She is best known for her two-volume work The British Garden, which ran to two or three editions in her lifetime, the second (and possibly the first)[1] being in 1799, and the third in 1805 or 1808,[2] and another in 1880.[3] The book was targeted at young people and considered the Linnaean system and how it can be used to discover the name of an unknown plant.[4]
She also produced numerous botanical illustrations.[5]
She died in Bath on 4 April 1808, unmarried. She was buried in Bath Abbey.[7]
Works
Murray, Charlotte (c. 1799). A Descriptive Catalogue of Hardy Plants, Indigenous Or Cultivated in the Climate of Great Britain; with Their Generic and Specific Characters, Latin and English Names, Native Country, and Time of Flowering.