Asa Gray and John Torrey correspondence, 1831-1871
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- Publication date
- 1831
- Topics
- Basilosaurus, Botanical specimens, Carex, Chemistry, Compositae, Cyperaceae, Ranunculus, Rhus succedanea, Trilobites, Gray, Asa, 1810-1888, Torrey, John, 1796-1873, Abbott, Gorham D., 1807-1874, Abert, J. W. (James William), 1820-1897, Agassiz, Louis, 1807-1873, Aiton, William Townsend, 1766-1849, Alexander, Stephen, 1806-1883, Bache, A. D. (Alexander Dallas), 1806-1867, Bailey, Jacob Whitman, 1811-1857, Baird, Spencer Fullerton, 1823-1887, Balfour, John Hutton, 1808-1884, Barratt, Joseph, 1796-1882, Beck, Lewis C. (Lewis Caleb), 1798-1853, Beckwith, E. G. (Edward Griffin), 1818-1881, Bentham, George, 1800-1884, Berkeley, M. J. (Miles Joseph), 1803-1889, Berlandier, Jean Louis, -1851, Bigelow, Jacob, 1786-1879, Blodgett, John Loomis, 1809-1853, Blytt, Matthias Numsen, 1789-1862, Boissier, Edmond, 1810-1885, Bolander, Henry N. (Henry Nicholas), 1831-1897, Boott, Francis, 1792-1863, Boott, J. Wright (John Wright), 1792-1845, Bory de Saint-Vincent (Jean Baptiste Geneviève Marcellin), 1778-1846, Brace, John Pierce, 1793-1872, Brackenridge, William D. (William Dunlop), 1810-1893, Bromfield, William Arnold, 1801-1851, Brown, Robert, 1773-1858, Brownlee, John, 1791-1871, Buchanan, James, 1791-1868, Buckley, S. B. (Samuel Botsford), 1809-1884, Candolle, Alphonse de, 1806-1893, Candolle, Augustin Pyramus de, 1778-1841, Carey, John, 1797-1880, Carey, Samuel Thomas, 1800-1857, Carter, William, Chapman, A. W. (Alvan Wentworth), 1809-1899, Choate, Rufus, 1799-1859, Choisy, Jacques Denys, 1799-1859, Clark, Alonzo, 1807-1887, Cleaveland, Parker, 1780-1858, Cogswell, Joseph Green, 1786-1871, Coulter, Thomas, 1793-1843, Croom, Hardy Bryan, 1797-1837, Curtis, M. A. (Moses Ashley), 1808-1872, Dalhousie, James Andrew Broun Ramsay, Marquis of, 1812-1860, Dana, James Dwight, 1813-1895, Darlington, William, 1782-1863, De Kay, James E. (James Ellsworth), 1792-1851, Decaisne, Joseph, 1807-1882, Delessert, Benjamin, baron, 1773-1847, Dewey, Chester, 1784-1867, Dod, Albert B. (Albert Baldwin), 1805-1845, Downing, A. J. (Andrew Jackson), 1815-1852, Douglass, David Bates, 1790-1849, Draper, John William, 1811-1882, Drayton, Joseph, Duby, J. É. (Jean Étienne), 1798-1885, Dumas, J.-B. (Jean-Baptiste), 1800-1884, Durand, Elias, 1794-1873, Eaton, Amos, 1776-1842, Eaton, Amos Beebe, 1806-1877, Eaton, Daniel Cady, 1834-1895, Edwards, Lewis Allison, 1823-1877, Ellet, William Henry, 1806-1859, Emerson, George B. (George Barrell), 1797-1881, Emory, William H. (William Hemsley), 1811-1887, Endlicher, Stephan, 1804-1849, Engelmann, George, 1809-1884, Fendler, August, 1813-1883, Fielding, H. B. (Henry Barron), 1805-1851, Fischer, F. E. L. (Friedrich Ernst Ludwig), 1782-1854, Folwell, Nathan W. (Nathan Wright), 1805-1879, Frémont, John Charles, 1813-1890, Gambel, William, 1823-1849, Gardner, George, 1812-1849, Gibbes, Lewis Reeves, 1810-1894, Gliddon, George R. (George Robins), 1809-1857, Graham, Robert, 1786-1845, Gray, Jane Loring, 1821-1909, Greene, B. D. (Benjamin Daniel), 1793-1862, Gregg, Josiah, 1806-1850, Griffith, R. Eglesfeld (Robert Eglesfeld), 1798-1850, Gould, Augustus A. (Augustus Addison), 1805-1866, Guyot, A. (Arnold), 1807-1884, Hadley, James, 1785-1869, Halenius, Jonas Petri, 1727-1810, Halsted, M. B. (Mina B.), -1860, Harvey, William H. (William Henry), 1811-1866, Hatch, Thomas P., active 1854, Henry, Joseph, 1797-1878, Heyland, Jean Christophe, 1792-1866, Hinds, Richard Brinsley, 1812-1847, Hochstein, Anthony, 1828 or 1829-1911, Holton, Isaac F. (Isaac Farwell), Hooker, Joseph Dalton, 1817-1911, Hooker, William Jackson, Sir, 1785-1865, Hope, Thomas Charles, 1766-1844, Horsford, Eben Norton, 1818-1893, Jewett, Charles C. (Charles Coffin), 1816-1868, Johnston, Jas. F. W. (James Finlay Weir), 1796-1855, Jussieu, Adrien de, 1797-1853, Kellogg, A. (Albert), 1813-1887, Ker, John Bellenden, 1765?-1842, Klotzsch, Fr. (Friedrich), 1805-1860, Knieskern, Peter D., 1798-1871, Kunth, Karl Sigismund, 1788-1850, Kunze, Gustav, 1793-1851, Le Conte, John Eatton, 1784-1860, Lehmann, Johann Georg Christian, 1792-1860, Lesquereux, Leo, 1806-1889, Lindheimer, Ferdinand, 1802-1879, Loddiges, George, 1786-1846, Lowell, John Amory, 1798-1881, Liebig, Justus, Freiherr von, 1803-1873, Lindley, John, 1799-1865, Locke, John, 1792-1856, Loomis, Elias, 1811-1889, Lyell, Charles, Sir, 1797-1875, Macrae, W. F. (William Frederick), Marcy, Randolph B. (Randolph Barnes), 1812-1887, Martius, Karl Friedrich Philipp von, 1794-1868, Meehan, Thomas, 1826-1901, Meissner, C. F. (Carl Friedrich), 1800-1874, Menzies, Archibald, 1754-1842, Miers, John, 1789-1879, Morrow, James, 1820-1865, Mulder, Claas, 1796-1867, Munro, William, Lieutenant-Colonel, Nees von Esenbeck, C. G. (Christian Gottfried), 1776-1858, Newberry, J. S. (John Strong), 1822-1892, Nicollet, J. N. (Joseph Nicolas), 1786-1843, Nuttall, Thomas, 1786-1859, Oakes, William, 1799-1848, Olmsted, Frederick Law, 1822-1903, Olney, Stephen T. (Stephen Thayer), 1812-1878, Pamplin, William, 1806-1899, Parry, C. C. (Charles Christopher), 1823-1890, Patterson, Robert M. (Robert Maskell), 1787-1854, Peirce, Benjamin, 1809-1880, Perry, Matthew Calbraith, 1794-1858, Pickering, Charles, 1805-1878, Pope, John, 1822-1892, Presl, K. B. (Karel Bořiwoj), 1794-1852, Prestele, Joseph, 1796-1867, Pursh, Frederick, 1774-1820, Quincy, Josiah, 1772-1864, Rafinesque, C. S. (Constantine Samuel), 1783-1840, Reynolds, J. N. (Jeremiah N.), 1799-1858, Rich, William, 1800-1864, Richardson, John, Sir, 1787-1865, Riocreux, Alfred, 1820-1912, Rogers, Henry D. (Henry Darwin), 1808-1866, Ross, James Clark, Sir, 1800-1862, Rugel, Ferdinand, 1806-1879, Ruprecht, F. (Franz), Sartwell, H. P. (Henry Parker), 1792-1867, Scheele, Georg Heinrich Adolf, 1808-1864, Schleiden, M. J. (Matthias Jacob), 1804-1881, Seemann, Berthold, 1825-1871, Sewell, Thomas, 1786-1845, Shepard, Charles Upham, 1804-1886, Short, Charles Wilkins, 1794-1863, Shuttleworth, R. J. (Robert James), 1810-1874, Silliman, Benjamin, 1779-1864, Silliman, Benjamin, 1816-1885, Smith, John Augustine, 1782-1865, Spach, Édouard, 1801-1879, Sprague, Isaac, 1811-1895, Story, Joseph, 1779-1845, Sullivant, William Starling, 1803-1873, Taylor, Thomas, 1775-1848, Thurber, George, 1821-1890, Tommasini, Muzio Giuseppe Spirito de, 1794-1879, Trowbridge, John Foote, 1791-1872, Tuckerman, Edward, 1817-1886, Webster, John White, 1793-1850, Wendell, Cornelius, 1813-1870, Whipple, Amiel Weeks, 1817?-1863, Wilkes, Charles, 1798-1877, Wood, Alphonso, 1810-1881, Woolsey, Theodore Dwight, 1801-1889, Wright, Charles, 1811-1885, Wyman, Jeffries, 1814-1874, Xántus, János, 1825-1894, Zuccarini, J. G. (Joseph Gerhard), 1797-1848, American Association for the Advancement of Science, G. & W. Endicott (Firm), Harvard University, Lyceum of Natural History (New York, N.Y.), United States and Mexican Boundary Survey, United States Exploring Expedition (1838-1842), United States Pacific Railroad Expeditions and Surveys, Wiley & Putnam, Gray, Asa, 1810-1888 -- Correspondence, Gray, Asa, 1810-1888. North American Gramineae and Cyperaceae, Gray, Asa, 1810-1888. Botanical text-book, Gray, Asa, 1810-1888. Plantae Fendlerianae Novi-Mexicanae, Gray, Asa, 1810-1888. Genera florae Americae Boreali-Orientalis illustrata, Torrey, John, 1796-1873 -- Correspondence, Torrey, John, 1796-1873. Flora of the state of New York, Torrey, John, 1796-1873. Flora of North America, Torrey, John, 1796-1873. Plantæ frémontianæ, Beck, Lewis C. (Lewis Caleb), 1798-1853. Botany of the northern and middle states, Bory de Saint-Vincent (Jean Baptiste Geneviève Marcellin), 1778-1846, Candolle, Augustin Pyramus de, 1778-1841. Prodromus systematis naturalis regni vegetabilis, Carter, William, (Gardener), Darlington, William, 1782-1863. Reliquiae Baldwinianae, Draper, John William, 1811-1882. Treatise on the forces which produce the organization of plants, Duby, J. É. (Jean Étienne), 1798-1885, Eaton, Amos, 1776-1842. Manual of botany, for North America, Engelmann, George, 1809-1884. Plantae Lindheimerianae, Frémont, John Charles, 1813-1890, Jussieu, Adrien de, 1797-1853. Monographie des Malpighiacées, Presl, K. B. (Karel Bořiwoj), 1794-1852, Schleiden, M. J. (Matthias Jacob), 1804-1881. Beiträge zur anatomie der Cacteen, Spach, Édouard, 1801-1879, Wood, Alphonso, 1810-1881. Class-book of botany, Xántus, János, 1825-1894
- Collection
- nybgtorrey; biodiversity; NY_Botanical_Garden
- Contributor
- New York Botanical Garden, LuEsther T. Mertz Library
- Language
- English
- Volume
- 1848-1849
John Torrey Papers (PP), Archives, The New York Botanical Garden
Correspondence from Asa Gray to John Torrey, dated 1831-1871. Gray's early letters establish the pattern of his correspondence to Torrey: notice of books and specimens sent and received; news of friends and colleagues; updates, discussion, and questions regarding their numerous joint projects; accounts paid and received; a smattering of personal news; and affectionate regards to Torrey and his family ("Tell dear Herbert ... that I look at his picture every day"). In the 1830s Gray casts about for steady employment, toys with the idea of moving south, or traveling to Mexico. (There are no letters from the period 1837-1840, when Gray traveled to Europe, or 1863-1868.) Once Gray settles in Cambridge, Massachusetts, his letters become more frequent; as years pass and Torrey and Gray take on the task of multiple botanical government reports in addition to their Flora, they mature into businesslike missives full of details of the commissioning and production of drawings and plates, and the distasteful task of navigating the political world. Gray's particular blend of personal circumspection ("Conclusions found in hurly-burly are good for nothing") and professional combativeness is much in evidence, as is his protectiveness toward his friend, and those who cause Torrey grief, like Charles Wilkes ("a very dirty fellow") and President James Buchanan ("a gross outrage"), are soundly dismissed. Obsolete and unresolved plant and animal names mentioned include Aplopappus, Arum quinatum, Azalea, Barrattia, Calypso borealis, Camassia fraseri, Carex flexilis, Chaetospora, Chenopodium virginicum, Chiogenes, Cnicus benedictus, Coniferae, Decachaena, Dentaria diphylla, Erythraea, Fremontia, Gautiera procumbens, Geranium fremontii, Gerardia, Gnaphilium germanicum, Helianthus dowellianus, Malachodendron pentagynum, Maruta, Oakesia conradii, Obeone, Onoclea obtusilobata, Phalangium croceum, Poa eragrostis, Poa obtusa, Poa quinquefida, Populus graeca, Quadriala, Ragiopteris obtusilobata, Salpiglossis prostrata, Sarracenia heterophylla, Schweinitzia, Stewartia pentagyna, Streptanthus obtusifolius, Stokesia, Taxodium sempervirens, Taxus nucifera, Tetraclea, Triptocalyx, Tuckahoe, Vesicaria, and Zygodon (Owens)
Digitized under grant #PW-234827-16 from the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH)
Finding aid for the John Torrey papers available from the LuEsther T. Mertz Library, New York Botanical Garden and online
Researchers' notes in folder 1: "There are nearly [sic] 300 letters in this collection. They were loaned to Mrs. Gray [i.e. Jane Loring Gray] when she was editing Dr. Gray's letters and since then they have been preserved in the order in which she placed them. The pencilled dates are in Mrs. Gray's writing." "Letters of Dr. Asa Gray to Dr. John Torrey. In the order in which they were arranged by Mrs. Asa Gray. The signed (J.L.G.) pencil notes are hers. The unsigned ones are those of Mrs. Britton [i.e. Elizabeth Gertrude Knight Britton]."
7 (304
Correspondence from Asa Gray to John Torrey, dated 1831-1874. Gray's early letters establish the pattern of his correspondence to Torrey: notice of books and specimens sent and received; news of friends and colleagues; updates, discussion, and questions regarding their numerous joint projects; accounts paid and received; a smattering of personal news; and affectionate regards to Torrey and his family ("Tell dear Herbert ... that I look at his picture every day"). In the 1830s Gray casts about for steady employment, toys with the idea of moving south, or traveling to Mexico. (There are no letters from the period 1837-1840, when Gray traveled to Europe, or 1863-1868.) Once Gray settles in Cambridge, Massachusetts, his letters become more frequent; as years pass and Torrey and Gray take on the task of multiple botanical government reports in addition to their Flora, they mature into businesslike missives full of details of the commissioning and production of drawings and plates, and the distasteful task of navigating the political world. Gray's particular blend of personal circumspection ("Conclusions found in hurly-burly are good for nothing") and professional combativeness is much in evidence, as is his protectiveness toward his friend, and those who cause Torrey grief, like Charles Wilkes ("a very dirty fellow") and President James Buchanan ("a gross outrage"), are soundly dismissed. Obsolete and unresolved plant and animal names mentioned include Aplopappus, Arum quinatum, Azalea, Barrattia, Calypso borealis, Camassia fraseri, Carex flexilis, Chaetospora, Chenopodium virginicum, Chiogenes, Cnicus benedictus, Coniferae, Decachaena, Dentaria diphylla, Erythraea, Fremontia, Gautiera procumbens, Geranium fremontii, Gerardia, Gnaphilium germanicum, Helianthus dowellianus, Malachodendron pentagynum, Maruta, Oakesia conradii, Obeone, Onoclea obtusilobata, Phalangium croceum, Poa eragrostis, Poa obtusa, Poa quinquefida, Populus graeca, Quadriala, Ragiopteris obtusilobata, Salpiglossis prostrata, Sarracenia heterophylla, Schweinitzia, Stewartia pentagyna, Streptanthus obtusifolius, Stokesia, Taxodium sempervirens, Taxus nucifera, Tetraclea, Triptocalyx, Tuckahoe, Vesicaria, and Zygodon (Owens)
Correspondence from Asa Gray to John Torrey, dated 1831-1871. Gray's early letters establish the pattern of his correspondence to Torrey: notice of books and specimens sent and received; news of friends and colleagues; updates, discussion, and questions regarding their numerous joint projects; accounts paid and received; a smattering of personal news; and affectionate regards to Torrey and his family ("Tell dear Herbert ... that I look at his picture every day"). In the 1830s Gray casts about for steady employment, toys with the idea of moving south, or traveling to Mexico. (There are no letters from the period 1837-1840, when Gray traveled to Europe, or 1863-1868.) Once Gray settles in Cambridge, Massachusetts, his letters become more frequent; as years pass and Torrey and Gray take on the task of multiple botanical government reports in addition to their Flora, they mature into businesslike missives full of details of the commissioning and production of drawings and plates, and the distasteful task of navigating the political world. Gray's particular blend of personal circumspection ("Conclusions found in hurly-burly are good for nothing") and professional combativeness is much in evidence, as is his protectiveness toward his friend, and those who cause Torrey grief, like Charles Wilkes ("a very dirty fellow") and President James Buchanan ("a gross outrage"), are soundly dismissed. Obsolete and unresolved plant and animal names mentioned include Aplopappus, Arum quinatum, Azalea, Barrattia, Calypso borealis, Camassia fraseri, Carex flexilis, Chaetospora, Chenopodium virginicum, Chiogenes, Cnicus benedictus, Coniferae, Decachaena, Dentaria diphylla, Erythraea, Fremontia, Gautiera procumbens, Geranium fremontii, Gerardia, Gnaphilium germanicum, Helianthus dowellianus, Malachodendron pentagynum, Maruta, Oakesia conradii, Obeone, Onoclea obtusilobata, Phalangium croceum, Poa eragrostis, Poa obtusa, Poa quinquefida, Populus graeca, Quadriala, Ragiopteris obtusilobata, Salpiglossis prostrata, Sarracenia heterophylla, Schweinitzia, Stewartia pentagyna, Streptanthus obtusifolius, Stokesia, Taxodium sempervirens, Taxus nucifera, Tetraclea, Triptocalyx, Tuckahoe, Vesicaria, and Zygodon (Owens)
Digitized under grant #PW-234827-16 from the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH)
Finding aid for the John Torrey papers available from the LuEsther T. Mertz Library, New York Botanical Garden and online
Researchers' notes in folder 1: "There are nearly [sic] 300 letters in this collection. They were loaned to Mrs. Gray [i.e. Jane Loring Gray] when she was editing Dr. Gray's letters and since then they have been preserved in the order in which she placed them. The pencilled dates are in Mrs. Gray's writing." "Letters of Dr. Asa Gray to Dr. John Torrey. In the order in which they were arranged by Mrs. Asa Gray. The signed (J.L.G.) pencil notes are hers. The unsigned ones are those of Mrs. Britton [i.e. Elizabeth Gertrude Knight Britton]."
7 (304
Correspondence from Asa Gray to John Torrey, dated 1831-1874. Gray's early letters establish the pattern of his correspondence to Torrey: notice of books and specimens sent and received; news of friends and colleagues; updates, discussion, and questions regarding their numerous joint projects; accounts paid and received; a smattering of personal news; and affectionate regards to Torrey and his family ("Tell dear Herbert ... that I look at his picture every day"). In the 1830s Gray casts about for steady employment, toys with the idea of moving south, or traveling to Mexico. (There are no letters from the period 1837-1840, when Gray traveled to Europe, or 1863-1868.) Once Gray settles in Cambridge, Massachusetts, his letters become more frequent; as years pass and Torrey and Gray take on the task of multiple botanical government reports in addition to their Flora, they mature into businesslike missives full of details of the commissioning and production of drawings and plates, and the distasteful task of navigating the political world. Gray's particular blend of personal circumspection ("Conclusions found in hurly-burly are good for nothing") and professional combativeness is much in evidence, as is his protectiveness toward his friend, and those who cause Torrey grief, like Charles Wilkes ("a very dirty fellow") and President James Buchanan ("a gross outrage"), are soundly dismissed. Obsolete and unresolved plant and animal names mentioned include Aplopappus, Arum quinatum, Azalea, Barrattia, Calypso borealis, Camassia fraseri, Carex flexilis, Chaetospora, Chenopodium virginicum, Chiogenes, Cnicus benedictus, Coniferae, Decachaena, Dentaria diphylla, Erythraea, Fremontia, Gautiera procumbens, Geranium fremontii, Gerardia, Gnaphilium germanicum, Helianthus dowellianus, Malachodendron pentagynum, Maruta, Oakesia conradii, Obeone, Onoclea obtusilobata, Phalangium croceum, Poa eragrostis, Poa obtusa, Poa quinquefida, Populus graeca, Quadriala, Ragiopteris obtusilobata, Salpiglossis prostrata, Sarracenia heterophylla, Schweinitzia, Stewartia pentagyna, Streptanthus obtusifolius, Stokesia, Taxodium sempervirens, Taxus nucifera, Tetraclea, Triptocalyx, Tuckahoe, Vesicaria, and Zygodon (Owens)
- Abstract
- Correspondence from Asa Gray to John Torrey, dated 1831-1871. Gray's early letters establish the pattern of his correspondence to Torrey: notice of books and specimens sent and received; news of friends and colleagues; updates, discussion, and questions regarding their numerous joint projects; accounts paid and received; a smattering of personal news; and affectionate regards to Torrey and his family ('Tell dear Herbert ... that I look at his picture every day'). In the 1830s Gray casts about for steady employment, toys with the idea of moving south, or traveling to Mexico. (There are no letters from the period 1837-1840, when Gray traveled to Europe, or 1863-1868.) Once Gray settles in Cambridge, Massachusetts, his letters become more frequent; as years pass and Torrey and Gray take on the task of multiple botanical government reports in addition to their Flora, they mature into businesslike missives full of details of the commissioning and production of drawings and plates, and the distasteful task of navigating the political world. Gray's particular blend of personal circumspection ('Conclusions found in hurly-burly are good for nothing') and professional combativeness is much in evidence, as is his protectiveness toward his friend, and those who cause Torrey grief, like Charles Wilkes ('a very dirty fellow') and President James Buchanan ('a gross outrage'), are soundly dismissed. Obsolete and unresolved plant and animal names mentioned include Aplopappus, Arum quinatum, Azalea, Barrattia, Calypso borealis, Camassia fraseri, Carex flexilis, Chaetospora, Chenopodium virginicum, Chiogenes, Cnicus benedictus, Coniferae, Decachaena, Dentaria diphylla, Erythraea, Fremontia, Gautiera procumbens, Geranium fremontii, Gerardia, Gnaphilium germanicum, Helianthus dowellianus, Malachodendron pentagynum, Maruta, Oakesia conradii, Obeone, Onoclea obtusilobata, Phalangium croceum, Poa eragrostis, Poa obtusa, Poa quinquefida, Populus graeca, Quadriala, Ragiopteris obtusilobata, Salpiglossis prostrata, Sarracenia heterophylla, Schweinitzia, Stewartia pentagyna, Streptanthus obtusifolius, Stokesia, Taxodium sempervirens, Taxus nucifera, Tetraclea, Triptocalyx, Tuckahoe, Vesicaria, and Zygodon (Owens).
- Addeddate
- 2017-11-15 00:19:51
- Associated-names
- Britton, Elizabeth G. (Elizabeth Gertrude), 1858-1934; Gray, Jane Loring, 1821-1909
- Call number
- nybgb12092782_5
- Call-number
- nybgb12092782_5
- Foldoutcount
- 0
- Genre
- biography
- Identifier
- asagrayjohntorr00grayd
- Identifier-ark
- ark:/13960/t48q2c26q
- Identifier-bib
- nybgb12092782_5
- Ocr
- ABBYY FineReader 11.0 (Extended OCR)
- Pages
- 176
- Possible copyright status
- Public domain. The BHL considers that this work is no longer under copyright protection.
- Ppi
- 300
- Year
- 1848-1849
- Full catalog record
- MARCXML
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