John Jeffrey (botanist)

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John Jeffrey (November 14, 1826 - 1854) was a Scottish botanist and plant-hunter active in the United States.

Jeffrey was born in Forneth, Parish of Clunie, west of Blairgowrie and Rattray in east Perthshire, Scotland. While working as a gardener for Edinburgh's Royal Botanic Garden, he was appointed by a Scottish group known as the Oregon Association (established 1849) to travel to North America. There he would collect seeds and continue the efforts of botanist David Douglas (1799-1834).

Jeffrey arrived at Hudson Bay in August 1850 and traveled more than 1200 miles (1930 km) overland to reach the Columbia River. He then spent the next four years exploring Washington, Oregon, and California, sending his specimens back to Scotland. In 1854 he disappeared while traveling from San Diego across the Colorado Desert. Despite attempts to find him, he was never seen again.

At the time, Jeffrey was criticized for poor results but his discoveries, particularly of conifers, were significant. The Jeffrey Pine (Pinus jeffreyi), which he discovered near California's Mount Shasta in 1852, and the perennial Penstemon jeffreyanus were named in his honor.

[edit] References

  • Coville, Frederick V., "The Itinerary of John Jeffrey, An Early Botanical Explorer of Western North America", in Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington, March 23, 1897. Vol. 11, pp. 57-60.
  • Harvey, A. G., "John Jeffrey: Botanical Explorer", in The Siskiyou Pioneer in Folklore, Fact and Fiction and Yearbook, Siskiyou County Historical Society. 1947. pp. 17-19, 39.
  • Woods, P. and J., "The Oregon Expedition 1850-1854: John Jeffrey and his Conifers", Acta Horticulturae 615: IV International Conifer Conference.