Fielding-Druce Herbarium


Fielding-Druce Herbarium, part of the Department of Biology, University of Oxford, located on South Parks Road, in Oxford, England. A herbarium is a collection of herbarium sheets, with a dried pressed specimen of the botanic species, whether they were bound into a book by one dedicated individual, or have been amassed into huge collections. They are like plant ID cards. As paper was expensive, multiple specimens are normally mounted on one sheet.
The 2 cores of the Herbarium collection, are bequeathed to the University from Henry Fielding containing a non-British and Irish collection. It also covers most taxonomic groups and geographical areas. It is particularly rich in nineteenth century material from the Americas and south and south east Asia. The other core a British and Irish collection from George Claridge Druce in 1932, this is particularly rich in specimens from Oxfordshire, Buckinghamshire and Berkshire. Other collections were added later.

History

It was established in 1621, they include the oldest herbarium in the United Kingdom and the fourth oldest herbarium in the world. Collectively, they hold approximately 1,000,000 botanical specimens from across all taxonomic groups and geographic regions. Four of the more significant pre-19th century herbaria are those of Robert Morison, William Sherard, Johannus Dillenius and John Sibthorp. The earliest collected plant specimens dates back to around 1606.

The collection

It includes collections from;

Former Staff

  • Frank White,. In 1971, White was established as the Curator of the Oxford University herbaria, the Forest Herbarium and the Fielding-Druce Herbarium. These herbaria collections former the majority of his own research and while some of his curatorial duties were neglected in the process. He achieved a great deal of work.