Wednesday, May 4, 2016

Amalie Dietrich (1821-1891), German Naturalist

A frequently quoted, though possibly apochryphal, story relates a conversation between Charles Darwin and the wife of a wealthy Londoner.  The woman approached Darwin after a public lecture to say: "Oh, Mr. Darwin, I hope it isn't true; but, if it is true, I hope noone finds out about it!"  Most Victorian women would have agreed with this perspective, if they dared express an opinion of natural selection at all.  One exception was (Koncordie) Amalie Dietrich (26 May 1821-9 March 1891), a middle-class German woman taught to value nature by her mother. 

Amalie married an unsuccessful medical doctor who worked as a pharmacist; however, his true passion was botanical collection.  Amalie's husband provided her with scientific training, particularly the skills required for work as a naturalist.  Though a daughter, Charitas, was born to the couple, they spent long periods of time collecting specimens in the forests of Germany.  According to some, though not all, reports, Amalie separated from her husband after he was unfaithful; however, she apparently returned to the marriage, leaving again permanently, with her daughter, at the age of 40. 

Upon the recommendation of a male acquaintance familiar with her experience, she was hired by the director of a German museum to assemble a collection of Australian plants and animals. Leaving her daughter in a boarding school, Dietrich sailed to Australia, and knowledge of Darwin's Beagle voyage may have provided her with motivation and courage to leave home.  Amalie was highly successful at her work in Australia and remains notable for her faunal collections of birds (arguably the largest collection of all time), spiders, snakes, etc., in addition to flora.  Though Dietrich apparently never published under her own name, several (male) scientists/naturalists of her time wrote papers or books based upon her work (e.g., C. Luerssen [1843-1916]; Karel Domin [1882-1953]). 

In some reports on Amalie, she is described as an anthropologist as well as botanist and naturalist.  Documentation about this aspect of her career is fuzzy, perhaps because of its controvertial nature, perhaps because little information exists about this phase of her career, or perhaps the extent of her role in the decimation of Australian aboriginals has been exaggerated.  Since at least two of the documents reporting that Dietrich was known as "the angel of black death" were written by advocates of creationism and anti-abortion politics, it is unclear to what degree Dietrich's participation in the collection of "savages" was a byproduct of others' activities or a direct cause of the escalation of aboriginal genocide (as claimed of her by a few sources). 

Whatever the case, the few quotations about her work attributed to Dietrich that I was able to locate online, indicate clearly that she was passionate about her career, the pleasures and rigors of field work, and the opportunity to collect organisms for broad dissemination (presumably for European museums and other collections).  I have found only one reference claiming that Amalie was a Darwinian, and that reference used in a context intended to link evil Darwin and "social darwinism" with moral creationism and the anti-abortion movement.  On the other hand, no text that I read suggested in any manner that Dietrich had any religious inclinations at all, an open-mindedness that, if accurate, would have made her receptive to Darwin's new science, including, perhaps, Social Darwinism and eugenics.  Whatever the case, Amalie Dietrich may stand as the first female Darwinist and, in all likelihood, the most accomplished and famous female fieldworker of her time.  Based upon the limited information I was able to access, her life and work deserve further study.



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ADDENDUM, 29 December 2013:

Amalie Dietrich: a singular botanical and natural history collector in nineteenth century Australia.M A R G I N: life & letters in early Australia - November 1, 2009
Ann Moyal
Word count: 1637.

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The Australian Colonies attracted their fair share of foreign naturalists and the presence of German botanical collectors and scientists tended to form a recurring theme in nineteenth century scientific investigation. Baron von Hugel and Ludwig Preiss had botanised in the Swan River Colony in the 1830s and early 1840s and these early flora prospectors carried unique collections back to Europe. In the 1840's Ludwig Leichhardt, a proficient student of botany and natural science, collected through a sweep of country from Sydney to Moreton Bay and on his expedition overland to Port Essington before he and his party disappeared without a trace on his third overland journey to look for an inland sea. Some of Leichhardt's specimens found their way to cabinets in France and Germany though he himself felt a strong patriotic desire to keep his collections in his adopted country
Ferdinand von Mueller's presence as Government Botanist in Victoria was another reminder of the teutonic presence in Australian botany, a situation which at times raised hackles and provoked xenophobia. Yet as New South Wales's pre-eminent geologist, the Rev. W.B. Clarke wisely observed in 1844, 'If foreign naturalists come amongst us to carry away the spoils of nature, Englishmen did the same in Germany and France and Russia, and anyhow the bounds of knowledge are increased'.
One of the most unusual German 'intruders' was a woman, Konkordie Amalie Dietrich (1821-1891) and it fell to the Godeffroy Museum of Natural History in Hamburg to enjoy the unique distinction of employing a woman collector to explore, amass, and consign to them botanical and natural history materials from Eastern Australia. Born at Siebenlehn, Saxony, the daughter of a leather-maker, and educated at the village school, Amalie Nelle developed her passionate interest in botany when in 1847 she met and married Wilhelm Dietrich, a member of a family long associated with botany and botanical taxonomy, who made a living by collecting botanical and natural history objects and selling them to institutions, scholars and apothecaries. An eager disciple of her husband's craft, Amalie rapidly became the key member of the collecting team. She travelled on foot across Germany, Belgium and Holland at first with her husband, but when amorous diversions lured him to other flowers, then alone with her daughter, Charitas.
In 1863 she made contact with the Pacific trader, G. J. Godeffroy, who, while at first reluctant, was persuaded by Amalie's scientific clients to engage her as a collector in Australia. 'Frau Dietrich', wrote one botanical expert on her behalf, 'has exceptional talent for her profession, a well-tried eye for all that Nature presents, and a great certainty in the classification of collected material.' She was also a willing work-horse. 'On her long and remarkable journeys', he added, 'she has invariably shown remarkable perseverance and fortitude'.
Surprisingly Godeffroy offered her a ten year contract, but before entrusting her to her career, he taught how to handle firearms, to skin and eviscerate birds and mammals, and--eager for Aboriginal relics--how to pack human skulls and skeletons. He also fitted her out with a workmanlike 'trousseau' including a pocket lens, a microscope, 6 insect cages, rags for packing, 6 tins of spirits, 20 pounds of tow, 5 quires of tissue paper, some bottles for live snakes, gunpowder and small shot, percussion caps, 100 jars and stoppers, and 2 boxes of poison. With her she carried David Dietrich's Plant Lexicon, an English Dictionary and some English lesson books though Amalie's command of English remained rudimentary.
This small, stockily-built explorer arrived in Brisbane aboard La Rochelle in August 1863. She had left her daughter, Charitas in the care of friends but kept in touch with her by letters, which, published by her daughter, form the basis of our knowledge. 'With truly festive feeling', she wrote Charitas on arrival, 'I slung over my shoulder my case filled with flour, salt, tea, and matches, put on my large straw hat, and set off on my wanderings'. Instincts of distance and loneliness were quickly transformed to those of wonder. 'What a lot of stuff is to be found here', she exclaimed, 'you have only to put out your hands and help yourself'. At first Amalie, truly feminine in this, worried about her first consignments to Hamburg; 'they are sure to be a little anxious as to whether I am equal to the task'. But with the competence of an experienced collector, she was rapidly launched. Within eight months, she had explored from Brisbane to Gladstone and Rockhampton and dispatched 12 cases of botanical and other specimens to Hamburg. In the clammy sub-tropical heat of late summer in Rockhampton she conveyed her experiences to her daughter.
'You can have no idea of how things flourish here, and what a scramble there is for space. Ferns, amongst which I disappear entirely, grow under the giant trees, and I am often frightened when I have to force my way through the luxurious creepers, ferns and branches, Large orchids hang from the trees by almost invisible threads; they are so wonderfully formed, have such beautiful colour, and look at me so mysteriously, that I pick them with certain awe'. Her keen eye noted the unconforming oddities of the land. 'The swans are black, some mammals have beaks ... and I noticed a water wagtail which moved its tail not up and down, but from side to side, ... Some trees shed their bark instead of their leaves, and a mournful impression is produced by the sight of these giants, chill and naked among the others'.
If Australia offered a weird and lonely backdrop for this solitary woman, it also offered an invigorating freedom. 'No one', she wrote, 'circumscribes my zeal. I stride across the wider plains, wander through virgin forests. I have felled trees in order to collect different kinds of wood. I cross rivers and lakes in a small canoe, visit islands and collect--collect--collect. It is just as if Herr Godeffroy had made me a present of this vast continent'. But Amalie Dietrich did more than collect and pack. She was rigorously accurate in her descriptions, skilful in her collections, and undaunted by the range of specimens required (once killing and disembowelling a crocodile), and intellectually committed to her native land. She had in view 'the scholars who go to work on what I send', and through them she foresaw that 'I shall gain recognition'. Recognition was important to her.
Amalie remained in Queensland for eight years. On every available ship she consigned to Europe cases of stuffed birds, preserved mammals, and always plants and more plants. In Rockhampton, fire destroyed her possessions. Would Godeffroy lose confidence in her? she wondered. Would she be recalled? Far from recalling, Godeffroy re-equipped her. In 1869 she was in Bowen, visited Holbourne Island and the Great Barrier Reef and, back to Bowen, gratified her employer by shipping home 13 Aboriginal skeletons and several skulls. In March 1871 she left for
Brisbane, Sydney and Melbourne where von Mueller, her fellow countryman, received her before her trip to Tonga and the islands. Her reputation had preceded her. In 1867 Amalie was elected a Fellow of Stettin Entomological Society and won a gold medal and first prize in the Paris Universal Exhibition of 1867 for a rare collection of 50 blocks of wood, each half a trunk in thickness, representative of Queensland trees. It was not for nothing she was called 'the fearless Frau Amalie Dietrich'. Entirely resolute in her scientific searches, careless of the nature of the reception by an alien society, Amalie set no premium on comfort and joyfully 'lighted upon treasures no one has secured before me'. Even in her own country she would have been a striking figure: in the Colonies her professionalism and self-sufficiency distinguished and emancipated her. She remained totally unaffected by the confining mores of her time.
In 1873 Amalie Dietrich arrived back in Hamburg, 'a little, grey-haired, bent lady, wearing canvas shoes with slits in them for greater comfort' and accompanied by two tame eagles. 'Within a limited circle', historian of botany L. A. Gilbert sums up judiciously, 'she was highly respected as an ardent collector and accurate observer. She had, reputedly, produced in Australia what was said for her time, to be the most important collection made by any single person'. In recognition Godeffroy employed her at his museum for thirteen years and, when his collections passed to the City of Hamburg, Amalie gained a post as Curator for the remainder of her life at the Botanical Museum. Her own large collections remained intact until damaged by air raids in World War II, but duplicates of many Australian botanical specimens were sent to Mueller at the National Herbarium in Melbourne. Amalie thus served both Germany and Australia and fertilized botanical science. Mueller repaid her by naming several plants in her honour, Acacia dietrichiana, Bonamia dietrichiana, and the moss Endotrichella dietrichiae; and several species of algae were named for her. A number of Australian insects also bear her name, while the famous Australian Skipper Butterfly of Queensland, Cephrenes amalia, flutters perennially in the regions she explored.
Notes of Sources
Charitas Bischoff Amalie Dietrich: ein Leben (Berlin, 1917). Charitas Bischoff.
The Hard Road: the life story of Amalie Dietrich, Naturalist, 1821-1891 English translation by A. Liddell Geddie. (London 1931).
Ann Moyal, Scientists in Nineteenth Century Australia. A Documentary History. Cassell Australia, 1976.
A. Jefferis Turner, 'Amalie Dietrich--A Forgotten Naturalist', The Queensland Naturalist, P.V. 8, pp82-88, September 1933.
E.M. Webster, Whirlwinds in the plain. Ludwig Leichardt- friends, foes and history. Melbourne University Press, 1980.




Citation Details
Title: Amalie Dietrich: a singular botanical and natural history collector in nineteenth century Australia.
Author: Ann Moyal
Publication: M A R G I N: life & letters in early Australia (Magazine/Journal)
Date: November 1, 2009
Publisher: Mulini Press
Issue: 79    Page: 5(5)





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