William Henry Pearson

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Born(1849-07-22)July 22, 1849
Pendleton, Lancashire, UKGBI
Died19 April 1923(1923-04-19) (aged 73)
Withington, Manchester, UKGBI
KnownforThe Hepaticae of the British Isles: Being Figures and Descriptions of All Known British Species (1902)
Spouse
Annie Pearson
(m. 1882)
William Henry Pearson
Born(1849-07-22)July 22, 1849
Pendleton, Lancashire, UKGBI
Died19 April 1923(1923-04-19) (aged 73)
Withington, Manchester, UKGBI
Known forThe Hepaticae of the British Isles: Being Figures and Descriptions of All Known British Species (1902)
Spouse
Annie Pearson
(m. 1882)
Children4 including,
Lucy Wertheim
Scientific career
Fields
Author abbrev. (botany)Pearson

William Henry Pearson (1849–1923) was an English botanist and bryologist specialising in liverworts, known for The Hepaticae of the British Isles: Being Figures and Descriptions of All Known British Species (1902).[1][2][3][4]

William Henry Pearson was born on 22 July 1849 in Pendleton (present-day, Greater Manchester) to Thomas Pearson, an assistant manager at a printers, and Mary Hannah Pearson.[1][4] Pearson was the eldest of six siblings.[4]

After secondary education, William Henry Pearson was employed by a Manchester company of yarn agents. After some years, he went into business for himself in the yarn trade. When he was in his late thirties and early forties, he lived in Eccles, Greater Manchester. There he became a friend of Benjamin Carrington and studied botany in some of the classes taught by Carrington. Richard Spruce encouraged Pearson to specialise in bryology.[1] With Benjamin Carrington he issued an exsiccata series under the title Hepaticae Britannicae exsiccatae (1878–1890).[5]

Pearson studied not only the British hepatics, but also those of Australia, New Zealand, and Canada. He published articles in the Journal of Botany, The Naturalist, and The Rucksack Club Journal. He was a member of several natural history societies (including the Rucksack Club) and the Manchester Museum Committee.[1]

He joined the Moss Exchange Club in 1908, and was elected an honorary member in the same year. He was elected vice-President of the newly formed British Bryological Society in 1923. His herbarium is at the Natural History Museum in London, with additional plants at Bolton Museum. 100 of his Welsh liverworts were sold to the National Museum of Wales at Cardiff in 1913. Manchester Museum has bryophytes that he collected from 1878 onwards.[4]

Personal life

Selected publications

References

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