William Ick
William Ick (1800 – 23 September 1844) was an English botanist and geologist.[1] In 1837 he won a prize offered by the United Committee of the Birmingham Botanical and Warwickshire Floral Societies for the best herbarium, known as a hortus siccus, of native plants collected within 10 miles of Birmingham within a one-year period from 1 August 1836.[2]
Early life
Ick was born at Newport in Shropshire in 1800. In 1803 his family moved to Birmingham. His father was a dealer in skins and hides.[3]
Education
He was awarded a Ph.D. in Geology from a German university.[2]
Career
Ick was a tutor at a school near Warwick before becoming the first curator of the Birmingham Philosophical Institute.[2]
Contribution to botany
In 1835 the United Committee of the Birmingham Botanical and Warwickshire Floral Societies offered a prize for the best herbarium of native plants collected within a 10 miles radius of central Birmingham between 1 August 1836 and 1 August 1837.[2] Ick won this prize with a herbarium of around 320 pressed plants and published his findings.[4] In 1948 Ick's herbarium was presented to Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery after being lost for over a century[2]
References
- ↑ Kent, D H; Allen, D E (1984). British and Irish Herbaria. London.
- 1 2 3 4 5 Cadbury, Dorothy (1971). A Computer-Mapped Flora of Warwickshire.
- ↑ Maskew, Roger (2014). The Flora of Worcestershire.
- ↑ Ick, William (1836). "Remarkable plants found growing in the vicinity of Birmingham in the year 1836". The Analyst; a quarterly journal of science, literature, natural history and the fine arts 6: 20–28.