Charles Wright (October 29, 1811 – August 11, 1885) was an American botanist.
History
Wright was born in Wethersfield, Connecticut,[1] the son of James Wright and Mary née Goodrich. He studied classics and mathematics at Yale,[1] and in October 1835 moved to Natchez, Mississippi to tutor a plantation owner's family. His employer's business failed two years later, and he moved to Texas, working as a land surveyor and teacher. He surveyed ground for the Pacific Railroad Company.[2] During this time, he also collected plants for Asa Gray. Gray thought of Wright as one of his most trusted collectors.[3][4]
Wright left the expedition at San Francisco in February 1856 and went south to Nicaragua.[2] His collection of plants from Hong Kong was used by George Bentham for his Flora Hongkongensis (1861).
Between 1856 and 1867, he led a scientific expedition to Cuba.[2] In 1859 he joined Juan Gundlach in the area around Monteverde, and in the winter of 1861-62 they explored together around Cárdenas. He was also still in communication with Asa Gray and via him, Charles Darwin, discussing orchids.[8] This was possible because at the start of the American Civil War, he was in Cuba and Gray kept him there until 1864 to keep Wright safe and his ongoing botanical work intact.[9] In 1871, he went with the US Commission to Santo Domingo.[2]
^Dupree, A. Hunter (1988). Asa Gray, American Botanist, Friend of Darwin. Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press. pp. 165–166. ISBN978-0-801-83741-8.