:''This article is about the 18th-century English naturalist. For the 20th-century American geographer, see
Gilbert F. White. Neither should be confused with Gilbert White (1859–1932), Bishop of Carpentaria, Australia, who was also a poet, or with Gilbert White (1877–1939), the American painter.''

This 'portrait' is not now generally accepted as authentic.
'Gilbert White' (
July 18,
1720 –
June 26,
1793) was a pioneering
naturalist and
ornithologist.
White was born in his grandfather's vicarage at
Selborne in
Hampshire. He was educated by a private tutor in
Basingstoke before going to
Oriel College, Oxford. He obtained his
deacon's orders in
1746, being fully ordained in
1749, and subsequently held several curacies in Hampshire and
Wiltshire, including Selborne's neighbouring parishes of
Newton Valence and
Farringdon, as well as Selborne itself on four separate occasions. In
1752/53 White held the office of Junior
Proctor at Oxford and was
Dean of Oriel. In
1757 he became non-resident
perpetual curate of
Moreton Pinkney in
Northamptonshire. After the death of his father in
1758, White moved back into the family home at ''The Wakes'' in Selborne, which he eventually inherited in
1763. In
1784 he became curate of Selborne for the fourth time, remaining so until his death. Having studied at Oriel at the behest of his uncle, he was ineligible to be considered for the permanent living of Selborne, which was in the gift of
Magdalen College.
White is best known for his ''The Natural History and Antiquities of Selborne'' (
1789). This was a compilation of his letters to
Thomas Pennant, the leading British
zoologist of the day, and also the Hon.
Daines Barrington, an
English barrister and another member of the
Royal Society. These letters contained White's discoveries about local birds, animals and plants. He believed in distinguishing birds by observation rather than by collecting specimens, and was thus one of the first people to separate the similar-looking
Chiffchaff,
Willow Warbler and
Wood Warbler by means of their song.
White is regarded by many as
England's first
ecologist and one of the founders of modern respect for nature.
[1] He said of the
earthworm (
1770):
Earthworms, though in appearance a small and despicable link in the chain of nature, yet, if lost, would make a lamentable chasm [...] worms seem to be the great promoters of vegetation, which would proceed but lamely without them...
White and William Markwick collected records of the dates of emergence of more than 400 plant and animal species, White recording in Hampshire and Markwick in
Sussex between
1768 and
1793. These data, summarised in ''The Natural History and Antiquities of Selborne'' as the earliest and latest dates for each event over the 25-year period, are among the earliest examples of modern
phenology. His 1783/4 diary corroborates the dramatic climatic impacts of the volcanic '
Laki haze' that spread from Iceland with lethal consequences across Europe.

Gilbert White's House in Selborne
White's frequent accounts of a
tortoise inherited from his aunt in ''The Natural History and Antiquities of Selborne'' form the basis for
Verlyn Klinkenborg's book, ''Timothy; or, Notes of an Abject Reptile'' (
2006), as well as for
Sylvia Townsend Warner's ''The Portrait of a Tortoise'' (
1946).
His house in Selborne, ''The Wakes'', now contains the Gilbert White Museum, as well as the Oates Memorial Museum, commemorating Frank and
Lawrence Oates.
A biography of White, by
Richard Mabey was published by
Century Hutchinson in
1986, and won the
Whitbread Biography of the Year award.
A documentary about White, presented by historian
Michael Wood, was broadcast by
BBC Four in 2006.
Gilbert White's famous work has been continuously in print since its first publication and is one of the most frequently published books in the English language. The paperback edition of ''The Illustrated Natural History of Selborne'' was last reprinted by
Thames & Hudson in 2007.
Notes
1. Hazell, D.L., Heinsohn, R.G. and Lindenmayer, D.B. 2005. Ecology. Pp. 97-112 in R.Q. Grafton, L. Robin and R.J. Wasson (eds.), ''Understanding the Environment: Bridging the Disciplinary Divides''. Sydney, NSW: University of New South Wales Press, (p. 99).
Further reading
★ Worster, D. 1994. ''Nature's Economy: A History of Ecological Ideas'' (2nd ed.). Cambridge; New York, NY, USA: Cambridge University Press.
External links
★
Gilbert White's House and the Oates Museum
★
Project Gutenberg edition of The Natural History of Selborne
★
★
Gilbert White's life @ ''Ward's Book of Days''