Priscilla Susan Bury
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Priscilla Susan Bury, born Falkner (12 January 1799 – 8 March 1872), was an English botanist and illustrator.


Personal life

Priscilla Susan Bury was born in
Rainhill Rainhill is a village and civil parish in the Metropolitan Borough of St Helens, Merseyside, England. The population at the 2011 census was 10,853. Historically part of Lancashire, Rainhill was a township in the ecclesiastical parish of Prescot ...
,
Liverpool Liverpool is a port City status in the United Kingdom, city and metropolitan borough in Merseyside, England. It is situated on the eastern side of the River Mersey, Mersey Estuary, near the Irish Sea, north-west of London. With a population ...
. Her parents were Edward Falkner and Bridget (née Tarleton) Falkner. Bury grew up in Lancashire, England and was the daughter of a rich Liverpool merchant whose estate resided outside the city at Fairfields. Bury’s childhood home contained a lush garden with many rare and exotic plants. Growing up, Bury drew each plant species that held her interest and claimed that she was "raised in the greenhouses of her family home” which was later demolished in 1913. As a young woman she was an enthusiastic botanist and flower painter and was particularly interested in lilies and similar allied flowers. She had no pretensions as to scientific knowledge and, in effect, was a very talented amateur that created aquatint engravings with original hand-coloring. By 1829, (age 30) she had produced a number of paintings of hexandrian plants, which she wished to publish and later became a venture promoted by her friend, William Swainson. On March 4, 1830, Falkner married Edward Bury F.R.S. (1794-1858), a wealthy and ingenious railway engineer and would later bore three sons between 1831 and 1835. Between 1852 and 1860 the family lived at Hillsborough Hall near
Sheffield Sheffield is a city in South Yorkshire, England, situated south of Leeds and east of Manchester. The city is the administrative centre of the City of Sheffield. It is historically part of the West Riding of Yorkshire and some of its so ...
and later moved to Croft Lodge,
Ambleside Ambleside is a town in the civil parish of Lakes and the Westmorland and Furness district of Cumbria, England. Within the boundaries of the historic county of Westmorland and located in the Lake District National Park, the town sits at the ...
in the
Lake District The Lake District, also known as ''the Lakes'' or ''Lakeland'', is a mountainous region and National parks of the United Kingdom, national park in Cumbria, North West England. It is famous for its landscape, including its lakes, coast, and mou ...
. In 1860 she published an account of her husband, ''Recollections of Edward Bury, Fellow of the Royal Society, Member of the institute of Civil Engineers, Member of the Smeatonian Society, Fellow of the Royal Astronomical Society, Fellow of the Royal Historic Society by his widow''. Between 1852 and 1860 the family lived at Hillsborough Hall near Sheffield and later moved to Croft Lodge, Ambleside in the Lake District. By 1866 she was living at Fairfield, Thornton Heath, Croydon. She died at Fairfield on 8 March 1872 (age 73) of
bronchitis Bronchitis is inflammation of the bronchi (large and medium-sized airways) in the lungs that causes coughing. Bronchitis usually begins as an infection in the nose, ears, throat, or sinuses. The infection then makes its way down to the bronchi. ...
and
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in Croydon, England. Bury's body is in St. Mary's Churchyard in Scarborough, North Yorkshire.


Artistic work

Although she was not trained as a botanist or commissioned as a professional artist, she was the author of several artistic and scientific plant illustrations She began to draw plants from the glasshouse at her family home 'Fairfield', and by 1829 had enough studies of lilies and allied plants for publication. The 1829 ''Drawings of lilies'', as lithographs by Hullmandel, features her illustrations accompanied by short notes. This was modelled on a book, and its publicity materials, by
William Roscoe William Roscoe (8 March 175330 June 1831) was an English banker, lawyer, and briefly a Member of Parliament. He is best known as one of England's first abolitionists, and as the author of the poem for children '' The Butterfly's Ball, and th ...
. She modeled her proposed book, then tentatively named ‘Drawings of lilies’, on William Roscoe's Monandrian Plants (1824–8), with the plates to be accompanied by brief letterpresses based on her notes and even used Roscoe's book prospectus as a model for her own. In it, she advertised her ‘Drawings of Liliaceous Plants arranged by Botanists in the genera Crinum, Amaryllis, Pancratium …’, to appear in ten numbers, each of five plates to be lithographed by Hullmandel, subscribers paying a guinea a number, others 27s. In 1831 Priscilla Bury's drawings began to be published as 'A Selection of Hexandrian Plants', the large (64 cm × 48 cm) plates being engraved by Robert Havell; the work had only seventy-nine subscribers, and it is unlikely that the number produced was much beyond that, accounting for its scarcity, which is noted by both Stafleu and Cowan and Pritzel. Fifty-one plates appeared in ten fascicles, the last in 1834, but whether or not the text is Bury's is unclear. The plates are fine-grained aquatints, partly printed in color and retouched by hand... The published work has been praised as "certainly one of the most effective colour-plate folios of its period". The engraving was entrusted to the Londoner Robert Havell, engraver of the
John James Audubon John James Audubon (born Jean-Jacques Rabin, April 26, 1785 – January 27, 1851) was a French-American Autodidacticism, self-trained artist, natural history, naturalist, and ornithology, ornithologist. His combined interests in art and ornitho ...
(1785-1851) plates. The book was carried out in
aquatint Aquatint is an intaglio printmaking technique, a variant of etching that produces areas of tone rather than lines. For this reason it has mostly been used in conjunction with etching, to give both lines and shaded tone. It has also been used ...
and the 350 plant drawings painted in part by hand. The subscribers to this large folio numbered only 79, mostly from the Lancashire region,
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being one of them. Her later work after 1836 consisted of eight plates for
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and Henslow's ''The Botanist''The LuEsther T. Mertz Library
/ref> and photographs of her drawings were included in ''Figures of Remarkable Forms of Polycystins, or Allied Organisms, in the Barbados Chalk deposit'' in 1860–1861, followed by new expanded editions in 1865 and 1869. The fossils had been collected by John Davy and prepared for microscopy by Christopher Johnson of
Lancaster Lancaster may refer to: Lands and titles *The County Palatine of Lancaster, a synonym for Lancashire *Duchy of Lancaster, one of only two British royal duchies *Duke of Lancaster *Earl of Lancaster *House of Lancaster, a British royal dynasty ...
.


Gallery

File:Hippeastrum correiense.jpg, Hippeastrum correiense File:Priscilla Susan Bury c1790-c1870.jpg, ''Hippeastrum ×johnsonii'' File:'Lily' in 'A Selection of Hexandrian Plants' by Priscilla Susan Bury, 1831.jpg, ''Lily'' in ''A Selection of Hexandrian Plants'' File:Lilium canadense (lit).jpg, ''Lilium canadense'' File:Lilium japonicum 2 (lit).jpg, ''Lilium brownii'' var. ''viridulum'' File:Hippeastrum striatum.jpg, ''Hippeastrum Striatum'' File:Bury EFSeedlingAmaryllus1819 MIA 6625150.jpg, E.F. Seedling Amaryllus, 1819.
Minneapolis Institute of Art The Minneapolis Institute of Art (Mia) is an arts museum located in Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States. Home to more than 90,000 works of art representing 5,000 years of world history, Mia is one of the List of largest art museums, largest ar ...


Bibliography

*1859: ''Recollections of Edward Bury, by his Widow'' (Privately published, Windermere) *1862: ''Figures of Remarkable Forms of Polycystins, or allied organisms, in the Barbados Chalk Deposit''; drawn by Mrs. Bury. Windermere: John Garnett,
862 __NOTOC__ Year 862 ( DCCCLXII) was a common year starting on Thursday of the Julian calendar. Events By place Central Europe * King Lothair II of Lotharingia tries to divorce his wife Teutberga, on trumped-up charges of incest. With ...


Sources

Works cited * Brent Elliott (2001). ''Flora. Une histoire illustrée des fleurs de jardin.'' Delachaux et Niestlé (Lausanne): 335 p.


External links


Saint Louis Art Museum
General background. Image from ''Hexandrian Plants''
Edinburgh University Press''A Selection of Hexandrian Plants''Biodiversity Heritage Library Flickr- Baptism Record
Article on Bury's "Figures of Remarkable Forms of Polycystins" {{DEFAULTSORT:Bury, Priscilla Susan English botanists British women illustrators British botanical illustrators 1799 births 1872 deaths Scientists from Liverpool 19th-century British women scientists British women botanists People from Wavertree