. Retrieved 17 May 2011.
  34. ^ Anderson, R. G. W. (2008). "Joseph Banks and the British Museum, The World of Collecting, 1770–1830". Journal of the History of Collections. 20: 151. doi:10.1093/jhc/fhm040.
  35. ^ Banks, Joseph. Papers of Sir Joseph Banks; Section 12: Lord Macartney's embassy to China; Series 62: Papers concerning publication of the account of Lord Macartney's Embassy to China, ca 1797. 3 June 2017 at the Wayback Machine [State Library of New South Wales.]
  36. ^ "No. 13792". The London Gazette. 30 June 1795. p. 688.
  37. ^ "No. 16972". The London Gazette. 4 January 1815. pp. 17–20.
  38. ^ James Boyce Imperial Mud: The Fight for the Fens, Icon Books, 2020, p100.
  39. ^ "Lady Banks Rose Growing: How To Plant A Lady Banks Rose". Gardening KnowHow. Retrieved 9 August 2021.
  40. ^ "Sir Joseph Banks (1743–1820)". Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences. Retrieved 19 July 2015.
  41. ^ "Fabian Gottlieb von Bellingshausen". 28 August 2010.
  42. ^ Flinders, Matthew (1966) [1814]. A Voyage to Terra Australis : undertaken for the purpose of completing the discovery of that vast country, and prosecuted in the years 1801, 1802, and 1803 in His Majesty's ship the Investigator, and subsequently in the armed vessel Porpoise and Cumberland Schooner; with an account of the shipwreck of the Porpoise, arrival of the Cumberland at Mauritius, and imprisonment of the commander during six years and a half in that island (Facsimile ed.). Adelaide; Reprint of: London : G. and W. Nicol, 1814 ed. In two volumes, with an Atlas (3 volumes): Libraries Board of South Australia. p. 234. Retrieved 24 December 2013.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
  43. ^ Margerison, Charles (19 April 2011). Amazing Scientists: Inspirational Stories. Amazing People Club. ISBN 978-1-921752-40-7.
  44. ^ "A Message From The Principal". Joseph Banks Secondary College. Retrieved 4 January 2021.
  45. ^ "Other Banknotes". Reserve Bank of Australia. Retrieved 16 December 2020.
  46. ^ Australian 90c postal stamp. JPG image.
  47. ^ Correia, Alice (1 September 2020). "'Respectable Exotics': Exhibiting South Asian Modernists in Britain, 1958 and 2017". Visual Culture in Britain. 21 (3): 310–329. doi:10.1080/14714787.2020.1852887. ISSN 1471-4787. S2CID 231821993.
  48. ^ Gadd, Denise (25 May 2011). "In full bloom at Chelsea". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 25 May 2011.
  49. ^ "BANKS, SIR JOSEPH (1743–1820), BROWN, ROBERT (1773–1858), DON, DAVID (1800–1841)". English Heritage. Retrieved 5 January 2016.
  50. ^ "The Lost World of Joseph Banks". Pilot Guides. 2016.
  51. ^ Hustwitt, J. R. (2014). Interreligious hermeneutics and the pursuit of truth. Lanham, Md.: Lexington Books. ISBN 978-0-7391-8739-5.
  52. ^ Ball, Philip (2015). Invisible: the dangerous allure of the unseen. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-226-23889-0.
  53. ^ International Plant Names Index.  Banks.
  54. ^ a b c d Matthew Fishburn, The book that Joseph Banks burned, sl.nsw.gov.au; first published in SL Magazine, Summer 2017–18. Retrieved 26 September 2022.
  55. ^ a b Papers of Sir Joseph Banks, nla.gov.au. Retrieved 26 September 2022.
  56. ^ Papers (Brabourne Collection), (c. 1769-1820) (microform), nla.gov.au. Retrieved 26 September 2022.
  57. ^ Petherick Collection, nla.gov.au. Retrieved 26 September 2022.
  58. ^ Hunt, Susan (Autumn 2018). "Sir Joseph Banks Online Archive". SL Magazine. 11: 1: 44–45.

Cited sources edit

  • Wulf, Andrea (2015). The Invention of Nature: Alexander von Humboldt's New World. New York: Alfred A. Knopf. ISBN 978-0385350662.

Further reading edit

Primary resources edit

Secondary resources edit

  • Cameron, H. C. (1952) Sir Joseph Banks, K.B., P.R.S.; the Autocrat of the Philosophers, Batchworth Press.
  • Carter, H. B. (1964) His Majesty's Spanish Flock: Sir Joseph Banks and the Merinos of George III of England [sic], University of Sydney.
  • Carter, Harold Burnell (1988) Sir Joseph Banks, 1743–1820 London: British Museum of Natural History ISBN 0-565-00993-1;
  • Chambers, Neil (2007). Joseph Banks and the British Museum: the world of collecting, 1770-1830. London: Pickering & Chatto. ISBN 978-1851968589. OCLC 1028009661.
  • Dawson, W. R. (ed) (1958) The Banks Letters, University of London.
  • Durt, Tania (2007) "Joseph Banks", pp. 173–181 in The Great Naturalists, edited by Robert Huxley. London: Thames & Hudson with the Natural History Museum.
  • Duyker, Edward (1998) Nature's Argonaut: Daniel Solander 1733-1782: Naturalist and Voyager with Cook and Banks. Melbourne University Press. ISBN 0-522-84753-6
  • Marshall, John Braybrooke. "Daniel Carl Solander, Friend, Librarian and Assistant to Sir Joseph Banks." Archives of Natural History 11.3 (1984): 451–456.
  • Duyker, Edward & Tingbrand, Per (ed. & trans) (1995) Daniel Solander: Collected Correspondence 1753–1782, Melbourne University Press, Melbourne, pp. 466, ISBN 0-522-84636-X Scandinavian University Press, Oslo, 1995, pp. 466, ISBN 82-00-22454-6
  • Fara, Patricia (2004) Sex, Botany & Empire: The Story Of Carl Linnaeus And Joseph Banks. New York: Columbia University Press ISBN 0-231-13426-6
  • Gascoigne, John (1994) Joseph Banks and the English Enlightenment: Useful Knowledge and Polite Culture Cambridge: Cambridge University Press ISBN 0-521-54211-1
  • Gascoigne, John (1998) Science in the Service of Empire: Joseph Banks, The British State and the Uses of Science in the Age of Revolution. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press ISBN 0-521-55069-6
  • Hawkesworth, John; Byron, John; Wallis, Samuel; Carteret, Philip; Cook, James; Banks, Joseph (1773). An account of the voyages undertaken by the order of His present Majesty for making discoveries in the Southern Hemisphere, and successively performed by Commodore Byron, Captain Wallis, Captain Carteret, and Captain Cook, in the Dolphin, the Swallow, and the Endeavour drawn up from the journals which were kept by the several commanders, and from the papers of Joseph Banks, esq. London Printed for W. Strahan and T. Cadell., Volume I, Volume II-III
  • Kryza, Frank T. (207) The Race to Timbuktu: In Search of Africa's City of Gold. New York: HarperCollins ISBN 0-06-056065-7
  • Lysaght, A. M. (1971). Joseph Banks in Newfoundland and Labrador, 1766; his diary, manuscripts, and collections. Faber and Faber, London. ISBN 0-571-09351-5;
  • Mackaness, G. (1936) Sir Joseph Banks. His Relations with Australia, University of Sydney
  • Maiden, J. H. (1909) Sir Joseph Banks: The “Father of Australia”.  Kegan Paul.
  • Musgrave, Toby (2020). The Multifarious Mr. Banks: From Botany Bay to Kew, the Natural Historian Who Shaped the World. Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-22383-5.
  • O'Brian, Patrick 1993 Joseph Banks: A Life. London: David R. Godine, 1993. ISBN 0-87923-930-1, reprinted by University of Chicago Press, 1997 ISBN 0-226-61628-2
  • ——— 1987 Sir Joseph Banks London: Harvill Press. ISBN 0-00-272340-9
  • Smith, Edward (1911) Life of Sir Joseph Banks: With Some Notices of his Friends and Contemporaries.  John Lane.

Select unpublished monographs edit

  • Duncan, A. (1821) A Short Account of the Life of the Right Honourable Sir Joseph Banks, University of Edinburgh.
  • Gilbert, L. (1962) Botanical Investigation of Eastern Seaboard Australia, 1788–1810, B.A. thesis, University of New England, Australia.

Fiction edit

Novels based on a mix of historical fact and conjecture about Banks' early life include:

External links edit

  • Works by Joseph Banks at Project Gutenberg Australia
  • Journal of the Right Hon. Sir Joseph Banks during Captain Cook's first voyage in H.M.S. Endeavour in 1768–71 to Terra del Fuego, Otahite, New Zealand, Australia, the Dutch East Indies, etc. Joseph Banks and J. D. Hooker. Macmillan, 1896.
  • Biography at the Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online
  • Correspondence concerning Iceland: written to Sir Joseph Banks, 1772–1818, from the University of Wisconsin Digital Collections
  • Lovell, Jennifer. "A Bath Butterfly Botany and Eighteenth Century Sexual Politics." National Library of Australia News 15.7 (April 2005).
  • Sir Joseph Banks Society. "Archive of Joseph Banks related material"
  • British Museum: Bronze portrait bust of Sir Joseph Banks by Anne Seymour Damer (1814)
  • BBC: Historic figures; BBC Radio 4: Science at Sea
  • "Archival material relating to Joseph Banks". UK National Archives.
  • Papers of Sir Joseph Banks – State Library of New South Wales
  • concerning the first Breadfruit Expedition
  • Sir Joseph Banks papers (MS 58). Manuscripts and Archives, Yale University Library.
  • Works by Joseph Banks at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
Baronetage of Great Britain
New creation Baronet
(of Revesby Abbey)
1781–1820
Extinct
Professional and academic associations
Preceded by 21st President of the Royal Society
1778–1820
Succeeded by

joseph, banks, other, people, named, disambiguation, baronet, february, february, 1743, june, 1820, english, naturalist, botanist, patron, natural, sciences, sirbt, frssir, painted, joshua, reynolds, 1773born, 1743, february, 1743, february, argyll, street, lo. For other people named Joseph Banks see Joseph Banks disambiguation Sir Joseph Banks 1st Baronet GCB FRS 24 February O S 13 February 1743 19 June 1820 1 was an English naturalist botanist and patron of the natural sciences 2 SirJoseph BanksBt GCB FRSSir Joseph Banks as painted by Sir Joshua Reynolds in 1773Born 1743 02 24 24 February 1743 13 February O S 30 Argyll Street London EnglandDied19 June 1820 1820 06 19 aged 77 Spring Grove House Isleworth London EnglandAlma materChrist Church OxfordKnown forVoyage of HMS Endeavour exploration of Botany BaySpouseDorothea BanksScientific careerFieldsBotanyInstitutionsRoyal Botanic Gardens KewAuthor abbrev botany Banks21st President of the Royal SocietyIn office 1778 1820Preceded bySir John PringleSucceeded byWilliam Hyde WollastonSignatureBanks made his name on the 1766 natural history expedition to Newfoundland and Labrador He took part in Captain James Cook s first great voyage 1768 1771 visiting Brazil Tahiti and after 6 months in New Zealand Australia returning to immediate fame He held the position of president of the Royal Society for over 41 years He advised King George III on the Royal Botanic Gardens Kew and by sending botanists around the world to collect plants he made Kew the world s leading botanical garden He is credited for bringing 30 000 plant specimens home with him amongst them he was the first European to document 1 400 3 Banks advocated British settlement in New South Wales and the colonisation of Australia as well as the establishment of Botany Bay as a place for the reception of convicts and advised the British government on all Australian matters He is credited with introducing the eucalyptus acacia and the genus named after him Banksia to the Western world Around 80 species of plants bear his name He was the leading founder of the African Association and a member of the Society of Dilettanti which helped to establish the Royal Academy Contents 1 Early life 1 1 Education 2 Newfoundland and Labrador 3 Endeavour voyage 4 Return home 5 Colonisation of New South Wales 6 Later life 7 Legacy 8 Dispersal of Banks papers 9 Online archive 10 See also 11 References 12 Cited sources 13 Further reading 13 1 Primary resources 13 2 Secondary resources 13 2 1 Select unpublished monographs 13 2 2 Fiction 14 External linksEarly life edit nbsp A 1757 portrait of Banks with a botanical illustration unknown artist but attributed to Lemuel Francis Abbott or Johann Zoffany 4 Banks was born in Argyll Street Soho London the son of William Banks a wealthy Lincolnshire country squire and member of the House of Commons and his wife Sarah daughter of William Bate 2 He was baptised at St James s Church Piccadilly on 20 February 1743 Old Style 5 He had a younger sister Sarah Sophia Banks born in 1744 6 Education edit Banks was educated at Harrow School from the age of nine and then at Eton College from 1756 the boys with whom he attended the school included his future shipmate Constantine Phipps 4 As a boy Banks enjoyed exploring the Lincolnshire countryside and developed a keen interest in nature history and botany When he was 17 he was inoculated with smallpox but he became ill and did not return to school In late 1760 he was enrolled as a gentleman commoner at the University of Oxford At Oxford he matriculated at Christ Church where his studies were largely focussed on natural history rather than the classical curriculum Determined to receive botanical instruction he paid the Cambridge botanist Israel Lyons to deliver a series of lectures at Oxford in 1764 7 Banks left Oxford for Chelsea in December 1763 He continued to attend the university until 1764 but left that year without taking a degree 8 His father had died in 1761 so when Banks reached the age of 21 he inherited the large estate of Revesby Abbey in Lincolnshire becoming the local squire and magistrate and dividing his time between Lincolnshire and London From his mother s house in Chelsea he kept up his interest in science by attending the Chelsea Physic Garden of the Worshipful Society of Apothecaries and the British Museum where he met the Swedish naturalist Daniel Solander He began to make friends among the scientific men of his day and to correspond with Carl Linnaeus whom he came to know through Solander As Banks s influence increased he became an adviser to King George III and urged the monarch to support voyages of discovery to new lands hoping to indulge his own interest in botany He became a Freemason sometime before 1769 9 Newfoundland and Labrador editIn 1766 Banks was elected to the Royal Society and in the same year at 23 he went with Phipps aboard the frigate HMS Niger to Newfoundland and Labrador with a view to studying their natural history He made his name by publishing the first Linnean descriptions of the plants and animals of Newfoundland and Labrador 10 11 Banks also documented 34 species of birds including the great auk which became extinct in 1844 On 7 May he noted a large number of penguins swimming around the ship on the Grand Banks and a specimen he collected in Chateau Bay Labrador was later identified as the great auk 12 Endeavour voyage edit nbsp Dr Daniel Solander Sir Joseph Banks Captain James Cook Dr John Hawkesworth and Lord Sandwich by John Hamilton Mortimer 1771 13 Use a cursor to see who is who 14 Main article First voyage of James Cook Banks was appointed to a joint Royal Navy Royal Society scientific expedition to the South Pacific Ocean on HMS Endeavour 1768 1771 This was the first of James Cook s voyages of discovery in that region Banks funded eight others to join him the Swedish naturalist Daniel Solander the Finnish naturalist Herman Sporing who also served as Banks personal secretary and as a draughtsman artists Sydney Parkinson and Alexander Buchan and four servants from his estate James Roberts Peter Briscoe Thomas Richmond and George Dorlton 15 16 In 1771 he was travelling with James Cook and docked in Simon s Town in what is now South Africa There he met the trader Christoffel Brand and a friendship started He was the godfather of Brand s grandson Christoffel Brand citation needed The voyage went to Brazil where Banks made the first scientific description of a now common garden plant Bougainvillea named after Cook s French counterpart Louis Antoine de Bougainville and to other parts of South America The voyage then progressed to Tahiti where the transit of Venus was observed 17 the overt purpose of the mission then to New Zealand From there it proceeded to the east coast of Australia where Cook mapped the coastline and made landfall at Botany Bay The ship then landed at Round Hill 23 25 May 1770 which is now known as Seventeen Seventy and at Endeavour River near modern Cooktown in Queensland where they spent almost seven weeks ashore while the ship was repaired after becoming holed on the Great Barrier Reef 11 While they were in Australia Banks Daniel Solander and Finnish botanist Dr Herman Sporing Jr made the first major collection of Australian flora describing many species new to science Almost 800 specimens were illustrated by the artist Sydney Parkinson and appear in Banks Florilegium finally published in 35 volumes between 1980 and 1990 Notable also was that during the period when the Endeavour was being repaired Banks observed a kangaroo first recorded as kanguru on 12 July 1770 in an entry in his diary citation needed nbsp Satire on Banks titled The Botanic Macaroni by Matthew Darly 1772 A macaroni was a pejorative term used for a follower of exaggerated continental fashion in the 18th century Return home editBanks arrived back in England on 12 July 1771 and immediately became famous He intended to go with Cook on his second voyage which began on 13 May 1772 but difficulties arose about Banks scientific requirements on board Cook s new ship HMS Resolution The Admiralty regarded Banks demands as unacceptable and without prior warning withdrew his permission to sail Banks immediately arranged an alternative expedition and in July 1772 Daniel Solander and he visited the Isle of Wight the Hebrides Iceland and the Orkney Islands 11 aboard Sir Lawrence In Iceland they ascended Mt Hekla and visited the Great Geyser and were the first scientific visitors to Staffa in the Inner Hebrides 18 They returned to London in November with many botanical specimens via Edinburgh where Banks and Solander were interviewed by James Boswell 19 In 1773 he toured south Wales in the company of artist Paul Sandby 20 When he settled in London he began work on his Florilegium He kept in touch with most of the scientists of his time was elected a foreign member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences in 1773 and added a fresh interest when he was elected to the Dilettante Society in 1774 He was afterwards secretary of this society from 1778 to 1797 On 30 November 1778 he was elected president of the Royal Society 11 a position he was to hold with great distinction for over 41 years nbsp Banks as painted by Benjamin West in 1773In March 1779 Banks married Dorothea Hugessen daughter of W W Hugessen and settled in a large house at 32 Soho Square 17 It continued to be his London residence for the remainder of his life There he welcomed the scientists students and authors of his period and many distinguished foreign visitors His sister Sarah Sophia Banks lived in the house with Banks and his wife He had as librarian and curator of his collections Solander Jonas Carlsson Dryander and Robert Brown in succession citation needed Also in 1779 Banks took a lease on an estate called Spring Grove the former residence of Elisha Biscoe 1705 1776 21 which he eventually bought outright from Biscoe s son also Elisha in 1808 The picture shows the house in 1815 Its 34 acres ran along the northern side of the London Road Isleworth and contained a natural spring which was an important attraction to him Banks spent much time and effort on this secondary home He steadily created a renowned botanical masterpiece on the estate achieved primarily with many of the great variety of foreign plants he had collected on his extensive travels around the world particularly to Australia and the South Seas The surrounding district became known as Spring Grove 22 The house was substantially extended and rebuilt by later owners and is now part of West Thames College 23 Banks was made a baronet in 1781 11 24 three years after being elected president of the Royal Society During much of this time he was an informal adviser to King George III on the Royal Botanic Gardens Kew a position that was formalised in 1797 Banks dispatched explorers and botanists to many parts of the world and through these efforts Kew Gardens became arguably the pre eminent botanical gardens in the world with many species being introduced to Europe through them and through Chelsea Physic Garden and their head gardener John Fairbairn He directly fostered several famous voyages including that of George Vancouver to the northeastern Pacific Pacific Northwest and William Bligh s voyages one entailing the infamous mutiny on the Bounty to transplant breadfruit from the South Pacific to the Caribbean islands Banks was also a major financial supporter of William Smith in his decade long efforts to create a geological map of England the first geological map of an entire country He also chose Allan Cunningham for voyages to Brazil and the north and northwest coasts of Australia to collect specimens citation needed nbsp Sir Joseph Banks center together with Omai left and Daniel Solander painted by William Parry circa 1775 76Colonisation of New South Wales editBanks s own time in Australia however led to his interest in the British colonisation of that continent He was to be the greatest proponent of settlement in New South Wales A genus of the Proteaceae was named in his honour as Banksia 11 In 1779 Banks giving evidence before a committee of the House of Commons had stated that in his opinion the place most eligible for the reception of convicts was Botany Bay on the coast of New Holland on the general grounds that it was not to be doubted that a Tract of Land such as New Holland which was larger than the whole of Europe would furnish Matter of advantageous Return 25 Although Banks remained uninvolved in these colonies in a hands on manner he was nonetheless the general adviser to the government on all Australian matters for twenty years He arranged that a large number of useful trees and plants should be sent out in the supply ship HMS Guardian which was unfortunately wrecked as well as other ships many of these were supplied by Hugh Ronalds from his nursery in Brentford 26 Every vessel that came from New South Wales brought plants or animals or geological and other specimens to Banks He was continually called on for help in developing the agriculture and trade of the colony and his influence was used in connection with the sending out of early free settlers one of whom a young gardener George Suttor later wrote a memoir of Banks The three earliest governors of the colony Arthur Phillip John Hunter and Philip Gidley King were in continual correspondence with him Banks produced a significant body of papers including one of the earliest Aboriginal Australian words lists compiled by a European 27 Bligh was also appointed governor of New South Wales on Banks s recommendation Banks followed the explorations of Matthew Flinders George Bass and Lieutenant James Grant and among his paid helpers were George Caley Robert Brown and Allan Cunningham citation needed However Banks backed William Bligh to be installed as the new governor of New South Wales and to crack down on the New South Wales Corps or Rum Corps which made a fortune on the trading of rum This brought him in direct confrontation with post Rum Rebellion de facto leaders such as John Macarthur and George Johnston This backing led to the Rum Rebellion in Sydney whereby the governor was overthrown by the two men This became an embarrassment for Sir Joseph Banks also because years earlier he campaigned that John Macarthur not be granted 4 000 hectares 10 000 acres of land near Sydney in the cow pastures which was later granted by Lord Camden The next governor Lachlan Macquarie was asked to arrest Macarthur and Johnston only to realise that they had left Sydney for London to defend themselves He was humiliated that Macarthur and Johnston were acquitted from all charges in London and both later returned to Sydney citation needed Later life edit nbsp In The great South Sea Caterpillar transform d into a Bath Butterfly 1795 James Gillray caricatured Banks s investiture with the Order of the Bath as a result of his expedition nbsp This 1812 print depicts Banks as president of the Royal Society wearing the insignia of the Order of the Bath Banks met the young Alexander von Humboldt in 1790 when Banks was already the president of the Royal Society 28 Before Humboldt and his scientific travel companion and collaborator Aime Bonpland left for what became a five year journal of exploration and discovery Humboldt requested a British passport for Bonpland should the two encounter British warships 29 On their travels Humboldt arranged for specimens be sent to Banks should they be seized by the British 30 Banks and Humboldt remained in touch until Banks s death aiding Humboldt by mobilising his wide network of scientific contacts to forward information to the great German scientist 31 Both men believed in the internationalism of science Banks was elected a member of the American Philosophical Society in 1787 32 and a foreign honorary member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1788 33 Among other activities Banks found time to serve as a trustee of the British Museum for 42 years 34 He was high sheriff of Lincolnshire in 1794 He worked with Sir George Staunton in producing the official account of the British mission to the Chinese Imperial court This diplomatic and trade mission was headed by George Earl Macartney Although the Macartney Embassy returned to London without obtaining any concession from China the mission could have been termed a success because it brought back detailed observations This multivolume work was taken chiefly from the papers of Lord Macartney and from the papers of Sir Erasmus Gower who was commander of the expedition Banks was responsible for selecting and arranging engraving of the illustrations in this official record 35 Banks was invested as a Knight of the Order of the Bath KB on 1 July 1795 36 which became Knight Grand Cross GCB when the order was restructured in 1815 37 Banks was a large landowner and activist encloser drainer and improver in Fens at Revesby 38 Banks s health began to fail early in the 19th century and he suffered from gout 11 every winter After 1805 he practically lost the use of his legs and had to be wheeled to his meetings in a chair but his mind remained as vigorous as ever He had been a member of the Society of Antiquaries nearly all his life and he developed an interest in archaeology in his later years In 1807 William Kerr named the Lady Banks climbing rose after Banks s wife 39 Banks was made an honorary founding member of the Wernerian Natural History Society of Edinburgh in 1808 In 1809 he became associated member of the Royal Institute of the Netherlands 40 In 1809 his friend Alexander Henry dedicated his travel book to him In May 1820 he forwarded his resignation as president of the Royal Society but withdrew it at the request of the council In 1819 Fabian Gottlieb von Bellingshausen on his First Russian Antarctic Expedition briefly stopped in England and met Joseph Banks Banks had sailed with James Cook 50 years earlier and supplied the Russians with books and charts for their expedition 41 He died on 19 June 1820 in Spring Grove House Isleworth London and was buried at St Leonard s Church Heston Lady Banks survived him but they had no children 11 Legacy edit nbsp Banks house was used for the offices of the Zoological Society of London Banks was a major supporter of the internationalist nature of science being actively involved both in keeping open the lines of communication with continental scientists during the Napoleonic Wars and in introducing the British people to the wonders of the wider world He was honoured with many place names in the South Pacific Banks Peninsula on the South Island New Zealand the Banks Islands in modern day Vanuatu the Banks Strait between Tasmania and the Furneaux Islands Banks Island in the Northwest Territories Canada and the Sir Joseph Banks Group in South Australia 42 The Canberra suburb of Banks the electoral Division of Banks and the Sydney suburbs of Bankstown Banksia and Banksmeadow are all named after him as is the northern headland of Botany Bay Cape Banks citation needed A number of schools and colleges are also named after him including the Sir Joseph Banks High School in the Sydney suburb of Revesby 43 and the Joseph Banks Secondary College opened in Perth Western Australia in 2015 44 An image of Banks was featured on the paper 5 Australian banknote from its introduction in 1967 before it was replaced by the later polymer currency 45 In 1986 Banks was honoured by his portrait being depicted on a postage stamp issued by Australia Post 46 In Lincoln England the Sir Joseph Banks Conservatory was constructed in 1989 at The Lawn Lincoln its tropical hot house had numerous plants related to Banks s voyages with samples from across the world including Australia The conservatory was moved to Woodside Wildlife Park in 2016 and has been named Endeavour A plaque was installed in Lincoln Cathedral in his honour In Boston Lincolnshire Banks was recorder for the town His portrait painted in 1814 by Thomas Phillips was commissioned by the Corporation of Boston as a tribute to one whose judicious and active exertions improved and enriched this borough and neighbourhood It cost them 100 guineas The portrait is now hanging in the Council Chamber of the Guildhall Museum 47 The Sir Joseph Banks Centre is located in Horncastle Lincolnshire housed in a Grade II listed building which was recently restored by the Heritage Trust of Lincolnshire to celebrate Banks life Horncastle is located a few miles from Banks Revesby estate and the naturalist was the town s lord of the manor The centre is located on Bridge Street It boasts research facilities historic links to Australia and a garden in which rare plants can be viewed and purchased citation needed At the 2011 Chelsea Flower Show an exhibition garden celebrated the historic link between Banks and the botanical discoveries of flora and fauna on his journey through South America Tahiti New Zealand and eventually Australia on Captain Cook s ship Endeavour The competition garden was the entry of Melbourne s Royal Botanic Gardens with an Australian theme It was based on the metaphorical journey of water through the continent related to the award winning Australian Garden at the Royal Botanic Gardens Cranbourne The design won a gold medal 48 In 1911 London County Council marked Banks house at 32 Soho Square with a blue plaque This was replaced in 1938 with a rectangular stone plaque commemorating Banks and botanists David Don and Robert Brown and meetings of the Linnean Society 49 Banks appears in the historical novel Mutiny on the Bounty by Charles Nordhoff and James Norman Hall He appears briefly as a contact with British naval intelligence in the historical novel Post Captain from the Aubrey Maturin series by Patrick O Brian He is also featured in Elizabeth Gilbert s 2013 best selling novel The Signature of All Things and is a major character in Martin Davies 2005 novel The Conjuror s Bird Banks s life and influence were explored in a documentary five part television series The Lost World of Joseph Banks in 2016 50 Banks account of the Endeavour s approach to Botany Bay might have been the basis for the invisible ships myth 51 52 The standard author abbreviation Banks is used to indicate this person as the author when citing a botanical name 53 Dispersal of Banks papers editFollowing Banks s death in 1820 a treasure trove of letters and papers 54 was passed to Sir Edward Knatchbull his wife s nephew In 1828 the latter passed bound volumes of foreign correspondence to the British Library but retained the rest of the papers in the expectation that an official biography would be written 55 After the death of Knatchbull and his wife the letters and papers were passed on to their son Edward Knatchbull Hugesson 1st Baron Brabourne who offered to sell them to the British Museum 55 However in 1884 it declined to purchase them 54 Following that notorious 54 decision the Agent General of New South Wales Sir Saul Samuel issued instructions for the purchase of a large portion of the papers which now form part of the State Library of New South Wales s Brabourne Collection 56 The large quantities of papers which remained were then auctioned off at Sotheby s in London in March and April 1886 54 One of the successful bidders was E A Petherick Many of those are now in the Petherick Collection at the National Library of Australia 57 During the twentieth century the National Library continued to purchase Banks s letters and papers when they came on the market Online archive editIn his Endeavour journal Banks recorded 30 years of his life Letters invoices maps regalia and watercolour drawings have now been digitised on the State Library of NSW website This rich research and educational tool provides access to 8800 high quality digital images 58 See also editEuropean and American voyages of scientific exploration List of Notable Freemasons History of Australia List of presidents of the Royal SocietyReferences edit Sir Joseph Banks Baronet Britannica com Retrieved on 22 June 2015 a b Gascoigne John 2004 Banks Sir Joseph baronet 1743 1820 naturalist and patron of science Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 1300 ISBN 978 0 19 861412 8 Retrieved 8 February 2021 Subscription or UK public library membership required Gooley Tristan 2012 The Natural Explorer London Sceptre p 2 ISBN 978 1 444 72031 0 a b O Brian Patrick 1993 Joseph Banks A Life London David R Godine pp 23 24 ISBN 0 87923 930 1 George Suttor ed Joseph Banks Memoirs Historical and Scientific of the Right Hon Sir Joseph Banks Parramatta E Mason 1855 p 19 Hill J W F 1952 The Letters and Papers of the Banks Family of Revesby Abbey Lincoln Record Society vol 45 noted in Patrick O Brian Joseph Banks A Life 1987 p 16 Gascoigne John 2004 Banks Sir Joseph baronet 1743 1820 in Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 1300 He was however awarded an honorary degree by Oxford on his return from his voyage to the South Seas see Banks Sir Joseph in Dictionary of Scientific Biography Scribner 1970 Jackson John October 2007 Specialist Lodges MQ Magazine 27 ns Tuck Leslie Montevecchi William Nuttall Ornithological Club 1987 Newfoundland Birds Exploitation Study Conservation Harvard University a b c d e f g h Gilbert L A 1966 Banks Sir Joseph 1743 1820 Australian Dictionary of Biography Vol 1 National Centre of Biography Australian National University pp 52 55 ISSN 1833 7538 Retrieved 6 November 2007 Lysaght Averil M 1971 Joseph Banks in Newfoundland and Labrador 1766 Berkeley University of California Press p 168 ISBN 0 520 01780 3 Digital Collection National Library of Australia Catalogue National Library of Australia accessed February 2010 Muster for HMB Endeavour during the first Pacific Voyage 1768 1771 PDF Captain Cook Society Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 Retrieved 6 May 2019 Holmes Richard 2009 The Age of Wonder HarperPress p 10 ISBN 978 1400031870 Holmes incorrectly states that Green s first name was William not Charles a b Holmes Richard 2008 Joseph Banks in Paradise The age of wonder how the romantic generation discovered the beauty and terror of science New York Pantheon Books pp 1 54 ISBN 978 1 4000 3187 0 OCLC 264044731 Agnarsdottir Anna 2020 The young Joseph Banks naturalist explorer and scientist 1766 1772 Journal for Maritime Research 21 1 2 23 44 doi 10 1080 21533369 2020 1746090 ISSN 2153 3369 S2CID 219033761 Boswell James Tankard Paul 10 June 2014 Facts and inventions selections from the journalism of James Boswell New Haven ISBN 9780300141269 OCLC 861676836 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Colley Linda 2009 Men at arms The Guardian 7 November 2009 Susan Reynolds editor Heston and Isleworth A History of the County of Middlesex Volume 3 Victoria County History 1962 Thorne James 1876 Lambourne Yiewsley John Murray West Thames College PART TIME FULL TIME AND EVENING COURSES FOR ADULTS PDF West Thames College p 4 Archived PDF from the original on 22 October 2021 Retrieved 23 October 2021 No 12172 The London Gazette 20 March 1781 p 5 Journals of the House of Commons 19 Geo III 1779 Vol 37 p 311 1 Ronalds B F 2017 Ronalds Nurserymen in Brentford and Beyond Garden History 45 1 82 100 JSTOR 44987945 Sir Joseph Banks Collection www sl nsw gov au 29 June 2016 Retrieved 18 January 2017 Wulf p 19 Wulf p 44 Wulf p 76 Wulf p 136 Joseph Banks American Philosophical Society Member History American Philosophical Society Retrieved 14 December 2020 Book of Members 1780 2010 Chapter B PDF American Academy of Arts and Sciences Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 Retrieved 17 May 2011 Anderson R G W 2008 Joseph Banks and the British Museum The World of Collecting 1770 1830 Journal of the History of Collections 20 151 doi 10 1093 jhc fhm040 Banks Joseph Papers of Sir Joseph Banks Section 12 Lord Macartney s embassy to China Series 62 Papers concerning publication of the account of Lord Macartney s Embassy to China ca 1797 Archived 3 June 2017 at the Wayback Machine State Library of New South Wales No 13792 The London Gazette 30 June 1795 p 688 No 16972 The London Gazette 4 January 1815 pp 17 20 James Boyce Imperial Mud The Fight for the Fens Icon Books 2020 p100 Lady Banks Rose Growing How To Plant A Lady Banks Rose Gardening KnowHow Retrieved 9 August 2021 Sir Joseph Banks 1743 1820 Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences Retrieved 19 July 2015 Fabian Gottlieb von Bellingshausen 28 August 2010 Flinders Matthew 1966 1814 A Voyage to Terra Australis undertaken for the purpose of completing the discovery of that vast country and prosecuted in the years 1801 1802 and 1803 in His Majesty s ship theInvestigator and subsequently in the armed vesselPorpoiseandCumberland Schooner with an account of the shipwreck of thePorpoise arrival of theCumberlandat Mauritius and imprisonment of the commander during six years and a half in that island Facsimile ed Adelaide Reprint of London G and W Nicol 1814 ed In two volumes with an Atlas 3 volumes Libraries Board of South Australia p 234 Retrieved 24 December 2013 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link Margerison Charles 19 April 2011 Amazing Scientists Inspirational Stories Amazing People Club ISBN 978 1 921752 40 7 A Message From The Principal Joseph Banks Secondary College Retrieved 4 January 2021 Other Banknotes Reserve Bank of Australia Retrieved 16 December 2020 Australian 90c postal stamp JPG image Correia Alice 1 September 2020 Respectable Exotics Exhibiting South Asian Modernists in Britain 1958 and 2017 Visual Culture in Britain 21 3 310 329 doi 10 1080 14714787 2020 1852887 ISSN 1471 4787 S2CID 231821993 Gadd Denise 25 May 2011 In full bloom at Chelsea The Sydney Morning Herald Retrieved 25 May 2011 BANKS SIR JOSEPH 1743 1820 BROWN ROBERT 1773 1858 DON DAVID 1800 1841 English Heritage Retrieved 5 January 2016 The Lost World of Joseph Banks Pilot Guides 2016 Hustwitt J R 2014 Interreligious hermeneutics and the pursuit of truth Lanham Md Lexington Books ISBN 978 0 7391 8739 5 Ball Philip 2015 Invisible the dangerous allure of the unseen Chicago The University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 23889 0 International Plant Names Index Banks a b c d Matthew Fishburn The book that Joseph Banks burned sl nsw gov au first published in SL Magazine Summer 2017 18 Retrieved 26 September 2022 a b Papers of Sir Joseph Banks nla gov au Retrieved 26 September 2022 Papers Brabourne Collection c 1769 1820 microform nla gov au Retrieved 26 September 2022 Petherick Collection nla gov au Retrieved 26 September 2022 Hunt Susan Autumn 2018 Sir Joseph Banks Online Archive SL Magazine 11 1 44 45 Cited sources editWulf Andrea 2015 The Invention of Nature Alexander von Humboldt s New World New York Alfred A Knopf ISBN 978 0385350662 Further reading editPrimary resources edit Sutro Library a branch of the California State Library Sir Joseph Banks Collection 1770 1812 State Library of New South Wales Papers of Sir Joseph Banks and The Endeavour Journal of Joseph Banks 1768 1771 National Library of Australia NLA Papers of Sir Joseph Banks Royal Geographical Society of South Australia Journal of a voyage to Newfoundland and Labrador commencing 7 April and ending 17 November 1766 Notebooks containing vocabularies of Tahitian languages and observations collected by Banks are held by SOAS Special Collections Digitised items from the collection are available to view online here Secondary resources edit Cameron H C 1952 Sir Joseph Banks K B P R S the Autocrat of the Philosophers Batchworth Press Carter H B 1964 His Majesty s Spanish Flock Sir Joseph Banks and the Merinos of George III of England sic University of Sydney Carter Harold Burnell 1988 Sir Joseph Banks 1743 1820 London British Museum of Natural History ISBN 0 565 00993 1 Chambers Neil 2007 Joseph Banks and the British Museum the world of collecting 1770 1830 London Pickering amp Chatto ISBN 978 1851968589 OCLC 1028009661 Dawson W R ed 1958 The Banks Letters University of London Durt Tania 2007 Joseph Banks pp 173 181 in The Great Naturalists edited by Robert Huxley London Thames amp Hudson with the Natural History Museum Duyker Edward 1998 Nature s Argonaut Daniel Solander 1733 1782 Naturalist and Voyager with Cook and Banks Melbourne University Press ISBN 0 522 84753 6 Marshall John Braybrooke Daniel Carl Solander Friend Librarian and Assistant to Sir Joseph Banks Archives of Natural History 11 3 1984 451 456 Duyker Edward amp Tingbrand Per ed amp trans 1995 Daniel Solander Collected Correspondence 1753 1782 Melbourne University Press Melbourne pp 466 ISBN 0 522 84636 X Scandinavian University Press Oslo 1995 pp 466 ISBN 82 00 22454 6 Fara Patricia 2004 Sex Botany amp Empire The Story Of Carl Linnaeus And Joseph Banks New York Columbia University Press ISBN 0 231 13426 6 Gascoigne John 1994 Joseph Banks and the English Enlightenment Useful Knowledge and Polite Culture Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 54211 1 Gascoigne John 1998 Science in the Service of Empire Joseph Banks The British State and the Uses of Science in the Age of Revolution Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 55069 6 Hawkesworth John Byron John Wallis Samuel Carteret Philip Cook James Banks Joseph 1773 An account of the voyages undertaken by the order of His present Majesty for making discoveries in the Southern Hemisphere and successively performed by Commodore Byron Captain Wallis Captain Carteret and Captain Cook in the Dolphin the Swallow and the Endeavour drawn up from the journals which were kept by the several commanders and from the papers of Joseph Banks esq London Printed for W Strahan and T Cadell Volume I Volume II III Kryza Frank T 207 The Race to Timbuktu In Search of Africa s City of Gold New York HarperCollins ISBN 0 06 056065 7 Lysaght A M 1971 Joseph Banks in Newfoundland and Labrador 1766 his diary manuscripts and collections Faber and Faber London ISBN 0 571 09351 5 Mackaness G 1936 Sir Joseph Banks His Relations with Australia University of Sydney Maiden J H 1909 Sir Joseph Banks The Father of Australia Kegan Paul Musgrave Toby 2020 The Multifarious Mr Banks From Botany Bay to Kew the Natural Historian Who Shaped the World Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 22383 5 O Brian Patrick 1993 Joseph Banks A Life London David R Godine 1993 ISBN 0 87923 930 1 reprinted by University of Chicago Press 1997 ISBN 0 226 61628 2 1987 Sir Joseph Banks London Harvill Press ISBN 0 00 272340 9 Smith Edward 1911 Life of Sir Joseph Banks With Some Notices of his Friends and Contemporaries John Lane Select unpublished monographs edit Duncan A 1821 A Short Account of the Life of the Right Honourable Sir Joseph Banks University of Edinburgh Gilbert L 1962 Botanical Investigation of Eastern Seaboard Australia 1788 1810 B A thesis University of New England Australia Fiction edit Novels based on a mix of historical fact and conjecture about Banks early life include Davies Martin 2005 The Conjurer s Bird New York Shaye Areheart Random House ISBN 1 4000 9733 9External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to wbr Joseph Banks and wbr Banksia nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Joseph Banks nbsp Wikisource has original works by or about Joseph Banks nbsp Wikispecies has information related to Joseph Banks Works by Joseph Banks at Project Gutenberg Australia Journal of the Right Hon Sir Joseph Banks during Captain Cook s first voyage in H M S Endeavour in 1768 71 to Terra del Fuego Otahite New Zealand Australia the Dutch East Indies etc Joseph Banks and J D Hooker Macmillan 1896 Biography at the Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online Correspondence concerning Iceland written to Sir Joseph Banks 1772 1818 from the University of Wisconsin Digital Collections Lovell Jennifer A Bath Butterfly Botany and Eighteenth Century Sexual Politics National Library of Australia News 15 7 April 2005 Sir Joseph Banks Society Archive of Joseph Banks related material British Museum Bronze portrait bust of Sir Joseph Banks by Anne Seymour Damer 1814 BBC Historic figures BBC Radio 4 Science at Sea Archival material relating to Joseph Banks UK National Archives Papers of Sir Joseph Banks State Library of New South Wales William Bligh s letters to Sir Joseph Banks concerning the first Breadfruit Expedition Sir Joseph Banks papers MS 58 Manuscripts and Archives Yale University Library Works by Joseph Banks at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp Baronetage of Great BritainNew creation Baronet of Revesby Abbey 1781 1820 ExtinctProfessional and academic associationsPreceded byJohn Pringle 21st President of the Royal Society1778 1820 Succeeded byWilliam Hyde Wollaston Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Joseph Banks amp oldid 1198089386, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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