Alexander Wilson (July 6, 1766 – August 23, 1813) was aScottish-American poet,ornithologist,naturalist, and illustrator. Identified byGeorge Ord as the "Father of American Ornithology", Wilson is regarded as the greatest American ornithologist beforeAudubon.[1]
Wilson was born in a Presbyterian family inPaisley, Scotland on July 6, 1766. Alexander senior ("Saunders") had given up smuggling and taken up weaving where he did well and he supplemented income with liquor distilling. The American revolution had caused economic hardship and after the death of Wilson's mother, Mary McNab, his father remarried and moved toAuchinbathie. Wilson got a little bit of schooling but spent time herding livestock and at thirteen he apprenticed with his brother-in-law William Duncan. He also worked four years as ajourneyman, shooting grouse in free time and peddling wares across Scotland.[2]
While working as a weaver in Paisley, Wilson became seriously interested in poetry. He was inspired by the dialect verse ofRobert Burns, who was only seven years older. He was close friends with fellow Paisley poetEbenezer Picken.[3]
In addition to ballads and pastoral pieces, Wilson wrote satirical commentary on the conditions of weavers in the mills. In 1792 he wrote a poem called "Watty and Meg: A wife reformed" on a drunkard and his wife, which was quite popular. His authorship of a satirical poem "The Shark, or Lang Mills Detected" with severe personal statements about a mill owner named William Sharp resulted in a libel suit. He then began to blackmail Sharp and this led to Wilson's arrest. His work was said to be inflammatory, against the English, and libelous; he was often in trouble with the law. Because he devoted little time to his trade as a weaver, Wilson lived in poverty. In 1794, he decided to emigrate to America.[4]
With a nephew, Wilson left Scotland in May 1794 at the age of 27 and landed in Delaware. He walked to Philadelphia where he tried work in printing and weaving. Opportunities were scarce for weavers in the Philadelphia area, and Wilson turned to teaching.
Wilson taught at theMilestown School in Bristol Township, the present-dayEast Oak Lane neighborhood of Philadelphia, for five years from 1796 to 1801.[5] A scandalous affair with a married woman in 1801 forced him to leave. He then moved on to teach briefly in New Jersey.
Eventually, Wilson settled into a position atGray's Ferry, Pennsylvania, and took up residence in nearbyKingsessing. There, he met the famous naturalistWilliam Bartram, who encouraged Wilson's interest inornithology and painting.
Resolved to publish a collection of illustrations of all the birds of North America, Wilson traveled widely, collecting and painting. He also secured subscribers to fund his work, the nine-volumeAmerican Ornithology (1808–1814). Of the 268 species of birds illustrated in its pages, 26 had not previously been described. His illustrations of birds in poses were an inspiration for James Audubon and other illustrators and naturalists.[6]
Wilson statue atPaisley AbbeyThe gravesite of Alexander Wilson (1766–1813) at the Gloria Dei (Old Swedes) cemetery, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA (17 December 2022).
Wilson died on August 23, 1813, "of dysentery, overwork, and chronic poverty" according to one report.[8] He was buried in Philadelphia, in the cemetery atGloria Dei (Old Swedes') church.[9] The two final volumes ofAmerican Ornithology were completed by Wilson's friend and patronGeorge Ord, who was an executor of Wilson's estate.[10]
An image entitled "Swedish Lutheran Church", which depicts an apparently elderly individual mourning at the grave of Wilson,[11] was drawn byThomas Sully (1783–1872), engraved and printed in 1828 by Cephas G. Childs and B. Rogers, respectively, and published in a book of landscapes,Views of Philadelphia (1827–1830).[12]
In Paisley, a statue of Wilson was erected on the grounds ofPaisley Abbey. A memorial on the banks ofRiver Cart, near the Hammills rapids and waterfall, commemorates Wilson's connection to that city. The memorial is inscribed "Remember Alexander Wilson 1766–1813. Here was his boyhood playground."[13]
According to an article about his life, Wilson's meeting withJames Audubon "probably inspired Audubon to publish his own book on birds, and he also influenced many later artists and ornithologists".[4]
Wilson, Alexander. n.d.The tears of Britain. A poem.OCLC: 166684875.
Wilson, Alexander. 1808–1814.American Ornithology; or, the Natural History of the Birds of the United States: Illustrated with Plates Engraved and Colored from Original drawings taken from Nature.
Wilson, Alexander. 1800. List of pieces written by Mr. Alexander Wilson, now in Philadelphia. [Paisley, Scotland]: Printed by Andrew Young. At head of title: Paisley repository. No. VIII. Probable decade of imprint from NSTC. "The American blue bird [by A. Wilson, in verse]": p. 2-3; "The Baltimore bird [by A. Wilson, part in verse]": p. 4.
Wilson, Alexander. 1800.Watty and Meg: or the wife reclaimed, together with : Habbie Sampson and his wife or, a new way of raising the wind : Donald and his dog : the West Kintra weaver turned teetotaler : the Loss o' the pack : John Tamson's cart : Takin' it out o' his mouth. Paisley, Scotland: W. Wilson.
Wilson, Alexander. 1800.Rab and Ringan: a tale as delivered in the Pantheon, Edinburgh by the author of Watty and Meg; to which is added The twa cats and the cheese, a tale. Glasgow: Brash & Reid.
Wilson, Alexander. 1801. Oration, on the power and value of national liberty delivered to a large assembly of citizens, at Milestown, Pennsylvania, on Wednesday, March 4, 1801. Philadelphia: Printed by H. Maxwell. Reprinted in Early American imprints. Second series;, no. 1668.
Wilson, Alexander. Papers, 1806–1813. Philadelphia: American Philosophical Society. This material relates to Alexander B. Grosart's biography of Wilson. There are notes and copies of letters and documents, including a copy of Wilson's will. There is one poem by Wilson, "The Last Wish," and an 1806 letter to William Bartram.
Wilson, Alexander. 1814.The Foresters: A Poem, Descriptive of a Pedestrian Journey to the Falls of Niagara in the Autumn of 1804. Newtown (PA): S. Siegfried & J. Wilson. Also published in the magazineThe Port Folio in 1809/1810.
^Strickland, George; Reinagle, Hugh; Doughty, Thomas; Mason, William; Childs, Cephas Grier; Steel, James W (1827).Views in Philadelphia and its vicinity. Philadelphia: Published by C.G. Childs, engraver.OCLC82059675.
Burtt, Edward H. Jr.; Davis, William E. Jr. (2013).Alexander Wilson: The Scot Who Founded American Ornithology. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press.