Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 April 2018
The British Museum, based in Montague House, Bloomsbury, opened its doors on 15 January 1759, as the world's first state-owned public museum. The Museum's collection mostly originated from Sir Hans Sloane (1660–1753), whose vast holdings were purchased by Parliament shortly after his death. The largest component of this collection was objects of natural history, including a herbarium made up of 265 bound volumes, many of which were classified according to the late seventeenth-century system of John Ray (1627–1705). The 1750s saw the emergence of Linnaean binomial nomenclature, following the publication of Carl Linnaeus' Species Plantarum (1753) and Systema Naturae (1758). In order to adopt this new system for their collections, the Trustees of the British Museum chose to employ the Swedish naturalist and former student of Linnaeus, Daniel Solander (1733–1782) to reclassify the collection. Solander was ordered to devise a new system for classifying and cataloguing Sloane's natural history collection, which would allow both Linnaeans and those who followed earlier systems to access it. Solander's work was essential for allowing the British Museum to realize its aim of becoming a public centre of learning, adapting the collection to reflect the diversity of classificatory practices which were existent by the 1760s. This task engaged Solander until 1768, when he received an offer from Joseph Banks (1743–1820) to accompany him on HMS Endeavour to the Pacific.
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7 See Hans Sloane, A Voyage to the Islands Madera Barbados, Nieves, St Christophers and Jamaica, with the Natural History of the Herbs and Trees, Four Footed Beasts, Fishes, Birds Insects, Reptiles, &c. of the last of those Islands, London: printed for the author, 1707–1725, Preface.
8 Hereafter this work will be referred to as A Voyage to Jamaica. Sloane, op. cit. (7); Rose, op. cit. (6), p. 23.
9 See Charmantier, Isabelle, ‘Notebooks, files and slips: Carl Linnaeus and his disciples at work’, in Hodacs, Hanna, Nyberg, Kenneth and van Damme, Stéphane (eds.), Linnaeus, Natural History and the Circulation of Knowledge, Oxford: Voltaire Foundation, 2018, pp. 25–56Google Scholar, 25.
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45 BMCATM, op. cit. (6), vol. 1, f. 78.
46 British Museum, Central Archive, plans by Fitzroy and Brazier, uncatalogued.
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56 Acts and Votes of Parliament relating to the British Museum, with the Statutes and Rules Thereof, and the Succession of Trustees and Officers, London: G. Woodfall, 1824, p. 5.
57 Delbourgo, op. cit. (2), p. 320.
58 Delbourgo, op. cit. (2), p. 320.
59 Anne Goldgar, ‘The British Museum and the virtual representation of culture in the eighteenth century’, Albion (2000) 32, pp. 195–231, 203.
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83 Joppien, Rüdiger and Chambers, Neil, ‘The scholarly library and collections of knowledge of Sir Joseph Banks’, in Mandelbrote, Giles and Taylor, Barry (eds.), Libraries within the Library: The Origins of the British Library's Printed Collections, London: British Library, 2009, pp. 222–243Google Scholar, 226.
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86 Banks's early bookplate in the front of this volume shows that he purchased it before he set out on the Endeavour in 1768. See Carter, Harold B., Sir Joseph Banks (1743–1820): A Guide to Biographical and Bibliographical Sources, London: St Paul's Bibliographies in association with the British Museum (Natural History), 1987Google Scholar, Plates 2–4.
87 The annotated location codes in Sloane's copy of A Voyage to Jamaica are in the hand of Sloane himself.
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89 Sloane, op. cit. (7), p. 107; ‘Manuscript descriptions of Plants, written on slips of paper and systematically arranged, the Phanerogams and Vascular Cryptogams in accordance with Wildenow's edition of Linné’s “Species Plantarum,” the Cellular Cryptogams by Richard's edition of that work: the slips, now bound in 24 volumes, were originally kept in small Solander Cases, and designed to form a complete catalogue of the species of Plants then known’, NHM, London, Botany Manuscripts, MSS BANKS COLL SOL. Hereafter referred to as Manuscript Slip Catalogue, vol. XVIII, f. 167.
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92 Solander, Daniel, ‘An Account of the Gardenia: In a Letter to Philip Carteret Webb, Esq; F.R.S. From Daniel C. Solander’, Philosophical Transactions (1762) 52, pp. 654–661Google Scholar, 659.
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104 Solander, BL Add. MS 45874, f. v2.
105 Letter from Daniel Solander to William Watson, 26 January 1763, BMCAOP, op. cit. (39), f. 176.
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110 Daniel Solander to the Trustees of the British Museum, 29 June 1765, BMCAOP, op. cit. (39), f. 211.
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116 Gunther, op. cit. (74), p. 40.
117 ‘Descriptions of plants from various parts of the world’, Daniel Solander and Hermann Spöring, MSS BANKS COLL SOL, NHM, London.
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122 NHM, London, HCR, Sloane Herbarium, H.S. 3: 40, Table 106, Figure 2.
123 Jarvis, Spencer and Huxley, op. cit. (20), p. 139; H.S. 3: 40, op. cit. (96).
124 See Spary, Emma C., ‘Codes of passion: natural history specimens as a polite language in late 18th-century France’, in Bödeker, Hans Erich, Reill, Peter Hanns and Schlumbohm, Jürgen (eds.), Sonderdruck aus Wissenschaft als kulturelle Praxis, 1750–1900, Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Puprecht, 1999, pp. 114–116Google Scholar; Terrall, Mary, Catching Nature in the Act: Réaumur and the Practice of Natural History in the Eighteenth Century, Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 2014, p. 114Google Scholar.
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128 This type of referencing was used by Solander in the zoological sections of the Manuscript Slip Catalogue.
129 Linnaeus, op. cit. (32), p. 1405.
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134 Gascoigne, op. cit. (14), pp. 105–106.
135 Dandy, op. cit. (23), p. 205; Marshall, op. cit. (112), pp. 8–9.
136 Sloane, op. cit. (7), vil. 1, p. 74; Linnaeus, op. cit. (32).
137 H.S. 1: 64, op. cit. (96); NHM, London, HCR, Sloane Herbarium, H.S. 1: 64, p. 74; Linnaeus, op. cit. (32), p. 719.
138 Rose, op. cit. (6), pp. 25–26.
139 Terrall, op. cit. (124), p. 160; for more on the authority added to a specimen by a label see Jim Endersby, Imperial Nature: Joseph Hooker and the Practices of Victorian Science, Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 2008, pp. 138–143.
140 Sloane, op. cit. (7), p. 74.
141 Later users of this collection included figures such as Olaf Swartz (1760–1818), who conducted extensive research on Sloane's collection from 1786 to 1787.
142 Solander, BL Add MS 45, 874, f. 2.
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149 After examining the entirety of Sloane's entomological collection, it is now apparent that many of Solander's labels appear to have been removed during the early nineteenth century and replaced with names which relate to more recent taxonomic literature, possibly by Charles Koenig, keeper of the natural history collections from 1813 to 1851.
150 Caroli Linnaeus, Systema Naturae, Stockholm: Laurentii Salvii, 1758, p. 421.
151 Daniel Solander, ‘Manuscript descriptions of Animals, written on slips and systematically arranged in accordance with Linné’s “Systema Naturæ … Edito duodecima reformata”: the slips, now bound in 27 volumes were originally kept in small Solander Cases, and designed to form a complete catalogue of the species of Animals then known’, vol. III, Coleoptera, f. 73. NHM, London.
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154 This was also the case in botanic gardens; see Koerner, op. cit. (90), p. 119.
155 See, McOuat, op. cit. (130).
156 Daniel Solander in a Report to the Trustees of the British Museum, 24 June 1768, BMCAOP, op. cit. (39), f. 225.