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John Abbot (entomologist)

John Abbot
Abbot John 1751-1840.jpg
John Abbot, self-portrait
Born 31 May or 1 June 1751
London, England
Died December 1840 or January 1841
Bulloch County, Georgia
Nationality English
Fields

John Abbot was an American entomologist and ornithologist. He was born on 31 May or 1 June 1751 in London and died on December 1840 or January 1841 in Bulloch County in Georgia.

Little is known of his life. He was the eldest son of James Abbot and Ann Clousinger. His father was training him to become a lawyer, but Dru Drury encouraged his interest in entomology and art and he studied drawing and engraving with the engraver Jacob Bonneau (1741—1786). Dru Drury and a group of naturalists from the Royal Society, recognized his talent as an illustrator, and encouraged him to go to Virginia to study and collect natural history specimens. He remained in Virginia from 1773 to 1775, and then settled in Georgia in what is now known as Screven County. He served in the Revolutionary War in the Third Georgia Continental Battalion as a private. As a veteran after the war he received several hundred acres of land upon which he established a plantation, and became the local school master.

He produced thousands of insect illustrations, as well as several sets of bird illustrations. The majority are preserved in the Natural History Museum, London, the British Museum and Houghton Library at Harvard University. Other repositories of his drawings include Johns Hopkins University, University of South Carolina, Emory University, and the Alexander Turnbull Library. Some have been dispersed following various auctions that included his drawings. The bird and insect specimens that he collected were sent to Britain and Europe, but a certain number were lost at sea, which discouraged him. He nonetheless continued to collect and paint specimens until at least 1835.


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