John Dallachy

John Dallachy (c. 1808 – 4 June 1871) was a curator of Melbourne Botanic Gardens and a plant collector.

Dallachy was born in Elginshire, Scotland. He worked as a gardener for the Earl of Aberdeen and Kew Gardens. In 1847, he went to Ceylon to manage a coffee plantation. Sailing to Australia in 1848, he took up work as a gardener for Jonathan Were in Brighton, Victoria. He was an overseer and later a superintendent of the Melbourne Botanic Gardens from 1849 to 1857. Following the appointment of Ferdinand von Mueller as director, Dallachy continued as curator until 1861.[1]

Expeditions

From 1849 onwards, Dallachy made a number of expeditions (mainly within Victoria) to collect plant specimens. These included:[2]

His plant specimens are located in National Herbarium of Victoria| (MEL), with duplicates in the herbaria London (BM), Berlin (B), Kiel (KIEL) and Vienna (W).[3]

gollark: There are no holograms. That would be way too expensive.
gollark: There are no pyramids. They're obviously impossible to build.
gollark: So, like I said, they hypnotize people into BELIEVING it's NOT nothing, and edit the pictures.
gollark: Well, exactly. And they want people to go.
gollark: You can't operate the holoprojectors because there are no holoprojectors. The entire area is empty. They cover it up to preserve tourism.

References

  1. Gross, A. (1972) "Dallachy, John (1808-1871)". Australian Dictionary of Biography. National Centre of Biography, Australian National University. Retrieved 23 March 2013.
  2. "Dallachy, John (c. 1803 - 1871)". Encyclopedia of Australian Science. Retrieved 23 March 2013.
  3. "Dallachy, John (1808 - 1871)". Australian National Herbarium. Retrieved 23 March 2013.
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