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Wallace And Eastwood: A Botanical Friendship

Teacher Alice Eastwood five years before the trip to Gray’s Peak with Wallace Photo credit: Alice Eastwood Papers, California Academy of Sciences Archives

Introduction

I can’t speak for others, but I’ve had a lifetime of grappling emotionally and intellectually with the Victorian era, and have had to personally confront my inner Victorian in recent years. As much as I seem to disdain the cluttered drawing rooms, peacock feathers, and somber colors of the 19th Century, I notice my house looks far more Victorian than Midcentury Modern in its aspect. And throngs of Victorian-era writers, thinkers, and artists have been touchstones of my intellectual life since childhood. Victorian England especially saw an explosion of scientific, industrial, and political thought and activity that likely will prove as enduring as the Renaissance or Classical eras in its significance for human history.

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Alfred Russel Wallace in 1887. Photo credit National Portrait Gallery London
Ruins of the Gray’s Peak miner’s hut, aka “highest house in the U. States”?  Photo from Denver Public Library Western History Archives
Gray’s Peak climbing party. Horses, trail guides, and high fashions were standard for tourist trips to the summit. The cost was $9 and included train ride to and from Denver and stays at both the Jennings Hotel and Kelso Cabin. Eastwood and Wallace hiked to the summit instead.  Photo from Denver Public Library Western History Archives
Wallace and his daughter Violet. Photo Credit: Wallace Memorial Fund
Denver Botanic Gardens botanist Loraine Yeatts on our second collecting trip to Grizzly Gulch on July 21, 2022, with Grizzly Peak in the distance.
Primula parryi
Lewisia pygmaea
Swertia perennis

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