Dawson Turner

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Portrait of Turner, c. 1816

Dawson Turner FRS FSA (18 October 1775 21 June 1858)[1] was an English banker, botanist and antiquary. He specialized in the botany of cryptogams and was the father-in-law of the botanist William Jackson Hooker and of the historian Francis Palgrave.

Print made by: Hannah Sarah Brightwen, After: John Philip Davis. British Museum

Turner was the son of James Turner, head of the Gurney and Turner's Yarmouth Bank[2] and Elizabeth Cotman, the only daughter of the mayor of Yarmouth, John Cotman. He was educated at North Walsham Grammar School (now Paston College), Norfolk and at Barton Bendish as a pupil of the botanist Robert Forby. He then went to Pembroke College, Cambridge, where the Master was his uncle Rev. Joseph Turner. He however left without a degree due to his father's terminal illness. In 1796, he joined his father's bank.[3]

After becoming a banker, he took a more intensive interest in botany in leisure time, collecting specimens in the field. In 1794, Turner offered to help James Sowerby with specimens. Turner published a number of books and collaborated with other botanists. In December 1802, he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society.[4] In 1816, he was elected a foreign member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences.[3]

Through his first wife Mary, he met Captain George Manby, amateur artist, inventor and barrack-master of Yarmouth. They corresponded frequently over the next 50 years.[5]

By 1820, his interest in botany had been replaced by an interest in antiquities. He and his children were taught drawing by renowned Norfolk artist John Sell Cotman who became a good friend. They travelled to Normandy together and collaborated on a book, Architectural Antiquities of Normandy, published in 1822, with Cotman providing the etchings.[6] Another friend was George Borrow the novelist who gifted Turner a letter in 1842 from Antonio Salazar, a Gypsy of Cordova.[7]

Turner died in 1858 and is buried in Brompton Cemetery, London.[3]

Bibliography

Among the published works of Dawson Turner are:[8]

  • Synopsis of British Fuci 1802
  • Muscologia Hibernicae Spicilegium (Irish Moss Ferns) 1804
  • Botanist's Guide through England and Wales with Weston Dillwyn 1805
  • Annals of Botany - nine articles 1800-1808
  • Account of a Tour of Normandy 1820

Family

References

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