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Charles Robert Darwin
(1809-1882)
Born in Shrewsbury in 1809, Darwin’s paternal grandfather
was Erasmus Darwin, author of the poem The Botanic Garden.
His mother’s father was Josiah Wedgwood. He attended Edinburgh
University to study medicine, which he disliked intensely. His father
then sent him to Christ’s College, Cambridge to study theology
– which he also disliked. In 1831 he embarked as a naturalist
on HMS Beagle’s five-year journey to Patagonia, Tierra del
Fuego, Chile, Peru and some Pacific islands. On his return he discovered
that some of his scientific papers had been privately published
and that he was regarded as a leading scientific thinker. In 1838
he was appointed as Secretary to the Geological Society. The following
year he married his cousin, Emma Wedgwood. He spent the rest of
his life developing his theory of evolution for publication, an
abstract of which was published in 1859 as On the origin of
species… He died in 1882. His lifelong friend Joseph
Dalton Hooker had appealed in his 1880 annual report for help in
updating Steudel’s listing of plant names Nomenclator
Botanicus. Darwin responded with an offer of financial assistance.
Work started in February 1882 and when Darwin died a few months
later his family took on the expense of publication. Hooker called
the new work Index Kewensis, initially a record of the
botanical names of seed-bearing plants published between 1735 and
1885.
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