Hamilton, Arthur Andrew (1855 - 1929)
Herbarium assistant at the NSW Herbarium in the early 1900s.
The Director, Joseph Maiden, after the eventual removal of a staff member he found troublesome, Miss Hynes, on 3 September 1910, sought the transfer from Centennial Park of a 55-year old gardener, Arthur Andrew Hamilton, to
succeed Miss Hynes as botanical assistant.
Arthur Hamilton
belonged, he wrote:
. . . to the same class of man that Mr Cheel does.
He
has a sound knowledge of plants, both exotic and
indigenous.
He is a born naturalist, and has studied the life
histories of plants without hope of reward ...
he is
capable of original investigations ...
For years ... he has spent most of his Saturday
afternoons and often his holidays in the herbarium
... He is a sound and cautious botanist with much experience.
Hamilton collected widely in NSW and in Queensland and Western Australia.
At times he was accompanied on expeditions by A.H.S.Lucas.
In 1918 he published a 69 page booklet titled
'Topographical ecological and taxonomic notes on the ocean shoreline vegetation of the Port Jackson district'.
Source: Extracted from:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arthur_Andrew_Hamilton
Gilbert, L. (2001) 'The Little Giant - the Life and Work of Joseph Henry Maiden, 1859-1925', Kardoorair Press.
Portrait Photo: Unknown source
Collecting localities for 'Hamilton, A.A.' from AVH (2025)
Data from 2,229 specimens