Record

CodePX291
Dates1743-1820
Person NameBanks; Sir; Joseph (1743-1820); 1st Baronet; Naturalist
SurnameBanks
ForenamesJoseph
PreTitleSir
Title1st Baronet
EpithetNaturalist
ActivitySir Joseph Banks, FRS (February 13, 1743 - June 19, 1820) was the English naturalist and botanist on Cook's first great voyage (1768-1771) and some 75 species bear Banks' name. He is credited with the introduction to the West of eucalyptus, acacia, mimosa, and the genus named after him, Banksia.

Born in London to the wealthy William and Sarah (Bates) Banks, Joseph Banks was at Eton with Constantine John Phipps. He acquired a passion for botany while at Oxford University in the early 1760s; it was an exciting time for the field. In the decades following the revolution sparked by Linnaeus, and after inheriting his father's fortune, Banks set himself up as a full-time botanist. He soon established his name by publishing the first Linnean descriptions of the plants and animals of Newfoundland and Labrador.

He was promptly appointed to a joint Royal Navy/Royal Society scientific expedition to the south Pacific Ocean on HMS Endeavour, 1768- 1771. This was the first of James Cook's voyages of discovery into that region.

This voyage went to Brazil and other parts of South America, Tahiti (where the transit of Venus was observed, the primary purpose of the mission), New Zealand, and finally to the east coast of Australia where Cook mapped the coastline and made landfall at Botany Bay near present-day Sydney and at Cooktown in Queensland, where they spent almost 7 weeks ashore while their ship was repaired after foundering on the Great Barrier Reef. While here, Joseph Banks and Daniel Solander made the first major collection of Australian flora, describing many species new to science.

While in Brazil, Banks made the first scientific description of a now common garden plant, bougainvillea (named after Cook's French counterpart, Louis-Antoine de Bougainville). Upon his return to England he was elected to be a fellow of the Royal Society and later served as their president from 1778-1820.

Before he left England, he had become a Freemason and is thus held to be the first Freemason known to have been in New Zealand and Australia.

It was the time in Australia which was to lead to Banks' second great passion, however, the British colonization of that continent. He was to be the greatest proponent of settlement in New South Wales, as is hinted by its early colloquial name: Botany Bay. The identification may have been even closer, as the name "Banksia" was proposed for the region by Linnaeus. In the end, a genus of Proteaceae was named in his honour as Banksia.

Upon his return home he left the British Isles only once more, on a trip to Iceland. The 1772 Iceland trip was taken on the Sir Lawrence along with the Swedish botanist Daniel Solander.

He was made a baronet in 1781, three years after being elected president of the Royal Society. The latter position he would hold for a record forty-two years, and from it he could direct the course of British science for the first part of the 19th century. He was directly responsible for several famous voyages, including that of George Vancouver to the Pacific Northwest of North America, and William Bligh's voyages to transplant breadfruit from the South Pacific to the Caribbean Sea islands; the latter brought about the famous mutiny on HMAV Bounty. The redoubtable Bligh was also appointed governor of New South Wales on Banks' recommendation, which in turn led to the Rum Rebellion of 1808.

During much of this time, Banks was an informal adviser to King George III of the United Kingdom on the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, a position that was formalized in 1797. Banks dispatched explorers and botanists to many parts of the world; through these efforts Kew Gardens became arguably the pre-eminent botanical gardens in the world, with many species being introduced to Europe through them.

Finally, Banks was a major financial supporter of William Smith in his decade-long efforts to create a geological map of England, the first geological map of an entire country in history.

Banks' impact on history was as a systematizer par excellence, very much in step with his times. He was also a major supporter of the internationalist nature of science, both being actively involved in keeping open the lines of communication with continental scientists during the Napoleonic Wars and in introducing the British people to the wonders of the wider world. As befits someone with such a role in opening the South Pacific to Europe, his name dots the map of the region: Banks Peninsula on South Island, New Zealand, and Banks Island in modern-day Vanuatu.

On his death he gave his collections to form a private museum which became the British Museum.
Relationships1779 married Dorothea Hugessen
Catalogue
RefNoTitle
DF/PH/3/1/245Gallery Photograph Album 1: Statue of Joseph Banks on Botany landing
DF/PUB/509/266Banks' Florilegium: 28 coloured greetings cards (DG660-712)
DF/LIB/601/61British Museum: Banksian Library
DF/LIB/601/48Carter H B: correspondence on Sir Joseph Banks
DF/LIB/601/49Carter H B: correspondence on Sir Joseph Banks
DF/MIN/10/3/4Copy of a report on the Charles Hatchett collection of minerals by Sir Joseph Banks, Charles F Greville and Philip Rashleigh, taken by Lazarus Fletcher
DF/LIB/601/39Letters of Sir Joseph Banks offered for sale: correspondence and papers
DF/LIB/601/77Carter, H B: acquisition of copies of Sir Joseph Banks's letters and journals
DF/MIN/10/2/2Joseph Rampasse collection of rocks from Corsica offered but not purchased by the Museum
DF/PH/3/5/3/1Botany Gallery: Entrance to gallery
DF/PH/3/2/3/2Benjamin Stone Photograph Album: Statue of Joseph Banks on Botany landing
DF/ADM/1004/47Banksian Library: correspondence on its transfer from Bloomsbury to South Kensington
DF/PH/1/7/4Botany Department: Sir Joseph Banks' desk in the Keeper of Botany's Office
DF/ADM/1004/46Sir Joseph Banks: correspondence on a cabinet designed by Robert Adam for Banks
DF/BOT/440/1/13Britten, James: Notes on Sir Joseph Banks and Daniel Solander relating to New Zealand
Add to My Items