The name Michaux often appears in the plant names of Florida, from the endangered yellow violets that grow wild in the panhandle to the Florida rosemary of the scrub. André Michaux (1746-1803) was an extraordinary and dynamic individual who explored North America during the eighteenth century, the first trained botanist to explore extensively the wilderness east of the Mississippi River, including Spanish East Florida. This first book-length account of Michaux's Florida exploration combines his original journal with writings about him by later authors, historical background, and the author's own narrative to create a multifaceted, comprehensive treatise on Michaux's travels and discoveries in Florida.
Beginning with a biographical sketch on the life of André Michaux, royal botanist for King Louis XVI of France, the authors retrace (using 16 maps) the exploratory routes he took in Florida and recount historical events occurring in Florida at the time. They include in full documentary form all the plants he discovered, collected, and observed and fully assess his findings so that his contributions can now be evaluated along with those of better-known botanists of whom much has been written, such as John Bartram and his son William – who acknowledged the Frenchman's abilities, writing that Michaux could traverse the same ground that he and his father had covered and find plants that they had missed.
From a historical as well as a botanical perspective, André Michaux in Florida re-creates the Florida exploration of a remarkable explorer and observer and allows us to experience vicariously the vibrancy and joy of his journey of discovery.
Walter Kingsley Taylor is a professor of biology at the University of Central Florida, Orlando, and the author of The Guide to Florida Wildflowers (1992) and Florida Wildflowers in Their Natural Communities (UPF, 1998).
Eliane M. Norman is a professor emerita of biology at Stetson University, DeLand, Florida, and the author of A Monograph on New World Buddlejaceae (2000).
"André Michaux in Florida is outstanding for its scholarship and documentation; the authors have clearly written with meticulous care to detail [...] A critical documentation of Michaux's botanical work in Florida that adds significantly to the historical record."
– Plant Science Bulletin"
This book makes a bold start at restoring the significance of [Michaux's] botanical record to the history of science."
– Isis
"Taylor and Norman have provided a volume useful to specialists on Florida's historical biological diversity. The volume will also be of use to scholars of the late colonial period in Florida, especially those interested in environmental history."
– H-Net
"[The authors] provide copious historical, geographic, and biographical background information concerning Michaux, other naturalists with whom he corresponded, and the political history of the area of Florida he explored."
– Journal of Southern History
"An excellent primary resource for understanding the second Spanish period of Florida."
– Colonial Latin American Historical Review
"The appeal of André Michaux in Florida lies in its interest and usefulness to both professional and amateur botanists, horticulturalists, gardeners, field naturalists, and historians."
– Ronald L. Stuckey, Museum of Biological Diversity, Ohio State University
"Botanists, historians, and amateur naturalists alike will delight in this meticulous telling of André Michaux's journey in Florida. Michaux's passion for discovery is brought to light through a wonderful recounting of the rigors of eighteenth-century exploration and collection, dealings with local officials, and collaboration with such American naturalists as William Bartram."
– David Taylor, Converse College, Spartanburg, South Carolina