Una Leonora Foster Weatherby (11 October 1878 – 17 August 1957) was an American botanical illustrator, botanical collector, and researcher of gravestones. The daughter of a Texas businessman and lawyer, she graduated college and trained as an artist in early life. During a European trip, she met the botanist Charles Alfred Weatherby, was commissioned to illustrate his works, and the two subsequently married. She continued to collect and illustrate plants, taking a particular interest in ferns, and left a bequest to the American Fern Society after her death. She and her husband were also interested in early American gravestones and their decoration.
Early life and education
Born on 11 October 1878 in Texas, United States of America, she was the daughter of Arthur Crawford Foster, a wealthy school teacher, lawyer and real estate agent.[1][2][3] Her mother was Margaret Ellen Edwards, a former student of Foster's who died when Una was three, leaving her an only child.[1] Arthur remarried and had other children, of whom a son and two daughters survived infancy.[3][4]
Una attended Baylor University in Waco, Texas, from 1896, before receiving a scholarship to study a Bachelor of Science degree at Shorter Female College in Rome, Georgia.[1][3] She graduated in 1899.[1]
In 1902, Una travelled to Boston, firstly to study at the Eric Pope Art School, and then at the Normal Art School with the aim of becoming an art teacher.[1][3]
Career
In February 1910, Una travelled to Europe, and it was while visiting the Uffizi gallery in Florence that Una met the botanist and herbarium curator Charles Alfred Weatherby, which sparked a close working relationship that saw Una commissioned to illustrate his books and articles.[1]
After a period of lengthy correspondence and occasional visits in the United States, they married in 1917, despite opposition from Weatherby's mother.[5][6] Una "provided critical illustrations of type specimens" and travelled with Charles to Europe to photograph and illustrate further type material.[6]
Botanical legacy
Una is recognised for her contributions to the field of botany, particularly the study of ferns, through her illustrations and collecting.
This includes a series of watercolours of Impatiens biflora, painted circa 1912, that are held by the New England Botanical Club.[1][7]
When the 1913 English publication Wild Flower Preservation, by Mae Coley was being adapted to the U.S. market, to feature North American species, Una was commissioned to create a new illustration of Robin's Plantain.[1][8] She also contributed to the Ferns of Eastern West Virginia.[9]
She also provided a habitat sketch of Ctenopteris punctata in The Ferns of Liberia in 1955.[10]
She was also a botanical collector. She collected the type specimen of Impatiens biflora Walter f. platymeris Weatherby,[11] and jointly collected type material with Charles Alfred Weatherby for:
After Una's death the American Fern Society, an organisation she had been a member of since 1914, were willed an unrestricted bequest that was used to financially support the American Fern Journal.[1]
Research into gravestones
Along with her husband Charles, Una photographed early American gravestones and studied their artistic motifs.[2][1] Throughout the 1920s, Una photographed tombstones throughout New England, and after her death her work was reappraised as a "pioneer" in a period where grave stones and their decorative motifs had received little scholarly attention.[19]
The Una F. Weatherby Collection at the Robert S. Cox Special Collections & University Archives Research Center, University of Massachusetts Amherst includes an unpublished manuscript and photographs of gravestones.
Selected publications
Una F. Weatherby. 1952. “The English Names of North American Ferns.” American Fern Journal 42(4): 134–51.[20]
^ abcdef"Una F. Weatherby Collection". UMass Amherst Libraries Robert S. Cox Special Collections & University Archives Research Center. University of Massachusetts Amherst. Retrieved 9 July 2023.