"The Curious Mister Catesby"

is now available on DVD
In February 1722, Mark Catesby, a 40-year old Englishman with an enigmatic past and an insatiable curiosity for the wondrous serendipity of nature, set sail on a three-month voyage to the Lowcountry of South Carolina. His sojourn in the New World was taken under the auspices of London's Royal Society. Catesby was to spend the next four years exploring the natural habitat of the southeast colonies and the Bahamas, and the subsequent 20 years writing and illustrating his exhaustive two-volume Natural History of Carolina, Florida and The Bahama Islands.
The details of Mark Catesby's early life are sketchy at best. We know that he was born in March 1683 in the village of Castle Hedingham in Essex. We know that his father was a "Dissenter" - a Calvinist Protestant who dissented from the Anglican Church - and that a distant cousin was one of the organizers of the infamous "Gunpowder Plot" to blow up king and parliament in 1605. We do not know where he went to school, although he was obviously well educated and wrote good English for the times. We do not know how or why he became a naturalist, although he was a frequent visitor to Castle Hedingham, where his uncle had a botanical garden. We also know that he became acquainted with John Ray, the leading English naturalist of the late 17th century and co-author of an early classic study on birds. We do not know where or how he learned to paint.
By 1719, Catesby had returned to England, where influential members of the Royal Society, then chaired by Sir Isaac Newton, had learned of his work in the colonies. Led by William Sherard, "one of the most celebrated botanists of the age," members began soliciting sponsors to finance Catesby for a botanical expedition to the Lowcountry of South Carolina. By 1722, Catesby was again crossing the Atlantic. This time his studies would reveal the natural marvels of what was still an exotic - and largely unexplored - continent and which would be chronicled in his monumental Natural History of Carolina, Florida & the Bahama Islands.
Catesby's odyssey produced a treasure trove of insights and observations about the untouched wilderness of North America. A number of his drawings depict species we will never see again - the Carolina Parakeet, the Ivory-billed Woodpecker and the Passenger Pigeon. He was very likely the first to recognize how natural and man-made destruction and depredation of a species' habitat lead to extinction. He was the first to depict live animals, particularly birds, in conjunction with environmentally-relevant plants. Earlier natural historians, such as John Ray and Joannes Johstonus, who authored a series of books on vertebrates, including one on birds, depicted their subjects as dead or isolated figures crowded together on the page, with little or no background. And, Catesby was the first to discover that birds migrate, rather than hibernate in caves, hollow trees or at the bottom of ponds, as was commonly believed in his time.
While many copies were lost, damaged or split apart for the beauty of the engravings, roughly 80 first edition copies of the Natural History still exist. They can be found, for example, at the Smithsonian Institution, Middleton Place Plantation near Charleston, South Carolina, the Natural History Museum in London, and in several private collections. In a fortunate twist to the Catesby story, the entire collection of his original paintings are in the Royal Collection in Windsor Castle. They were purchased in three leather-bound volumes from a bookseller by King George III in 1768. The 1997 public exhibition of a number of them at Buckingham Palace and in the Unites States has stimulated an international re-examination of Catesby's artistic and scientific achievements. Remounted and photographed by Alecto Historical Editions Limited of Essex, England before being returned to storage, these original paintings do much to restore the reputation and significance of Mark Catesby's work.