William Markwick


William Markwick, who took the name of William Eversfield, was a Fellow of the Linnaean Society and a keen naturalist, known for his pioneering phenological observations recorded in Gilbert White's 1789 book The Natural History and Antiquities of Selborne.
Many of his scientific writings remain unpublished, in some cases despite being submitted to the Linnaean Society.

Life

William Markwick was the son of James Markwick of Catsfield and Mary Eversfield, who were married in Eastbourne on 10 June 1735.
He was nominally admitted to the Inner Temple to study Law in May 1758, and equally nominally educated at Peterhouse, Cambridge in June 1758. However he neither practised as a lawyer nor took a Cambridge degree, choosing instead to live the life of an English country gentleman.
His estate covered 1600 acres of Sussex around Catsfield Place, also called Church House. He ordered short and delicate sheep's fescue grass seed to create an elegant greensward suitable for sheep, so that he could enjoy a view of sheep grazing outside his windows. Unfortunately, the story runs, the seed merchant supplied instead a much coarser grass, possibly giant fescue, which grew so rank and tall that the sheep would not eat it, and it had to be controlled by scything.
On 30 June 1789, a few days after his fiftieth birthday, Markwick married Mary Date of Southampton and they had four children:
Markwick's aunt Olive Eversfield, who died in 1803, directed in her will that for her inheritance he must take the surname Eversfield, which he did, though he continued to use the name Markwick on his scientific papers. He thus acquired Denne Park near Horsham, which caused long legal complications and consumed some years of his time. After his death, his widow and later his son James lived at Denne, selling the Catsfield estate.
Markwick was made a Fellow of the Linnaean Society in 1792. His land along the south coast of Sussex and the Pevensey Levels, with the time available to a gentleman of leisure, enabled him to observe wildlife in detail around the year, in particular wetland birds and marine animals including fish. He noted Buffon's objections to the value of the beaks of birds such as the crossbill, calling it "a deformity", and of the black skimmer. Markwick correctly pointed out that these were "admirably well formed" for their specific purposes and rebukes Buffon for "finding fault with the works of the Creator". The European Magazine, and London Review of 1792 reported On the Migration of certain Birds, and on other Matters relating to the feathered Tribes. by William Markwick, Esq., Associate had been published:
Markwick was one of two Justices of the Peace living in Catsfield in 1791.

Phenology

Markwick is known for his useful and pioneering work in phenology, the study of when annual events happen in nature. Some 500 of his detailed observations are documented in the second edition of Gilbert White's 1789 book The Natural History and Antiquities of Selborne. It was praised as "a work of great exactness, and the result of as much, and as patient observation as perhaps was ever brought to the subject. It is formed upon an attentive comparison of the seasons, from 1768 to 1793." The "Comparative View of White's and Markwick's Calendars" begins as follows:
WhiteMarkwick
Redbreast sings1–12 Jan.3–31 Jan., and again 6 Oct
Larks congregate1–18 Jan.16 Oct, 9 Feb
Nuthatch heard1–14 Jan.3 March, 10 April
Winter aconite fl.1 Jan, 18 Feb28 Feb, 17 April
.........

Works

Markwick provided the natural history illustrations for some of his works, both zoological and botanical.