Johann Reinhold Forster | |
---|---|
![]() Portrait 1781 | |
Born | (1729-10-22)22 October 1729 |
Died | 9 December 1798(1798-12-09) (aged 69) |
Children | George Forster |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Natural history,ethnology |
Institutions | Warrington Academy University of Halle |
Author abbrev. (botany) | J.R.Forst |
Johann Reinhold Forster (22 October 1729 – 9 December 1798) was a GermanReformed pastor and naturalist. Born inDirschau,Pomeranian Voivodeship,Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth (now Tczew, Poland), he attended school in Dirschau andMarienwerder before being admitted at theJoachimsthalsches Gymnasium in Berlin in 1745. Skilled in classical and biblical languages, he studied theology at theUniversity of Halle. In 1753, he became aparson at a parish just south ofDanzig. He married his cousin Justina Elisabeth Nicolai in 1754, and they had seven children; the oldest child wasGeorge Forster, also known as Georg.
In 1765, Forster was commissioned by the Russian government to inspect the new colonies on theVolga. Accompanied by George on the journey, he observed the conditions of the colonists and made scientific observations that were later read at theRussian Academy of Sciences. After making a report that was critical of the Russian administration, Forster left for England without payment in 1766. In England, Forster became the successor ofJoseph Priestley as tutor in modern languages and natural history atWarrington Academy where he worked for two years. He made contact with many other naturalists, published a textbook on mineralogy and translated works of theapostles of Linnaeus into English. Invited by the geographerAlexander Dalrymple, Forster moved to London in 1770 in preparation for participation in anEast India Company expedition, but the plans fell through and Forster continued to publish translations and scientific works including contributions to North American zoology and botany. In February 1772, he was elected aFellow of the Royal Society.
After the withdrawal ofJoseph Banks from thesecond voyage of James Cook, Forster accepted the position of naturalist on Cook's ship, where he was accompanied by his son George as draughtsman and assistant. On their three-year journey, they made the first recorded crossing of theAntarctic Circle and made observations and discoveries in New Zealand and Polynesia. When they returned to England, Forster published the botanical workCharacteres generum plantarum. However, there was disagreement with Cook on who should write a narrative of the journey. After a lengthy argument, George wroteA Voyage Round the World, which appeared six weeks before Cook's account. Forster separately published his scientificObservations Made During a Voyage Round the World.
Forster's pride and obstinacy caused him to fall out with many powerful men in England; after clearing some of his substantial debt with the aid of German patrons, he returned to Germany where he was a professor at the University of Halle from 1780. He oversawthe university's botanical garden for a few years and published in a wide range of sciences. Forster died in 1798 and is buried inHalle. He is commemorated in the names of various species of plants and animals, including the generaForstera andForsterygion.
Johann Reinhold Forster was born on 22 October 1729 inDirschau,Pomeranian Voivodeship,Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth (now Tczew, Poland).[1] Forster's family traced its origins to aYorkshire-born ancestor called George Forster, a descendant of the Scottish Forrester family. This ancestor had emigrated from England after supporting the losing Royalist side in theEnglish Civil War and had become a merchant inNeuenburg (Nowe) in the 1640s.[2] Forster's father was Georg Reinhold Forster and his mother was Eva Plaht, the daughter of Dirschau's mayor Johann Wolff and the widow of Martin Plaht.[1] Georg Reinhold became mayor of Dirschau in 1733 (as the third Forster in this position) but became an invalid in 1735 and had to retire as mayor.[3] Forster attended aLatin school in Dirschau, and then went toMarienwerder (Kwidzyn) to attend thegymnasium in 1743.[4]
In May 1745, Forster was admitted at theJoachimsthalsches Gymnasium in Berlin, a reputable institution.[5] His teachers includedJohann Philipp Heinius [de], the school rector, who taught theology, Hebrew, Roman antiquity and philosophy; andFriedrich Muzel [de], the school librarian, who taught history, literature, Latin and natural philosophy.[6] Forster quickly became skilled in classical and biblical languages including Coptic and fluent in Latin.[7][8][9] He graduated in 1748 together withKarl Franz von Irwing [de], who became a lifelong friend.[10] Other friends and acquaintances includedLouis de Beausobre,August Friedrich Pallas [de] andCarl Gottfried Woide.[11] Forster also sought out the friendship of foreign students to improve his knowledge of modern languages, especially French.[8][11]
After his time at the gymnasium, Forster wanted to study medicine at theUniversity of Halle but his father wanted him to study law. As a compromise, Forster studied theology in Halle.[8][12] Little is known about his student days.[9][12] His academic teachers included theologianSiegmund Jakob Baumgarten and orientalistChristian Benedikt Michaelis [de].[13]
By July 1751, Forster had arrived inDanzig (Gdańsk), where he was a candidate forordination at theReformed church ofSt Peter and Paul [de;pl].[14] He had a meagre income, and his preaching workload did not allow him to pursue his scholarly interests. His sermons were praised, and his superiors contemplated sending him abroad for additional training.[15] Forster was ordained inKönigsberg in August 1753 and (possibly to please his father) accepted the post ofparson of theHochzeit-Nassenhuben parish just south of Danzig, starting there on 23 September 1753.[16][17]
Forster had courted his cousin Justina Elisabeth Nicolai since 1751, but was unable to marry her on his income at the time.[18] His father died on 15 November 1753, not long after Forster obtained the post in Nassenhuben, and Forster sold the family house in Dirschau soon after, in 1754.[19][17] He married Justina Elisabeth on 26 February 1754 at St Peter and Paul in Danzig.[17] Between 1754 and 1765, they had seven children who survived childbirth, including the eldest son,Johann George Adam Forster, also known as Georg Forster.[20][21]
Forster spent some of his inheritance on his library, collecting thousands of books.[20] He concentrated on scholarly work (especially Egyptian languages such as Coptic) to the detriment of his duties as a pastor. Sometimes he fell asleep during the church service only to be woken to deliver his sermon.[22] Forster expected to move to a position in Danzig after the one in Nassenhuben, following existing precedent, but this did not materialise.[22][23] In 1757, he wrote to the mathematicianLeonhard Euler in an attempt to find a position at the newImperial Moscow University; while he obtained a recommendation, nothing came of it because of the intensifyingSeven Years' War.[23] Russian troops occupied the area surrounding Danzig in May 1758, including the Hochzeit-Nassenhuben parish.[24] Forster did not leave for the relative safety of Danzig, but stayed with his parishioners and protected them against excesses of the occupying Russian troops by directly making demands of the Russian commander-in-chief,William Fermor.[25]
Forster's son George was interested in the study of nature from an early age, and so Reinhold, to satisfy his son's curiosity, boughtCarl Linnaeus'sSystema Naturae and other books, learned natural history from them and then taught his son.[26] Other subjects of this instruction were Latin, French, religion, writing and arithmetic.[27]
In 1765, Forster obtained leave from his pastoral offices and travelled toSt Petersburg with ten-year-old George. Their expenses were paid by Hans Wilhelm Rehbinder, a Russian in Danzig who recommended them to CountGrigory Orlov, the favourite ofCatherine the Great.[28][29] Forster was given a commission to inspect the newly founded colonies nearSaratov on theVolga River, with the expectation that his report should show that theVolga German colonists were thriving and happy and to dispel rumours to the contrary.[30] Forster also made scientific plans for the journey, which theAcademy of Sciences in St Petersburg supported by providing him with reference books and instruments.[31][32] The Forsters travelled from Moscow to Saratov in May 1765, continuing via Dmitriyevsk (nowKamyshin) to Tsaritsyn (nowVolgograd). They reached theKalmyk Steppe andLake Elton (where Forster studied the salt industry) and inspected further settlements along the Volga and some of its tributaries before returning to St Petersburg in October. During the 4,000 km (2,500 mi) journey, George collected hundreds of plant specimens, helping his father with naming and identification.[33]
Forster made contact with other scientists, and his scientific observations from the journey were read in several sessions of the Academy of Sciences, introduced by the geologistJohann Gottlieb Lehmann.[34][35] His report for the Russian government was critical of the conditions for the colonists and the officials in Saratov. After it was received by Orlov and Catherine, Forster was asked to draft regulations for the colonies that would include improved governance and some degree of autonomy, and finished this work in May 1766.[36] Forster hoped for a government post, but when that did not come true, he asked for permission to leave Russia and payment of 2000roubles[a] for his time and as compensation for having lost his Nassenhuben post. When he was offered only 1000 roubles, he proudly refused, only receiving 500 roubles from the Russian government much later, in 1771.[38] The Forsters then travelled by boat fromKronstadt to London, where they arrived on 4 October 1766.[39][40]
When Forster came to London, he knew very little English.[41] He brought a letter of introduction from Friedrich Dilthey, a Reformed pastor in St Petersburg, toAndrew Planta, pastor of the German Reformed congregation in London and assistant librarian at the British Museum.[42] Planta did not receive Forster as warmly as the latter had expected. Instead of an employment opportunity in England, Planta suggested a pastoral vacancy inNorth Carolina.[43][44] Based on the recommendation of Forster's school friend Woide, Planta introduced Forster to the naturalistDaniel Solander, who also worked at the British Museum and was a disciple ofLinnaeus.[45] Forster sold some items collected during the Russian expedition, including coins and fossils, and tried to find a salaried position to bring the rest of his family to England.[46][47][b] He was introduced to theSociety of Antiquaries and elected as an Honorary Fellow in January 1767.[48] Based on the observations from the voyage in Russia, he wroteSpecimen Historiae Naturalis Volgensis, an essay in Latin on the natural history of the Volga region that was translated into English and then read at theRoyal Society and published in thePhilosophical Transactions of the Royal Society.[49]
In June 1767, Forster was appointed as tutor in modern languages and natural history atWarrington Academy, replacingJoseph Priestley, with an annual salary of £60.[c][51] He reunited with his family who came to Warrington in September 1767.[52] Forster taught French, German, and natural history, and published a textbook on mineralogy in 1768.[53][54] The geologist and science historianVictor Eyles described Forster's approach as "rather more scientific than some of his contemporaries" and giving a "sound grounding in the subject".[55] Forster became a member of the committee of theWarrington Circulating Library and of themasonic lodge "Lodge of Lights No. 148 Warrington".[56] He made the acquaintance of other people interested in natural history, includingJohn Blackburne and his daughterAnna Blackburne ofOrford Hall.[57] Forster helped Blackburne with the arrangement of her insect collection and presented his lectures onentomology to her,[58] while she provided him with access to the family library.[59] He also struck up a friendship with the naturalistThomas Pennant, whom he visited atDowning Hall in the summer of 1768.[60]
Together with his son George, Forster began to translate the works of three of theapostles of Linnaeus into English:Pehr Kalm'sTravels into North America,Pehr Osbeck'sA voyage to China and the East Indies, andPehr Löfling'sTravels through Spain and Cumana in South America.[61] Forster increasingly was in financial trouble and started to teach French at the grammar school inWinwick, sharing the duties with his son, who taught the less able pupils.[62][63] In early 1769, Forster's debts and a dispute about discipline and corporeal punishment caused a rift between him and his colleagues, especiallyJohn Seddon, and Forster was dismissed, leaving the Academy in June 1769.[64] Religious differences may also have played a role in the dispute.[65][66] Forster then taught languages at theBoteler Grammar School in Warrington while continuing work on the translations.[67][68]
In the summer of 1770, Forster was invited to accompany the geographerAlexander Dalrymple on anEast India Company expedition toBalambangan and planned to take George with him as a midshipman. The family moved to London in November 1770, but the plans fell through when Dalrymple was dismissed from the project in March 1771.[69][70] Forster cultivated a friendship with the lawyerDaines Barrington, a close friend of Pennant and the vice president of the Society of Antiques and of the Royal Society.[71] The translations begun in Warrington started to appear and were successful, with those of Kalm and Osbeck printed in a second edition.[72][73] Forster additionally translatedJean Bernard Bossu'sTravels through that part of America formerly called Louisiana. He published his own contributions to North Americanzoology andbotany,A Catalogue of the Animals of North America andFlorae Americae Septentrionalis; or a Catalogue of the Plants of North America.[71] TheCatalogue of the Animals, described by ornithologistElsa Guerdrum Allen as "the first attempt to cover American fauna", contains a section with "Directions for Collecting, Preserving and Transporting all Kinds of Natural History Curiosities", a guide for field studies.[74][75] In 1771, Forster started writing forThe Critical Review, contributing reviews of foreign books.[76] Commissioned byThomas Davies, he started a translation ofLouis Antoine de Bougainville'sVoyage autour du monde [fr], which appeared in 1772 asA Voyage Round the World.[77][78] On 14 November 1771, Barrington and a number ofFellows of the Royal Society includingJoseph Banks and David Solander endorsed Forster's nomination as a Fellow, leading to his election on 27 February 1772.[76]
Banks and Solander had returned to England in July 1771 from thefirst voyage of James Cook, and early plans for asecond voyage started in August or September 1771.[79] Forster attempted to ingratiate himself with Banks and Solander, for example by dedicating theFlorae Americae Septentrionalis to Solander and directly suggested that he should accompany Banks on a further voyage when he dedicated his bookNovae Species Insectorum to Banks.[79] Cook was officially commissioned in November,[80] and whenLord Sandwich, theFirst Lord of the Admiralty, approached Banks about taking part, he agreed and started assembling an expedition party including scientists and artists as well as musicians.[81][80] Forster was not chosen by Banks, but they were in regular contact and had an amicable relationship.[80]
On Banks's suggestions, significant changes were made to the expedition ship,HMS Resolution, to accommodate Banks's large entourage and their equipment.[82] Alterations included an additional deck and a "roundhouse" on top for the captain, as Banks was to occupy the great cabin.[83] This made the ship so top-heavy that it was deemed unsafe after a first trial at sea, and the additions were removed atSheerness Dockyard.[84] When Banks saw the refitted ship on 24 May 1772, he was furious and soon after announced he would not take part in the expedition.[85][80] On 26 May, Forster received a visit from the naval surgeon and inventorCharles Irving, who, according to Forster's journal, "in a very mysterious manner told me, that Mr Banks did not go in the Resolution to the South Seas, & asked whether I would go".[86][87] Forster accepted on the condition that his son George could accompany him as his assistant.[86]
The English parliament had not long before voted to spend £4,000 for a scientist to accompany Cook on the voyage, which was intended to go to the Scottish physician and naturalistJames Lind, whom Banks had chosen as a member of his party.[86][88] Banks attempted to use his parliamentary contacts and to obtain an audience with the king in order to change the Admiralty's decision regarding the ship.[86] Lord Sandwich obtained the king's approval for Forster's appointment.[86] In a letter to the Prime Minister,Lord North, Sandwich asked him to support Forster, writing
For these reasons I hope (if you have no objection of your own) that you will encourage Mr. Foster [sic] who from all hands is admitted to be one of the fittest persons in Europe for such an undertaking; he is ready to go at a moment's warning, is thoroughly satisfied of the safety of the ship and with her present accomodation, and having his son with him, who is a very able draughtsman and designer, will fully supply the chasm occasioned by Mr. Banks' having withdrawn himself from the voyage.[86][89]
On 11 June 1772, the king authorised a payment of £1,795 to Forster from thecivil list to prepare for the voyage, which was received on 17 June.[90] After spending £1,500 on books and equipment, Forster went toPlymouth, where HMSResolution arrived on 3 July.[91]
Together with a second expedition ship,HMS Adventure,Resolution sailed from Plymouth on 11 July 1772.[92][93] The first stop was the Portuguese island ofMadeira, where Forster and his servant Ernst Scholient collected plants that were then drawn by George.[94] In November 1772, the expedition spent three weeks in theCape Colony in Southern Africa where Forster and the officers stayed with the traderChristoffel Brand.[95] Forster metAnders Sparrman, a disciple of Linnaeus, and employed him as his scientific assistant for a salary of £50 per year plus expenses.[96] From there they sailed south, making the first recorded crossing of theAntarctic Circle on 17 January 1773.[97][98] They sailed to New Zealand and arrived inTamatea / Dusky Sound on 27 March after four months at sea.[99][100] They stayed there for five weeks; while Forster complained it was not a good season for proper botany, he managed to describe at least 19 birds as well as several fishes and plants.[101] On an excursion, Forster found a lake that was later named "Lake Forster".[102]
After a stay inQueen Charlotte Sound / Tōtaranui, they visited theSociety Islands includingTahiti and theFriendly Islands (Tonga) between June and October 1773.[103] After another tour to antarctic waters where the ship reached 71° 10′ southern latitude,[104] aFarthest South record that stood for almost 50 years,[105] they arrived atEaster Island in February 1774. The southern hemisphere winter was spent in Polynesia, and in October 1774 Cook sailed from New Zealand toTierra del Fuego, where he started a third attempt to sail into the Antarctic. They returned to the Cape of Good Hope in March 1775 and finally to Plymouth, arriving there on 29 July 1775.[103]
After their return to London, Forster and his family moved to 16Percy Street,St Pancras.[107] He was received by KingGeorge III in August 1775 and presented some animal specimens to QueenCharlotte.[108] Forster started to publish the scientific results of the voyage. The first publication was on botany, the bookCharacteres generum plantarum, which appeared in 1775/76.[109] It had been prepared on board and was rushed to publication while containing numerous errors, as Forster saw himself in competition with Banks and hoped to claim the discoveries of plant species for himself.[110][111]
In addition to the scientific publications, Forster also expected, based on promises made by Daines Barrington before the voyage, that he would write the official account of the voyage.[112] The report of Cook's first voyage,An Account of the Voyages, had been compiled byJohn Hawkesworth for a compensation of £6,000.[113] For the second voyage, Cook, who was dissatisfied with Hawkesworth's work, wanted to publish his own account.[114] A compromise between Forster and Cook was negotiated by Lord Sandwich in April 1776. Cook was to write a first volume containing a narrative of the journey and the nautical observations, while Forster would contribute a second volume on natural history and ethnology. TheBritish Admiralty would pay forengravings that were to be distributed between the two books.[115] However, Forster's sample chapters did not satisfy Sandwich, who claimed they were a narrative instead of a scientific work and askedRichard Owen Cambridge to correct them.[116] Forster found this unacceptable, proudly refused to submit any of his work for corrections and saw himself as the victim of a conspiracy.[117]
After further attempts at compromise had failed due to Forster's obstinacy,[118] Cook worked on his own narrative towards a separate publication. Forster's diaries were used by his son George, who was not bound by any contractual agreements, to writeA Voyage Round the World, which appeared in March 1777, six weeks before Cook'sA Voyage Towards the South Pole, and Round the World.[119][120] Forster by then was writing hisObservations Made During a Voyage Round the World containing the scientific and ethnological results of the voyage as a separate publication.[121] Forster was spending lavishly and soon was in financial difficulties.[122] The publication ofA Voyage Round the World was unsuccessful financially; although the book had good reviews, it was outsold by Cook's book, which contained over sixty engravings. By late 1777, the book sales had not yet covered expenses and Forster was so deeply in debt that he was forced to sell some of his library to avoid debtor's prison.[123] An important source of money for Forster was his fellow naturalist Banks: in 1776 and 1777, Banks bought drawings and books for almost £1,000 from Forster and additionally loaned him £200.[124]
In 1778,William Wales, the astronomer on board theResolution, published aRemarks on Mr Forster's Account of Captain Cook's last Voyage round the World, attacking Forster (whom he regarded as the true author ofVoyage, dismissing George's authorship) and accused him of lies and misrepresentations.[125][126] George Forster defended his father with aReply to Mr Wales's Remarks containing some factual corrections as well as attacks on Wales and Sandwich.[127] In June 1778, this was followed up by theLetter to the Right Honourable the Earl of Sandwich, which contained a further attack on Sandwich and his mistress,Martha Ray.[128] After this publication, there was no more possibility of reconciliation with the Admiralty, and the Forsters worked on plans to move to Germany.[129] The family moved to less pricey lodgings in the summer of 1778, and George travelled to Germany to obtain a position for his father, but only obtained a professorship of natural history at theCollegium Carolinum inKassel for himself, which was insufficient to support his father's large family.[130]
In February 1779, Forster was appointed professor of natural history and mineralogy at theUniversity of Halle byKarl Abraham von Zedlitz, the minister of education of theKingdom of Prussia. The appointment was part of an attempt to raise the profile of the university and was supported by KingFrederick the Great.[131] A difficulty that needed to be overcome before Forster could take up the appointment was that his debts amounted to almost £800. George worked in Germany to secure money to help his father and family leave England, succeeding with the help ofDuke Ferdinand of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel and variousFreemasons. The only remaining debt was owed to Banks, who did not pursue the matter at the time.[132] In March 1780, Forster's paper on penguins was presented byJohann Friedrich Gmelin at theGöttingen Academy of Sciences; it appeared in 1781 and was later described as his "definite treatise" on the penguins.[133][134] Forster and his family left London for Germany in July 1780.[133] On his way to Halle, Forster spent some time in Berlin, where he was granted an audience with the king, who gave him the title ofGeheimrat, approved an increase of his salary in Halle and supported his travel expenses.[135]
In September 1780, Forster was introduced to the Senate of the University. To make up for his lack of teaching credentials, he was given an honorary degree with the title ofDoctor of Philosophyhonoris causa.[136] He was made responsible forthe university's botanical garden, which was run by Philipp Kaspar Junghans who was employed as demonstrator in botany.[137][138] When Forster's supervision ended in 1788, he had added (in his own estimation) 2700 plants to the garden by using his international connections, for example those toCarl Peter Thunberg in Uppsala andWilliam Aiton atKew.[139][140]
Forster was made professor of medicine and received the degree ofDoctor of Medicine, alsohonoris causa, in 1781.[141] He lectured on natural history, based on his own research, an approach that was unpopular with the students.[142] Possibly influenced by his son-in-lawMatthias Christian Sprengel, Forster began to teachuniversal history,geography andstatistics using more established teaching texts.[143] Student attendance was higher when he lectured in agriculture, and Forster started publishing essays on cultivation,husbandry and general technology.[144] He also taught mineralogy from the works ofAugust Ferdinand von Veltheim and translatedTiberius Cavallo's mineralogical tables into German. The first edition of 750 copies sold completely and Forster followed it up with an improved second edition.[144] In 1784, he published a work on the exploration of the Arctic, which was translated to English in 1786 asHistory of the Voyages and Discoveries in the North. An attack on Barrington was removed for the English version.[145] In 1790, Forster was elected pro-rector of the University; his responsibilities included student discipline. He started editing a journal of travel literature, theMagazin von neuen merkwürdigen Reisebeschreibungen (Magazine of new curious travel descriptions).[146] Although Forster was by 1790 one of the most well-paid academics at Halle and had additional income from his books, he was often in financial difficulties as he spent his money amassing an extensive library with a special focus on maps and travel literature.[147]
Meanwhile, George had become the university librarian inMainz in 1788.[148][149] After the city had been captured by French revolutionary troops in 1792, George became a member of the MainzJacobin Club and a leading person of theRepublic of Mainz.[148] He was sent to Paris as a delegate in 1793 and petitioned for the accession of Mainz into theFirst French Republic;[150] for this, he was considered a traitor in Germany. George died in Paris on 10 January 1794.[151] Forster then wrote a biographical account of his son that was published in thePhilosophischer Anzeiger.[152]
On 9 December 1798, Forster died from anaortic aneurysm after suffering fromangina. He was buried in arcade number 61 of the municipalStadtgottesacker [de] cemetery.[153] A memorial plaque for Forster was installed there on 7 May 2016.[154][155]
After Forster's death, Banks forgave his widow the remaining debt of £250.[156] The extensive library and the manuscripts were bought by the Prussian royal library for 8,000Taler.[d][158] Forster's collection of Pacific artefacts was sold to theHanoverian government for 80 Taler after negotiations led byJohann Friedrich Blumenbach; it now forms part of theUniversity of Göttingen's ethnological collections.[159]
Forster has been generally overshadowed by his more famous son.[160] This is especially true in Germany, where George Forster was rediscovered by East German historians and studied as an early German democrat.[126] However, the Forsters were often seen as a symbiotic unit, especially for some of their work in the natural sciences.[161] In English-language scholarship concerned with the voyages of James Cook, the focus was for a long time on the elder Forster's difficult character;[e] his achievements and abilities were downplayed or ignored.[163] The botanistElmer Drew Merrill accused Forster of plagiarising the work of Solander, but his arguments were later refuted by fellow botanistsDan Henry Nicolson andFrancis Raymond Fosberg.[164][165] The Cook scholarJohn Beaglehole introduced Forster as "one of the awkward beings of the age" and called him "one of the Admiralty's vast mistakes".[166][126] Beaglehole attacked Forster at every opportunity in his edition of Cook's journals, which the literary scholarPhilip Edwards described as "petty persecution".[167]
Modern study of Forster has resulted in a reassessment of his contributions, especially after the publication of Michael Hoare's Forster biographyThe Tactless Philosopher and Hoare's edition of Forster's journals from the voyage.[168][169] The Australian art historianBernard Smith called Forster a "pioneer of social anthropology" in 1985,[170] andObservations was described after the publication of a scholarly edition in 1996 as "the beginning of modern geography" by geographerDavid Stoddart and "one of the most important early examinations of the new Pacific archive" by anthropologist K. R. Howe.[171][172]
Forster is commemorated by the plant genusForstera, which is considered to have been named by Linnaeus.[173][174] Its description, probably due to Sparrman and under the name "Forsteria", was sent to Linnaeus by Forster in a letter and first published by George Forster in 1780.[175] The genusForsterygion of triplefin fishes in New Zealand is named after Forster, who had describedForsterygion varium.[176]Several other taxa were named in his honour, for example theemperor penguin (Aptenodytes forsteri),[177]Forster's tern (Sterna forsteri)[178] and various plants.[179]
Geographic features named after Forster include Lake Forster and Mount Forster inFiordland, New Zealand, and Forster's Passage in theSouth Sandwich Islands.[180][181][182] Also named for Forster, theReinhold-Forster-Erbstollen [de], is an 1805drainage tunnel for an iron ore mine close toSiegen, Germany, that has been converted to anexhibition mine in 1983.[183]
A complete bibliography can be found in the biography of Michael Hoare.[184]