Correspondence of John Hussey and G. W. Clinton, Part 2
P. M. Eckel and Nick Harby
Res Botanica
Missouri Botanical Garden
September 10, 2011
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The Correspondence of

John Hussey (1831-1888) and

George William Clinton (1807‑1885). Notes on the early herbarium of Purdue University: Part 2.

 

P. M. Eckel, P.O. Box 299, Missouri Botanical Garden, St. Louis, Missouri, 63166‑0299; email: patricia.eckel@mobot.org

 

Nick Harby, Arthur & Kriebel Herbaria, Dept. of Botany & Plant Pathology, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana; email: nickharby@yahoo.com

 

 

The Specimens

 

There are two herbaria curated by the Department of Botany and Plant Pathology at Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana:

The Kriebel Herbarium (PUL) possesses around 75,000 specimens, 70,000 of them vascular plants, the most important of which are those by J.C. Arthur and A. A. Lindsey, and R. Kriebel, after whom the herbarium was named (Thiers 2011). An important collector represented in the Kriebel Herbarium is Charles Deam (see below). This herbarium also has 2,000 specimens of algae, bryophytes and fungi other than rusts (Purdue University website 2011). At the present time, the Kriebel Herbarium website attributes the beginnings of this herbarium to one of its professors, Stanley Coulter (1853-1943) who, together with his brother John M. Coulter (1851-1928), “were pioneer botanists in Indiana, and published the first flora of Indiana in 1881” (Kriebel Herbarium web-site, http://www.btny.purdue.edu/herbaria/Kriebel/).

The present herbarium (PUL) “was dedicated and renamed in honor of Ralph Kriebel in August 1961” in recognition of the 10,886 specimens Kriebel accumulated during his lifetime and which comprise a large part of the present herbarium.

Ralph Kriebel, teacher, quarry-man, botanist and conservationist, made many plant collections in Lawrence County in southern Indiana, where he worked for the Soil Conservation Service (SCS) from 1934-1942. His primary botanical mentor and field companion was Charles C. Deam, author of the second and much enlarged Flora of Indiana (1940).

Kriebel transferred to the Lafayette office of the SCS in 1942, then joined the staff of the Agricultural Extension Service of Purdue University in 1943. After his death, his herbarium of 10,886 specimens was purchased by the Purdue Agricultural Experiment Station, and added to the existing herbarium started by Stanley Coulter. The combined herbarium was dedicated and renamed in honor of Ralph Kriebel in August 1961. The Kriebel Herbarium was subsequently transferred in 1986 from the Department of Biology to the Department of Botany and Plant Pathology, where it is now maintained.

Although the Kriebel Herbarium at Purdue owes its name and important collections of the Indiana flora to Ralph M. Kriebel (1897-1946), it has been in existence since the very beginning of Purdue University.  As Purdue started classes for the first time in 1874, only six professors had been hired to teach.  One was John Hussey, botany professor.  He brought his personal plant collection to assist his students, and Hussey’s specimens are still in the Kriebel Herbarium to this day.

By 1897, professor Stanley Coulter (1853-1943) had become director of the biological laboratories at Purdue. Stanley Coulter and his brother John M. Coulter (1851-1928) were pioneer botanists in Indiana, and published the first flora of Indiana in 1881. Stanley Coulter was the only true botanical mentor of renowned Hoosier botanist Charles C. Deam.   John M. Coulter became president of Indiana University (1891-1893) and professor at the University of Chicago (1896-1925). 

The Arthur Herbarium (PUR) with 101,000 specimens has a worldwide specialization in the Uredinales (plant rusts), one of the largest collection of its kind in the world. It represents many more collectors than the Kriebel, including those of J. C. Arthur (1850-1942) the first head of the Department of Botany and Plant Pathology, after whom this herbarium was named. The concentration of this important group of organisms for research, teaching and reference is an important example of Purdue University’s prominence in fields associated with agriculture.

 

One significant representation of specimens in the Arthur Herbarium was that of Charles Horton Peck, a correspondent of George W. Clinton of the Buffalo Society of Natural Sciences in Buffalo, New York. The Arthur Herbarium possesses several of Peck’s type specimens. The Arthur Herbarium also possesses an extensive representation of mycological specimens from H. W. Ravenel, who prepared an extensive correspondence with Clinton. D. C. Eaton, a noted American pteridologist, was also a correspondent of Clintons and a number of his specimens are represented in the Kriebel Herbarium.

 

It was while databasing the specimens from the two herbaria, and seeking more detailed information regarding the collectors represented on the labels that the second author discovered the Clinton donation and notified the first author, who is editor of the G. W. Clinton Correspondence. This paper is the result of a collaboration based on a shared interest in the history of American botany.

 

In the G. W. Clinton donation to the Purdue University Herbarium (PUL) are many that do or do not correspond to letters Clinton retained as he wrote to various botanists while amassing the specimens of the Clinton Herbarium at the Buffalo Museum of Science in Buffalo, New York, and the New York State Herbarium in Albany, New York. From the Purdue labels, a partial list of correspondents includes:

 

Michael S. Bebb

Joseph Blake

D. Clarke*

Captain G. Frazier*

A. P. Garber

H. Eggert*

George Engelmann

Elihu Hall

Leo Lesquereux

Elihu S. Miller

Charles Mohr

John Paine

Edward Palmer*

Charles F. Parker

E. Roth*

Charles E. Smith

Edward Tuckerman.

 

The asterisks indicate names without associated letters in the Clinton Archives and some may indicate specimens, such as Edward Palmer’s, that derived from other contemporary botanists, such as from the duplicates of Asa Gray or John Torrey.

 

An example of a Clinton specimen that appears to have been a duplicate of specimens sent to Clinton in Buffalo, New York, includes a fern from South Africa. Clinton was corresponding with Michael Shuck Bebb (1833 - 1895) of the State of Illinois, an important student of the American Salicaceae, and Peter MacOwan (1830 - 1909), one of the foremost botanists of South Africa. Although Clinton received specimens collected by both of these authors, he also received duplicate specimens from both of them.

 

For example, in the Kriebel Herbarium of Purdue University (PUL) there is a specimen of Adiantum ethiopicum Thunb.  from South Africa made by the Rev. Leopold Richard Baur (1825-1889) from the donation to the University of specimens by George Clinton.  Baur was a Moravian missionary stationed in 1873 at Baziya, “between the upper reaches of the Bashee and Umtata Rivers, in the Transkei” (Gunn & Codd 1981), when Baur began sending specimens to MacOwan, then teaching at Gill College in Somerset East. “... thus began a long association with MacOwan and over the years many novelties and interesting records from this little-known area were sent to Kew.” (Gunn & Codd 1981). (Digital image below of PUL specimen by Nick Harby.)

 

 

Another specimen (below) from the Clinton donation to PUL was collected by Paul von Kühlewein (1798-1870). and is a duplicate of Clinton’s collections at the Buffalo Museum of Science: written in Clinton’s handwriting: Equisetum litorale Kuehl. In Ruprecht Symbolae etc. 1846 pag. 215" which possibly is a type specimen (Petropoli is a reference to Leningrad (St. Petersberg)).

 

 

 

 

For more information on Paul von Kühlewein (click here)

 

Other interesting specimens from the Clinton donations shed light on other issues, such as the significance of Goat Island, at Niagara Falls, New York, in the history of botany. This island, a favorite tourist destination for centuries, is representative of the extraordinary biological uniqueness of the cataracts and the seven mile gorge associated with them.

 

For example, two type specimens derive from the Goat Island flora, and are part of the Clinton donation to Purdue University:

Aecidium allenii Clinton, part of the type The packet reads “”On Shepherdia [‘canadensis’ written in pencil], Buffalo, N.Y. G. W. Clinton. The label is hand written in apparently Clinton’s handwriting. A packet curated next to the type has the same information, but the locality is “Goat Island, Buffalo, N.Y.” Goat Island is in Niagara Falls, Niagara County, N.Y.  and is probably an isotype. There are no dates written in, hence the two BUF specimens need to be examined to verify the year to determine whether these, too, are isotypes.

Another specimen (below) of Aecidium allenii at Purdue was made in 1885, the year the Niagara Reservation was officially established, on June 29 by Clara E. Cummings, also on Shepherdia canadensis on Goat Island, Niagara [“N.Y.” written in pencil]. The Cummings specimen, according to the packet, derived from the Herbarium of A. B. Seymour. Clinton died on September 7, 1885 and, although perhaps collected at the type locality, and perhaps on the very shrub, it is not part of the type specimen.

 

 

Puccinia clintonii Peck. There is a Puccinia clintonii Peck type specimen (below) also, as the Aecidium allenii specimen cited above, curated in the Arthur Herbarium of Purdue University. The packet reads “On Pedicularis canadensis. Goat Island, Niagara, N. Y. G. W. Clinton. Oct.” which would indicate that a specimen at the Buffalo Museum of Science collected in the same place by Clinton, on October 9, 1875, is perhaps the holotype specimen for the species, and the specimen at Purdue is an isotype (or they are all isotypes).

 

 

 

The Arthur rust fungus collection of the Arthur Herbarium has other specimens that were, according to the labels, collected by G. W. Clinton.  However, it is hard to say whether Clinton collected them as rust and sent them to Purdue or that the Clinton vascular plant collection that got here in 1878 was later found to have some rust and a portion was transferred to the Arthur collection later.  One would be surprised how much of the Arthur collection is actually a rusted leaf that was found on a “normal” herbarium specimen. This is a demonstration of how prevalent the rusts really are. Here are some examples (below) of a Clinton collected specimen in the Arthur rust collection - note that the handwriting appears to be that of J. C. Arthur:

 

One curious set of specimens concerns another correspondent of G. W. Clinton, and that is Charles Mohr of Mobile, Alabama. One of Mohr’s specimens (PUL 4429), a collection of Eleocharis palustris, was collected on July 4, 1864, at West Fowl River, Mobile Bay, Alabama.  The collection site would have been within sight of where the Civil War Battle of Mobile Bay was fought a month later, on August 5, the collecting site near the three Confederate forts that guarded the entrance to Mobile Bay. A Confederate fleet under Adm. Franklin Buchanan was guarding the Bay while the Federal fleet under Rear Adm. David G. Farragut was preparing to attack. Perhaps Mohr had been using his collecting trip as a disguise for a mission to observe the Union naval operations. Mohr, who had moved with his wife and children to Mobile, Alabama in 1857, was working for the Confederate government in his pharmaceutical and medicinal capacity during the Civil War. Notice the “G.W.C.” written on the upper left of the label (below).

 

For more on Charles Mohr (click here):

 

 

As data entry of the eighteenth century specimens, including the Clinton donation, is continuing at both the Kriebel and Arthur Herbaria at Purdue University, without doubt there will be more interesting items of information from the specimens, not only for the purposes of plant systematics, but also data that display the movements and activities of American scientists and educators during the American Victorian period.

 

Acknowledgements

 

We would like to thank George Yatskievych for reviewing specimens and useful discussions regarding the Clinton material and other early specimens from the Purdue Herbarium. Grateful acknowledgement if made to John Grehan, Director of Science at the Buffalo Museum of Science, Buffalo, New York, who, made research on the Clinton Correspondence possible for the first author. We thank Nelda Ikenberry for her kindness and encouragement. The second author prepared the digital and data entry information at Purdue University. We thank Richard Zander of the Missouri Botanical Garden for review of the manuscript and for providing computer assistance in the preparation of the text and images for on-line publication.

 

Bibliography

 

Thiers, B. [continuously updated]. Index Herbariorum: A global directory of public herbaria and associated staff. New York Botanical Garden's Virtual Herbarium. http://sweetgum.nybg.org/ih/