To J. S. Henslow 28 October [1845]
Down Bromley Kent
Oct 28th.
My dear Henslow
I have to thank you for several printed notices about the Potatoes &c &c—1 What a painfully interesting subject it is; I have just returned home, & have looked over my potatoes & find the crop small, a good many having rotted in the ground, but the rest well.— I am drying sand today in the oven to store with the greatest care in baskets my seed-potatoes.—2 I think it a very good suggestion of yours, about gentlefolk not buying potatoes, & I will follow it for one. The poor people, wherever I have been, seem to be in great alarm: my labourer here3 has not above a few weeks consumption & those not sound; as he complains to me, it is a dreadful addition to the evil, flour being so dear: sometime ago this same man told me, that when flour rose, his family consumed 15d pence more of his 12s earnings per week in this one article. This would be nearly as bad, as if for one of us, we had to pay an additional 50 or 100£ for our bread: how soon in that case, would those infamous corn-laws be swept away.4
At Shrewsbury we tryed the potato flour; how very curiously soon the starch separates; it really is quite a pretty experiment.5
I have been taking a little tour, primarily to see a farm, which I have purchased in Lincolnshire as an investment (& on which I have told my agent to arrange allotments for every labourer) & then I went & saw York & visited the Dean of Manchester, & had some hours hybrid talk.— I then visited Mr Waterton at Walton Hall, & was exceedingly amused with my visit, & with the man; he is the strangest mixture of extreme kindness, harshness & bigotry, that ever I saw.— Finally I visited Chatsworth, with which I was, like a child, transported with delight.— Have you ever seen it? Really the great Hot house, & especially the water part, is more wonderfully like tropical nature, than I could have conceived possible.— Art beats nature altogether there.6
I have been most sincerely grieved at Hooker’s disappointment at Edinburgh: I cannot but think he will make a great Botanist; it is admirable what a stock of general & accurate knowledge, he appears to have on all such subjects, as geographical range &c &c.—
We are all flourishing here, with the exception of my wearifull stomach.— I hope Mrs. Henslow is better: pray remember me very kindly to her.
Ever my dear Henslow | Yours truly | C. Darwin
Footnotes
Bibliography
Barnes, Donald Grove. 1930. A history of the English corn laws from 1600–1846. London: George Routledge.
Jenyns, Leonard. 1862. Memoir of the Rev. John Stevens Henslow, late rector of Hitcham, and professor of botany in the University of Cambridge. London: John Van Voorst.
Prideaux, J. 1845. Potatoes: storing and preserving. Gardeners’ Chronicle and Agricultural Gazette, no. 39 (27 September): 655–6.
Salaman, Redcliffe Nathan. 1985. The history and social influence of the potato. Revised edition by J. G. Hawkes. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Summary
Comments on potato disease and its effects on the poor.
Describes visit to his Lincolnshire farm,
to York where he discussed hybrids with the Dean of Manchester [William Herbert],
his meeting with Charles Waterton, and his delight with Chatsworth.
Disappointed at Hooker’s failure to receive the Edinburgh chair; believes JDH will make a great botanist.
Letter details
- Letter no.
- DCP-LETT-921
- From
- Charles Robert Darwin
- To
- John Stevens Henslow
- Sent from
- Down
- Source of text
- Smithsonian Libraries and Archives (Dibner Library of the History of Science and Technology MSS 405 A. Gift of the Burndy Library)
- Physical description
- ALS 6pp
Please cite as
Darwin Correspondence Project, “Letter no. 921,” accessed on 26 September 2022, https://www.darwinproject.ac.uk/letter/?docId=letters/DCP-LETT-921.xml
Also published in The Correspondence of Charles Darwin, vol. 3