Hooker, Sir William Jackson

Hooker, Sir William Jackson

▪ British botanist

born July 6, 1785, Norwich, Norfolk, Eng.
died Aug. 12, 1865, Kew, Surrey
 English botanist who was the first director of the Royal Botanic Gardens (Kew Gardens) at Kew, near London. He greatly advanced the knowledge of ferns, algae, lichens, and fungi, as well as of higher plants.

      Hooker was the son of a merchant's clerk and descendant of Richard Hooker, noted theologian of the 16th century. A fortuitous discovery in 1805 of a rare moss, which he communicated to James Edward Smith, founder of the prestigious Linnean Society (London), redirected his interests from general natural history to botany. His early education at Norwich Grammar School was followed by a voyage to Iceland in 1809, a period of extensive study in England, and a trip to France, Switzerland, and Italy in 1814–15, where he met some of the leading continental botanists. He married Maria Turner, daughter of the botanist Dawson Turner, in 1815. Joseph Dalton Hooker, the second of their five children, also became a famous botanist. In 1820 Hooker accepted the chair of regius professor of Botany at Glasgow, a position he held until 1841. Until his death at Kew, he was actively engaged in promoting the importance of botany. He was made a knight of Hanover in 1836.

      Beginning with his Journal of a Tour in Iceland in the Summer of 1809, published in 1811, he had more than 20 major works as well as numerous periodical articles published in the following 50 years. His main interest was in cryptogamic botany (e.g., ferns, mosses, fungi), as shown by his publications British Jungermanniae, 1816; Musci Exotici, 1818–20; Icones Filicum, with R.K. Greville (1829–31); Genera Filicum (1838); and Species Filicum (1846–64). He also published important floristic studies—Flora Scotica (1821); The British Flora (1830); Flora Borealis Americana: or the Botany of the Northern Parts of British America (1840)—and was a pioneer in the study of economic botany. These publications—together with his own herbarium, which he generously made available to all scholars, and the journals that he founded and edited—made him the centre of English botany. The climax of his career came in 1841, when he was appointed the first director of Kew Gardens. Under his leadership, Kew Gardens became the world's leading botanical institution. Now a vast complex, including laboratories, a museum, a library, and greenhouses, it is a national showpiece as well as his personal monument. Before his retirement in 1865, he founded the Museum of Economic Botany at Kew (1847).

Additional Reading
Mea Allan, The Hookers of Kew, 1785–1911 (1967), is a popular but well-written and carefully researched work, based on correspondence and archival materials at Kew.

* * *


Universalium. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно решить контрольную?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • William Jackson Hooker — William Jackson Hooker. Sir William Jackson Hooker (* 6. Juli 1785 in Norwich; † 12. August 1865 in Kew) war ein britischer Botaniker. Sein offizielles botanisches Autorenkürzel lautet „Hook.“. Ebenso war er Regius Professor der Botanik an der …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • William Jackson Hooker — Pour les articles homonymes, voir William Hooker et Hooker. William Jackson Hooker. Sir William Jackson Hooker est un botaniste britannique, né le 6 juillet 1785 à Norwich et mort le 12 août 1865 à Londres …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Hooker, Sir Joseph Dalton — ▪ British botanist born June 30, 1817, Halesworth, Suffolk, Eng. died Dec. 10, 1911, Sunningdale, Berkshire  English botanist noted for his botanical travels and studies and for his encouragement of Charles Darwin and of Darwin s theories. The… …   Universalium

  • William Jackson Hooker — Nacimiento 1785 Norwich Fallecimiento …   Wikipedia Español

  • William Jackson Hooker — Sir William Jackson Hooker (Julio 6, 1785 Agosto 12, 1865) fue un Botánico inglés. Hooker nació en Norwich. Su padre , Joseph Hooker de Exeter, era miembro de la misma familia que el conocido Richard Hooker, ferviente estudioso de la literatura… …   Enciclopedia Universal

  • William Jackson Hooker — Infobox Scientist name = William Jackson Hooker box width = image width =150px caption = William Jackson Hooker birth date = July 6, 1785 birth place = Norwich death date = August 12, 1865 death place = residence = citizenship = nationality =… …   Wikipedia

  • Hooker , William Jackson — (1785–1865) British botanist. See Hooker, Sir Joseph Dalton …   Scientists

  • William Henry Harvey — (February 5, 1811 ndash;May 15, 1866) was an Irish botanist who specialised in algae. He was one of the most distinguished students of marine algae of all time. Biography William Henry Harvey was born at Summerville near Limerick, Ireland, in… …   Wikipedia

  • William Henry Harvey — en 1852 Nacimiento …   Wikipedia Español

  • William hooker (1779-1832) — Pour les articles homonymes, voir William Hooker et Hooker. William Hooker est un illustrateur naturaliste britannique, né en 1779 et mort en 1832. Cet élève de Franz Adreas Bauer (1758 1840) devient l’artiste officiel de la Société royale d… …   Wikipédia en Français

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”