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词条 Peter Collinson (botanist)
释义

  1. Life and work

  2. References

     Notes 

  3. External links

{{EngvarB|date=June 2017}}{{Use dmy dates|date=June 2017}}

Peter Collinson FRS (January 1694 – 11 August 1768) was a Fellow of the Royal Society, an avid gardener, and the middleman for an international exchange of scientific ideas in mid-18th century London. He is best known for his horticultural friendship with John Bartram and his correspondence with Benjamin Franklin about electricity.

Life and work

Born the son of a London woolen draper, Collinson entered his father's business and developed an interest in botany. His family belonged to the Gracechurch Street Meeting of the Religious Society of Friends (i.e. Quakers).

In October 1728, Collinson wrote to Sir Hans Sloane, President of the Royal Society, about strange events in Kent and on 7 November 1728, he was proposed for Fellowship of the Society.

Collinson supported the struggle of Thomas Coram, William Hogarth, and others to establish a charitable institution that would welcome babies abandoned by their mothers. A Royal Charter to start the Foundling Hospital was granted by George II on 17 October 1739. The charter lists Collinson as a founding governor.

Although Collinson was a cloth merchant by vocation, largely trading with North America, his real love was gardening. Through his business contacts, he obtained samples of seeds and plants from around the world. Collinson's personal plant collections, first at Peckham and later at Mill Hill became famous. He came to realise that there was a market for such things in England and, in the late 1730s, began to import North American botanical seeds for English collectors to grow through financing the travels of John Bartram. Yearly, he distributed the New World seeds collected by Bartram to British gentry, nurserymen, and natural scientists including Dillenius, Philip Miller, Lord Petre, the Dukes of Richmond and Norfolk, James Gordon,[1] John Busch, etc. Collinson was also the patron of the artist and natural historian Mark Catesby.

Collinson maintained an extensive correspondence and was friendly with notable scientists in London and abroad including Sloane, Carl Linnaeus, Gronovius, Dr. John Fothergill, Cadwallader Colden, and Benjamin Franklin. Collinson was a particular patron of the Philadelphia scientific community assisting the fledgling American Philosophical Society founded by Bartram and Franklin in 1743. He also served for many years as the purchasing agent for the Library Company of Philadelphia. It was through Collinson that Franklin first communicated to the Royal Society what would in 1751 be published as Experiments and Observations on Electricity.

He was elected a foreign member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences in 1747.

Whilst living in Mill Hill, he lived in what is now the Ridgeway House boarding house of Mill Hill School. Furthermore, the school also has a Collinson House and more recently a Cedars House, named after the trees Collinson planted.

{{Botanist|Collinson}}

References

  • Alan W. Armstrong, ed., "Forget not Mee & My Garden..." Selected Letters 1725–1768 of Peter Collinson, F.R.S., (Philadelphia: American Philosophical Society, 2002).
  • {{BBKL|c/collinson_p|band=31|author=Claus Bernet|spalten=274–282}}
  • Norman G. Brett-James, The Life of Peter Collinson. Edgar G. Dustan & Co., London, 1925.
  • Geoffrey Cantor, Quakers in the Royal Society 1660–1750, Notes and Records of the Royal Society, 51 (2), pp. 175–193 (1997).
  • Peter Collinson, "An Account of the Introduction of American Seeds into Great Britain," contributed by A. B. Rendle, The Journal of Botany British & Foreign, vol. 63 (1925), p. 163–165.
  • William Darlington, ed., Memorials of John Bartram and Humphry Marshall. Philadelphia: Lindsay & Blakiston, 1849.
  • Lewis Weston Dillwyn, Hortus Collinsonianus: An Account of the Plants Cultivated by the Late Peter Collinson, Esq., F.R.S., Swansea: W. C. Murray and E. Rees, 1843.
  • R.H. Nichols and F A. Wray, The History of the Foundling Hospital (London: Oxford University Press, 1935), p. 353.
  • Jean O'Neill and Elizabeth P. McLean, Peter Collinson and the Eighteenth-Century Natural History Exchange. Memoirs of the American Philosophical Society, vol. 264. American Philosophical Society, Philadelphia, PA, 2008.
  • Earl G. Swem, Brothers of the Spade, Correspondence of Peter Collinson of London, and of John Custis, of Williamsburg, Virginia, 1734–1746. Barre Gazette, Barre MA, 1957. [Reset reprint from Proceedings of the American Antiquarian Society, (April 1948), p. 17-201.]

Notes

1. ^[https://books.google.com/books?id=thmPzIltAV8C&pg=PA286&lpg=PA286&dq=%22James+Gordon%22+botanist&source=web&ots=9Eo0dPjfQ4&sig=cwKv6HySGuzklncGrG9ZnIJsjDo&hl=en&sa=X&oi=book_result&resnum=1&ct=result James Gordon (1708–1780) – article in Dictionary of British and Irish Botanists and Horticulturists by Ray Desmond, Christine Ellwood, Published by CRC Press, 1994] {{ISBN|0-85066-843-3}}, {{ISBN|978-0-85066-843-8}} p286 – extracts on GoogleBooks

External links

  • {{UK National Archives ID}}
  • Swem, E. G., "Brothers of the Spade: Correspondence of Peter Collinson, of London, and of John Custis, of Williamsburg, Virginia, 1734–1746." Proceedings of the American Antiquarian Society 58 (1): 17–153. 1948
    • Brothers of the Spade: Correspondence of Peter Collinson, of London, and of John Custis, of Williamsburg, Virginia, 1734–1746
    • The Correspondence of Peter Collinson and John Custis
    • Bibliographical Note
    • Appendix I: Custis Biographies
    • Appendix II: John Bartram in Virginia
    • Appendix III: Calendar of Letters
    • Footnotes
    {{Authority control}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Collinson, Peter}}

    14 : Botanists with author abbreviations|English botanists|English physicists|Fellows of the Royal Society|Members of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences|English Quakers|1694 births|1768 deaths|17th-century Quakers|18th-century Quakers|18th-century British scientists|18th-century English people|People from London|18th-century British botanists

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