Gulielma Lister

Gulielma Lister (28 October 1860 – 18 May 1949) was a British botanist and mycologist, and was considered an international authority on Mycetozoa.[1][2]

Gulielma Lister
Giulielma Lister, 1905
Born28 October 1860
Leytonstone, Essex, UK
Died18 May 1949(1949-05-18) (aged 88)
Known forAuthority on Mycetozoa
Scientific career
FieldsMycology
InstitutionsBritish Museum (NH)
Author abbrev. (botany)G.Lister

Life

Lister was born in Sycamore House, 881 High Road, Leytonstone (East London) on 28 October 1860, one of seven children of Susanna Tindall and Arthur Lister.[3][4] She was born into a prominent Quaker family, being the granddaughter of J.J. Lister and niece of Lord Lister.[5][6] Lister was educated at home save for one year at Bedford College for Women.[3] It was this time in Bedford that gave Lister a grounding in systematic and structural botany.[2] Lister's mother was a formally trained artist, which appears to have been part of Lister's home schooling.[4]

Lister spent her life in Leytonstone, and the family summer house in Lyme Regis, where she conducted much of her field work.[4] Lister died in the house where she was born on 18 May 1949, following a stroke.[2] She is commemorated at grave number 07 at the Quaker Meeting House in Bush Road where her ashes were scattered.[5]

Botanical and mycological work

Lister's interest in natural history was due to her father, who although a wine merchant, dedicated much of his time to the study of Mycetozoa.[1] She acted as his field and laboratory assistant in his work.[6] Lister first helped her father in the compilation of his 1894 work A monograph of the Mycetozoa,[7] going on to revise and expand the work with two further editions in 1911 and 1925.[1][8] These further additions featured coloured plates of Lister's watercolour illustrations.[2]

She also began working in the collections of British Museum (Natural History), London with her father around this time.[2] In 1895 her father wrote the first edition of the Guide to the British Mycetozoa exhibited in the Department of Botany, British Museum (Natural History) with her help, and after his death she revised new editions of this guide.[9] She never held an official appointment at the museum.

She was a contemporary of Annie Lorrain Smith and Ethel Barton.[4] She catalogued and studied botanical collections in Kew Gardens, Natural History Museum, Paris, and the University of Strasbourg.[4]

Lister was an active member of the British Mycological Society from 1903, being one of the first 100 founding members.[10] She served as president in 1912 and 1932, and her dedication to the group was recognised in 1924 when she was made an honorary member.[1] She also served as President of the Essex Field Club from 1916-1919,[5][6] becoming the first woman to hold the position.[4] After this she was the vice-president permanently.[2] She was elected as one of the first women fellows of the Linnean Society of London in December 1904, a council member (1915–1917, 1927–1931) and vice-President (1929–1931).[1] From 1917 until her death, Lister was a trustee on the Botanical Research Fund, and was the chair of the School Nature Study Union for a number of years.[6]

Lister corresponded with fellow mycologists from all over the world, including the Emperor of Japan, who sent her a pair of enamel vases to thank her for her help in his studies.[6] She travelled frequently with Alice Hibbert-Ware, fellow naturalist and member of the Linnean Society of London to Europe and New Zealand to birdwatch and study fungi.[10] To keep up to date with research, Lister even learnt Polish so as to be able to read the work of Jósef Tomasz Rostafinski in the study of British and European Myxogastria.[4] She contributed to the Royal Irish Academy's Clare Island Survey, and is credited by Robert Lloyd Praeger in aiding in the advancement of Mycetozoa study in Ireland.[11] Lister also had an interest in other animals, including birds and coniferous trees. She provided the illustrations for Dallimore and Jackson's Handbook of Coniferae and F.J. Hanbury's Illustrated Monograph of the British Hieracia.[1]

Lister's botanical and mycological collections can be found in the Natural History Museum, London, Stratford museum and Kew Gardens.[4] She bequeathed 74 research notebooks to the British Mycological Society, which later were accessioned to the Natural History Museum, London, which documented the work Lister and her father had conducted on historical collections as well as their own.[2] Her scientific illustrations are also recognized in the artwork collections of the museum.[12]

List of publications

See also

References

  1. Ogilvie, Marilyn Bailey; Harvey, Joy Dorothy (2000). The Biographical Dictionary of Women in Science: L-Z. London: Taylor & Francis. p. 795. ISBN 9780415920407.
  2. Creese, Mary R. S. (2004). "Lister, Gulielma (1860–1949)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  3. Ramsbottom, J. (1949). "Miss Gulielma Lister". Nature. 164 (4159): 94. Bibcode:1949Natur.164...94R. doi:10.1038/164094a0.
  4. Creese, Mary R. S. (2000). Ladies in the Laboratory? American and British Women in Science, 1800–1900: A Survey of Their Contributions to Research. Kent: Scarecrow Press. pp. 35–36. ISBN 9780585276847.
  5. "Gulielma Lister 1860 -1949". Wanstead Wildlife. Retrieved 9 May 2015.
  6. Haskins, E.F. (1999). "Miss Gulielma Lister F.L.S. remembered". Mycologist. 13 (2): 54–56. doi:10.1016/s0269-915x(99)80004-4. (First page preview)
  7. See the introduction ofLister 1894, p. 19
  8. See: Lister 1894 2nd ed. 1911 and 3rd ed. 1925.
  9. Lister 1895 ed. 1909 and 1919.
  10. e.m.w (1950). "Obituary: Miss Gulielma Lister". Transactions of the British Mycological Society. 33 (1–2): 165. doi:10.1016/s0007-1536(50)80061-x.
  11. Praeger, R. Lloyd. "Some Irish Naturalists: A Biographical Notebook". National Botanic Gardens. Archived from the original on 23 January 2015. Retrieved 9 May 2015.
  12. "Women artists". www.nhm.ac.uk. Retrieved 15 April 2023.
  13. International Plant Names Index.  G.Lister.

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