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Henry Wickham
Henry Wickham was responsible for gathering 70,000 seeds
from the rubber-bearing tree, Hevea brasiliensis, in the
Manaus area of Brazil in 1876. These had been gathered at
the behest of the eminent Victorian botanist Sir Joseph
Hooker, Director of Kew. Wickham is a key figure in the
story. Even though some people (and he himself) may have
over-rated the contribution that he made to the subsequent
establishment of the rubber plantation industry, there is
no doubt that in 1873 he was the right man, at the right
time, and at the right place.
Wickham, who was at that time living and working near Santerem
in the Rio Tapajos region of the upper Amazon, was already
interested in Hevea, and had published some information
on the tree, thus satisfying Markham that he would be a
suitable person to make a collection. Markham then arranged
that the British consul in Belem should be instructed to
obtain seeds of Hevea, with a mention of "a Mr Wickham,
at Santerem, who may do the job".
The story of the way in which Wickham organized his famous
collection of 1876 has been told many times, often with
little reference to the facts. In later years, Wickham himself
encouraged the idea that his seeds had been loaded aboard
a ship under the nose of a gunboat which "would have
blown us out of the water had her commander suspected what
we were doing". Dean expressed the view that it was
essential to Wickham's subsequent and largely unsuccessful
attempts to achieve fame and fortune that he should foster
the notion that his operation was attended by extreme personal
danger. It is curious that no comprehensive biography of
Wickham has been written, but much information on his life
is provided in a series of articles by Lane (1953).

Sir Henry Wickham
In June 1876 seventy thousand of Wickham's seeds arrived
at Kew Gardens; only 2700 seem to have germinated. According
to the Kew records (see Baulkwill, 1989), 1900 of the seedlings
were sent to the Botanic Gardens at Colombo, where 90 per
cent survived; 18 went to the Botanic Gardens at Bogor,
Indonesia, where two survived; and 50 went to Singapore
where probably none survived.
During the same year, there was another collection of Hevea
in Brazil, by Robert Cross, who departed from England after
the arrival of the Wickham seeds; he returned in November
with 1000 seedlings collected in the Lower Amazon.
The subsequent fate of these is a mystery; the general
opinion seems to be that none of Cross's material survived,
though Baulkwill suggests that "some small admixture
of Cross genetic material cannot be entirely ruled out".
This matter is of some importance, because the Wickham and
Cross collections were made in different regions of the
Amazon, so that their materials would certainly have possessed
differing genetic compositions. The probability is that
the entire Hevea industry has developed from Wickham's 2700
seedlings. collected in the Upper Amazon, a very narrow
genetic base.
As just noted, during 1876 seedlings from Kew Gardens were
received in Sri Lanka, Singapore (and subsequently Malaysia)
and Indonesia. In India, the first were received in 1878,
from Sri Lanka. It was in fact Sri Lanka which was the centre
of early activity, the Heneratgoda Botanic Gardens in Colombo
becoming a major source of rubber seeds, for domestic use
and also for export. Much valuable early development work
was done in Colombo, for example on latex flow and the use
of acetic acid to coagulate latex (Parkin, 1910), and on
diseases (Fetch, 1911).
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