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Colonial pride and metropolitan expectations: the British Museum and Melbourne's meteorites

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 January 2009

A. M. Lucas
Affiliation:
Centre for Educational Studies, King's College London, Cornwall House Annex, Waterloo Road, London SE1 8TX, UK.
P. J. Lucas
Affiliation:
Centre for Educational Studies, King's College London, Cornwall House Annex, Waterloo Road, London SE1 8TX, UK.
T. A. Darragh
Affiliation:
Department of Invertebrate Palaeontology, Museum of Victoria, Russell Street, Melbourne 3000, Australia.
S. Maroske
Affiliation:
Department of History and Philosophy of Science, University of Melbourne, Parkville, Vic 3052, Australia.

Extract

The four-year wrangle over the ownership of what was then thought to have been the largest known meteorite, recognized near Melbourne in 1860, provides a fine-grained example of the interaction between scientific internationalism, metropolitan appetite for specimens, and colonial civic pride.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © British Society for the History of Science 1994

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References

The larger project from which this study has emerged, on the collected correspondence of Ferdinand von Mueller, has been supported by the William Buckland Foundation, the R. E. Ross Trust, the Sidney Myer Fund, the Victorian Department of Conservation, Forests and Lands (now the Department of Conservation and Environment), the University of Melbourne and the Australian Research Council.

We have benefited from comments made by Professor R. W. Home and Dr A. L. Mansell, an anonymous referee, and the discussion at a meeting of the Society for the History of Natural History, at which an earlier version of the paper was read. We are grateful to the following for permission to quote from material under their control: the Board of Trustees, Royal Botanic Gardens Kew; the Public Record Office, Kew, London for permission to quote from Crown Copyright material; the Museum of Victoria; the British Museum; the Natural History Museum, London.

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11 Bruce, James, Letter to the Editor, dated 3 12 1862Google Scholar, Melbourne Argus, 5 12 1862.Google Scholar

12 Natural History Museum, Mineralogy Keeper's Archives, Meteorite letters A-G (Cranbourne) (cited below as NHM: Cranbourne). (The advertisement is in the form of a handwritten note; we have been unable to confirm the hand. Translated from the German by Juraschek, M., 1989.Google Scholar The note is annotated on the back in a different hand ‘Mr A. Abel's note to Prof Abel of Woolwich’. Professor Frederick Augustus Abel, FRS (1827–1902), Lecturer in Chemistry at the Royal Military Academy, Woolwich, and ordnance chemist at the Woolwich Arsenal, was A. J. Abel's nephew (DNB).

13 Flight, , op. cit. (8).Google Scholar From the context of the article, it is probable that Flight had had communication with Bruce, then living in Chislehurst, near London.

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16 Mueller, to Murchison, , 25 09 1861 (NHM: Cranbourne).Google Scholar

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18 Outward letter book 2, no. 62/4, National Museum of Victoria, 3 January 1862.

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32 The details of this inquiry are difficult to determine, as the file pertaining to it cannot be found in the Public Record Office of Victoria. We know from the Registers that it was sent to Mr Odgers, the Chief Clerk of the Chief Secretary's Department, on 26 March 1867, but we have been unable to determine for what purpose the file was needed. We reconstruct the inquiry as far as possible from letters that mention it, but it is not certain how far the final report departs from the draft preserved in the Museum of Victoria archives. The Board may not have been as biased as it appears on the surface: Smyth and Selwyn did not have a good relationship, and in May 1863 Smyth reports not having spoken to Selwyn except on official business for nearly two years (Darragh, , op. cit. (5), 10).Google Scholar

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38 Argus, 20 11 1862, 6Google Scholar; Argus, 22 11 1862, 5Google Scholar; Argus, 5 12 1862, 7Google Scholar; Argus, 27 12 1862, 5.Google Scholar

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42 McCoy, to Evans, , 21 04 1863Google Scholar (Outward letterbook 2, no. 63/70, National Museum of Victoria); Barkly, to Maskelyne, , 25 05 1863 (NHM: Cranbourne).Google Scholar

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44 [Draft] ‘Report of the Board Appointed to consider the contemplated removal from the Colony of the Cranbourne Meteorite’ (Cranbourne Meteorite File, National Museum of Victoria Archives).

45 Barkly, to Secretary of State for the Colonies, 15 07 1862Google Scholar (Public Record Office, London, CO309/60, p. 304).

46 Barkly, to Mueller, , 22 05 1863Google Scholar, Barkly, to McCoy, , 28 04 1863Google Scholar (Victorian Public Record Office, Bundle 10, no. 12, unit 11, VPRS special files, VA 466 Governor's Office); Mueller, to Maskelyne, , 25 09 1863Google Scholar (NHM: Cranbourne); Mueller, to Darling, , 28 11 1863Google Scholar (Victorian Public Record Office, Bundle 10, no. 12, unit 11, VPRS special files, VA 466 Governor's Office).

47 Mueller, to McCoy, , 11 09 1863Google Scholar (Mitchell Library, MSA675); Mueller, to Evans, , 11 09 1863Google Scholar (Victorian Public Record Office, Bundle 10, no. 12, unit 11, VPRS special files, VA 466 Governor's Office); Mueller, to Maskelyne, , 25 09 1863Google Scholar (NHM: Cranbourne).

48 British Museum Archives, Standing Committee Minutes, Committee vol. XXIX, p. 10391; Maskelyne, to Panizzi, , 26 07 1863Google Scholar (NHM: Cranbourne); Bruce, to Maskelyne, , 15 07 1863Google Scholar (copy in Public Record Office, London, CO309/60, p. 238); Panizzi to Secretary of State for the Colonies, 31 July 1863 (Public Record Office, London, CO309/60, p. 229–30); Despatch of Secretary of State for the Colonies to Darling, Charles, 20 08 1863Google Scholar (Public Record Office, London, CO411/8, p. 89); Colonial Office to Crown Agents, 20 August 1863 (Public Record Office, London, CO411/07, pp. 126, 7); Crown Agents to Colonial Office, 6 October 1864 (Public Record Office, London, CO309/70, p. 58).

49 Mueller, to Maskelyne, , 25 10 1863 (NHM: Cranbourne).Google Scholar

50 McCoy, to Darling, , 11 11 1863Google Scholar (Outward letterbook 2, no. 63/181, National Museum of Victoria); Mueller, to Darling, , 28 11 1863Google Scholar (Victorian Public Record Office, Bundle 10, no. 12, unit 11, VPRS special files, VA 466 Governor's Office; copy in NHM: Cranbourne). Not all enclosures are associated with either copy available, but some have been identified and have been used as sources in their own right in this account.

51 Maskelyne, to Mueller, , 8 08 1864Google Scholar (National Herbarium of Victoria Library, RB MSS M76); Mueller, to Maskelyne, , 25 03 1864Google Scholar (NHM: Cranbourne).

52 Governor to Chief Secretary, 12 April 1864 (copy enclosed with despatch 73, Public Record Office, London, CO309/67, p. 275).

53 Mueller, to Maskelyne, , 25 04 1864Google Scholar (NHM: Cranbourne); Chief Secretary to Governor, 20 June 1864 (copy enclosed with despatch 73, Public Record Office, London, CO309/67, p. 278); Darling to Secretary of State for the Colonies, 20 July 1864 (Public Record Office, London, CO309/67, p. 272); Colonial Office to Panizzi, 29 September 1864 (Public Record Office, London, CO411/7, p. 218).

54 Governor Darling to Secretary of State for the Colonies, 23 January 1865 (Public Record Office, London, CO309/71, p. 32).

55 Outward letterbook 2, nos. 65/16, 65/15 and 65/17, National Museum of Victoria; Mueller to Maskelyne, 25 January 1865, Syd Smirke, to Maskelyne, , 27 09 1865Google Scholar (NHM: Cranbourne); Maskelyne to Trustees of the British Museum, 8 November 1865 (British Museum Archives, Officers' Reports, vol. 75, 1865); Panizzi, to Mueller, , 21 11 1865Google Scholar (British Museum Archives, Letter Books, vol. 13; pp. 106–7).

56 Flight, , op. cit, (8)Google Scholar; Maskelyne, N. Story, ‘Some lecture notes upon meteorites’, Nature (1875), 12, 485–7, 504–7, 520–3Google Scholar, quotation from 504; [P. E. M.] Berthelot: ‘Sur la matiere charboneusses des meteorites’, Comptes Rendus (1868), 67, 849Google Scholar, ‘Nouvelles contributions à l'historie du carbone’, Comptes Rendus (1871), 73, 494–6Google Scholar, also in Annales de Chimie (1873), 30, 419–31Google Scholar; Berthelot, to Maskelyne, , 16 04 1872Google Scholar (‘Letters, vol. 11, (Bar-Bom), 1800–1900, Mineral Department’, Natural History Museum, Mineralogy archives); Brown, H. (ed.), A Bibliography on Meteorites, Chicago, 1953Google Scholar; Flight, Walter, ‘A chapter in the history of meteorites’, serialized in The Geological MagazineGoogle Scholar, New series, decade n, vol. II, 1875 (the Cranbourne meteorites are discussed on pp. 552–3, where preliminary analyses are presented); Walcott, , op. cit. (8).Google Scholar

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60 Other, but later, Australian examples are briefly discussed in Kohlstedt, Sally Gregory, ‘International exchange in the natural history enterprise: museums in Australia and the United States’, in Home, R. W. and Kohlstedt, Sally Gregory (eds.), International Science and National Scientific Identity, Dordrecht, 1991, 121–49, e.g. 133.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

61 Maskelyne, , op. cit. (33).Google Scholar

62 Fitzgerald, William G., ‘The romance of museums’, Strand Magazine (1896), 11, 70–1.Google Scholar The article contains other inaccuracies besides the belief that Bruce accompanied his meteorite to London.

63 See, for the case of the Scottish fossil, Museums and Galleries Commission, Report, 1989–90. For Australian legislation see Tasmania, , Meteorites Act 1973Google Scholar; Western Australia, Museum Act 1969–1973, especially section 45; South Australia, South Australian Museum Act, 1976–1980; Australia, Protection of Movable Cultural Heritage Act 1986, and the regulations made under it (e.g., Statutory Rules 1988, No. 194; Statutory Rules 1990, No. 350). For recent reaction to illicit export see Bunk, Steve, ‘Moonraker’, The Australian Magazine, 6 06 1992.Google Scholar

64 For committee membership, see Argus, , 14 01 1865Google Scholar; for FRS, Mueller, to Hooker, Joseph Dalton, 8 06 1879Google Scholar (Royal Botanic Gardens Kew, Archives, Australia: Mueller, 1871–81, fol. 234); for medal and D.Sc., DNB; for KCMG, McCoy, to Owen, , 16 03 1889Google Scholar (Natural History Museum, Owen Correspondence, vol. 18, fol. 258); Owen, to McCoy, , 30 04 1869Google Scholar (copy: Natural History Museum, Owen Correspondence, vol. 18, fol. 260).

65 Barkly, to Hooker, William Jackson, 20 04 1861Google Scholar (Royal Botanic Gardens Kew, Archives, Director's Correspondence, vol. LXXV, fol. 11). See also Lucas, A. M., ‘Baron von Mueller: protégé turned patron’Google Scholar, in Home, R. W. (ed.), op. cit. (2), 133–52Google Scholar, on 138–9. Moyal, Ann Mozley, Scientists in Nineteenth Century Australia: A Documentary History, Stanmore, 1976, 172–85Google Scholar presents an account based on the direct exchange of letters between Mueller and the botanists at Kew; she does not mention the role of Governor Barkly.

66 See Stafford, , op. cit. (5).Google Scholar

67 Mueller, to Dyer, William Thistleton, 16 09 1887Google Scholar (Royal Botanic Gardens Kew, Archives, Australia: Mueller, 1882–90, fol. 228).

68 See, for claim to specimens, Mueller, to Gregory, Augustus, 9 07 1855Google Scholar (Public Record Office, London, CO201/485, fol. 187) and W. J. Hooker to Colonial Office (Public Record Office, London, CO201/488, fol. 357); for unwanted gifts of aboriginal implements, Mueller, to Chantre, , 9 06 1880Google Scholar and Chantre, to Jackson, , 23 09 1880Google Scholar (Royal Botanic Gardens Kew, Archives, Australia: Mueller 1871–81, fols. 274, 275); for Prince Paul, Mueller, to Barkly, Governor, 21 08 1858Google Scholar, in Barkly to Chief Secretary, 21 August 1858 (Public Record Office of Victoria, VPRS 1189, G58/7190); for an example of other offers, see Mueller, to Owen, Richard, 30 10 1878Google Scholar, suggesting that the British Museum purchase a collection of Longicorn Beetles assembled by Charles French (Natural History Museum, Zoology Keeper's Archives, Letters 1878, vol. 14, fol. 379); for buying honours, see Australasian, 6 01 1872Google Scholar, and other examples in Powell, J. M., ‘A baron under siege: von Mueller and the press in the 1870'’, Victorian Historical Journal (1979), 50(1), 1835.Google Scholar

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70 For Bentham as ‘Chief Justice’ for Barklya, see Mueller, to Bentham, , 15 06 1858Google Scholar (Royal Botanic Gardens Kew, Archives, Australia: Mueller 1858–70, fol. 44). Mueller had previously had Sender's supporting judgement, but Bentham was the ‘highest authority’; for purchase and exchange see Short, P. S., ‘Politics and the purchase of private herbaria by the National Herbarium of Victoria’, in Short, P. S. (ed.), History of Systematic Botany in Australasia, Melbourne, 1990, 512Google Scholar; for encouragement to amateurs see Lucas, , op. cit. (65)Google Scholar; for resistance to Mueller's rights to plants, see Hill, Walter [Superintendent, Botanic Garden, Brisbane]Google Scholar to Hooker, W. J., 17 02 1862Google Scholar (Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, Director's Letters, Australian and Pacific Letters 1859–65, vol. LXXV, fol. 78).

71 For nominations to learned societies see Lucas, , op. cit. (65)Google Scholar; for plants being more valuable at Kew, see Mueller, to Hooker, W. J., 6 03 1857Google Scholar (Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, Director's Letters, vol. LXXIV, letter no. 158); for monotremes see Gruber, Jacob W., ‘Does the platypus lay eggs? The history of an event in science’, Archives of Natural History (1991), 18(1), 51123.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

72 Mueller, to Darling, , 28 11 1863Google Scholar (Victorian Public Record Office, Bundle 10, no. 12, unit 11, VPRS special files, VA 466 Governor's Office).

73 For Neumayer see Home, R. W. and Kretzer, Hans-Jochen, ‘The Flagstaff observatory, Melbourne: new documents relating to its foundation’, Historical Records of Australian Science (1991), 8(4), 213–43CrossRefGoogle Scholar, and sources cited therein, especially in notes 2 and 3.

74 Pyenson, Lewis, Empire of Reason: Exact Sciences in Indonesia 1840–1940, Leiden, 1989.Google Scholar

75 Home and Kohlstedt, , op. cit. (60)Google Scholar, editors' introduction, 3.