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WP - The Alfred Russel Wallace Correspondence Project

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When Mrs Greenell, Mary <strong>Wallace</strong>'s stepmother, died in 1826, the family moved to her hometown,<br />

Hertford, in Essex. Here ARW met another child, George Silk, who became a lifelong<br />

friend and correspondent. <strong>The</strong> <strong>Wallace</strong>s lived first in a house in Andrews Street, next at an<br />

address in Old Cross, a short distance away.<br />

Other members of the family included Aunt Wilson, Mary Anne <strong>Wallace</strong>'s sister, wife of<br />

Thomas Wilson, lawyer, who in 1826 lived in Dulwich. Thomas Wilson was controlling<br />

trustee of a Greenell family legacy which paid for, among other things, John <strong>Wallace</strong>'s board,<br />

and held money in trust for the other <strong>Wallace</strong> children. When Thomas Wilson was declared<br />

bankrupt in 1834, the legacy became involved and the <strong>Wallace</strong>'s income was drastically<br />

reduced.<br />

ARW was educated at Hertford Grammar School and then Hertford School where in his final<br />

year he was a pupil-teacher. In 1837, aged 14, he went to London where he stayed with his<br />

brother John (an apprentice builder) and became an apprentice surveyor as pupil to his brother<br />

William. His parents moved to Rawdon Cottage, Hoddesdon, in the same year.<br />

ARW began collecting insect specimens found during his surveying trips, and became<br />

increasingly interested in natural history. In 1848 he went with fellow enthusiast H W Bates<br />

to the Amazon on a collecting expedition, hoping to make a living as a collector of natural<br />

history specimens. His brother Herbert (usually known by his second name, Edward)<br />

subsequently joined him, but died of Yellow Fever in 1851. ARW returned to England in<br />

1851, losing his journals and collection of specimens when the ship in which he was sailing<br />

caught fire and sank.<br />

Still hoping to make a living as a collector and naturalist, ARW sailed for Malaysia in 1854<br />

with a young assistant, Charles Allen. He spent eight years in the Malay Archipelago,<br />

collecting birds and insects and studying and writing on the local flora, fauna and people. It<br />

was here that he began writing scientific papers, formed his ideas on the natural selection and<br />

geographical distribution of species, and began corresponding with Charles Darwin.<br />

At a meeting of the Linnean Society on July 1st, 1858, <strong>Wallace</strong>'s paper "On the Tendency of<br />

Varieties to Depart Indefinitely from the Original Type", written in early 1858 while he was at<br />

Ternate in the Moluccas, was presented jointly with an unpublished essay of 1844 on the<br />

subject by Darwin.<br />

ARW returned to England in 1862, and subsequently published widely on a variety of<br />

scientific and other subjects, and gave public lectures. He travelled to America and Canada<br />

for a lecture tour in 1886-1887. He was member of a number of scientific societies, was made<br />

a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1892 and was awarded the Order of Merit by the King in<br />

1908.<br />

ARW married Annie Mitten, the daughter of pharmacist and bryologist William Mitten, in<br />

about 1866. <strong>The</strong>y had three children, Herbert Spencer (1867-1874), William Greenell (born<br />

1871) and Violet (born 1869).<br />

ARW died at home in Broadstone, Dorset, on 8 November, 1913.<br />

References:<br />

Raby, Peter (London 2002) <strong>Alfred</strong> <strong>Russel</strong> <strong>Wallace</strong>: A Life.<br />

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