Background
James Britten was born on May 3, 1846, at 18 Shawfield Street, Chelsea, London, the son of James Alexander Britten, a bookseller, and his wife, Mary Ann Shepard.
Linnean Society of London, Burlington House, Piccadilly, Mayfair, London W1J 0BF, United Kingdom
James Britten was elected a fellow of the Linnean Society in 1870.
Vatican City
In 1897, James Britten was made a Knight of the Order of St. Gregory by Pope Leo XIII.
Vatican City
In 1917, James Britten was promoted to Knight Commander of the Order of St. Gregory.
James Britten was born on May 3, 1846, at 18 Shawfield Street, Chelsea, London, the son of James Alexander Britten, a bookseller, and his wife, Mary Ann Shepard.
Britten was educated privately and for five years, until he reached the age of twenty-three, he resided with a doctor at High Wycombe, Buckinghamshire, as a preliminary to entering the medical profession. During that period he was the secretary to the local natural history society and editor of its magazine.
James Britten abandoned his medical studies when, in 1869, he was appointed assistant in the herbarium of the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. The following year he attended a course of lectures at University College, London, given by Daniel Oliver, who at the time was also a keeper of the herbarium at Kew. Oliver befriended Britten and greatly encouraged him in botanical field pursuits, which they often shared. On Oliver’s advice, Britten applied for a post in the department of botany in the British Museum, then still part of the main establishment at Bloomsbury. Much to the resentment of Sir Joseph Hooker, he left Kew, after only two years, to begin what was to be an industrious and somewhat tempestuous career at the museum.
Britten’s most important contributions to botany concerned historical, literary, and biographical aspects of the subject; and his long obituary notices, notes, and anecdotal comments, occasionally caustic and vituperative, are most valuable reference sources. With G. S. Boulger he produced in 1893 the invaluable Biographical Index of British and Irish Botanists, to which three supplements were published before his death and of which a second edition, revised by Dr. A. R. Rendle, appeared in 1931. His interest in old English dialects and folklore was manifest in many of his writings, especially in two works published by the English Dialect Society: the important Dictionary of English Plant Names (1878-1886), compiled in cooperation with Robert Holland, and his reprint, with notes, of William Turner’s The Names of Herbes (1881). He also published a number of articles of ephemeral importance in the popular scientific press of the day.
The herbarium of Sir Hans Sloane, probably the most extensive collection of plants in existence in the seventeenth or eighteenth century, was purchased when the British Museum was founded in 1753. Britten’s historical bent led him, throughout his service in the museum, to accumulate a mass of data, written on slips of paper, that until recently were the only commentary to the contents of Sloane’s 265 bound volumes of exsiccatae. They formed the basis of The Sloane Herbarium, an annotated list of the horti sicci composing the herbarium, with biographical accounts of the principal contributors revised and edited by J. E. Dandy; it was published by the trustees of the British Museum in 1958.
Britten’s first published work was a short note on locations of rare plants, mostly in the Thames Valley in Irvine’s The Phytologist (November 1862). In the following year, he contributed the paper "Rare and Exotic Plants at Kew Bridge, Surrey" to the first volume of the Journal of Botany, which he later edited for almost forty-five years. He used his editorial prerogative in a highly individualistic manner, and never missed an opportunity to express his candid criticism, deserved or not. This attitude caused resentment, and he was quick to pounce on any apparent shortcomings of the authorities and publications of Kew, which became a constant target for his pungent comments. Relations between his department and Kew were severely strained after an official committee recommended in 1901 that the herbarium collections at the museum should be transferred to Kew. Britten did not conceal his malice toward Kew, particularly criticizing the administration and making personal attacks on members of the staff. His indiscretions led to legal action, and he was obliged in the same year to make a public apology to the Kew authorities and to pay a donation to an agreed charity. His wit was always evident and perhaps one of his best efforts concerned the supposed demise of the regular numbers of the Kew Bulletin in a period when four appendices appeared and he surmised that the main publication had developed appendicitis!
James Britten is remembered as a botanist, and editor of the Journal of Botany, British and Foreign for 45 years, the journal for the records of British plants, descriptions of new species, botanical bibliographies, and obituaries.
The standard author abbreviation Britten is used to indicate this person as the author when citing a botanical name.
James Britten was admitted to the Roman Catholic Church when he was twenty-one, and with his characteristic energy threw himself with zest into the propaganda activities of his adopted church. Also, he was particularly prominent in the work of the Catholic Truth Society.
His irascible, and controversial temperament was often an embarrassment to his colleagues.
Quotes from others about the person
"Britten threw himself fully into the editorship, although his pungent remarks on papers submitted were not always appreciated." - botanist Norman Hall
Daniel Oliver was a British botanist. He was Librarian of the Herbarium, Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew from 1860-1890 and Keeper there from 1864-1890, and Professor of Botany at University College, London from 1861-1888.