William Hudson (botanist)
William Hudson FRS (1730 in Kendal – 23 May 1793) was a British botanist and apothecary based in London.[1] His main work was Flora Anglica, published in 1762. He was elected a fellow of the Royal Society in 1761.
Life and work
Hudson was born at the White Lion Inn, Kendal, which was kept by his father, between 1730 and 1732. He was educated at Kendal grammar school, and apprenticed to a London apothecary. He obtained the prize for botany given by the Apothecaries' Company, a copy of Ray's Synopsis; but he also paid attention to mollusca and insects. In Pennant's British Zoology he is mentioned as the discoverer of Trochus terrestris.[2][3] From 1757 to 1768 Hudson was resident sub-librarian of the British Museum, and his studies in the Sloane herbarium enabled him to adapt the Linnean nomenclature to the plants described by Ray far more accurately than did Sir John Hill in his Flora Britannica of 1700(??).[4][5]
In 1761 Hudson was elected a fellow of the Royal Society, and in the following year appeared the first edition of his Flora Anglica, which, according to Pulteney and Sir J. E. Smith, "marks the establishment of Linnean principles of botany in England." Smith writes that the work was "composed under the auspices and advice of" Benjamin Stillingfleet. Hudson, at the time of its publication, was practising as an apothecary in Panton Street, Haymarket, and from 1765 to 1771 acted as 'praefectus horti' to the Apothecaries' Company at Chelsea. A considerably enlarged edition of the Flora appeared in 1778; but in 1783 the author's house in Panton Street took fire, his collections of insects and many of his plants were destroyed, and the inmates narrowly escaped with their lives. Hudson retired to Jermyn Street.
In 1791 he joined the newly established Linnean Society. He died in Jermyn Street from paralysis on 23 May 1793, being, according to the Gentleman's Magazine, in his sixtieth year. He bequeathed the remains of his herbarium to the Apothecaries' Company. Linnaeus gave the name Hudsonia to a North American genus of Cistaceae.
Hudson was buried in St James's Church in Westminster, London.[6]
Selected works
- Flora Anglica (1762) –1798 printing
Notes
- ↑ Davey, F Hamilton (1909). Flora of Cornwall. Penryn: F Chegwidden. pp. xxxiii–xxxiv.
- ↑ http://www.animalbase.uni-goettingen.de/zooweb/servlet/AnimalBase/home/speciestaxon?id=16928
- ↑ "Elements of Natural History". 1802. p. 394. Retrieved 18 June 2016.
- ↑ "Hudson, William (1730?-1793)". Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900. Almost all of this article is copied from this source.
- ↑ https://books.google.com/books/about/Flora_Britannica_sive_Synopsis_Methodica.html?id=L82VQwAACAAJ&redir_esc=y
- ↑ Gorton, John (1851). A General Biographical Dictionary. 2. London: Henry G. Bohn.
- ↑ IPNI. Huds.
References
- Attribution
This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: "Hudson, William (1730?-1793)". Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.
Further reading
- Rees' Cyclopaedia article by Sir J. E. Smith
- Cornelius Nicholson's Annals of Kendal, p. 345
- Gentleman's Magazine 1793, i. 485
- Henry Field and Robert Hunter Semple, Memoirs of the Botanic Garden at Chelsea (1878), p. 88; Memoirs of the Botanic Garden at Chelsea.
- Trimen and Dyer's Flora of Middlesex, p. 392
- Pulteney's Sketches of the Progress of Botany, ii. 351
- Bromley's Catalogue of Portraits.