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    The Collector: David Douglas and the Natural History of the Northwest

    The Collector: David Douglas and the Natural History of the Northwest

    by Jack Nisbet


    eBook

    $13.99
    $13.99

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      ISBN-13: 9781570617256
    • Publisher: Sasquatch Books
    • Publication date: 12/01/2009
    • Sold by: Penguin Random House Publisher Services
    • Format: eBook
    • Pages: 304
    • File size: 650 KB

    Jack Nisbet is a historian, teacher, and author focusing on the intersection of human history and natural history in the Pacific Northwest. His Sources of the River won the Murray Morgan Prize from the Washington State Historical Society.

    Table of Contents

    Prologue: Nature's Hand ix

    I Fruits of the New World: 1823-24 1

    II The Rites of Neptune: 1824-25 23

    III Between the Desert and the Sea: Spring-Summer 1825 37

    IV Taking the Smoke: Summer-Winter 1825 53

    V The Interior Year: Spring 1826 73

    VI Sleeping on Shattered Stones: Summer 1826 91

    VII The Perfect Enthuslast: Fall 1826-Spring 1827 117

    VIII Crown of the Continent: Spring-Summer 1827 143

    IX "A Scientifick Naturalist": Fall 1827-Fall 1829 167

    X Breathing New Climates: Fall 1829-Fall 1832 191

    XI The Canyon: Winter 1832-Summer 1833 211

    XII Craters: 1834 229

    Epilogue: Nourishment Beyond Names 251

    Acknowledgments 256

    Bibliography 257

    Chapter Notes 265

    Index 275

    Maps

    David Douglas in North America: 1824-34 vii

    The Northwest Coast: 1825-33 36

    The Interior: 1826-27 72

    The North Country: 1833 212

    Hawaiian Islands: 1834 228

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    Jack Nisbet first told the story of British explorer David Thompson, who mapped the Columbia River, in his acclaimed book Sources of the River, which set the standard for research and narrative biography for the region. Now Nisbet turns his attention to David Douglas, the premier botanical explorer in the Pacific Northwest and throughout other areas of western North America. Douglas's discoveries include hundreds of western plants--most notably the Douglas Fir. The Collector tracks Douglas's fascinating history, from his humble birth in Scotland in 1799 to his botanical training under the famed William Jackson Hooker, and details his adventures in North America discovering exotic new plants for the English and European market. The book takes readers along on Douglas's journeys into a literal brave new world of then-obscure realms from Puget Sound to the Sandwich Islands. In telling Douglas's story, Nisbet evokes a lost world of early exploration, pristine nature, ambition, and cultural and class conflict with surprisingly modern resonances.

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    Botanist David Douglas (1799-1834) was born a commoner in a tiny Scottish village, but his exceptional talents as a plant hunter and collector won him early notice in high places. In 1824, he was dispatched by the Royal Horticultural Society to America's Pacific Northwest to find plants for the English and European markets. The society obviously made the right choice: Douglas collected over 200 species during his herculean 10,000-mile walk between the Pacific Coast and Hudson Bay. Jack Nisbet chronicles Douglas's astonishing life and mysterious death in this richly detailed biography.
    From the Publisher
    "Jack Nisbet’s brisk, thrilling accoun allows us to walk, ride, and paddle along with David Douglas, the tireless nineteenth-century Scotsman whose name is attached to Cascadia’s iconic fir. Nisbet takes us on the ultimate naturalist’s tour of a largely
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