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William Brackenridge

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Fields
  
botany

Name
  
William Brackenridge


Influences
  
Asa Gray

Influenced by
  
Asa Gray

William Brackenridge httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Residence
  
Edinburgh Berlin Philadelphia Washington, DC

Institutions
  
Gardener to Patrick Neill, Secretary of the Caledonian Horticultural Society, Edinburgh Student under Christoph Friedrich Otto, Director of the Botanical Garden in Berlin United States Exploring Expedition

Died
  
1893, Balti, Maryland, United States

Books
  
Cryptogamia, Filices, Lycopodiaceae and Hydropterides

Author abbrev. (botany)
  
Brackenr. or Brack.

Known for
  
Darlingtonia californica

William Dunlop Brackenridge (1810–1893) was a Scottish nurseryman and botanist.

Contents

Brackenridge emigrated to Philadelphia in 1837, where he was employed by Robert Buist, nurseryman. He was appointed horticulturalist, then assistant botanist, for the United States Exploring Expedition from 1838-1842. Originally, the well-known botanist Asa Gray was to be the chief botanist, and William Rich, a Washington, DC socialite and son of an ambassador, was politically appointed as his assistant. However, Gray never went on the expedition due to taking an academic job, and Rich was appointed botanist, so they needed a new assistant. Rich was reportedly of little use on the trip, and Brackenridge did almost all the collecting and serious botany work.

Brackenridge was assigned to the U.S. Ship Vincennes. In 1839, he collected plants in the Sydney and Hunter River districts of New South Wales, Australia. From 1841-1842, the ships explored the Oregon and California coasts, with trips inland. After returning, he continued working with the collected plants and wrote the fern report for the expedition, included in the overall botanical report written by Asa Gray. After 1855, he lived in Baltimore and worked as a nurseryman and landscape architect. Near Mount Shasta, he discovered the California Pitcher Plant, Darlingtonia californica, one of the noted successes of the expedition. John Torrey chose the genus name to honor his friend, Pennsylvania botanist William Darlington.

Brackenridge Passage in Puget Sound is named for him.

Reports of the day indicate that Brackenridge was a hardy, strapping six-footer. He and his wife Isobel were Presbyterians. They had at least four children: Agnes (1846), Robert Buist (1847), William D. (1850), and Jane Henderson Brackenridge (1854).

Plants named for W. D. Brackenridge

  • The plant genus Brackenridgea A. Gray, in the Ochnaceae (Fiji and Australia)
  • The tree fern Cyathea brackenridgei Mett. (Cyatheaceae)
  • Plants named by W. D. Brackenridge

    (list not inclusive)

  • Diclidopteris Brack. (genus)
  • Diellia Brack. (genus; now included in Asplenium L.)
  • Onychium densum Brack.: now Aspidotis densa (Brack.) Lellinger
  • Antrophyum subfalcatum Brack.
  • Cyrtogonium palustre Brack.: now Bolbitis palustris (Brack.) Hennipman
  • Sitolobium samoense Brack.: now Dennstaedtia samoensis ( Brack.) T.Moore
  • Gymnogramma pilosa Brack.: now Coniogramme pilosa (Brack.) Hieron.
  • Blechnum coriaceum (Brack.) Brownlie
  • Blechnum vittatum Brack.
  • Polypodium sarmentosum Brack.: now Adenophorus sarmentosus ( Brack. ) K.Wilson
  • Goniopteris costata Brack.: now Pneumatopteris costata (Brack.) Holtt.
  • Lastrea attenuata Brack.: now Plesioneuron attenuatum (Brack.) Holtt.
  • Goniopteris glandulifera Brack.: now Pneumatopteris glandulifera (Brack.) Holtt.
  • Elaphoglossum intermedium Brack.
  • Oleandra hirta Brack.
  • Works by W. D. Brackenridge

  • Brackenridge, William Dunlop. United States Exploring Edition Report, Volume XVI - Botany - Filices. 1854.
  • Brackenridge, William Dunlop. United States Exploring Edition Report, Volume XVI - Botany - Filices: Atlas. 1856.
  • References

    William Brackenridge Wikipedia