Background
Thomas Workman was born at Ceara, Belfast, Ireland in 1844 into a wealthy family involved in commerce.
Thomas Workman was born at Ceara, Belfast, Ireland in 1844 into a wealthy family involved in commerce.
He is best known for his book Malaysian Spiders, published in 1896, in which he described several new species. He became a successful businessman, at first in the linen trade and then in shipbuilding. Not to be confused with Frank Workman, born in Belfast 16 February 1856, youngest of 15 children in a family of Scottish origin who were muslin manufacturers, who started the Belfast Shipyard of Workman Clark in 1879.
In the years 1869 and 1870 Workman travelled in North America spending his time mainly in the West, much with native tribes.
His trip journals and accounts of the natural history of the American plains and Native Americans are now in the Public Records Office in Belfast. His collection of North American Indian artefacts is in the Ulster Museum.
Each year, when business and family permitted, Workman spent lengthy periods in foreign lands, collecting insects, especially butterflies and spiders. His ethnographic collections are in the Ulster Museum in Belfast.
His most significant trips were 1881 -Brazil 1883 -India, Burma, Singapore, China and the Philippines 1888 - Singapore and Ceylon 1890- Singapore and Java 1892- Ceylon, Singapore and India Workman was, as well as being actively involved in the civic administration of Belfast, the Honorary Librarian of the Belfast Natural History and Philosophical Society becoming president in 1898.
He died in Saint Paul, Minnesota, United States.A in 1900, having caught a chill en route from Vancouver following a trip to the Rocky Mountains. Octavius Pickard-Cambridge (1828–1917) England Theodore Savory ( ) England Tord Tamerlan Teodor Thorell (1830–1901) Sweden Adalbert Seitz (1860–1938) Germany Lionel Walter Rothschild ( (1868–1937) England Damarchus workmanii Thorell Theridium workmanii Thorell Phidippus workmanii Peckham & Peckham Goleta workmanii Peckham & Peckham Workman"s correspondence, diaries et cetera are in the Public records Office Belfast.
Aside from his work on spiders, especially those of the Far East, Workman was a considerable lepidopterist collecting for Adalbert Seitz and Lionel Walter Rothschild among others Some of his specimens are figured and noted without attribution in Seitz" monumental Macrolepidoptera of the World. A systematic description of the hitherto known Macrolepidoptera, edited in collaboration with well-known specialists published in Stuttgart by Alfred Kermen.