Edit History
Wakefield, Elsie Maud (1886-1972)
Date Updated: 19 April 2013
Herbarium
Natural History Museum (BM)
Collection
Plant Collectors
Resource Type
Reference Sources
Contributor
Natural History Museum (BM)
First name(s)
Elsie Maud
Last name
Wakefield
Initials
E.M.
Life Dates
1886 - 1972
Collecting Dates
1910 - 1938
Specification
Plant collector
Groups collected
Fungi
Pteridophytes
Organisation(s)
BR, E, K
Countries
Southern Africa: South AfricaEurope: United KingdomNorth American region: United States
Associate(s)
Dennis, Richard William George (1910-) (co-author)
Massee, George Edward (1850-1917) (assistant)
Tubeuf, C. von (1862-1941) (student)
Massee, George Edward (1850-1917) (assistant)
Tubeuf, C. von (1862-1941) (student)
Biography
Mycologist at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, from 1910 to 1951. Elsie Wakefield was a specialist in Basidiomycetes and an international authority on Aphyllophorales. Born in Birmingham, Wakefield studied at Oxford and Munich before being recruited by Kew to work in the herbarium. She also spent six months in Barbados as a mycologist for the West Indies Imperial Department of Agriculture (1920-1921), taking the opportunity to study tropical fungi and diseases of tropical crops. She served in the position of deputy keeper during her last five years at Kew and was active in mycological nomenclatural issues. Wakefield was recognised for her dedication to the fungal collections at the Kew herbarium and their meticulous organisation, rather than published research, of which she produced relatively little. "A lifetime of care and maintenance and the solving of other people’s problems of identification sounds much less exciting and memorable than one of phylogenetic speculation and taxonomic innovation but it is of much more permanent value to science," as her one-time assistant, R.W.G. Dennis put it.
Sources:
A.A. Bullock, 1951, "Miss Elsie M. Wakefield, OBE, MA, FLS", Taxon, 1(7): 113-114
R.W.G. Dennis, 1972, "Miss E.M. Wakefield", Journal of the Kew Guild, 9(77): 163-164.
Sources:
A.A. Bullock, 1951, "Miss Elsie M. Wakefield, OBE, MA, FLS", Taxon, 1(7): 113-114
R.W.G. Dennis, 1972, "Miss E.M. Wakefield", Journal of the Kew Guild, 9(77): 163-164.
References
Brummitt, R.K. & Powell, C.E., Authors Pl. Names (1992): 688;
Date Updated: 19 April 2013
Herbarium
Natural History Museum (BM)
Collection
Plant Collectors
Resource Type
Reference Sources
Contributor
Natural History Museum (BM)
First name(s)
Elsie Maud
Last name
Wakefield
Initials
E.M.
Life Dates
1886 - 1972
Collecting Dates
1910 - 1938
Specification
Plant collector
Groups collected
Fungi
Pteridophytes
Organisation(s)
BR, E, K
Countries
Southern Africa: South AfricaEurope: United KingdomNorth American region: United States
Associate(s)
Dennis, Richard William George (1910-) (co-author)
Massee, George Edward (1850-1917) (assistant)
Tubeuf, C. von (1862-1941) (student)
Massee, George Edward (1850-1917) (assistant)
Tubeuf, C. von (1862-1941) (student)
Biography
Mycologist at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, from 1910 to 1951. Elsie Wakefield was a specialist in Basidiomycetes and an international authority on Aphyllophorales. Born in Birmingham, Wakefield studied at Oxford and Munich before being recruited by Kew to work in the herbarium. She also spent six months in Barbados as a mycologist for the West Indies Imperial Department of Agriculture (1920-1921), taking the opportunity to study tropical fungi and diseases of tropical crops. She served in the position of deputy keeper during her last five years at Kew and was active in mycological nomenclatural issues. Wakefield was recognised for her dedication to the fungal collections at the Kew herbarium and their meticulous organisation, rather than published research, of which she produced relatively little. "A lifetime of care and maintenance and the solving of other people’s problems of identification sounds much less exciting and memorable than one of phylogenetic speculation and taxonomic innovation but it is of much more permanent value to science," as her one-time assistant, R.W.G. Dennis put it.
Sources:
A.A. Bullock, 1951, "Miss Elsie M. Wakefield, OBE, MA, FLS", Taxon, 1(7): 113-114
R.W.G. Dennis, 1972, "Miss E.M. Wakefield", Journal of the Kew Guild, 9(77): 163-164.
Sources:
A.A. Bullock, 1951, "Miss Elsie M. Wakefield, OBE, MA, FLS", Taxon, 1(7): 113-114
R.W.G. Dennis, 1972, "Miss E.M. Wakefield", Journal of the Kew Guild, 9(77): 163-164.
References
Brummitt, R.K. & Powell, C.E., Authors Pl. Names (1992): 688;
Date Updated: 19 April 2013
Herbarium
Natural History Museum (BM)
Collection
Plant Collectors
Resource Type
Reference Sources
Contributor
Natural History Museum (BM)
First name(s)
Elsie Maud
Last name
Wakefield
Initials
E.M.
Life Dates
1886 - 1972
Collecting Dates
1910 - 1938
Specification
Plant collector
Groups collected
Fungi
Pteridophytes
Organisation(s)
BR, E, K
Countries
Southern Africa: South AfricaEurope: United KingdomNorth American region: United States
Associate(s)
Dennis, Richard William George (1910-) (co-author)
Massee, George Edward (1850-1917) (assistant)
Tubeuf, C. von (1862-1941) (student)
Massee, George Edward (1850-1917) (assistant)
Tubeuf, C. von (1862-1941) (student)
Biography
Mycologist at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, from 1910 to 1951. Elsie Wakefield was a specialist in Basidiomycetes and an international authority on Aphyllophorales. Born in Birmingham, Wakefield studied at Oxford and Munich before being recruited by Kew to work in the herbarium. She also spent six months in Barbados as a mycologist for the West Indies Imperial Department of Agriculture (1920-1921), taking the opportunity to study tropical fungi and diseases of tropical crops. She served in the position of deputy keeper during her last five years at Kew and was active in mycological nomenclatural issues. Wakefield was recognised for her dedication to the fungal collections at the Kew herbarium and their meticulous organisation, rather than published research, of which she produced relatively little. "A lifetime of care and maintenance and the solving of other people’s problems of identification sounds much less exciting and memorable than one of phylogenetic speculation and taxonomic innovation but it is of much more permanent value to science," as her one-time assistant, R.W.G. Dennis put it.
Sources:
A.A. Bullock, 1951, "Miss Elsie M. Wakefield, OBE, MA, FLS", Taxon, 1(7): 113-114
R.W.G. Dennis, 1972, "Miss E.M. Wakefield", Journal of the Kew Guild, 9(77): 163-164.
Sources:
A.A. Bullock, 1951, "Miss Elsie M. Wakefield, OBE, MA, FLS", Taxon, 1(7): 113-114
R.W.G. Dennis, 1972, "Miss E.M. Wakefield", Journal of the Kew Guild, 9(77): 163-164.
References
Brummitt, R.K. & Powell, C.E., Authors Pl. Names (1992): 688;
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