Ronald Campbell Gunn

Ronald Campbell Gunn

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The son of Robert Gunn, an officer in the army, was born at Cape Town, South Africa. He accompanied his father to Mauritius, the West Indies, and Scotland where he was educated. He was given an appointment in the Royal Engineers at Barbados, but left there in 1829 to go to Van Diemen’s Land (now Tasmania), where he obtained the position of superintendent of convict barracks at Hobart Town.

In 1830 Gunn became superintendent of convicts for North Tasmania. In 1831 be became acquainted with an early Tasmanian botanist, Robert William Lawrence (1807-1833), who encouraged his interest in botany and placed him in touch with Sir William Jackson Hooker and Dr Lindley, with whom he corresponded for many years. In 1836 Gunn was appointed police magistrate at Circular Head. From there he visited Port Phillip and Western Port and also traveled much in Tasmania. He became assistant police magistrate at Hobart Town in 1838, and in 1839 private secretary to Sir John Franklin and clerk of the executive and legislative councils. In 1841 he gave up these appointments to take charge of the estates of William Effingham Lawrence, and spent much time investigating the flora of Tasmania. But his interests were not confined to botany; he became a general scientist and made collections of mammals, birds, reptiles and mollusca, for the British Museum.

Taking up the study of geology, Gunn was employed by the government to report on mining fields, and also on the general resources of the colony. In 1864 he was appointed one of the commissioners for selecting the seat of government at New Zealand. Subsequently he became recorder of titles at Launceston, holding this position until 1876 when he retired owing to ill health. He died at Newstead, near Launceston, after a long illness, on 13 March 1881. He became a fellow of the Linnean Society in 1850, and was elected a fellow of the Royal Society, London, in 1854.

Gunn was a first-rate botanist and general scientist. Sir William Jackson Hooker, who dedicated his "Flora Tasmaniae" to Gunn, and another Tasmanian botanist, William Archer (1820-74), speaking of Gunn in his Introductory Essay said: ‘There are few Tasmanian plants that Mr Gunn has not seen alive, noted their habits in a living state, and collected large suites of specimens with singular tact and judgment. These have all been transmitted to England . . . accompanied with notes that display remarkable powers of observation, and a facility for seizing important characters in the physiognomy of plants, such as few experienced botanists possess’.

Though so competent, Gunn published little. With Dr. John E. Gray, he was responsible for a paper "Notices accompanying a Collection of Quadrupeds and Fish from Van Diemen's Land", and he was the author of a few papers on the geology and botany of that island. When private secretary to Sir John Franklin he assisted in founding, and was editor of, the "Tasmanian Journal of Natural Science", which recorded papers read at government house. From these beginnings sprang the Royal Society of Tasmania. The "Tasmanian Journal" was succeeded by the "Proceedings of the Royal Society of Van Diemen's Land", in which some of Gunn's few papers appeared. He was much liked and respected and may be ranked as the most eminent of Tasmanian botanists. He is commemorated by the genus Gunnia and many species.

References

*Dictionary of Australian Biography|First=Ronald|Last=Gunn|Link=http://gutenberg.net.au/dictbiog/0-dict-biogG.html#gunn1


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