William Cattley (1788 – 8 August 1835) was a British merchant and horticulturist. He was significantly involved with the trade between Britain and Russia, including the importation of grain (generically called "corn") to England. He also collected, and had others collect on his behalf, plants from locations throughout the world.[1] He was particularly fond of orchids.[2][3]
Cattley was born in Garlickhythe ('garlic dock'), City of London, to a large merchant family. Many of Cattley's factors were members of his extended family, for example his cousin John Prescott headed up the firm's offices in St. Petersburg from which he ran the Russian side of the trade. Prescott was an enthusiastic collector of plants, and forwarded large numbers back to England for Cattley.[3] In 1818 Cattley was unpacking a shipment that he had received from Brazil. Among the various materials he found un-preposessing tendrils which might be an orchid, so he nurtured it back to health and it turned out to be the beautiful orchid, which John Lindley named in Cattley's honour as Cattleya labiata (the "corsage orchid").[4][5] The year previously William Swainson had discovered the orchid in the wild in the Brazilian state of Pernambuco and dispatched a specimen along with other plants to Cattley via the Glasgow Botanic Gardens.[5][6]
To help with his collection Cattley had hired John Lindley to draw, describe and catalog the novel plants in his garden at Barnet. Cattley paid for the publication of Lindley's monograph on digitalis, Digitalium Monographia, and later for Lindley’s Collectanea Botanica (1821) a catalogue of Cattley’s plant collection.[7] However, after 1821 due to financial reverses, Cattley was no longer able to pay Lindley a salary.[3][8]
William Cattley died at his home, "Cattley Close", Wood Street, in Barnet on 8 August 1835.[9] A blue plaque has been placed on the house which says: William Cattley, Botanist, 1788-1835, lived in this house.[10]
^Veitch, James; et al. (1887). "Orchid Amateurs of the Past". A Manual of Orchidaceous Plants Cultivated Under Glass in Great Britain, Volume 1. Chelsea, London: Veitch & Sons. p. 128. OCLC 490946137.
^Veitch 1887, p. 146
^ abcLankester Botanical Garden (2010). "Biographies" (PDF). Lankesteriana. 10 (2/3): 183–206, page 186. Archived (PDF) from the original on 23 May 2014.
^Holway, Tatiana (2013). The Flower of Empire: An Amazonian Water Lily, The Quest to Make it Bloom, and the World it Created. Oxford, England: Oxford University Press. p. 85. ISBN 978-0-19-537389-9.
^ abBechelli, Jeremy. "About Cattleyas…". Genesee Region Orchid Society. Archived from the original on 24 May 2014.
^Milligan, Brian (2005). "Fact or Fiction". Orchid Societies Council of Victoria. Archived from the original on 24 May 2014.
^Stearn, William Thomas (1999). "The life, times and achievements of John Lindley (1799-1865)". In Stearn, William Thomas (ed.). John Lindley, 1799-1865 : gardener, botanist and pioneer orchidologist. Woodbridge, Suffolk, England: Antique Collectors' Club, in association with the Royal Horticultural Society. pp. 15–72, pages 19 &, 20. ISBN 978-1-85149-296-1.
^Holway 2013, p. 86
^"Deaths: London and its vicinity". The Gentleman's Magazine. 158: 331. 1835.
^"Community Focus Trail: Wood Street (Chipping Barnet)". Culture 24. Archived from the original on 24 May 2014.
WilliamCattley (1788 – 8 August 1835) was a British merchant and horticulturist. He was significantly involved with the trade between Britain and Russia...
(myrtle) family. The species is named in honour of English horticulturist WilliamCattley. Its genus name Psidium comes from the Latin psidion, or "armlet."...
Lindley after horticulturalist WilliamCattley. Cattley obtained a specimen of then unnamed Cattleya labiata from William Swainson who had discovered the...
Finchley in c.1830) Harry Beck – designer of the original Tube map Sir William Shee, the first Roman Catholic judge to sit in England and Wales since...
few months later. One of Banks’ friends, a wealthy merchant called WilliamCattley, paid Lindley to draw and describe new plants in his garden at Barnet...
based on a drawing by Lady Ackland. The genus was named in honour of WilliamCattley, a prominent British merchant and horticulturist. Cattleya aclandiae...
(1799-1865) Ferdinand Bauer (1760-1826) WilliamCattley (1788-1835) 1821–23 Philadelphia A Flora of North America William Paul Crillon Barton (1786–1856) 1821–24...
curiosity that makes women so formidable DESCENDANTS CHART FOR THOMAS CATTLEY OF CLAPHAM (from Legacy) 2) at members.iinet.net.au "Fifth Generation"...
Heroes of Faith. Bridge-Logos. ISBN 978-0-88270-934-5. Foxe, John (1838). Cattley, Stephen Reed (ed.). The Acts and Monuments of John Foxe: A New and Complete...
Mary (London: William Pickering, 1831), pp. clxv-clxvi. Richard Grafton, Chronicle at Large, vol. 2 (London, 1809), p. 566. Stephen Cattley & George Townsend...
Vol. 4. London: Villon Society. p. 107. OCLC 4476645. Foxe, John (1563). Cattley, Stephen Reed (ed.). The Acts and Monuments of John Foxe. Vol. V (1838 ed...
Age of Henry the VIII. Croom Helm. ISBN 0709908644. Foxe, John (1838). Cattley, S. R. (ed.). The Acts and Monuments of John Foxe. Vol. V. Fraser, Antonia...
2019. Foxe, John (1837). "The Condemnation of Master George Wisehart". In Cattley, Stephen Reed (ed.). The acts and monuments of John Foxe: a new and complete...
the Wayback Machine Description of John Frith's death in Foxe, Townsend, Cattley (1838), p. 15 Detailed description of Servetus' death at Kurth (2002) Out...
antiquarian and author of legal treatises. Charles Robert Cattley, (1817–1855), son of Robert Cattley of St Petersburg, Russia, diplomatist and intelligence...
Carmichael William Carter (1871–1874) : W. J. Carter George Carver (1907) : G. J. Carver Arthur Cattley (1882–1884) : A. C. Cattley Stephen Cattley (1879–1883) :...
and treason: the Tudor court, 1547-1558 (Longman, 2004), p. 217: Stephen Cattley & George Townsend, The Acts and Monuments of John Foxe, 8 (London, 1839)...
brother), Blanca Catalina and Leocadia Fernanda. Her father was Stephen Cattley Tennant (1800–1848), a merchant whose family came from Yorkshire, northern...