William Yarrell
William Yarrell | |
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A History of British Birds, 1843 | |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Zoology, ornithology |
William Yarrell (3 June 1784 – 1 September 1856) was an English
Yarrell is best known as the author of
Early life
Yarrell was born in Duke Street, St James's in London, to Francis Yarrell and his wife Sarah (née Blane). His father and uncle ran a newspaper agency and bookshop.[1] He studied at Dr Nicholson's school in Ealing.[1] His father died in 1794 and the Yarrells moved the short distance to Great Ryder Street, where William lived the rest of his life.[3] In 1802 he became a clerk with the Herries, Farquhar and Co. bank. In 1803 he and his cousin, Edward Jones, joined his father's business.[4] He sometimes left the business in Jones's care, going into the countryside to fish and shoot.[1] He acquired the reputation of being the best shot and the best angler in London, soon becoming an expert naturalist. He sent many bird specimens to Thomas Bewick, who engraved them as woodcuts for his own book of British birds.[1]
Career
He joined the
Yarrell was one of the original members of the
Works
Yarrell's major works were
British Birds was first published "in thirty-seven parts of three sheets each, at intervals of two months; the first Part was issued in July 1837 and the last in May 1843."[9] The sheets were then collected into two volumes, with the addition of "many occurrences of rare birds and of some that were even new to Britain". The additional birds were listed and briefly described in the Preface and "the new subjects have been engraved on single leaves, so paged, that the bookbinder may insert these separate leaves among the birds of the genus to which each respectively belongs."[9]
British Birds was illustrated with drawings by
At the time of its release, Yarrell's Birds was considered the best work on the subject both scientifically and artistically, as noted by Prof. Alfred Newton in his "Prospectus" to the 1871 edition,[2] from which Yarrell's introduction was removed along with the names of contributing artists under Thompson's direction.[10] Both Yarrell's books were so popular that their publisher John van Voorst stated that sales exceeded £4,000.[4] Thomas R. Forbes, in his biographical paper on Yarrell, writes that "All [editions of Birds] are outstanding because of the author's clear, narrative style, accuracy, careful scholarship and unassuming charm."[3]
Yarrell's last paper, "On the Influence of the Sexual Organ in Modifying External Character" (1856), described an experiment that disproved the belief that when a stag lacks a healthy testicle, it will fail to grow an antler on that side of the body.[3]
Legacy
Yarrell died during a trip to Great Yarmouth and a memorial was erected in St James's Church, Piccadilly. He was buried in the churchyard of St Mary's in Bayford, Hertfordshire, with his chosen epitaph "He was the survivor of twelve brothers and sisters, who, with their father and mother, are all placed close to this spot" together with William Wordsworth's lines "first and last, The earliest summon'd and the longest spared — Are here deposited."[4]
Yarrell has a number of species named after him, including the birds yellow-faced siskin (Carduelis yarrellii) and Chilean woodstar (Eulidia yarrellii) and the fish Yarrell's blenny (Chirolophis ascanii). The British subspecies of the white wagtail, the pied wagtail (Motacilla alba yarrellii), was also named for him.
Publications
- Observations on the Tracheae of Birds, with Descriptions and Representations of several not hitherto figured. — Linn. Trans. 1827, 15. 378.
- Description of a species of Tringa, killed in Cambridgeshire, new to England and Europe. — Linn. Trans. 16. 109.
- On the Organs of Voice in Birds. — Linn. Trans. 16. 305.
- On a new species of Wild Swan, taken in England, and hitherto confounded with the Hooper. — Linn. Trans. 16. 445.
- Description of the Organs of Voice in a new species of Wild Swan (Cygnus buccinator, Richards.). — Linn. Trans. 17.
- Descriptions of Three British Species of Freshwater Fishes, belonging to the genus Leuciscus of Klein. — Linn. Trans. 17. 5.
- On the Habits and Structure of the Great Bustard (Otis tarda of Linnaeus). — Linn. Trans. 21. 155.
- Notice of an Interwoven Mass of Filaments of Conferva fluviatilis of extraordinary size. — Proc. Linn. Soc. 1. 65.
- On the Influence of the Sexual Organ in modifying External Character. — Journ. Linn. Soc. 1857, 1. 76–82.
- On the Growth of the Salmon in Freshwater, with six coloured illustrations of the fish of the natural size. Oblong Folio. van Voorst, London, 1839.
References
- ^ a b c d e f Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900. .
- ^ a b William Yarrell. History of British Birds (PDF). First edition: 1843. Second edition: 1845. Third edition: 1856. Vol. I. Original publisher: John van Voorst (digitized by University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign in 2011). Retrieved 19 January 2013. Vol. II.
- ^ JSTOR 985256.
- ^ a b c d e f g Anon. (1858) [Obituary] Journal of the Proceedings of the Linnean Society 2:33–36 scanned
- ^ Bettany, G. T. (1887). "Couch, Jonathan (1789–1870), naturalist, by G. T. Bettany". Dictionary of National Biography Vol. XXII. Smith, Elder & Co.
- ^ Audubon, John James (1835). Ornithological Biography, Or an Account of the Habits of the Birds of the United States of America, Volume 3. Edinburgh: Adam & Charles Black. pp. vii.
- ^ "Review of A History of British Fishes by William Yarrell". The Quarterly Review. 58: 334–370. April 1837.
- ^ "A history of British birds (1885)". Attribution. Ebook and Texts Archive. 1885. Retrieved 19 January 2013.
- ^ a b c Yarrell, William (1843). A History of British Birds: Preface. London: John Van Voorst. pp. v–xii.
- ^ a b "The Literary Gazette and Journal of the Belles Lettres, Arts, Sciences, &c". Original from Princeton University. Digitized 2 February 2010. W.A. Scripps. 1837. Retrieved 21 January 2013.
- ^ "Colour Prejudice and William Yarrell". News from the Independent Booksellers' Network. Isabelline Books. Retrieved 21 January 2013.
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