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BAILEY, FREDERICK MANSON (1827-1915), botanist,
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son of John Bailey, nurseryman and seedsman, was born in London on 8 March
1827. His father went with his family to Australia in 1838 and arrived at
Adelaide on 22 March 1839. He was appointed colonial botanist soon afterwards,
and was asked to form a botanic garden. Later he resigned, began farming, and
subsequently started a plant nursery at Adelaide In these ventures he was
assisted by his son, F. M. Bailey, who in 1858 went to New Zealand and took up
land in the Hutt Valley. In 1861 he went to Sydney and in the same year started
a seedsman's business in Brisbane. For some years he was collecting in various
parts of Queensland, and he also contributed articles to the newspapers on plant
life. In 1874 he published a Handbook to the Ferns of Queensland, and in
the following year was made botanist to the board appointed to inquire into the
diseases of live stock and plants. In connexion with this, Bailey in 1879
brought out An Illustrated Monograph of the Grasses of Queensland. He was
afterwards put in charge of the botanical section of the Queensland museum, in
1881 was made colonial botanist of Queensland, and held this position until his
death. He published in 1881 The Fern World of Australia, and in 1883
appeared A Synopsis of the Queensland Flora, a work of nearly 900 pages
to which supplementary volumes were added in later years. This work was
superseded by The Queensland Flora, published in six volumes between 1899
and 1902 with an index published three years later. In the meantime there had
been published in 1897 A Companion for the Queensland Student of Plant Life
and Botany Abridged, a revised reissue of two earlier pamphlets. Among other
works of Bailey was A Catalogue of the Indigenous and Naturalised Plants of
Queensland published in 1890. This was expanded into a Comprehensive
Catalogue of Queensland Plants, Both Indigenous and Naturalised, which
appeared with many illustrations in 1912. Bailey died on 25 June 1915, working
practically to the end in spite of his 88 years. He married in 1856 Anna Maria,
daughter of the Rev. T. Waite. A son, J. F. Bailey, who survived him was
successively director of the Brisbane and Adelaide botanic gardens. Bailey was
awarded the Clarke medal of the Royal Society of New South Wales in 1902, and
was created C.M.G. in 1911. His name has been attached to about 50 species of
plants by fellow botanists, of which perhaps the best known is Acacia
baileyana. A list of his writings will be found in the Proceedings of the
Royal Society of Queensland for 1916, p. 7.
Bailey was a kindly man of great industry who did very valuable work on the
Queensland flora. He was devoted to his work; on one occasion when his office
was dispensed with during a financial depression, he continued to cheerfully
carry on, as he felt the work must go on whether a salary were provided or not.
There was a public protest and he was soon reinstated. He was very interested in
the economic side of botany, and his advice was much sought by fruit-growers and
others. He takes high rank among Australian botanists.
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