The museum facade
Research & Collections :: Collections at the State Museum :: Biology
MYCOLOGICAL COLLECTIONS HERBARIUM

Samwell Cave, California
Boletus spectabilus
Drawing by Charles Peck, ca. 1869
The fungus collection at the New York State Museum in Albany was created by Charles Peck from 1868 to 1913 during which time he amassed 33,600 mycological specimens. In the years following, the next State Botanist, Homer House, and other mycologists added to this number. Currently it contains more than 90,000 specimens, however, the importance of the collection is not in the number of specimens it contains, but in its type specimens of American fungi collected during the early years of American mycology. It is especially rich in Agarics and other larger fungi. Some of the other collectors represented in the herbarium of the New York State Museum are G. F. Atkinson, M. E. Banning, E. Bartholomew, M. J. Berkeley, E. A. Burt, G. W. Clinton, M. C. Cooke, M. A. Curtis, J. Dearness, J. B. Ellis, W. R. Gerard, E. C. Howe, J. H. Haines, H. W. Harkness, E. W. D. Holway, C. H. Kauffman, W. A. Murrill, P. A. Saccardo, S. J. Smith, and C. J. Sprague.

Curator: John Haines
Collections Manager: Lorinda Leonardi

In addition to specimens, the Museum holds numerous original drawings and paintings of fungi by Charles Peck, Mary Banning, and others plus an extensive file of correspondence covering the formative years of American mycology. Specimens, including types, are available on loan to recognized scientific institutions for taxonomic research.

Chalres Peck in his office
[Click to view larger image]
Charles Peck
in his office in Albany, NY, January 1894.
View information about the microscope in this photo.

Museum Hours: Open daily from 9:30am to 5:00 pm | Carousel Hours Open Daily: 10am-4:30 pm | Information please call: 518-474-5877
The New York State Museum is a program of The University of the State of New York / New York State Education Department / Office of Cultural Education