Lady Charlotte Wheeler Cuffe
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

Charlotte Isabel Wheeler-Cuffe (; 24 May 1867 – 8 March 1967) was an amateur botanical artist, plant collector and gardener.


Life

Williams was born on 24 May 1867 in Wimbledon, London, to a family with Irish connections, her maternal grandfather being the Rev. Sir Hercules Langrishe, third Baronet of Knocktopher,
County Kilkenny County Kilkenny ( gle, Contae Chill Chainnigh) is a county in Ireland. It is in the province of Leinster and is part of the South-East Region. It is named after the city of Kilkenny. Kilkenny County Council is the local authority for the cou ...
. Her father, William Williams (1816–1907), was a President of The Law Society of England and Wales. Her pet name was "Shadow". She was taught by a governess at home, and later studied painting under the guidance of
Frank Calderon William Frank Calderon aka W. Frank Calderon (London 1865 – 21 April 1943), was a British painter of portraits, landscapes, figure subjects and sporting pictures. He was the third son of the painter and Keeper of the Royal Academy in Lond ...
. In the summer of 1897 at
Lodsworth Lodsworth is a small village and civil parish in the Chichester district of West Sussex, England. It is situated between Midhurst and Petworth, half a mile north of the A272 road. It lies within the South Downs National Park, just to the north o ...
parish church in Sussex, she married Otway Fortescue Wheeler-Cuffe (who was to inherit the Wheeler-Cuffe baronetcy when his uncle, Sir Charles Wheeler-Cuffe, second baronet, died in January 1915). Otway Wheeler-Cuffe (1866–1934) who was born in Southsea, Hampshire, was a civil engineer employed by the 1890s in the Public Works Department in Burma. They travelled together to Burma immediately after their marriage. In Burma, she was sometimes able to accompany Otway when he went on official inspection tours of the roads in remote regions. She described these tours in some of the hundreds of weekly letters to her mother. After her mother's death in 1916, she continued the routine of writing once a week to her husband's cousin, Baroness
Pauline Prochazka Pauline Prochazka (1842–1930) was a water-colourist and one of the founders of the Water Colour Society of Ireland. Life Baroness Pauline Prochazka was the daughter of Ottokar, Baron Prochazka, Field Marshal Lieutenant in the Austrian Army, ...
(1842–1930) who then lived at Leyrath,
Kilkenny Kilkenny (). is a city in County Kilkenny, Ireland. It is located in the South-East Region and in the province of Leinster. It is built on both banks of the River Nore. The 2016 census gave the total population of Kilkenny as 26,512. Kilken ...
. Another correspondent was Sir Frederick Moore, the Keeper of the Royal Botanic Gardens, Glasnevin, Dublin. In 1911, on Mount Victoria – also called Nat Ma Taung – Charlotte Wheeler-Cuffe found two new species of
rhododendron ''Rhododendron'' (; from Ancient Greek ''rhódon'' "rose" and ''déndron'' "tree") is a very large genus of about 1,024 species of woody plants in the heath family (Ericaceae). They can be either evergreen or deciduous. Most species are nati ...
: ''Rhododendron burmacium'', a low, busy shrub with pale yellow flowers and a second species, later named ''Rhododendron cuffeanum'', which has white flowers and grows on pine trees. Living plants of both species were sent to the Royal Botanic Gardens, Glasnevin, where they grew and bloomed. Another plant from the mountain, known as Shadow's buttercup, was the blue-flowered ''Anemone obtusiloba'' f. ''patula''. She was a keen gardener and would collect living plants in the wild and bring them into her garden, sometimes also sending material to family and friends in England and Ireland, including the exquisite Shan lily ('' Lilium sulphureum''). Wheeler-Cuffe was invited by the authorities to undertake the formation of a botanical garden at Maymyo (now Pyin U Lwin). She readily agreed and worked on the layout and planting of this garden between 1916 and 1921 when she and her husband left Burma. The Wheeler-Cuffes returned to Europe, and settled in the Cuffe family home at Leyrath, outside Kilkenny, Ireland. She died at Leyrath on 8 March 1967, just 11 weeks short of her one hundredth birthday


Publication

While in Burma she produced ''The Burma alphabet'', a book illustrated by her watercolours. This was sold at five rupees a copy to raise funds for a new hospital, the Queen Alexandra's Children's Hospital, in Mandalay.


Legacy

Wheeler-Cuffe instructed that her watercolours of Burmese orchids and other plants should remain "indefinitely" in the National Botanic Gardens, Glasnevin. Later, her correspondence with her mother and Polly Prochazka was also deposited there by Captain Anthony Tupper, as well as a number of her sketchbooks. However, watercolours (landscapes of Ireland and Burma) and miscellaneous other items were sold when the contents of Leyrath were auctioned in September 1993,Christie’s Scotland Ltd, atalogue of auctionLyrath, Co. Kilkenny, Ireland ...15 September 1993. and so are widely scattered.


See also

*
List of Irish botanical illustrators This is a list of botanical illustrators born or active in Ireland. Botanical illustration involves the painting, drawing and illustration of plants and ecosystems. Often meticulously observed, the botanical art tradition combines both science a ...
* List of Irish plant collectors * Patricia Butler, ''Irish Botanical Illustrators'', Antique Collectors Club, London 2000


References


External links


Frank Kingdon Ward, commissioned drawing


{{DEFAULTSORT:Wheeler-Cuffe, Charlotte 1867 births 1967 deaths 19th-century Irish painters 19th-century Irish women 20th-century Irish painters 20th-century Irish women Botanical illustrators Irish gardeners People from British Burma Wives of baronets People from Wimbledon, London People from County Kilkenny