Henry William Ravenel

Henry William Ravenel
Born May 19, 1814
Berkeley County, South Carolina
Died July 17, 1887 (1887-07-18) (aged 73)
Aiken, South Carolina
Occupation Planter, botanist

Henry William Ravenel (May 19, 1814 July 17, 1887) was an American planter and botanist. He studied fungi and cryptogams in South Carolina, discovering a large number of new species. The genus Ravenelia is named after him, along with many of the species he discovered.

Biography

Early life

Henry William Ravenel was born on May 19, 1814 on the Pooshee Plantation in Berkeley County, South Carolina. The plantation had been in his family since before 1716. It now lies beneath the waters of Lake Moultrie, which was created in 1939. The nearest existing place is Bonneau.[1]

He attended the nearby Pineville Academy and graduated in 1832 from South Carolina College, now the University of South Carolina, where he was a member of the Clariosophic Society.

Career

He inherited the Pooshee Plantation from his father. He was also a regular diarist.

He made a critical study of the phaenogams (phanerogams?) of South Carolina, was botanist of the government commission to Texas in 1869 and was agricultural editor of the Weekly News and Courier. The genus Ravenelia of the Uredineae is named in his honor. He was credited with being the only American after the Rev. Moses A. Curtis, who knew specifically the fungi of the United States. The University of North Carolina gave him the degree of LL.D. in 1886.[2]

Death

He died on July 17, 1887 in Aiken, South Carolina.

Works

Secondary source

References


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