Evening Telegraph (First Edition)

£10k funds boost to help celebrate scientific legacy

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A PROJECT to celebrate the legacy of a Tayside man credited with discoverin­g the process of natural selection 30 years before Charles Darwin has been awarded Heritage Lottery funding.

The Carse of Gowrie Sustainabi­lity Group (CoGSG) will receive £10,000 f or t he Patrick Matthew Memorial Project, which includes a festival weekend from September 30 to October 1

“This project, which is two years in the making, will create a story-map and trail for people of all ages to discover Patrick Matthew’s Carse and his contributi­on to science, orchards, redwoods and social justice,” said Fiona Ross, CoGSG chairwoman.

“Securing the Heritage Lottery funding promotes a memorial to his legacy for local residents and Matthew’s descendant­s.”

The group i s working with Matthew’s descendant­s, i ncluding Howard Minnick, and expert Dr Mike Sutton, from Nottingham Trent University, to promote his legacy.

Dr Sutton maintains Darwin’s book, On t he Origin of Species, published in 1859, had been heavily influenced by Matthew’s work, On Naval Timber and Arboricult­ure, published in 1831, which contains t he complete hypothesis of the theory of natural selection.

“In actuality, it is Scotland and its people who have been most short-changed by this deception,” said botanist and conservati­onist Mr Minnick.

“Therefore, it is they and Scotland who need t o recover this heritage taken from them.

“That is what I hope to accomplish and help to bring about with this memorial project.”

It was Matthew who introduced the California­n giant sequoia redwood to the Inchture and Errol area.

There are moves to establish a genetic reserve in Scotland, as redwoods are depleting in the US due to global warming.

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