Edit History
Royal Botanic Society of London (1839-1931)
Date Updated: 19 April 2013
Herbarium
Natural History Museum (BM)
Collection
Plant Collectors
Resource Type
Reference Sources
Contributor
Natural History Museum (BM)
Last name
Royal Botanic Society of London
Life Dates
1839 - 1931
Collecting Dates
1839 - 1850
Specification
Plant collector
Groups collected
Spermatophytes
Organisation(s)
BM
Countries
Europe: United Kingdom
Associate(s)
Marnock, R. (1800-1889)
Robinson, W. (1838-1935) (gardener)
Sowerby, J.B. (1855-1934) (secretary)
Sowerby, James de Carle (1787-1871) (founder)
Sowerby, W. (1827-1906) (secretary)
Robinson, W. (1838-1935) (gardener)
Sowerby, J.B. (1855-1934) (secretary)
Sowerby, James de Carle (1787-1871) (founder)
Sowerby, W. (1827-1906) (secretary)
Biography
English scientific society founded to promote 'Botany in all its branches, and its application to Medicine, Arts, and Manufacture, and also for the formation of extensive Botanical and Ornamental Gardens within the immediate vicinity of the metropolis'. It was established by royal charter granted to the Duke of Norfolk, the Duke of Richmond, the Earl of Albemarle, Lieut-Col. Rushbrooke, Philip Barnes and James de Carle Sowerby with Queen Victoria as Patron. Three generations of the Sowerby family were closely associated with the society and founder J. de C. Sowerby was secretary for 30 years.
Fellows of the society had the right to use the initials 'F.R.B.S.' after their names. The society had the lease of some 18 acres in Regent's Park for their garden created by landscape designer Robert Marnock. Marnock had had recently completed Sheffield Botanical Gardens for the Sheffield Botanical and Horticultural Society and was recommended by J.C. Loudon to become the first curator of the Regent's Park gardens (1840-1869). The gardens included a conservatory designed by Decimus Burton, a Botanic Museum and later opened a gardening school. Four horticultural exhibitions were held every year and became a fashionable part of the 'London scene', attracting many of the aristocracy. So succesful was the garden that attendance dropped sharply at the garden of the Horticultural Society of London at Chiswick and contributed to that society's considerable financial difficulties around 1850.
The society had a library and was responsible for a number of academic publications including Quarterly Record of the Royal Botanic Society of London (1880-1909), Botanical Journal (1910-1918) and Quarterly Summary and Meteorological Readings, Royal Botanic Society of London (1919-1930). Records of original acquisitions were published in the society journals. Today little remains of the original design of the society's botanical garden having suffered in the Second World War, and the restored area of the Regent's Park Inner Circle is now Queen Mary's Rose Garden.
Much of the original library is now held by the library of The Natural History Museum, including the diaries of James de Carle Sowerby. Many botanical specimens were acquired by BM (1932) after the demise of the organisation and can be identified by a slip label bearing the name of the society. The material includes British collections identified by the name of the society alone and other material, both British and foreign, from individually named collectors. Not to be confused with the Botanical Society of London, which later became the Botanical Society of the British Isles.
Fellows of the society had the right to use the initials 'F.R.B.S.' after their names. The society had the lease of some 18 acres in Regent's Park for their garden created by landscape designer Robert Marnock. Marnock had had recently completed Sheffield Botanical Gardens for the Sheffield Botanical and Horticultural Society and was recommended by J.C. Loudon to become the first curator of the Regent's Park gardens (1840-1869). The gardens included a conservatory designed by Decimus Burton, a Botanic Museum and later opened a gardening school. Four horticultural exhibitions were held every year and became a fashionable part of the 'London scene', attracting many of the aristocracy. So succesful was the garden that attendance dropped sharply at the garden of the Horticultural Society of London at Chiswick and contributed to that society's considerable financial difficulties around 1850.
The society had a library and was responsible for a number of academic publications including Quarterly Record of the Royal Botanic Society of London (1880-1909), Botanical Journal (1910-1918) and Quarterly Summary and Meteorological Readings, Royal Botanic Society of London (1919-1930). Records of original acquisitions were published in the society journals. Today little remains of the original design of the society's botanical garden having suffered in the Second World War, and the restored area of the Regent's Park Inner Circle is now Queen Mary's Rose Garden.
Much of the original library is now held by the library of The Natural History Museum, including the diaries of James de Carle Sowerby. Many botanical specimens were acquired by BM (1932) after the demise of the organisation and can be identified by a slip label bearing the name of the society. The material includes British collections identified by the name of the society alone and other material, both British and foreign, from individually named collectors. Not to be confused with the Botanical Society of London, which later became the Botanical Society of the British Isles.
Date Updated: 19 April 2013
Herbarium
Natural History Museum (BM)
Collection
Plant Collectors
Resource Type
Reference Sources
Contributor
Natural History Museum (BM)
Last name
Royal Botanic Society of London
Life Dates
1839 - 1931
Collecting Dates
1839 - 1850
Specification
Plant collector
Groups collected
Spermatophytes
Organisation(s)
BM
Countries
Europe: United Kingdom
Associate(s)
Marnock, R. (1800-1889)
Robinson, W. (1838-1935) (gardener)
Sowerby, J.B. (1855-1934) (secretary)
Sowerby, James de Carle (1787-1871) (founder)
Sowerby, W. (1827-1906) (secretary)
Robinson, W. (1838-1935) (gardener)
Sowerby, J.B. (1855-1934) (secretary)
Sowerby, James de Carle (1787-1871) (founder)
Sowerby, W. (1827-1906) (secretary)
Biography
English scientific society founded to promote 'Botany in all its branches, and its application to Medicine, Arts, and Manufacture, and also for the formation of extensive Botanical and Ornamental Gardens within the immediate vicinity of the metropolis'. It was established by royal charter granted to the Duke of Norfolk, the Duke of Richmond, the Earl of Albemarle, Lieut-Col. Rushbrooke, Philip Barnes and James de Carle Sowerby with Queen Victoria as Patron. Three generations of the Sowerby family were closely associated with the society and founder J. de C. Sowerby was secretary for 30 years.
Fellows of the society had the right to use the initials 'F.R.B.S.' after their names. The society had the lease of some 18 acres in Regent's Park for their garden created by landscape designer Robert Marnock. Marnock had had recently completed Sheffield Botanical Gardens for the Sheffield Botanical and Horticultural Society and was recommended by J.C. Loudon to become the first curator of the Regent's Park gardens (1840-1869). The gardens included a conservatory designed by Decimus Burton, a Botanic Museum and later opened a gardening school. Four horticultural exhibitions were held every year and became a fashionable part of the 'London scene', attracting many of the aristocracy. So succesful was the garden that attendance dropped sharply at the garden of the Horticultural Society of London at Chiswick and contributed to that society's considerable financial difficulties around 1850.
The society had a library and was responsible for a number of academic publications including Quarterly Record of the Royal Botanic Society of London (1880-1909), Botanical Journal (1910-1918) and Quarterly Summary and Meteorological Readings, Royal Botanic Society of London (1919-1930). Records of original acquisitions were published in the society journals. Today little remains of the original design of the society's botanical garden having suffered in the Second World War, and the restored area of the Regent's Park Inner Circle is now Queen Mary's Rose Garden.
Much of the original library is now held by the library of The Natural History Museum, including the diaries of James de Carle Sowerby. Many botanical specimens were acquired by BM (1932) after the demise of the organisation and can be identified by a slip label bearing the name of the society. The material includes British collections identified by the name of the society alone and other material, both British and foreign, from individually named collectors. Not to be confused with the Botanical Society of London, which later became the Botanical Society of the British Isles.
Fellows of the society had the right to use the initials 'F.R.B.S.' after their names. The society had the lease of some 18 acres in Regent's Park for their garden created by landscape designer Robert Marnock. Marnock had had recently completed Sheffield Botanical Gardens for the Sheffield Botanical and Horticultural Society and was recommended by J.C. Loudon to become the first curator of the Regent's Park gardens (1840-1869). The gardens included a conservatory designed by Decimus Burton, a Botanic Museum and later opened a gardening school. Four horticultural exhibitions were held every year and became a fashionable part of the 'London scene', attracting many of the aristocracy. So succesful was the garden that attendance dropped sharply at the garden of the Horticultural Society of London at Chiswick and contributed to that society's considerable financial difficulties around 1850.
The society had a library and was responsible for a number of academic publications including Quarterly Record of the Royal Botanic Society of London (1880-1909), Botanical Journal (1910-1918) and Quarterly Summary and Meteorological Readings, Royal Botanic Society of London (1919-1930). Records of original acquisitions were published in the society journals. Today little remains of the original design of the society's botanical garden having suffered in the Second World War, and the restored area of the Regent's Park Inner Circle is now Queen Mary's Rose Garden.
Much of the original library is now held by the library of The Natural History Museum, including the diaries of James de Carle Sowerby. Many botanical specimens were acquired by BM (1932) after the demise of the organisation and can be identified by a slip label bearing the name of the society. The material includes British collections identified by the name of the society alone and other material, both British and foreign, from individually named collectors. Not to be confused with the Botanical Society of London, which later became the Botanical Society of the British Isles.
╳
We're sorry. You don't appear to have permission to access the item.
Full access to these resources typically requires affiliation with a partnering organization. (For example, researchers are often granted access through their affiliation with a university library.)
If you have an institutional affiliation that provides you access, try logging in via your institution
Have access with an individual account? Login here
If you would like to learn more about access options or believe you received this message in error, please contact us.