
William Jackson Hooker (1785 – 1865) an English Botanist was educated at the high school of Norwich.
His author abreviation: Hook.
As he came from a wealthy family, William Jackson Hooker was able to travel and start on studies of natural history, especially ornithology and entomology. On a recommendation of Sir James Edward Smith he focused his activities to botany. In 1809 he undertook his first botanical expedition to Iceland. 1816 his first scientific work, “the British Jungermanniae”, was published. 1820 he became a regius professor of botany at the University of Glasgow. William Jackson Hooker established the Royal Botanic Institution of Glasgow and developed the Glasgow Botanic Gardens. In the year 1841 William Jackson Hooker became the first director of the Royal Botanic Gardens Kew.
His son Sir Joseph Dalton Hooker succeeded him as
the director of Kew gardens. William Jackson Hooker died at 12.08.1865.
His son´s Joseph Dalton Hooker author abreviation: Hook.f.

Desert Rose (Adenium obesum)
Dendrochilum magnum Rchb. f. 1861
Coral Plant (Jatropha multifida)
Bulbophyllum patens King 1896
Dendrobium sulcatum Lindl. 1838
Rain Tree (Samanea saman)
Blue Strawberry Flower (Memecylon caeruleum)
Bulbophyllum claptonense Rolfe 1905
Luisia curtisii
Cream Fruit (Strophanthus gratus)
Thai Orchid Rhynchostylis coelestis
Rudraksha Tree (Elaeocarpus grandiflorus)
Miniature Orchid Bulbophyllum dentiferum
Bangkok Rose Mussaenda Queen Sirikit
Luisia thailandica
Spiral Ginger (Costus barbatus)
Green Orchid Grammatophyllum multiflorum var. multiflorum
Queens Wreath (Petrea volubilis)
Hoya lasiantha
Geodorum recurvum (Roxb.) Alston 1931



Cats Claw Creeper (Macfadyena unguis-cati)
Water Lily Hybrid Nymphaea Peach Glow
Succulent Huernia macrocarpa
Hoya kerrii Craib 1911 Sweetheart Hoya
Dendrobium unicum Seidenf. 1970
[...] species has been primaryly named by Joseph Dalton Hooker, the son of the great English botanist William Jackson Hooker as Doritis braceana Hook. f. 1890 and has been reclassified by the American botanist Eric A. [...]
[...] was the famous English botanist William Jackson Hooker, who named the Bulbophyllum careyanum (Hook.) Spreng. 1826 orchid species, in honour to the English [...]