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GB 235 RBG/1/JHB/1/1/A/A6 · Stuk · 1860
Part of Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh Institutional Archives

Letter from Thomas A. Ainslie, Government Civil Hospital, Hong Kong, to John Hutton Balfour, dated 13 April 1860, Ainslie writes that he is now at the hospital from 12 January at a salary of £300pa which he confesses is a poor salary for China but he doesn't expect any preferment in the Government Service. Ainslie has had an offer of a medical practice in Amoy; $4000 [Chinese or U.S. dollars?] from Dr. Hunter [who is leaving due to ill health] at an income of $8000pa. Ainslie has little faith in people here; has to see how his health holds up. "Here Dr. Murray keeps me in until 4pm. I climbed the Peak to visit the new sanitarium. Many troops here, several regiments have gone to Chusan to be nearer the action. The ultimatum has been rejected by Shanghai. Cumming who graduated two years ago is in the artillery was sent home after a few weeks to die of phthisis [tuberculosis]... Many deaths in the hospital; five out of 30 patients died from phthisis or pneumonia." Hopes Mrs Balfour is well and thank her for her kindnesses. Ainslie sent her and his mother presents at end of December, with a a good likeness of himself [photograph] for his mother. Dr. Wang called while Ainslie was laid up. Dr. Dods has taken Dr. Dixon's practice in Canton. Ainslie is trying to get a few seeds from the interior to send. He has asked about the rice paper plant and the specimen poison Prof. Christison asked about without success. This will reach Balfour in mid-summer. Ainslie wishes he was in your class, with best remembrances.

GB 235 RBG/1/JHB/1/1/A/A29 · Stuk · 1874
Part of Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh Institutional Archives

R.G. Alexander writes: Dear Professor Balfour I have just taken my B.A. at Cambridge. My final exam was Botany, knowledge of which I am indebted to your book. Dr. Babington told you when you were last here, that it was not so much used as in the past. I think he must be mistaken. It was used by nearly all the men. However it has placed me in First Class a thing which has never occurred in Botany before. 14 candidates and 6 passed. I feel it my duty to say how indebted I am to the thorough teaching which your lectures gave me and to the careful perusal of your valuable works. I am still the only Physican in Bradford while there are 50 G.P.s and am [satisfactory as it may appear on account of my youth] head of the honorary staff at the general hospital in virtue of my title. I trust you are well and that the duties at this time of the year are not too arduous. I hope that the time is far distant when Edinburgh will be deprived of your valuable lectures upon a subject which is of such essential reading in training the mind to form exact opinions and accurate diagnoses. With renewed thanks, believe me , dear sir yours gratefully R.G.A. p.s. added by D.Alexander “I am pleased to see that you still have time for original communications”