Sir Geoffrey Evans CIE (1883–1963) was a botanist who was Economic Botanist and acting Director at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew .
Early life
Evans was born in Walmersley , near Bury , Lancashire , England, on 26 June 1883.[ 1] He was educated in Bury, Lancashire , and at Downing College, Cambridge , where he received a Diploma in Agriculture in 1905.[ 2]
Career
After working at the Agricultural Department of the University of Cambridge ,[ 3] he was in the Indian Agricultural Service from 1906 to 1923.[ 1] [ 2] From 1927 to 1938 he was Principal of the Imperial College of Tropical Agriculture in Trinidad ,[ 3] and worked from there in Australia, Fiji and New Guinea .[ 2]
Evans was a Member of the British Guiana Refugee Commission,[ 2] a Member of the Commission on Higher Education in West Africa from 1942 to 1943[ 4] [ 5] and Chairman of the Commission for Settlement in British Guiana and British Honduras .[ 2]
In 1938 Evans joined the staff of the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew ,[ 6] where he was Economic Botanist (1938–1954) and, from 1941 to 1943, acting Director.[ 1] [ 2] [ 7] He can be seen in the short colour film World Garden by cinematographer Geoffrey Unsworth in 1942.[ 8]
Death and legacy
He died at Mayfield, Sussex , on 16 August 1963.[ 1] His papers, covering the period 1906 to 1955, are held at the Bodleian Library in Oxford .[ 2] A portrait of Evans by Walter Stoneman , made in 1948, is held at the National Portrait Gallery, London .[ 9]
References