To Ralph Tate   17 March 1889

17/3/89

 

Let me assure you, dear Professor Tate, that I appreciate most highly the honor of your connecting my name now also with conchology,1 and that I also most gratefully recognize the sentiments, which induced this dedication. Quite with admiration I have glanced over your list of the plants from the two rich regions, recently visited by you, and I am further charmed by the splendid manner, in which you at once turn all these observations to account for the geologic history of Australia! Indeed you are the only one, who possesses within himself the united knowledge of three branches of science sufficiently, to generalize effectually on the past history of the Australian Continent in all respects, you also only having with these comprehensive views gone personally over wide tracts of Australia with grand facilities now existing.

The Melb. meeting of the Austr. Assoc.2 has been definitely fixed for Jan 1890. I hope, this will give you the opportunity of seeing the Austral. Alps also This year the railway will be finished to Bright,3 from whence (at a drive of a few hours) elevations of 6000 feet can be reached. I have recommended to the executive Committee, that an effort be made, to induce the Government, to fix at that height some tents, so that the members of the Assoc. and their Ladies can have shelter and refreshments there amidst some of the grandest alpine scenery of the world! This tour would be made in the second week of the meeting The party can then return late in the afternoon to Bright, the whole tour taking up three days from Melbourne Of course under the tent-shelter a camp can be kept up for a few days, so that professional scientists, like yourself, can make excursions to the not very distant elevations of 7000', which first were scaled in 1854 (by myself). According to the rules of the Assoc. only Delegates of the former meetings can be members of the executive council. Thus I have not a seat on it, and have had very little influence on the choice4 of the Presidents Vice-Presidents and Secretaries of the sections, which seems however to be a happy one, altho' I should have liked you to have been in a very prominent position. But you are sure, to be President, when the Assoc. meets in Adelaide,5 and then something can be done for you in London also.6

Ever regardfully your

Ferd. von Mueller

 

I am trying to bring a new edition of the Census out in 1889.7 Ceratophylleae will then be placed near Ranunculaceae; — Thymeleae next to Rosaceae, Viniferae near Araliaceae &c How many distinct creations and migrations of living vegetation of Australia can be discovered according to your views?

 

Araliaceae

Ceratophylleae

Rosaceae

Thymeleae

Viniferae

 
Semicassis muelleri, in recognition of M’s work on fossil plants; see Tate (1889), p. 167.
Australasian Association for the Advancement of Science.
Vic.
Thus ... choice is bracketed in the margin and marked Private! by M.
Tate was indeed President when the Association first met in Adelaide, in September 1893.
Tate had been an unsuccessful candidate for election to the Royal Society of London in 1884-6, but was never proposed subsequently.
B89.13.12.

Please cite as “FVM-89-03-17,” in Correspondence of Ferdinand von Mueller, edited by R.W. Home, Thomas A. Darragh, A.M. Lucas, Sara Maroske, D.M. Sinkora, J.H. Voigt and Monika Wells accessed on 28 April 2024, https://epsilon.ac.uk/view/vonmueller/letters/89-03-17