Joseph Banks was the first [British] man of Scientific education to undertake a voyage of discovery and is noted for having established a new paradigm for ship-based natural history research.
This book is a dense read, apparently being a precise of Bank's correspondence and diaries. It is great if you are interested in the minutiae of his life, but it is difficult to extract the bigger picture of his accomplishments. The author seems overly concerned with various critics of Banks and his actions.
Although Banks was an important man of science, he generated little written material. The first of his journals to appear in print – the Endeavour record – was published 125 years after the Endeavour’s return; both his Newfoundland and Iceland journals remained unpublished until the 1970s and that covering his travels in the Netherlands until 2005. Of the eight journals he kept, some still remain unpublished to this day.
While Bank's attended universities, he never attained a degree. When his father died, Bank's was left a large estate and thereby had the funds to support both travel and scientific endeavors. His studies were largely in natural history. One of his references was "The Herball" by John Gerard, published in 1636 edition and and containing over 800 species of plants and more than 2,500 woodcuts.
His first voyage was to Newfoundland and Labrador where he published the first scientific descriptions of the plants and animals, including the Great Auk which was subsequently driven to extinction.
Banks was a member of Cook's first expedition, the primary objective of which was to observe the transit of Venus. Cook's objectives were fulfilled: the hypothesized position of the Southern Continent had been disproved, the transit of Venus had been observed, and Cook had surveyed and filled in many blanks on the chart of the South Seas, and as expected of a naval officer on a voyage of discovery, had claimed great tracts of land for the king.
Banks was the first scientist of any consequence to voyage and explore in the Southern Hemisphere. The number of plants collected was about 3000, 110 of which are new genera, and 1300 new species which were never seen or heard of before in Europe. Sydney Parkinson had drawn 1300 or 1400 prints of the collected plants, each with a flower, a leaf, and a portion of the stalk, coloured by the same hand. Banks created his own herbarium based on the plants collected, which was referenced by scientists of the time and was eventually bequeathed to the Natural History Museum.
Banks ability with language was demonstrated when he quickly learned something of the Mā’ohi language, acquiring a vocabulary of more than 750 ordinary words and phrases. Given the local name ‘Tapane.’ (Cook was ‘Toole.’ and Solander ‘Torano’), Banks was the de facto fulcrum of communication between the two peoples. He wrote a English–Tahitian dictionary after five months in Tahiti.
Upon his return homw, Banks lobbied to be included on the second expedition. Unfortunately, the time available did not allow publication of his voyages or his collections, much to the disappointment of many including Linnaeus.
Due to his various demands, Banks withdrew from Cook's second expedition, instead going to Iceland. There he described the flora - including Iceland purslane (Koenigia islandica) - and fauna and made a collection of Icelandic books and manuscripts. He became a long time friend of the Icelandic people, later assisting them politically.
Banks is famously associated with the Royal Botanic Gardens at Kew. His goal was to establish the garden’s supremacy both nationally and internationally by means of an unrivalled living botanical collection. Banks dispatched Kew-trained gardeners to various destinations around the world specifically in order to collect plants. When Banks set sail in the Endeavour in 1768 a mere 600 taxa were cultivated there; the early 1800's over 11,000 taxa were growing, dominated by species from Australia, South America, Siberia and China.
Kew became a place of botanical pilgrimage for gardeners wishing to see the latest introductions, and was instrumental in driving the nation’s obsession with gardening novelty. Banks was generally happy to share Kew’s hard-acquired bounty – just so long as Kew received the new plants first and only when the particular species had been propagated sufficiently to be no longer rare. Nurserymen in particular begged for seeds and cuttings with which to feed wealthy gardeners’s insatiable desire for foreign species, and the turnaround could be impressively swift. For example, in 1794, only six years after the first seeds of the crimson bottlebrush (then Metrosideros citrina and now Callistemon citrinus) arrived at Kew from Australia, The Botanical Magazine reported that young plants were available in ‘most of the Nurseries near town.
A consummate colonialist, Banks perceived exploration, colonisation and commerce as complementary; and cognizant as he was to the economic value of certain commodity plants, he was adamant that they should contribute to the nation’s commercial life and finances. He worked with forty-nine ‘Botanical Departments and Establishments' in India, and the Colonies. Economic plants – tobacco, banana, sugar, indigo, coffee, teak, sago – were routinely transferred between colonies and to new colonies, later cochineal, tea and hemp breadfruit, more easily grown than plantain. Sugar was collected at Tahiti and transferred to Jamaica and from there to the other sugar-producing islands in the West Indies, where this particular strain was shown to be advantageous because its thicker, stronger canes were more resilient to wind damage. Utilising Kew, Banks demonstrated how the practice of transferring between colonies those plant taxa that yielded commodities could make a substantial contribution to the empire’s plantations and nation’s finances.
Banks has been called the ‘Father of Australia’. When England was searching for a location for remote penal colony, Banks recommended Botany Bay in Australia. He aided George Suttor who eventually became the first successful market gardener in Australia, largely due to fruit trees and vines provided by Banks. Banks was also involved in the development of the fine wool industry, largely by John Macarthur, based on Merino sheep obtained in Spain.
Banks was president of the Royal Society for an unbroken forty-one and a half years, where he worked toward the Baconian ideal of a strong partnership between government and science. However, he was apolitical and resolutely rejected the frequent overtures to tempt him to stand for Parliament.
The perennially curious Banks became an acknowledged expert on a wide range of subjects including agriculture, botanic gardens, canals, cartography, coinage, colonisation, currency, drainage, earthquakes, economic botany, exploration, farming, leather-tanning, Merino sheep, plant pathology and even the plucking of geese.
Banks did much research in his own gardens, including the cultivation of the American cranberry, publishing the results in 1812 - well before commercial production in the Americas in the 1840's. his invention of the orchid basket as a means of cultivating epiphytic orchids.
When a famine occurred in 1795 as a result of a failed grain harvest, Banks championed the use of the potato. He was the first to recognize that the blight that was attacking grain crops was present on barberries (Berberis vulgaris) and transferred to the grain.
Banks arranged the embankment, drainage, navigation and survey of ten thousand acres of his own wetlands, making it productive farmland which he then sold.
Banks was an instrumental and formative player in the significant and pioneering survey which in due course culminated in the first accurate cartographical record of the United Kingdom.
In 1799 he became heavily involved with founding the Royal Institution of Great Britain, or as it is more familiarly known, the Royal Institution. He believed its activities should advance, promote and disseminate useful scientific knowledge but disillusionment set in when he realised that other members favoured fashionable popularity and introduced lectures on non-scientific subjects such as art, history, literature and music.
Banks believed that the advancement of science requires not only minds of genius to make breakthrough discoveries, but also those with the vision to recognise where advances would be advantageous. "A man is never so well employed, as when he is Laboring for the advantage of the Public; without the Expectation, the hope or Even a wish to Derive advantage of any kind, from the Result of his Exertions."