Barbara Hulme

Barbara Hulme (née Poulter; 1930–2020) was a botanist, credited with being the first to produce experimental hybrids in the genus Atriplex or oraches, a genus of wild flower common on seaside strandlines. The Canadian botanist Pierre Michel Taschereau would later name the Atriplex X hulmeana hybrid after her.[1]

Barbara Hulme
Born1930
York, England
Died2020
EducationUniversity of Edinburgh, Scotland
Known forBotany: First to produce experimental hybrids in the genus Atriplex

Early life and education

Born in York, Barbara attended Tang Hall Junior School in the Heworth area of the city, before gaining a scholarship to attend Queen Anne Grammar School.[1]

University and research

Atriplex is a plant genus of 250–300 species, known by the common names of saltbush and orache.

Barbara studied botany at the University of Edinburgh from 1948 where she achieved a first class degree. She stayed on to study for a PhD, which she gained in 1957 with a thesis entitled "Studies on some British species of Atriplex L".[2] She also assisted botanist Peter Hadland Davis in his study of the flora of Turkey.[1]

Marriage and later life

It was also during her time at Edinburgh that she met her future husband Ken Hulme, who was then working as a foreman at the Royal Botanical Gardens Edinburgh. The couple married in 1955 and moved first to Birmingham, where Barbara finished writing up her thesis, and then to the Wirral in 1957, where Ken had become the first Director at Ness Gardens, University of Liverpool. After the birth of her three children, Barbara's life revolved around caring for them and other family members but her interest in plants stayed with her for the rest of her life, and many of her holidays with Ken, including a trip to China to attend a symposium about botanic gardens, revolved around plants and gardens.[1]

References

  1. "Barbara Hulme obituary". The Guardian. 9 February 2021. Archived from the original on 11 June 2022.
  2. Hulme, Barbara A. (1957). Studies on some british species of Atriplex L. University of Edinburgh. OCLC 64447070.
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