Ref NoMS/28
TitleWild Flowers of Kashmir - E.F. Noel
AdminHistoryEmilia Frances Noel ( - 1950) was the youngest child and third daughter of the Honourable Henry Lewis Noel, whose father was the first earl of Gainsborough. His cousin was the third earl of Gainsborough, an amateur botanist who had collaborated with A.R. Horwood in writing the 'Flora of Rutland and Northamptonshire'. The Noel's family homes were in Rutland and Lincolnshire.

Emilia Noel attended Somerville College, Oxford, before going on to study at Swanley Horticultural College where she received prizes for the best diary of garden work and the best notebook of advanced botany. She was elected a Fellow of the Linnean Society in 1905 and was among the twenty or so senior female members. She travelled extensively and visited places including Egypt (in 1892) India, Kashmir, Europe, America, North Africa, Ceylon [Sri Lanka], South Africa, Australia, New Zealand, Java, Lombok and in around 1938 she visited the Canaries and West Africa. She kept detailed diaries of the plants that she encountered on these trips. She registered for the Women's War Service in World War I and travelled extensively in England between World War I and World War II. In [1905?] she published a book on the plants of Kashmir and some notes on the country. Noel died on 19 March 1950.
DescriptionNotebook entitled 'Wild Flowers of Kashmir, with localities where found' by E.F. Noel containing details and drawings of plants seen in South Africa, including locations. Also includes 1 loose insert of a drawing of a plant and notes.

A note on the title page states that the notebook was bound in 1937.
Date[1895]-1938
LevelFile
Extent1 notebook
LanguageEnglish
Related MaterialMS/25, MS/26, MS/27, MS/29, MS/29a. Her diares with sketches are at the Royal Geographical Society and some of her drawings of plants of Kashmir are at Liverpool University.
AcquisitionPresented to the Linnean Society by E.F. Noel on 9 March 1948.
Creator NameNoel, E.F.
Access_StatusOpen
    Powered by CalmView© 2008-2025