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Robert Patterson (naturalist, born 1802)

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Portrait of Robert Patterson, half-length sitting on chair, upper body turned and looking to right over back of the chair.

Robert Patterson, FRS (1802–1872) was an Irish businessman and naturalist born in Belfast, Ireland.

Biography

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The eldest son of Robert Patterson (1750–1831), owner of a mill-furnishing business in Belfast established in 1786, Robert Patterson was born into a wealthy family. He was educated first at the Belfast Academy under the direction of a Dr. Bryce, and then at the Belfast Academical Institution. Here he won a prize for an essay on the natural history of Lough Neagh.

When his father died in 1831, Patterson took over management of the family business, eventually marrying Mary Ferrar, one of whose ancestors had come to Ireland as a captain in Schomburg's Horse regiment. The newly-weds settled at No. 3 College Square North, Belfast, where most of his 11 children were born.

At 19 Robert Patterson was one of seven young men who, on 5 June 1821, gathered at the house of Dr. James Lawson Drummond, at No. 5, Chichester Street to form the Belfast Natural History Society, which established the first museum in Ireland to be built by public subscription, at No. 7 College Square North. He served the society, later renamed, for more than fifty years, occupying every office. He was also a member of the Belfast Literary Society and the Royal Irish Academy. The Royal Society elected him a Fellow in 1859,[1] and he was an early member of the British Association, serving as secretary to the Natural History section.

Established as a significant naturalist in his thirties, Patterson had close links with Charles Darwin, Thomas Bell, Edward Forbes, William Yarrell and Charles Lucien Bonaparte. Patterson, FRS, MRIA died at his house in College Square North, Belfast, in February, 1872, after a fall. His second son, Robert Lloyd Patterson and grandson Robert Patterson were also naturalists.

Books

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Patterson also prepared, for the Department of Science and Art, a series of large coloured diagrams, illustrated by Joseph Wolf. These were widely used in schools in Britain, Ireland and the United States.

References

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  1. ^ [1] Lists of Royal Society Fellows 1660-2007
  2. ^ Patterson, R. (1842). The natural history of the insects mentioned in Shakespeare's plays. A.K. Newman.
  3. ^ "Review of Natural History of Insects mentioned in Shakespeare's Plays by R. Patterson; The Ornithology of Shakespeare by J. E. Harting; THe Henry Irving Shakespeare". The Quarterly Review. 178: 340–362. April 1894.
  • Nash, R. and Ross, H.C.G. The development of natural history in early 19th century Ireland in From Linnaeus to Darwin: commentaries on the history of biology and geology Society for the bibliography of Natural History 13:27-
  • Foster, J. W. and Chesney, H. C. G (eds.), 1977. Nature in Ireland: A Scientific and Cultural History. Lilliput Press. ISBN 0-7735-1817-7.
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  • BHL Introduction to zoology : for the use of schools / by Robert Patterson; with upwards of 330 illustrations and a glossary of scientific terms London Simms and M'Intyre,1848.
  • BHL Letters on the natural history of the insects mentioned in Shakespeare's plays : with incidental notices of the entomology of London W. S. Orr & Co.,1838.