Wild
plants growing in Badsey 1817 - 1821:
Botany and the Rev. William Rufford
William Squire
Rufford was an assistant curate at Badsey from 1813 to 1819. His interest
in botany gives us a glimpse of the wealth of wild plants that were then
growing in the Badsey area.
Charles Phillott,
the vicar at that time, lived away from Badsey. Rufford would have carried
out most of the vicar's duties. Between 1815 and 1818 the parish records
show the baptisms of three daughters born to Rufford's wife Anne.
We know about
Rufford's interest in botany from a recent article Worcestershire botany
– the historical record by J J Day published in the Worcestershire
Record Issue 14 (April 2003). The full article appears on the website
of the Worcestershire Biological Records
Centre & Worcestershire Recorders.
Some of the information comes
from correspondence between Rufford and Thomas Purton who was a doctor
of medicine at Alcester. Rufford's records provide a wealth of detail
on the species and communities in the Vale of Evesham.
Day comments "The list
is in many respects stunning. There would be no inkling of this assemblage,
particularly the halophytes and arable weed spectrum, without Rufford's
work. W. Cheshire visited the Badsey area in the 1850's, in an attempt
to relocate rarities, but reported little of interest amidst an improved
landscape and deeply dug drains."
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