Edward James Salisbury

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Sir
Edward James Salisbury
Born(1886-04-16)16 April 1886
Limbrick Hall,
CBE (1939)
  • Knighted (1946)
  • Hon. LL.D. Edin. (1950)
  • Hon. LL.D. Glas. (1956)
  • SpouseMabel Elwin-Coles (1917–1956)
    Parent(s)James Wright Salisbury (businessman)
    Elizabeth Salisbury née Stimpson
    RelativesFrank O. Salisbury (cousin)
    Awards (1953)

    Sir Edward James Salisbury

    East London College. He returned to University College London as a senior lecturer, from 1924 as a reader in plant ecology and from 1929 as Quain Professor of botany
    .

    Salisbury was director of the

    Second World War
    .

    He was elected a

    The Veitch Memorial Medal of the Royal Horticultural Society in acknowledgement of his book The Living Garden (1935), which was enormously popular.[4] In 1939, he received the Commander of the Order of the British Empire and in 1946 he was knighted
    .

    At first, his research was focussed on forest ecology, particularly in his native Hertfordshire. Later, he pioneered investigations of seed size and reproductive output of plants in relation to habitat. He also investigated the ecology of garden weeds and of dune plants.

    He was elected President of the Sussex Wildlife Trust in January 1962, where he remained in office until April 1967.

    Popular science books

    • The Living Garden. 1936
    • Flowers of the Woods. 1946

    Scientific books

    • Durand, Théophile; Benjamin Daydon Jackson; William Turner Thiselton-Dyer; David Prain; Arthur William Hill; Edward James Salisbury (1908). Index Kewensis plantarum phanerogamarum: Supplementum Tertium Nomina et Synonyma Omnium Generum et Specierum AB Initio Anni MDCCCCI Usque AD Finem Anni MDCCCCV Complectens. Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew.
    • Salisbury, E.J. (1935). The Living garden, or the how and why of garden life. London: George Bell & Sons. Unknown ID: N000193912.
    • Salisbury, E.J. (1942). The Reproductive Capacity of Plants. London: George Bell & Sons.
    • Salisbury, E.J. (1952). Downs and Dunes: their plant life and its environment. London: George Bell & Sons.
    • Salisbury, E.J. (1961). Weeds and Aliens. The New Naturalists. Vol. 43. London: Collins.
    • Salisbury, E.J. (1962). The Biology of Garden Weeds. The Royal Horticultural Society.

    Selected scientific papers

    References

    Academic offices
    Preceded by Fullerian Professor of Physiology
    1947–1953
    Succeeded by