William Ormston Backhouse

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Born1885 (1885)
Died1962 (aged 7677)
William Ormston Backhouse
Born1885 (1885)
Died1962 (aged 7677)
Scientific career
FieldsBotany, agricultural and genetics

William Ormston Backhouse (1885 – 1962) was an English agriculturalist and geneticist, and a member of the Backhouse family of County Durham, several generations of which were influential in the development of horticulture.

William Ormston Backhouse worked for a period of fíve years at the Cambridge Plant Breeding Station and the John Innes Institute, but left Britain to become a geneticist for the Argentine Government. He established a number of wheat-breeding stations in Argentina, then moved to Patagonia, where he reared pigs, grew apples and other fruits and started intensive honey production.[1] He returned to England and bred red-trumpet daffodils at Sutton Court.

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI