E T
Was entomology a fairly common practice at the time?



G B
Yes, there were many entomologists at the time, and they published their records and observations in various specialist journals, just as they do today. However, entomologists formed a tiny proportion of the population, then as now. Most people think you’re weird when you tell them you collect beetles, and probably the same was true back then.



E T
Do you know how long this amateur scientific community of entomologists was working before Wallace’s time?



G B
The number of amateurs studying insects increased steadily from the mid-eighteenth century, and as a result the insects and other fauna of Britain were pretty well known by the time Wallace began collecting. By the 1850s natural history had also become very popular among the general public. A friend of mine, the writer and artist Errol Fuller, who is interested in the history of taxidermy, has said that everyone had to have a stuffed bird in their living room at that time. So, there was a greater appreciation of and interest in natural history, and a huge demand for showy foreign specimens to display domestically—butterflies on the wall, or a stuffed bird. However, Wallace’s market—the people who did serious scientific work on the collections he sent back from his expedition through the Malay Archipelago (1854–62)—was really just a handful of people. There were probably more amateurs doing the serious work of describing species in Britain than there are now, but that’s not the case everywhere. In Eastern Europe, for example, there are still many amateurs doing that sort of work.



A S
Did the majority of specimens that Wallace sent to Europe from the Archipelago end up in private or public collections?



G B
Probably less than fifty percent were purchased directly by the British Museum. Wallace mostly collected insect and bird specimens, and he shipped them to his agent, Samuel Stevens, in London. Stevens had rooms near the old British Museum (the natural history collections that we have here in South Kensington used to be in Bloomsbury, in what’s now the British Museum). When new shipments came in, Stevens would let the scientists in  the museum know, and they would come to pick out all the things they thought were interesting or new. The rest of the material was then sold to keen amateurs such as William Wilson Saunders. Saunders would take all of Wallace’s smaller orders of insects, whereas the beetles went to certain specialists on the different groups. For instance, Francis P. Pascoe got the longhorn beetles. Stevens often kept some specimens aside for a certain collector. Then there was the general public, who had very little knowledge of natural history but wanted really showy specimens— brightly colored parrots or hummingbirds or whatever—to decorate their homes. We don’t know what proportion of specimens went to the third group of people because typically the original labels were removed. Even if you went through collections of old Victorian taxidermy today (and there are many such collections), you wouldn’t know if they were Wallace specimens or if they were collected by someone else.



E T
But there was a certain accounting procedure, was there not? Everything had to pass through Stevens, who would have had some form of master list to track payments owed to Wallace, no?



G B
Wallace kept rough records of how many specimens and species he collected on each island and shipped back to Stevens. His notebook detailing his consignments to Stevens is in the Linnean Society library. Unfortunately, however, Stevens’s records do not survive.



A S
Are there any shipping papers or transportation documentations available?



G B
None that were issued by the actual shipping agents, at least none that anybody has ever found. Maybe Stevens had lists but they don’t survive at all, so we only have fragmentary information, and we don’t even know exactly where most of Wallace’s specimens are now. We have a fairly good idea which museums have Wallace specimens in their collections, but we generally don’t have lists of the specimens they have. Although I’m pretty sure that there must be thousands of Wallace specimens in the Paris museum, there’s no list of them and no way of easily finding them. This is also true in the Natural History Museum, because our specimens haven’t been individually databased, and won’t be for a very long time, if ever—the collection is just too huge! We have about 25,000,000 insect specimens; although we don’t have a record of what Wallace specimens we have, I have estimated that we must have roughly seventy percent of everything he collected. Our museum not only purchased Wallace’s specimens directly from Stevens, but many others came in collections formed by entomologists which were purchased, donated, or bequeathed to the Museum when the collectors died. The Oxford Museum of Natural History has the second biggest collection of Wallace’s specimens, mostly insects. Sadly, in the whole of the Malay Archipelago there are only two Wallace specimens—a dung beetle in the Sarawak Museum in Malaysia and a drab little bird in the natural history museum in Singapore.



A S
So what first made you interested in Wallace?



G B
When I was doing my Ph.D. on the evolution of mimicry in butterflies from South America, I became interested in theories of animal coloration—for warnings, camouflage, sexual selection, and so on. I realized that it was Wallace who proposed the majority of these theories. I hadn’t really heard of him before, nor did I know that he was the co-discoverer of natural selection, so I started to read a bit more about him. I was reading James Marchant’s Alfred Russel Wallace: Letters and Reminiscences, which says that Wallace was buried in Broadstone, Dorset, on a windswept hill. On the first outing that I had with my wife-to-be, we happened to be camping in that area of Dorset and I had just read this, so we ended up going to find Wallace’s grave. After some searching, we eventually discovered it behind a huge conifer; it was marked by a strange monument, which looks a bit like a phallus on a stone base. I decided to find out who owned it because I felt it was a shame that it was in such bad condition—you had to climb inside the tree in order to see the name plaque, and the roots were tipping it over. I contacted the cemetery and they said that Wallace’s grandsons still owned the grave—I hadn’t realized that any of his grandsons were still alive. I managed to find the address of his grandson Richard and wrote to him, saying that I’d seen their grandfather’s grave was in a sorry state. He wrote back saying something like, “Yes, it’s a great shame. We do our best, but we’re 72 73 getting kind of old and we go there once a year to clear shrubs and brambles from the base.” As Wallace is one of the greatest figures in the natural sciences, at least in biology, I decided that his grave should be restored. I started the Wallace Memorial Fund in order to raise the money to do this and extend the lease on the plot. I’d discovered that the lease only had another fourteen years to run, after which time they would use the plot for another burial and dispose of the monument. I sent articles to various places telling them about the fund and that I was looking for donors. Within a pretty short time we had over 100 donors from all around the world, which enabled us to restore the monument, cut down the tree that was pushing it over, put up a new bronze plaque explaining who Wallace was, and extend the lease on the plot. By this stage I was in touch with various people in places where Wallace had lived and they were really interested in participating; working with them, we set up other monuments.



A S
Tell us more about how Wallace collected and identified his 125,660 specimens?