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Historical Records of Australian Science
  The history of science, pure and applied, in Australia and the southwest Pacific
 
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Article     |     Next >>   Contents Vol 16(2)

Watch Dog over the Herbarium: Alfred Ewart, Victorian Government Botanist 1906–1921

Helen M. Cohn

Historical Records of Australian Science 16(2) 139 - 167

Abstract

Alfred Ewart was Government Botanist in the service of the Victorian Government from February 1906 to February 1921. He was concurrently foundation Professor of Botany at the University of Melbourne, both positions being part-time. As Government Botanist he was in charge of the National Herbarium of Victoria, which had fallen into a slump after the death of the first Government Botanist, Ferdinand von Mueller, in 1896. Ewart was determined to restore the Herbarium to its former position as a leading centre of research on the Victorian and indeed the Australian flora. In doing so he enlisted the aid of the many capable botanists who were members of the Field Naturalists' Club of Victoria. The Herbarium being in the Department of Agriculture, Ewart had duties in relation to the business of that Department. These had mainly to do with weeds, impure seeds and providing advice to departmental officers. Of particular importance was his taxonomic work as Government Botanist. He published a series of papers and books on the flora of Victoria and the Northern Territory, and engaged in debates with colleagues both interstate and overseas. Ewart ceased to be Government Botanist when the professorship was made a full-time appointment in response to increased teaching loads.



Full text doi:10.1071/HR05009

© Australian Academy of Science 2005

 
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