valerie barkham

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  • 7/25/2019 Valerie Barkham

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    MYCOLOGIST

    Valerie Barkham (19352005)

    Valerie Barkham had a special place in UK mycology and in the hearts of a wide range of both amateur and

    professional mycologists. I first met Valerie in 1974 when she joined the staff of the then Commonwealth

    Mycological Institute at Kew as a Library Assistant under Sheila Daniels. She soon became fascinated by mycology,

    and especially its literature, so it was not surprising that she succeeded Beatrice V. Thomas as the compiler of the

    Index of Fungiwhen Mrs Thomas retired in 1981. This demanding role involved scouring the worlds literature for

    newly published and long-overlooked scientific names, and also assessing the status of those names. In order to

    do this she learned Latin, having already grasped cyrillic scripts during her library period. She was meticulous in

    never leaving any stone unturned, securing copies of obscure works she found references to, and giving tasks to

    people like me to scan journals in other libraries. During the 14 years she held this position, the stature and inter-

    national respect of the Indexgrew; she was a treasure amongst my staff, and never afraid to voice concerns where

    she saw some injustice.

    When she retired from the Institute in 1995, she still wanted to continue her affair with the worlds fungal literature,

    and what better way to do that than become the Librarian of the British Mycological Societys Library at Kew. Shedeveloped that role to a new level, not only in securing additions to the library but organizing the preparation of

    abstracts from journals received, providing a photocopy service, making up and checking in and out the foray box,

    reorganizing the collections, and assisting in the publication of a series of booklets. Prior to having her family, she

    had worked at the Bank of England, and this showed in her meticulous record keeping and chasing debtors who

    had not paid for photocopies they had made on the Library copier.

    But it would be wrong to think of Valerie only being dedicated to mycology. She was a key figure in the Richmond

    Scientific Society, serving as its President in 198890, and as its Honorary Secretary from 1992 until a few weeks

    before she died. Other interests included the local Ramblers Association and support for her local church in

    Ashford, but her loving family always came first. People with such unstinting dedication are the backbone of any

    Society, and the British Mycological Society was so fortunate to have her enthusiastically serving it for so long. She

    is very much missed.

    D. L. Hawksworth