Elizabeth Blackwell
Born1699
Died1758
NationalityScottish
Known forillustrator
SpouseAlexander Blackwell

Elizabeth Blackwell (born 23 April 1699 in London[1][2] –1758) was a botanical illustrator and author who was best known as both the artist and engraver for the plates of "A Curious Herbal", published between 1737 and 1739. The book illustrated medicinal plants, and was designed as a reference work for the use of physicians and apothecaries.

Life

Figure 1: Illustration from A Curious Herbal
Figure 2: Illustration from Herbarium Blackwellianum
Figure 3: A page from A Curious Herbal detailing how individual plants were described

Elizabeth Simpson was the daughter of the painter Leonard Simpson. As a young woman, she was educated in art, music, and languages, and she would have received a substantial dowry from her father.

Elizabeth married Alexander Blackwell, as he was completing his education at Marischal College.[3] Elizabeth fled Aberdeen when questions arose regarding her husband's qualifications. In fear that Alexander could be charged for illegal practice, Elizabeth and her husband moved to London post-haste. Accounts record that Elizabeth studied as a midwife with William Smellie, but did not pursue this career due to ‘the ignorance and low character of the women who at that time followed the same calling’.[4] Elizabeth's husband continued his questionable decision-making in London. Alexander became associated with a publishing firm and established his own printing house in 1730 despite not belonging to a guild or serving the required apprenticeship. Alexander was charged with flouting trade rules and was heavily fined. These heavy fines, in addition to Alexander's lavish spending habits, led to his subsequent stay in Highgate Prison for two years.

Accomplishments

Left to her own devices with no income, a house to run, and a child to raise, Blackwell decided to put to use her training as an artist. She learned that a herbal was needed to depict and describe exotic plants from the New World. She decided that she could illustrate it and that Alexander, given his medical background, could write the descriptions of the plants. As she completed the drawings, Blackwell would take them to her husband's cell where he supplied the correct names in Latin, Greek, Italian, Spanish, Dutch, and German.[5]

Blackwell was an amateur in botany. To compensate for this, she was aided by Isaac Rand, then curator of the Chelsea Physick Garden, where many of these new plants were under cultivation. At Rand's suggestion, she relocated near the Garden so she could draw the plants from life. In addition to the drawings, Blackwell engraved the copper printing plates for the 500 images and text and hand-colored the printed illustrations.[5] It was common for artists to hire a professional engraver to create plates, but Blackwell took it upon herself in order to save this expense.[6] Pages of written descriptions for each plant were added that included a physical description, growth habit, where and when the plant could be located, how each part could be used, and the other names for the plant provided by Blackwell’s husband.

The task of creating A Curious Herbal was immense and took a number of years to complete. A Curious Herbal, containing five hundred cuts of the most useful plants which are now used in the Practise of Physick, to which is added a short description of ye plants and their common uses in Physick[7] was issued in weekly parts, each containing four plates and accompanying text over 125 weeks between 1737 and 1739. The first volume contained 250 plates and was published in 1737. The imprint read "London printed for Samuel Harding in St Martin’s Lane"[8] and the new publication was announced in the Gentleman’s Magazine for July 1737."[8]

In addition to creating her own illustrations and engravings, Elizabeth also marketed the book herself, both through journals and by word of mouth.[3] The Country Journal: or the Craftsman for 6 May 1738 records the publication of the first volume of 252 plates of plants. It noted further that "a further 132 plates of plants for the second volume"[9] had been published and that "the whole 500 will be finished in eight months";[10] a dedication to Dr. John Johnstoun is dated 17 January 1739.[11] The advertisement in The Country Journal closes with a warning against a spurious and base copy of the work sold by Samuel Harding. One such copy had been made by a group of printers and engravers who attempted to duplicate some of Elizabeth’s plates, but her husband Alexander prosecuted them.[8]

The first printing of A Curious Herbal met with moderate success, both because of the meticulous quality of the illustrations and the great need for an updated herbal. Physicians and apothecaries acclaimed the work, and it received a commendation from the Royal College of Physicians. A second edition was printed 20 years later in a revised and enlarged format in Nuremberg by Dr. Christoph Jacob Trew, a botanist and physician, between 1757 and 1773.[5]

Revenue from the book led to Alexander's release from prison. However, within a short while debts again accumulated, forcing the couple to sell half of the publication rights to the book to John Nourse, a bookseller in London. In April 1747, the Blackwells sold their remaining half share of the publication rights, all remaining copies of the book, and all of the copper plates to Nourse to settle an outstanding debt.[3] Alexander also became involved in several unsuccessful business ventures, and eventually left the family to start a new life in Sweden. Where Alexander's trail of bad decisions lead him to death by execution for conspiracy against the Crown on 9 August 1747 as Elizabeth was leaving London to join him.

Little is known of Blackwell's later years, though she possibly continued her original training as a midwife. She was buried on 27 October 1758,[12] and her grave is at All Saints Church in Chelsea, London.[13] Her name is one of four on a plaque in Chelsea Old Church commemorating Chelsea women distinguished by their learning and piety.[14] She remained loyal to Alexander throughout, even sharing royalties with him from the sale of additional book rights.

Blackwell has a genus of plants named after her, Blackwellia of the class Dodecandria Pentagynia. There are six sub species of Blackwellia; Blackwellia Panticulata, Blackwellia Glauca, Blackwellia Nipaulensis, Blackwellia Axillaris, Blackwellia Siralis, Blackwellia Padifolia. These species are native to Réunion, Mauritius, Nepal, Madagascar, Peru and China respectively.[15]

In the 1920s, playwright Constance Smedley wrote a play titled The Curious Herbal about the work of Elizabeth Blackwell, though the play has not been performed since the 1940s.[2]

Influences

Blackwell was likely influenced by the work of Maria Sibylla Merian, who illustrated garden flowers in her work Neues Blumen Buch, among other works. Joseph Miller’s ‘Botanicum Officinale; or a Compendious Herbal: giving an account of all such plants as are now used in the Practice of Physick.’ also influenced Blackwell, and many of the descriptions of medical properties of plants were taken from it. Miller’s work and similar publications were not illustrated, so Blackwell’s illustrated herbal was needed. Some of the illustrations in A Curious Herbal were taken from H.A. van Rheede tot Draakestein’s Hortus indicus malabaricus, and Elizabeth credited and assigned these plates to him.[2]

Elizabeth Blackwell depicts plants in the style typical of botanical illustration from the sixteenth century onwards. Sparked by the European Renaissance and popularized by illustrators such as Leonhart Fuchs, this style was meant to give the viewer an understanding of the forms of organism from a scientific as well as artistic perspective. Blackwell’s illustrations often depict entire plants including the rhizomes or root systems. She also includes separate flower structures, meant to mimic the appearance of scientific dissections.[16]

Reception

Elizabeth presented a copy of her work to the Royal College of Physicians, who ‘so greatly approved of it that they not only made her a handsome present, but also gave her an ample testimonial, in writing, of their approbation of her work’. This present took the form of a commendation from Thomas Pellet, the President of the Royal College of Physicians, which appears in most copies of A Curious Herbal. The commendation is dated 1 July 1737 and features an engraving of Theophrastus and Dioscorides along with the coat of arms of the Royal College of Physicians.[2]

While Blackwell's work in Curious Herbal is referenced in many histories of botany, she appears to receive scant attention from the Society of Apothecaries who owned the Chelsea Physic Garden where she undertook her work on the herbal. The more scholarly works on botany, particularly that of Wilfrid Blunt,[17] dismiss her contribution to botany as not particularly scientific. However, her achievement is in making an illustrated list of medicinal plants available to the medical profession and the more enlightened public of the time. During the preliminary stages of her work on A Curious Herbal, Elizabeth submitted drawings to Sir Hans Sloane, president of the Royal Society in 1712, and Dr. Richard Mead, a notable physician, who encouraged her to pursue publication. She also gained the attention of Dr. James Douglas (1675–1742), the obstetrician, who considered her to be one of the hundred most famous women of history.[18] The skill and diligence she displayed in engraving and hand painting all the plates herself should also be remembered as should her dedication to freeing her husband from debtors prison."[8]

Blackwell's "A Curious Herbal" has been featured on the British Library website as a "classic of botanical illustration." The book is available to view online using the Turning the Pages system.[19] Preserved in the British Library's manuscript collections are several transactions made during 1737 and 1747 regarding the purchase of shares and copyright deed to the herbal from Alexander and Elizabeth Blackwell by John Nourse.

Examples of Blackwell's work were included in ‘Print and Prejudice: Women Printmakers, 1700-1930’, an exhibition at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London, 2022-23.[20]

Publications

  • A curious herbal: containing five hundred cuts, of the most useful plants, which are now used in the practice of physick engraved on folio copper plates, after drawings taken from the life / by Elizabeth Blackwell. To which is added a short description of ye plants and their common uses in physick.[21] (London, 1737–1739), her great herbal, which contained engravings drawn from specimens in the Chelsea Physic Garden
  • Herbarium Blackwellianum emendatum et auctum, id est, Elisabethae Blackwell collectio stirpium :quae in pharmacopoliis ad medicum usum asseruantur, quarum descriptio et vires ex Anglico idiomate in Latinum conversae sistuntur figurae maximam partem ad naturale exemplar emendantur floris fructusque partium repraesentatione augentur et probatis botanicorum nominibus illustrentur. Cum praefatione Tit. Pl. D.D. Christophori Iacobi Trew; excudit figuras pinxit atque in aes incidit Nicolaus Fridericus Eisenbergerus ... By : Blackwell, Elizabeth, - Eisenberger, Nicolaus Friedrich, - Trew, Christoph Jacob, - Christiani de Launoy. - Io. Iosephi Fleischmanni. Publication : Norimbergae : Typis Io. Iosephi Fleischmanni, 1750–1773.online and download
  • A Curious Herbal (2023) full-color facsimile edition, edited by Marta McDowell, published by Abbeville Press[22]

References

  1. On the birthday, the maiden name and the family background see entry Elizabeth Blackwell in the Dictionary of National Biography, updated on the basis of research by Janet Stiles Tyson.
  2. 1 2 3 4 Madge, Bruce (30 July 2001). "Elizabeth Blackwell—the forgotten herbalist?". Health Information & Libraries Journal. 18 (3): 144–152. doi:10.1046/j.1471-1842.2001.00330.x. PMID 11780743 via Wiley Online Library.
  3. 1 2 3 Madge, Bruce (15 April 2003). "Elizabeth Blackwell-the forgotten herbalist?". Health Information and Libraries Journal. 18 (3): 144–152. doi:10.1046/j.1471-1842.2001.00330.x. ISSN 1471-1834. PMID 11780743 via Wiley Online Library.
  4. Aveling, James Hobson (1872). English Midwives: Their History and Prospects. J. & A. Churchill.
  5. 1 2 3 Garnett 1886.
  6. "About Elizabeth Blackwell". BOTANICAL ART & ARTISTS. Retrieved 28 October 2022.
  7. Blackwell, Elizabeth (1739). A Curious Herbal: Containing 500 Cuts, of the Most Useful Plants, which are Now Used in the Practice of Physick...; to which is Added a Short Description of Ye Plants, and Their Common Uses in Physick. Nourse.
  8. 1 2 3 4 Madge, Bruce (30 July 2001). "Elizabeth Blackwell—the forgotten herbalist?". Health Information & Libraries Journal. 18 (3): 144–152. doi:10.1046/j.1471-1842.2001.00330.x. PMID 11780743.
  9. Weston, R (1806). "A review of the principal authors on horticulture and botany, from 1480 to 1750". The Gentleman's Magazine. 18 (3): 1101.
  10. Weston, R (1806). "A review of the principal authors on horticulture and botany, from 1480 to 1750". The Gentleman's Magazine. 18 (3): 1101.
  11. Weston, R (1806). "A review of the principal authors on horticulture and botany, from 1480 to 1750". The Gentleman's Magazine. 18 (3): 1101.
  12. "Ancestry® | Genealogy, Family Trees & Family History Records".
  13. "Elizabeth Blackwell". National Library of Scotland.
  14. "Chelsea Walk - Swan Walk". www.rbkc.gov.uk. Retrieved 28 October 2022.
  15. Miller, Philip (30 July 1835). "The gardeners dictionary" via Google Books.
  16. Zemanek, Alicja; Zemanek, Bodgan (2008). "The Morphology of Illustrated Plants". Drawn after Nature: The Complete Botanical Watercolours of the 16th-Century Libri Picturati. Zeist: KNNV Publishing. pp. 79–84.
  17. Blunt, Wilfrid (1950). The art of botanical illustration Collins. London.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  18. Mead, Kate Campbell Hurd (1938). A History of Women in Medicine: From the Earliest Times to the Beginning of the Nineteenth Century. Haddam Press.
  19. "Virtual books". The British Library.
  20. "V&A · Print and Prejudice: Women Printmakers, 1700 – 1930 - Display at South Kensington". Victoria and Albert Museum. Retrieved 12 November 2022.
  21. Blackwell, Elizabeth; Harding, Samuel; Nourse, John (30 July 1737). A curious herbal :containing five hundred cuts, of the most useful plants, which are now used in the practice of physick engraved on folio copper plates, after drawings taken from the life. Printed for Samuel Harding.
  22. Blackwell, Elizabeth (2023). Marta McDowell (ed.). A Curious Herbal: Elizabeth Blackwell's pioneering masterpiece of botanical art. New York: Abbeville Press Publishers. ISBN 978-0-7892-1453-9. OCLC 1333619714.
  23. International Plant Names Index.  Blackw.
Attribution

 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Garnett, Richard (1886). "Blackwell, Elizabeth". In Stephen, Leslie (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 5. London: Smith, Elder & Co.

Further reading

Historical editions

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