The Herald

Box full of Darwin’s treasures returned to its home by family descendant­s

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A KEEPSAKE box containing Charles Darwin’s shells is being returned to the family home.

The shells were gathered by Darwin on his famous Beagle Voyage, where his observatio­ns led him to develop his theory of evolution.

Darwin’s descendant­s have donated the red leather box and its “treasures” inside to English Heritage, who will display the object at what was Darwin’s home – Down House, in Kent.

The Victorian box belonged to Darwin’s daughters, who filled it with family mementos.

Darwin and his wife Emma gave the box to their eldest daughter Annie but when she died, aged 10 in 1851, the box passed to her sister Henrietta.

Henrietta (Etty) continued to fill it with souvenirs, including locks of hair belonging to members of the Darwin family, Darwin’s silk handkerchi­ef and the shells.

His daughters carefully labelled the objects using scrap paper from the naturalist’s draft manuscript­s.

The box has now been donated to English Heritage from the estate of Richard Darwin Keynes, greatgrand­son of Charles and Emma Darwin.

Speaking on behalf of the Keynes family, Simon and Randal Keynes, the great-great-grandsons of Darwin, said: “We are delighted to return this box, long treasured by Darwin’s daughter, Etty, and granddaugh­ter, Margaret, to Down House for display among the other objects there which remind visitors of its many years as a family home.”

Darwin lived at Down House for 40 years until his death in 1882 and it was here that he wrote his groundbrea­king masterpiec­e, On The Origin Of Species By Natural Selection (1859).

English Heritage said the box is a reminder that Darwin’s work and family life were “deeply intertwine­d”, with Henrietta helping him to edit The Descent Of Man (1871).

Its curator Olivia Fryman said: “This charming keepsake box gives us an intimate insight into Victorian habits of collecting, the life of Charles Darwin and how his scientific work and family life were intertwine­d... the box will give visitors to Down House a valuable sense of Darwin’s work and the family who surrounded and supported him.”

The donation has been announced on the 150th anniversar­y of the publicatio­n of Darwin’s book, The Descent Of Man And Selection in Relation to Sex (1871). The box will go on display later in the year.

 ?? Pictures: Christophe­r Ison/pa ?? English Heritage curator Olivia Fryman inspecting a keepsake box that once belonged to the daughters of Charles Darwin and which has been returned to the family home in Kent, England
Pictures: Christophe­r Ison/pa English Heritage curator Olivia Fryman inspecting a keepsake box that once belonged to the daughters of Charles Darwin and which has been returned to the family home in Kent, England
 ??  ?? The keepsake box contains a number of notes, shells and other items from the Darwin family’s collection
The keepsake box contains a number of notes, shells and other items from the Darwin family’s collection

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