Herman Rupp

Botanist, Award Winner

1872 – 1956

17

Who was Herman Rupp?

Herman Montague Rucker Rupp was an Australian clergyman and botanist who specialised in orchids and was known as the "Orchid Man".

Rupp was born in Port Fairy, Victoria to a Prussian-born Anglican clergyman father and Tasmanian mother who died soon after his birth. Rupp was educated at Geelong Grammar School as a boarder, where an uncle John Bracebridge Wilson, the naturalist, was headmaster.

Rupp was made deacon on 28 May 1899 and ordained priest on 2 June 1901. He began recording his botanical observations and specimens in 1892; from 1899 made 'a census of the native plants' of his parishes. In 1924 he decided to 'concentrate on the family which had always attracted me most — the orchids' and gave some 5000 other specimens to the University of Melbourne's botany school. He sent 'some MSS notes on orchids' to Joseph Maiden who had them published in the Australian Naturalist. Rupp published over 200 papers in the following thirty years.

Rupp was awarded the Clarke Medal by the Royal Society of New South Wales in 1949 and the Australian Natural History Medallion by the Field Naturalists Club of Victoria in 1954.

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Born
Dec 27, 1872
Port Fairy
Profession
Education
  • Geelong Grammar School
Died
Sep 2, 1956

Submitted
on July 23, 2013

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