.---Ashton Blackburne
was an important early collector of birds in the New York City region at the time
of the Revolutionary War. His contributions to American ornithology were graciously
acknowledged by Thomas Pennant (1785, 1: leaf A2) in "Arctic zoology." He dis-
closed how Blackburne's specimens came into his hands, and pointed out their
importance to him:
"To the rich museum of American Birds, preserved by Mrs. Anna Blackburn, of
Orford, near Warrington, I am indebted for the opportunity of describing almost
every one known in the provinces of Jersey, New York, and Connecticut. They
were sent over to that lady by her brother the late Mr. Ashton Blackburn; who
added to the skill and zeal of a sportsman, the most pertinent remarks on the
specimens he collected for his worthy and philosophical sister."
Mrs. Allen (1951) implied that Ashton Blackburne vas one of Pennant's collectors
in North America, but the statement above affirms that their connection was less
direct.
McAtee (1963) determined the number of birds from New York that Pennant
described from Ashton Blackburne's specimens amounted to "no fewer than 101."
The number is still higher when the birds from adjacent areas are included. This
brief biographical sketch of a neglected naturalist also attempts to identify those
species and subspecies that have maintained their priority and are cited in the
A.O.U. Check-list (1957).
The Blackburne family has been referred to occasionally in the popular literature,
but much of the information about them has been recopied from earlier sources (cf.
Pennant 1774). The amount of material I found in a rather extensive search is
sparse and contains frequent inaccuracies.
Ashton Blackburne was the fifth son of John Blackburne (1693-1786), a well-
known and highly respected horticulturist of Orford Hall, near Warrington, in
Lancashire, England. John Blackburne was famous for his extensive gardens of
exotic plants. Ashton's sister Anna Blackburne (1726-1793) shared their father's
passion for botany, but later turned her efforts toward collecting other objects of
nature. Eventually she established an impressive museum at "Fairfield," her resi-
dence also near Warrington. Her collection formed an important source of reference
specimens used by some of her notable contemporaries: J. R. Forster, C. Linn,
P.S. Pallas, Thomas Pennant, and possibly John Latham, all of whom held her
in high regard as a naturalist. As an expression of his appreciation for the loan of
her North American specimens, Pennant named the Blackburnjan Warbler (Dendroica
)usca) in her honor (Vystrach 1974). Ashton's older brothers remained settled as
gentlemen in the Liverpool-Warrington area, but he seems to have been an ad-
venturer and emigrated to America. His main mission evidently was to supply his
sister's cabinet with items from the New World.
Efforts to find a record of Ashton Blackburne's birth have been fruitless, but it
was probably around 1730. His mother was Katharine Ashton, the daughter of the
Reverend William Ashton (or Assheton), Rector of Prestwich, Lancashire. Her
sister, Dorothy Ashton, was the mother of Sir Ashton Lever (1729-1788), a pioneer
in the development of natural history museums (Ripley 1969). Nothing sub-
stantial has been found about Ashton Blackburne's early life and education, but
the quality of his account of the Passenger Pigeon (Ectopstes migratorius), quoted
verbatim in "Arctic zoology" (Pennant 1785, 2: 324-326), seems sufficient evidence
that he had acquired an education befitting a squire's son.
In her first letter to Linn (Hulth 1922: 284-285), dated 29 June 1771, Anna
indicated that Ashton had already been actively collecting in America for some time:
"Having a Bro r. who lives near new York in north America, who annually
enriches my Cabinet with the productions of that Country, if it wou'd be agreeable
to you I wou'd send you a few Birds & insects, which I believe are not in your
Sys. Nat ae. & which he kill'd within 50 miles of that place."
Anna Blackburne and the Swedish taxonomist exchanged only a few letters, and it
is doubtful that he described any birds from her specimens because of the illness
that inactivated him in 1774. Gmelin (1788) subsequently gave technical names to
those Blackburne birds that had been described initially and given vernacular names
by Pennant (1785) and by Latham in "A general synopsis of birds" (1781).
Very few records are extant of the activities and fate of Anna Blackburne's
brother in America. McAtee (1952) reported that he lived on Long Island, possibly
in the Hempstead area, and collected birds in New Jersey, New York, and
Connecticut. How far and how frequently he strayed from that locale has not been
determined, but in his account of the Passenger Pigeon, he indicates travel to
"Niagara" and British garrisons.
In her second letter to Linn (Hulth 1922: 286-287), dated 14 October 1771, Anna
suggests that Ashton may have been seriously ill at that time:
"My Colection of dry'd birds is pritty num[erous]. My cabinet is not destitute
of shells, Insects, fish & Fossils, & if my brother lives will increase fast."
Coupled with that last remark, the circumstance of his death is speculative. Rylands
(1881) gives the following account in "Hale Hall:"
"Asheton Blackburne died in America in 1787, and was buried at the Episcopal
Chapel at Nouwalk, 60 miles from New York. The church had been lately re-
built, and was the first that was consecrated by the first bishop sent out from
England to America."
"Nouwalk" is Norwalk, Connecticut, and the church is St. Paul's, but documentation
of Mr. Blackburne's death or burial is no longer extant because the church
records were destroyed during the Revolutionary War. If he resided on Long
Island and died in Norwalk, he was far from home when he met his end, suggesting
that it was unexpected. The year 1787 appears to be an error; it seems more
likely that he died nearer to 1780. One piece of evidence is Pennant's reference to
the "late Ashton Blackburn" in his acknowledgement in "Arctic zoology." Further
support for an earlier date is found in an obituary notice for Ashton's father
published in 1787 (Aiken 1787). This author comments that Anna's brother had
"died in that country [North America] several years ago." Thus h!s life span was
approximately 50 years.
The birds of the A.O.U. Check-list believed to have been originally described
from specimens Ashton Blackburne procured were selected from among the 29
given Linnaean names by Gmelin and based on birds published earlier by Pennant
and/or Latham. Examination of their original descriptions in "Arctic zoology" and
"A general synopsis of birds" identified those species and subspecies that were
described from specimens collected in the New York environs and obtained from
the Blackburne Museum. They numbered 16: American Wigeon (Anas americana),
Labrador Duck (Camptorhynchus labradorius), Red-shouldered Hawk (Buteo
lineatus), Clapper Rail (Rallus longirostris crepltans), Yellow Rail (Coturnicops
noveboracensis), American Woodcock (Philohela minor), Willet (Catoptrophorus
semipalmatus), Lesser Yellowlegs (Tringa flavipes), Short-billed Dowitcher (Lim-
nodromus griseus), Eastern Screech Owl (Otus asio naevius), Eastern Phoebe
(Sayornis phoebe), Wood Thrush (Hylocichla mustelina), Northern White-eyed
Vireo (Vireo griseus noveboracensis), Scarlet Tanager (Piranga olivacea), Sharp-
tailed Sparrow (Ammospiza caudacuta), and Vesper Sparrow (Pooecetes gramineus).
Perhaps the Dickcissel (Spiza americana) should also be included. It appears to
have been described independently by Pennant and Latham, although Pennant re-
ported that his specimen came from New York by way of Anna Blackburne's
collection.
Accounts of all 17 birds are given in both works. In most instances the descrlp-
tions are essentially the same and are generally in the style of Pennant. In all but
three cases, the same trivial names are used, and, except for the American Wigeon
and the Clapper Rail, they differ from those of the A.O.U. Check-l/st. Thus it
appears that much of Latham's information regarding these species came directly
from Pennant and the Blackburne specimens. To put Ashton Blackburne's contri-
butions into perspective compare his 16, or possibly 17, eastern species and sub-
species still on the Check-list, with Audubon's 22 and Wilson's 26.
I am indebted to the staff members of the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript
Library of Yale University for the use of the early ornithology books cited, and to
Carl-Otto von Sydow of Universitets Biblioteket, Uppsala, for permission to quote
from the Anna Blackburne-Linn correspondence.
LITERATIJ'RE CITED
AIxEr, J. 1787. Obituary of John Blackburne. Gent. Mag. 57 part 1: 204.
ArrEst, E.G. 1951. The history of American ornithology before Audubon. Trans.
Amer. Phil. Soc. 41: 492-493.
ARc^ ORTOLOCSTS' Uo. 1957. Check-list of North American birds, fifth
ed. Baltimore, Amer. Ornithol. Union.
GEL, J. M. 1788. Syst. nat..; ef. A.O.U. check-list for specific citations.
HULTa, J. M. (Ed.). 1922. Bref och skrifvelser af och till Carl yon Linn
Afd 2, Del. 1.
L^T^, J. 1781. A general synopsis of birds. London, Benj. White.
McAEE, W.L. 1952. Thomas Pennant. Nature Mag. 45: 98, 108.
McAT, W. L. 1963. The North American birds of Thomas Pennant. J. Soc.
Bibliogr. Nat. Hist. 4: 100-124.
P^% T. 1774. A tour in Scotland and voyage to the Hebrides. London,
John Monk.
P^, T. 1785. Arctic zoology. Lon,don, Henry Hughs.
RIPLEY, S. D. 1969. The sacred grove, essays on museums. New York, Simon
and Shuster.
RYL^DS, J.P. 1881. Hale Hall, with notes on the family of Ireland Blaekburne.
Liverpool, private printing.
W3/4ST^Cr, V. P. 1974. A note on the naming of the Blackburntan warbler. J.
Soc. Bibliogr. Nat. Hist. 7: 89-91.
V. P. WYSTRACIt, 20 Westfield Road, Wilton, Connecticut 06897. Accepted 15
Jul. 74.